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Vietnamese family reconnects with sailors who rescued them

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This article was originally published in the “Stars and Stripes” on October 5, 2014.

By Jennifer Hlad

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But one photo caught Nguyen’s eye and she said to her husband, “That looks just like your mom.”

Doan Ha said he instead was fixated on one of the three children in the photo: himself at age 5.

Ha has vague memories of Vietnam and knew that his family had fled in a stolen wooden fishing boat in 1979. He knew his parents, siblings and nearly 20 others in the boat were rescued by a Navy ship. He didn’t realize there were more than a dozen photos of the rescue in the National Archives.

The photo motivated Ha to find out more, and eventually to contact one of the sailors from the ship that saved him.

On Sept. 28, 35 years since the USS Wabash dropped the Ha family in the Philippines, they reunited with some of the men who rescued them.

Dangerous escape

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Thanh Ha was a fisherman before serving in the South Vietnamese Army. After the fall of Saigon in 1975, he returned home to Nha Trang to hide from the North Vietnamese, who were intent on putting South Vietnamese soldiers and members of the previous government into “re-education camps.”

Thanh, his wife, Van, and their young children lived in difficult conditions, always worried that Thanh would be found and sent away to be tortured. Their rickety house was on stilts because at high tide the waters of the South China Sea would rush in under their feet.

Thousands of people were leaving the country, but escaping by boat was dangerous. There was no guarantee that they would be rescued by the huge U.S. ships off the coast, and the Philippines are 800 miles away. Hundreds of people died at sea, including one of Thanh’s cousins.

Even though he knew there was only a small possibility his family would be rescued, Thanh believed they had to try. His thinking at the time, he said, was that he’d rather die at sea than be sent to a concentration camp.

So Thanh; his wife and three small children; his cousin, Canh Do; friends; and family members piled into a stolen wooden boat and set off.

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Rescue at sea

The USS Wabash was commissioned Nov. 20, 1971, a hulking replenishment oiler nearly 700 feet long and roughly 100 feet wide. Andy Anderson and Malcolm Slack, two of the ship’s original crewmembers, described it as a kind of “floating Wal-Mart,” taking oil and supplies to aircraft carriers and other ships during the Vietnam War and afterward.

In July 1979, the Navy told all of its 7th Fleet ships in the South China Sea to seek out refugees in the area and to do as much as possible to help them, according to an article in Stars and Stripes at the time. Navy ships picked up about 600 refugees at sea in 1978 and already had picked up 567 so far in 1979, the report said.

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Aboard the Wabash, crewmembers outfitted a small room used as a lounge for first class petty officers as temporary quarters. They had no extra bedding, so they rolled bubble wrap on the floor, said then-Petty Officer 2nd Class Bud Biery, who worked in the boiler room.

On Aug. 5, 1979, Biery volunteered to help new refugees get showered and clothed, while Ray Coggins joined the whale boat sent to rescue the 28 people aboard the 30-foot wooden fishing boat.

The sea was rough that day. A storm had caused the waves to swell, and the boat carrying Thanh and his family was taking on water. The refugees had been at sea for three days and were running out of food. Though it is bad luck to speak of death on a ship, Thanh said, the group was past superstition. They believed they would be dead within two hours.

Then they saw the lifeboat and knew they would make it.

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Ray Coggins, Thanh Ha, Van Ha, Doan Ha, Canh Do, Kim Tu and Bud Biery pose for a photo Saturday in San Diego. Coggins and Biery served on the USS Wabash and, on Aug. 5, 1979, helped rescue the Ha family, Do, and several other Vietnamese refugees in a small wooden fishing boat. Thanh Ha, who was a fisherman before serving in the South Vietnamese Army, said the group had been at sea for three days and the boat was taking on water when they were rescued. He believes they would have been dead within just a few hours if it weren’t for the crew of the Wabash.

Reconnecting

The Wabash performed four rescue operations, saving about 140 people. Biery said he remembers this group of 28 specifically — how, when the crew handed out small boxes of cereal and a piece of fruit to each of them, the children were excited, as though it was a huge treat.

The ship dropped the refugees in the Philippines the next day, and the crew never knew what happened to them.

Then, Doan and his wife went to see “Miss Saigon.”

The picture in the slideshow, plus turning 40 this year, prompted him to start looking for other pictures of his family.

His sister, Kim Tu, who was 3 when the family was rescued, said they had a copy of a magazine with a black-and-white photo of them on the cover but she never knew about the other photos.

When she finally saw photos in the National Archives, she felt like she was looking at her daughter’s face. In one snapshot, she said, she’s holding a box of Fruit Loops — her daughter’s favorite cereal.

Doan also began searching online for some of the sailors whose names were printed on the photos. The searches led him to a Florida surgeon, who suggested he join the ship’s Facebook group.

After he posted a thank-you to the crewmembers for helping his family, Biery had an idea: Why not arrange a reunion?

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 Ray Coggins and Bud Biery listen as Helen Elstrob shows them a photo of her family and thanks them for saving her mother, Canh Do, shown standing next to her. Do was one of 28 Vietnamese refugees who were rescued by the USS Wabash on Aug. 5, 1979. They reunited with Coggins, Biery and other sailors from the Wabash on Saturday in San Diego.

‘Like a movie’

On Sept. 28, as tourists splashed outside in the pool, Biery carefully lined up Wabash bumper stickers, a bolt and piece of metal from the ship, photos of the rescue and other memorabilia on a table in a hotel conference room.

Slack set up a laptop to show video footage he shot of the ship just before it was scrapped a few years ago. He is one of five men who were present at the ship’s commissioning and decommissioning.

Anderson said that as a plank owner, when he left the ship on July 2, 1974, the crew rang the bell and announced his name. “I stood on the pier and cried,” he said.

Biery joined the crew two years later. He said he was very moved by Doan’s note on the ship’s Facebook page, as he has often wondered what happened to the refugees.

Doan wanted to make sure they knew.

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Bud Biery, right, presents Doan Ha with a membership card to the USS Wabash Association, making him an honorary member. Ha was 5 years old when he and his family fled Vietnam and were rescued by the Wabash. Ha contacted the ship association via its Facebook page, and he and Biery set up a meeting Saturday for the family members who were rescued and some of the ship’s former crew members.

After the hugs and greetings — Thanh described it as “kind of like meeting old friends” — Doan showed a video he had produced, set to “Wind Beneath My Wings” and Mariah Carey’s “Hero,” detailing the lives the sailors had made possible.

Thanh and Van Ha had three children when they left Vietnam, and Van was pregnant with their fourth. After reaching the United States, they had two more and adopted a seventh. Thanh became an auto mechanic and Van a manicurist. Six of their children graduated from college, the seventh is in nursing school. They have four grandchildren.

Other people who had been on the boat have also been successful. Canh Do, a cousin of the Ha family who left Vietnam with them, also attended the reunion — along with her daughter and son-in-law and their baby.

Helen Elstob, Canh Do’s daughter, said she learned the details of the boat escape and rescue only recently, and it seems “like a movie.”

“I knew my mom was a strong woman,” she said, but she hadn’t realized how strong.

Doan said he went back to Vietnam in 1998 and visited the neighborhood he would have grown up in. The whole area had been told to clear out to make room for resorts just a year after the family left, but it moved only a few blocks inland and is still jammed with plywood homes on stilts.

His father, using Doan as a translator, said there are still former members of the South Vietnamese Army being held in concentration camps.

“You provided an opportunity for three generations of Vietnamese,” Doan said. “The opportunity we have today, you guys provided that.”

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Monument in Switzerland to honor the Boat People from around the world who found freedom!

hlad.jennifer@stripes.com
Twitter: @jhlad

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Tagged: book sites, books war, cherry soldier, combat, Combat Infantry, digital books, firefights, Grunts, Historical fiction, jungle warfare, Military, novels, The vietnam war, The Vietnam war story, Veteran, Vietnam blog pages, Vietnam book, Vietnam conflict, Vietnam veteran, war books, war stor, Wars and Conflicts

10 American Patriotic Songs / Videos

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Another Veteran’s Day is fast approaching! 

After a searching through dozens of patriotic videos on Youtube, I’ve captured ten that I like the best and posted them below for your viewing – most folks will be familiar with all the following tunes except for maybe one:  “The Lights of Freedom” video caught my attention – the tune is catchy and the author uses pictures from  every state in the union during the presentation.  What do you think?  Are any of these your favorites?  I trust you’ll enjoy this compilation!

NOTE:  ANY OF THESE VIDEOS CAN BE VIEWED AT FULL SCREEN BY CLICKING IN THE BRACKETS ON THE BOTTOM RIGHT OF THE VIDEO.  WHEN OVER, HIT THE ESCAPE KEY TO RETURN TO THIS PAGE.

Lee Greenwood – Proud to be an American

 Toby Keith – American Soldier

Toby Keith – Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue

 Billy Ray Cyrus – Some Gave All

 Johnny Cash – The Ragged Old Flag

Hank Williams, Jr. – America will Survive

Plank Road Publishing, Inc. Music by Teresa Jennings – The Lights of Freedom -

 President Ronald Reagan – We Must Fight

Neil Diamond – America

 Celine Dion – God Bless America

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Thank you for taking the time to view these videos!  Don’t miss out on the many articles, pictures and videos available to you on this website (see below).

If you enjoyed this article and want to learn more about the Vietnam War – subscribe to this blog and get each new post delivered to your email or feed reader.   A directory, to the right of each article, lists all my published posts in chronological order – links are live – just click and read.  If you’d rather sample every post by scrolling through the many pages, then click on the Cherries title at the top of this page to land on the blog’s main page…most recent posts are first – a navigation bar at the bottom of every page aids readers in moving between pages.

I am trying to determine my website audience – before leaving, would you please click HERE then choose the one item best describing you.  Thank you in advance!


Tagged: book sites, books war, cherry soldier, combat, Combat Infantry, digital books, firefights, Grunts, Historical fiction, jungle warfare, Military, novels, The vietnam war, The Vietnam war story, Veteran, Vietnam blog pages, Vietnam book, Vietnam conflict, Vietnam veteran, war books, war stor, Wars and Conflicts

Revisiting Vietnam’s Hamburger Hill 43 Yrs. Later

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sign on Hill 937

One of these videos was posted on my Facebook site earlier in the week resulting in quite a few comments from vets and non-vets alike.  The main reason for posting is two-fold:  first, to show how the scenery has changed – vegetation reclaiming the land after 45 years.  Second, many people had absolutely no idea what it was like patrolling (humping) through the jungles- posed pictures somehow don’t offer a real “feel” of that experience – hopefully, this video will give viewers a taste of what us grunts experienced when moving through the jungles way back then.

While watching this video, you’ll have to use a little imagination so consider the following:  The temperature and humidity are both in the mid-90’s; the rucksack of supplies on your back weighs about 70 lbs. –  its straps are digging into your shoulders, restricting the blood flow to both arms which are already numb – you can try shifting the pack around, doubling up the towel under the straps and even increase your forward bend (like in the picture below) during the hump for temporary shoulder relief; the sweatband circling your head is now soaked through and beads of salty moisture are rolling down your forehead and irritating your eyes – causing them to water and get blurry;  your fatigues are soaked through and through from sweat and your back is beginning to itch; watch out for the elephant grass fronds, their razor sharp edges tear and cut  skin and become irritated from your salty sweat; Oops, land leaches are beginning to fall from upper branches onto the troops as they pass through; snakes, spiders and other insects rebel when entering their domain; 

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higher canopied jungle have “wait-a-minute vines” hanging from above, their thorny rope-like vines snag onto uniforms or rucksack – stopping you dead in your tracks.  The solution is to back up and allow the soldier following you to “unsnag” the vine from your body to continue the march; 90% of the time, columns of soldiers will not walk on trails and instead, use machetes to cut a path through the thick jungle, making travel much more difficult and slower;

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spacing is critical and soldiers normally keep a distance of  10 – 15 feet between one another – closer in thicker jungles; when setting up a small perimeter for the night, sleeping positions need to be cut out in the thick vegetation and pathways cleared to a central location for night guard and radio watch – everyone rotates and gets an hour-long turn every night.  So there ya have it, everything you might experience while on patrol through the endless jungles.  Oh yea, I almost forget the two most important things – keep a sharp eye out for enemy soldiers who could be lurking anywhere and for their boobytraps – both, capable of maiming and death!

In 2012, a Facebook friend of mine visited Vietnam and toured Dong Ap Bia, where a punishing 11-day battle took place for a mountain near the border with Laos. The 101st Airborne Division fought North Vietnamese regulars in May 1969 for control of the site designated as Hill 937 on U.S. military maps, but known to American soldiers as “Hamburger Hill.” The U.S. operation took the hill, but only after 71 Americans died and 372 were wounded. Some estimates put the Vietnamese deaths at 600.   This friend sent me these two videos and several pictures of current day Hamburger Hill to share.

I am not attempting to tell the story of this battle  – certainly there are thousands of versions.  Instead, the focus of this article is to educate those who have never been in the military or  had to patrol / fight in the jungles and hills of Vietnam. It is an opportunity for one to experience what it might have been like.  In the second video, my friend is following a guide up “Hamburger Hill” in the A Shau Valley and filming the video while walking – he is not carrying any supplies on his back, yet, he is short of breath, which makes it difficult for him to provide a running commentary. It’s the monsoon season and both men are following a small path.  Prior to showing the video, I’ve posted his pictures and some from the actual battle, and then added comments from those viewers who’ve seen the video earlier in the week.

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Hill, between the ‘Screaming Eagles’ of the 101st Airborne Division (Airmobile) and the 29th ‘Pride of Ho Chi Minh’ NVA Regiment. 

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LZ for the evacuation of those wounding during the battle.

Short look from former LZ and up the mountain

 

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Dong Ap Bia (Hamburger Hill)

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hill

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Fighting up the hill

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Guide at LZ

LZ at base of Hamburger Hill

Is that NVA

Guide heading uphill

Looking down a clearing

Looking downhill into an opening within the thick vegetation

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One of the LZ’s used during the battle

Stairs at foot of hill

Stairs at the base of the hill – leading up to the monument

Monument

Monument near hilltop honoring those Vietnamese Communists lost during the battle 

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English version of plaque inside of monument

to the summit

Near the summit

Going up back side where NVA went down

Backside of mountain where the NVA escaped

Elephant grass

Example of elephant grass

Dense jungle

Panoramic view

Looking down a clearing

Looking downhill

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Stream

 

Okay, it’s time to watch the video – please keep in mind all the things I mentioned at the beginning to get an up close and personal feel of what grunts had to endure in the jungles and hills of Vietnam.  

Better to watch in “full screen” – items to watch for:

  1. My friend cuts his hand when brushing against elephant grass
  2. He comes upon a snake and bunker, but it’s too fast for us to see anything
  3. He stops to film an unusual flower and loses his guide.  Since they are on a trail, it will be easy for him to catch up.  When cutting our own trail and losing sight of the person in front of you sometime causes panic due to the uncertainty of how to proceed.  Most of the time, the person in front will come back for you when he notices you gone.

Walking Up Hamburger Hill

 

Comments from Facebook:

“Looks so different now!”

“…not all of the terrain was this thick and heavy. Some areas had been defoliated and cut down.”

“Yes the foliage varied in the A Shau and some hills were steeper than others. Walked point there a couple times and avoided trails like that as much as possible.”

“That was life back then nothing important but taking the next step !!!”

“From the vantage point of 40 some odd years later, I am asking myself, how the hell did we do it for weeks at a time?”

“WOW! Barely a trail there at all. I don’t know HOW you could have seen any enemy! They could lie down just a few feet in, and you’d never see them! Snakes? Insects?”

“I’ll tell ya, we sure did pick some God-awful pieces of real estate to assault and then abandon…”

“That was one of the things wrong with this War – ground was not/could not be held.”

“Damn. As an Airman, about all I can say is I already had a high level of respect for you men on the ground, now your can quadruple that or more! Frankly, I can’t imagine me going through that place.”
 
“Add a helmet, flack jacket, boots, ammunition, weapons and other supplies to the hike and you have a real day in Nam. Oh yeah, I forgot there were also people trying to kill you.”
 
“thanks … this video and your telling the way it was .. puts a visual in my mind!”
 

Thank you for taking the time to view these pictures and videos!  Please leave a comment below and don’t miss out on the many articles, pictures and videos available to you on this website (see below).

If you enjoyed this article and want to learn more about the Vietnam War – subscribe to this blog and get each new post delivered to your email or feed reader.   A directory, to the right of each article, lists all my published posts in chronological order – links are live – just click and read.  If you’d rather sample every post by scrolling through the many pages, then click on the Cherries title at the top of this page to land on the blog’s main page…most recent posts are first – a navigation bar at the bottom of every page aids readers in moving between pages.

I am trying to determine my website audience – before leaving, would you please click HERE then choose the one item best describing you.  Thank you in advance!


Tagged: book sites, books war, cherry soldier, combat, Combat Infantry, digital books, firefights, Grunts, Historical fiction, jungle warfare, Military, novels, The vietnam war, The Vietnam war story, Veteran, Vietnam blog pages, Vietnam book, Vietnam conflict, Vietnam veteran, war books, war stor, Wars and Conflicts

Famous Quotes About Vietnam and War

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 These thirty quotes were cherry-picked from the website “BrainyQuote” – all are from famous people referencing war – especially the Vietnam War.   Using a photo editor, I was able to create a backdrop for each of these special quotations and have posted them below in no specific order.  The pictures are from Facebook and the internet.  Feel free to copy and paste any of them to your personal directory.  I hope you enjoy them!  Let me know if you have a favorite…

 

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Ike hates war

 

memorial

 

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HamburgerHill

 

sylvester

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sam eliot

 

want die

pentagon

 

childhoods

 

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whos right

 

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U.S. Marines in Operation Allen Brook

 

weapons

 

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politicians

 

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vva

 

friendship

 

generals

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Thank you for taking the time to view these slides!  Don’t miss out on the many articles, pictures and videos available to you on this website (see below).

If you enjoyed this article and want to learn more about the Vietnam War – subscribe to this blog and get each new post delivered to your email or feed reader.   A directory, to the right of each article, lists all my published posts in chronological order – links are live – just click and read.  If you’d rather sample every post by scrolling through the many pages, then click on the Cherries title at the top of this page to land on the blog’s main page…most recent posts are first – a navigation bar at the bottom of every page aids readers in moving between pages.

I am trying to determine my website audience – before leaving, would you please click HERE then choose the one item best describing you.  Thank you in advance!


Tagged: book sites, books war, cherry soldier, combat, Combat Infantry, digital books, firefights, Grunts, Historical fiction, jungle warfare, Military, novels, The vietnam war, The Vietnam war story, Veteran, Vietnam blog pages, Vietnam book, Vietnam conflict, Vietnam veteran, war books, war stor, Wars and Conflicts

The bloody battle of Khe Sanh: 77 days under siege (Guest Blog)

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 Cut off and surrounded, about 5,000 Marines and their supporting forces, including the men of Bravo Company, 1st Battalion, 26th Marine Regiment, seen here, successfully defended Khe Sanh Combat Base from three NVA divisions and about 20,000 troops during an 11-week siege in early 1968. Fifty years after the start of the war, the men of Bravo have told their story for the first time in the form of a new documentary film, “Bravo! Common Men, Uncommon Valor,” which describes some of the most brutal fighting in the Vietnam war. This photograph depicts Bravo Marine Steve Wiese’s squad. Wiese is on the far right and Mike McCauley, also featured in the film, is on the far left.     

This article was originally published in the Stars and Stripes on November 17, 2014 by Matthew M. Burke.  My good friend and fellow VVA Chapter 154 member, John “Doc” Cicala is interviewed in this article and also featured in the forthcoming documentary.   

 Marine Cpl. Steve Wiese watched in horror from a shell crater as several North Vietnamese Army regulars walked toward him, callously executing his wounded brothers in arms.

Wiese’s squad had been one of two from 3rd platoon that was decimated while on patrol a short distance from the base at Khe Sanh on Feb. 25, 1968. The patrol was looking for an enemy mortar position when they were drawn into a perfectly orchestrated crescent-shaped ambush.

As the NVA drew closer, Wiese pulled the body of a fellow Marine over his chest and played dead. Something distracted the enemy and they turned around and went in the opposite direction.

Wiese retreated meticulously back to the besieged American base. It took the entire day to trek back about 400 yards.

The engaimage (1)gement would be one of the deadliest days at Khe Sanh for the men of Bravo Company, 1st Battalion, 26th Marine Regiment, with 27 killed, one taken prisoner and 19 wounded, according to survivors and official reports. Only eight of the wounded, including Wiese, were fit enough to return to duty.

While most have heard of the Battle for Khe Sanh, an 11-week siege in early 1968 that pitted three NVA divisions — about 20,000 troops — against a single surrounded and cut-off U.S. Marine regiment of about 5,000 and their supporting forces, few have heard of the men of Bravo, the “ghost patrol” and subsequent Marine retaliation for the slaughter.

Marking the 50th anniversary of the start of the war, a new documentary made by Bravo Marine and Khe Sanh veteran Ken Rodgers and his wife, Betty, “Bravo! Common Men, Uncommon Valor” offers a glimpse into some of the bloodiest fighting of the Vietnam War.

The film has also provided some much-needed catharsis to the survivors from Bravo, many of whom opened up for the first time.

“I don’t think anyone else could have [made the film],” Wiese, now 66, told Stars and Stripes from his California home. For years, he suppressed his experiences and was reluctant to tell his story. However, that changed when he sat across from the camera and Rodgers.

“I carry major survivor’s guilt,” he said. “I don’t understand why I’m alive and they aren’t. I don’t understand why I’m here.”

Securing Khe Sanh

Khe Sanh Combat Base was erected near the border with Laos in western Quang Tri province in 1962 by Green Berets. The base featured an airstrip and was atop a plateau “in the shadow of Dong Tri mountain,” overlooking a tributary of the Quang Tri River, according to official Marine Corps histories.

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The surrounding area featured piedmont hills, uninhabited jungle with impenetrable undergrowth, mountain trails hidden by tree canopies at 60-70 feet above the floor, tall elephant grass and bamboo thickets. It was a natural infiltration route into the south and the densely populated cities on the eastern coast of Quang Tri.

United States Military Assistance Command Vietnam commander Army Gen. W.C. Westmoreland said that the base was strategically important.

The North Vietnamese hoped to establish a “liberation government” just south of the DMZ and they wanted to control the area to launch attacks into the south and sow unrest. If they wanted to push south from bases in Laos, Khe Sanh stood directly in their path.

In addition, by fighting in a generally unpopulated region, there would be few restrictions on tactics and weapons.

“Another factor favoring the decision to hold Khe Sanh was the enemy’s determination to take it,” Westmoreland wrote. “Our defense of the area would tie down large numbers of North Vietnamese troops which otherwise could move against the vulnerable populated areas whose security was the heart of the Vietnamese pacification program.”

The first substantial Marine units arrived at the base in spring 1966. The first attacks on the base happened a year later, and the NVA were repelled. During what would come to be known as the “Hill Fights,” the Marines secured three surrounding hills and built combat outposts. The base remained relatively quiet for the remainder of the year, according to Bravo skipper retired Lt. Col. Ken Pipes, then a captain. He arrived at Khe Sanh in September 1967.

‘Something was brewing’

All of the signs were there. The enemy was planning something big.

Patrols began making contact out in the hinterlands; Reconnaissance reported large groups were moving into the area and they were staying put, Pipes said. Recovered NVA documents and maps depicted all of the major approaches to the base. A disgruntled NVA first lieutenant who surrendered knew the entire plan and began talking.

“We did get intelligence,” Pipes said. “We knew something was brewing.”

NVA reconnaissance patrols turned into probes; sniper fire increased and ambushes picked up. The Marines stopped running patrols and improved their fortifications as reinforcements arrived.

