International Commission of Control and Supervision Medal explained

International Commission of Control and Supervision Service Medal
Presenter:International Commission of Control and Supervision (ICCS)
Type:Service Award
Eligibility:Personnel who served with the ICCS
Awarded For:90 days of service
Status:No longer awarded
Established:1973
Lastawarded:1975
Precedence Label:Order of Wear
Higher:Varies by country
Lower:Varies by country
Related:International Commission for Supervision and Control Medal

The International Commission of Control and Supervision Medal is a service medal awarded to personnel from the four countries that made up the International Commission of Control and Supervision (ICCS). The ICCS was established by the Paris Peace Accords in 1973 to supervise the cease-fire, the withdrawal of troops, the dismantlement of military bases, the activity at ports of entry, and the return of captured military personnel and foreign civilians in Vietnam. It was to report on the implementation, or violation, of the Peace Agreement and Protocols. Initially made up of personnel from Canada, Hungary, Indonesia, and Poland, the Canadians withdrew in July 1973 being replaced by personnel from Iran. The work of the ICCS continued until the April 1975 Fall of Saigon.

Criteria

Personnel of ICCS member nations served in various locations throughout Vietnam investigating compliance and monitoring enforcement of the peace accords. The commission also oversaw the return of military prisoners of war and civilian political detainees.[1] The International Commission of Control and Supervision Medal was awarded for 90 days of cumulative service between 28 January 1973 to 30 April 1975.[2]

Appearance

The International Commission of Control and Supervision Medal is a circular medal made of gilt metal 36mm) in diameter. The obverse depicts symbols of the four contributing nations: a Canadian maple leaf and the Lion and Sun emblem of Iran, the Coat of ams of the People's Republic of Hungary, the People's Republic of Poland coat of arms, and the Coat of arms of Indonesia. Initially Canada was represented on the medal but after the country left the ICCS in July 1973, then the Iranian emblem replaced the Maple Leaf until April 1975, when the medal was no longer awarded to relevant personnel after the Fall of Saigon. Around the edge are the words: INTERNATIONAL COMMISSION OF CONTROL AND SUPERVISION. The reverse bears the inscription in three lines SERVICE VIETNAM 27-1-73 surrounded by a laurel wreath.[2]

The medal hangs from a ring suspension that is attached to a thin metal bar with a laurel pattern. The ribbon of the medal is nine equal stripes of red, white, red, white, green, white, red, white, and red. After Canada left the ICCS in July 1973 and was replaced by Iran, the ribbon was modified to be ten equal stripes of red, white, green, red, white, green, white, red, white, and red.[2]

In the 1990s a version was made for Canadian civilians who did not receive the original 1973 medal. The civilian version was of a higher quality with a thicker planchet and a solid straight bar suspender with claw attachment.[3]

Order of wear

Country Preceding Following
Canada
Order of precedence[4]
Multinational Force and Observers Medal

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Details/Information for Canadian Forces (CF) Operation GALLANT. National Defence and Canadian Forces. 17 November 2015.
  2. Web site: International Commission of Control and Supervision Vietnam (ICCS). Canadian Honours Chart. National Defence and Canadian Forces. 17 November 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20151117031036/http://www.cmp-cpm.forces.gc.ca/dhr-ddhr/chc-tdh/chart-tableau-eng.asp?ref=ICCS. 17 November 2015. dead.
  3. Book: McCreery. Christopher. The Canadian Honours System. 2008. Dundurn Press. Toronto. 9781554880171. 241.
  4. Web site: Canadian Honours Chart . National Defence and the Canadian Forces . 18 November 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20151025114214/http://www.cmp-cpm.forces.gc.ca/dhr-ddhr/chc-tdh/index-eng.asp . 25 October 2015 .