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IN MEMORIAM: JAMES B. STO: Fair Winds and Following Seas
By Scott Tait
The world has lost a truly great man. By Scott Tait.
The United States Navy lost a great leader; the
Hoover Institution and Stanford University
both lost a loved and respected scholar of long association; and the world lost a truly great man with the passing of
Vice Admiral James B. Stockdale on July 5, 2005.
Although I never had the honor of meeting him, I
feel—as I believe all naval officers today do—that I knew him
closely. Each of us has, in a way, grown up at his knee. From the earliest
stages of our training, and throughout our careers, his example and his
writings have formed a substantial part of our
education on military ethics and virtue—and for good reason. It is
hard not to be simultaneously humbled,
challenged, and encouraged by his tale.
Admiral Stockdale served our nation as an active-duty
naval officer, a fighter pilot operating from
aircraft carriers, for 37 years. He spent more than seven of those years in captivity as the senior U.S. officer
held by the North Vietnamese at the infamous Hoa Lo (“Hanoi
Hilton”) prison. At the time of his capture—after being shot
down on a strike mission—he was the commander of Attack Air Wing 16
onboard the USS Oriskany (CVA 34), the father of four children, and already a
distinguished officer of 19 years’ service. During his captivity he
faced 15 extended, intense torture sessions and more than four years in
cramped solitary confinement for defying his captors’ will and
encouraging his subordinates to follow suit. He was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor and 26 other combat
decorations, including two Distinguished
Flying Crosses, three Distinguished Service Medals, four Silver Star
medals, and two Purple Hearts.
He always accredited his survival, and his success as
a prison leader, not to his military training but rather to his religious
faith and what he learned in graduate school at
Stanford. He spent two years at “the Farm” (1960–1962, three years before his capture) to get a degree in
international relations. During that time he
inadvertently discovered the world of philosophy under the tutelage of Professor Philip Rhinelander and became a
life-long Stoic. Particularly taken by the teaching of Epictetus, he
carried The Enchiridion and Discourses with him back to sea. He frequently reminisced that his first
coherent thoughts after ejecting from his damaged aircraft, descending
toward enemy territory under parachute, were “I’m leaving the
world of technology and entering the world of
Epictetus.” Over the next seven and a half years he tested the integrity of Stoic philosophy in
the most demanding crucible of human
experience imaginable and found it worthy.
During his 15 years as a Hoover fellow and a lecturer
in Stanford’s philosophy department, he wrote (and spoke)
prolifically, including the book In Love and
War (written with his wife, Sybil) and two
collections of essays: A Vietnam Experience:
Ten Years of Reflection and Thoughts
of a Philosophical Fighter Pilot. His thoughts and his writing converged on the unifying
theme of human choice and dignity under the most extreme circumstances.
Always at home in academia, he was perhaps at his best where he was most at
home: speaking candidly to military audiences about his experiences and the
lessons life had taught him.
Epictetus, addressing the merits of Stoicism, said,
“What is the fruit of all these
doctrines? Tranquility, fearlessness, and freedom.” Admiral
Stockdale’s fearlessness is well
established; as he joins the eternal pantheon of history’s great naval heroes, his shipmates
left behind wish him tranquility and freedom.
Special to the Hoover Digest.
Available from the Hoover Press is Courage under Fire: Testing Epictetus’s Doctrines in a Laboratory of Human Behavior, by James Stockdale, a monograph in the Hoover Essays series. Also available is Thoughts of a Philosophical Fighter Pilot, by James Stockdale. To order, call 800.935.2882 or visit www.hooverpress.org.
Scott Tait was a national security affairs fellow at the Hoover Institution for 2004–5. He is a lieutenant commander in the U.S. Navy.
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