When Chafee resigned from the post of Secretary of the Navy, he had
served as Navy Secretary of a longer period (three years and three
months) than any of the previous 11 secretaries with the single
exception of Paul Nitze, who served for three years and seven months.
He had been appointed the 60th Secretary of the Navy on
January 31, 1969 (on the same day U.S. forces in Vietnam reached a peak
of 542,000 personnel) and resigned on May 4, 1972 (when 96% of that
number had been brought home).
Chafee announced his resignation on April 4, 1972, about a month
from the deadline by which he had pledged to announce his political
plans. Rumors were rampant that he would challenge Claiborne Pell for
his Senate seat in 1972. A group called "Chafee for 72"
had already been formed. Chafee declined to talk about his expected
challenge to Mr. Pell and said the timing of his action had not been
influenced either by political circumstances in Rhode Island or by the
fact that a new campaign reform law would shortly go into effect. The
new law required political candidates and groups that supported them
to disclose all contributions and expenditures of over $100, received
or spent for a candidate after that date.
While he was Secretary, Chafee had traveled many thousands of miles
to visit various Navy and Marine Corp bases. At least once each year
since taking office, he had visited Vietnam and other Navy operations
in the Western Pacific. He oversaw the reduction of Navy personnel in
Vietnam (a reduction of 96% over the three years he was in office) and
supported an All Volunteer Force. He supervised the trimming and
modernization of the Navy. He continually fought in Washington to
protect and strengthen the Navys bases at Newport, Quonset Point,
and Davisville. At a time when people had to look "ecology"
up in the dictionary, he targeted the importance of cleaning up and
preventing pollution. Most important, he focused on people by raising
pay, lessening duty tours to lessen periods of family separation, and
worked to provide better housing for dependents.
During his first year in office, Chafee garnered
national attention in his decision on the US Pueblo incident.
In May 1969 Chafee overruled the Naval Board of Inquirys
recommendation to court martial Commander Lloyd Bucher, captain of the
Naval Intelligence ship, Pueblo, which had surrendered to North
Korean patrol boats off the coast of Japan on January 23, 1968. The
ship was, in the words of Navy: The Magazine of Sea Power (Feb
1969), "crammed with highly secret electronic and coding machines
and classified papers." It was not outfitted with "destruct
devices" for destroying the top-secret information; it was not
defended by US tactical fighter-bombers. Its only weapons, a pair of
.50-caliber machine guns, were frozen fast beneath their tarpaulin on
the ships bridge. One crewman was mortally wounded in the attack,
three others, including Bucher, were hit. Chafee said the officers and
crew of the Pueblo had suffered enough--they had undergone 11
months of imprisonment and interrogation under the North Koreans--and
that a court martial was not necessary. Public and Congressional
opinion supported his view. On May 6, 1969, Secretary Chafee dismissed
all charges against officers involved in the Pueblo incident.
A list of the major actions of Chafee's career at the Navy
Department, "Initiatives and Accomplishments during Tenure of
Honorable John H. Chafee, Secretary of the Navy," was produced at
the end of his Navy career. On it is listed the various Naval
procurement of military jets and submarines and approval of plans to
develop ships and aircraftChafee approved the F-14 carrier-based
fighter jet, as well as the SSN-688 class nuclear submarine, the P-3C
aircraft, the S-3A carrier-based ASW aircraft, a new major amphibious
assault ship (LHA), the SPRUANCE class antisubmarine destroyers, and a
new jet-powered carrier-based antisubmarine aircraft, the S-3A Viking,
among others.
In addition to approving military weapons development, Chafee
worked to improve working conditions for Navy personnel. He worked
hard to put through approval for pay bonuses to officers and enlisted
men as an incentive for these men to remain. He pushed for increased
sea pay for those sailors who spent abnormal amounts of time at sea.
Throughout his career as Secretary, he pushed for improvements for
families in the Navy. He asked for a variable housing allowance which
would pay extra money to personnel who were stationed in high cost of
living areas and for an increase for family housing (a 50% increase
over what the Department of Defense had planned). He encouraged the
building of Temporary Lodging Facilities and permanent housing for
Navy personnel. He approved new actions to assist Navy personnel
involved with drugs and addicted to alcohol, including granting of
amnesty to drug users voluntarily seeking help and setting up drug and
alcohol rehabilitation centers in the United States
He appointed various personnel to the Admiralty,
including the first Black admiral of the US Navy, Rear Admiral Samuel
L. Gravely, and Astronaut Alan B.
Shepard, Jr., Americas first man in space and the first Sea Service astronaut to reach flag rank.
Chafee also was Secretary during the time when the decision was
made on February 8, 1973, to permit women to enroll in Naval Reserve
Officer Training programs for the first time in history. He oversaw
the "Vietnamization" of Navy forces in Vietnam. This term
describes the withdrawal of forces from Vietnam. In January 1969 the
Navy had 35,700 people in Vietnam. By January 1972 that number had
dropped to 7,500 with about half of those remaining to be out by May
of 1972.
Chafee approved several actions designed to enhance opportunities
for naval personnel of minority races. He worked to encourage
recruitment and retention of qualified black officer. By the time
Chafee left office, there were more than 600 black naval officers; in
1967 there were only 269. He worked to encourage the appointment of
black midshipmen to the US Naval Academy. In September 1971, 45 black
midshipmen were enrolled in the freshman class; more than had
previously been enrolled in the entire brigade prior to 1971. He
oversaw the opening of Naval Reserve Officer Training programs as
three predominantly black colleges and universities.
Chafee broke with tradition in reserving certain jobs for a special
category of officer by appointing a non-aviator to head the US Sixth
Fleet, by appointing an aviator to head the Bureau of Naval Personnel,
by nominating a non-aviator to become the new Chief of Naval
Operations (the highest military position in the Navy). At age 49, Vice-Admiral Elmo Zumwalt became the youngest
CNO in history (and one of the most controversial). He created the
post of Deputy Undersecretary of the Navy with primary responsibility
for environmental matters and anti-pollution efforts throughout the
Navy.
During Chafees term in office, Navy bases in Rhode Island were
constantly threatened with closure and, in fact, one of his major
stands in his abortive 1972 Senatorial Campaign, was that he would
help protect the bases he presciently predicted would close. Chafee
charged in 1972 that Claiborne Pell supported a plan by which "Quonset
Point Naval Air Station would be closed, Davisville Seabee Center
likely would be shut down, and Navy operations at Newport would be
greatly reduced." Providence Journal, Sept 5, 1972. Chafee sought to link Pell,
the incumbent Democrat,
to antiwar policies that would cost Rhode Island thousands of Navy
jobs.
Chafee was Secretary of the Navy during a formative time in United
States and US Naval history. At the beginning of his tenure, the
Vietnam War was at its peak, while at the same time popular protest
against it was growing. The psychological impact on public opinion of
the Tet Offensive on January 30-31, 1968, marked a rallying point in
popular protest against the Vietnam War. Naval development of new
aircraft and weapons were proceeding at a great rate, but at the same
time the Navy was losing popular support. Chafee came into office
representing the Establishment, while he also represented the liberal
faction of the Republican Party. Once again as a member of a less
dominant power group, he followed his pattern
of bipartisan compromise to benefit public interest.