National Defense Service Medal No Longer Authorized in 2023! Who is authorized the NDSM??

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  • Опубликовано: 12 янв 2023
  • Ribbon Wear Guide for the Army, Marine Corps, Navy, Air Force , Space MilitaryForce and Coast Guard for 2024 is now available: www.moapress.com. This video reviews who is authorized the National Defense Service Medal. The National Defense Service Medal is a military medal awarded to all members of the United States Armed Forces who have served in any one of the four specific period of armed conflict or national emergency from June 27, 1950 to December 31, 2022. For replacement medals, ribbons, insignia, shadow boxes and more shop our on line catalog: www.medalsofamerica.com/onlin...
    The four campaigns were the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Persian Gulf War and the Global War on Terrorism.
    The pentagon has announced the award of a medal to all who serve on active duty will be terminated as of 31 Dec. 2022 based on the fact that the United States is no longer involved in large scale combat operations in response to the 2001 terrorist attack on civilians in New York City and Arlington Virginia.
    Special thanks to Medals Of America for providing all of the awards and insignia you will see. WW.W.MedalsofAmerica.com.
    Medals of America is a Veteran Owned and Operated Company. They are authorized to carry all officially licensed goods by all the branches of service. MOA is also hallmarked and approved by the Institute of Heraldry to make and sell U.S. Made Official Uniform Items, as well as, what we are known for, our mounted medals and Mil-Thin Ribbons. They are the best source for your ribbons, medals and official uniform items and original military shadow boxes.

Комментарии • 84

  • @davidm3000ify
    @davidm3000ify Год назад +8

    According to my late brother (Vietnam, 1966), "Red for the blood not shed, white for the eyes unseen, blue for the rivers you didn't cross, and yellow, the reason why."

  • @unkorichie2029
    @unkorichie2029 8 месяцев назад +5

    I received two National Defense Medals; Gulf War, and Global War on Terror.

  • @annettemalaski1967
    @annettemalaski1967 Год назад +17

    Now the new veterans know how some of we older veterans feel when twelve years of AD service did not even garner a DSH!

    • @mitchellaugustine7769
      @mitchellaugustine7769 Год назад +1

      My 5 month mission awarded me 4 extra medals. That was right before the war was over

  • @No-One-of-Consequence
    @No-One-of-Consequence День назад

    At the Coast Guard Academy they used to call that the Chase Hall Residence Award. If you lived in Chase Hall as a cadet, you got a medal on day one.

  • @mikeyj9607
    @mikeyj9607 4 часа назад

    When I got out of basic at Lackland AFB in 1972 we were all informed that we now have one stripe (E2 airman ) and can now wear the NDSM,so we have very little hair one stripe and one ribbon we was something to behold lol

  • @DustyB
    @DustyB Год назад +11

    My cousin who is a year older than me started serving in the Marine Corps about 2 years ago received both the Global War on Terrorism Service Medal and the National Defense Service Medal. He probably was one of the last groups to receive both of these medals. I’m about to leave for Army basic training in about 2 weeks so the only ribbon I’m going to receive would be the Army Service Ribbon.

    • @penandsword4386
      @penandsword4386 Год назад +6

      Don't worry! You'll have experiences, memories, and medals that symbolize your training and overseas service. No two medal cases are quite alike. And thank you for serving!

  • @roberthansen9694
    @roberthansen9694 Год назад +13

    I served reserve with several active-duty periods from the 60's through the GWOT so am authorized three NDSM. It was actually the first medal I ever received. However, in one of my veteran's groups there is a fellow that served four years of active duty and is not eligible. One important distinction: if you service was only for training purposes, and you never served on active duty you are not eligible. We kicked a fellow out of our veteran's group as he served 9 years in the reserves as an E1 and only earned the army training ribbon (he told people he was an ex marine with multiple purple hearts) which we discovered when we tried to verify his service).

    • @veteransmedalsworkshop-moa4376
      @veteransmedalsworkshop-moa4376  Год назад +7

      Three NDSM is really rare...that s a lot of miles on your boots!

    • @roberthansen9694
      @roberthansen9694 Год назад +7

      @@veteransmedalsworkshop-moa4376 when i had my medal rack made they even called me up to make sure it was accurate. I've tried to get MOA on the phone, but they haven't answered my emails or returned my phone calls. My retirement letter credits me with 42 years, 3 mos and 17 days of service -- reserve and active.

    • @MrJMB122
      @MrJMB122 Год назад +3

      ,@@roberthansen9694 I need to see that shadow box.