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On Jan. 21, 1968, “all hell broke loose” with hundreds of 82mm mortars, artillery shells and 122mm rockets slamming into the base. The Marines dove for cover in trenches and bunkers while a mess hall was flattened, the regimental commander’s quarters was hit, fuel storage areas were set ablaze and several helicopters and trucks were destroyed.

One of the first rounds hit the ammunition dump near the eastern end of the runway. It erupted in a series of blinding explosions. Mortars and artillery were sent into the air and exploded upon coming down, adding to the devastation. Tear gas was released.

“It was crazy,” Ken Rodgers recalled. “The Vietnamese were pounding us … Rounds were coming down on top of us; we were wearing masks, expecting an assault on the line.”

Navy Corpsman John “Doc” Cicala remembers someone calling for him. The 3rd class petty officer grabbed his rifle and left his hooch.

No sooner had he hit the trench line when he heard an explosion, he said. Next thing he knew, he was on his back looking up at the sky.

“I reached for my helmet and there was the tail fin of a mortar stuck in it,” he said. “I was out for a couple of minutes.”

He went on to the scene to find a Marine with his foot blown off, he said. He applied a tourniquet and brought him to the aid station.

“I kept quite busy,” he recalled. “It wasn’t a fun time.”

“I reached for my helmet and there was the tail fin of a mortar stuck in it.” - John “Doc” Cicala

The artillery barrage would continue for 77 days and nights. The men tried to stay underground as much as possible.

“Anyone who says they weren’t scared is lying,” said Wiese. “We knew we were going to be overrun and the whole world was going to end — but that happened every night. People were wounded and killed every night.”

The leadership tried to keep everyone calm as they watched the NVA dig trenches around the base and begin tunneling toward it.

“You have to maintain and present a confidence,” said Pipes. “We were pretty well-trained too.”

Pipes made the rounds day and night, sometimes offering “a quick sniff” of Jack Daniel’s to the men. He made sure they had ammunition. His efforts earned him the devotion of his men.

Some days only a few rounds would hit the base; other days would bring more than 2,000, Pipes said.

‘Ghost patrol’

On Feb. 25, the “ghost patrol” went outside the wire led by a fearless yet young and relatively inexperienced Lt. Donald Jacques. The patrol, which included Wiese and Cicala, reached two checkpoints before veering off course.

They saw three NVA soldiers walking down the road at 50 yards before jumping into the jungle. Against the advice of a defector turned scout, Jacques gave the order to pursue. Most of the men were cut down soon after.

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“It was total chaos,” said Cicala. “Guys started dropping everywhere. All I could do was run around and try and take care of them.”

An NVA soldier popped out of a hole in front of Cicala as he rushed to aid a comrade. Cicala was shot two times in the chest. While he was down, a grenade landed between his legs. All he could do, he said, was curl up in the fetal position and wait for the end.

Cicala was too close to absorb the brunt of the blast, which went over him, he said. He dressed his own wounds.

Jacques ran up to the injured corpsman. “Get out of here, we’re all getting killed,” Cicala recalled him shouting. Jacques was hit in the femoral artery by machine gun fire less than 50 feet away, and he bled out.

Seeing no one alive, Cicala started crawling. The dead and wounded were left on the battlefield.

It took the rest of the day for Cicala to crawl back to base. When he arrived, he was in shock, repeating, “They’re all dead.” He left Khe Sanh and Vietnam after the battle.

Wiese stayed.

His squad had been wiped out, so at 19, he found himself in charge of a new one.

The battle-hardened Wiese was supposed to leave Khe Sanh on March 28, so he waited while the barrage continued.

When his time came, he recalled going to the airstrip. A C-130 landed and loaded the dead and wounded. There was no room for him.

 The next day, no plane came.

On March 30, he had two choices: wait at the airfield or go on patrol with his men. He went, not wanting to be viewed as a coward.

Pipes led the patrol, which was designed to recover the bodies of fallen comrades and get revenge on a battalion of NVA. The Marines were outnumbered four or five to one.

They went outside the wire with a slightly larger force of 186, this time through heavy fog. Survivors call it the “payback patrol.”

As Company B approached the NVA trenches and bunkers, Pipes got on the radio.

“Be advised, fix bayonets,” Wiese recalled. “I was like, ‘Oh crap, we’re talking hand-to-hand combat.’”

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It didn’t take long for the NVA to pin down some of the Marines, including Wiese.

Lance Cpl. Wayne Moore charged a soldier holding a machine gun and was shot dead as Wiese and his men watched.

Lance Cpl. Author Smith jumped into the enemy trench line with a bayonet and died fighting.

Pfc. Ted Britt did the same.

“We all jumped up and started screaming and charged the line,” Wiese recalled. “All along the line, everybody was jumping up. We killed a lot of NVA.”

Pipes was hit with a mortar fragment that went through his arm and lodged in his chest just a few inches from his heart, yet he continued to coordinate the artillery and air support. A sniper’s bullet finally stopped the captain; he was shot in the head and knocked unconscious. The bullet penetrated the steel of his helmet but was stopped by his helmet liner.

Official reports estimate the number of NVA killed at 115. Those who weren’t stabbed or shot were blown out of their fortifications with grenades, satchel charges or flamethrowers.

The Marines sent the larger force running down the hill. There were nine Americans killed in the engagement, including Moore, Smith and Britt, according to official accounts.

''Gateway_to_Hell''_S.O.G._BO

The aftermath

Payback marked the end of Operation Scotland I and the beginning of Operation Pegasus, which would end the siege with Marine and Army elements and South Vietnamese counterparts.

Pipes insists they didn’t need relief.

From November 1967 to the end of the “payback patrol,” there were 205 killed from all services and more than 1,600 wounded.

The Marines confirmed the deaths of 1,602 NVA but the number is believed to be as high as 15,000. Counting is difficult because the enemy often carried away their dead.

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Khe Sanh Base after the seige

Within months, the base at Khe Sanh was abandoned by the U.S., and the NVA raised their flag over the pockmarked plateau.

Cicala remembers reading in Stars and Stripes that it was “strategically unnecessary to hold” while he was in the hospital recovering from his wounds. He was so angry that he remembers what page the article was on.

He said that the sacrifices made defending the base only to give it up have made him bitter, a sentiment reiterated by the Bravo Marines interviewed by Stars and Stripes.

“We always felt betrayed that so many guys died and then they just left it,” Wiese said.

The men of Bravo Company were forced to process these feelings and the horrors they had witnessed while coming home to a country that wanted nothing to do with them. They banded together with yearly reunions and constant contact. For many, it has taken decades to get over what they saw and come to terms with the post-traumatic stress.

“I get angry when people talk about glory and honor,” Cicala said. “The only thing that counts is keeping your buddy alive.”

Their bond has lasted a lifetime. Now, they face a new enemy in cancer, diabetes and other ailments they say were caused by exposure to Agent Orange. Wiese is fighting both.

Ken and Betty Rodgers said several of the men in the film have died since their interviews.

The film, in the works for years, stands as a testament to the men of Bravo. It recounts the battle, complete with interviews with over a dozen survivors, never before heard audio that brings the battle to life, after-action reports and photos.

The film was completed over the summer with sound and film editing by Vietnam veteran John Nutt from “Apocalypse Now” and “Amadeus” and four-time Oscar winner Mark Berger, who mixed the sound.

The Rodgerses are working to secure screenings across the country and are looking for a home for the film on television.

To this day, Pipes can rattle off the names of the men he served with like it was yesterday — Lownds, Wilkinson, Rayburn, Pessoni, Norman, Morris, McCauley, Gaynor, Horton, Quigley, Scudder.

 

“These were important men. If we don’t talk about them I’m afraid they’ll be forgotten and that would hurt my heart.” - Ken Pipes

They are forever on his mind, he said, and the film serves as a way to keep their memory alive. He sees it as immortality for the warriors of Bravo.

“These were important men,” Pipes said, his voice wavering with emotion. “If we don’t talk about them I’m afraid they’ll be forgotten and that would hurt my heart.”

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burke.matt@stripes.com

 

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Famous Quotes About Vietnam and War – (Part 2)

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My earlier article, “Famous Quotes About Vietnam and War” was well received and generated a ton of interest.  As a result, I’ve published this new blog with 34 additional “Quotes on pictures” – some are anonymous, but all are statements we’ve heard at one time or another while in Vietnam.  Like I did before, the quotes were cherry-picked from the website “BrainyQuote dot com” – most are from famous people referencing war – especially the Vietnam War.   Using a photo editor, I created a backdrop for each of these special quotations and posted them below in no specific order.  Most pictures are from Facebook and the internet – a couple include my mug and are from my personal collection.  Feel free to copy and paste any of them to your personal directory.  I hope you enjoy them!  Let me know if you have a favorite…

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Vietnam: The loss of American innocence?

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By Terry Leonard, Stars and Stripes

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As fellow troopers aid wounded comrades, the first sergeant of A Company, 101st Airborne Division, guides a medevac helicopter through the jungle foliage to pick up casualties suffered during a five-day patrol near Hue, April 1968. /ART GREENSPON/AP

image (9)South Vietnam, May 20, 1965: U.S. helicopters rake the perimeter of a landing zone with rockets and machine-gun fire before dropping off troops brought in from Binh Hoa.  Mike Mealey/Stars and Stripes

image (1)When Neil Armstrong took his small step for man in the lunar dust in July 1969, Americans saw it as proof there were no Earthly limits. Nothing then seemed beyond the reach of American power, prestige and know-how. It took Vietnam to expose the hubris in that sentiment.

The American Century was at its zenith. Unrivaled U.S. wealth and prosperity, predictable fruits of the postwar Pax Americana, lifted national influence to new heights globally. Hollywood, rock music, blue jeans and hamburgers carried American culture, taste and values to the far corners of the world.

Yet with images of Apollo 11 fresh on the mind, Vietnam forced Americans to accept limits to U.S. power and to acknowledge their reach had exceeded their grasp. With apologies to Robert Browning, that troublesome realization was not what they believed a heaven was for.

 

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Fifty years later, the Vietnam War remains an enigma. Its legacy distorted by folklore, myth, political spin, cloudy memories and the perverted history of feature films and popular fiction. Yet it remains clear the war changed America in profound ways still not understood.

It changed who we are and how we see ourselves. It fundamentally revised our view of the world and the world’s view of us. It reshaped our institutions, particularly the military. It altered not only how we fight wars, but when and why we choose to fight.

Stars and Stripes is commemorating the Vietnam War at 50 annually with a series of stories and special projects intended to add context and understanding to the history of that war and to the changes it wrought. The project examines the fighting abroad and the protests, politics and turmoil at home. It includes the voices of veterans who fought and those of others who marched at home for peace.

More than 58,000 Americans and at least 1.5 million Vietnamese died in the war that divided the country as nothing else had done since the Civil War.

“No event in American history is more misunderstood than Vietnam. It was misreported then, and it is misremembered now,” former President Richard Nixon wrote in his 1985 book “No More Vietnams,” a selective history and apologia for his role in the tragic war.

Americans fought fiercely and gallantly in Vietnam. The Medal of Honor was awarded to more than 250 individuals. U.S. troops won nearly every significant battle. Yet it was all in vain. Many fighting men would feel betrayed by political leaders and people at home who turned against the war.

At home, the war taught a generation of young people not to trust their government. In an astonishingly short period of time they taught their parents and even some political leaders.

“The biggest lesson I learned from Vietnam is not to trust our own government statements. I had no idea until then that you could not rely on them,” former Sen. J. William Fulbright told the New York Times in 1985, a decade after the war ended.

image (7)The government also didn’t trust its people. Security agencies spying on civil rights leaders and political dissidents added people who spoke out against the war to their surveillance lists. Later Senate investigations detailed widespread illegal intelligence gathering on U.S. citizens.

KINGAnti-war and civil rights protesters were also portrayed in government-run campaigns of character assassination as anti-American or communist sympathizers, sometimes with violent consequences. At the 1968 Democratic National Convention, Chicago police savagely attacked and beat anti-war protesters. A federal investigation later would term it a police riot.

In May of 1970, National Guardsmen opened fire on anti-war protesters at Kent State University in Ohio, killing four and wounding nine. Just 10 days later, police killed two and wounded 12 when they fired on African-American students protesting the war at Jackson State College in Mississippi.

Kent State triggered a nationwide student strike that closed hundreds of colleges and universities and became a symbol of how the war divided the country. In a Newsweek poll three weeks after the shootings, 11 percent of the respondents blamed the National Guard and 58 percent the students. The shootings at predominately African-American Jackson state were largely ignored.

When the war began in the Sixties many had already begun to question a U.S. international policy shaped by the cold war narrative of the Red Menace and the Domino Theory. Domestically, American society was under pressure from many sides to become more inclusive and fair.

CHURCH BOMBINGThe civil rights movement forced a reluctant country to confront its values and its shameful past. The sexual revolution and the women’s rights movement sought to fundamentally change how Americans lived, loved and worked. It reshaped gender roles and widened a growing gap between the younger and older generations.

The assassination of President John F. Kennedy stunned the country and exposed deep and dark divisions. The subsequent murders in 1968 of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy destroyed lingering illusions about an idyllic America and raised troubling questions about our violent national character.

The mostly peaceful civil rights movement was fiercely and violently resisted. Police brutally suppressed peaceful demonstrations, and not just in the south. Civil rights workers were murdered or beaten, black churches were bombed, black men lynched. Race riots in the ‘60s rocked New York, Newark, Philadelphia, Detroit, Chicago and Los Angeles. Americans were shocked by television images of National Guardsmen and U.S. paratroopers, locked and loaded, patrolling the streets of burning American cities.

America’s disaffected youth recoiled from society and their discontent gave rise to an anti-authoritarian counterculture that sought to reinterpret the American dream. Peace and love replaced duty and honor. The popular refrain “Don’t trust anyone over 30,” defined the boundaries of the generation gap.

Entertainers such as Bob Dylan, Phil Ochs, Pete Seeger, Joan Baez and others made rebellion part of popular culture. Dylan caught the emerging tenor in his 1964 song “The Times They Are A-Changin’”:


Come mothers and fathers  

Throughout the land
And don’t criticize
What you can’t understand
Your sons and your daughters
Are beyond your command

Your old road is
Rapidly agin’
Please get out of the new one
If you can’t lend your hand
For the times they are a-changin’


The Harvard psychologist Timothy Leary became a counterculture guru by advocating mind-altering drugs such as LSD. He popularized the phrase “Turn on, Tune in, Drop out.” He was fired by Harvard, but he was seen as something of a philosopher by the “sex, drugs and rock and roll” culture of the ‘60s. So much so that even today a common joke is: “If you can remember the ‘60s, you weren’t really there.”

Despite the obvious excesses, mainstream society began to embrace causes of the youth movement, particularly its anti-war sentiment. Peace marches that began with a few thousand students grew into marches by tens of thousands from all walks of life.

Nixon sought to deflect criticism of the war and growing distrust in government. He spoke in1969 of the “silent majority” of Americans whose views supported him and the war but whose voices were being drowned out by a more vocal minority.

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That was the summer Apollo 11 landed on the moon and confirmed our belief in American exceptionalism. Americans constantly boasted that if we could go to the moon, we could do anything.

Many historians argue that a series of U.S. presidents and their military and political aides believed it too and erroneously assumed military might would win in Vietnam.

“Tell the Vietnamese they’ve got to draw in their horns or we’re going to bomb them into the Stone Age,” warned Gen. Curtis LeMay, the Air Force chief of staff, in May 1964. U.S. warplanes dropped more tons of explosive on Vietnam than fell on Germany, Japan and Italy in World War II, but his hollow threat would later be lampooned by critics of the war.

In just three years, that overconfidence retreated to a position of curious optimism. Walt Rostow, President Johnson’s national security adviser, tried to deflect bad news about the war in 1967 by saying: “I see light at the end of the tunnel.” That light, his critics joked, was an oncoming train.

Even the curious optimism faded.

Two years later, Nixon, under pressure to end the war vowed: “I’m not going to be the first American president to lose a war.”

Nixon later claimed victory in Vietnam but blamed a hostile press and an irresponsible Congress for “losing the peace.” In the book “Chasing Shadows: The Nixon Tapes, the Chennault Affair and the Origins of Watergate,” journalist Ken Hughes said this year that newly released transcripts of FBI wiretaps indicated then presidential candidate Nixon ordered the sabotage of the Paris peace talks in October of 1968, apparently to bolster his election chances that November.

Over the years, news coverage of the war shifted from supportive to an increasingly grim portrayal of the fighting. As the reporting became increasingly negative, as casualties continued to mount, public doubts grew dramatically.

One of the most enduring legacies of Vietnam and its negative impact on public opinion and policy is the Vietnam Syndrome, the name to the paralyzing effect on U.S. foreign policy brought on by the fear of becoming mired in another quagmire, a questionable war with no clear objectives and a defined end game. Every president since the war ended has had to deal with the syndrome.

The Vietnam War was perhaps the most publicized war in American history and certainly the first televised war with ghastly images nightly on the evening news.

“Television brought the brutality of war into the comfort of the living room. Vietnam was lost in the living rooms of America – not on the battlefields of Vietnam,” Marshall McLuhan, the highly regarded Canadian philosopher of communication theory told the Montreal Gazette in 1975.

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That coverage of the Vietnam War and its impact on the public became a serious concern. Early in 1968 polls showed 61 percent of Americans supported the war. By years end, 53 percent opposed it. By the time Armstrong landed on the moon, 58 percent opposed it and s upport for the war would continue to fall.

“Vietnam was the first war ever fought without censorship. Without censorship, things can get terribly confused in the public mind,” retired Gen. William Westmoreland, the commander in Vietnam from 1964 to 1968, would tell Time magazine in 1982.

For some, the key lesson learned was that it was the coverage of failed policies, and not the policy failures themselves, that caused Americans to lose faith and confidence in government.

The military now tightly controls access to a battlefield. With the policy it can and at times has limited what could be seen and by extension, what could be reported. Critics argue the policy supports the old adage: “Truth is the first casualty of war.”

Although support for the war dwindled, until Saigon finally fell April 29, 1975, many still refused to believe we could lose. Today, many scholars contend the war marked the loss of American innocence. It deeply divided a nation unified by World War II and the division and distrust of government continues to grow.

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leonard.terry@stripes.com

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Decades later, ‘Vietnam syndrome’ still casts doubts on military action

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By Erik_Slavin
Article originally publishes in Stars and Stripes, November 12, 2014

image (1)The Vietnam War’s lasting impact on America’s foreign policy is largely characterized by doubt, in the opinions of many analysts.

Doubt that the United States, despite possessing the most powerful military on earth, will win a war against a determined enemy.

Doubt among presidential administrations that the public would support a conflict, once television showed them pictures of dead soldiers being dragged through the streets of countries most Americans knew little or nothing about.

Mostly, doubt — with some notable outliers — that the United States can impose its will through force, no matter the situation.

Driving those doubts is the desire to avoid another open-ended commitment with an uncertain endgame, where U.S. troops spend years on the ground in a foreign country, fighting against an enemy that can blend back into the civilian population far too easily.

That desire is part of what some have defined as “Vietnam syndrome,” a concept declared dead and reborn several times in the decades since the last American combat troops left Southeast Asia.

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“Getting involved and not being able to get up, like Gulliver tied down by the Lilliputians suffering constant blows, that’s the concern,” said Carlyle Thayer, an American professor and Vietnam analyst who taught a course on the Vietnam War at Australia’s National Defense University.

That concern endures — buffeted by experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan — as Americans debate today’s military actions.

Americans support fighting the Islamic State group by a 60 percent to 31 percent margin — unless that action turns to ground troops, according to a September Gallup poll. Only 40 percent approve of that, according to the poll.

President Barack Obama went so far as to rule out U.S. ground troops before the latest round of air and naval strikes on Iraq and Syria began.

Before the end of the Vietnam War, presidents didn’t speak in such measured, cautious ways about how they would wage war. However, Obama made it clear during a May speech at the U.S. Military Academy that caution would be a cornerstone of his foreign policy agenda.

“Since World War II, some of our most costly mistakes came not from our restraint, but from our willingness to rush into military adventures without thinking through the consequences,” Obama said.

The U.S. would act unilaterally when it was directly threatened and would otherwise explore other options, he said.

Obama, 53, is too young to have served in Vietnam — yet his words that day mirror the definition of Vietnam syndrome offered by journalist and Vietnam War author Marvin Kalb, who called it “a fundamental reluctance to commit American military power anywhere in the world, unless it is absolutely necessary to protect the national interests of the country.”

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The term Vietnam syndrome first reached prominence when presidential candidate Ronald Reagan used it during an August 1980 campaign speech. Reagan said the syndrome was created by the “North Vietnamese aggressors” aiming to “win in the field of propaganda here in America what they could not win on the field of battle in Vietnam.”

In Reagan’s view, America failed to secure Vietnam because it lacked the means and the will to do so from the home front.

Nevertheless, fear of another Vietnam “quagmire” became the lens through which military action was viewed in the post-war 1980s.

Although Reagan’s budgets dramatically increased defense spending, his military actions were generally small, covert or obtained by proxy.

Then came the first Gulf War. It was civilian America’s first look at the reconstituted, all-volunteer force in a very large-scale action.

Victory came swiftly and at the cost of relatively few casualties. President George H.W. Bush avoided the quagmire by pulling troops out of Iraq quickly and leaving Saddam Hussein in power — moves that drew little criticism at the time.

Basking in the afterglow of military triumph, Bush ended a speech in 1991 with the proclamation that, “By God, we’ve kicked the Vietnam syndrome once and for all.”

About two years later, the doubts that Vietnam brought about returned, this time in the Horn of Africa.

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On Oct. 3, 1993, the “Black Hawk Down” incident kicked off the Battle of Mogadishu, leaving 18 U.S. servicemembers dead. Americans recoiled at images of Staff Sgt. William David Cleveland’s body being dragged through the Somali capital’s streets.

Days later, Clinton ordered U.S. troops to begin preparing for withdrawal.

A year later, the genocide in Rwanda began, and Clinton sent no military force. He would later describe not intervening in the genocide, which claimed about 1 million Rwandans, as one of his biggest regrets.

“If we’d gone in sooner, I believe we could have saved at least a third of the lives that were lost. … It had an enduring impact on me,” Clinton said on CNBC in 2013.

American overseas involvement remained somewhat restrained up until the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks.

After that, eight out of 10 Americans supported a ground war in Afghanistan.

If President George W. Bush had any worries about Vietnam syndrome, he didn’t share them publicly.

Defense analysts once again declared Vietnam syndrome kicked, at least, until the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan grew protracted, and opinion polls turned against the conflicts.

“Getting involved and not being able to get up, like Gulliver tied down by the Lilliputians suffering constant blows, that’s the concern.”– Carlyle Thayer

In 2009, conservative scholar Max Boot said that George H.W. Bush got it wrong with his 1991 proclamation — Vietnam syndrome was alive and well in the Obama era.

Boot noted several examples of lawmakers and analysts questioning the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan through the prism of Vietnam.

Boot dismissed their doubts as defeatist. He saw no reason to make the Vietnam comparison, unless it was to compare administrations “more interested in ending than in winning the war.”

Boot’s view led him to agree on one point with Obama’s assessment: “You never step into the same river twice. And so Afghanistan is not Vietnam.”

slavin.erik@stripes.com
Twitter: @eslavin_stripes

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Vietnam: Looking Back – At The Facts

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1 Jun 01 © By: K. G. Sears, Ph.D., with permission – Ron Leonard (http://www.25thAviation.org)

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One reason America’s agonizing perception of “Vietnam” will not go away, is because that perception is wrong. It’s out of place in the American psyche, and it continues to fester in much the same way battle wounds fester when shrapnel or other foreign matter is left in the body. It is not normal behavior for Americans to idolize mass murdering despots, to champion the cause of slavery, to abandon friends and allies, or to cut and run in the face of adversity. Why then did so many Americans engage in these types of activities during the country’s “Vietnam” experience?

