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Rep. Burton Strongly Condemns North Korean Attack on South Korea

Posted by Joshua Gillespie on November 23, 2010

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                             CONTACT: Joshua Gillespie
November 23, 2010                                                                                    (317) 848-0201

Rep. Burton Strongly Condemns North Korean Attack on South Korea

Washington, D.C. – Today, Rep. Dan Burton (R-IN-05), Republican Co-chair of the Congressional Caucus on Korea issued the following statement in response to North Korea’s artillery attack on the South Korean border island of Yeonpyeong:

“Once again Kim Jong Il’s despotic communist regime has shattered the peace of the Korean peninsula. I stand with President Obama in strongly condemning this atrocity, and I call on President Obama and Secretary of State Clinton to rally the international community against these attacks and send a strong message to Kim Jong Il that the world stands strongly behind the people of South Korea.”

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Operation Halyard Exposed; a Hero Honored at Last

Posted by Dan Burton on November 19, 2010

Madame Speaker, as co-founder and co-chair of the Congressional Serbian Caucus, I rise tonight to honor an outstanding Serbian-American, Captain (Ret.) George M. Vujnovich, who was recently awarded the Bronze Star Medal, for his heroic actions during World War II.

The Bronze Star is awarded to military service personnel for bravery, acts of merit or meritorious service.  When awarded for bravery, it is the fourth-highest combat award of the United States Armed Forces.  Captain Vujnovich’s participation in the planning and execution of Operation Halyard – one of the most successful air force rescue missions in history; and an operation so secret that the records were only declassified in 1997 – certainly exemplifies the heroism required to receive this prestigious military honor.

Captain Vujnovich served with the Office of Strategic Services; the predecessor of the modern Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), and the wartime organization charged with coordinating activities behind enemy lines for the branches of the United States military.   Operation Halyard evolved in wake of the Allied bombing campaign to destroy Nazi Germany's vast network of petroleum resources in occupied Eastern Europe.   The most vital target of bombing was the facilities located in Ploesti, Romania, which supplied 35 percent of Germany's wartime petroleum.  Beginning in April 1944, bombers of the Fifteenth Allied Air Force began a relentless campaign to blast the heavily guarded facilities in Ploesti in an attempt to halt petroleum production altogether. By August, Ploesti was virtually destroyed — but at the cost of 350 bombers lost, with their crews either killed, captured, or missing in action.

The assault on Ploesti forced hundreds of Allied airmen to bail out over Nazi-occupied eastern Serbia, an area patrolled by the Allied-friendly Chetnik guerrilla army. When the Chetnik commander, General Draza Mihailovich, realized that Allied airmen were parachuting into his territory, he ordered his troops, as well as the local peasantry, to aid the aviators by taking them to Chetnik headquarters in Pranjani, Serbia for evacuation.

General Mihailovich's first attempts to alert American authorities to the situation regrettably failed to produce action. Fortunately, fate would have it that when Mirjana Vujnovich, a Serb employee of the Yugoslav embassy in Washington, D.C., heard of the trapped airmen.  She immediately wrote to her husband, Captain Vujnovich, stationed in Bari, Italy.  As an American, descending from Serb parents, Vujnovich knew the region intimately and also knew how to escape from Nazi-occupied territory: he had been a medical student in Belgrade when Yugoslavia fell to the Axis powers in 1941, and he and his wife spent months sneaking through minefields and begging for visas before they finally escaped from Nazi-occupied Europe.

Captain Vujnovich made it his personally crusade to get the airmen home.  From the outset though, Operation Halyard encountered opposition from Allied leaders — from the U.S. State Department, from communist sympathizers in the British Special Operations Executive (SOE), even from British Prime Minister Winston Churchill himself.   It was an operation that seemed condemned from the start, but Captain Vujanovich’s persevered rather than let the mission die. His persistence not to be in vain; he eventually won out.

Even though the operation endured from August 9, 1944 through December 27, 1944, within only the first two days, Operation Halyard successfully retrieved 241 American and Allied airmen.  By the time the Operation was officially ended, Vujnovich's team had airlifted 512 downed Allied airmen to safety without the loss of a single life or aircraft — a truly impressive accomplishment.

Captain George Vujnovich’s recognition as a hero and valued asset to this country and the United States Air Force is long over due. Frankly, had the records of the operation not remained sealed until 1997, I feel certain Captain Vujanovich would have received this honor years ago. Nevertheless, the decades do not and cannot diminish the valor and patriotism of this extraordinary man.  I ask all my colleagues to join me now to honor this Serbian-American hero, to thank him for his dedicated service to our country and to congratulate him for winning the Bronze Star. Captain Vujanovich, I salute you.

Army Master Sergeant Jeffrey Mittman Receives "Oz" Award

Posted by Dan Burton on November 19, 2010

Madam Speaker,

Today I rise to celebrate and honor the service of Army Master Sergeant Jeffrey Mittman for receiving the Osborne A. “Oz” Day AbilityOne Awareness Award.  The prestigious “Oz” Award is presented by the Committee for Purchase from People Who Are Blind or Severely Disabled to an employee at a federal agency who demonstrates exceptional service promoting the AbilityOne Program throughout the federal, state and local communities.

