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Medal of Honor: Jay R. Vargas

Posted: Tuesday, October 09, 2007 10:00 AM by Daily Nightly Editor
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Every weekday for 110 straight days we will feature a different living recipient of the Medal of Honor. These are the men who have received their nation's highest military honor. Brian is a board member of the Congressional Medal of Honor Foundation. The words and photos are courtesy of Artisan Books, publishers of Medal of Honor: Portraits of Valor Beyond the Call of Duty by Peter Collier with photographs by Nick Del Calzo.

Jay R. Vargas
Captain, U.S. Marine Corps Company G, 2nd Battalion, 4th Marines, 9th Marine Amphibious Brigade

The son of immigrants—an Italian mother and Hispanic father—Jay Vargas had two older brothers who fought at Iwo Jima and Okinawa in World War II, and a third who fought in Korea. Vargas himself got as far as the Class A Portland team in the Los Angeles Dodgers farm system in the early 1960s before he realized he probably wouldn’t make it as a big-league baseball player. He decided to play for the Marines instead.

By 1968, Captain Vargas was in command of Company G of the Fourth Marines in Vietnam. On April 29, his unit, positioned along the demilitarized zone separating North and South Vietnam, was the last American element in the area. It was supposed to be lifted out, but when the helicopters came under heavy fire, Vargas’s men had to march to base camp during the night. Along the way, hundreds of enemy artillery rounds burst around them, but the impact of the shells and the spray of shrapnel were partially absorbed by the soft muddy soil of the rice paddies, and everyone made it back to base without serious injury.

The next day, although they hadn’t slept for thirty-six hours, Vargas and his men were loaded onto landing craft and taken down the Bo Dieu River to an area around the village of Dai Do where two other Marine companies were in a battle with a North Vietnamese Army regiment. Company G went ashore at about one in the afternoon. Vargas had been ordered to attack across seven hundred yards of open ground; the company made it about one third of the way before the NVA opened fire. When one of Vargas’s platoons was pinned down at a hedgerow by machine guns and mortar and artillery rounds, he hurried toward it with a reserve platoon. Although wounded by a grenade, he took out three machine-gun positions by himself. Company G finally entered the village in the afternoon and engaged in hand-to-hand fighting with enemy soldiers popping up from spider holes and out of abandoned huts.

Vargas thought he had secured Dai Do when suddenly the NVA launched a massive counterattack. Taking cover in the village cemetery, Company G dug up fresh graves, tossed out the bodies, and used the holes for cover. The fight raged through the night.

The next morning, the bodies of more than three hundred enemy soldiers lay near their position. Vargas’s battalion commander arrived on the scene and ordered a renewed assault on the village. Low on ammunition, Company G pistol-whipped, stabbed, and beat the enemy with rifle butts. Vargas killed a North Vietnamese soldier with his knife. He carried to safety a Marine whose arm had been severed, and when the soldier pleaded for his arm, Vargas went back and found it. When the battalion commander, fighting like any other rifleman, was shot in the back three times, Vargas dragged him a hundred yards to an evacuation point, firing at the enemy as he went with an AK-47 he had picked up on the battlefield. By the end of the third day of battle, the North Vietnamese melted away and Vargas finally allowed himself to be treated for a bullet wound in his side and shrapnel from mortar blasts.

Jay Vargas received the Medal of Honor from President Richard Nixon on May 14, 1970. After the ceremony, his father struck up a conversation with the president.  The next day, the senior Vargas disappeared for several hours.  When he returned and his son asked him where he’d been, he replied nonchalantly that the president had asked him to come to the White House and have a sandwich with him.