1

That the American experience in Vietnam was painful and ended in long lasting (albeit self-inflicted) grief and misery cannot be disputed. However, the reasons behind that grief and misery are not even remotely understood, by either the American people or their government. Contradictory to popular belief, and a whole lot of wishful thinking by a solid corps of some 16,000,000+ American draft dodgers and their families and supporters, it was not a military defeat that brought misfortune to the American effort in Vietnam.

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The United States military in Vietnam was the best educated, best trained, best disciplined and most successful force ever fielded in the history of American arms. Why then, did it get such bad press, and, why is the public’s opinion of them so twisted? The answer is simple. But first, a few relevant comparisons.

3

During the Civil War, at the Battle of Bull Run, the entire Union Army panicked and fled the battlefield. Nothing even remotely resembling that debacle ever occurred in Vietnam.

4

In WWII at the Kasserine Pass in Tunisia, elements of the US Army were overrun by the Germans. In the course of that battle, Hitler’s General Rommel (The Desert Fox) inflicted 3,100 US casualties, took 3,700 US prisoners and captured or destroyed 198 American tanks. In Vietnam no US Military units were overrun and no US Military infantry units or tank outfits were captured.

5

WW II again. In the Philippines, US Army Generals Jonathan Wainwright and Edward King surrendered themselves and their troops to the Japanese. In Vietnam no US generals, or US military units ever surrendered.

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Before the Normandy invasion (“D” Day, 1944) the US Army (In WW II the US Army included the Army Air Corps which today has become the US Airforce) in England filled its own jails with American soldiers who refused to fight and then had to rent jail space from the British to handle the overflow. The US Army in Vietnam never had to rent jail space from the Vietnamese to incarcerate American soldiers who refused to fight.

Desertion. Only about 5,000 men assigned to Vietnam deserted and just 249 of those deserted while in Vietnam. During WW II, in the European Theater alone, over 20,000 US Military men were convicted of disertion and, on a comparable percentage basis, the overall WW II desertion rate was 55 percent higher than in Vietnam.

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During the WW II Battle of the Bulge in Europe two regiments of the US Army’s 106th Division surrendered to the Germans. Again: In Vietnam no US Army unit ever surrendered.

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The highest ranking American soldier killed in WW II was Lt. (three star) General Leslie J. McNair. He was killed when American warplanes accidentally bombed his position during the invasion of Europe. In Vietnam there were no American generals killed by American bombers.

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As for brutality: During WW II the US Army executed nearly 300 of its own men. In the European Theater alone, the US Army sentenced 443 American soldiers to death. Most of these sentences were for the rape and or murder of civilians.

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In the Korean War, Major General William F. Dean, commander of the 24th Infantry Division, was taken prisoner of war (POW). In Vietnam no US generals, much less division commanders, were ever taken prisoner.

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During the Korean War the US Army was forced into the longest retreat in its history. A catastrophic 275 mile withdrawal from the Yalu River all the way to Pyontaek, 45 miles south of Seoul. In the process they lost the capital city of Seoul. The US Military in Vietnam was never compelled into a major retreat nor did it ever abandon Saigon to the enemy.

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The 1st US Marine Division was driven from the Chosin Reservoir and forced into an emergency evacuation from the Korean port of Hungnam. There they were joined by other US Army and South Korean soldiers and the US Navy eventually evacuated 105,000 Allied troops from that port. In Vietnam there was never any mass evacuation of US Marine, South Vietnamese or Allied troop units.

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Other items: Only 25 percent of the US Military who served in Vietnam were draftees. During WW II, 66 percent of the troops were draftees. The Vietnam force contained three times as many college graduates as did the WW II force. The average education level of the enlisted man in Vietnam was 13 years, equivalent to one year of college. Of those who enlisted, 79 percent had high school diplomas. This at a time when only 65% of the military age males in the general American population were high school graduates.

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The average age of the military men who died in Vietnam was 22.8 years old. Of the one hundred and one (101) 18 year old draftees who died in Vietnam; seven of them were black. Blacks accounted for 11.2 percent the combat deaths in Vietnam. At that time black males of military age constituted 13.5 percent of the American population. It should also be clearly noted that volunteers suffered 77% of the casualties, and accounted for 73% of the Vietnam deaths.

Vietnam War U.S. Casualties

The charge that the “poor” died in disproportionate numbers is also a myth. An MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) study of Vietnam death rates, conducted by Professor Arnold Barnett, revealed that servicemen from the richest 10 percent of the nations communities had the same distribution of deaths as the rest of the nation. In fact his study showed that the death rate in the upper income communities of Beverly Hills, Belmont, Chevy Chase, and Great Neck exceeded the national average in three of the four, and, when the four were added together and averaged, that number also exceeded the national average.

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On the issue of psychological health: Mental problems attributed to service in Vietnam are referred to as PTSD. Civil War veterans suffered “Soldiers heart” in WW I the term was “Shell shock” during WW II and in Korea it was “Battle fatigue.” Military records indicate that Civil War psychological casualties averaged twenty six per thousand men. In WW II some units experienced over 100 psychiatric casualties per 1,000 troops; in Korea nearly one quarter of all battlefield medical evacuations were due to mental stress. That works out to about 50 per 1,000 troops. In Vietnam the comparable average was 5 per 1,000 troops.

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To put Vietnam in its proper perspective it is necessary to understand that the US Military was not defeated in Vietnam and that the South Vietnamese government did not collapse due to mismanagement or corruption, nor was it overthrown by revolutionary guerrillas running around in rubber tire sandals, wearing black pajamas and carrying home made weapons. There was no “general uprising” or “revolt” by the southern population. Saigon was overrun by a conventional army made up of seventeen conventional divisions, organized into four army corps. This totally conventional force (armed, equipped, trained and supplied by the Soviet Union) launched a cross border, frontal attack on South Vietnam and conquered it, in the same manner as Hitler conquered most of Europe in WW II. A quick synopsis of America’s “Vietnam experience” will help summarize and clarify the Vietnam scenario:

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  • Prior to 1965 – US Advisors and AID only
  • 1965 to 1967 – Buildup of US Forces and logistical supply bases, plus heavy fighting to counter Communist North Vietnamese invasion.
  • 1968 to 1970 – Communist “insurgency” destroyed to the point where over 90% of the towns and villages in South Vietnam were free from Communist domination. As an example: By 1971 throughout the entire populous Mekong Delta, the monthly rate of Communist insurgency action dropped to an average of 3 incidents per 100,000 population (Many a US city would envy a crime rate that low). In 1969 Nixon started troop withdrawals that were essentially complete by late 1971.
  • Dec 1972 – Paris Peace Agreements negotiated and agreed by North Vietnam, South Vietnam, the Southern Vietnamese Communists (VC, NLF / PRG) and the United States.
  • Jan 1973 – All four parties formally sign Paris Peace Agreements.
  • Mar 1973 – Last US POW released from Hanoi Hilton, and in accordance with Paris Agreements, last American GI leaves Vietnam.
  • Aug 1973 – US Congress passes the Case – Church law which forbids, US naval forces from sailing on the seas surrounding, US ground forces from operating on the land of, and US air forces from flying in the air over South Vietnam, North Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. This at a time when America had drawn its Cold War battle lines and as a result had the US Navy protecting Taiwan, 50,000 troops in South Korea and over 300,000 troops in Western Europe (Which has a land area, economy and population comparable to that of the United States), along with ironclad guarantees that if Communist forces should cross any of those Cold War lines or Soviet Armor should role across either the DMZ in Korea or the Iron Curtain in Europe, then there would be an unlimited response by the armed forces of the United States, to include if necessary, the use of nuclear weapons. In addition, these defense commitments required the annual expenditure of hundreds of billions of US dollars. Conversely, in 1975 when Soviet armor rolled across the international borders of South Vietnam, the US military response was nothing. In addition, Congress cut off all AID to the South Vietnamese and would not provide them with as much as a single bullet. In spite of the Case – Church Congressional guarantee, the North Vietnamese were very leery of US President Nixon. They viewed him as one unpredictable, incredibly tough nut. He had, in 1972, for the first time in the War, mined Hai Phong Harbor and sent the B-52 bombers against the North to force them into signing the Paris Peace Agreements. Previously the B-52s had been used only against Communist troop concentrations in remote regions of South Vietnam and occasionally against carefully selected sanctuaries in Cambodia, plus against both sanctuaries and supply lines in Laos.
  • Aug 1974 – Nixon resigns.
  • Sept 1974 – North Vietnamese hold special meeting to evaluate Nixon’s resignation and decide to test implications.
  • Dec 1974 – North Vietnamese invade South Vietnamese Province of Phouc Long located north of Saigon on Cambodian border.
  • Jan 1975 – North Vietnamese capture Phuoc Long provincial capitol of Phuoc Binh. Sit and wait for US reaction. No reaction.
  • Mar 1975 – North Vietnam mounts full-scale invasion. Seventeen North Vietnamese conventional divisions (more divisions than the US Army has had on duty at any time since WW II) were formed into four conventional army corps (This was the entire North Vietnamese army. Because the US Congress had unconditionally guaranteed no military action against North Vietnam, there was no need for them to keep forces in reserve to protect their home bases, flanks or supply lines), and launched a wholly conventional cross-border, frontal-attack. Then, using the age-old tactics of mass and maneuver, they defeated the South Vietnamese Army in detail.

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The complete description of this North Vietnamese Army (NVA) classical military victory is best expressed in the words of the NVA general who commanded it. Recommended reading: Great Spring Victory by General Tien Van Dung, NVA Foreign Broadcast Information Service, Volume I, 7 Jun 76 and Volume II, 7 Jul 76. General Dung’s account of the final battle for South Vietnam reads like it was taken right out of a US Army manual on offensive military operations. His description of the mass and maneuver were exquisite. His selection of South Vietnam’s army as the “Center of gravity” could have been written by General Carl von Clausewitz himself. General Dung’s account goes into graphic detail on his battle moves aimed at destroying South Vietnam’s armed forces and their war materials. He never once, not even once, ever mentions a single word about revolutionary warfare or guerilla tactics contributing in any way to his Great Spring Victory.

If you enjoyed this article and want to learn more about the Vietnam War – subscribe to this blog and get each new post delivered to your email or feed reader.   A directory to the right of each article, lists my published posts in chronological – links are live – click and read.  If you’d rather sample every post by scrolling through the many pages, then click on the Cherries title at the top of this page and be redirected to the blog’s main page…most recent posts are first – a navigation bar at the bottom helps move between pages.

I am trying to determine my website audience – before leaving, would you please click HERE then choose the one item best describing you.  Thank you in advance!

 


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My Grandfather’s War (Guest Article)

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70 Years ago to the day, Bryan Campbell’s grandfather, Ronald G. Gallie, was captured by German forces during the Battle of the Bulge. Here, we publish Gallie’s notes from his time as a POW.

by Bryan Campbell

This article was originally published on GearPatrol.com on December 20, 2014

“You don’t know the horrible aspects of war. I’ve been through two wars and I know. I’ve seen cities and homes in ashes. I’ve seen thousands of men lying on the ground, their dead faces looking up at the skies. I tell you, war is Hell!”  –  Commanding General William Tecumseh Sherman addressing the Michigan Military Academy graduating class of 1879.

When I was young I felt fortunate to have my grandparents live close by, enough so that they could always come over for a Sunday dinner and not just special holidays (I never knew my grandparents from my father’s side; they passed away before I was born). They’d come over around four or five o’clock; if it happened to be winter I’d be helping my dad stoke a fire in the fireplace. We’d all sit and watch whatever movie happened to be on basic cable — usually Superman Returns or Raiders of the Lost Ark, for some reason — and my mom would call everyone in to the dinning room to eat around six. “Pleasant” isn’t a very dramatic word, but it describes the memory perfectly.

When I first started learning about WWII, I became fascinated with the first half of the 20th century. It seemed to be such a romantic time in the world, just before the explosion of information intake we know today. An ambassador to the era, my grandfather Ronald Gallie immigrated from Wales when he was six years old in 1929; he grew up in Queens, New York, attended Cooper Union for architectural design in 1942, and was drafted into the United States Army in 1943. His exploits inspired me, to say the least. Enough so that one Sunday evening, before dinner, I told my grandfather I was thinking about joining the army myself. He quickly but calmly rebutted: “Don’t.” I stared, surprised he didn’t spur me on with my decision. With sound confidence, he continued: “War is something no one should experience.” He could have recited words to the tune of General Sherman’s graduation speech in Michigan, but he didn’t have to. I knew my grandfather had experienced war and I wasn’t exactly naive about what happened in WWII. But to this day, I’ve never heard such softly spoken words carry such weight.

My Grandfather never talked about his time in WWII, and come to think of it, I struggle to remember any detailed answers from when I inquired about it. I desperately wanted to know what one of the largest events in human history looked like through the eyes of someone I knew and loved. But for whatever reason he never felt the need to share — as if to humbly say, “What happened happened. It’s in the past and there’s no need to dwell.”

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However, a few years ago my mother had transcribed the diary my grandfather had kept to document his wartime experience. I needed to read it. Just to get a better understanding of what he had gone through. The events leading up to my grandfather’s capture seemed to be straight out of a movie. It was hardly believable, yet there I was reading his day-by-day account that he had scribed into a composition book given to him by one of his German captors.

Just five days after taking up position in the Ardennes Forest in Belgium, my grandfather, a corporal and mortar gunner, and the rest of the 106th Infantry Division were engulfed in one of the largest battles of the war: the Battle of the Bulge. The attack began, as he described, “in the foggy dawn of December 16th with a tremendous artillery barrage.” His regiment, the 422nd, along with the 423rd, was “engulfed by the overwhelming weight of the German breakthrough spearhead” in an attack that continued through nightfall. By mid morning the next day, the 422nd, 423rd and 424th regiments were forced to withdraw. “At 3:35 PM on Dec 18 the radio sputtered that all units of the two regiments were in need of ammunition, food and water. Because of the fog, parachuting supplies was out of the question.” By 4 p.m. his regiment had surrendered to German forces. Over the following days they were marched to Stalag IV-B, one of Germany’s largest prisoner-of-war camps, where my grandfather and his fellow soldiers would remain until the following Spring, all while enduring forced labor and Allied air raids.

I was always thankful that my grandfather made it home, and after reading his personal account of imprisonment, the feeling is tenfold. He survived artillery barrages, air raids, a frozen winter landscape and a stay in one of Germany’s largest POW camps, and was able to make it home to eventually marry my grandmother. My grandfather never lost his quiet warrior’s spirit, even though he had been long removed from the theater of war; he was tough and straightforward, yet charming, intelligent and wise. He passed away earlier this year and I thought it would serve his memory best by sharing with you a glimpse into one of the most trying times of his life, 70 years to the day of his capture. The following is my grandfather’s account from the day he was captured to his eventual liberation, along with two letters he wrote home to his parents and brother while imprisoned:

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Early on December 18, division headquarters started moving west out of St. Vith. Some units were halted by English-speaking MPs who turned out to be Germans in American uniforms. One of them fired a rocket which signaled the opening of a terrific barrage against the division’s halted vehicles.

My regiment was surrendered at 1600 [hours] Dec 19. From my experiences I would never have been taken. But that is water under the bridge.

Our regiment had been without food for two days prior to capture, a misfortune as it turned out later. The day we were taken was a hard one. No one seemed to know where to go. Officers were helpless when it came to finding themselves. It became mainly a game to see how long we could stay away from the Germans. Cornered at last we gave up on top of a hill. Weapons destroyed, we marched out to the enemy.

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That night we were marched some 15 miles past long columns of advancing Jerries. Naturally the German troops took advantage of the situation to strip us of our valuables: wristwatches, rings, pens, knives, etc. were taken and pocketed. That evening we were bedded down in an old, muddy barnyard. However we were awakened an hour later and pushed into an old church. The temperature was about 0 degrees F. No food was given to us.

Next morning at daybreak we started out again on what turned to be a 30-kilometer or more march. Unfortunately for those of us without overcoats and blankets it remained cold. Frozen feet was the complaint of everyone. That night we went to sleep again with no food, except for some raw turnips we had picked up along the way. The following day was a repetition of the first. By 10 p.m. we arrived in a small town,Gerolstein, and again bedded down in the open courtyards.

After four days without food we were given two bags of hard biscuits. Each bag weighed about one pound. There was also a pound of cheese divided between seven men. These rations were for two days on the boxcars. The boxcar trip lasted 10 days. 60 of us were crowded into a French 40-by-8-foot car, the floor covered with straw and horse shit. The doors were locked and we were on our way to God-knows-what. At infrequent intervals we received 1/6 of a loaf of bread with a little margarine.

Lemberg, Germany was our first major stoppage. On the night of Dec 23 the RAF bombed the railroad yards just outside the Stalag. I woke from a sound sleep to find the car rocking and an unholy red glare in my eyes. The Jerries had taken off, leaving us locked in the cars. We pushed a boy out of a small window to open the doors; a few of us then piled out of the cars. The bombs sounded like locomotives coming down. Running across the field with a piece of bread in my hands, I hit the ground twice. I finally lay on the side of a hill and prayed to God to stop it. The glare died down and the bombers flew off. I was rounded up and put in the Stalag while the majority of the boys were left in the boxcars.

POW-Portrait-Gear-PatrolThe 10th day saw us at Stalag IV-B, an English non-com camp. Here after arriving in the morning we were deloused and registered. This took till 5 a.m. the following morning. A week was our length of stay; from there I went to Halle(Saale) [sic] on Kommando, Jan 9. Assigned to a private railroad contractor named Reckman, we started work the following Monday, Jan 15. There we labored 11 hours a day through the cold, snow and rain. Our food allowance came from the military plus what Rechman gave us for working. We received one bowl potato soup, 1/4 of a loaf of bread and 20 grams of margarine. Weekly we received about 300 grams of meat and monthly 1 pound sugar, 1/4 pound cheese and on Sundays we also got a small amount of jam. That was our roughest period, sweating out air raids by day and by night. The railroad was bombed a few times so we were put to work slowly filling the bomb craters. Americans, by this time, had earned the reputation of being the laziest beings on Earth.

Towards the end our rations were cut to 1/6 of a loaf of bread and one bowl of soup daily. We had received about six Red Cross parcels during this time, divided at times between six men. Thank God for the Red Cross.

March 18, 1945

Dear Mom, Dad & Joe

Another week has come to a close with hopes for the future still high. I trust this letter will find you all in good health and not worrying too much. As for myself I still enjoy good health. The warmer weather coming in makes it a little easier for us now. Most of our spare time we spend mending clothes and washing out the dirty ones, the rest of the time it’s different ways to prepare dishes. A good deal of our talks are concerned with what we will do when we return to the States. A terrific feast is of course number one on the list, with a variety that is hard to describe. They’ll have a hard job controlling us when we get back.

The Red Cross package came thru as I wrote you before. It had a can of powdered milk, spam, jam, coffee, two chocolate bars, five packs of cigarettes, tuna fish, cereal, vitamin C pills, prunes, meat paste, cheese, sugar and margarine, all adding up to five pounds. The Red Cross certainly is a wonderful organization as far as a POW is concerned.

You must start looking for a new apartment soon or a house. With the two boys returning soon you’ll need more room; at least three bedrooms. New York won’t be too crowded once the war ends and the defense workers return to their original homes. I have not received any mail as of yet and to be truthful I don’t think any will ever reach us. All the packages you sent me must have been returned by now. Store them away and the day I get home will be like Christmas Day for the whole family and me. My 22nd birthday will be coming up soon. Joe won’t have to worry about you running off to spend it with me this time. You’d have a devil of a job getting to Germany unless you drop in by parachute.

We worked till April 12, when we were evacuated because of the approaching Yanks. After a three-day march of about 80 kilometers, with very little food, we were finally brought to rest in a pine forest. This proved to be our home for a week, under the filthiest of sanitary conditions. In the camp we were all mixed together: English, French, Serbs, Russians and Italians. Rations were small so we dug up potatoes in the fields, risking getting shot by some guard.

My 22nd birthday, April 12, 1945

My birthday, chronicled especially for my dear mother.

For some unknown reason the lights went on at 4 a.m. a full hour before their usual time. Loud explosions were heard in the distance at this time, later reported to be the dynamiting of the bridges across the Saale River by the Germans. I arose at 5 a.m. and put a bowl of potato soup on to heat, my sole meal for the day. I left for work on the railroad soon after. At 8 a.m. the air raid alarm sounded, enabling us to head for the open fields and sleep. I felt particularly weak this morning so it came in handy.

At a safe distance from the railroad we prepared for whatever was to come. By 9:30 a.m. Thunderbolt fighter planes have come into sight, a welcomed sight [sic]. One became rather nosey so we decided a bomb crater would be more suitable than the open ground. However he continued on his way to finish the strafing and bombing his comrades had started. I returned to work in hopes of getting a bowl of soup for our efforts.

1 p.m. Another air raid, so back to the field. Distant rumbling can be heard this time, possibly artillery. We have been expecting Patton for two weeks possibly it would be he [sic]. Fighter planes again, no bombers today, another sign perhaps that the Yanks are close.

3 p.m. Word has just reached us that the railroad line has been cut by the Yanks, a feeling of high excitement flows through the boys. The thunder in the distance continues; can it be possible we will soon be liberated from our bondage?

3:30 p.m. We are told to quit work a good hour before our regular time. Something must be up. Red Cross packages are supposed to be over at the Stadium for us: a good birthday present.

A Christmas parcel for six men just arrived. Our nightly bowl of soup must be dished out first though. The package was divided, my share has found its way to my stomach. It has been definitely [sic] established that the Yanks are close; will be in tomorrow morning perhaps. A double meat ration tonight, what a night it has been. The bread ration was cut to six men on a 1 1/2 kilo of a loaf a tonight. Who cares? The Yanks are coming!

It is now 9:00 p.m. Raleigh watch time. What will the morning bring?

The morning of April 24 we were marched about 15 kilometers to the welcoming arms of the Yanks.

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 My grandfather was sent back to the States not long after being liberated and awaited reassignment at Fort Leavenworth in Kansas. Though the war had been won in Europe, Japan was still a very active theater and seemed an inevitable destination. Luckily for him, the Japanese formally surrendered on August 15, 1945, before he could be redeployed. I’m sure he celebrated the end of the fighting with special vigor, knowing there’d be no chance of writing a Japan-based sequel to his German thriller.

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After being honorably discharged on December 6, 1945, my grandfather went on to work in New York City as an architectural designer at Barr & Barr until his retirement at age 74. He also happened to be working in downtown Manhattan the morning of September 11, 2001, arguably the most impactful event of the 21st century so far — but from the calm, even demeanor he displayed until the day he died, you’d never imagine he’d been subjected to violence in both his youth and his old age.

You’re always raised to respect your elders as a child, but it’s often unclear why. Having shared a fraction of his experience in WWII through these notes and letters, the admiration I’ve always had for my grandfather has only been solidified. Ronald Gallie was one of many members of “The Greatest Generation”, and an encyclopedia of experience and wisdom. Most importantly, he was my grandfather.

Here’s a direct link to the original article and an opportunity to review others on Gear Patrol:  http://gearpatrol.com/2014/12/19/grandfathers-war/

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Thank you for taking the time to view this article!  Don’t miss out on the many other articles, pictures and videos available to you on this website (see below).

If you enjoyed this article and want to learn more about the Vietnam War – subscribe to this blog and get each new post delivered to your email or feed reader.   A directory, to the right of each article, lists all my published posts in chronological order – links are live – just click and read.  If you’d rather sample every post by scrolling through the many pages, then click on the Cherries title at the top of this page to land on the blog’s main page…most recent posts are first – a navigation bar at the bottom of every page aids readers in moving between pages.

I am trying to determine my website audience – before leaving, would you please click HERE then choose the one item best describing you.  Thank you in advance!