  • @rifleman762
    @rifleman762 Год назад +8

    I was issued my national defense service medal (also known as the fire watch medal, because all we did was stand fire watch) in May 1992 when I graduated from boot camp at Parris island.

    • @veteransmedalsworkshop-moa4376
      @veteransmedalsworkshop-moa4376  Год назад +5

      yeah, I stood a few fire watches also…I think we all did!

    • @jgreen2592
      @jgreen2592 10 месяцев назад +2

      I have also heard this medal referred to as the "Road Guard Medal". In the Army a road guard is the person(s) in a troop formation who block vehicle traffic when the formation is marching or running. Still the medal shows you served your nation in time of need.

    • @rifleman762
      @rifleman762 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@jgreen2592 oh yes! We have all heard the Drill instructor yell "Road Guard out!" Or "road guard recover!" More than a few times!

  • @HereticBra55
    @HereticBra55 Год назад +9

    Seeing the younger kids only having one decoration out of initial training is such a weird feeling, especially since I graduated with 3: NDSM, A&STR, and GWOT

    • @nathangallegos9304
      @nathangallegos9304 11 месяцев назад +1

      Sometimes I wish we earned awarded GWOT but since it was stopped I feel inside War on Terrorism never ended

    • @G1CAAAAEO
      @G1CAAAAEO 6 месяцев назад +1

      As a non-American soldier it is weird for us to see people leave initiat training with already medals on their chest. Earned my first one after 8 years of active duty! But I guess other country have harder requirements and have less decoration categories.

    • @ComfortsSpecter
      @ComfortsSpecter 6 месяцев назад

      @@G1CAAAAEOSome Lesser Awards for Exceptional and or The Best Performance in Certain Training
      Some Standard Awards for Participation
      Great Way to Help Morale and Teach Regalia Use from The Start
      But ofcourse You Can’t Hand out Too Many Free Rewards or It Mean’s Nothing

    • @dick8193
      @dick8193 4 месяца назад +2

      I graduated from Navy bootcamp in 1963 with NO medals. I earned mine on a ship off the coast of Viet Nam in 1965-66 and 67.

    • @davidisbell4033
      @davidisbell4033 3 месяца назад +1

      For me, it's weird seeing anyone leave basic training with anything but a shooting award. I once saw an Airman fresh out of Basic wearing the NDSM, GWOT-Service, AF Small Arms Expert Ribbon, BMT Honor Graduate Ribbon, and the AF Training Ribbon. Yep, he was stacked 5-deep and hadn't even been to technical training. It took me 8 years in the Marine Corps to acquire 5 ribbon awards. That was a strange sight to behold.

  • @Pluvo2for1
    @Pluvo2for1 Год назад +1

    Thank you for putting the effort into another interesting episode. You have an enviable level of knowledge. Please keep it coming.

  • @Doc_Egan
    @Doc_Egan Год назад +1

    Glad you did an update on this.

  • @jastdi2
    @jastdi2 11 дней назад +1

    Interesting. First ribbon I ever wore in 1965.

  • @richardsnow7299
    @richardsnow7299 Год назад +5

    Most interesting Colonel. Thanks for this video

  • @joeg6385
    @joeg6385 9 месяцев назад

    Sir
    Great history lesson on the NDSM. Thank you for the video.

  • @romad357
    @romad357 6 дней назад

    I was awarded two: the first for the Vietnam War time frame and the second for the Desert Shield/Storm time frame. My father also had two: Korea and Vietnam to go along with the equivalent from just before World War II, the American Defense Service Medal.

  • @richardfish8379
    @richardfish8379 Год назад +2

    thk for including Cost Guard..

  • @josephdeangelisjr.6282
    @josephdeangelisjr.6282 Год назад +3

    Served 30 years from Nov.1969 to Dec.1999...just a few months shy of being able to have served during 3 periods ...

    • @randyramey6549
      @randyramey6549 Год назад +1

      Thank You for your service to our country!

  • @barkermjb
    @barkermjb 10 дней назад

    I entered service in 1983. Didn’t get the NDSM until the First Gulf War (Desert Shield/Desert Storm) in 1990. Second award for GWOT. It’s called peacetime, although it sure doesn’t seem like it’s peacetime….

  • @w.p8960
    @w.p8960 4 месяца назад +1

    In USMC 1962 /1967 No medals were awarded to me until 1965 when I got a Good Conduct. If I had not extended to go to Nam. That would have been it. One good drunk and I would have gotten out wearing an Expert badge.

