WON Receives Legion of Merit Warrant Officer Diver Lance Graham, Warrant Officer of the Navy, has been awarded the Legion of Merit from the United States of America. At the IndoPacific 22 Maritime conference in Sydney, US Commander of the Pacific Fleet Admiral Samuel Paparo presented the medal to WODR Graham. The award recognizes exceptionally meritorious conduct in the performance of outstanding services and achievement by any member of the Armed Forces of the United States or of a friendly foreign nation. According to Wikipedia it is the seventh in the order of precedence of all US military awards. The award is issued in degrees; the official title for the WON’s award is Legion of Merit (Degree of Legionnaire), indicating it is to a senior non-commissioned officer. The other degrees are Chief Commander, Commander and Officer. According to NZDF’s Heritage, Commemoration and Protocol Group, he is likely the first New Zealand noncommissioned officer to receive the award since World War II. WODR Graham had been posted to the United States’ Indo-Pacific Command, based in Hawaii, between December 2018 and January 2021. The broad aim of
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USINDOPACOM is to enhance stability in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region by promoting security cooperation, encouraging peaceful development and deterring aggression. He says he had no idea an award of this level was coming his way. “The presentation from the Admiral just blew me away,” he says. He joins a select set of New Zealanders, including former Chief of Navy Rear Admiral Jack Steer and former Devonport RSA president Lieutenant Colonel (retired) Chris Mullane, who have received it. His time in Hawaii was professionally “exceptional”, he says. “It’s exposure to strategic levels in a highly contested area of operation, with an admiral in charge of 370,000 personnel. There’s a global economy that requires stability in that area for the flow of trade, and the US is passionate about
having a strong footing and supporting smaller countries.” He and other colleagues came up with a development strategy targeted at NCO’s from 36 countries. They also worked on an initiative to help countries develop their peacekeeping strategies, including a peacekeeping training exercise for around 40 countries. “And on a personal front, it was a fantastic experience for the family to be immersed in Hawaiian culture and US culture. It was a once-in-a-lifetime experience.”