Tagged: Bastogne, battle of the Bulge, book sites, books war, cherry soldier, combat, Combat Infantry, digital books, firefights, Grunts, Historical fiction, jungle warfare, Military, novels, POW, The vietnam war, The Vietnam war story, Veteran, Vietnam blog pages, Vietnam book, Vietnam conflict, Vietnam veteran, war books, war stor, Wars and Conflicts

Best Vietnam war movies – Part 2

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 Hello Everyone!  Happy New Year – 2015!

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Vietnam War movies can almost be counted as a genre on their own–there are so many of them.  This list contains the best Vietnam War movies that were ever made, including popular classic like Full Metal Jacket and more recent films, like Tunnel Rats. The best Vietnam movies place the war in correct context and capture the ethos of the environment at the time. Many of the titles on this list are from the point of view of Americans, but international and independent films are included as well.

What are the best Vietnam War films? This list of of Vietnam war movies is thorough, but it is not complete. If you see that your favorite film is missing, please add it to the list. You can click on any of the Vietnam movie names for more details and change the dropdown info to display the release date, directors, and stars. So, what are the best movies about the Viet nam war? Vote on this list to display your preferences.

Please scroll down to the bottom of this article and click on the link indicated to be redirected to my list of movies which also include trailers in most cases.  As more votes are cast, the favorites will migrate to the top of the list.  Feel free to revisit this page any time to see how your favorite film is ranking.

THESE ARE THE RESULTS OF AN UNOFFICIAL POLL TAKEN ON FACEBOOK AFTER THE PUBLICATION OF THIS ORIGINAL ARTICLE;  IT WAS POSTED ON BOTH OF MY FB PAGES AND ON 59 DIFFERENT VETERAN GROUP PAGES.  UNFORTUNATELY, “VOTES” WERE NOT PLACED ON THE OFFICIAL ATTACHED POLL AND INSTEAD, READERS CITED THEIR “BEST VIETNAM MOVIES” IN THE POST COMMENT SECTION.  SO, I CREATED AN EXCEL LIST AND TALLIED THESE RECOMMENDATIONS BY HAND DAILY FOR THE PAST WEEK – RESULTS ARE COMPILED IN THE CHART BELOW.  ALL RECOMMENDATIONS ARE INCLUDED – SEVERAL NOT BEING TITLES, BUT MENTIONED ACROSS THE DIFFERENT PAGES.  SOMEBODY ALSO SAID THAT WE SHOULD NOW VOTE ON THE WORST VIETNAM WAR MOVIE…MAYBE AT A LATER DATE.

 

Best Vietnam War Movies – FB poll 1-2 TO 1-7-15   
Rank Movie   Votes
1 We were Soldiers Once 175
2 Platoon 72
3 Full Metal Jacket 39
4 Hamburger Hill 36
5 The Green Berets 25
6 Best Movie Not yet made 24
7 The Boys of Company C 21
8 The Deer Hunter 20
9 Apocalypse Now 20
10 Go tell the Spartans 16
11 Forest Gump 15
12 I lived my VN War Movie 15
13 Don’t watch VN War movies 15
14 Good Morning Vietnam 14
15 Tour of Duty 13
16 The Seige of Firebase Gloria 11
17 Casualties of War 7
18 Purple Hearts 6
19 84 Charlie MoPic 5
20 Flight of the Intruder 4
21 China Beach 4
22 Platoon Leader 4
23 Jacob’s Ladder 3
24 The Hanoi Hilton 3
25 Make movie about Khe Sanh 3
26 2 Days in October 3
27 Bat-21 2
28 The Anderson Platoon 2
29 The Quiet American 2
30 Heroes 2
31 Cease Fire 2
32 The Odd Angry Shot 1
33 Tunnel Rats 1
34 Dear America: Letters Home from Vietnam 1
35 A Bright Shining Lie 1
36 Vietnam in HD 1
37 Missing in Action  1
38 Off Limits 1
39 A Rumor of War 1
40 Unnatural Causes 1
41 Tribes 1
42 Gardens of Stone 1
43 The Ugly American 1
44 Vietnam: The 10,000 day War 1
45 In Country 1
46 China Gate 1
47 A Better Tomorrow 0
48 A Yank in Viet-Nam 0
49 Air America 0
50 American Gangster 0
51 Born on the Fourth of July 0
52 Braddock: Missing in Action III 0
53 Bullet in the Head 0
54 Combat Shock 0
55 Coming Home 0
56 Dead Presidents 0
57 Distant Thunder 0
58 Don’t Cry, It’s Only Thunder 0
59 Expendable 0
60 Faith of My Fathers 0
61 Father Xmas 0
62 Firehawk 0
63 Free The Army tour 0
64 Going Back 0
65 Heaven & Earth 0
66 Hell on the Battleground 0
67 How Sleep the Brave 0
68 Journey from the Fall 0
69 Long Tan 0
70 Missing in Action 2: The Beginning 0
71 Nam’s Angels 0
72 Operation C.I.A. 0
73 Operation Dumbo Drop 0
74 Rescue Dawn 0
75 Rolling Thunder 0
76 R-Point 0
77 Some Kind of Hero 0
78 Sunny 0
79 The Ballad of Andy Crocker 0
80 The Foot Shooting Party 0
81 The Iron Triangl 0
82 The Lost Platoon 0
83 The Uncounted Enemy 0
84 The Walking Dead 0
85 The War at Home 0
86 Thou Shalt Not Kill… Except 0
87 Tigerland 0
88 To the Shores of Hell 0
89 Tunnel Rats 0
90 Uncommon Valor 0
91 White Badge 0
92 Word of Honor 0
     
  Total Votes Cast 598

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THANK YOU ALL FOR PARTICIPATING IN THIS POLL!

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Balls of Fire (Guest Blog)

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I’d like to introduce former U. S. Air Force pilot Captain George E. Nolly.  Thank you for contributing this article – a very interesting story by an excellent writer.  It was originally published in 1972 and later reproduced on http://www.keytlaw.com last year.  Enjoy!
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I turned off my Big Ben alarm clock at 0230, the usual wake-up time for our Linebacker mission. When the scheduling board simply indicated “Special”, we knew it would be a 0400 mass briefing at Wing Headquarters for a bombing mission over North Vietnam. We wouldn’t know our target until the mission briefing. The schedule was normally posted at the end of each day’s flying, and the previous day I had seen my name listed for the number four position in Jazz Flight for today’s Special. My Weapon Systems Officer would be Bill Woodworth.

F-4 pilots quickly become creatures of habit mixed with ritual, and I walked the short distance to the Ubon Officer’s Club to have my standard breakfast: cheese omelet, toast with butter, and coffee. I had successfully flown thirty-one Counters – missions over North Vietnam – and I wasn’t about to change anything without a pretty compelling reason. A few weeks earlier, the Thai waitress had misunderstood me when I had ordered, and brought me a plain Omelet. I politely ate it, and the mission on that day was the closest I had come – up until then – to getting shot down.

After breakfast, I walked to the 8th Tactical Fighter Wing Headquarters building, and performed my usual routine of stopping by the Intel desk and checking the Shoot-down Board. The Shoot-down Board was a large Plexiglas-covered board that listed the most recent friendly aircraft losses, written in grease pencil. We could tell, at a glance, if any aircraft had been shot down the previous night, the call sign, aircraft type, and survivor status. There were no friendly aircraft losses over North Vietnam to enemy action in the previous day.

That was not surprising. The Special for the previous day had been canceled when the strike leader, my Squadron Commander, Lieutenant Colonel Brad Sharp, crashed on takeoff when his left tire exploded at 160 knots. He aborted, taking the departure end barrier, and his aircraft caught fire when pieces of the shredded tire pierced his left wing fuel tank. Brad’s emergency egress was delayed when he got hung up by his leg restraint lines. As he sat in his seat, seeing the canopy melting around him, his WSO, Mike Pomphrey, ran back to the burning aircraft and pulled him out, saving his life. As Mike dragged him to a drainage ditch 100 yards away to hunker down, the ejection seats, missiles and, eventually, bombs cooked off. Ubon’s only runway was out of commission, and the entire Linebacker mission, for all bases, was canceled. Overnight, the runway at Ubon was repaired, and our mission was on for this day.

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The mission briefing was in a large auditorium. The Wing Commander led the Mission Briefing, followed by an Intel Briefing and Weather Briefing. Slides were projected onto the screen to show the targets on a map of North Vietnam, then reconnaissance photos of the individual targets for the strike flights. Jazz Flight’s target was POL (Petroleum, Oil, Lubricants) storage near Kep Airfield, north of Hanoi. During the briefing, we all received our mission line-up cards, showing our Estimated Times Enroute (ETE), fuel computations, strike frequencies, and flight de-confliction information.

A mass strike over Route Package Six, the area of North Vietnam covering Hanoi, Haiphong and points north, required a massive orchestration effort. The run-in directions, Time Over Target (TOT), and egress plan for each of the sixteen four-ship strike flights, plus all of the same information for support flights, such as MiG-Cap, were designated to exacting specifications.

After the mass briefing, we assembled in our respective squadrons for our individual flight briefings. When I walked into the 25th Tactical Fighter Squadron, my first order of business was to check the Flight Crew Information File Book. The FCIF was a book that had last-minute changes to procedures and other instructions for aircrews. After reading the latest entries in the book, each crewmember would initial his FCIF card and turn the card over in the vertical card file so that the green side of the card was facing out, instead of the red side. That way, the Ops Officer could instantly see if all the crews were flying with the most current information.

The briefing for Jazz Flight lasted about 45 minutes. Our Flight Lead briefed engine start and check-in times, flight join-up, frequencies, tactics, and our munitions load. Today we would each carry two 2,000-pound Mark-84L laser-guided bombs. After the briefing we waited our turns for the most important part of the preflight.

The building that housed our squadron had not been designed for a mass launch of 32 crewmembers all needing to use the latrine at the same time. It was a three-holer, and everyone always badly needed to use the facility before a mission up north. It was a major bottle-neck to our individual plans.

After that essential stop we went by the Life Support section to leave our personal items, such as wedding rings, wallets and anything else we wouldn’t need for the flight, in our lockers. The only thing I would carry in my pocket was my ID Card and my Geneva Convention Card. And, of course, I had my dog tags around my neck. Then we would pick up our G-suits, helmets, survival vests and parachute harnesses and board the “bread truck” for transportation to the flight line, with a quick stop at the armory to retrieve our .38 caliber Smith & Wesson revolvers. Our Thai driver always had a cooler stocked with plastic flasks of cold water, and we would grab several and put them in leg pockets of our G-suits. I also grabbed several piddle packs.

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The F-4 did not have a relief tube, so we carried piddle packs. The piddle pack was a small plastic bag with a 2 inch by 6 inch sponge inside and a spout at one end. When you used this portable urinal, the entire assembly would expand to about the size of a football. This flight was scheduled to be a bit longer than the standard mission, so I grabbed three piddle packs.

There were two ways to get to Pack Six from Ubon: right turns and left turns. With right turns, the missions are about 45 minutes shorter. Head north over Laos, refuel on Green Anchor, make a right turn at Thud Ridge and proceed to the target. Left turns takes us to the east coast of Vietnam, and proceed north “feet wet”, then make a left turns toward Vinh to strike our targets. Today we would make left turns.

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We launched off at dawn and headed into the rising sun. Our route of flight took us east across Laos to DaNang, then north to the Gulf of Tonkin, then northwest to our target in the area of Kep. Our refueling would be along Purple Anchor as we headed north for pre-strike and south for post-strike.

One of my rituals during every refueling, in between hook-ups, was to break out one of the water flasks, finish off an entire pack of Tums, and fill one of the piddle packs. Using the piddle pack in the seat of the Phantom was easier said than done. It required a bit of maneuvering.  I handed the jet over to Bill, my WSO, as I loosened my lap belt, loosened the leg straps on my parachute harness, and unzipped my flight suit from the bottom. Then I did my best to fill the piddle pack without any spillage. Our route was already taking us feet wet, and I wasn’t looking forward to becoming feet wet in any other respect.

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Bill flew smoothly, and I finished my business with no problem, and took control of the airplane again for our refueling top-offs. We conducted our aerial ballet in total radio silence as our four airplanes cycled on and off the refueling boom, flying at almost 400 knots, as we approached the refueling drop-off point.

When we finished refueling, we switched to strike frequency and headed north-northwest to the target area. Typical for a Linebacker mission, strike frequency was pretty busy. There were “Bandit” calls from Disco, the Airborne Early Warning bird, an EC-121 orbiting over the Gulf of Tonkin. And SAM breaks. And, of course, the ever-present triple-A (Anti-Aircraft Artillery)that produced fields of instant-blooming dandelions at our altitude. We pressed on. In the entire history of the Air Force, and the Army Air Corps before it, no strike aircraft has ever aborted its mission due to enemy reaction, and we were not about to set a precedent.

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Weather in the target area was severe clear, and Flight Lead identified the target with no problem. We closed in to “fingertip” formation, with three feet of separation between wingtips.  “Jazz Flight, arm ‘em up.”

We made a left orbit to make our run-in on the designated attack heading. Then a left roll-in with 135 degrees of bank. My element lead, Jazz Three, was on Lead’s right wing, and I was on the far right position in the formation. Our roll-in and roll-out was in close fingertip position, which put me at negative G-loading during the roll-out.

During negative-G formation flying, the flight controls work differently. I was on the right wing and a little too close to Element Lead, so I needed to put the stick to the left to increase spacing. Totally unnatural. At the same time, I was hanging against my lap belt, which I had forgotten to tighten when I had finished my piddle-pack filling procedure. My head hit the canopy, as dust and other detritus from the cockpit floated up into my eyes. But I maintained my position.

We rolled out on the correct run-in heading, and reached our delivery parameters right on profile. Five hundred knots at 20,000 feet. Lead called our release.  “Jazz Flight, ready, ready, pickle!”

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We all pushed our Bomb Release “pickle” buttons on our stick grips at the same time, and eight 2000-pound bombs guided together to the target that was being illuminated by the laser designator in the Lead’s Pave Knife pod, guidance performed by his WSO.  Immediately after release, we performed the normal 4-G pullout. And I was instantly in excruciating pain. I screamed out in pain on our “hot mike” interphone.  “Are you okay?”  Bill called.  “I think I’ve been shot in the balls!” I screamed.

Then, I realized what had happened. I had carelessly neglected to tighten my lap belt and parachute harness leg straps after relieving myself during the refueling. My body had shifted, and my testicles had gotten trapped between the harness and my body. With a 4-G pull, my 150-pound body was exerting 600 pounds of pressure on the family jewels.

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As soon as I knew what the problem was, I unloaded the aircraft to zero Gs, to try to readjust myself. But I was still headed downhill, and Mother Hanoi was rushing up to me at 500 knots. And I was getting further out of position in my formation. So I gritted my teeth and pulled.  When we got onto the post-strike tanker, I adjusted myself, but the damage had been done. I was in agony all the way back to Ubon.

As soon as I landed, I went to see the Flight Surgeon and told him what had happened. He told me to drop my shorts and show him my injury. “Wow! I’d heard you guys had big ones, but these are even larger than I expected.”  I looked down, and saw that my testicles were swollen to the size of large oranges. The Flight Surgeon put me on total bed-rest orders, telling me I could only get out of bed to use the bathroom until the swelling subsided. While I was flat on my back, waiting for the pain to subside, I couldn’t get that stupid old joke out of my head, the one where the kid goes into a malt shop and asks for a sundae with nuts, and the clerk asks, “Do you want your nuts crushed?” And the kid has a wise-crack answer. All of a sudden, it didn’t seem so funny.

After about five days I was feeling much better.  The Flight Surgeon had offered to submit my injury for a Purple Heart, but I declined. For starters, my injury was not due to enemy action, it was due to my carelessness. And I wasn’t too keen on standing in front of the entire squadron at my next assignment while the Admin Officer read the citation to accompany the award of the Purple Heart. “On that day, Captain Nolly managed to crush…”. No thanks!

A few months later, the Flight Surgeon showed up at our squadron.  “You’re famous, and made me a famous author,” he beamed, as he held up the current issue of Aerospace Medicine magazine. In the article, he recounted how a 27-year-old pilot had experienced a strangulation injury to his testes that came very close to requiring amputation.

Castration!  “There was no use in telling you and making you worry, when there was nothing we could do for you other than bed rest, and wait to see if you healed,” he commented.

Well, it’s been 41 years now, and I’m at an age where I don’t embarrass as easily. More important, I sired three healthy children several years later, so the equipment works just fine, thank you.  Lots of guys have great “There I was” stories of their time in Vietnam. I racked up 100 missions over the north, and had some exciting missions.  This mission was not the most exciting, but was certainly the most memorable.

George Nolly is a retired Air Force pilot and retired from United Airlines as a B777 Captain. He currently instructs in B777s and B787s, and is the author of the Hamfist novel series, available at Amazon in Kindle and printed formats.

George Nolly’s Hamfist Books

B008MB4RPI cover     B009C97620 cover   B00AGVK0C6 cover   B00H1BOHRI cover   B00CQ8MCM8 cover   B00FBS6Q2C cover

 

Thank you for taking the time to view this article!  Don’t miss out on the many other articles, pictures and videos available to you on this website (see below).

If you enjoyed this article and want to learn more about the Vietnam War – subscribe to this blog and get each new post delivered to your email or feed reader.   A directory, to the right of each article, lists all my published posts in chronological order – links are live – just click and read.  If you’d rather sample every post by scrolling through the many pages, then click on the Cherries title at the top of this page to land on the blog’s main page…most recent posts are first – a navigation bar at the bottom of every page aids readers in moving between pages.

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Thanksgiving Day 1970 / In-Country R&R 1971

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I’d like to introduce Mr. Norm McDonald and also thank him for contributing these two memories of Vietnam.  Most of his time in Vietnam was spent with the 5/7 Cav. 1970 – 1971, which operated in the Parrot’s Beak area – NW of Saigon on the Cambodian border.  Norm’s tour was cut short when he was wounded and evacuated from country in August, 1971.  He writes as a hobby – these are two of his stories.

Thanksgiving Day…1970

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I had been in Vietnam just over 2 months, plenty of time to acclimate into a hardened grunt.  I had lost an old filling from a tooth, so a day or two before Thanksgiving, I and another soldier made our way back to Bien Hoa Airbase, one of the largest and most modern American Airbases in Vietnam at the time.  I couldn’t get to the dentist for a day or so I and my buddy just wasted some time until we could get to the dentist.  On Thanksgiving day, we were wandering around and noticed one of the big U.S. Air Force mess halls…they were known to be far more luxurious than the Army or any mess hall for that matter.

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We decided to try and see if they would feed us since it was Thanksgiving.  We got in the rather long line, the Airmen pretty much ignored us, but frankly we didn’t care.  Pretty quick, a high ranking Air Force officer came over to us; I have no idea how high ranking; I never could tell their ranks, but the Airmen around us snapped to attention.  The officer asked us what we were doing…”Sir, we were hoping to get a plate of food”..fully expecting that he would be sending us on our way.  He and all the airmen, could see what we were;  faded and worn jungle fatigues, leach straps about our upper calves, 8 and 10 inch Buck knives strapped on (mine on the side of my leg)…both of us with hair far too long for the military…and the tell-tell red stained jungle boots.  Obviously grunts right out of the bush.   The officer turned to the airmen around us and said…”you know what these men are and you know they are in the real war; give them respect and let them in”.  He took us up to the front of the line. Told the mess that we were to be given what we wanted and that we were the “guests of honor”.

There were a few Vietnam experiences that were extremely positive….this was one of them.

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 An In-Country R&R With Profound Memories….

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When I was stationed with Delta 2/8 Angry Skippers in the First Cav, I lucked out and got a trip to Vung Tau for R&R.  On that first day almost right on my 21st birthday, June 1971, I and my main buddy had left the R&R Center and went downtown to the bars. We were both very tired for some reason I forget why, probably a combination of just leaving the bush and too much smoke. But we were sitting there trying to ignore the Tea girls, when one walked to our booth. I turned to tell her to beat it. I stopped talking after the first word; utterly stunned with my lower jaw dropped to my chest. She was the most beautiful girl I had ever seen in my life. Long black hair with a natural reddish tint, light olive skin and most striking was her large deep green eyes; she was obviously French.

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I got up and told her I wanted to go with her; that simple. Well she did her thing, I paid the mamas an (we know them as madams) at the bar and away we went in one of those insane three wheeled taxis and off to her shack. If you all will remember, the girls all had a “love shack” in a location other than where they actually lived. We went in got ready, I had already started liking her, she spoke English very well and her looks …well, obviously were easy on the eyes. I got undressed and put my wallet under the pillow on my side. I was nervous because a previous R&R had cost me my wallet when one of the girls ripped it off. She went through the roof…”I no like other girls!” “I love American GI!” “I never steal from anyone!”….she made such a fuss, I reached under the pillow and handed her my wallet and in frustration said..”OK I believe you and trust you”.

That broke the ice; we fooled around of course, but also talked all night. She had been the “kept” woman of an American airman for nearly two years; one of the reason she spoke such good English, I suspect.   I don’t know whether this was in Vung Tau, but probably somewhere near an airbase. He had told her he was going to marry her and take her stateside and in addition, they had a little boy together. He went home without even telling her he was going, simply abandoned them. She told me she was born in 1947. Her mother was a village girl, her biological father was a French soldier who also had abandoned her.

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The next morning, I had to get back to the R&R Center to check in so I went outside to flag a taxi. She came out with me and asked me to come back to the bar later that afternoon. She told me something, I would bet most of you didn’t know; the bar made the girls get us to buy ‘tea’ every day and they were paid on how many drinks they got us to buy. But in her bar, I suspect it was true all over the town, the girls only had to take GIs home no more than twice a week. So she had me that night so she was off for 3 or 4 days except to sell the ‘tea’.

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I went back to the early evening, and left with her. She took me to her house not the shack, which was a pretty nice villa up on the hillside above the beach. I met her 3 year old boy, cute little guy, looked like any kid we would see on our streets; after all, he was ¾ European and ¼ Asian. I stayed there, except for checking in at the R&R center each morning until we left to go back to the field. I got her mailing address and started writing her from the bush..she wrote back to me. Not only could she speak English quite well, she was pretty good at reading and writing English. I was getting very serious about her and had even contacted the Chaplain about getting her and the little boy out of Vietnam. Late July or early August, I got my ‘rear’ job and started serious work on getting the paper stuff fixed up to see if it was possible.

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Then they moved the communications depot and a few days later, I was hit with the mortar shrapnel (August 24, 1971). Even through the gangrene, several debridement operations and hospital time, I still wrote her a couple times. But then and it seemed all of a sudden, I was at the airbase and being loaded onto a C-141 hospital plane and everything changed. I went home, never wrote again; I got drunk and stoned for the next 10 years; had drunk ex-soldier relationships, even a couple of marriages; including my current marriage.

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I have thought about her off and on over the years; a lot after I got sober and started with some of the PTSD treatments back in the 1980s. I would like to believe they got out before 1975, but I simply don’t know; I do know, it really affected me seeing the newsreels of that April day in 1975 when the last choppers left the embassy in Saigon. I even felt guilty sometimes, although I probably shouldn’t, it was probably not meant to be. However, I will always cherish the memory.

Thank you for taking the time to view this article!  Don’t miss out on the many other articles, pictures and videos available to you on this website (see below).

If you enjoyed this article and want to learn more about the Vietnam War – subscribe to this blog and get each new post delivered to your email or feed reader.   A directory, to the right of each article, lists all my published posts in chronological order – links are live – just click and read.  If you’d rather sample every post by scrolling through the many pages, then click on the Cherries title at the top of this page to land on the blog’s main page…most recent posts are first – a navigation bar at the bottom of every page aids readers in moving between pages.

I am trying to determine my website audience – before leaving, would you please click HERE then choose the one item best describing you.  Thank you in advance!

