The Korea Defense Veterans of America Support Cold War Victory Medal
AWARD A COLD WAR VICTORY MEDAL
BE IT RESOLVED, that the Korea Defense Veterans of America joins with other veteran service organizations and petitions The U.S. Department of Defense for award of a Cold War Victory Medal to all members of the U.S. Military that served between 2 September 1945 and 26 December 1991; and
WHEREAS, immediately after World War II we witnessed a polarization in relationship between the Soviet Union and the U.S. and its allies in that the Soviet Union, by physical force and other means, expanded its influence and control over Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Eastern Germany, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Manchuria, Outer Mongolia, North Korea, Romania, and Yugoslavia, annexed the Kurile Islands and the southern half of Sakhalin Island, and instigated problems in Cuba, Greece, Iran, Lebanon, and Turkey. The Soviet Union continued its expansionist movement and dominated Eastern Europe until 1991; and
WHEREAS, the Cold War initiated the largest arms race in history that included nuclear, chemical and biological weapons as well as fomenting low-intensity conflicts, proxy wars, assassinations and various forms of intimidation; and
WHEREAS, the Cold War Era time period was fraught with conflicts and wars stressing U.S. Armed Forces and their allies that included:
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- Soviets blockade of Berlin - 1948, leading to the Berlin Airlift
- NATO created to deal with Soviet aggression and expansion - 1949
- Atomic Bomb in Soviet hands - 1949
- Korean War - 1950 to 1953 (UN intervention including U.S. Armed Services members)
- Iran military coup - 1953 (U.S. backed)
- Guatemala military coup - 1954 (U.S. backed)
- Warsaw Pact – 1955 established as counter weight to NATO
- Hungarian Revolution - 1956 (Soviet intervention 4 Nov 56)
- Cuban Bay of Pigs Invasion - 1961
- Cuban Missile Crisis - 1962
- Taiwan Straights and Quemoy and Matsu Islands
- Grenada - 1983
- Angola Civil War (U.S. armed and funded surrogates)
- El Salvador Civil War (U.S. armed and funded surrogates)
- Nicaragua Civil War (U.S. armed and funded surrogates)
- Afghanistan War; and
WHEREAS, the Cold War is officially considered ended; however, its fallout continues to surface and create tensions today in Africa, the Caribbean, Central and South America, and the Pacific Rim as a testament to its longevity and global impact; and
WHEREAS, the Cold War Medal has already been designed by Nadine Russell, former Chief of Creative Heraldry at the U.S. Army's Institute of Heraldry, to directly complement the non-acceptable Cold War Certificate, and it meets all criteria for a U.S. Military medal; now, therefore
BE IT RESOLVED, by the Korea Defense Veterans of America, that we petition for award of a Cold War Victory Medal.
Hi, I served in the U.S. Army from 1983-89 and strongly support the efforts to award a Cold War Victory Medal to the men and women who served our nation during the cold war era. I hope it happens in the not too distant future.
ReplyDeleteRespectfully submitted,
Rich McKeever
U.S. Army Vet