Captain Paul Bucha (United States Army – ret.).
Captain Bucha received the Medal of Honor for actions between March 16 and 19th, 1968. His citation:
He was a West Point graduate:
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Ross Perot hired him.
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Mr. Bucha later openly criticized Mr. Perot for exaggerating stories about his career and traveled around the country on behalf of President George H.W. Bush’s campaign for a second term. In 2008, Mr. Bucha was a foreign policy adviser to Barack Obama’s presidential campaign.
There was a point of consistency across his political stances, Ms. Whaley, his daughter, said: “He was a person who valued character and integrity.”
He served as president of the Congressional Medal of Honor Society from 1995 to 1999.
Though Mr. Bucha became well known for his Medal of Honor, he often appeared publicly without it.
“I never wear it if I’m giving a speech that might get political,” he told the Purple Heart Mission. The medal, he said, belonged not principally to him but to the men he had fought alongside, and he did not want to say anything while wearing it that they might have disagreed with.
Statement from the Congressional Medal of Honor Society. According to the society, there are 60 surviving recipients.