 


Tagged: book sites, books war, cherry soldier, combat, Combat Infantry, digital books, F4 Fighter jets, firefights, Grunts, Historical fiction, jungle warfare, Military, novels, The vietnam war, The Vietnam war story, Veteran, Vietnam blog pages, Vietnam book, Vietnam conflict, Vietnam veteran, war books, war stor, Wars and Conflicts

Musings from Vietnam (Guest blog)

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Let me introduce Joseph Welsh.  He served in Vietnam 1967- 68 and was stationed at The 8th Radio Research Field Station, (Trai Bac Station) located on Highway 1, Phu Bai, Vietnam (Republic Of).  They were co-located with HQ 3d MARDIV and across the road from the Hue-Phu Bai Airport.

 

 

Joe, in his room sometime during Tet ’68.



Red X: marks where my room was.
(There were 5 – 6 people to a room.)
Blue X: is the Operations Bldg., where I worked (Usually Swings).
Green X: marks Star Bunker 3, my Alert Station.
(I was an ammo bearer. We had the 3.5 in. rocket launcher [Bazooka]
and a whole conex container full of white phospherous rounds for it.
We were supposed to take out the MP’s bunker, next to the main gate,
if it were to be overrun.)
Yellow X: is the Mess Hall (In today’s Milspeak, the “Dining Facility.”)

 

     
Aerial Photograph of the 8th RRFS, Phu Bai, RVN, ca. 1968
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Joseph has a blog (MUSINGS) that he’s maintained since 2009.  Not all his articles are about his time in Vietnam, but he did offer me my pick of those he had posted for republication here. Enjoy!
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Shortly after my arrival at the 8th RRFS, Phu Bai

I got word that my wife needed a power-of-attorney. The nearest JAG office was forty-some miles away, at Da Nang AFB. Was given leave to go down and conduct business and told to then hurry back. Hitched a ride on a Huey and found my way to the JAG office. . . quonset hut with air conditioning, little white picket fence, flower garden, lovely young Vietnamese secretary. I did all the necessary paperwork, grabbed lunch, returned to pick up the finished document, ran to catch a flight north but had missed the last flight out. Today, I don’t know why I didn’t request AF transient quarters but instead hitched a ride downtown on a passing deuce-and-a-half.
I was searching for “army” units to find a place to bed down. I came upon a large compound belonging to the First Logistical Command. Made my way to the orderly room and requested a bunk for the night.(Because we performed a classified mission, I had been told to not disclose my specific unit. Since I was wearing a MACV patch, I told the 1SG that I was from MACV-J2. That was as high as one could go in the intel field in Vietnam.)The MACV Patch

Got my bunk. In fact, got an entire hooch to myself. . . and I was a mere PFC! The 1SG even sent the orderly room clerk (a SP4) over with a jeep to give me a tour of downtown Da Nang. I toured (saw the oldest tree in the country), ate, went to sleep. Next morning, the same clerk woke me and escorted me to breakfast then drove me back to the airfield. I caught a ride on a 123 and was back at the 8th in time for swings.  I’ve often wondered just who they thought I was. . . and what shenanigans might’ve been going on inside that First Log compound.

American Icon …

An ice-cold Coke. Funnily enough, when I think of that icon I’m remembering Vietnam.July 1967 …
110 in the noon-day sun …
work detail (repairing the trench line) …
metallic-tasting warm water in the canteens.
The NCO in charge leaving us …
going to the EM Club …
returning with a case of Coke …
a bucket of ice …
sleeve of paper cups.
Break time!
Sucking down Coke over ice …
guzzling Coke on ice …
cold ‘n wet.
Coke on ice …
Nirvana,
on a brutal hot day.A memory carried for more than 40 years.   Don’t drink much soda now.  Never did drink much to start with.  Probably wouldn’t be drinking it nowadays at all… except for that memory of Vietnam.  (I’ve become diabetic.)  Nothing else has ever tasted quite as good since.  Despite what the Docs say … every once in awhile, I just gotta have… a Coke!

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A memory surfaces …

The 8th RRFS, Phu Bai, Vietnam, ca. 1967 …
me, pulling LN Guard … assigned to watch a couple of local PA&E plumbers do work in the HQ Company latrine. (The old French-style buildings.) The plumbers had dug up a drainage pipe near the entrance. I was standing in the doorway watching. MPs were up and showering, getting ready for swings. House-boys and house-girls were working away, cleaning and doing laundry.
One MP (name unknown) had just exited the shower and was standing at the wash basins, getting ready to shave … in the buff. He was big, 6’3″ maybe, red-haired, lots of freckles. The facilities had been built to accomodate a much shorter folk than we Americans. The red-headed MP’s “equipment” was lying in the sink as he shaved. Moving down the line of basins was a young, pretty house-girl. She was intent on her job of cleaning the sinks and completely ignored the naked men surrounding her. When she reached the sink being “occupied” by our MP, she merely picked up his “equipment”, wiped the sink beneath, then dropped it back in place and, walking around him, continued on with her job, nonplussed. I’d seen what was coming and was watching the MP for his reaction. Thought he’d cut his throat the way he jumped. He’d had no idea she was there.  I laughed ’til I almost peed my pants.
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Late summer:

Had been there a short while . . . perhaps 2 months. Was beginning to feel confined. We weren’t allowed off the combat base. A ration convoy was being put together. I volunteered . . . wanted off post, badly. We had to be fully armed, but nobody said with what. I decided to forego taking the -14 and borrowed a .45 pistol from a machine-gunner friend. (Note: I had no idea how to operate said pistol. How fucking stupid was I??) We rolled out the main gate early one morning and turned north, towards the city of Hue. After traveling for about 30 minutes the truck I was riding in began back-firing and jerking and then stopped. The convoy kept going, per SOP, and we three found ourselves stuck on Highway 1, in an area away from any villages or U.S. forces. Me, armed with a pistol that I’d never even held before and two other nervous ASA’ers armed with their M-14s and 80 rounds each. After an eternity of time, along came the maintenance trail. They fiddled with our engine and after a time we were rolling again. We wended our way through paddys, villages and farm country until we reached the shore of a large body of brackish water. On the shore was a small village and our trucks were all parked there, on the beach. Out on the water, about a quarter mile,  was a US Navy self-propelled reefer barge. A “Mike Boat” (landing craft) was ferrying the trucks, one at a time, out to the barge, where they were loaded then returned to shore.

Since my truck was now last in line, I had a goodly bit of time to explore. I wandered through the village, taking in all the strangeness and tranquility and poverty. A little girl caught my eye. My guess is that she was about 10 – 12 years old. She waved me over, then offered me a slice of watermelon. It was a brutal hot day. I accepted. I was struck near dumb. Here was this child who had nothing, offering me something . . . for nothing . . . out of compassion. The melon went down smooth. Tried to talk with her but she spoke no English and I was mono-linguistic. I was then called over and ordered to go out with the next Mike Boat to facilitate the transfer of foodstuff. It was getting late. Once aboard the barge we labored long and hard, shifting crates of vegetables (To include a deck cargo of heat-rotted potatoes that the navy insisted we take because they were ours and “sorry, there was no room in the cooler for them, and we know we’re three weeks overdue but regs are regs . . . and there’s a fuckin’ war going on!”) The hardest part was moving the frozen meats up from out of the freezer compartment. I stood on a crate and passed each piece up, through the open hatch, to someone there, waiting for it. This went on for about three-quarters of an hour. It would have been a good workout for a weight lifter in a gym. I was whipped afterwards. Went up on deck and lit a cigarette. Local kids, in round caracle boats, had swarmed the barge and were yelling (begging) to the GIs on board. Somebody had opened a crate of oranges and had begun tossing them into the water to watch the kids fight over the fruit. Some of the fights were downright vicious. Guys were taking bets on which kid would get to the orange first. I found this to be repugnant behavior on the part of well-fed Americans.

Soon, the transfer of foodstuff was complete. We formed convoy on the beach and prepared to drive off. I was, once again, in the back of a truck. This one happened to have a couple crates of oranges on board. As we passed through the village, I spied the little girl who’d offered me the melon slice. I waved at her, then heaved a crate of oranges out towards her and yelled “Thanks.” She waved back . . . that’s the last I saw of her.

I’ve remembered that little girl through the intervening years. Wondered if she survived, grew up, got married, raised a family.
I dearly hope so . . . hope her life was peaceful and uncomplicated.

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Officer doesn’t have a clue…

This cartoon may be from the current conflict but back in Vietnam, at the 8th RRFS, Phu Bai, this actually happened.

It was the tail-end of the ’68 Tet Offensive. The NVA was mostly beaten but there was a persistent VC mortar crew who would hit us with 5 – 6 rounds, maybe once or twice a week. It was ALWAYS 5 – 6 rounds, then they’d have to dee-dee because of counter-battery fire. This one afternoon they dropped rounds on us again. The siren sounded and the barracks quickly emptied out. There were guys in towels, having come straight from the shower, guys half dressed, dragging their field gear behind them, guys in full TA-50 and uniform. This was normal. After about 30 minutes, myself and another SP4 (Can’t remember his name.) were standing in the trench line adjacent to Star Bunker #3, waiting for the all-clear to sound. Both of us were shirtless, wearing trousers, flip-flops, flak jackets and TA-50 gear. Our helmets rested on the trench edge, our weapons were slung. Around a bend in the trenchline came a frog-hopping  Lieutenant Colonel. We’d never seen him before. He frog-walked to where we were standing, looked up at us through a pair of those black GI issue glasses, and demanded to know what it was we were doing, just standing there. Where was our duty station?  Where were our proper uniforms?? Why weren’t we paying attention to the perimeter wire??? … and on and on. We looked at each other, then down at him (Trying hard not to laugh.), as he squatted there. I explained that the attack was over and we were waiting for the official “all clear” to sound. I further explained that we’d hurried to the bunker quickly, that there had been no time to get properly dressed, there never was and that this was the norm for daytime alerts. He nodded at us, saying, “Oh … okay.” He then allowed that he’d let our appearance pass but we were to be in the proper uniform next time the alert was sounded. He then frog-hopped away, down the trench line towards the bunker.
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Thank you Joseph Welsh!  If any of you would like to read more of Joe’s prose, this is the direct link to his home page:  http://jmawelsh.blogspot.com/

Thank you for taking the time to view this article!  Don’t miss out on the many other articles, pictures and videos available to you on this website (see below).

If you enjoyed this article and want to learn more about the Vietnam War – subscribe to this blog and get each new post delivered to your email or feed reader.   A directory, to the right of each article, lists all my published posts in chronological order – links are live – just click and read.  If you’d rather sample every post by scrolling through the many pages, then click on the Cherries title at the top of this page to land on the blog’s main page…most recent posts are first – a navigation bar at the bottom of every page aids readers in moving between pages.

I am trying to determine my website audience – before leaving, would you please click HERE then choose the one item best describing you.  Thank you in advance!


Tagged: book sites, books war, cherry soldier, combat, Combat Infantry, digital books, firefights, Grunts, Historical fiction, jungle warfare, Military, novels, The vietnam war, The Vietnam war story, Veteran, Vietnam blog pages, Vietnam book, Vietnam conflict, Vietnam veteran, war books, war stor, Wars and Conflicts

Military Bases in Vietnam 1963 – 1975 (REVISED)

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Revision 1:

This posting is a revision for the one written below.  It appears that the person responsible for creating this page, Ray Smith, stopped updating it in 2007.  However, my friend, Ray Ormond, did some digging around and found another of his websites with way more information – even has items of interest for Marines which the sample below did not.  So, take a look at his stuff…everything is copyrighted so I am not able to copy/paste anything here.  Ray has sent him emails but has not received a response yet.

Here’s the direct link:   http://www.rjsmith.com/topo_map.html

Revision 2:

I also received this note on my Facebook page and thought I’d share it here in the event readers want to delve into this much deeper.  Richard Phelps’ High school classmate and fellow Vietnam Veteran, Ray Bows, has recently completed an eight year effort to record bases, camps, and outposts in Vietnam and the heroes for whom they are named.

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Original article:

THIS IS A FULL Collection of 4 pages of FIRE BASES, AIR FORCE BASES, Naval and Medical, BROWN WATER Naval, and any and all bases DOD during the Vietnam War 1963 to 1975.

It is a work in progress so if your base is not listed, please inform the website owner to get it added.

https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?ll=13.432367%2C107.424316&msa=0&spn=12.457797%2C21.643066&mid=zQJPAeunyYc4.koiZlsflHgOg
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Thank you for taking the time to view this article!  Don’t miss out on the many other articles, pictures and videos available to you on this website (see below).

If you enjoyed this article and want to learn more about the Vietnam War – subscribe to this blog and get each new post delivered to your email or feed reader.   A directory, to the right of each article, lists all my published posts in chronological order – links are live – just click and read.  If you’d rather sample every post by scrolling through the many pages, then click on the Cherries title at the top of this page to land on the blog’s main page…most recent posts are first – a navigation bar at the bottom of every page aids readers in moving between pages.

I am trying to determine my website audience – before leaving, would you please click HERE then choose the one item best describing you.  Thank you in advance!

 


Tagged: book sites, books war, cherry soldier, combat, Combat Infantry, digital books, firefights, Grunts, Historical fiction, jungle warfare, Military, novels, The vietnam war, The Vietnam war story, Veteran, Vietnam blog pages, Vietnam book, Vietnam conflict, Vietnam veteran, war books, war stor, Wars and Conflicts

Special Services in Vietnam

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Thanks to Rich Morawa and Joseph Welsh

“First with the Most”
FIRST LOGISTICAL COMMAND MAGAZINE
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Page1I’ve copied several pages from the magazine that I thought would be of equal interest to all Vietnam Veterans…Remember the “Donut Dollies”?  They were American Red Cross employees, who went to forward areas, and on some bases, operated Red Cross Centers, similar to Service Clubs offering recording studios to listen and record cassette tapes from home, participate in BINGO, trivia or other “games” so us soldiers could forget about the war for a short period of time. The Service Clubs were staffed by DOD/NAF civilians, who worked only on bases (with rare trips forward). Special Services also operated craft shops where guys could do their own film developing, make jewelry, etc., in addition to running the libraries and being responsible for all of the books that were sent out to firebases and LZs.  Donut Dollies were the most recognized women, after the nurses, because they had so much exposure. Unfortunately, it became the norm to refer to all American women with USO, Special Services and Red Cross to become referred to as “Donut Dollies”.

R&R was something most, if not all, soldiers in the Vietnam War were able to schedule.  In-country three-day passes to Vung Tau, China Beach, Eagle Beach and Cam Rahn Bay among others  were usually easier to get than the week-long trips outside of the country.  To us infantry soldiers, in-country R&R was normally given as a reward – for something well-done by either an individual or a unit.  It was always more fun to go as a group!

The PX’s in some of the main base camps throughout the country were like large department stores back in the states where most anything was available or  items such as a new car could be ordered and paid for in monthly installments – waiting for him when returning home.  New soldiers were introduced to the war zone PX’s at the reception centers and usually visited them whenever returning to the rear areas.

Entertainment was plentiful throughout Vietnam – touring bands usually played in the rear-area EM / NCO / Officer clubs and sometimes visited soldiers in the remote firebases.  The most famous and most sought after of all shows was the Bob Hope Christmas Special, which played in several of the larger bases over the Christmas holiday period.  However, these  shows filled quickly and normally by those stationed on the base.  Those of us in remote firebases or out in the bush couldn’t leave our positions to attend and had to settle for listening to it on the radio.

My second reason for choosing these particular pages was that they represented the GOOD times we had during our Vietnam deployment…to this day, I can still remember many of those happy memories!  I hope this article does the same for you!

service clubs

 

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 Allan Furtado 154th Transportation Company – Owner And Webmaster

Unofficial Web Site Of The 71st Transportation Battalion In Vietnam

Please stop by  and visit their website.  It is filled with hundreds of personal photos from those veterans who had served in this battalion.  There’s dozens of pages – each dedicated to one of these former soldiers…review the pics while their favorite song of the era plays in the background.   

http://www.allanfurtado.com/newport.html

Thank you for taking the time to view this article!  Don’t miss out on the many other articles, pictures and videos available to you on this website (see below).

If you enjoyed this article and want to learn more about the Vietnam War – subscribe to this blog and get each new post delivered to your email or feed reader.   A directory, to the right of each article, lists all my published posts in chronological order – links are live – just click and read.  If you’d rather sample every post by scrolling through the many pages, then click on the Cherries title at the top of this page to land on the blog’s main page…most recent posts are first – a navigation bar at the bottom of every page aids readers in moving between pages.

I am trying to determine my website audience – before leaving, would you please click HERE then choose the one item best describing you.  Thank you in advance!


Tagged: book sites, books war, cherry soldier, combat, Combat Infantry, digital books, firefights, Grunts, Historical fiction, jungle warfare, Military, novels, The vietnam war, The Vietnam war story, Veteran, Vietnam blog pages, Vietnam book, Vietnam conflict, Vietnam veteran, war books, war stor, Wars and Conflicts

Rescue in Laos

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Let me introduce Capt. Gary L. Bain USMC (Ret) who is the author of this guest article.  He joined the United States Marine Corps. Attended boot camp at Parris Island Marine Corps Recruit Depot in Beaufort, South Carolina. 1959;  Attended flight school at  NAS Pensacola, Florida, Meridian, Mississippi, and Kingsville, Texas. Received the coveted Naval Aviator  “Wings of Gold”   in April, 1967.  Flew 213 combat missions in Vietnam piloting the famous McDonnell-Douglas F-4 Phantom.  Retired from the Corps in 1979.  

Published here with the permission of his brother, Darrell Bain, author of “Medics Wild” and fifty other books – here’s a link to his author page:  http://www.amazon.com/Darrell-Bain/e/B000APW4IQ/ref=ntt_dp_epwbk_0.

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Bill and I were back in the air again in a couple of days and we continued flying as a team until I went on R&R (rest and relaxation) a few months later in May of 1969. My R&R destination was Hong Kong and I took a shuttle flight from Chu-Lai to DaNang to await further routing. I had to spend two days in DaNang waiting for my flight so I decided to look up my Jolly Green rescuers as they were based out of DaNang. It just so happened they were in a festive mood so for two days we consumed massive amounts of booze,  told war stories, and I reveled in the camaraderie of my heroes. I got to know one of the pilots real good. His name was “Pete”. Little did I know the importance of our meeting, for we were to meet again in a few short days, but in much different circumstances.

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Arriving back in Chu-Lai a week later I once again set about winning the war. By this time I had well over two hundred missions under my belt and Bill and I had flown almost a hundred of those together as a team. Ourpersonal call sign was “Boomslang” and when we checked in with the FAC(forward air controller) he knew the job was going to get done! We  had both been recently  transferred to VMFA-115, but were still flying out of Chu-Lai. He was scheduled to go on R&R to meet his wife in Hawaii in a couple of days so when I found out he was scheduled to fly with me twice the next day I insisted he cancel the flights. He wouldn’t hear of it but after a lot of discussion, we compromised. He would fly the first mission in the morning and cancel the evening mission. This was, most unfortunately, a truly bad decision on both our parts. Bill, or “Rhino”, as we fondly called him, would not return from the mission.

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We launched early in the morning on May 11th as a flight of two, call sign Manual 42, our destination, Laos, another Steel Tiger mission. The target was in the area of Tchepone, a heavily defended part of the Ho Chi Minh Trail . I was carrying a load of Zuni’s, or 5″ rockets, for anti-aircraft fire suppression. As we reached the target area the FAC,  Call sign Nail 16, designated the enemy position and I rolled in “Hot” (ordnance armed and ready to fire).

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The delivery method I was using was a 500 knot, 60 degree dive angle run. Bill was calling me fast all the way down, as he read off the altitude, airspeed, and dive angle. Just as the pipper in the gunsight arrived at the target I let loose the full compliment of rockets. Just as I had been trained to do and had done hundreds of times before, I repeated the mantra, pickle, pause, pull. Just as I was getting a heavy load of G’s on the airplane in the pull-up phase and starting the jinking turn ( a high speed turn to avoid anti-aircraft fire)  a tremendous explosion rocked the big Phantom. The aircraft rolled over to the inverted position and was heading for the ground, all controls lost. At 500 plus knots, impact was imminent and I told Bill to eject three times, very quickly I might add!! Hearing no response I braced myself and reached for the alternate ejection handle nestled between my legs. With a sharp tug the ejection sequence started and the next few seconds of my life became a blur as my stationary body met with the ferocity of a wind twice that of a force 5 tornado. This was about as traumatic as anything you could imagine.

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I’ll try to slow it down for you. The canopy came off first, then the rockets fired that propelled me and the seat out of the aircraft at an instantaneous 18 G’s (one G being the force of gravity). As I left the cockpit the horrendous wind blast ripped off my helmet and oxygen mask, it inflated my MK3C life vest, my left arm got thrown behind my back and snapped it in half between the shoulder and elbow, my pistol that I wore on my right hip was ripped off, and the pockets on my G-suit were torn off. Then from bad to worse, the seat, which is supposed to separate from the pilot as the parachute deploys, malfunctioned and the restraint lanyards tangled on my left leg and broke it and the seat stayed with me all the way down. The parachute deployed and I remember hanging there, and I remember this just as vividly as if it were yesterday, I heard a loud whooshing noise and said to myself, “they are shooting at me already”. Then a string of bombs went off underneath me. My wingman had seen the fire from my aircraft impacting the ground, thought it was the target and dropped his bombs. I descended through all the debris and after just a few seconds in the parachute hit the ground like a ton of bricks.

The most amazing part of this is that I never felt any pain. I didn’t even know my arm was broken until I tried using it and just the stump would move, not the rest of my arm. I remember every detail of the ejection and events leading up to my rescue. To this day, I don’t know how my thinking process remained intact, but it did, and my ability to communicate with the rescuers is what saved me. As OIC (Officer-in-charge) of the Safety and Survival shop in my squadron I always made it a point to carry two survival radios which if I remember correctly were the newer PRC-90’s. It was a good thing I did because the first one I tried wouldn’t work! I immediately got in contact with the FAC, call sign Nail 16 (OV-10), on my emergency radio to let them know I had survived. No one ever saw a second chute and most opinions concur that I must have taken a 37mm AAA shell in the area of the rear cockpit. I had landed very close to a huge North Vietnamese bunker complex and within 50 meters of some buildings. The word was, they didn’t take prisoners in that area!! For the next three hours, I would call on everything I had ever learned about survival to make it through the ordeal. But in fact, what contributed mostly to my rescue, was Nail 16 insisting that I stay with the parachute, drink water, stay calm and that I was going to get out of there!!

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The FAC transmitted a mayday call and the Jolly Greens were alerted. They were launched from a base North of DaNang, Quang Tri. The Jolly Green choppers are escorted by the famous A-1 Skyraider, a big recip withover ten wing stations that carry an assortment of ordnance including cannons, bombs, rockets, gas and other goodies. The Hobo and Sandy A-1’s were alerted and the Hobos commenced loading CBU-19’s. My wingman, Jim Redmond, was out of ordnance but made dummy passes to keep the bad guys heads down.  Playboy 13 arrived on station and Nail 16 had him make some low passes and then fired his rockets into the area.  In the meantime I had gotten myself oriented, established a clock code for the FAC to reference the drops to and had made a sling for my arm out of parachute cord. I always carried a snub-nosed 38 inside my flight vest and I took it out and laid it on my chest. I seriously doubt that it would have done much good but it sure made me feel better. I could hear hollering , whistling and shooting but never did see any enemy personnel.

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Then the A-1’s arrived on station. At this point Spad 11 assumed OSC (on scene commander) of the rescue but not before Nail 16 asked me for my son’s nickname, a question about personal authenticator codes. This was a system devised to prevent the bad guys from luring in our aircraft on a phony rescue. All pilots had to fill out cards with answers to questions like, what is your favorite drink, your favorite football team, etc. and then the cards went to a central location  for use by the rescuing entities to verify it was actually the pilot talking. When Nail 16 asked my son’s nickname, I answered correctly, but am reluctant to say that nickname was ,”Pooter”!! 

