Veteran Zacchio awarded peace medal

WINSTED — Resident Anthony Zacchio, a Korean War veteran, was awarded the Korean Ambassador for Peace Medal in a ceremony at Town Hall on Tuesday, Oct. 18.

The medal was presented to Zacchio by Congressman John Larson (D-1).

The Korean War lasted from June 25, 1950 to July 27, 1953.

During his time of service, Zacchio was a corporal in the U.S. Marine Corps and earned several medals, including the Korean Service Medal, the United Nations Service Medal, the National Defense Service Medal, the Good Conduct Medal, the Overseas Service Ribbon and the Connecticut Wartime Service Medal.

According to a press release issued by Larson’s office, the Korean Ambassador for Peace Medal is offered to Korean War Veterans by the Republic of South Korea in gratitude of the service and “for helping to preserve South Korea’s freedom and democracy.”

Before the ceremony, Zacchio said that he has a lot of mixed emotions about receiving the medal.

“It’s a nice honor,” Zacchio said. “I didn’t expect it. I did what was needed to be done, and it was my turn to do it.”

“Of all the things I get to do as a member of the United States Congress, this is probably the thing I enjoy the most,” Larson said before the ceremony. “That’s because I get an opportunity to bestow an honor on people that richly deserve it.”

Larson said that the award was created by the ambassador of South Korea “in gratitude for saving their country.”

“There is a tremendous amount of gratitude South Koreans have for Americans,” Larson said. “For many years this was called ‘The Forgotten War.’ I was with [United States Army General] Vincent Brooks, and he said that ‘This should be called “The Forgotten Victory.”’ Because the victory that it achieved for the South Korean people staved off a Communist takeover.”

Larson called Chairman of the Workers’ Party of Korea Kim Jong Un a “wild dictator.”

“Just to the south of North Korea is this democratic republic that is now the sixth largest trading partner of the United States,” Larson said. “South Korea will also soon be hosting its second Olympics. So it went from almost being entirely devastated in the early 1950s to what it is today.”

Larson said that, when he visited South Korea last August, both Russia and China were conducting drills in the South China Sea.

“While I was there, Kim Jong Un launched two missiles,” Larson said. “[Our group] got to look across the demilitarized zone [into North Korea]. The North Koreans have a cardboard city that they have put up where they have fake lights to make people from the south feel like they’re very productive and that things are not as severe as they actually are over there.”

Larson said that out of everything that he got out of his visit to South Korea, that “the one thing I came away with is the enormous gratitude that South Korean people have.”

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