|
|
Posted By Executive Director Maj. Gen. Jeff Phillips, U.S. Army Retired,
Thursday, January 18, 2024
|

(Above) Retired U.S. Army Col. Ralph Hockley receiving Legion of Honor from Consul General of France
Valérie Baraban, Nov. 17, 2021. Photo by Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum photographer Kim Leeson. (Below) Retired Col. Ralph Hockley, U.S. Army.
The “Passing West” of the Greatest Generation saw the passage onto hallowed memory Nov. 8 of retired U.S. Army Col. Ralph Martin Hockley, veteran of World War II and the Korean War, exemplar of the best in America, and longtime ROA member.
“Losing a loved one hurts a lot. My husband, our father, grandfather and great-grandfather was also important to many other people. He left his deep impression on many lives,” Col. Hockley's wife Carolyn wrote in his memorial program. The tribute was also written in French and German, two languages Ralph spoke fluently.
Born to a Jewish family in Karlsruhe, Germany, Oct. 17, 1925, Ralph grew up a European, educated classically and well. At nine, the Nazi scourge apparent, his family moved to Marseille, France.
At 14, as France fell into occupation, he worked in Marseille as an interpreter in his three languages for American Quakers there and as a link to the U.S. Consulate. Those contacts enabled his family to get visas and flee Europe for America in May 1941, a harrowing journey that included the release of his father from a German concentration camp and the crossing of the frigid Atlantic, then infested with U-boats.
I am reading the American correspondent Eric Sevareid’s superb 1946 autobiography, Not So Wild a Dream
. Sevareid was in France during the period the Hockley family was seeing the Nazi depredations against Jews that would become genocide; and as one must imagine, agonizing over what next to do.
Sevareid recounts how as a journalist he transitioned
from a “neutral” to a sobered realist; he returned to the States after the London Blitz of late 1940-early 1941, dismayed by the isolationism, ignorance of the war, and even pro-Nazi sentiment among his own people, shielded as they were from what he had experienced in France and England. Anyone who escaped occupied France or lived another day in besieged England had cheated death.
His family settled in New York, Ralph joined the U.S. military as soon as he could. “I could not wait to be part of the effort to bring to an end Hitler’s torture of Europe,” he wrote in his autobiography,
Freedom is not Free. He changed his name from Hockenheimer to Hockley. A nineteen-year-old American soldier, he stepped onto the continent in the closing weeks of the war, celebrating V-E Day on the Champs-Elysées and later visiting his French and German hometowns to thank neighbors who’d helped his family escape.
Using his fluency in French and German, as one of the Army’s “Ritchie Boys,
” many of them refugee Jewish soldier-linguists, he served in a more beneficent occupation than the one he’d fled, first as an intelligence special agent and then as a corporal in U.S. Army counterintelligence.
Ralph returned home in April 1946, his troopship passing the Statue of Liberty and a “mammoth” sign that read “Welcome Home – Well Done.”
“The obsession . . . to contribute to the disestablishment of the Hitler regime. . . had now been fulfilled. How close my immediate family and I had come to perishing from his madness. When it all began, I was a little German boy,” he wrote. “Twelve or thirteen years later, I was an American soldier and citizen, something that would otherwise never have happened.”
Next came Syracuse University on the GI Bill and a bachelor’s degree in political studies specializing in Russian area studies. Since returning from Germany, Ralph had stayed in the Army Reserve. Now came an opportunity to be commissioned. In May 1948, a year before graduating from Syracuse, he earned a commission as a second lieutenant in military intelligence.
While he had stepped into the second world war in its closing days, he entered the Korean War from its beginning. Now a field artillery officer with the 2nd Infantry Division, in August 1950 he saw combat in the
Battle of the Bowling Alley.
“Suddenly I saw a crouching enemy soldier coming toward us, holding an enormous old rifle with fixed bayonet,” he wrote. “[H]e was certainly no more than twenty-five feet downslope from me.” When his own carbine misfired, the young lieutenant “lost no time in grabbing my .45 automatic . . . and aimed it at the still advancing enemy. The .45 bullet stopped him cold. He had raised his rifle and was about to shoot when he got hit.”
