The President of the United States of America takes pleasure in presenting the Silver Star to Commander David Bruce Miller, United States Navy, for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in aerial combat in jet aircraft while serving as Commanding Officer of Attack Squadron ONE HUNDRED FORTY-FOUR (VA-144), embarked in U.S.S. TICONDEROGA (CVA-14), on the afternoon of 19 April 1966. Commander Miller, as strike leader of a flight of 11 aircraft, was assigned to destroy the Haiphong Highway Bridge which is the most vulnerable and consequently the most heavily defended portion of the only route leading from Communist China into Haiphong from the north and east. Having earlier in the day reconnoitered over land in the vicinity of the target, and observing the marginal weather and enemy defenses, Commander Miller determined that a relatively small group of aircraft carrying maximum ordnance loads had the best chance of success in striking the bridge. Accordingly he had all external fuel tanks removed from the A-4’s and all stations loaded with maximum bomb loads. This bold weaponeering nearly doubled the ordnance normally put on target by the A-4 aircraft. Gaining altitude on approaching the target area, a missile warning was received and he calmly led the group to low altitude, successfully evading the surface-to-air missiles. Climbing after these two missiles cleared the flight, and in the face of intense enemy anti-aircraft fire which hit his own aircraft and gravely damaged a maneuvering fighter escort, Commander Miller positioned the strike group in an optimum attack position. In spite of a 37 millimeter projectile which had exploded inside the dorsal fin of his aircraft creating a large hole, and although two additional missiles were observed being fired at the strike group, Commander Miller intrepidly and valiantly pressed home the attack, personally placing one 2,000-pound and two 1,000-pound bombs directly at the base of the western support, dropping the center lift span of the bridge. As a result of Commander Miller’s imaginative planning and valiant leadership, his daring and heroic actions in aggressively pressing the attack which damaged his aircraft, and his loyal devotion to duty in the face of intense enemy fire upheld the highest traditions of the United States Naval Service.



