My
husband had a soft spot in his heart for John McCain. There was a reason.
Somewhere
around here I still have the order of the day, a ship’s daily newsletter, from
October 28, 1967. Rick saved it from when he was on the USS King - DLG 10.
He
was not supposed to save it. He was not supposed to smoke dope with the
quartermasters in the signalmen’s little cabin when they were all on watch,
either. I’m just saying. It was Vietnam. A lot of things happened that weren’t
supposed to happen.
This
particular order notes that the day before they picked up a distress signal
from a plane going down but did not see the plane or pilot out in the Tonkin
Gulf.
The
King was stationed on North SARS – SARS being “Search and Rescue.” They picked
up pilots who came flaming out over the Vietnamese jungles and ditched in the
Tonkin Gulf. The ship cruised up and down the northern coast of Vietnam,
fending off occasional forays by Viet Cong who came out in boats of all sizes
to shoot at them with rifles, and leaving a trail of ship’s garbage in the
water.
Rick
realized later that the distress signal they picked up was from John McCain’s
airplane. Now, the plane went down in a lake in Hanoi, so there was never any
question of the King being able to rescue McCain, but Rick still took it to
heart that they had not been able to help him. After he learned McCain’s story,
he wished for the rest of his life that they’d been able to pick McCain up and
bring him safely back to an American hospital.
In
listening to the accolades following McCain’s death this week, I was interested
to hear it said that his POW experience was the making of him. He was a bit of
a screw-off in the Naval Academy, but in Vietnam he was tempered by beatings,
torture, and the camaraderie among the prisoners. He became the extraordinary
person he was forever after.
Rick
always respected McCain, and so did I when I learned his story. After someone
dies you see them in clearer perspective, but that clear perspective is
consistent with what we both thought about John McCain.
If
there is a heaven, and I believe there is because I will be pissed if Rick
isn’t there to meet me when I die, I hope Rick was part of the crowd welcoming
John McCain.
Fair
winds and a following sea! Rest in peace, you two.
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