  • @comm2531
    @comm2531 6 месяцев назад +2

    I think this medal parallels closely but not exactly similar to what membership in the American Legion was prior to now letting everyone in. You had to have served during a WAR or a CONFLICT (As in Lebanon, Grenada, Panama).
    The NDSM is only given to war eras but NOT for CONFLICTS. Which is kind of strange. Involvement in Lebanon lasted longer than the first Gulf War and more people were killed there in those 2 years than the first Gulf War.
    None of these required being in country for eligibility. I was eligible for American Legion but not an NDSM. 1982-85

  • @sandovalperry2895
    @sandovalperry2895 11 месяцев назад +2

    I would be possible to be award 3 NDSM in a less than 30 year career. I received my first in 1972, the second in 1991 and would have gotten a third if I had retired at 30 years instead of 27.

  • @1106gary
    @1106gary Год назад +3

    I was on active duty USAF 1963-1967. The NDSM is on my dd214. Thus, it seems right to say I am authorized to wear it. However, while I was on active duty no one gave me the medal or even told me I was allowed to wear the ribbon. So saying I was AWARDED the medal seems a gross exaggeration. Strangely, my main duty Air Defense Command base made sure every one wore a Presidential Unit Citation ribbon from a 1944 action which we had to take off when transferred to a different unit.

  • @jeffblacky
    @jeffblacky 11 месяцев назад +2

    I got 2
    Desert Storm
    War on terror
    Hooah

  • @markmclaughlin2690
    @markmclaughlin2690 11 месяцев назад

    Served as an Armor Crewman US Army 1985-1994 we called it the IBB I’ve Been To Basic Badge.

  • @MarkM58
    @MarkM58 Год назад +3

    When I was in the Navy, it was referred to as the Geedunk Medal because, up to 1975 just about everyone had it.

    • @veteransmedalsworkshop-moa4376
      @veteransmedalsworkshop-moa4376  Год назад

      Ah, it does have some colorful nicknames!

    • @G1CAAAAEO
      @G1CAAAAEO 6 месяцев назад

      If everyone has that medal then nobody has to medal right?

    • @MarkM58
      @MarkM58 6 месяцев назад

      @@G1CAAAAEO It is not a competition.

  • @davegustavson7084
    @davegustavson7084 11 месяцев назад

    Fun trivia. New folks were happy about this award. Those of us with with multiple deployments were annoyed by having to add the McDonald's ribbon for both the 1st Gulf War and GWoT.

    • @monsterram6617
      @monsterram6617 20 дней назад

      Considering all you had to do was add a star on the ribbon, idk what you're so annoyed about... Btw, me and nearly everyone in my unit had multiple deployments when this was reissued after 9/11/2001 and no one cared or complained about it.

  • @comm2531
    @comm2531 6 месяцев назад +1

    Frankly, i think well made certificates are better than medals. Especially if you get one with a signiture like from a high office with the Seal of the United States. Everyone knows a Cold War Certificate is kind of lame but i do like the fact the paper comes from and signed by the Secretary of Defense. I also like my Honorable Discharge letter from the Commandant of the Marine Corps that came with my discharge certificate. I could really care less about marksmanship medals. I also got a very colorful certificate i got laminated of Desert Storm from Blount Island Command as i was working a DOD contract during the Gulf War in Saudi Arabia. It has all the coalition countries listed on there. I was with the Maritime Preposition Ships loading ships there for 8 months. Shipboard 5 years all over. I never rated a NDSM not knocking it, but after all the places i been after my military service, including war zones and hotspots, I am not impressed about a NDSM and view it like a low level coin.

  • @Dr._Ghost
    @Dr._Ghost 10 месяцев назад +1

    I'm cool w/ being a peace time soldier.

  • @Eagle_1-327
    @Eagle_1-327 10 дней назад

    I did not receive a NDSM for my service with the 1sr Armored Division in Germany during the Cold War nor did I receive a NDSM for my service with the 101st Airborne Division as part of Rapid Deployment Force. No. Nope. Nada.
    I received the NDSM for serving in an ROTC Brigade headquarters (and working on a master’s degree) at Fort Dix, New Jersey during Desert Shield/Desert Storm.
    Go figure.

  • @WilliamFlemming-gk3cn
    @WilliamFlemming-gk3cn 7 дней назад

    Was in service from 1975 to 1979, no natl service metal, although told I could get natl cold war metal, but haven't heard on how to apply.