In November, word reached his command that his father was gravely ill (he would die in June 1952); Ralph went home on emergency leave. He would return to war barely three months later. By his return home in December 1951, a first lieutenant, he had served in seven campaigns there, earning the Bronze Star with V-device for valor.
In his review of Ralph’s book appearing in the May 2022 issue of Reserve Voice Magazine
former ROA director of legislation and military policy Air Force Reserve Maj. Jonathan Sih wrote, “The defining moments of his military career were in the Korean War. The Korean War chapters . . . are detailed accounts of a soldier who was able
to see the war through so many different lenses: as an artillery forward observer, vehicle maintenance officer, back on the home front as he was spared from the Chinese advance in [autumn] 1950 due to a family emergency, and as a liaison officer
with French units fighting alongside the U.S. when he asked to return to Korea.
In November 2021, Colonel Hockley was awarded the highest French civilian award, the Legion d' Honneur
, and inducted as a Knight of the Legion of Honor for his service and contributions to France, particularly as a U.S. artillery forward observer with the French UN battalion during the Korean War Battle of Heartbreak Ridge in 1951. Ralph was presented
this award at the Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum by Consul General of France Valérie Baraban, who told Hockley he “could have taken advantage of the refuge offered to you by the United States, far from the barbarism which was unleashed
in Europe. But your courage and your sense of duty continued to guide you.”
The French Legion d’ Honneur requires French presidential approval; Colonel Hockley joins Audie Murphy, Sen. Daniel Inouye, and Gen. Colin Powell as other distinguished Americans inducted into knighthood.
After Korea, Ralph served out his regular Army time in military intelligence in Berlin. Returning home in 1955, he joined the Army Reserve. Moving to California, he met and married Eva Frankel, who was born in Berlin and escaped Europe as a child in 1941. He joined the federal Civil Service Commission as an investigator, retuning to West Germany and primarily focusing on East German activities during the early years of the Cold War. He would remain in West Germany nearly two decades, he and Eva raising there the couple’s children, Ralph and Denise.
A captain, Ralph saw at close hand the erection of the Berlin Wall. He was promoted to major in 1962, fulfilling his reserve commitments in West Germany. His promotion to lieutenant colonel came in 1969 and colonel five years later, serving as an individual mobilization designee for the deputy chief of counterintelligence, U.S. Army Europe and completing the Industrial College of the Armed Forces by correspondence. He retired from the Army in 1979.
Ralph, Eva, and their family returned to the States in 1981, settling in the San Francisco Bay area. There, in 1983, Eva died of heart trouble. Surmounting his devastation and urged on by his rabbi, Ralph rallied. He met Carolyn Harris later that year. They married in 1984, their new family now counting five children, with Carolyn bringing to the tribe Kris, Heidi, and Kirk (all Texas A&M grads).
Ralph was active in the Reserve Officers Association for decades; he had joined in 1948 as a second lieutenant and was president of the Frankfurt chapter during the Vietnam War. He was an active member of the ROA Department of Texas in Chapter 33 (Houston) and later in Chapter 18 (Dallas-Fort Worth). He led ROA’s support of the construction of the
Korean War Veterans Memorial on the National Mall. A true gentleman, he was known for his kind and generous temperament, and could be counted on to offer insights rich with the wisdom and perspective borne of his incomparable life experiences.
In addition to his other awards, Ralph earned a Meritorious Civilian Service Medal and the Department of the Army Meritorious Civilian Service Medal for his many years in a civilian capacity for the U.S. Army in Europe.
Col. Ralph Hockley led a full and impactful life founded on a legacy of service to the United States. To his dying day, he remained optimistic on his adopted country’s future and its role. “It behooves us Americans not to abuse our power,” he wrote in his book, “but to recognize our freedoms and good fortune and to help others to gain similar good fortune within the possibilities available to us.”
“What stands out in his story,” wrote former Undersecretary-General of the United Nations Jacques Paul Klein in his review of Ralph’s book, “is his indomitable spirit, humanism, and a basic decency which has been the hallmark of his life.” (A kindred spirit of Ralph and those like him who truly live life, Klein is
described as “A larger than life, cigar-smoking former U.S. State Department official and Air Force major-general who had previously led UN peacekeeping missions in Bosnia-Herzegovina and Croatia.”)