Now, the National Account Manager for the National Industries for the Blind’s Midwest Region, Master Sergeant Mittman supports a mission of employment for others with disabilities by promoting the AbilityOne Program through the federal procurement process in Indiana’s 5th Congressional District. This patriot’s story is a remarkable one, for his story does not start nor finish here with this award.

Master Sergeant Mittman’s indefatigable commitment to serve his fellow Americans began as a soldier in the United States Army in 1989. Having fought in Operation Desert Storm, Operation Desert Shield, Operation Enduring Freedom, and in 2003, Operation Iraqi Freedom, Master Sergeant Mittman was the All-American hero who never turned down defending his country. It wasn’t till his return to Iraq in 2005 as a special advisor to the Iraqi Department of the Interior, that he came face-to-face with death; changing his life forever.

Tragically, an improvised explosive device that exploded near his vehicle in Iraq, leaving Master Sergeant Mittman without a nose, lips, most of his teeth, and the majority of his vision. Since that time, he has endured more than 40 operations and spent over four years recovering physically and emotionally. To his great credit, he has traveled the country sharing the lessons he learned from these experiences with the world.

He is noted for saying it is the veteran who has to take that very first step to recovering and that he realized this after attending the Blinded Veterans Association Conference in 2006, where he met people who were blinded years ago who are now attorneys, teachers and business executives. After realizing life can be good in spite of having a disability, he decided to help others who also have disabilities find jobs and lead meaningful lives.

Master Sergeant Mittman, a 40-year old decorated warrior, husband of 17 years, father of two and outspoken military veteran was and forever will be an All-American hero whose determination and selflessness continue to serve our country and inspire our hearts. Today, we salute you.

Floor Speech: Rep. Burton to President Obama: Don't Waive These Sanctions On Iran

Posted by Joshua Gillespe on June 25, 2010

(Partial transcript)

"If I were talking to the President right now, I would remind him that Lord Chamberlain flew to Munich in the late 1930s and signed an agreement with Herr Hitler that led to 60 million people being killed in World War II. 60 million.

"We were not in the nuclear age at that time, but we still lost 60 million people in this world. We are now in the nuclear age and that’s why this legislation is so important.

"There are waivers in this bill and that really troubles me. I didn’t want there to be any waivers in this conference report, but they’re there. The President can waive these sanctions.

"And, I would just like to say if I were talking to the President, look at history, Mr. President. Look at what happened because of a weak-kneed approach back in the late 1930s that led to World War II, and don’t let that happen now.

"We need to let Ahmadinejad and the leaders in Iran know that we mean business, and that means don’t waive any of the sanctions we’re passing here today.

"You have the authority, but don’t do it.

"They’re building a nuclear weapon, everybody in the world knows it, and if a nuclear weapon is set off, millions will die. And, it could lead to a conflagration that would be worldwide in scope.

"So, I’d just like to say there are problems with this bill. I’d like to thank the Chairman and the Ranking Member for the hard work they’ve put into it. I wish those waivers weren’t there, but they are."

Burton To Obama: Don't Waive These Sanctions On Iran

Posted by John Donnelly on June 24, 2010

MEDIA ADVISORY                                                                        CONTACT: John Donnelly
June 24, 2010                                                                                         (317) 848-0201

Burton To Obama: Don't Waive These Sanctions On Iran

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Rep. Dan Burton (R-IN-05), Ranking Member of the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on the Middle East and South Asia, and conferee on H.R. 2194, the Comprehensive Iran Sanctions, Accountability, and Divestment Act of 2009, delivered the following remarks on the House floor today prior to the vote on the Iran Sanctions conference report:

(Partial transcript)

"If I were talking to the President right now, I would remind him that Lord Chamberlain flew to Munich in the late 1930s and signed an agreement with Herr Hitler that led to 60 million people being killed in World War II.  60 million.

"We were not in the nuclear age at that time, but we still lost 60 million people in this world.  We are now in the nuclear age and that’s why this legislation is so important. 

"There are waivers in this bill and that really troubles me. I didn’t want there to be any waivers in this conference report, but they’re there.  The President can waive these sanctions.

"And, I would just like to say if I were talking to the President, look at history, Mr. President.  Look at what happened because of a weak-kneed approach back in the late 1930s that led to World War II, and don’t let that happen now.

"We need to let Ahmadinejad and the leaders in Iran know that we mean business, and that means don’t waive any of the sanctions we’re passing here today.

"You have the authority, but don’t do it.

"They’re building a nuclear weapon, everybody in the world knows it, and if a nuclear weapon is set off, millions will die.  And, it could lead to a conflagration that would be worldwide in scope. 

"So, I’d just like to say there are problems with this bill.  I’d like to thank the Chairman and the Ranking Member for the hard work they’ve put into it.  I wish those waivers weren’t there, but they are."
...

To view the full speech, please visit: http://www.c-spanvideo.org/videoLibrary/clip.php?appid=598365052

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