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LIEUTENANT GENERAL
VICTOR H. KRULAK, USMC
(RETIRED)
Lieutenant
General Victor H. Krulak, who earned the
Distinguished Service Medal for exceptionally meritorious service of great
responsibility for service as Commanding General, Fleet Marine Force, Pacific,
from March 1964 to May 1968, was placed on the retired list 1 June 1968. A
ceremony, which marked the first time in Marine Corps history that all major
Marine Corps commands on the West Coast have joined forces for one occasion,
commemorated the general's colorful 34-year Marine Corps career which spanned
three wars, was held at Marine Corps Base, Camp Pendleton, California, 14 May
1968.
General
Krulak, a "paramarine"
during World War II, earned the Navy Cross and Purple Heart as a lieutenant
colonel on Choiseul Island, where his battalion
staged a week-long diversionary raid to cover the Bougainville invasion. His
citation states in part:
"Assigned
the task of diverting hostile attention from the movements of our main attack
force enroute to Empress Augusta Bay, Bougainville
Island, Lieutenant Colonel Krulak landed at Choiseul and daringly directed the attack of his battalion
against the Japanese, destroying hundreds of tons of supplies and burning camps
and landing barges. Although wounded during the assault on 30 October he
repeatedly refused to relinguish his command and with
dauntless courage and tenacious devotion to duty, continued to lead his
battalion against the numerically superior Japanese forces."
Victor Harold Krulak
was born in Denver, Colorado, 7 January 1913, and was commissioned a Marine
second lieutenant upon graduation from the U.S. Naval Academy, 31 May 1934. His first assignment after completing Basic
School at the Philadelphia Navy Yard was with the Marine
Detachment aboard the USS Arizona, followed by
an assignment at the U.S. Naval Academy.
In July 1936, Lieutenant Krulak joined the 6th
Marines at the Marine Corps Base, San Diego, California. The following March he
sailed with his unit for Shanghai, China, where he served with the 4th Marines
for two years as a company commander. While there, he was
promoted to first lieutenant in July 1937.
Lieutenant
Krulak departed China in May 1939. On his return to
the United States, he completed the Junior Course at Marine Corps Schools, Quantico,
in June 1940, and was appointed Assistant to the Brigade Quartermaster, 1st
Marine Brigade, Fleet Marine Force. He was promoted to
captain in August 1940. With the 1st Marine Brigade (later the 1st Marine
Division), Captain Krulak embarked for Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in October 1940, where he was a
company commander. Returning to Quantico in April 1941, he served on the staff
of General Holland M. Smith, then Commanding General of Amphibious Corps,
Atlantic Fleet. He was serving in this capacity when World War II broke out. In
May 1942, he was promoted to major.
Major
Krulak moved with the staff of the Amphibious Corps
to San Diego in September 1942 and continued as Aide to the Commanding General
and as Assistant G-4 until January 1943, when he volunteered for parachute
training. He completed training and was designated a parachutist on 15 February
1943. The following month he sailed for the Pacific area and at New Caledonia
took command of the 2d Parachute Battalion, 1st Marine Amphibious Corps. He was
promoted to lieutenant colonel in April 1943, and went into action that
September at Vella, Lavella
with the Second New Zealand Brigade.
That
October, Lieutenant Colonel Krulak commanded the divesionary landing on Choiseul
to cover the Bougainville invasion, during which action he earned the Navy
Cross for extraordinary heroism and the Purple Heart for wounds received in
combat. He returned to the United States in November 1943, served in the
Division of Plans and Policies, Headquarters Marine Corps, until October 1944, then went overseas again. Overseas, Lieutenant Colonel Krulak joined the newly-formed 6th Marine Division as
Assistant Chief of Staff, G-3 (Operations). For outstanding service in the
planning and execution of the Okinawa campaign, he was awarded the Legion of
Merit with Combat "V." He also
received
the Bronze Star Medal at the war's end for his part in negotiating the
surrender of Japanese forces in the Tsingtao, China
area.
Returning
to this country in October 1945, Lieutenant Colonel Krulak
reported to Quantico as Officer in Charge of the Research Section, and
subsequently became Assistant Director of the Senior School. He left Quantico
in June 1949 for Camp Pendleton, where he served as Regimental Commander of the
5th Marines, 1st Marine Division. He was promoted to colonel in August 1949.
Ordered to Pearl Harbor in June 1950, Colonel Krulak
was serving as Assistant Chief of Staff, G-3, Fleet Marine Force, Pacific, when
the Korean conflict began. In the
ensuing
year, his duties took him many times to the battlefront, and during the latter
half of 1951, he remained in Korea as Chief of Staff of the 1st Marine
Division. He earned a second Legion of Merit with Combat "V" in that
capacity, and was awarded the Air Medal for
reconnaissance and other flights in Korea between August 1950
and July 1951.
Colonel
Krulak remained in Korea until November 1951, then returned to Washington for duty at Headquarters Marine
Corps as Secretary of the General Staff, until June 1955. In August 1955, he
rejoined Fleet Marine Force, Pacific, at Pearl Harbor, serving as Chief of
Staff. He was promoted to brigadier general in July 1956, and at the time
assumed duties as Assistant Division Commander, 3d Marine Division, on Okinawa.
On
his return to the United States in July 1957, General Krulak
became Director of the Marine Corps Educational Center, Quantico. While at Quantico, he was promoted to major general in November
1959.
The
following month, General Krulak assumed command of
the Marine Corps Recruit Depot, San Diego. In February 1962, he relinguished his command in San Diego, and assumed duty as
Special Assistant for Counterinsurgency and Special Activities, Organization of
the Joint Chiefs
of
Staff. For exceptionally meritorious service in this capacity from February
1962 until his detachment in February 1964, he was awarded a Gold Star in lieu
of his third Legion of Merit.
General
Krulak assumed command of Fleet Marine Force,
Pacific, with the rank of lieutenant general, at Camp H.M. Smith, Hawaii, 1
March 1964, and served in this capacity until he retired from active duty 31
May 1968. The general's medals and decorations include: the Navy
Cross,
the Distinguished Service Medal, the Legion of Merit with Combat "V"
and two Gold Stars in lieu of second and third awards, the Bronze Star Medal,
the Air Medal, the Purple Heart, the Presidential Unit Citation with three
bronze stars indicative of second through
fourth
awards, the China Service Medal with one bronze star, the American Defense
Service Medal with Base clasp, the American Campaign Medal, the Asiatic-Pacific
Campaign Medal with three bronze stars, the World War II Victory Medal, the
Navy Occupation Service Medal with
Asia
clasp, the National Defense Service Medal with one bronze star, the Korean
Service Medal with four bronze stars, the Vietnam Service Medal, the United
Nations Service Medal, the Korean Order of Service Merit second class, the
Republic of Vietnam National Order Medal
third
class, the Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross with Oak Leaf Cluster, two
Korean Presidential Unit Citations, and the Republic of Vietnam Campaign Medal.