It is a paradox that the defining experience of Ralph’s adult life was the war he and others have called the “forgotten war.”
Yet in conquering his fears and serving his nation and his brothers there with valor, integrity, and distinction, he launched himself on a life certain to ensure that he shall himself never be forgotten.
>>> Go back to January RV
This post has not been tagged.
Permalink
| Comments (0)
|
|
|
Posted By Press Release: Exchange,
Wednesday, January 17, 2024
|

DALLAS –MILITARY STAR® wants to help military shoppers start the new year with savings. From Jan. 11 to Jan. 25, shoppers who open and use a new MILITARY STAR account will save 15% on all purchases made the first day instead of the usual 10% first-day discount. The savings can be combined with other MILITARY STAR offers, including everyday cardmember discounts such as: - 5 cents off every gallon of gas at Exchange fuel locations.
- 10% off food purchases at participating Exchange restaurants.
- Free shipping on online orders.
Shoppers also earn unlimited 2% rewards on purchases everywhere the card is accepted, including commissaries. “The first-day discount is just the beginning of savings with MILITARY STAR,” said Air Force Chief Master Sgt. Kevin Osby, the Army & Air Force Exchange Service’s senior enlisted advisor. “Everyday discounts and no annual, late or over-limit fees are some of the ways the card helps military shoppers save all year long.” MILITARY STAR offers the second-lowest APR among retail credit cards, regardless of credit score. Active-duty military members are eligible for additional benefits such as a 0%-interest Military Clothing plan for qualifying uniform basics and a reduced-interest deployment plan with no payments. The 15% discount applies to purchases made everywhere the MILITARY STAR card is accepted, including all exchanges, commissaries and online at ShopMyExchange.com, myNavyExchange.com and ShopCGX.com. Department of Defense civilians and retirees are eligible to apply for a card. All honorably discharged Veterans who have confirmed their eligibility to shop online at ShopMyExchange.com can use their MILITARY STAR card discount for online purchases. Rewards exclude Military Clothing Plan. The first-day discount is dependent on the application being approved and will be applied as a credit on the first monthly billing statement. For more information, visit https://aafes.media/milstarpa. Social-media-friendly version: MILITARY STAR’s new year’s resolution: Help you save money! Open and use a new MILITARY STAR card from Jan. 11 to 25 and save 15% on all-first day purchases. Keep the savings rolling all year long with the card’s everyday discounts. Read more: https://wp.me/p9Q7PG-2Be. — 30 — Since 1895, the Army & Air Force Exchange Service (Exchange) has gone where Soldiers, Airmen, Guardians and their families go to improve the quality of their lives by providing valued goods and services at exclusive military pricing. The Exchange is the 54th-largest retailer in the United States. 100% of Exchange earnings support military communities. In the last 10 years, your Exchange benefit has provided $3.5 billion in earnings for critical military Quality-of-Life programs. The Exchange is a non-appropriated fund entity of the Department of Defense and is directed by a Board of Directors. The Exchange is a 50th Anniversary Vietnam War Commemorative Partner, planning and conducting events and activities that recognize the service, valor and sacrifice of Vietnam Veterans and their families in conjunction with the United States of America Vietnam War Commemoration. To find out more about the Exchange history and mission or to view recent press releases please visit our website at http://www.shopmyexchange.com or follow us on Twitter at https://twitter.com/ExchangePAO.
>>> Go back to January RV
This post has not been tagged.
Permalink
| Comments (0)
|
|
|
Posted By Corporate Gray,
Monday, January 15, 2024
|
This post has not been tagged.
