Tuskegee Airmen Suit Up, Head to Iraq

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Tuskegee Airmen Suit Up, Head to Iraq
By SAMIRA JAFARI, Associated Press Writer
Sat Oct 22, 6:09 AM ET

TUSKEGEE, Ala. - Lt. Col. Herbert Carter is 86 years old and ready for deployment. More than 60 years after his World War II tour with the pioneering black pilots known as the Tuskegee Airmen, Carter's new mission will be shorter, though no less courageous.

Carter is one of seven aging Tuskegee Airmen traveling this weekend to Balad, Iraq — a city ravaged by roadside bombs and insurgent activity — to inspire a younger generation of airmen who carry on the traditions of the storied 332nd Fighter Group.

"I don't think it hurts to have someone who can empathize with them and offer them encouragement," he said.

The three-day visit was put together by officials with the U.S. Central Command Air Forces to link the legacy of the Tuskegee Airmen with a new generation.

"This group represents the linkage between the 'greatest generation' of airmen and the 'latest generation' of airmen," said Lt. Gen. Walter Buchanan III, commander of the Air Forces command, in an e-mail to The Associated Press.

The retired Airmen who will make the trip — five pilots, a mechanic and a supply officer — shrugged off the dangers of Iraq, saying they have stared down the enemy before. Some fought in Korea and Vietnam as well as World War II.

Current members of the 332nd, redesignated as the 332nd Air Expeditionary Group in 1998, include men and women of different backgrounds and races.

But the black retirees said they are thrilled that a group still fights within their 332nd lineage, regardless of skin color.

"I'm proud they're in a unit carrying our name," said Charles McGee, 82, a retired colonel whose 409 combat missions is an Air Force record. "That's very meaningful from the heritage point of view."

The original Tuskegee Airmen were recruited in an Army Air Corps program created to train blacks to fly and maintain combat aircraft during World War II — though some of the retired Airmen say it was really designed to try to prove that blacks were incapable of flying and fighting.

Even after the first group completed pilot training in March 1942, they were not allowed to fly for more than a year.

"My status as a Negro bordered on second-class citizenship and the military simply reflected the culture of the time," Carter recalled in a recent interview. "If you were a Negro, you were a Negro in either setting."

Eventually, the black airmen flew escort for bombers. They were credited with shooting down more than 100 enemy aircraft and never losing an American bomber under escort to enemy fighters. In all, 992 pilots were trained in Tuskegee from 1940 to 1946. About 450 deployed overseas and 150 lost their lives in training or combat.

The trip to Iraq brings new recognition to the trailblazing team celebrated in a 1995 HBO movie, "The Tuskegee Airmen."

Maj. Anthony Robinson of Shaw Air Force Base, S.C., who spearheaded the trip for the seven, said the group in Iraq is looking forward to hearing the Tuskegee Airmen's stories.

Only about 100 Tuskegee Airmen are still living. Several surviving members said they would make the trip to Iraq if health issues did not stand in their way.

They said they would continue to speak to current units, schools and public officials to ensure their legacy stays alive years after they are gone.

"I think everything should be done to pass their story to future generation of Americans," said Ted Johnson, 80, who graduated from the Advanced Flight School in 1945 and is considered one of the youngest Tuskegee Airmen.

"It was the Tuskegee Airmen who made America come to its senses," he said, "that individuals should be judged on their accomplishments, rather than their ethnicity and color."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20051022...hlI2ocA;_ylu=X3oDMTBiMW04NW9mBHNlYwMlJVRPUCUl
 

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<font size="5"><center>Tuskegee Airmen to Be Honored
With Congressional Gold Medal</font size>

<font size="4">300 Tuskegee Airmen and Their Families in D.C.
for Bestowing of Congressional Gold Medal</font size></center>


resource.aspx



Black America Web
Date: Wednesday, March 28, 2007
By: Jackie Jones, BlackAmericaWeb.com

It was called an experiment. No one expected them to succeed. They were not considered “the best of the best.”

More than 60 years later, the United States is formally recognizing the bravery, heroism and skillful work of the Tuskegee Airmen by awarding the group the Congressional Gold Medal, the highest civilian award bestowed by the federal legislature.

“It’s long overdue, and it’s very important to finally be recognized after 62 years,” said Luther H. Smith, a retired Air Force captain, who was assigned to patrol duty over the Mediterranean Sea in 1944 during World War II.

Last August, five months after the House bill was passed, there were some murmurs that the process to honor the Airmen, many of whom are in their 80s, was being delayed needlessly. From 1941 to 1946, 992 Tuskegee Airmen were trained for duty. Fewer than 400 are alive today.

Emile Milne, a spokesman for Rep. Charles Rangel, told BlackAmericaWeb.com at the time that it takes time to create the medals because they are always one-of-a-kind creations, and that a committee of the Airmen would be involved in designing the medal.

In bestowing the medal, Smith told BlackAmericaWeb.com, the U.S. is saying, “We recognize what you did, that we respect you people, and you were outstanding in your military service.”

That was a dramatic change from the government’s thinking about black aviators when the war started.

“The government didn’t want black people in aviation service,” Smith said. “The Germans, who initiated aviation war power, bragged they had their best people in the Luftwaffe, and that sent a message to the British and the United States that if they hoped to win, they had to bring it on with their best.

