WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Ash Carter and congressional leaders thanked Vietnam War veterans for their service and presented pins to dozens of veterans at a Capitol ceremony Wednesday that marked 50 years since U.S. ground troops arrived in Vietnam.
House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and other legislative leaders attended the ceremony. A day earlier, President Barack Obama held an unprecedented meeting with the head of Vietnam’s Communist Party as the U.S. pressed to conclude talks on a groundbreaking Asia-Pacific economic pact.
The Vietnam War taught Americans many lessons, “many hard-won, some difficult to swallow,” Carter said. “But all of them have made us a better country and a better military.”
Two lessons in particular are important to remember, Carter said. “First, we leave no one behind,” he said. While the U.S. is not the only military with that ethos, “there are few that have such a steadfast and sustained commitment, which is about more than raising the iconic POW-MIA symbol up on the flagpoles around the nations. It’s about the promise we make and we work hard to keep.”