Permalink
| Comments (0)
|
|
|
Posted By ROA Staff,
Wednesday, December 27, 2023
|

With the Dec. 11 news that the Reserve Forces Policy Board will have new leadership under the Hon. Lisa S. Disbrow, former under secretary of the Air Force, and a retired Air Force Reserve colonel, the Reserve Organization of America extends congratulations to Colonel Disbrow and heartfelt gratitude to the board’s former chairman and lifetime public servant, retired Marine Corps Maj. Gen. Arnold Punaro. “No one knows more about America’s Reserve and National Guard than General Arnold Punaro,” said ROA’s executive director, retired Army Maj. Gen. Jeffrey E. Phillips. “A longtime friend to ROA and a mentor to me, General Punaro has made inestimable contributions to the nation both in and out of uniform. ROA thanks General Punaro for his lifetime of service to country and wishes him success in this next chapter of his rich story.” Punaro was the chairman of the RFPB, an independent advisory board to the secretary of defense on reserve component matters, comprising serving reserve component flag officers and distinguished civilian experts, for more than 10 years. As chairman, Punaro led more than 40 board meetings that included leaders from the military and private and public sector. These meetings culminated in 71 recommendations to the secretary of defense on how to enhance reserve component readiness, including duty status reform, total force integration, and total uniformed force benefits parity. From 2005 to 2008, he chaired the Independent Commission on the National Guard and Reserves, which provided nearly 100 recommendations on how to best organize, train, equip, compensate, and support the reserve components to meet national security needs. In uniform, Punaro served as the director and deputy commander of the Marine Corps Reserve, deputy commanding general, Marine Corps Combat Development Command (Mobilization), and for three years as the commanding general of the Fourth Marine Division. In 1990, Punaro was mobilized for Operation Desert Shield. In 1993, he completed an active-duty tour as commander of Joint Task Force Provide Promise (Forward) in the former Yugoslavia. He was mobilized for a third time in 2003 in support of Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom. He also served as an infantry platoon commander in Vietnam where he was awarded the Bronze Star with V Device for valor and the Purple Heart. From 1973 to 1997, Punaro worked as Sen. Sam Nunn’s director of national security affairs and then as staff director of the Senate Armed Services Committee. During his “combat tours” inside Washington’s beltway, Punaro engaged in the formulation of all major defense and intelligence legislation, the oversight and review of all defense policy and programs, and civilian and military nominations. Maj. Gen. Punaro’s leadership and expertise of the RFPB will be deeply missed. ROA looks forward to remaining in contact with this great public servant, and building on his legacy with a strong relationship with the RFPB under Chairman Lisa Disbrow’s leadership.
This post has not been tagged.
Permalink
| Comments (0)
|
|
|
Posted By Jake Fales, defense fellow, ROA,
Friday, December 22, 2023
|

The news of Rear Adm. Robert “Bob” Merrilees’ passing fills the Reserve Organization of America with deep sorrow. Merrilees was a man of service well-known for his dedication and commitment to others and the nation. After getting a bachelor of science and masters in public administration from American University in 1961, he enlisted in the U.S. Coast Guard Reserve. Commissioned in 1964 and promoted to flag officer in 1990, Merrilees’ passion for service led him to government work in his civilian life as well, at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida as their community relations officer. Known for being a “Coastie’s Coastguardsman,” Merrilees cared deeply for the service members under his command. He led with a steady hand in both the Pacific and Atlantic – at home and abroad. As commander of the Third Coast Guard District reserve inspection team, retired Capt. Henry Plimack, USN, remembers receiving an installation inspection from Merrilees during his time as commanding officer on Governors Island (then the Coast Guard’s largest installation). “After I introduced him to my unit, he asked me to leave, as he wanted to hear straight from the deck plates and not from the command,” said Plimack.
Merrilees’ dedication to serving the needs of the reserve components led him to various leadership roles within ROA. “The Admiral was always a mentor and a source of knowledge when I became chair of the Coast Guard Affairs Committee,” said ROA past national president, retired Coast Guard Capt. Bob Carmack. “Rear Admiral Merrilees will be deeply missed.” Merrilees also served as vice president of the Confederation of Interallied Reserve Officers and as the Coast Guard representative for the Reserve Forces Policy Board. During his time at CIOR, he was active abroad, even traveling as far as South Africa to facilitate their entry into the organization. While he may no longer be “with us,” his spirit and legacy will unquestionably live on in the hearts and minds of those who had the blessing of his friendship. “One memorable quote that sticks out to me is that Admiral Merrilees was ‘too nice’ to be a flag officer,” said retired Navy Capt. Gordon Austin, former ROA naval services vice president. “I never met anyone who didn’t like him.” “Our hearts go out to his wife Beverly, and his entire family,” said ROA’s executive director, retired U.S. Army Maj. Gen. Jeffrey E. Phillips. “Fair winds and following seas, Admiral Merrilees. You will be missed and revered for generations to come.”
