World War II Prouty was commissioned as a reserve
2nd lieutenant in the cavalry on June 9, 1941, and began his military career with the
4th Armored Division in
Pine Camp, New York. He was promoted to
1st lieutenant on February 1, 1942. He transferred to the
United States Army Air Forces on November 10, 1942, and earned his pilot wings that same month. He arrived in
British West Africa (specifically
the British Gold Coast colony) in February 1943 as a pilot with
Air Transport Command. In the summer of 1943 he was the personal pilot of General
Omar Bradley, General
John C. H. Lee and General
C. R. Smith (founder and president of
American Airlines), among others. He flew the
U.S. Geological Survey Team in Saudi Arabia, October 1943, to confirm oil discoveries in preparation for the
Cairo Conference. He was assigned to special duties at the
Cairo Conference and the
Tehran Conference November–December 1943. He flew
Chiang Kai-shek's Chinese delegation (
T. V. Soong's delegates) to
Tehran. An important mission he was involved in was the evacuation of the British commandos made famous by the novel
Guns of Navarone involved in the
Battle of Leros from
Leros to
Palestine. He was promoted to captain on February 1, 1944. In 1945 he was transferred to the Southwest Pacific and flew in
New Guinea,
Leyte and was on
Okinawa at the end of war. He landed near
Tokyo at the time of the surrender with the first three planes carrying General
Douglas MacArthur's bodyguard troops. He flew out with American
POWs.
Post-war service After the war, Prouty accepted an assignment from the
U.S. Army in September 1945 to inaugurate the ROTC program at
Yale University, where he also taught during each scholastic year from 1946 to 1948. This timeline intersects with the years that
George Bush and
William F. Buckley, Jr. also spent at Yale. Prouty fondly recalled Buckley at that time in his role as editor of the
Yale Daily News, and Prouty later told an interviewer in 1989 that he had written for Buckley on several occasions. In 1950 he transferred to
Colorado Springs to build
Air Defense Command. From 1952 to 1954 he was assigned to
Korean War duties in Japan, where he served as Military Manager for Tokyo International Airport (Haneda) during the post-war U.S. occupation. In 1955 he was assigned to the coordination of operations between the
U.S. Air Force and the CIA. As a result of a CIA commendation for this work he was awarded the
Legion of Merit by the
U.S. Air Force, promoted to colonel, and assigned to the Office of the Secretary of Defense. Following the creation of the
Defense Intelligence Agency and termination of the OSO by Secretary
Robert McNamara, Prouty was transferred to the Office of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and charged with the creation a similar organization on a global scale. From 1962 to 1963 he served as Chief of Special Operations with the Joint Staff. He would be delegated to Air Force Brigadier General
Edward Lansdale, who in early 1961 became the Assistant to the Secretary of Defense for Special Operations. Lansdale later said Prouty was a “good pilot of prop-driven aircraft, but had such a heavy dose of paranoia about CIA when he was on my staff that I kicked him back to the Air Force.”
Rufus Phillips, who became famous for his insistence on telling the truth about American failures in Vietnam and for opposing the American escalation, later said Prouty was "a complete nut." In a chance encounter with Edward Lansdale in the hallways of the Pentagon, a "month or two before" the assassination (as Prouty tells it), Lansdale informed Prouty he had arranged for him [Prouty] to accompany a group of VIPs to the
South Pole from November 10 to 23, in the capacity of Military Escort officer. The ostensible purpose of the trip was the activation of a nuclear power plant at the
United States Navy Base at
McMurdo Sound,
Antarctica, to provide heat, light, and sea water
desalination. Prouty later described his confusion at the unusual assignment, but he expected the job to be a "paid vacation" and accepted the task. The activation of the plant,
PM-3A, actually occurred on 3 March 1962, a year and a half earlier than Prouty claimed. Prouty retired in 1964 as a colonel in the U.S. Air Force. As recognition of his long and distinguished career in the service of his country, he was awarded one of the first three
Joint Service Commendation Medals by General
Maxwell D. Taylor,
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. ==Post-military==