Twenty years in the past this month President
George W. Bush
walked into the Rose Garden and honored one in all America’s biggest army heroes, whose valor had been largely missed for almost six many years. Even immediately, what number of Americans know the story of U.S. Army Capt. Ben Salomon?
Salomon’s exploits remained obscure for generations—even his family didn’t know the extent of his actions—due to the distinctive set of circumstances surrounding his heroism. The story got here to nationwide consideration primarily accidentally. At that 2002 ceremony President Bush posthumously awarded Salomon the Medal of Honor and famous:
For Captain Ben Salomon, no dwelling family members stay to witness this second. And despite the fact that they by no means met, Captain Salomon is represented immediately by a real pal, Dr. Robert West. Welcome, sir.
Five years in the past, Dr. West was studying about his fellow alumni of the University of Southern California’s dental faculty. He stumbled on the story of Ben Salomon of the category of 1937 . . .
What a narrative it’s. Before exploring why it took greater than half a century for Salomon to be acknowledged appropriately—and solely then as a result of a fellow alum occurred to be doing analysis in preparation for the one hundredth anniversary of USC’s dental faculty—let’s look at the actions of Capt. Salomon on a horrific day way back within the western Pacific. In a historical past maintained by the U.S. Army medical division, Col. William T. Bowers (ret.) units the scene:
In June 1944, newly promoted Captain Salomon went ashore on Saipan with the one hundred and fifth Infantry Regiment for his first style of battle. In energetic fight operations there was little work for the regimental dentist, so Ben instantly volunteered to switch the 2nd Battalion’s surgeon who had been wounded in a mortar assault on 22 June.
Two weeks later, the dentist-turned-surgeon can be saving many lives. The Congressional Medal of Honor Society quotes the official quotation:
For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity on the danger of his life above and past the decision of responsibility. Captain Ben L. Salomon was serving at Saipan, within the Marianas Islands on July 7, 1944, because the Surgeon for the 2nd Battalion, one hundred and fifth Infantry Regiment, twenty seventh Infantry Division. The Regiment’s 1st and 2nd Battalions have been attacked by an amazing power estimated between 3,000 and 5,000 Japanese troopers. It was one of many largest assaults tried within the Pacific Theater throughout World War II. Although each models fought furiously, the enemy quickly penetrated the Battalions’ mixed perimeter and inflicted overwhelming casualties. In the primary minutes of the assault, roughly 30 wounded troopers walked, crawled, or have been carried into Captain Salomon’s support station, and the small tent quickly crammed with wounded males. As the perimeter started to be overrun, it turned more and more tough for Captain Salomon to work on the wounded. He then noticed a Japanese soldier bayoneting one of many wounded troopers mendacity close to the tent. Firing from a squatting place, Captain Salomon rapidly killed the enemy soldier. Then, as he turned his consideration again to the wounded, two extra Japanese troopers appeared within the entrance entrance of the tent. As these enemy troopers have been killed, 4 extra crawled beneath the the tent partitions. Rushing them, Captain Salomon kicked the knife out of the hand of 1, shot one other, and bayoneted a 3rd. Captain Salomon butted the fourth enemy soldier within the abdomen and a wounded comrade then shot and killed the enemy soldier. Realizing the gravity of the state of affairs, Captain Salomon ordered the wounded to make their manner as finest they might again to the regimental support station, whereas he tried to carry off the enemy till they have been clear. Captain Salomon then grabbed a rifle from one of many wounded and rushed out of the tent. After 4 males have been killed whereas manning a machine gun, Captain Salomon took management of it. When his physique was later discovered, 98 useless enemy troopers have been piled in entrance of his place. Captain Salomon’s extraordinary heroism and devotion to responsibility are consistent with the best traditions of army service and replicate nice credit score upon himself his unit and the United States Army.
Except for the half the place our hero dies, this wonderful story reads like a scene from Captain America. But Captain Salomon was actual. How was he not honored within the Nineteen Forties? Ellen Sorokin wrote within the Washington Times in 2002:
Soon after the motion in Saipan ended, Capt. Salomon’s commander nominated him to obtain the medal. However, the paperwork stopped after his division officers strictly interpreted a Geneva Convention rule that prohibited medical personnel from receiving valor awards.
That’s the place West, the USC-trained dentist and in addition a World War II veteran, was capable of choose up the path greater than 50 years later. According to Ms. Sorokin:
During his analysis, Dr. West discovered that the posthumous award was denied due to an error, not a technicality. Dr. West had found that the commanding basic reviewing Capt. Salomon’s advice for a medal misunderstood the Geneva Convention rule.
The rule states that medical personnel have been prohibited from bearing arms towards enemy troops for offensive functions, however they might bear arms in self-defense or in protection of the wounded or sick. That meant, Dr. West discovered, that medical personnel might obtain valor awards if these resembling Capt. Salomon have been defending their sufferers and support stations or hospitals.
However, by the point that interpretation got here via, the time restrict on nominations had handed.
West spent years writing letters to varied authorities officers and eventually succeeded in seeing Salomon honored earlier than his personal dying in 2012. That’s in line with a report within the San Diego Union Tribune.
But this wonderful story nonetheless leaves one questioning how the regimental dentist was not solely capable of rise to the event to defend his support station, however to carry out in fight on the extent of the best particular operations warriors. Fortunately for the boys in his care, Salomon had initially been drafted into the infantry earlier than the United States entered the struggle. Col. Bowers notes:
After fundamental coaching Ben joined the 102d Infantry Regiment and rapidly proved to be a pure soldier and chief. He received awards as an knowledgeable rifle and pistol marksman, and his commanding officer said that he was “the best all-around soldier” within the regiment. Within a yr he had risen to the rank of sergeant and was answerable for a machine gun part. In 1942 Salomon acquired notification that he was to grow to be an officer within the Dental Corps. At first Ben tried to stay within the infantry, and his commanding officer requested that he be commissioned a second lieutenant of infantry. The request was denied, and Salomon reported to Schofield Barracks, Hawaii, the place he was commissioned a primary lieutenant on 14 August 1942. After a number of months of labor in a hospital, Lieutenant Salomon was assigned in May 1943 because the regimental dental officer of the one hundred and fifth Infantry Regiment, a part of the twenty seventh Infantry Division.
Characteristically, Ben jumped into his new duties with enthusiasm and talent. Despite not having practiced dentistry for 2 years, Lieutenant Salomon was rapidly acknowledged as a wonderful dentist by his sufferers and his fellow dentists. He developed a routine of dealing with dental appointments within the morning and becoming a member of his regiment within the subject for coaching within the afternoon. Ben was not only a employees observer, but additionally an energetic participant in all actions from scorching, dusty hikes and vary firing to crawling via the mud of the impediment programs. He received the entire regimental competitions. Later, his regimental commander described the distinctiveness of his dental officer:
Ben Salomon was the most effective teacher in infantry ways we ever had. He gave everyone who ever met him an actual raise. He had a manner of inspiring folks to do issues that they won’t have finished in any other case. I feel it was as a result of he himself was essentially the most very important man most of us ever met.
As President Bush said in 2002:
America will at all times know Benjamin Louis Salomon . . . one younger man who was the match for 100, an individual of true valor who now receives the distinction due him from a grateful nation.
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James Freeman is the co-author of “The Cost: Trump, China and American Revival.”
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