About Colonel Bo Bottomly; His War Stories and
Audio Books
Colonel Heath Bottomly ... known generally by
his service nickname "Bo" ... was born in Chinook, Montana
in 1919. He was the second-born of seven sons of Judge
R.V. Bottomly, Associate Justice of the Montana Supreme
Court.
His major youthful influence came from
his close association with a Nez Perce Indian remnant of the
Chief Joseph surrender and through his rough-out, frontier
guide, grandfather, Buffalo Ben. Along with his six brothers,
he achieved Eagle Scout.
Heath graduated from the University of
Montana in 1941, the US Military Academy at West Point in 1944.
He won a Masters Degree in Middle Eastern Studies at the
American University in Beirut, Lebanon and in Geopolitics from
George Washington University in DC. He is a member of the
International Society of Journalists and has virtually his
entire life recorded in daily journals. He teaches Journaling
in the local Jr High
During WWII he flew a P-38, Lightning tour in
the Southwest Pacific and commanded the first jet squadron
in the orient. Colonel Bo's Middle East adventures as a
student, a peace-keeper, a spy, a fugitive and as a POW
are documented in his stories Blind Glory, Kyrgyz
Assignment and Escape from Afghanistan.
Later, while peacekeeping with the UN
Mixed Armistice Commission in Palestine and flying the French
Mirage IIIv, he was shot down, surviving on the desert with a
family of Arab nomads.
Colonel Bo served as Secretary of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and
recorded the secret, emergency, JCS meetings with Secretary
McNamara during the Gulf of Tonkin Incident that opened the
Vietnam War.
Later he fought in Vietnam, Laos and
Thailand for three years as a jungle, fighter wing commander.
His awards include the Distinguished Flying Cross and the
Legion of Merit, America's highest award for meritorious
service, which he won 4 times.
This life was not all a rosy rocket to fame and
glory.
Like many Viet Vets, Colonel Bo was
spiritually or psychologically wounded out there. He returned
an arrogant alcoholic. This ultimately destroyed his family,
his career as a radio news analyst and his ministry with Campus
Crusade for Christ.
Because of my special Middle East Intelligence
clearances, I have been recalled to active duty on three
occasions … Latest in 2002 … Terrorist mastermind, Osama
bin Laden was reported escaping from Afghanistan to China
through the hidden Wakhan Defile in the Hindu Kush
Mountains. I had been through there twice on special
assignment, so I was recalled to lead a Hazara Search Team
into the Central Asian Knot.
At sundown on Day-12, the caravan had
pulled up to rest our camels at the Muji Oasis east of Kashi,
China. There at a Zen tribal campfire, I was inducted into the
world's oldest craft fraternity: Raconteurs
Internationals.
That which you are about to read or hear
will sound like stories, but really they are more than that.
They are the narration of my hundred years of American history
as told in exciting stories. I grew up in frontier Montana at
the beginning of the Twentieth Century. The first collection of
stories, WESTWIND WHISPERS, tells about life in a family of
nine kids in the little cattle town, Chinook. We hiked the
plains and mountains, rode ponies to school and found our best
friends and wildest adventures with a little Indian village
along the river.
WWII broke as I graduated from West Point. I
chose Army Air Corps, so the next collection … WORLD WAR
II & KOREA AIR BATTLES … are airwar stories from my
War Journal. I kept a daily diary of our battlesfrom the
Solomons in the Southwest Pacific clear up through the
Philippines through Okinawa to standing with MacArthur on
the battleship Missouri in Tokyo Bay. The Korean War
adventures, which came right then, are included.
When the Tonkin Gulf Incident provoked the war in Vietnam, I
was Secretary of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in the Pentagon.
When a war breaks, a fighter pilot must fly. Like all Namvets,
the Vietnam War had an unusually complex psychological impact
on my life.
I have told a lot of war stories about what
happened out there, but I find that my overall view of the
war … My Vietnam … is imbedded in four air battles …
together with the classic, 'Nam-stuff' that went along
with them. For purity, in telling these four stories, I
have lifted the pivotal patches directly from my Vietnam
War Journal.
My next assignment was to the Middle East and it included an
intriguing spy assignment. Then, because I became somewhat of a
Middle East expert in the Pentagon and White House, these
stories from my MIDDLE EAST JOURNAL include my adventures from
Morocco to Jerusalem and on into Central Asia during the Iran
Hostage Debacle and the Gulf War.
After a miracle recovery at Scripps, La Jolla,
Colonel Bo retired to the hidden Scott River Valley in far
northern California to start a new life. Employing his
experience in Scouting, in the military and in Campus
Crusade, he developed a program of Wilderness
Adventure designed to keep other young people from being caught
up in the drug addiction trap.
The American Eagle Teamwork Adventure is
a tough-love, teen, drug and alcohol prevention program. The
program won a Religious Heritage of America gold medal in 1990
as the most effective, troubled youth program at large in
America.
He now is
retired with his second wife, Penny, at the craft and culture
community in the San Jacinto mountains at Idyllwild, California
where he writes stories of his Twentieth Century and publishes
them on tape, CD and in books.
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