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When we read something like this, how can Americans have a negative attitude about Iraq?  Such bravery and adrenalin...during our age, that is what you did, respected your president, your country, love of freedom, honor, prayers, flags, unity, respect for others, and the God given right to protect ourselves.  Had it not been for 9/11, we would not be in this situation...a bunch of so called "religious" men who will go to purgatory for what they did, thinking that they would receive rewards in heaven.  God is love, not hate.  Thank you Captain Vargas for all you have done for your country.
Captain Jay R. Vargas, one really resilient and brave soldier. He withstood quite an ordeal between the hand to hand combat and helping his fellow soldiers. I liked his statement to his son about the President asking him to the White House for a sandwich. We salute his service to our country.
Thank you Captain Vargas, I salute your fortitude and leadership abilities. I am grateful to learn of your heroic selfless reactions that I am sure you have since performed in countless ways in your everyday life, just not with the NVA and mortars breathing down your neck!
Thank you Brian Williams for the focus on these wonderful and yet everyday Americans.
For me and the other Marines of 2/4 who were there, it's simply known as "Dai Do." In three days and nights fighting thousands of NVA trying to attack the 3MARDIV headquarters at Dong Ha, I think we lost 81 KIA and 390 wounded. On the third night, there were only about 75 of us left out there in a small defensive perimeter when we were hit with a heavy motar attack that wounded 30. I was the last Marine on the last medivac chopper out of Dai Do. It wasn't until 30 years later I learned that Lt. Col. Bill Weise, our battalion CO, had survived his Day 2 wounds, and that Capt. Jay Vargas and Capt. Jim Livingston had been awarded Medals of Honor. (I've heard that a third MOH was awarded to a medivac pilot for heroism in that same battle.) They and every other Marine at the little-known Dai Do battle earned all the recognition they got by the courage and tenacity they showed there. I hope somebody does a documentary on Dai Do someday. Thanks to NBC for doing this series.  Semper Fi.
i have personaly meet Jay a few times and he is just like the story says a super person, a great guy.
Iknew Junior vargas in Arizona.  I was from Flagstaff,he from Winslow.  Rivals!!!!!!!!!!  He struck me out in an all star little league game.  The S.O.B.  It dosen't surprise me that he did what he did. I think all of us from that part of the country are dammed proud of him(regardless if he came from Winslow or not)  Gracias, Junior
Iknew Junior vargas in Arizona.  I was from Flagstaff,he from Winslow.  Rivals!!!!!!!!!!  He struck me out in an all star little league game.  The S.O.B.  It dosen't surprise me that he did what he did. I think all of us from that part of the country are dammed proud of him(regardless if he came from Winslow or not)  Gracias, Junior
I was in the 2nd Battalion 4th Marines during Dai Do, but I just arrived in country.  I was in Btn. S-1 and once Captain Vargas entered and began chatting with a friend of mine; another Corporal there.  When he left, I asked the Corporal who he was, and the response was, "Oh, that was Captain Vargas."  I feel so ashamed for not knowing and not calling every Mrine to attention upon this fine, wonderful Marine Officer's first entry into our field office.  That still bothers me till this day.  BTW, his wounds were a lot worse than one can imagine.  I think that he will limp forever whenever he walks.  Two Reinforced Regiments of well equipt NVA were turned back from Dai Do and that kept them from over-running the 3rd Mar Div Headquarters in Dong Ha.  All we got out of it was a Navy Unit Citation.  That's because the Commanding General in Dong Ha never really knew what had happened.  Thanks to great Marines like Captain Vargas, Captain Livingston, LtCol Weise, and all of them . . . Many of them paid the ultimate price!  God Bless the 2nd Battalion, 4th Marines, 2nd to None, The Magnificent Bastards in Vietnam!!  
The unknown part of a soldiers war is war within a soldiers/marines heart long after the last shot is fired.  Memories of lost youth and living in a nation that has little idea of what goes on in war other then the verbs. Americans learn about war between 1 minute news about Britney Spears and 30 second discussion of hemorrhoid relief.

I knew superficially knew Vargas when he was stationed in Hawaii. I was in 2nd Bn. 4th Marines at Con Thein in Vietnam before he arrived I was wounded and sent back to the states. Those not killed or wounded were either killed or wounded at Dai do.  2nd Bn won 4 Congressional Medals of Honors in six months.
Reading this story about our nation's TRUE heroes, such as CPT VARGAS, makes me ashamed to have a President who feels compelled to constantly apologize for our nation's commitment to (and sacrifices for) freedom.  Not to mention our willingness to lay down our lives for those who cannot fight off evil themselves. God Bless CPT Vargas. I've heard through the grapevine that he is battling cancer?
capt Jay Vargas is probably one of the best people i ever did a report on. he cared about the nation by doing whats right and having self-control.
I was assigned to 3/9 when it was attached to 7th Marines at Pendleton. Col. Vargas was our Regimental CO he was a big football fan, I played nose guard for our team, when ever I walked by HQ he would holler out the window "Get up here you big wuss" and I would go up there and we would talk about football for awhile.  He was a great CO, who could inspire his men.  I felt proud to serve under him

Former SSGT John Baltierra
Junior Vargas was a very popular kid in high school.  But his mother is or should be a story in herself.  A unique and brave person in her own right.  Junior was her pride and joy being the youngest.
The Battle at Dai Do and vicinity, is detailed at great length in an incredible account of the bravery and sacrifice made by our soldiers (HEROES ALL). The book, = The Magnificent Bastards: The Joint Army-Marine Defense of Dong Ha 1968 =, by the late author, Keith W. Nolan (whose detailed accounts and efforts at accuracy I shall miss greatly), is available in reprint (or maybe a local library). I own all of his books, and this is a true homage to those that give us so much.    
I was in 3/7 from 1984-thru 1986. Colonel Vargas was my Regimental Commander. I was proud to be under his command not only because he was a monority officer (and there were very few)but because he was a real Marine. I wish him the best!


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