The Jollies 03 and 07 out of Quang Tri had to divert because of fuel problems.  Jolly Green 15 and 28, from the 37th ARRS out of DaNang were then alerted and they promptly headed my way escorted by the DaNang A-1’s, the Spads. While flying cover for the choppers  during the extraction Spad 01 took a 37 MM hit in the tail and had to RTB (Return to Base).

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What a sight those A-1’s were!! They would fly so low I could see them smile when they went by. Every time I heard a noise I would call out the clock code and the Skyraider would devastate the area with deadly accuracy.  On one run they made they didn’t notify me prior to the drop and it happened to be one of those bombs that opens and drops a bunch of small bomblets, a CBU. I must have jumped ten feet high when those things started going off, thinking of course, I was taking fire. I thought my number was up for certain. Some of them had to be within 20-30′ because debris from the explosions rained down on me like a hail storm. I very politely asked them to notify me before they dropped any more unannounced ordnance. I think they must have gotten a chuckle out of that but I did get a big “Roger that” from them.

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At other times the situation would become very quiet and I created things to do to stay busy and alert as I was feeling very faint. I even noticed that my beloved Seiko watch was still intact however it seemed to have lost about four hours on the ejection!! I also started gathering every different kind of leaf that was in reach of me and storing them in my survival vest to keep as mementos of my vacation in Laos. Also, I had started pulling the parachute and the ejection seat close in towards me so I could analyze why the seat lanyards had tangled on my leg.  I reconsidered though and asked the Rescue Commander if I should pull the chute in or leave it out as a marker for visual contact with me. I was advised to leave it in place for easier eye contact with my position. Sweat was pouring from every pore in my body and I was thirsty, real thirsty. I pulled the seat pan close to me and removed the contents of the survival pack looking for water. I found the water in a gray can, but alas, no pull tabs back then!! So I took out my bright orange survival knife and decided to punch a hole in the top of the can so I could drink. Opening the knife one handed presented a problem though and I tried everything, snagging it on my flight suit, with my teeth, and was about to give up when I realized, hey, this is a switch blade. With a quick flick of the button the knife was open. I then propped the can up between my legs and with a quick stab, smartly planted the blade squarely in my leg instead of the can. I actually laughed at myself, oh no, I wasn’t shook up!! .

After listening to the audio tapes I have a fairly clear picture now of how the A-1’s work an area. It is a well coordinated attack, a daisy chain of death and destruction. There were 12 of the A-1’s working the area and escorting the Jolly chopper. I can assure you I am more than glad that Nail 16 and the OSC encouraged me to stay with my chute. It seems throughout the rescue that chute was what everybody referenced to locate me. I would hate to be on the receiving end of the ordnance that was laid down because I had a front row seat of the damage it could inflict. Those A-1’s were a thing of beauty!

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The weather was deteriorating and the Jolly Green 15 chopper was starting to get low on fuel so the RCC (Rescue Crew  Commander) of Jolly Green 15, Capt. Joseph Hall, knew that it was then or never. Capt. Hall also knew he had to depend on the OSC  (On Scene Commander) Spad 11 to make the ultimate decision for him to come on in. Jolly Green 15  had been holding in a designated area waiting for the OSC  to give the all clear and that enemy fire had been suppressed. Spad 11 called him in and it was at this time that I told the OSC that I was the Marine that spent two days with the Jolly’s last week. He laughed as he asked the Jolly’s if they had heard that. The Jolly said no and asked what I said, then he laughingly relayed the information to them. I was glad that in my hysteria I had found something they could laugh about!! The Hobo A-1’s then gassed the area, I popped a smoke flare and with machine guns blazing the Jolly Green HH3E chopper came in and hovered over my position.

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What an incredible sight, forever etched in my memory, the chopper swooping in, the PJ (para-jumper) coming down the hoist with a gas mask on and the co-pilot, Capt. Martin Richert,  laying down suppressing fire from the co-pilot’s window with an automatic rifle and the flight mechanic hosing the area down with machine gun fire. They took small arms fire throughout the approach and hover. Capt. Richert said that during the final approach he could hear the slap of small arms fire above the noise of the rotor and knew that we were taking fire. Two rounds went through the cockpit and nose area while I was being picked up which is something I didn’t know until much later. As the chopper stabilized over me I hobbled over to the hoist and the PJ strapped me on and away we went. As we departed the area the crew pulled me inside and promptly started attending my needs. They administered morphine, put an air cast on my arm and checked all my vital signs. From that point on my memory becomes a little fuzzy, probably from the morphine, but it seems one of them traded me a cigarette lighter for my pistol. That was simply a diplomatic way of taking a weapon from someone that they didn’t know what state of mind they were in. I still have that lighter and will always treasure it. Dennis Palmer told me much later that he carried my pistol on every mission but when it was time for him to rotate home it was taken from him. About halfway back to DaNang the pilot got up out of his seat and came back to where I was. I looked up and there, standing before me, was “Pete”, which is Capt. Joseph Hall’s nickname!!.

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EPILOGUE

Move forward to August 2001. I was conducting research for a book I am writing about my Marine Corps Aviation career. I had contacted a few of my fellow Vietnam fighter pilots through the internet and in the summer of 2001 decided to start looking for the crews that had rescued me. The Jolly Greens had sent me certificates on each of the two rescues, complete with name and rank of the crew. I had kept these over the years and now with the internet I might be able to find these heroes. It just so happened that the day I located and called Martin Richert, the co-pilot of the Laos rescue, that it was his birthday. He was obviously shaken and we talked about half the night. I then found and talked to Captain “Pete” Hall, the pilot and in January , 2002 located and spoke with James Thibodeau.  I cannot describe the emotions in going back in time and talking with these brave men.   I could not find the other crew members but am listing their names at the end of this in case someone knows them they can tell them how to contact me. It just so happened that Marty and his wife, Suzanne, would be traveling through Oklahoma City in September, 2001 so they decided to pay a visit. I had never seen Marty because after the rescue the helicopter dropped me off at the DaNang hospital and they then returned to their operating area and I was medevaced. It was a wonderful reunion and we had Fox 25 local news come out and they put the reunion on the evening news. We of course watched the news that evening then enjoyed some mighty fine food consisting of jumbo shrimp, filet mignon, and topped off with champagne and late night “War Stories”. Ahhh– the good ‘ol days! It is my fervent hope that in the future I will have an opportunity to meet with all of the crew. Oh, and one final note, I didn’t know until Marty told me, that I was shot down on Mother’s Day!! He said that is among the reasons he remembers this rescue.

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I want to say here that there are a lot of unsung heroes that played a major part in the war. The FAC’s were an integral part of the tactics used and we wouldn’t have ever gotten anything done without them. In this case Nail 16 did a remarkable job in the co-ordination and deployment of available aircraft. John Johnston was his name and he advised me and encouraged me that help was on the way. His voice reassured me that I was going to be rescued, and I was. He undoubtedly risked his life to save me.  His actions in the air were heroic to say the least in the low passes he made and in directing fire power close to my position on the ground. To all the FAC’s I worked with, my hat is off to you and I salute you, and especially John Johnston for his steadfastness and professionalism in the face of danger.

The Jolly Greens and their A-1 escorts are among some of the unsung heroes of the Vietnam War. The Jolly Green and A-1 motto, “That others may live” is well embedded in my mind and every day I wake up I say thanks to these great warriors that gave so much of themselves.  And how these A-1 pilots could so constantly expose themselves to withering anti-aircraft fire just totally overwhelms me. Albeit late in the game, I take great pride in being able to present this work as a testament to the heroics of our gallant comrades in arms, and especially to the crewmembers that plucked me out of the ocean and the jaws of death in the jungles of Laos. The Jolly Greens and A-1’s rescued over 500 pilots during the Vietnam war and took risks that ordinary men wouldn’t even dream of. Their courage and spirit under fire is one of the ingredients that makes the United States military force the most formidable on the planet. I salute the Jolly Greens, their A-1 escorts, and thank you, both former and present members, for your service to our country. God bless the United States!

To know about this author and to read more of his work, please visit Gary at this website:  http://www.videoexplorers.com/

Thank you for taking the time to view this article!  Don’t miss out on the many other articles, pictures and videos available to you on this website (see below).

If you enjoyed this article and want to learn more about the Vietnam War – subscribe to this blog and get each new post delivered to your email or feed reader.   A directory, to the right of each article, lists all my published posts in chronological order – links are live – just click and read.  If you’d rather sample every post by scrolling through the many pages, then click on the Cherries title at the top of this page to land on the blog’s main page…most recent posts are first – a navigation bar at the bottom of every page aids readers in moving between pages.

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10 things every Veteran should know about Agent Orange

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1. Agent Orange was a herbicide and defoliant used in Vietnam

Agent Orange was a blend of tactical herbicides the U.S. military sprayed from 1962 to 1971 during the Vietnam War to remove the leaves of trees and other dense tropical foliage that provided enemy cover. The U.S. Department of Defense developed tactical herbicides specifically to be used in “combat operations.” They were not commercial grade herbicides purchased from chemical companies and sent to Vietnam.

More than 19 million gallons of various “rainbow” herbicide combinations were sprayed, but Agent Orange was the combination the U.S. military used most often. The name “Agent Orange” came from the orange identifying stripe used on the 55-gallon drums in which it was stored.

Heavily sprayed areas included forests near the demarcation zone, forests at the junction of the borders of Cambodia, Laos, and South Vietnam, and mangroves on the southernmost peninsula of Vietnam and along shipping channels southeast of Saigon.

2. Any Veteran who served anywhere in Vietnam during the war is presumed to have been exposed to Agent Orange.

For the purposes of VA compensation benefits, Veterans who served anywhere in Vietnam between January 9, 1962 and May 7, 1975 are presumed to have been exposed to herbicides, as specified in the Agent Orange Act of 1991.

These Veterans do not need to show that they were exposed to Agent Orange or other herbicides in order to get disability compensation for diseases related to Agent Orange exposure.

Service in Vietnam means service on land in Vietnam or on the inland waterways (“brown water” Veterans) of Vietnam.

3. VA has linked several diseases and health conditions to Agent Orange exposure.

VA has recognized certain cancers and other health problems as presumptive diseases associated with exposure to Agent Orange or other herbicides during military service. Veterans and their survivors may be eligible for compensation benefits.

  • AL Amyloidosis
    A rare disease caused when an abnormal protein, amyloid, enters and collects tissues or organs
  • Chronic B-cell Leukemias
    A type of cancer which affects a specific type of white blood cell
  • Chloracne (or similar acneform disease)
    A skin condition that occurs soon after exposure to chemicals and looks like common forms of acne seen in teenagers. Under VA’s rating regulations, it must be at least 10 percent disabling within one year of exposure to herbicides.
  • Diabetes Mellitus Type 2
    A disease characterized by high blood sugar levels resulting from the body’s inability to produce or respond properly to the hormone insulin
  • Hodgkin’s Disease
    A malignant lymphoma (cancer) characterized by progressive enlargement of the lymph nodes, liver, and spleen, and by progressive anemia
  • Ischemic Heart Disease
    A disease characterized by a reduced supply of blood to the heart, that can lead to chest pain (angina)
  • Multiple Myeloma
    A cancer of plasma cells, a type of white blood cell in bone marrow
  • Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma
    A group of cancers that affect the lymph glands and other lymphatic tissue
  • Parkinson’s Disease
    A progressive disorder of the nervous system that affects muscle movement
  • Peripheral Neuropathy, Early-Onset
    A nervous system condition that causes numbness, tingling, and muscle weakness. Under VA’s rating regulations, it must be at least 10 percent disabling within one year of herbicide exposure.
  • Porphyria Cutanea Tarda
    A disorder characterized by liver dysfunction and by thinning and blistering of the skin in sun-exposed areas. Under VA’s rating regulations, it must be at least 10 percent disabling within one year of exposure to herbicides.
  • Prostate Cancer
    Cancer of the prostate; one of the most common cancers among older men
  • Respiratory Cancers (includes lung cancer)
    Cancers of the lung, larynx, trachea, and bronchus
  • Soft Tissue Sarcomas (other than osteosarcoma, chondrosarcoma, Kaposi’s sarcoma, or mesothelioma)
    A specific group of malignant of cancers in body tissues such as muscle, fat, blood and lymph vessels, and connective tissues

helicopter-spraying-Agent-Orange

4. Veterans who want to be considered for disability compensation must file a claim.

Veterans who want to be considered for disability compensation for health problems related to Agent Orange exposure must file a claim.

During the claims process, VA will check military records to confirm exposure to Agent Orange or qualifying military service. If necessary, VA will set up a separate exam for compensation.

5. VA offers health care benefits for Veterans who may have been exposed to Agent Orange and other herbicides during military service.

Veterans who served in Vietnam between January 9, 1962, and May 7, 1975, are eligible to enroll in VA health care. Visit VA’shealth benefits explorer <http://hbexplorer.vacloud.us&gt; to check your eligibility and learn how to apply.

6. Participating in an Agent Orange Registry health exam helps you, other Veterans and VA.

VA’s Agent Orange Registry health exam alerts Veterans to possible long-term health problems that may be related to Agent Orange exposure during their military service. The registry data helps VA understand and respond to these health problems more effectively.

The exam is free to eligible Veterans and enrollment in VA health care is not necessary. Although the findings of your exam may be used to inform your subsequent care, they may not be used when applying for compensation as a separate exam is required. Contact your local VA Environmental Health Coordinator about getting an Agent Orange Registry health exam.

7. VA recognizes and offers support for the children of Veterans affected by Agent Orange who have birth defects.

VA has recognized that certain birth defects among Veterans’ children are associated with Veterans’ qualifying service in Vietnam or Korea.

The affected child must have been conceived after the Veteran entered Vietnam or the Korean demilitarized zone during the qualifying service period.

Learn more about benefits for Veterans’ children with birth defects. http://www.publichealth.va.gov/exposures/agentorange/benefits/children-birth-defects.asp

planes-spraying-Agent-Orange

8. Vietnam Veterans are not the only Veterans who may have been exposed to Agent Orange.

Agent Orange and other herbicides used in Vietnam were used, tested or stored elsewhere, including some military bases in the United States. Other locations/scenarios in which Veterans were exposed to Agent Orange may include:

Possible exposure of crew members to herbicide residue in c-123 planes flown after the Vietnam War

9. VA continues to conduct research on the long-term health effects of Agent Orange in order to better care for all Veterans.

VA and other Federal government Departments and agencies have conducted, and continue to conduct, extensive research evaluating the health effects of Agent Orange exposure on U.S. Veterans.

An example is the Army Chemical Corps Vietnam-Era Veterans Health Study designed to examine if high blood pressure (hypertension) and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are related to herbicide exposure during the Vietnam War. Researchers have completed data collection and aim to publish initial findings in a scientific journal in 2015.

Learn more about Agent Orange related studies and their outcomes here:http://www.publichealth.va.gov/exposures/agentorange/research-studies.asp

10. VA contracts with an independent, non-governmental organization to review the scientific and medical information on the health effects of Agent Orange.

VA contracts with the Institute of Medicine (IOM) of the National Academy of Sciences every two years to scientifically review evidence on the long-term health effects of Agent Orange and other herbicides on Vietnam Veterans. The IOM uses a team of nationally renowned subject matter experts from around the country to gather all the scientific literature on a topic, identify peer-reviewed reports, and then examine the studies to determine the most rigorous and applicable studies. The IOM looks for the highest quality studies. The IOM then issues its reports, including its conclusions and recommendations to VA, Congress, and the public.


About the author:
Dr. Ralph Erickson is an Army Veteran of the Gulf War (1990-91) and Operation Iraqi Freedom (2003). He retired with 32 + years active-duty service, during which he held a number of leadership positions to include:  Commander of The Walter Reed Army Institute of Research; Command Surgeon, US Central Command; and Director, DoD Global Emerging Infections and Response System (DOD-GEIS). He is a board certified physician in Preventive Medicine and Public Health. He received his medical degree from the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences  (USUHS), Masters of Public Health from Harvard University, and Doctorate of Public Health from Johns Hopkins University.

Thank you for taking the time to view this article!  Don’t miss out on the many other articles, pictures and videos available to you on this website (see below).

If you enjoyed this article and want to learn more about the Vietnam War – subscribe to this blog and get each new post delivered to your email or feed reader.   A directory, to the right of each article, lists all my published posts in chronological order – links are live – just click and read.  If you’d rather sample every post by scrolling through the many pages, then click on the Cherries title at the top of this page to land on the blog’s main page…most recent posts are first – a navigation bar at the bottom of every page aids readers in moving between pages.

I am trying to determine my website audience – before leaving, would you please click HERE then choose the one item best describing you.  Thank you in advance!


Tagged: Agent Orange, book sites, books war, cherry soldier, combat, Combat Infantry, digital books, firefights, Grunts, Historical fiction, jungle warfare, Military, novels, The vietnam war, The Vietnam war story, VA benefits for AO, Veteran, Vietnam blog pages, Vietnam book, Vietnam conflict, Vietnam veteran, war books, war stor, Wars and Conflicts

Memories of my visit at the 24th Evac Hospital

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Let me introduce my guest blogger, Norm McDonald.  He is a grandpa, great grandpa, an old soldier, old railroad worker…and even did a little bricklaying once.  He last worked as a Medical Technologist and retired as the Director of Transfusion Services for Utah Valley Medical Center. He is married to Grandma Maggie and they live in Orem, Utah.  Norm was in the U.S. Army and spent time in Vietnam from Sept.  1970 – Sept. 1971 with the 1st Cav – 5/7 Cav and 2/8 Cav – carried M60 machine gun through the bush in both outfits.  Welcome Home Brother!
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24th evac

I’d like to call this first story “Beauty and the GI”

In the 24th Evacuation Hospital in Long Bien, the atmosphere was pretty easy going on the wards. The staff and the patients…i.e…usually wounded soldiers, bantered and joked around. Each day, the nursing staff would come by and do their bandage changings, listen to how the night went for the wounded soldier or just for a small visit. With an open hole in the side of my foot, each day during the bandage changing, they would pack that hole with antibiotic covered gauze thread. The idea was to keep the healing from the bottom of the hole upward, rather than have the wound heal over leaving an empty space inside the foot.

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We loved all the nurses, no matter where or what they looked like, but there was one young nurse at the 24th that fit into the “so drop dead gorgeous, she took your breath away” category. We considered ourselves lucky if she was our daily nurse. One lucky day for me, she was my bandage changer. She unwrapped the bandage and started pulling out the gauze thread. She got to the end and the gauze was stuck…not a problem, the gauze got stuck in the wound nearly every day. So I told her just pull it loose, it will be fine. Only this time it wasn’t….she pulled it loose and Oh oh! Apparently, the end of the gauze was stuck to an artery because every time my heart beat, a little Old Faithful geyser of blood shot out the wound.

The pretty nurse slammed both hands over the hole in my foot and yelled for help. The blood was seeping up through her hands. The other nurse grabbed some towels and they put pressure on the wound with the towels. It didn’t work, the blood was everywhere around the bottom of the bed and all over the nurses. I was getting faint from both the situation and the loss of blood. A surgeon came running in with clamps, they pulled of the towels and he was able to clamp off the artery. He ordered a bag of blood to transfuse me then told me he was going to sew up the artery and use a local anesthetic. I was in no shape to argue.

Landscape

He started with the anesthetic shots down inside the hole in my foot. To say having those shots down in the wound was painful would not do it justice. It was an excruciating dive into pure and utter agony, to say the least. I was yelling and holding on to the bar next to the bed; I ended up bending that bar. By this time, the pretty nurse was crying, but still doing her job assisting the surgeon. It didn’t take long for the artery to be fixed and pain to go away, but I was exhausted from the pain and the loss of blood.

The surgeon left after wrapping me up and making sure the transfusion was going alright. The pretty nurse stayed, sat on the bed next to me and cuddled me. After all that blood and craziness, I had entered into 21 year old GI heaven; being held by an incredibly beautiful American girl while in Vietnam. I don’t remember the young ladies’ name; if I ever really knew it, but her face is etched in my memory forever.

Story 2:  The Arty guy in the next bed

One of the Facebook groups I belong to is a Vietnam Veteran only group. One of the fellows posted up a photo of a nurse on duty with a patient at the 24th Evacuation Hospital in Long Bien in 1971; the time I was also a patient at the 24th for wounds received from a VC mortar. Actually the VC mortar label comes from my Army medical records; in reality, I am pretty sure it was an NVA mortar. But that aside, I was reminded of some of the experiences I had while in the 24th. I wasn’t there all that long, but these have really stuck with me over the years. Here is one of them…..

Operating-room-24th-Evac.-Saigon-1971

I arrived at the 24th with a raging case of gangrene in my leg from that mortar wound. In fact, the blood poisoning was tenfold more serious that the wound itself. As a result, it was a few days before I was in a position to even know where I was let alone talk with anyone. But when I did come around, I promptly made friends with the soldier in the next bed; always have been a friendly guy.

This soldier was an artillery guy on a firebase working with 155 Howitzers; the big ones. He was in the hospital and on the orthopedic unit for a bullet wound in his upper arm. Serious enough of a wound to have had some surgery on it.   We talked about the normal stuff young men talked about in those days and at that age. After a couple of days, and after contemplating his wound, I started wonder how he had gotten shot with a rifle. Now before you old artillery guys start freaking out, I know arty guys got shot by bullets, but not near like the grunts. I seemed to me that the firebases were mortar and rocket magnets which means lots of shrapnel.

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One day an officer, I assume from the hospital, came around the ward with couple other officers and nurses and presented us with our Purple Hearts. No big deal for me at that time, I was polite and accepted it just fine. The arty guy got his, he didn’t say a word just looked down; glanced at me a couple of times but just nodded his head in thanks. After they left, he was very quiet, so I asked him what was wrong.   He said..”Can you keep a secret, I mean a real secret…”. I answered, “Sure, no problem”.

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He started talking; it seems that he was the connection in the ville near the last firebase he served on. The Vietnamese guy from the ville would drop off the smoking dope…or dew…as we called it back then.   This artillery guy would go out there; pick up the weed and leave the script money.   Well, he had found that the firebase was going to be abandoned within a day; remember how fast these could be brought down and moved. So he thought…”What the hell; I’ll just pick up the dope and not leave any money since we won’t be here tomorrow.”   But the ville guy came a bit early while there were still some Americans left on the base including my buddy there in the bed next to me. The Vietnamese guy went back to the ville, got a rifle, came back and shot him from just inside the jungle. Of course, all hell broke out and gunships, arty and all sorts of action, but the guy and his other buddies in his unit didn’t dare say anything knowing full well why he got shot.

Vietnamese Soldier Smiling and Making the Peace Sign

So there he was…getting a Purple Heart for a bad drug deal.   At the time, and with my somewhat rebellious attitude, I thought it was a poetic metaphor for the war. My views have long since changed, but it was what it was….somewhere in the U.S., there is an old grey haired soldier with a bullet hole in his arm and a Purple Heart received for a dope deal gone badly.

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Thank you for taking the time to view this article!  Don’t miss out on the many other articles, pictures and videos available to you on this website (see below).

If you enjoyed this article and want to learn more about the Vietnam War – subscribe to this blog and get each new post delivered to your email or feed reader.   A directory, to the right of each article, lists all my published posts in chronological order – links are live – just click and read.  If you’d rather sample every post by scrolling through the many pages, then click on the Cherries title at the top of this page to land on the blog’s main page…most recent posts are first – a navigation bar at the bottom of every page aids readers in moving between pages.

I am trying to determine my website audience – before leaving, would you please click HERE then choose the one item best describing you.  Thank you in advance!