  • @ComfortsSpecter
    @ComfortsSpecter 6 месяцев назад +1

    Strange Use
    Respectable Purpose
    But The Wartime Requirement or whatever Is Estranging

  • @jonyoung6405
    @jonyoung6405 5 дней назад

    Even Gomer Pyle got one .

  • @edzgang2
    @edzgang2 Год назад +1

    Can you do the GWOT one?

  • @alanbeesley525
    @alanbeesley525 11 дней назад

    I am a retired army I have 3 national defense medals, nam gulf war and war on tear. 12:24

  • @timothymeyer602
    @timothymeyer602 8 месяцев назад +1

    Glad they finally got rid of it

    • @showmeyourdaleel6568
      @showmeyourdaleel6568 7 месяцев назад

      I am too. You literally only had to graduate basic training to get it.

    • @monsterram6617
      @monsterram6617 20 дней назад

      They didn't get rid of it. The medal has ceased being issued because the country is not currently at war. Once we get into another conflict, it will be issued again. Btw, even if you're only accomplishment is graduating basic, if it's during a time of war; you rate the NDSM.

  • @phillipbrandt6075
    @phillipbrandt6075 11 месяцев назад

    The 3rd ID patch in the shadow box is not just wrong it's really wrong. The top left corner should be blue, this patch is on it's side.

  • @MarkM58
    @MarkM58 Год назад +1

    There was a long period in the '70s and '80s where it was not awarded, either.

  • @user-ch6to6fl5y
    @user-ch6to6fl5y 2 месяца назад

    Okay so I graduated basic training before they stopped giving the nation defense medal and I received one but I graduated AIT after Dec 30 2022 so would I still be able to wear the ndm?

  • @TommyH.-qh7yp
    @TommyH.-qh7yp 17 дней назад

    Help please. I served in Navy Feb. 1985 to Jan. 10, 1991. I was on USS Francis Hammond FF1067 getting underway on 8 December 1990 for Western Pacific and Indian Ocean to participate in Operation Desert Shield arriving in Subic Bay 28 December 1990. The Navy being what it is would not allow me to stay behind to discharge in Feb. 1991. Shortly before arriving in Subic I was told I'd be sent back to the States to be discharged. I had 4 days in January to get checked out at 32nd St. Naval Base San Diego - why there and not Long Beach I have no idea. Because of the war, the ship being overseas and who knows what else, there's nothing on my DD-214 or in service record about a National Defense Medal. I should be qualified for that, correct?

  • @Police_Supporter
    @Police_Supporter 7 месяцев назад +1

    Got all the pawpaws patches ribbons and medals one of them were that there he was in the national guard in the earlys 70-s

  • @wernerpanchenko6542
    @wernerpanchenko6542 4 месяца назад

    That is a shame

  • @michaelallison1255
    @michaelallison1255 11 месяцев назад +1

    great information i have all of my dads medals.

  • @ferninarvin5173
    @ferninarvin5173 6 месяцев назад

    How much Asiatic pacific campieng

  • @davidisbell4033
    @davidisbell4033 3 месяца назад

    We fresh Devil Dogs graduated boot camp with rifle shooting badges and nothing else. Prior-service crossovers were not permitted to wear their fruit salad at graduation. Like others here, we called the NDSM the "fire watch ribbon" when we were awarded it years later during the original Gulf War era. I received a second before retiring. I'm glad it finally reached a cutoff date.

  • @dw7094
    @dw7094 12 дней назад +1

    Got news for everybody, these medals and $5 will get you a cup of coffee at Starbucks. Once you get out, or retire, these medals have no value. Employers don't care., they just want to know what you're qualified to do, and how much money you can bring to the company. All mine have been boxed up in the garage ever since retirement some 35 years ago.

  • @rwdchannel2901
    @rwdchannel2901 6 дней назад

    Soldiers shouldn't be getting 3 ribbons for graduating basic training.

    • @veteransmedalsworkshop-moa4376
      @veteransmedalsworkshop-moa4376  5 дней назад

      I agree with you.

    • @rwdchannel2901
      @rwdchannel2901 5 дней назад

      @@veteransmedalsworkshop-moa4376 You know what I got for saving my squad leader's life? A challenge coin from the commanding general of the 101st airborne.

  • @lorenzomaximo1818
    @lorenzomaximo1818 19 дней назад

    I think this is terrible. As a Vietnam veteran anyone that raises their right hand and takes the oath to defend the United States with their lives. Should receive the metal and ribbon whether we are at war or not to defend the nation should qualify.

  • @Clancy192
    @Clancy192 Год назад +2

    They gave these to the Taliban too! FJB!