THE UNTOLD STORY OF ROBERT MUELLER'S TIME IN COMBAT
ONE DAY IN the summer of 1969, a young Marine lieutenant named Bob Mueller arrived in Hawaii for a rendezvous with his wife, Ann. She was flying in from the East Coast with the couples infant daughter, Cynthia, a child Mueller had never met. Mueller had taken a plane from Vietnam.
After nine months at war, he was finally due for a few short days of R&R outside the battle zone. Mueller had seen intense combat since he last said goodbye to his wife. Hed received the Bronze Star with a distinction for valor for his actions in one battle, and hed been airlifted out of the jungle during another firefight after being shot in the thigh. He and Ann had spoken only twice since hed left for South Vietnam.
Despite all that, Mueller confessed to her in Hawaii that he was thinking of extending his deployment for another six months, and maybe even making a career in the Marines.
Ann was understandably ill at ease about the prospect. But as it turned out, she wouldnt be a Marine wife for much longer. It was standard practice for Marines to be rotated out of combat, and later that year Mueller found himself assigned to a desk job at Marine headquarters in Arlington, Virginia. There he discovered something about himself: I didnt relish the US Marine Corps absent combat.
So he headed to law school with the goal of serving his country as a prosecutor. He went on to hold high positions in five presidential administrations. He led the Criminal Division of the Justice Department, overseeing the US investigation of the Lockerbie bombing and the federal prosecution of the Gambino crime family boss John Gotti. He became director of the FBI one week before September 11, 2001, and stayed on to become the bureaus longest-serving director since J. Edgar Hoover.
And yet, throughout his five-decade career, that year of combat experience with the Marines has loomed large in Muellers mind. Im most proud the Marines Corps deemed me worthy of leading other Marines, he told me in a 2009 interview.
https://www.wired.com/story/robert-mueller-vietnam/
louis-t
(23,292 posts)"I was having too much fun partying, and my heel hurt, so I didn't go."
duforsure
(11,885 posts)Another phony smear campaign finding anyone that'll claim something bad about Robert Mueller, and if they can't find or bribe someone, they 'll just make up something to say bad about him soon. Sometimes they claims crimes against others to use and criminalize them with.
Eliot Rosewater
(31,109 posts)Guess what though.
lunasun
(21,646 posts)SWBTATTReg
(22,112 posts)all of us sat around the TV and watched the draft numbers being drawn (kind of a lottery system back then). The suspense and fear among all of us sitting there was very tangible. It was a scary time.
Thanks for posting article on Mueller. A good man.
MosheFeingold
(3,051 posts)I stood in line to volunteer for my adopted country's Army on December 9, 1941.
SWBTATTReg
(22,112 posts)do appreciate it. Take care and go w/ many blessings!!
mitch96
(13,890 posts)I think tRump would be a challenge but not as bad as Vietnam...No body is shooting at you!
I lucked out with the lottery with a stupid high number. All of my buddies growing up went into the military or were drafted...
dumb luck...
m
SWBTATTReg
(22,112 posts)In elementary school in Independence MO, we waved at Harry as he went on his daily walk outside our school. We also would be let out of school when other presidents or ex-presidents would come to see Harry. Good times when you could see him as a person and individual, taking his daily walks. This was one of the best periods of my life when I got to see so many presidents and ex-presidents coming to visit Harry.
MosheFeingold
(3,051 posts)I was not a Roosevelt fan at the time.
Given his effective acquiescence to the Shoa that has come to be confirmed lately, I REALLY am not a fan.