 


Tagged: 24th Evac hospital, book sites, books war, cherry soldier, combat, Combat Infantry, digital books, firefights, Grunts, Historical fiction, jungle warfare, Military, novels, The vietnam war, The Vietnam war story, Veteran, Vietnam blog pages, Vietnam book, Vietnam conflict, Vietnam veteran, war books, war stor, Wars and Conflicts

Dazed and Confused (Guest Blog)

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I’d like to introduce my guest writer, Jim Cain, who wrote this narrative some years ago and finding it quite cathartic.  He was drafted in 1969 and served in Vietnam from 1/70 through 12/70 in the central highlands – assigned to the 4th Div. 1/14th Battalion Echo Company – recon platoon and carried an M60 for most of his tour. After leaving the army in 1971, Jim utilized the G.I. Bill and finished school. He recently retired from the University Medical Center in California and is enjoying retirement: playing guitar, reading as much as possible, riding his road bike and writing poetry.

This article was originally published in the Air Cavalry Squadron Field Manual – 1969; “Dazed and Confused-Vietnam: January 5th through December 8th 1970” by Jim Cain; National Archives – some of the pictures shown are from Jim’s private collection while others were pulled from the internet by me.

The imagination is a wonderful paintbrush when allowed to stroke the canvas of the past unhindered. Unlike a photograph it uses hues of emotional reality to create an image of personal reality. For this reason I decided to allow my imagination to use the emotional hues of my memory to paint this story.

My tour in Vietnam was full of segmented stories, some crazy and hard to imagine, but most were mundane, uneventful, and hard to remember. I have difficulty remembering the names of guys I lived side by side with for months. Humping through leech infested triple canopy jungle, sliding down monsoon-drenched mountainsides together for months, and I can’t remember their names. I suspect this is a coping mechanism, a cleansing of stressful memories of a stressful time. I do periodically have vivid flashes of faces and smells and images of mountains, streams, trees, and sounds of helicopters, artillery and those quiet dark nights lying under a poncho tied to branches with shoestrings. I can’t even remember walking out into the jungle alone to relieve myself. I know that I did and I did it often, I just can’t remember. I vaguely remember setting up our campsites for the night; setting up the trip flares and claymores. I have vague memories of night watch, fighting to stay awake and often falling asleep. So many memories lost to redundancy and the vagueness of passing time. Yet I have a sense of being there, a collage of the past, interpreted from so much vagueness. I did take a lot of photographs while in Vietnam. I had hundreds; photographs of the guys, the jungle, the Vietnamese, the Montagnards, even the first pair of jungle boots that I wore out, everything! I lost them, all gone. Now I have to rely on my memory. A collage of the past, painted with vague translucent images.  The stories were prophetic

My first memory of Vietnam was the warm humid air; it engulfed my body as I stepped off the airplane in Cam Rahn Bay. It seemed so alien to me, I had never felt that depth of penetrating humidity before. At that moment I knew the world had changed, I could literally feel it.

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I was taken with the other FNG’s (f**king new guys) to a holding area where soldiers who were on their way home, or “back to the world” were staying.  I stayed there for a few nights and heard many stories from the old timers; some scared me, others made me laugh. One of the stories that scared me was told by a sergeant from Texas, I think San Antonio. He was a big guy, with thick wavy dark hair that seemed to stand up as he told his story, I know mine did.  His squad was out on patrol one night when they made contact with an unknown number of North Vietnamese Army Regulars, NVA.  After a firefight broke out, he called for artillery support.  Not knowing the number of enemy or their exact location, he called in coordinates within 100 meters of his position. The first few rounds landed outside of the intended target, so he adjusted his coordinates. The next thing he remembered was the sound of incoming, and then he felt the outward movement of air, and heard the sound wave from the explosion. Immediately following the sound wave, he heard pieces of shrapnel tumble and fly through the air. He said, “These are sounds I will never forget.” His squad suffered casualties, and a number of wounded soldiers. He survived with minor injuries. I heard other stories of death, survival and mishap and wondered how I would possibly survive in this hostile world.

I did hear one funny story that stands out in my memory.  It was told by a guy who was very jovial and had an infectious laugh, he talked about all kinds of funny things. He talked about the people of Vietnam and the military, and about his R&R in Bangkok, but his funniest story was about the Central Highlands. It was a funny story of survival, immersed in satirical irony. He said the Central Highlands was a nightmare during the monsoon season. The ticks and leeches were everywhere, and the rain was relentless.  He said they would fight all day climbing and cutting the jungle from the mountainside with machetes only to slide back down in the leech-infested mud.  After a few times of sliding down and crawling back up the muddy mountainside, he would stick the barrel of his weapon into the mud, using it as a grappling hook to pull himself up to the top of the mountain. He said the fight was no longer with the NVA or the VC, it was with the mountain and the rain, the jungle, the leeches and ticks, they were the enemy.  The way he told the story made me laugh, but after a few months in country, the laughs turned to tears. The stories were prophetic; we all shared the same war! And I was so happy for those guys, I could feel the sheer joy of their happiness; it was palpable, they were going home, “back to the world.”

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Camp Enari near Pleiku

The next day I was called into a large room where they read off my unit assignment. I was assigned to the 4th Infantry Division, which at that time, was headquartered at CampEnari near Pleiku in the Central Highlands, in the military area called II Corps. I loaded onto a C-130 cargo plane and flew to an American Air Force Base located just outside of Pleiku. Pleiku was inhabited primarily by Montagnards the indigenous people of the Central Highlands.  The term Montagnard means “mountain people” in French and is a carry over from the French colonial period in Vietnam. I remember getting into a military bus that looked like an armored car. I can’t see an image of the bus, but somewhere in the collage, I remember thinking it was like an armored car.  As we drove through Pleiku City, the driver told us to keep our heads down because of sniper fire. I was getting deep into the action and felt a little concerned because I still had no weapon.

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After a short ride in the armored car, I was dropped off somewhere in Camp Enari.  Camp Enari was a large base camp, devoid of trees, and the land looked much like what you find in South Georgia, lots of red clay and plenty of dust, which kicked up every time a helicopter came in. I found my way to the in-processing facility, and was assigned to a transit barrack (Quonset hut) that was located near by. I spent about five days in the transit area attending classes and orientation to Vietnam.

At this point, I believe I started to become a little paranoid.  One night inside my Quonset hut, I began to think that this was all a dream, and I would soon wake up, and that everyone there was playing a trick on me. I realized it was no trick when a mortar dropped near the Quonset hut where I was staying, killing one soldier and wounded another.

Shrouded in a dingy green meshed mosquito net inside a dark and smoky room listening to rumbling voices echo into the darkness, I float on a dream of fear, filled with false images of a far away place anticipating the sudden awakening from the nightmare, when death awakened the truth from its slumber, and I rose into the light of day.

During this in-processing period, an officer and sergeant came around looking for volunteers for a two-week recondo training course for the 75th Infantry ranger unit. I figured two more weeks in base camp and a little more training would give me more time away from the jungle. I wasn’t ready to hit the kill zone. I wasn’t gung ho! by any means. I didn’t enlist in this crazy war, I was drafted! My only goal was to get out alive. I have to admit that I was very naïve for twenty. I had just turned twenty-years old three months earlier, while training at Fort Lewis. I knew how to survive on my own back in the world, but in Vietnam, I had no clue as to why we were even there. I had some vague image of fighting communism, but I didn’t even understand what communism was about. I was scared on the inside and trying to hide it on the outside. And there I was on the other side of the world, just doing what I was told, just like every other eighteen, nineteen, and twenty-year old naïve kid.

Throughout my entire tour in Vietnam I only remember kids like me, enlisted or drafted, they all were young and naïve! Some were so blinded by patriotism, they didn’t care why they were there, they were American and they would die for their country. I mean, come on! Even I, a naïve country boy could see that this third world country had nothing to do with our freedom. Did fighting communism mean killing thousands of innocent people? I didn’t know the answer, but what I did know was that I wanted to get my ass out of there and back to that little country town where at least some things made sense.

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Recondo Training course

After classes and orientation to Vietnam, I signed up for the recondo training course. I was issued my gear including an M-16 with ammunition. Finally, I was assigned a weapon!  I felt a little more secure, but still scared as hell! I passed the recondo course, which required learning advanced skills in escape, evasion, and survival. At one point, I had to call an artillery strike within fifty yards of my own position. This was a tactic used in the event that your position had been over run by the enemy. I remember the day that I was assigned to the artillery range, I was very apprehensive, and thought about quitting the course, until I found out that the 105 howitzers had been used many times and even if you gave them the wrong coordinates, they would always use the correct ones. I did complete the artillery course, and it was unbelievable! It felt as if the rounds were falling right on top of me. I remember thinking about what the sergeant from Texas had said back at Cam Rahn Bay. Fortunately, I never had to use this tactic during my tour in country.

Technically, my first mission in Vietnam was during my recondo training course. One night the sergeant took me and three other soldiers outside of Camp Enari. We traveled light and headed for a wooded area about a kilometer out. The sergeant explained that we were on a reconnaissance patrol and that stealth was priority one. What made the patrol interesting was that the sergeant appeared to become a little nervous. I figured it was because he was out there with four FNGs, so I kept my eyes and ears open. That night we made camp in a small depression under some thick brush. Just after nightfall, I spotted some movement on a trail about 100 meters away. I saw the silhouette of two men walking quickly toward the Base Camp. I became very excited and informed the sergeant. He didn’t seem too interested so I figured it was okay and continued my watch for the night.

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What really stands out in my memory from the recondo training course is the running. For two weeks, I could not walk anywhere. I had to run, even if it were only two or three steps, I had to run. If you were caught walking, you had to do fifty push-ups. I must say, “I got pretty good at doing push-ups”. The final test was again, running! This time it was a five-mile run to be completed in less than an hour. What made it tough was that you wore complete jungle fatigues with weapon, ammunition, water and a thirty-pound sand bag in your rucksack during the hottest part of the day.

I made the run and passed the course only to be told that I did not pass the security screening because of an arrest for possession of marijuana. I was eighteen and fresh out of high school and was busted for thirteen roaches in 1968.  Then, there in Vietnam, I was told that I was a security risk, when everywhere that I went up until that point in time, marijuana was smoked as casually as smoking tobacco. I remember being disappointed. Looking back on it now, I think I was fortunate. I mean spending a year in the jungle as a 75th Infantry ranger; seems a little crazy in retrospection. Just shows how naïve I was!

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Camp Radcliff

After my rejection from the 75th Rangers, I was assigned to a recon platoon out of the Divisional Base at Camp Radcliff.  I rode on a convoy to Camp Radcliff from Pleiku on highway 19 passing through a narrow slit in the mountains known as the Mang Yang Pass.

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The pass is infamous for the 1954 ambush of the French. It’s said that over 2000 French soldiers died that day and were buried standing up, facing the west. That defeat and the defeat at Dien Bien Phu ultimately forced them to sign a peace agreement with the Viet Minh a month later.  It was very intimidating passing through that narrow stretch of highway with its history of so many ambushes. I felt like a sitting duck in the back of that deuce and a half.  We passed without incident and continued on to Camp Radcliff.

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When I arrived at Camp Radcliff I was assigned to Echo Company, recon platoon 1st Battalion, 14th Infantry; “The Golden Dragons.”  The 14th Infantry was named Golden Dragons during the Boxer Rebellion of 1900. The Chinese dubbed the American unit, “Golden Dragons,” because of their fierce fighting spirit. The Golden dragons also fought in the Iraqi war; a war of similar consequences of Vietnam. Iraq like Vietnam was a war of so many contradictions…

“a war with no boundaries or indications of friend or foe. So many smiles of, “you number one GI,” and beyond the looking glass; the need to survive, “you number 10 you die.” In Vietnam, you humped with Kit Carson scouts former Viet Cong acting as guides and you humped the mama-san prostitutes who surrendered their pride. You felt compassion for the people, next to your primordial need to survive, often you killed indiscriminately, and later you cried.”

Echo Company was out on a mission when I arrived at Camp Radcliff. Camp Radcliff was a very big place. It was originally built as the base camp for the 1st Cavalry Division in 1965. It became home for the 4th Infantry Division, and thus 1st Battalion, 14th Infantry in early 1970.  Its strategic location allowed for the defense and control of the Central Highlands.

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Hon Cong Mountain was a prominent landmark right in the middle of the base camp. From the top, you could see for miles. There was an observation post on top with a communication tower and a very large searchlight. It was common to have mortar attacks during the day and night. At night, the searchlight would light up the area where the mortar shells hit. Because the base was so big, you became accustomed to the sound of the mortar shells after a few nights. I can still hear the sound…

“a piercing shrill in the darkness of  night, as I try to gauge its intent. I welcomed the thud at the end of its cry, for I knew I would not die.  I’ve heard it said, with no cry you die, but I’ll never know, as the shells they slow, and the night becomes permanent for those who know.”

 Sin City

It was difficult getting use to the relentless firing of artillery. The 105mm and 8-inch howitzers and the 175mm guns fired all day and night, mostly at night, harassment and interdiction (H&I) fire. The sound and shock waves were unbelievable!  I would lie on my cot at night thinking about what it must be like on the receiving end of those guns. I knew what it was like with VC or NVA mortars and rockets. It was very frightening to say the least. I just could not imagine being on the receiving end of the magnitude of firepower that was unleashed on the Vietcong and NVA every day and night from Camp Radcliff. It must have been like Dante’s Inferno, a “Living Hell!”

There was a huge commissary, “Wal-Mart like” in the middle of the camp; it had everything except a ticket back to the world! It had electronics of all kinds, jewelry and clothing, and the biggest seller, cigarettes! With cigarettes, you could trade to the Vietnamese for just about anything. With enough cigarettes, I probably could have gotten a ticket back to the world. Camp Radcliff was like a small city back in California. It was located near An Khe. An Khe was a small Vietnamese city that looked similar to Tijuana Mexico in the 60’s. One section of An Khe was often referred to as, “Sin City.” Most Vietnamese cities near a military base had their own Sin City.

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Sin Cities were whorehouses sanctioned by the army. The military police would be stationed outside during the day, and they made sure that you were gone before nightfall. GI’s would go there to have a little fun and blow off some stream with the mama-sans. You could buy a beer for around 50 piasters and sex for 300 piasters. The mama-san would say “you number 1 GI” which meant great, number 10 meant you suck, and sex was “boom boom” and that usually happened in a small room behind the bar.

Everything in An Khe looked old and dirty; buildings were made from cardboard and odd pieces of tin. Like Tijuana, with enough American dollars, the key to the city was yours. Drugs and prostitution were big among the troops; go figure! Get high, find sexual gratification with a mama-san, and pretend it’s your girl and hope you don’t get the Clap!

 

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Di Di Mau

If you were lucky when on stand-down, (time away from the jungle, usually three or four days at base camp), you would draw patrol duty on the An Khe side of Camp Radcliff. I got lucky one stand-down around my third month in country, and was assigned patrol duty on the An Khe side. We set up in the area around “Sin City” for the night. There were five of us in our patrol. We set-up an observation post so that we could detect enemy movement around the base camp and give them advance warning. Before we left the base camp, the old timers filled us in on the mama-san situation. They said it sounds crazy but when the mama-sans are there you knew the Viet Cong, wasn’t!

Well the mama-sans did come out to our campsite and they partied with us all night for twenty dollars each.  When I say partied all night, I mean they stayed all night. I was a little hesitant about having these girls stay all night, but nature’s call intervened, I gave a pretty mama-san twenty dollars, and we both climbed on my air mattress. The party lasted about an hour or so and I wanted to sleep, but I had a problem. The air mattress was not big enough for both of us.  I pushed her off hoping that she would find her way home so I could get some sleep, but she didn’t go home, she said something in Vietnamese and climbed back on the mattress. I finally gave up on that tactic after a few tries and rolled over onto the ground wrapped in a blanket and went to asleep. I woke up just before light and she was still there on my mattress, so nature and I crawled back on that mattress until the sun peaked above the horizon and she “di di mau” (go quickly) back home.

 Firebase Abbey

119TH AVIATION COMPANY (ASLT HEL) Logged on 16 Feb. 1970

The Gators and Crocs initiated the insertion of the 4th Inf Div troops 1st Battalion, into firebase Abbey. Firebase Abbey is located 7.5 KM northwest of firebase, LZ Lewis. The next day the company supported firebase Abbey by inserting dog teams and recon patrols 10KM west of Abbey. This operation was to detect enemy movement from the north to the AN KHE area.

I flew out to firebase Abbey a week or so after arriving at Camp Radcliff, my first helicopter ride. It was somewhat intimidating, that big green Huey, with its M60 machine guns, rocket launchers and most of all those two big open doors. I climbed on board and moved to the middle of the Huey. Two old timers sat in the open doorway. I knew they were old timers because they were sitting with their feet hanging out. It looked like fun, but I wasn’t ready for that yet.  The Huey made steep left and right banks; it looked like the old timers sitting in the doorway would be thrown out at any moment, not to mention the target they made. The view was unbelievable! The jungle was so vast, green, and thick and the mountains were rugged and gnarly! Beautiful water falls and clouds swirled below the helicopter, how unreal it all seemed; so much beauty hidden behind the veil of war!

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As we flew over firebase Abbey, it looked very dry and dusty. A river flowed lazily along the valley floor, creating a beautiful view from the helicopter. As the huey set down, red dust began to fly everywhere. I was amazed that the pilot could maneuver the helicopter down onto the landing tarmac. The firebase was built on a mountaintop that had been denuded. The trees and bushes had been replaced with artillery and bunkers. Barbed wire had been positioned all around the perimeter. Bunkers lined the inner edge of the perimeter and the artillery was located near the center. As I stood there looking at all of this, a CH-47 Chinook transport helicopter began hovering over the tarmac. I had never been this close to a Chinook so I stood there just watching. Big mistake, red dust was flying everywhere and so was I.  The force of the wind created by the Chinook tossed me into some barbed wire about twenty feet away. Trip flares began to go off, which totally freaked me out. I was pulled from the barbed wire unscathed and very embarrassed.

I was ushered into a dark bunker where I was introduced to members of my new platoon, Fox Force. Fox Force was part of Echo Company, which was comprised of two platoons; Four-Deuce mortar and Fox Force recon platoon. Our lieutenant’s name was Norton. He was very young. I would guess around 23 years old. I immediately liked him because he seemed so self-assured; I needed that at that time. He asked me if I had ever fired a machine gun. I said “only during training.” At that point, he introduced me to Dan, who was the current machine gunner. Dan had been in country for quite some time and decided to relocate to the rear. The platoon needed a machine gunner and I was picked for the job.

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The platoon also had a couple of “Kit Carson Scouts”. Their names were Ten and Who. Kit Carson Scouts were VC soldiers who surrendered themselves to an American unit, this was called Chu Hoi. They received indoctrination and some training, and then were assigned to American units. The theory was they could assist American units because they were familiar with the terrain and the tactics of the VC. Many of us thought that, at least some were actually still VC. I was never certain how these guys were controlled, because they seemed to come and go as they pleased. After a few missions with the scouts, I accepted Ten as one of the guys, but Who, he always seemed lazy to me.

First Combat Mission

The following day after meeting the platoon, we were assigned a combat mission, which would be my first! That morning I noticed that everyone was wearing a red scarf. I thought this was crazy, but I didn’t say a thing. I found out later that it was a tradition carried on from a past group of Fox Force members. I think it was supposed to show the enemy that we were a little crazy as well as courageous. I know that I did wear the scarf, and I still have mine, but on hindsight, I think it was more crazy than courageous.

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Lieutenant Norton gave me the machine gun and asked me to shoot at a tree about 100 yards away. I fired about 100 rounds and hit the tree only once, Lieutenant Norton said, “Good shot, saddle-up.” We all loaded into three or four helicopters and headed out for my first combat assault! Dan was sitting next to me telling me what to expect. As the helicopter got closer to the ground, everyone started to jump off. Everything was a blur; guns and rockets were firing and I was a little confused. What I remember next was Dan pushing me to the ground as he fired at a VC, who appeared to be just behind me. Dan saved my life that day. I think that’s what binds soldiers together; strangers from all parts of the country; from different cultural back grounds and differing political and religious affiliations. They’re all bound by the need to survive. You watch my back, I’ll watch yours! The soldier’s bond is a very special one, its family.

Whoops!

As I ran down the ridge from our Landing Zone (LZ), me and a few other guys, I can’t remember who they were, began to chase a couple of VC into the jungle.  We ran quite some distance until we came to an open area where the trail began to drop off into a valley. I still remember the view from there it was post card perfect. Only problem was, we lost the VC, so we turned and headed back toward the LZ. As we turned and headed back through a small clearing, a Cobra helicopter spotted us. Cobra helicopters were armed with a side-mounted six-barrel “minigun” and a seven-tube 2.75-inch rocket launcher,which could rain down terror from the sky. Because we wore camouflage jungle fatigues and bush hats instead of the normal jungle fatigues and steel pots, the pilot thought we were VC and opened up on us with his minigun. I dove under an old tree limb and didn’t move a muscle. The other guys did the same. I will never forget that sound, it sounded like a sewing machine on steroids, and then the whole jungle began to rip apart.

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It seemed ironic that my first combat assault would end with me being killed by friendly fire. We didn’t have a radio, so we had no means of contacting the Cobra. One of the guys said, because I have very blonde hair that I should take my hat off and run out into the open waving my hands. I thought man this is crazy just about the same time the Cobra passed over again and sprayed the area with his steroid sewing machine. I had no choice, so I ran out like a mad man, waving my arms and jumping up and down to get his attention. It worked! He flew by and waved from his cockpit. I could just hear him thinking, whoops!

Ambush and Moans

We made it back to the unit all in one piece, albeit scared as hell! We joined the platoon, and as we moved down the hill into a small flat area, one of the guys, Peaches, a very young likeable guy from Georgia, spotted four VC walking along the ridge top. Lt Norton called for a hasty ambush. So we scurried up the ridge and hid in the vegetation. Lt Norton told me to point my gun in the general direction of the VC and start shooting when he gave the signal. The next thing I remember was a lot of gunfire. I remember just holding that trigger. After a short time, the firing stopped and I could hear someone moaning.  I had never seen or heard death before. One of the guy’s, a sergeant, walked over to the VC that was moaning, he was just out of my sight, and then I heard a short burst of gun fire and no more moaning. I cried so hard that night that I vomited. Peaches came over to me that night; he must have heard me crying. He sat there not saying much, but his presence and reassurance I remember. He showed me compassion that night. He understood what I was feeling and that’s what I needed.

The next morning someone spotted a VC walking nonchalantly across an open area just below the ridge where we were. I remember for some reason, we had a sniper with us on this mission. He carried an M-14 with a scope. He took aim on the VC, who was about two or three hundred yards away. He pulled the trigger, I heard the shot, and about a half second later, the VC fell. We watched for a moment, and then he moved. He was trying to crawl behind a big boulder that stood near by. The sniper fired a few more shots and it was over.

The transitional line where life ends and death begins, is the moment of truth known and simultaneously forgot – where a soft flickering shadow licks a silent caress on the moment between the end and the beginning – the moment where life is but a silent caress!

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Because we had found a cache of rice in the area, which meant that there could be more, Lieutenant Norton called in for artillery to work the area around the clearing. One of the guys took a punji stick in the kneecap while searching the tall bush for weapon or rice caches. The punji sticks, made of bamboo, were mounted vertically in the ground with sharpened tips around the rice cache. The punji sticks were frequently smeared with feces, adding insult to injury. The injury may heal quickly but the insult of bacteria may cause longtime disabilities.

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The lieutenant was told that the artillery on Fire Base Abbey was being used in support of another company. He finally was granted support from naval guns located offshore in the China Sea. I remember the lieutenant saying, “it’s on its way.” It seemed like an eternity before I heard the squealing sound of incoming. The first round hit within yards of the dead VC. They worked the area for about ten minutes and we moved off the ridge toward the jungle.

We stayed out on that assignment for a week or so looking for food and weapon caches, and during that time, I learned a lot about myself. I made the transition from boy to man. We eventually ended up back at firebase Abbey. Before we climbed up to the firebase, we all jumped in that lazy river for a swim. What a treat that was!  This account of my first combat assault is comprised of many vague thoughts and feelings. I’m sure the reality for each guy was different, but for me, this is how I remember my first combat assault.

