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[Pages S2681-S2682]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING LIEUTENANT COLONEL RICHARD ``DICK'' COLE
Mr. INHOFE. Madam President, today I wish to honor Lieutenant Colonel
Richard ``Dick'' Cole, of the United States Air Force, who was the last
living link of the Doolittle Raiders and passed away on April 9 at the
age of 103. The Doolittle Raiders were comprised of 80 heroic U.S. Army
Air Forces airmen who flew 16 modified B-25 Mitchell bombers off the
USS Hornet aircraft carrier on the first Allied retaliatory strike on
the Japanese Home Islands, just a few months after Pearl Harbor.
In an age before midair refueling and GPS, the USS Hornet weighed
less than a quarter of today's fortress-like aircraft carriers. With
then-Lt. Cole as the copilot to then-Lt. Col. Jimmy
[[Page S2682]]
Doolittle, the B-25 Mitchell bomber #40-2344, would take off with only
467 feet of takeoff distance. This audacious and unprecedented raid was
a one-way mission against enormous odds. What made the mission all the
more challenging was a sighting by a Japanese patrol boat that prompted
the task force commander, U.S. Navy Adm. William Halsey, to launch the
mission more than 650 nautical miles from Japan, 10 hours early and 170
nautical miles farther than originally planned. Flying at wavetop level
around 200 feet with their radios turned off, Cole and the Raiders
avoided detection for as much of the distance as possible. In groups of
two to four aircraft, the bombers targeted dry docks, armories, oil
refineries, and aircraft factories in Yokohama, Nagoya, Osaka and Kobe,
as well as Tokyo itself. The Japanese air defenses were so caught off
guard by the Raiders that little anti-aircraft fire was volleyed and
only one Japanese Zero followed in pursuit. With their bombs delivered,
the Raiders flew towards safety in nonoccupied China, but had to bail
out when their aircraft ran out of fuel.
The bombing mission sent a message that America was ready to fight
back, and bolstered spirits on the home front. Lt. Col. Cole remained
in the China-Burma-India Theater flying combat and transport missions
from May 1942 to June 1943, followed by service with the 5th Fighter
Group in Tulsa, OK, from June to October 1943. He retired from the Air
Force on December 31, 1966, as a command pilot with more than 5,000
flight hours in 30 different aircraft, amassing more than 250 combat
missions and more than 500 combat hours. His decorations include the
Distinguished Flying Cross with two oakleaf clusters; Air Medal with
oakleaf cluster; Bronze Star Medal; Air Force Commendation Medal; and
Chinese Army, Navy, Air Corps Medal, Class A, First Grade. All
Doolittle Raiders were also awarded the Congressional Gold Medal in May
2014.
In his final years, Lt. Col. Cole remained a familiar face at Air
Force events in the San Antonio area and toured Air Force schoolhouses
and installations to promote the spirit of service among new
generations of airmen. On September 19, 2016, Lt. Col. Cole was present
during the naming ceremony for the Northrop Grumman B-21 Raider, named
in honor of the Doolittle Raiders. While he may have slipped the surly
bonds of earth to reunite with his fellow Raiders, his legacy will
forever live on in the hearts and minds of Americans.
On behalf of my colleagues in the U.S. Senate, I wish to offer our
eternal thanks to Lt. Col. Cole and our condolences to his family. May
we never forget the courage and honor of the Doolittle Raiders.
____________________