During his February 24 State of the Union address, President Donald Trump awarded the Medal of Honor to 100-year-old Korean War veteran Capt. Royce Williams, formally recognizing a 1952 aerial battle that had remained partially classified for decades.
According to the U.S. Department of Defense, Williams was flying a Navy F9F Panther when he encountered a formation of Soviet-built MiG fighters over the Sea of Japan. Despite sustaining damage and operating without wingman support, he successfully downed multiple enemy aircraft and returned safely. The department described the engagement as an βextraordinary act of heroismβ and confirmed the award followed a records review that upgraded earlier commendations.
In the House chamber, Trump called Williamsβ actions βan unmatched display of American courage,β adding, βTonight, we right a historic wrong and honor one of the greatest fighter pilots in our nationβs history.β Lawmakers from both parties stood as Williams received the medal, a moment widely described by outlets including Fox News as long overdue recognition for Cold War-era service.
Melania Trump just hung the Medal of Honor around the neck of a 100-year-old former Navy fighter pilot who shot down 4 Soviet jets during a secret mission in the Korean War.
Nobody has ever heard this story until now.
Iβm not crying β youβre crying. pic.twitter.com/xezyAoQ3VU
β johnny maga (@johnnymaga) February 25, 2026
Trump described Williamsβ long-classified 1952 air battle as a story that βdidnβt even want to tell his wife,β adding that βthe legend grew and grewβ before telling the chamber, βTonight, at 100 years old, this brave Navy captain is finally getting the recognition he deserves.β First Lady Melania Trump placed the medal around Williamsβ neck as lawmakers stood in applause.
Moments later, Trump awarded a second Medal of Honor to Army Chief Warrant Officer 5 Eric Slover, a helicopter pilot wounded during the raid that led to the capture of Venezuelan leader NicolΓ‘s Maduro. Trump said Slover piloted the lead CH-47 Chinook into a βheavily protected military fortress,β telling lawmakers he endured multiple gunshot wounds but completed the mission before appearing at the ceremony using a walker.
The Defense Departmentβs official summary states that the missionβs full details were not publicly acknowledged at the time due to sensitive intelligence considerations. Military historians have noted that Medal of Honor upgrades are rare and typically require extensive archival verification and congressional coordination.
The tone shifted moments later. After fastening the medal, Trump added: βIβve always wanted it, but Iβm not allowed to give it to myselfβ¦ if they ever change the law, Iβll be there.β The remark drew laughter from parts of the chamber and immediate circulation online.
The clip quickly circulated on X.
So a draft dodger wants a medal for a war he didn’t participate in and says that if the law around it changes (which it won’t because why the fuck would it?) he’d happily have it.
What?
β Silver Woods Designs πͺπΊπ¨π΅ (@TheSilverWoods) February 25, 2026
And they laughed and applauded when he said it. Tomorrow, he will be trying to sell medals with his name on them. If he can’t get one legit, he will devalue them.
β TheCalmClam10 (@TheCalmClam10) February 25, 2026
The broader ceremony, however, centered on Williamsβ service record. According to Defense officials, he engaged six MiGs during the November 1952 encounter, downing at least four despite aircraft damage and limited fuel. βHis actions saved lives and demonstrated extraordinary valor,β the department said in its release.
Fox Newsβ coverage emphasized bipartisan applause and framed the award as recognition of βoverlooked heroism.β Lawmakers in attendance were seen congratulating Williams as he exited the chamber.
The juxtaposition β a solemn military recognition followed by an improvised personal quip β became part of the speechβs immediate online afterlife. Clips highlighting the medal ceremony and the comment circulated simultaneously, generating distinct reactions.
Featured image via YouTube screengrab







