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The FReeper Canteen looks at |
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The Legion of Merit
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Establishing Authority
The Legion of Merit was established by Act of Congress (Public Law 671, 77th Congress) approved July 20, 1942, and by Executive Order 9260 signed on October 29, 1942, by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Effective Dates
Award of the Legion of Merit is retroactive to September 8, 1939.
Criteria
The Legion of Merit is awarded to members of the Armed Forces of the United States without degree for exceptionally outstanding conduct in the performance of meritorious service to the United States. The performance must merit recognition by individuals in a key position which was performed in a clearly exceptional manner. The performance of duties normal to the grade branch, specialty or assignment and experience of an individual is not an adequate basis for this award.
For service rendered in peacetime, the term "key individual" applies to a narrower range of positions than would be the case in time of war and requires evidence of significant achievement. In peacetime, service should be in the nature of a special requirement or of an extremely difficult duty performed in an unprecedented and clearly exceptional manner. However, justification of the award may accrue by virtue of exceptionally meritorious service in a succession of important positions.
Order of Precedence
The Legion of Merit is awarded to members of the Armed Forces of the United States without degree and is worn after the Defense Superior Service Medal and before the Distinguished Flying Cross.
Awards to members of foreign armed forces are made in the degree of Chief Commander, Commander, Officer, and Legionnaire. The first two degrees are comparable in rank to the Distinguished Service Medal and are usually awarded to heads of state and to commanders of armed forces, respectively. The last two degrees are comparable in rank to the award of the Legion of Merit to United States service members
Devices
Army and Air Force
Additional awards are denoted by oak leaf clusters.
Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard
Additional awards are denoted by gold stars five-sixteenths of an inch in diameter, and the Combat Distinguishing Device may be authorized.
Designer and Sculptor
The Legion of Merit was designed by Colonel Robert Townsend Heard and sculpted by Katharine W. Lane of Boston, Massachusetts.
First Recipients
American
The first American recipient of the Legion of Merit was Lieutenant (Junior Grade) Ann Agnes Bernatitus, USN, whose award was approved on October 14, 1942 based on her service as a nurse during the campaign in the Manila-Bataan Peninsula areas from December of 1941 to April of 1942.
Foreign
Legionaire
The first foreign recipient of the Legion of Merit in the grade of Legionnaire was Lieutenant de Vaisseau A. Bergeret of the Free French Navy and commander of the Corvette Roselys, whose award was approved on October 27, 1942.
Officer
The first foreign recipient of the Legion of Merit in the grade of Officer was Colonel Johanes K. Meijer of the Royal Netherlands Army in Surinam.
Commander
The first recipient of the Legion of Merit in the grade of Commander was Brigadier General Amaro Soares Bittencourt of Brazil, who received his award at Miami, Florida on November 7, 1942.
Chief Commander
The first person to actually receive the Legion of Merit in the grade of Chief Commander was General Sir Kenneth A.N. Anderson, the British Army commander in North Africa, who received his award on June 18, 1943. |
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Description and Symbolism
Obverse
A five-armed white enameled cross of ten points, each point tipped with a gold ball. The cross is bordered in American Beauty red enamel. In the center of the cross, thirteen stars on a blue field are surrounded by a circle of heraldic clouds. Between the arms of the cross, a laurel wreath is tied in a bow between the two lower arms of the cross. Between the wreath and the center of the medal, situated in each re-entrant angle of the cross, are two crossed arrows pointing outward.
The basic physical form and name of the Legion of Merit was adapted from the French Legion of Honor, which is also a white enameled cross of five arms tipped with balls. The field of thirteen stars surrounded by clouds is taken from the reverse of the Great Seal of the United States and represents the "new constellation," the description of the young republic used by the Founding Fathers. The laurel wreath alludes to achievement, and the arrows pointing outward represent armed protection of the nation.
Reverse
The same cross appears on the reverse, except it is not enameled. In the center of the cross is a blank circular space defined by a rope border to be used for engraving the recipient's name. Contained within a second rope border (forming a space between the two), the raised inscription, ANNUIT COEPTIS MDCCLXXXII with each word being separated by a bullet. In place of the wreath that appears on the obverse, there is a band bearing the raised inscription, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, each word also separated by a bullet. In the re-entrant angles of the cross, in the space between the band and the center of the medal, are two crossed arrows pointing outward.
The words ANNUIT COEPTIS (He [God] Has Favored Our Undertaking) is taken from the front of the Great Seal of the United States, and the date MDCCLXXXII (1782) refers to the year General George Washington founded the Badge of Military Merit, from which the Legion of Merit is descended. . Ribbon
The ribbon is purple-red (American Beauty Red) edged in white. The color is modified from that of the Purple Heart, which is also derived from General George Washington's Badge of Military Merit. Information gathered here.
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Myers Awards Legion of Merit to NATO Committee ChiefBy Jim Garamone American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, April 7, 2005 The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff awarded a senior NATO officer the Legion of Merit today during a Pentagon ceremony. Air Force Gen. Richard B. Myers said German Gen. Harald Kujat, the chairman of NATOs Military Committee, has helped ensure NATO changed with the times. The Legion of Merit, Degree of Commander, is the highest decoration U.S. officials award to foreign military members, personnel officials said. Myers said that when Kujat took over as chairman of the Military Committee, NATOs highest military authority, in July 2002, many pundits questioned whether NATO was relevant in the new threat environment. If you think about where NATO was and where NATO is today, the change has been absolutely dramatic, Myers said. In many cases, it probably ensured that NATO survived as a military alliance. It was a big question. I think NATO answered that question, and a lot of the credit goes to Harald Kujat. Kujat pushed for a viable alliance and a robust transatlantic link, Myers said. He helped persuade member nations to update their capabilities and accept new missions. He pushes, and sometimes its pushing uphill, Myers said. Its getting the reluctant and recalcitrant to go along with whats good for the alliance and the transatlantic alliance. We could not have had a better leader. The leadership that Harald has brought to the job has been truly remarkable. During Kujats tenure, which ends in June, NATO took on a major role in Afghanistan and is working to grow that mission, Myers said. NATO personnel are involved with training Iraqi security forces both in Iraq and in other countries. The NATO Response Force took shape and achieved its operating capability. Like all things in NATO, (taking on these new missions) requires a lot of energy, and Harald has been a dynamo, Myers said. The citation for the award praised Kujats leadership of the 26-member Military Committee. General Kujat guided the Military Committee and the entire NATO military establishment along the path of transformation critical to success in addressing future challenges, the citation read in part. Kujat said he was surprised, honored and moved by the award. The German four-star entered the service in 1959. He said that during his career NATO was always important, but not only the alliance but specifically the transatlantic link was always my No. 1 item on the agenda. I think this is very important ever more for the future than in the past. Kujat is in Washington for talks with U.S. military officials. Story here. |
Please remember: The Canteen exists to support our military heroes serving all over the world and their families. There are lots of places around Free Republic to talk about politics and debate your views. Please try to keep it out of the Canteen. We want to keep the Canteen a place where the guys and gals who are serving can sit down, kick their shoes off and relax and not have to keep their guard up. Thanks for your help! Now go out there and have FUN!!!! *HUGS!* Hopefully next week we'll get back to the Short Speak threads -- I know BIGLOOK can't wait for more of those "R's" - LOL!! I just have had a couple of sick kids and didn't have time to get 'er done this week! Thanks all! |
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