“And the Americans and the British responded very quickly,” Smith said. “When America was asking for its best young men to become aviators, many young men came forward. Many young black Americans requested a chance to volunteer to become pilots. They were told, ‘You do not have the capabilities. We want the best of the best.’”

http://www.blackamericaweb.com/site.aspx/bawnews/airmenmedals329
 

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<font size="5"><center>
Tuskegee Airmen Get Late Justice</font size></center>



ip_tuskegee_airmen_jpg_jpg.jpg



Black Press USA
by Hazel Trice Edney
NNPA Washington Correspondent

WASHINGTON (NNPA) – The crowd, the cheers and the applause in the United States Capitol Rotunda belied the segregationist homecoming that the Tuskegee Airmen received 60 years ago.

The bestowing of the Congressional Gold Medal upon the Black air core was viewed as a 21st century stride for racial progress and an inspiration to fight for justice.

“Today we give the Tuskegee Airmen the Heroes’ welcome they have so long deserved,” said Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.). “In 1942, the African-American paper, The Pittsburgh Courier, called for a double victory campaign: victory in the fight against fascism abroad, and victory in the fight against racism at home. Today, we come together to pay tribute to the Tuskegee Airmen, who with planes and the power of their example – fought against both of these foes, foreign and domestic. And as we honor them with the Gold Medal today, we take another in a long series of steps toward victory at home.”

That victory is hastened by their example, said Congressional Black Caucus Chairwoman Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick (D-Mich.).

''We will fight with the courage that you displayed,'' she said. “And we promise that we will never let you down.''

The Congressional Gold Medal is the highest civilian award bestowed by the U. S. Congress. Emotions ran high during and after the ceremony, packed with family members, supporters and members of Congress. Dozens of people were turned aware because of a lack of space.

Tears streaking her face, Robin Roberts, co-anchor for ABC Good Morning America, recalled her father, Lawrence Roberts, a Tuskegee Airman who died three years ago.
“He was one of the originals,” said the Tuskegee native in an interview with the NNPA News Service. “But, I didn’t know until later because they were such proud men. They would let others speak for them.

He didn’t get on a soapbox. It was many years later in my teens and in my 20s that I found out exactly what they had accomplished.”

Roberts recalled going with him to the training field in 2003, flying one of the planes that he flew, “and fully experienced what it was that they experienced.”

Not everything. Humiliating segregationist laws caused the fighter group to fly laudatory missions in which they are believed never to have lost a bomber that they escorted. Yet, on the ground, they were not even aloud to eat in the same cafeteria with White pilots. They had to eat in the kitchen with the cooks.

President George Bush’s father, former President George Herbert Walker Bush, was one of those White pilots. Preparing to award the medal, President Bush recalled the difference in his father’s experience.

“He flew with a group of brave young men who endured difficult times in the defense of our country. Yet for all they sacrificed and all they lost, in a way, they were very fortunate, because they never had the burden of having their every mission, their every success, their every failure viewed through the color of their skin,” Bush said. “Nobody told them they were a credit to their race. Nobody refused to return their salutes. Nobody expected them to bear the daily humiliations while wearing the uniform of their country.”

He continued, “It was different for the men in this room. When America entered World War II, it might have been easy for them to do little for our country. After all, the country didn't do much for them. Even the Nazis asked why African-American men would fight for a country that treated them so unfairly.” Bush concluded the presentation with a salute after saying, ''I would like to offer a gesture to help atone for all the unreturned salutes and unforgivable indignities. And so, on behalf of the office I hold, and a country that honors you, I salute you for the service to the United States of America.''

The bill to honor the Airmen was co-sponsored by U. S. Rep. Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.) and Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.).

Rangel said the story of the Tuskegee Airmen is synonymous with the story of Black people.

“A nation that rejected you because of your color, said you couldn’t fight, said you couldn’t fly. And then you had to go out there and prove them how wrong they were,” said Rangel. “You showed them that all we need is a chance…As a high school drop out who turned around and went back, if I can become chair of Way and Means, then every one of us can do something too. You remember, slaves built this building,” Rangel said to thunderous applause.

Little was nationally known about the Tuskegee Airmen until a 1995 HBO film,
“The Tuskegee Airmen.” The Moton Field, Tuskegee – where the Black airmen trained, has been the Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site since 1998. Many accomplishments of African-Americans during enslavement and throughout history have been omitted from history books and museums.

“Yet, with all of the discrimination and oppression, you never lost sight of the goal,” said retired Army Gen. Colin Powell, also the nation’s first Black Secretary of State. “The only reason I am able to stand proudly before you today is because you stood proudly before American 60 years ago…You deserve our highest tribute.”

Russell Davis, president of the Tuskegee Airmen Incorporated says the actual gold medal, awarded to the original airmen, will be housed at the Smithsonian Institution.

The more than 200 airmen who participated in the ceremony received free replicas, he said. Davis says because no one has ever been able to count the exact number of Tuskegee airmen, it is unknown how many more there are. AirforceTimes.com, the online newspaper of the U. S. Air force, reports that more than 1,000 Black men were trained at Tuskegee during the war, of which 450 were deployed and engaged in combat over North Africa, Sicily and Europe.

Sixty-six of the airmen died in combat and another 33 were shot down and captured, according to Congress.

''Because of our great record and our persistence, we inspired revolutionary reform which led to integration in the armed forces in 1948,” said Roscoe Brown, a former commander of the 100th Fighter Squadron, 332nd Fighter Groups, speaking on behalf of the Tuskegee Airmen. “As the president said, this provided a symbol for America that all people can contribute to this country and be treated fairly.''

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