Posted by
Dan Sebby on Thursday, January 01, 2009 3:36:53 PM
From today's Los Angeles Times:
Nicknamed 'Brute,' Krulak was a decorated World War II hero and the author of a history of the Marines titled 'First to Fight.'
By Tony Perry
December 31, 2008
Retired Marine Lt. Gen. Victor H. "Brute" Krulak, celebrated for his
leadership in World War II, Korea and Vietnam and for his authoritative
book on the Marines, "First to Fight," died Monday at Scripps Memorial
Hospital La Jolla. He was 95 and had been in declining health for
several years.
In
a career that spanned three decades Krulak displayed bravery during
combat and brilliance as a tactician and organizer of troops.
"Brute
was very forgiving of young Marines who made mistakes," said retired
Col. G.I. Wilson, a combat veteran. "But he was hell on senior officers
who preferred careerism and bureaucracy over decisive action. He
detested those who lost sight of looking after their enlisted Marines
and young officers."
Born in Denver on Jan. 7, 1913, Krulak was
a 1934 graduate of the Naval Academy -- where he picked up his
nickname, a jest on the fact he was 5 foot 4. As a junior officer he
served in Marine actions in Central America, where his views on
counterinsurgency were formed.
In World War II, as a lieutenant
colonel, he led a battalion in a weeklong battle as a diversionary raid
to cover the invasion of Bougainville. Although wounded, he refused to
be evacuated. For his bravery he was awarded the Navy Cross.
Under
heavy fire from the Japanese, the Navy sent patrol boats to evacuate
wounded Marines. Krulak befriended one of the young commanders, John F.
Kennedy. Decades later the two shared a drink of whiskey in the Oval
Office after Kennedy was elected president.
After World War II,
Krulak held several key jobs, including commander of the 5th Marine
Regiment and later chief of staff for the 1st Marine Division during
the war in Korea. Later he served as commander of the Marine boot camp
in San Diego and, from 1962 to 1964, as special assistant for
counterinsurgency to the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
As commanding general of Fleet Marine Force Pacific he made 54 trips to Vietnam.
His
ideas about mining Haiphong Harbor and relying on small unit actions in
South Vietnam to win the support of the populace clashed with the
strategy of Army Gen. William C. Westmoreland, commander of all U.S.
troops from 1964 to 1968. He opposed Westmoreland's decision to
establish an outpost at Khe Sanh, which resulted in one of the
bloodiest sieges of the war.
Krulak had hoped to become Marine
Corps commandant, but President Johnson in 1968 nominated Gen. Leonard
Chapman Jr. Krulak retired and began a second career as an executive
for Copley newspapers and as a columnist. He retired as an executive in
1977 but continued to write.
In 1984, his book "First to
Fight: An Inside View of the U.S. Marine Corps" was published,
examining the history and culture of the Marine Corps. It remains on
the official reading list for Marines and has been said to carry the
DNA of the organization that prides itself on being the worst enemy
that a foe of the United States can imagine.
"The Marines are an
assemblage of warriors, nothing more," Krulak wrote. He called on
Marines to maintain a "religious dedication" to being ready to "go and
win -- and then come back alive." He disdained Pentagon bureaucracy
and, even as he celebrated the Corps' history, he called for Marines to
"remain on the cutting edge of the technology that will keep its
specialty effective."
Bing West, former assistant secretary of
defense in the Reagan administration and author of books on Marines in
Vietnam and Iraq, said Krulak "was legendary for the depth of his
intelligence."
In a 2007 speech to the Marine Corps Assn.,
Defense Secretary Robert Gates praised Krulak for "overcoming
conventional wisdom and bureaucratic obstacles thrown in one's path."
Among other things, Krulak advocated that the Marines form a special
forces unit when other Marine leaders opposed the idea.
All
three of Krulak's sons served in Vietnam: Charles and William as Marine
infantry officers, Victor Jr. as a Navy chaplain. After retiring from
the Marines, William followed his brother into the Episcopal clergy.
Charles,
as a general, served as Marine commandant from 1995 to 1999, and
followed in his father's footsteps as an innovator and champion of the
enlisted man. Along with his sons, Krulak is survived by four
grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren.
Krulak's wife, Amy, died in 2001. Funeral services are set for 2 p.m. Jan. 8 at the chapel at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar.