The Daily Weekly News, Politics, and Media

Afternoon Edition: We'll Buy You a Case
Posted May 21; 02:52 pm

Reverb Music & Nightlife

Death Cab Outsells Sinatra
Posted May 21; 03:44 pm

Voracious Food News and Reviews

What Do Yogis Eat?
Posted May 21; 03:20 pm

Thread Count Arts, People, and Style

Uh, That Nate Lippens Reading
Posted May 20; 02:14 pm

Buzzer Beater Seattle Sports

Two Distinctly Different Storms at KeyArena
Posted May 21; 08:33 am


Slideshows

Newsletters

Stay up-to-date with the Seattle Weekly. We'll e-mail you a detailed rundown of what's on seattleweekly.com once a week.

Signing up is simple and you can opt out anytime. Give it a try.

Web Feeds

Use one of the buttons below to subscribe to Seattle Weekly's full Web feed. Or choose from our full list of Web feeds.

- For Newsreaders

- For Home Pages

Free Classifieds Seattle, WA

Crippled Home Front

The Department of Veterans Affairs is being targeted for billions in cuts. Evidently, President Bush's support for the troops doesn't include their health care.

By Rick Anderson

April 9, 2003

Joe Hooper, a Medal of Honor winner who battled booze and died young.

The willingness with which our young people are likely to serve in any war, no matter how justified, shall be directly proportional to how they perceive the veterans of earlier wars were treated and appreciated by their nation.

—George Washington

War was his best moment and his worst. Visions of whistling bullets, airborne body parts, screams of the wounded—and that was a good day for Joe Hooper. The Medal of Honor winner and most decorated soldier in Vietnam would bolt upward in his Seattle bed, sweating booze from the night before. Those earlier appearances on national TV, the possibility of a Hollywood biopic, hanging out with Bob Hope and several presidents—that just churned him up more inside. The catlike, strawberry-haired 6-footer and former Washington state football scoring champ at Moses Lake High School had enlisted at age 19 because he admired the military.

Then came Vietnam. Staff Sgt. Joe Hooper, 29, of the 501st Airborne Infantry, killed at least 115 of the enemy—24 of them in a six-hour firefight, lobbing grenades into Viet Cong bunkers and wading through withering machine-gun fire to repeatedly rescue wounded American soldiers. Fourteen out of 189 survived. After treatment for his wounds, Hooper broke out of the hospital to return to his unit. Part American Indian, he said he could smell out the enemy, and thought he was born to go to Vietnam. His 37 medals were more than those earned by World War II's Audie Murphy and World War Is Alvin York—names that, unlike Hoopers, still ring familiar today. Like others of his era, he arrived home to accusations of being a baby killer. But thats not what eventually soured him on Vietnam. "At high schools, when I speak, the question kids most often asked me was, 'Would you do it again?'" he told me once. "I would, the reason being I thought my abilities helped save lives. But I would tell my children, if [we] were to do this over, 'Go to Canada. Dont fight a war you cant win.'"

For decades, vets say, theyve watched their benefits fade in tandem with the diminishing national consciousness of their earlier sacrifices.

In the end, it was Joe Hooper who needed to be rescued. From the day he left the service in 1974 with a $12,000 retirement check carried around in his shoe, his war was with himself and the bottle. Not all soldiers, including the many who were transported from the killing fields to home just a few days out of combat, had his agonizing psychological problems. Overwhelmingly, the average war veteran makes it through decompression to live a normal life. But Hooper wasnt average, nor was his war. ("Vietnam", says vet and psychologist Jim Goodwin, was uniquely "a private war of survival" by individual soldiers.) Hooper, with two children and a caring wife, was painfully arthritic and 60 percent disabled from his wounds. He sometimes toted around a gun when he boozed. "He drank hard, theres no denying that," Hoopers friend Larry Frank recalled. "But the VA couldnt deal with him drinking and running around, and thats exactly what the VA is there for, people with problems like Joe's". His binges lasted days, and sometimes he was carried out of Seattle bars by military buddies the way he carried the wounded over his shoulders in Vietnam. "When hed get on a tear," remembered Medal of Honor historian Don Ross of Kitsap County, "Bob Bush [another Medal of Honor winner from Olympia] and I would go after him. It was a constant battle." In between bouts, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) gave him a desk job counseling vets on benefits and then let him go due to "problems adapting to the bureaucratic environment." In 1979, five years out of his army boots, Joe Hooper was dead from a cerebral hemorrhage. He was 40. The VA eventually was reluctantly persuaded to name a wing of its medical center on Beacon Hill after him, and the Armys reserve center in Bothell now bears his name.