>>> Go back to December RV
This post has not been tagged.
Permalink
| Comments (0)
|
|
|
Posted By Retired Col. Scott S. Russell, USAFR,
Friday, December 22, 2023
|

Denise and Phillip Sickinger, Texas Chapter 33 (Houston) represented ROA at the Army Reserve Yellow Ribbon event Dec. 9, 2023. There were approximately 350 attendees and they distributed 23 STARs schoolkits. Denise was also able to donate 48 pillowcases to deployers and their families.
>>> Go back to December RV
This post has not been tagged.
Permalink
| Comments (0)
|
|
|
Posted By Retired Col. Thomas J. Syracuse, Greater North Georgia Chapter,
Friday, December 22, 2023
|
Past National President Brig. Gen. William "Bill" Basnett, USAF (retired), celebrated his 90th birthday on Veterans Day, Nov. 11, 2023. His children hosted the event and he was joined by friends, family and fellow ROA members. 


>>> Go back to December RV
This post has not been tagged.
Permalink
| Comments (0)
|
|
|
Posted By Dept. of Defense,
Friday, December 22, 2023
|
The Department of Defense has released the 2024 Basic Allowance for Housing rates. Basic Allowance for Housing rates will increase an average of 5.4 percent when the new rates take effect on January 1, 2024. An estimated $27.9 billion will be paid to approximately one million Service members. While average BAH rates increased, different rental markets experience different market trends, and the 2024 BAH rates reflect those geographic market condition differences.
The Department collects rental housing cost data annually for approximately 300 military housing areas in the United States, including Alaska and Hawaii. The Basic Allowance for Housing rate-setting process relies on a wide variety of data sources (e.g., U.S. Census Bureau survey data, Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Price Index, commercial subscription rental cost databases, industry-leading online rental listing websites, and input from the Services and local military installation housing offices, among other sources) to obtain high-quality, accurate, current-year housing cost data.
Median market rents and average utilities (including electricity, heat, and water/sewer) comprise the total housing cost for each military housing area and are included in the Basic Allowance for Housing computation. Total housing costs are determined for six housing profiles (based on dwelling type and number of bedrooms) in each military housing area. Basic Allowance for Housing rates are then calculated for each pay grade, both with and without dependents, based on the housing choices of civilians with comparable incomes to each Service member pay grade grouping.
The 2024 Basic Allowance for Housing rates, as part of a robust military compensation package, continue the member cost-sharing element at five percent of the national average housing cost by pay grade. These amounts vary by grade and dependency status and range from $85 to $194 monthly for the 2024 rates. Even with this cost-sharing element, the overall military pay and benefits package remains competitive and healthy.
An integral part of the Basic Allowance for Housing program is the provision of individual rate protection to all members. No matter what happens to measured housing costs – including the out-of-pocket expense adjustment – an individual member who maintains uninterrupted Basic Allowance for Housing eligibility in a given location will not see his/her Basic Allowance for Housing rate decrease. This ensures that members who have made long-term commitments in the form of a lease or contract are not penalized if the area's housing costs decrease.
The Department is committed to the preservation of a compensation and benefit structure that provides members with an adequate standard of living to sustain a trained, experienced, and ready force now and in the future.
For more information on the Basic Allowance for Housing, including the 2024 Basic Allowance for Housing rates and 2024 Basic Allowance for Housing rate component breakdown, visit https://www.travel.dod.mil/Allowances/Basic-Allowance-for-Housing/. Service members can calculate their BAH payment by using the Basic Allowance for Housing calculator at: https://www.travel.dod.mil/Allowances/Basic-Allowance-for-Housing/BAH-Rate-Lookup/.
>>> Go back to December RV
This post has not been tagged.
