Eugene "Red" McDaniel - President
On 19 May 1967, while on his 81st
combat mission over North Vietnam, Eugene "Red" McDaniel was shot down while
flying his A-6 Intruder aircraft. He was listed as "missing in action"
until 1970, when the Hanoi government acknowledged that he was being held prisoner.
A POW for more that six years, McDaniel was released 4 March 1973, after the Vietnam
cease-fire.
Red McDaniel was one of the most brutally tortured prisoners of the Vietnam War.
This torture resulted from his active role in camp communications during an organized
escape attempt by his fellow prisoners. He is the author of Scars
and Stripes, a book telling about his six years in a communist prison.
When Red McDaniel returned home from
Vietnam, he was awarded the Navy's highest award for bravery, the Navy Cross. Among
his other military decorations are two Silver Stars, the Legion of Merit with Combat
"V", the Distinguished Flying Cross, three Bronze Stars with Combat
"V", and two Purple Hearts for wounds received at the hands of the North
Vietnamese torturers.
Captain McDaniel resumed active duty
and served as Commanding Officer of USS Niagara Falls and
Commanding Officer of the aircraft carrier USS Lexington. Under his
command, Lexington experienced no serious accidents while accomplishing more than 20,000
carrier landings.
Red McDaniel served as Director of
Navy/Marine Corps Liaison to the U.S. House of Representatives from 1979 to 1981. In
this capacity, Captain McDaniel worked daily with Congress on national defense planning
and provided legislators with information vital to the strategic development of Navy
forces throughout the world. He retired from the Navy in 1982.
Today, Captain "Red"
McDaniel is President of the American Defense Institute, a non-profit
organization headquartered in Washington, D.C. He founded ADI to increase public
awareness of the need for a strong national defense.
To contact Captain McDaniel, write
to him at his email address: ebm1@americandefinst.org
.