William R. Peers

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William R. Peers
1914-1984
Image:General William R. Peers.jpg
Place of birth Stuart, Iowa
Place of death San Francisco, California
Service/branch United States Army
Years of service 1938-19??
Rank Lieutenant General
Commands held I Field Force, Vietnam
4th Infantry Division
Battles/wars World War II
Vietnam War

William R. Peers was a United States Army general.

[edit] Biography

Peers, often referred to by his middle name "Ray" by close associates, was born in Stuart, Iowa in 1914.[1] He attended the University of California, Los Angeles where he was a member of the Sigma Pi Fraternity. He graduated with a degree from the College of Education in 1937, and received a regular Army commission in 1938.

When the United States entered World War II, Peers was recruited into the Office of Strategic Services (OSS). He joined Detachment 101, which carried out guerrilla operations against the Japanese in the China India Burma Theater. At first the unit's operations and training officer, he eventually became the unit's commander. He held that position until 1945, when he became commander of all OSS operations in China south of the Yangtze River. In this capacity he led a Nationalist Chinese parachute-commando unit into Nanking, securing the former Chinese capital from the Japanese and Communist Chinese before the armistice.

Then Major General William R. Peers, commander of the 4th Infantry Division and overall U.S. commander at the Battle of Dak To
Then Major General William R. Peers, commander of the 4th Infantry Division and overall U.S. commander at the Battle of Dak To

After WWII, Peers joined the CIA, establishing the agency's first training program. During the Korean War, he directed covert operations by Chinese Nationalist troops into the southern part of the People's Republic of China from secret bases in Burma.

Upon his return from China, he attended the prestigious Army War College, and afterward held a series of intelligence and staff positions. With his asian insurgency warfare expertise, it was inevitable that his career would prosper during the Vietnam War. At its beginning, Peers was the assistant deputy chief of staff for special operations. The next year he became special assistant for counterinsurgency and special activities for the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

In January 1967, as a major general, he was named the 32nd commanding officer of the 4th Infantry Division ("The Ivy Division"). 14 months later, he was promoted to lieutenant general, and commanded the 50,000 American soldiers of the corps-level I Field Force, Vietnam.[2] Based in the Central Highlands, The I Field Force comprised some of the most aggressive American formations in Vietnam, including the 1st Cavalry Division (United States), 101st Airborne and the 173rd Airborne. Peers also coordinated the operations of four South Vietnamese and the two elite South Korean divisions sent as that country's contribution. Under his leadership, allied troops decisively defeated Viet Cong guerrillas and NVA regulars in the battles of Dak To in November 1967, and Duc Lap in August 1968.

In 1969, Peers was ordered by General Westmoreland to investigate the My Lai Massacre, being selected because of his reputation for fairness and objectivity.[3] In 1970 Peers issued a very thorough and critical reporton the incident. Hugh Thompson, along with his helicopter crew, were the only soldiers who attempted to stop the massacre, said of the Peers report[4] :

The Army had Lieutenant General William R. Peers conduct the investigation. He conducted a very thorough investigation. Congress did not like his investigation at all, because he pulled no punches, and he recommended court-martial for I think 34 people, not necessarily for the murder but for the cover-up.

Peers died at the age of 69 in 1984 of a heart attack at Letterman Army Medical Center at the Presidio of San Francisco.[5]

[edit] In popular culture

Oliver Stone's movie Pinkville will star Bruce Willis as William Peers.

[edit] References

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