His death was said to be from natural causes. And that's what scares everyone to this day.

"He was a casualty of war, and you can expect more of the same after Iraq," says David Willson, a retired Green River Community College librarian, editor of Vietnam War Generation Journal, and a Vietnam vet who worked with Hooper on a collection of war literature. "Look at the history—this is a country made by war on the backs of vets who have never, ever been treated as promised." Hooper's story is a lesson on that failure, Willson says. "If we can't save our heroes, who can we save?"

More Patients, Less Money

Comments (0)

Reader Comments

No comments.

* indicates required fields. Please enable browser cookies before filling out this form. All reader comments are subject to our Terms of Use. By clicking Add Comment, you acknowledge that you have reviewed and agree to these Terms.




(Characters are case sensitive)

Comments may take a few moments to process and appear on the site. Please do not click the "Add Comment" button again while your comment is being added.

More "The War"

  • Who's Shooting Who? - How the U.S. Military strung along the family of a Fort Lewis soldier killed by "friendly fire." By Rick Anderson
  • The War Hits Home - As they laid Justin Hebert to rest, it was hard to square the death of the 20-year-old with what we know now about the invasion of Iraq. By Rick Anderson
  • Missile Defense: The Northwest Front
  • Over Our Heads - Should Seattle worry about rogue missile attacks, or the multibillion-dollar program being deployed to stop them? By Fred Kaplan
  • North Korea: Heads Up, Seattle - Kim Jong II may be a nut job, but he's a nuclear nut job. By Matt Rosenberg
More >>
Most 
Popular

now click this

Travel
Pacific Northwest Getaways

Seattle Home Search
1000's of Listings and Detailed Neighborhood Information

Seattle Weekly Online Career Fair!
Where People & Jobs Find Each Other.

Sound Living ®
Seattle Metro Real Estate


To Do List

Wednesday, May 21

Firoozeh Dumas
Whether hoarding just-ripened persimmons grown in her California neighborho... More>>
Seattle Central Library, Wed., May 21, 7:00pm

Mike Edison
Many journalists enter the biz under some false pretense that we will be no... More>>
Sunset Tavern, Wed., May 21, 7:00pm

Dorothy Rissman
Much to the chagrin of her Wallingford neighbors, Dorothy Rissman began dum... More>>
Fetherston Gallery, Daily from Mon., April 21 until Sat., May 24, 11:00am

135 more things to do today>>
Find a Restaurant

 
A work of love from charismatic man-about-town Waid Sainvil, Waid's is the only Haitian restaurant o...
Off the Delridge Way exit from the West Seattle Bridge, Skylark Cafe & Club is a genuine blue-collar...
The Northlake Tavern is proud to tell you that its small pie weighs more than two-and-a-half pounds ...
Entering Can Can is like walking into Moulin Rouge—not the Parisian tourist trap, the Baz Luhrmann m...
Find a Concert

Wednesday, May 21
Our Top Picks
Check out our Digital Jukebox!
Find a Movie

Find a Theater

Find a Club

The groan-inducingly named Thai One On in Lake City dims its lights and switches on the speakers at ...
Seattle resident Gabe Morgan was once in a constant mental, physical, and psychological battle with ...
I haven't eaten much steak this summer because I'm usually broke. When I discovered Ozzie's Wednesda...
Pure, unadulterated joy is the look permanently affixed to the face of a man doing the mambo to the ...
It's Saturday night between 10th and 11th on Pike Street, Capitol Hill's bustling new epicenter. The...
national

Headlines from Coast to Coast

SF Weekly

The Price of Truth

Deanna Johnson agreed to testify about a murder suspect. In return, she lost her home, her son, and her dog. More >>

Dallas Observer

Terrain of Grief

At the Gold Star Family Support Center, families of fallen soldiers will never be told they need to stop mourning. More >>

Houston Press

We Got Us a Convoy

Back in the good old days, truckers didn't need to carry chihuahuas in their cabs. More >>