In June of ‘83, I returned to America after serving 4 1/2 years with the Army in Germany. At the time, the Post-Vietnam dislike of soldiers was still alive, a decade after the war. Returning to the States, I had a good experience at the airport that still gives me shivers today.

It’s different now and we as a country, or at least most of us, have learned to separate politics from the people serving in uniform. Back then? Post-Vietnam? We weren’t so great about how we treated our soldiers. I remember someone spitting at me as a cadet while walking in New York City in the mid-‘70s. In 1979, right before we first deployed to Germany, a woman from our church commented to my mom about how terrible it was that they as taxpayers had to pay for Cathy to go to Germany with me, and for us to be able to take some of our belongings with us. AND this was a woman from our church I’d know since I was a child.
Of course most family friends, and our close friends were great with us, but past that? Things were often ambiguous. None of this was as bad as soldiers put up with during Vietnam, but it would be years later before we (as a country) really learned to separate politics and our respect for our soldiers.
In June of ‘83, I turned over my Company Command in Stuttgart, Germany. I had a couple of weeks of additional work I needed to do, so Cathy flew back ahead of me. Finally it was time for me to go home and I flew on a commercial flight wearing civies. We landed at Dulles and I made my way to customs where the line seemed about a mile long. Several flights arrived at the same time, and the line wasn’t moving.
As I stood there, I noticed a young lady walking down the line looking at people in the line. Eventually she arrived in front of me and said “Are you in the Armed Forces?” I’m sure my short haircut and bearing probably gave me away.
I answered “Yes ma’am, the Army.” and she said “Follow me.”
I walked with her for quite awhile and we finally arrived at the front of the customs line. One of the stations opened up and she walked me over to it. The guy behind the counter looked at me and asked for my passport, or my military ID and orders, which I produced for him. He took a quick look, handed my papers back to me and then said, “Thank you for your service. Welcome home to the United States of America.”
I still get a shiver typing those words today. It was the first time someone went out of their way to thank me for what I was doing, and then welcomed me home to boot. It was such a little thing, but plainly had a huge impact on me. I remember it clear as a bell forty years later.
I’ve thought about this story lately. Probably since Panama in ‘89, and certainly since the First Gulf War, we’ve thanked our soldiers and shown respect for them. Unfortunately, an annual poll conducted last November by the Reagan Institute shows respect for the military dropping from 70% in 2017 to 48% in 2022. Much of the drop was attributed to people (from both sides) trying to politicize the military, or what the military was doing.
To be quite frank, most people today have no connection with our armed forces. Their sons and daughters aren’t in our military. If fact, over 70% of American youth today aren’t qualified for the military. They are overweight, or are doing illegal drugs, or are doing legal drugs that make them ineligible for military service. I fear that for many, saying thank-you is a cheap and easy way to feel good, while not really caring about our troops. Maybe I have that wrong, but I’m not so sure.
As time progresses, I’m hoping we as a nation can adult enough to remember to mentally separate politics and the soldiers serving in the military. I hope that we can take a couple of minutes to genuinely thank our troops. Not pro forma, but really thank them. We continue to owe them that much.
Addendum:
- in a side note, in the 4 1/2 years we were gone on that tour, I only made it back to the States once. That was to attend my sister Tanya’s wedding. When Roberta married the next year, we couldn’t afford another trip home. It was one of the many family events we would miss over the course of our almost 9 years overseas.
- Thanks to my wife Cathy for input to parts of this blog. As an Army wife, she too remembers those days. Like me, she is also concerned about the lack of connectivity between our society and our military today.
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I was traveling in uniform as a Navy Lieutenant to be the Best Man at my Naval Academy’s roommate’s wedding in San Francisco in 1967. I was flying space available so waited in the boarding area in the Charleston, SC airport for my flight for every once else to board. There was one other guy, a US Army guy heading to Vietnam. That was before Nam became a feature of every evening’s news program.
We were finally cleared to board and walked down to an empty row of three seats. We had just settled in, chatting about whatever, when I looked up and saw a father with two sons walking down the aisle towards us. I mentioned this to my new friend, we smiled to each other, grabbed our bags, and stood in the aisle to let the father and his sons in. We walked up the aisle to exit the plane and wait in the terminal for the next plane heading to San Fransico. We started to turn to exit the plane when the head stewardess asked if we could wait for a moment. We smiled and said something profound like, “Well, sure.” She put the intercom to the cockpit, smiled and said “Gentlemen, if you’d like, you can sit in two extra seats in First Class.” We smiled broadly and said something clever, like “Yes, ma’am!” And who should sit behind us, after serving the passengers, two stewardesses, who were happy to chat with us between their duties – as well as taking care of our, well, thirsts.
When we landed in San Francisco, we were, well, very relaxed. We disembarked last, and I somewhat steadily walked down the stairs to the tarmac to meet my roommate, his soon-to-be wife (who had been the college roommate of the woman who would become my wife a year later) and her mother and father. I shook hands with her father and her mother came in for a polite hug. She then said “I am so glad to meet you, Bob, I’ve heard some many things about you. And, you need a nap.”
Charleston was the site of a squadron of nuclear-powered submarines. My experiences, and the times, were so much different than yours.
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Great story Bob! Thank you for sharing!
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