Permalink
| Comments (0)
|
|
|
Posted By Reserve Organization of America,
Wednesday, December 13, 2023
|
The Reserve Organization of America commends the decision made Dec. 6 to ground all Osprey CV-22 aircraft pending operational safety investigations. The decision was announced just one week after ROA wrote to Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin calling for the aircraft’s immediate grounding. “ROA thanks the secretary of defense, and the secretaries of the Air Force, Navy, and Marine Corps for grounding the Osprey,” said ROA’s executive director, retired Army Maj. Gen. Jeffrey E. Phillips. “Ensuring the safety of this aircraft, and future tiltrotor capabilities, is vital to military readiness and the lives of our precious servicemembers. ROA looks forward to learning the results of these safety investigations. With their findings, we urge the Pentagon to be transparent with the American people who fund and furnish the crews for this aircraft.” ROA sent its Nov. 29 letter to Secretary Austin in direct response to the aircraft’s fatal crash in Japan, which claimed the lives of at least seven, and likely all eight, of the Air Force crew. “How many more young warriors will die and be injured,” Phillips wrote, “some horribly, before we admit the problem and do the right thing?” To date, 16 Ospreys have been damaged beyond repair in accidents that have killed more than 60 people. Four crashes killed 30 people during testing from 1991 to 2000. While some crashes have been attributed to pilot error, since the V-22 became operational in 2007, 12 crashes, including two in combat zones, and several other accidents and incidents have killed 33 people. In grounding the Osprey, the Pentagon has at last done right by its men and women in uniform and their families. Any resumption of the Osprey’s use must be prefaced by systemic fixes and not mere training directives to crews, such as we have seen, with disastrous effect. Future decisions regarding the use of this aircraft must be guided by a recognition that tiltrotor technology, while beguilingly advantageous, has yet to prove reliable.
The appearance of U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) visual information does not imply or constitute DoD endorsement. >>> Go back to January RV
This post has not been tagged.
Permalink
| Comments (0)
|
|
|
Posted By Reserve Organization of America,
Wednesday, December 13, 2023
|

The Reserve Organization of America offered its appreciation to Sen. Tommy Tuberville for lifting his hold, and to the Senate for approving more than 400 general and flag officer promotions Tuesday.
“Friction and contention in Congress is inherent in its design by the founders. Yet, ROA will work to ease such friction when our nation’s military readiness is at stake,” said ROA’s executive director, retired Army Maj. Gen. Jeffrey E. Phillips.
In September, ROA called on Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer to allow for one-by-one consideration of the remaining nominees to keep the process moving.
“ROA does not challenge the legitimacy of longstanding U.S. Senate procedures,” wrote Phillips. “ROA is focused on arriving at a solution.”
One proposed solution endorsed by ROA was S.Res.444, which would have enabled the Senate to approve most of the held nominations in bulk without unanimous consent. The resolution, introduced by the ranking member of the Senate armed services committee, Rep. Jack Reed (RI), passed the Senate rules and administration committee on Nov. 14.
ROA’s legislation and military policy director, Matthew Schwartzman, was present for the vote and met with the offices of every single committee member urging unanimous support.
“There were three words that [rules and administration committee] Chairwoman [Amy] Klobuchar brought up [in her remarks] that I want to put forward: improvise, adapt, and overcome. That’s exactly what Senate Resolution 444 does and that’s exactly why ROA endorses this proposal,” said Schwartzman in a video address from the hearing room.
While S.Res.444 did not receive a vote on the Senate floor, it has been stated that the resolutions passage prompted the lift on the hold.
While the Senate’s Tuesday vote represents real progress, thirty nominations remain. At least 11 are four-star officers.
ROA urges the majority leader to bring those nominations to the floor one-by-one, just as he did with the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, U.S. Army chief of staff, and U.S. Marine Corps Commandant.
While it remains unclear as to when the remaining nominees will be considered, what is clear is the importance of immediately approving them. So too is ROA’s commitment to ensuring military readiness and reassuring young officers that their nation values their service and supports their military careers.
The appearance of U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) visual information does not imply or constitute DoD endorsement.
This post has not been tagged.
Permalink
| Comments (0)
|
|