[Congressional Record Volume 152, Number 87 (Thursday, June 29, 2006)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages E1319-E1320]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SILVER STAR MEDAL PRESENTED TO DONALD F. FULTON
______
HON. GEORGE MILLER
of california
in the house of representatives
Thursday, June 29, 2006
Mr. GEORGE MILLER of California. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to invite
my colleagues to join me in recognizing Major Donald F. Fulton, USAF
Ret., a resident of Vacaville, California, who has been awarded the
Silver Star
[[Page E1320]]
Medal for extraordinary gallantry in action while on a combat mission.
The incident took place on August 14, 1969 when Maj. Fulton was serving
in the United States Air Force as a Forward Air Controller, FAC, while
supporting classified combat operations in Laos during the Vietnam War.
Approval was announced by the Department of the Air Force for the award
of the Silver Star Medal, the nation's third highest award for valor,
to Donald F. Fulton.
Don Fulton is a native of New York City, NY, and has lived in the
Vacaville, CA, area since 1975. He graduated from Point Lorna Nazarene
University in 1965.
As a captain in the U.S. Air Force, he served as a FAC while assigned
to Pleiku Air Base, Republic of Vietnam, with the 20th Tactical Air
Support Squadron, TASS. On August 14, 1969, Captain Fulton was the
pilot of a lightly armed observation aircraft (0-2) and was
participating in aerial flight deep inside Laos in support of Military
Assistance Command--Vietnam, Studies and Observation Group, MAC-V SOG,
Command and Control Central (CCC). Operating under call sign Covey 538,
Captain Fulton coordinated Tactical Air Support for an eight-man
Special Operations Strategic Reconnaissance Team while it conducted
Operation Sad Sam, a raid on a major North Vietnamese Army unit
headquarters. Recon Team New York was subsequently heavily engaged by a
North Vietnamese Infantry Regiment and was immobilized with casualties
and surrounded at dusk in mountainous rain forest. With a low ceiling
and heavy rain approaching, and no tactical air support immediately
available, Captain Fulton, firing marking rockets and an M-16 rifle,
made numerous aerobatic, treetop level attacks on the enemy forces.
During these passes, he was subjected to heavy fire from small arms,
12.7mm heavy machine guns, rocket propelled grenades and 23mm and 37mm
antiaircraft weapons, inflicting substantial battle damage to his
aircraft. His actions forestalled enemy attacks on the besieged Recon
Team, until tactical air support could arrive. Subsequently, Captain
Fulton directed the air assets in attacking the enemy and in conducting
a night extraction of the Reconnaissance Team during a heavy rainstorm,
while his fuel level dropped to near empty.
In his recommendation for the award of the Silver Star to Major
Fulton, Lieutenant Colonel Edward Wolcoff, U.S. Army, Ret., stated that
the ``operation resulted in the discovery of a major enemy headquarters
and nearby main force bivouacs and fortifications, which were subjected
to aerial attack and subsequently ground attack by an exploitation
force from CCC, whereby the enemy sustained heavy losses and was forced
to abandon the complex. The Sad Sam operation and subsequent ground
operation caused the enemy to reinforce security in its sanctuary area
at the expense of main force units, and its order of battle in South
Vietnam was decremented.''
Major Donald Fulton is also the recipient of the Distinguished Flying
Cross, the Meritorious Service Medal and the Air Medal with eight Oak
Leaf Clusters.
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