Air-Minded: A Valuable Lesson

Alexander Butterfield. Now that’s a name I’ve not heard in a long time.

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It’s not a name Americans should quickly forget. Like Alexander Vindman, a name more recently in the news, Alexander Butterfield was called before Congress to testify under oath about his knowledge of dealings within the White House. Vindman, in 2019, blew the whistle on Trump’s attempt to extort Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelenskyy into investigating Joe Biden in exchange for aid. Butterfield, in 1973, had dropped an even bigger bomb, revealing the existence of a White House taping system, a revelation leading to President Nixon’s resignation a year later, an event unprecedented in American history.

I don’t remember the name of our wing commander at Vance Air Force Base in 1977, but he’d flown in combat with then-Colonel Alexander Butterfield during the Vietnam War. Butterfield’s testimony before Congress and Nixon’s resignation was old news by 1976, but his name was still well known. He’d recently resigned as head of the Federal Aviation Administration and was looking for work, and our wing commander invited him to address his officers at a dining-in.

Military dinings-in are formal affairs featuring guest speakers talking on a range of topics. At that point in my USAF career I had only been to one or two, and was looking forward to this one. Alexander Butterfield’s announced topic was his post-USAF career in the White House, where he’d been a deputy under Nixon’s chief of staff, Bob Haldeman, and his experiences as head of the FAA. The fact that he’d been an Air Force fighter pilot and had seen combat was icing on the cake.

Butterfield stuck to his announced topic and everyone in the audience was interested and paying attention — save for the crusty old major a few seats down the table from me, the second-in-command of my flying training squadron. As Butterfield got deeper into his story about working for Haldeman and Nixon, the major drank more and more wine, emptying the carafe in front of him and reaching up the table for another, finally clearing his plate to one side and slumping over the table as if falling asleep. He was faking it, miming boredom to send a message. Our squadron commander, sitting next to him, wasn’t having it, repeatedly nudging him to sit up and show some respect. But the major was well into his cups by then, oblivious to nudges and whispers. Suddenly he raised himself up into a half-standing position and loudly interrupted our guest speaker. “We don’t wanna hear about this political shit,” he slurred, “tell us about flying in fucking Vietnam.”

There was a hush. Butterfield made a joking reply, then returned to his topic. Our commander clicked his fingers at two of my larger squadron-mates, who escorted the major out of the room, one on either side to hold him erect. The next day the major, no longer second-in-command of a flying training squadron, was running base operations, the traditional graveyard assignment for disgraced pilots.

Thus I learned a valuable lesson, one that was to serve me well (with a few notable exceptions, over which I still cringe in shame) as a military officer: in a hard-drinking profession, you’ve got to be able to hold your liquor.

Alexander Vindman’s Army career was on fire until he crossed paths with Trump. He was passed over for colonel and forced to retire; today he’s running for Congress in Florida. Butterfield’s Air Force career was behind him when he blew the whistle on the White House tapes, and he remained in place as head of the FAA until 1975, a year after Nixon’s resignation, so his story and Vindman’s are different in certain respects. I have a lot of respect for both men.

We need more like them. Now more than ever.

p.s. Looking back on previous Air-Minded entries, I see I’ve told this story before, in somewhat more detail. If you’re interested, you can read my earlier post here.

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One thought on “Air-Minded: A Valuable Lesson

  • I remember this episode. The recordings showed quite well Nixon’s unconstitutional high crimes and misdemeanors while in office, despite his underlings muddling up the evidence.
    His assistant Rose Mary Woods’s famous ‘accidentally’ erasure of 18 1/2 minutes of the most damning Nixon tape means we lost for good his most criminal speech.
    She used the incredible yoga technique, the ‘Rose Mary Woods Stretch’, in order to reach the Delete button and hold it down for so long.
    But plenty of evidence remained that Nixon was, indeed, a crook. Leading the not yet treasonous enough GOP Republican elders to tell Tricky Dick to spend more time with his family in San Clemente.
    This was before we knew about Dick telling the Hanoi commies not to make the peace with President Johnson since he’d give them a much better deal when elected.
    This lead to the death of many US servicemen. And the treason of the Republican Party came fuller into view.
    This was before president Reagan illegally supplied arms to the murderous ‘Contras’ (using the Israel connection) in exchange for ME hostage negotiation.
    Light colonel Oliver North, point man for the deal, was arrested and convicted but was pardoned by Bush I.
    So Butterfield and Vindman stood up to high crimes and treason from the POTUS and suffered for it, while many others helped cover up the crimes by the Republican party, and were largely rewarded for their crimes (it’s always the cover-up) and pardoned.
    They paid no consequence for their crimes and treason, just like that crook Tricky Dick. And like all the January 6th insurrection traitors pardoned by the traitor Donald trump.
    So trump’s treason of holding back necessary arms to our ally Ukraine in exchange for invented dirt on Joe Biden is not a new thing for the Republicans.
    Their crimes, and conspiring collusion with our national enemies stretches back several if not many decades. Benedict Arnold was the prototype Republican.

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