 Fire in the hole

We never stayed in one place too long. We often did rescue missions. I remember one where a Chinook had dropped a load of ammunition in dense triple canopy jungle. The army didn’t want to recover it, so they sent an explosive team to blow it up. Our job was to march through the jungle as fast as possible, securing the area for the explosive team. We humped all day through very dense terrain and finally reached the dropped munitions. We set-up our perimeter and waited for the explosive team to wire the ammo for detonation. The next day we were ready for action. We moved away, far away from the site and some one yelled,” fire in the hole”   Well let me tell you, that was some explosion! The area looked like a B52 bomber had dropped a couple of bombs on it. I often wonder how much money was lost, and why they chose to destroy and not recover. Oh well! There is a lot I will never understand about Nam.

Firebase Nutmeg

119TH AVIATION COMPANY (ASLT HEL) Logged on 22 Jun. 1970

“Gator 362″ was about the finest aircraft in the first flight. Today the ship was destroyed by enemy mortar fire sitting in LZ Nutmeg. It was piloted by 1LT Mchugh. The only serious injury was WO1 Spivey who broke his leg while flying as first pilot. Later in the day, the Gator and Croc pulled a final extraction of LZ Nutmeg and moved the people to LZ Mark Twain 20 miles to the south.

A few days later, we flew into firebase Nutmeg, south of the Mang Yang pass. We landed on the firebase and immediately set-up our positions on the perimeter. We were pretty close to the landing pad and it was cool watching the helicopters. They would fly in as fast as possible, and fly out just as fast. I soon realized why. I remember the first mortar hitting about one hundred yards beyond the landing pad. The next few rounds walked right down to the pad where a huey helicopter was dropping off some troops. Just as the last soldier jumped off the huey, it took a round right in the nose and rolled forward onto its blades. It spun around a few times and stopped. The first pilot suffered only a broken leg, and the co-pilot and door gunners were thrown clear, receiving minor injuries.

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Fox Force was sent out to locate the VC and eliminate the threat. We left the firebase and headed down the mountainside into very dense terrain. We knew the VC was very mobile and they could be anywhere, so we just kept our heads down and moved very quietly through the dense jungle. We stayed out there for days playing a cat and mouse game, the mortar attacks continued, we were always where they weren’t.  We did find an abandoned Montagnard village that had been abandoned just minutes before we arrived. There were chickens and pigs running about as we searched the hootches and the bush along its perimeter. I remember looking in an area just out side of the perimeter of the village where I saw some straw laid in an unusual position. Thinking that it may have been a cache of food or weapons, I slowly stuck my hand inside the straw feeling for any objects that may have been hidden there. To my surprise it felt like mud, so I with drew my hand and realized that I had just stuck my hand into feces!  It probably was their composting pit, because human and animal waste was an extremely valuable commodity to the Montagnards.  What little crops they grew they would need fertilizer. So I suspect they composted human and animal waste for that purpose.  My hand smelled for days, no matter how often I washed it; time was the only cleanser of that smell.  I remember one of the guys chased down one of the pigs, it wasn’t very big, he hit it across the back of it’s neck a few times with his machete until it bleed to death. He them skinned the pig and skewered it over a fire pit.   Some of the guys ate it, I couldn’t because it smelled to bad. We returned to the firebase and after a few more days, and it was decided that the firebase would be shut down. We returned to the jungle and continued our reconnaissance until the firebase was abandoned. The downed huey was stripped of all usable parts and the shell was left behind as bait for scavenging VC.

We moved in on the perimeter of the abandoned firebase, and positioned ourselves on a small hill that gave us a clear view of the firebase, and the downed helicopter. The firebase looked eerie, just days before there was so much life;

Soldiers moved across the landscape of bunkers and foxholes, as helicopters floated down from the blue sheath of sky, stretched from tree line to tree line. Laughter and music waxed and waned between mortar and artillery fire, and the smell of diesel thick, wafted above human waste pits, overflowed with stench. So much blood, sweat and tears shed for this empty firebase, in the middle of a jungle, half way around the world. Insane!

We sat there quietly, watching and waiting for any movement. Just about sunset a group of people came out of the jungle and began to rummage through the abandoned firebase.  I didn’t get a good look at them, I was covering the rear. As the group approached the downed helicopter, the guys up front opened fire. My curiosity caused me to move to the front so I could see what was happening. I remember seeing dead bodies lying near the helicopter. A couple of the guys went down to check them out. They returned with some weapons and we made it out of there in a hurry.

As we entered the jungle, the sun had gone down and it was pitch dark. It began to rain so hard it was difficult to walk. Because of the rain and the darkness, the point man couldn’t find his way through the bush, so word came back from the front to drop in place, we were going to stay there for the night. I fell right there were I stood and pulled my poncho out of my rucksack and pulled it over me and fell asleep. When I awoke in the morning, the rain had stopped and I was almost dry. We never looked back; we just saddled-up and moved on.

 Resupply Helicopter

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A few days later, we cut an LZ for our resupply helicopter. We were resupplied about two times a week. If we were in a hot zone, the supplies were dropped from the helicopter to the ground. The helicopter crew didn’t like to hang around very long. They wanted to get in and out as fast as possible.  Our supplies usually consisted of clean fatigues and underwear, food and water, ammo and mail. There were times when we got beer from the rear. We would all chip in some money and one of the guys in the rear would payoff a helicopter crew to bring it out with some ice. We cooled down the beer by rolling it on small pieces of ice for a few minutes. It never got that cold but hey, it was beer.  Each C-ration meal contained cheese, crackers, a can of something edible, toilet paper, and a small box of cigarettes. Once in awhile we would get a Supplementary Ration Pack. It was a cardboard box about three feet by two feet by eight inches in size with 10 cartons of cigarettes, some chewing tobacco, some candy, several tablets of writing paper and ball point pens, and some replacement boot laces. Once, a helicopter flew in with ice cream. It was a reward for having the highest number of kills for the week. Now that was crazy!

 Pith Helmet

The next mission that I remember was around the time of the Lieutenant’s or someone’s birthday, not sure who’s. We celebrated that night with fireworks on the mountainside. Each night before setting up camp the lieutenant would call in our coordinates and have smoke markers fired to mark our position. On this night, I remember live artillery and white phosphorus rounds lighting up the hillside. I think I was listening to The Beatles song “A long and winding road,” it was the first time I heard the song and thought that it was perfect for how I felt at the time.  There were a lot of times lying out there in the jungle late at night, curled up on my air mattress, or on the ground if my mattress had a hole, which it often did, that my mind would try to escape the reality of the jungle. I would just lie there staring off into the darkness.

The dark walls of jungle push from all sides, pushing from all directions at the same time; the color of its darkness so heavy with despair, smothered in depression, I gasp for fresh air. Tomorrow seems a distant thought, shaded in fear and uncertainty, the moonless night it wrought. I roll from side to side in search of a glimmering light, until slumber claims the darkness of the moonless night…

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The next morning came with a bang. We were saddled-up and ready to head out when a couple of VC walked right into our campsite. The point man saw them and fired a few rounds. They turned and ran back down the hillside. We chased them; I think there was a blood trail but we never found a body. I did fine a pith helmet lying in the bush. I still have it. It’s one of the few things I brought back, other than myself. I kept it because of the inscription inside the hat. The inscription was the name of the soldier and the date he enlisted. The curious thing is that the date was the exact date that I entered Vietnam, Jan. 05, 1970.

It put a human face on Charlie, which I had forgotten. The military tries to dehumanize the enemy with names that take away his humanity. I’m sure this was done on both sides of the battlefield; names like, gook, dink and Charlie. I don’t know what names were used for GI’s by the enemy, but I suspect there were a few.

 Cambodia

119TH AVIATION COMPANY (ASLT HEL) Logged on 4 May 1970

Once again, the Gators were over the Cambodian border inserting recon patrols and companies from the 1st and 2nd Battalion of the 4th Inf Div. This time the enemy was a little obnoxious as he continued to put massive ground fire up at the C and C ships. There were negative injuries but operations were delayed until the enemy strongholds were equalized by heavy artillery and continuous air strikes.

unnamed (25)Around the first of May, we got word that something big was coming down. A few days later, the sky was full of hueys. It reminded me of the scene in The Wizard of Oz where the flying monkeys filled the sky in search of Dorothy; It was very ominous. The helicopters swooped down and gathered up all the line companies, as well as Echo Company. We were flown back to Camp Radcliff, re-supplied and trucked by convoy to an airstrip near Plei Djereng. Plei Djereng was located on the border of Vietnam and Cambodia.  The airstrip at Plei Djereng was bustling with aircraft coming and going; Hueys, Cobras and Chinooks carrying troops and supplies, moved with an urgency of surprising the NVA and the Viet Cong.

While sitting there on the dusty airstrip waiting for our transport chopper, a reporter from Time Magazine took a few snapshots of the platoon. I saw the pictures a few weeks later when one of the guys got a letter from home. His mom had seen the pictures in the magazine and sent them to him. I couldn’t see my face in the picture because I had my back turned to the camera, but you could see my M60, and the other guys pretty well. Their red scarves stood out!

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We eventually were loaded onto a Chinook and dropped off somewhere in Cambodian or around May 5th.  I had never flown a combat mission in a Chinook before. I remember the rear ramp dropped and we ran off like marines landing on Guadalcanal. Fortunately, the landing zone was very quiet; we made no contact with the VC or the NVA. We were all very anxious and had expected heavy resistance. The terrain was heavily scarred with large bomb craters filled with red muddy water from the – all too frequent – monsoon rains. It was spooky! The jungle surrounded the craters with a dark and quiet eerie anticipation.  The air was thick and humid, and the sky was covered with a gray misty blanket of clouds that hung just above the treetops. The faint light of the morning sun created patches of glowing light around the craters as silent dark shadows bleed into the darkness of the jungle. We moved off into that quiet eerie darkness of the jungle, like voyagers from another world in search of the Ho Chi Minh Trail.

In the early days of the war, it took six months to travel from North Vietnam to Saigon on the Ho Chi Minh Trail. By 1970, as many as 20,000 soldiers a month came from Hanoi using the trail. From the air, the Ho Chi Minh Trail was impossible to identify because of the triple canopy jungle, and although the Air Force had been trying to destroy it with heavy bombing, they were unable to stop the constant flow of men and supplies.

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On April 30th, President Richard Nixon announced to a national television audience that US troops were invading Cambodia. In fact, the US had been conducting bombing raids in Cambodia for over a year. I guess bombing was not considered an invasion!  A few weeks later, I heard about the rioting back in the world. I was shocked when I heard aboutKent State. Innocent people were being killed here; and now back in America, for what? I think I can now understand both sides of the war, having been in Vietnam I truly believe the war was wrong, not that stopping the spread of misguided communism was wrong; I think the way in which we were trying to stop it was wrong. Vietnam needed help moving into the twentieth century not bombed back into the dark ages.

Three Stupid GI’s

We had traveled about two kilometers when word came down to take a ten-minute break. Me and three other guys dropped our rucksacks in a slight depression and sat down. While sitting there I noticed the ground began to move. I pushed back some decaying leaves and hundreds of leeches began crawling up my legs. I pulled my legs back and pulled up my pant legs to check for leeches. There was a battalion of these slimy bloodsuckers marching up my legs. They were big, fat, and juicy blood engorged suckers, working hard to suck all the blood from my body. I whipped out my Zippo and began the firefight. One after the other they fell, and just as the last sucker fell, I noticed that me and the other two guys had been left behind. I didn’t want to panic but I felt very vulnerable.

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I remember thinking that the VC could have been waiting for the perfect moment to strike, and this would be the perfect moment to take out three stupid GI’s. We couldn’t yell because that would give our position away. Fortunately, one of the guys was the RTO, (radio telephone operator) and had a radio. He got on the horn and told the lieutenant that we had lost contact with the platoon. It was decided a yellow smoke canister would be popped and that we should walk toward the smoke. When we saw the smoke, about four hundred meters away we wanted to run toward it, but we didn’t, because we didn’t want to be mistaken for VC and shot by a trigger happy soldier. We slowly advanced toward the smoke and made contact with our unit. We were very happy and embarrassed at the same time, to be back with the unit.  Some of the guys made a few wise cracks; but we knew we deserved them.

We made camp there for the night. The jungle was very thick and because total darkness comes quickly in the jungle, we hurried to set out our trip flares and claymores on the perimeter of our campsite. Just before darkness, we heard someone yelling off in the distance. He was yelling in English that he was lost and from Bravo Company. We didn’t want to give away our position by yelling back, because it could have been a trap. A couple of our guys went out to check it out. They returned with a very frightened American soldier.  He had been separated from his unit for a couple of days. I remember thinking how frightened I was for the hour or so that I was separated from my unit and understood his fear.

Maggots

The next day one of the line units spotted a hootch, (hut). Lieutenant Norton was a little upset that the recon platoon didn’t spot the hootch first. I figured who gives a crap it was spotted. The hootch was part of an abandoned campsite for the NVA. It looked as if they had left in a hurry. The bomb craters near by were clues as to why they left lickety-split. Someone found a wounded NVA soldier in a small bunker. His entire body had been burnt with napalm and was full of maggots. I was amazed that he was still alive. The medics refused to treat him because he smelled so badly. They were ordered to make him comfortable until he could be evacuated by helicopter.

We destroyed the hootches and bunkers and moved to higher ground for the night. That night I heard gunfire and mortars from all directions.  It began to rain hard and I was wet, cold, and laying in the mud. It was miserable. I couldn’t make a hammock from my poncho to get off the ground because of the gunfire, so I just wrapped myself in the poncho and waited for the sun to come up.

When I woke up I was dry and still pissed off but happy that it had stopped raining. My body heat inside that poncho had dried everything. The next day we found the Ho Chi Minh Trail. The trail was very wide and you could tell that it was well used. The earth was very hard, the exposed roots of trees were worn down, and the jungle was thick. We leftCambodia with out having to fire our weapons. I felt very fortunate, knowing that others didn’t fare as well.

 The bird twittered & The lizard would croak

We flew back to Camp Radcliff for a three-day stand-down. A stand-down was a period of rest and refitting in which all operational activity except security stopped. I was very happy to be back at Radcliff. Those artillery sounds were music to my ears. While on stand-down, we were assigned guard duty on top of Hon Gong Mountain. We rode in a deuce and a half truck to the top of the mountain. The view from the top was spectacular. You could see for miles and miles, and down below was Camp Radcliff with the airstrip, sometimes called “The Golf Course” lined with helicopters. Our job was to guard the communication tower.

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That night felt like a party. Everyone was in a great mood. I remember it was the first time I heard the Re-up Bird. I couldn’t believe it at first. I thought the guys were kidding me. Well after listening very closely, I could hear it! Re-up, it would say, in a twittering kind of way. That was funny, but the F**k You Lizard was even funnier when it answered the Re-up Bird. That night I was entertained by the Re-up Bird and the F**k You Lizard. When the bird twittered, “Re-up” the lizard would croak “f**k you.” This was crazy! Sitting on top of a mountain in Vietnam listening to a lizard tell a bird to get f**ked, when just a few days ago I flew on my first combat assault; crazy!

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Well things did get crazier! Later that night, sometime after midnight, we could see some explosions on the airstrip; one after the other, right down the line, explosion after explosion. I thought it was incoming from outside the camp. The word came up that Sappers had infiltrated the perimeter and had attacked the airstrip. Sappers were North Vietnamese Army or Vietcong demolition commandos that would snick through the perimeter of the base camp and place their satchels of explosive in bunkers or aircraft, usually in the middle of the night.  This attack resulted in 17 aircraft destroyed or damaged. There were no American casualties’ and the sappers evaded capture. We were very vigilant the rest of the night “to say the least.”

LZ Hard Times

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After our stand down ended we headed by convoy to LZ Hard Times. Hard Times was located in the Vinh Thanh Valley 20 km northeast of An Khe on highway 19. Hard Times was surrounded by high mountains, so incoming was as often as mealtime. You would just get settled outside of your bunker and a mortar or rocket attack would drive you back inside. Some guys would just sit there reading, eating or whatever during the attack. I didn’t want to stay there long enough to get that comfortable.

I believe our next mission was in conjunction with two other line companies. We were positioned along the base of a mountain near LZ Hard Times. All the companies were lined up in single file and swept across the mountainside flushing out the enemies’ position.  I remember this as being one of the stupidest things I had ever seen. We had hundreds of soldiers, single file, cutting through brush and boulders up the side of a mountain with f-105 jets firing 20 caliber exploding rounds on the mountainside. This was well and dandy, until one of the f-105’s left its guns on a split second too long, dusting the area where we were with 20 caliber exploding rounds. Fortunately, no one was injured. This was up there with my Cobra experience a few weeks earlier. It looked as if friendly fire was becoming my nemesis.

Firebase Stump

119TH AVIATION COMPANY (ASLT HEL) Logged on 13 May 1970

With the combined efforts of Gators and 57th Gladiators, the 1st BDE, 4th INF. DIV. was pulled out of Cambodia. Parts of this element were inserted 4 kilometers east of the Se San (hot) Pass.

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We set-up shop on firebase Stump located on the Vietnamese side of the border. We worked hard to complete our bunker before nightfall. firebase Stump was appropriately named because stumps were everywhere. It must have been cleared with chainsaws.  It was built on flat ground surrounded by dense jungle. The tree line was maybe 200 meters away from the perimeter and our bunker! That night around midnight sappers penetrated the wire on the other side of the firebase and tossed explosives into a couple of bunkers. I heard the explosion and thought it was incoming.

The lieutenant asked for a couple of us to go help defend the other perimeter. I grabbed someone’s M16 and headed over to the other side of the base. It was dark as hell; I could barely see but a few feet in front of me. I knew that I could have easily been seen as a sapper, so I made my presence known as I approached each bunker. I eventually made it to the other side and found the damaged bunkers. The perimeter was secure so I returned to my bunker. The next morning a body count revealed two dead GI’s.  By mid afternoon, the bodies still laid in a metal container that looked like a small storage shed. Some of the soldiers on the firebase were upset that the bodies were still there, because the heat inside that metal container must have been extreme. They felt that the unit commanders were being disrespectful in leaving the dead soldiers in the hot shed.  I believe the bodies were flown out the next morning.

I think that its human nature that we look for someone or something to blame for our pain.  Once we find the source of our pain, we then can channel our anger and frustration toward its center.  In this case, the soldiers felt the pain of losing two fellow soldiers, and the emptiness of not being able to inflict revenge on their killers, so the unit commanders become, “the center focus”.

Accidents Happen

Having survived the invasion into Cambodia, I returned to Plei Djereng on May 13, 1970. My company was headed for a much-needed stand-down back at Camp Radcliff. While we were waiting on the airstrip at Plei Djereng I witnessed a Chinook crash into a deuce and a half truck loaded with troops. The accident happened some distance from my location but I could see the Chinook. It was drifting to the right and because of the dust; the pilot couldn’t see the truck. The wheel of the Chinook caught the truck causing it to flip over. The rotor blade hit the truck and the Chinook settled on top of it. I found out later that four soldiers had been killed and twenty-five injured. I remember thinking that death comes at any moment, and just being in Vietnam pushes those moments a little closer together.

Hippie Parties

The stand down at Camp Radcliff was a much-needed rest. We slept in military barracks on cots with blankets, had hot meals and showers, we had all the conveniences of home. Well maybe not all the conveniences, but it felt like it after being in the jungle so long. Often there were movies outside using what looked like giant bed sheets for screens. I remember watching only one, “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.”  I liked the movie, but not the ending; they were killed far away from home!

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There were a lot of tribute bands that played little venues scattered around the camp. The best one I saw was a Beatles tribute band. The band was Vietnamese and they sounded just like the Beatles. The most popular bands were the female bands. The officers always made their presences known when the ladies performed.

The big parties happened in the late night hours. GI’s gathered in the middle of the camp forming giant bong circles some with bonfires in the middle to signify the connection of the circle. Bongs were water pipes made from all sorts of things; beer cans, bamboo, anything that could hold water. Actually, the Bong was a cheap water pipe invented in Vietnam during the war.

The circles often had a hundred or more GI’s passing their bongs or pipes around. I remember sitting in one of these circles with a bonfire fit for a Celtic king for hours and never saw the same bong or pipe pass by, this includes my own. Guys would sit there listening to Rock’n Roll and talk about home, their dreams, about everything. It was a time to forget the war and relax. It never got out of control that is until the MP’s came to break up the party.  I never saw anyone arrested. I think if they had, a riot would have broken out.  I know the parties where alcohol was used often became violent. Fights would break out and someone would be shot or killed.

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There were typically three kinds of parties; White parties, Black parties and Hippie parties. The Hippie parties had every ethnic group covered, everyone got along very well. I think this is one reason marijuana was used so heavily in Vietnam. It made life in a world of death and destruction a little more bearable. Not every GI smoked marijuana or drank alcohol, but I think everyone had their own personal escape.

A Friend from Back Home

During our stand-down, after Cambodia, I was completely shocked one day as I made my way to the mess hall for lunch. While walking along the road a jeep passed and I heard someone call my name. When I turned around the jeep had stopped and the driver was running back toward me yelling my name. As he got closer, I couldn’t believe my eyes, it was Jeff, a friend from back home. How strange was this, so far away from home and here he was standing in the middle of Camp Radcliff in the middle of Vietnam giving me a big hug!

Jeff was drafted a few months after me and had been in country for a few months. He was assigned to a company that helped the locals with their rice productivity. He said he was more like a gofer, he would drive the officers around and do minor jobs for his unit. I asked him how he got the job and he said, they asked him what kind of job he had before he was drafted. He told them that he worked for a rancher who grew rice, so they assigned him to this company.

He was a spec4 and had his own jeep and hootch, which comes with a mama-san housekeeper. I thought he had it made; the perfect job in Vietnam. He asked me what I had been up to and I told him a little about Fox Force and the missions I had been on. He was excited about combat and said that he had been thinking about a transfer to a line company. I told him that he was crazy! Don’t even think about it.

We jumped in his jeep and drove to his hootch, which was cool. He had electricity and all the comforts of home. I couldn’t believe he wanted to transfer. I would have traded places with him in a second. I hung out with him as often as I could. He knew all the hot spots in Camp Radcliff and An Khe very well.

On my next stand-down, I found out that Jeff had transferred to a line company. I think it was Bravo Company. I never saw him again while I was in Vietnam. I did hook up with him after I returned home and we shared war stories. I asked him if he regretted transferring to Bravo Company and he said no. He had learned a lot about himself and he wouldn’t change it for the world.

Fragmented Images

1. The next missions are hard for me to remember, I have fragmented images as I hover above a hot LZ with hueys and cobras firing their rockets and miniguns below me. I hover like a buzzard waiting for the kill. I see images of tall elephant grass ten or fifteen feet below. I see a hot LZ and hear the door gunner yelling, “jump, jump” and me yelling back “lower, lower,” “too

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high, too high.”  I have images of jumping off the huey firing into the jungle. Running into the darkness of the tree line wondering what monster might be waiting there.  I follow a small trail into the thickness stopping at a narrow stream flowing below a jagged cliff of faded gray.  I sit my gun down and walk a short distance when the sound of gunfire and metal ricocheting off granite forces me to fire my pistol into the darkness above the cliff. Others fire into the darkness as I roll over to my gun and fire a burst into the emptiness, no need to make chase; the sniper is gone. We back off, return on the trail a few hundred yards, and take five, I began to write a letter to mother. A crack, a yell, “man down.” The FO, (forward observer) hit in the back of the head and rolls down an embankment. He is unconscious but alive. The bullet parts his scalp to the bone. The medic wraps his wound and we move to a spot for a dust-off at sunrise…

2. Walking single file along a jungle trail, I remember wondering what it must be like to walk point, to hear the subtle sounds, and smell the wafting odors of jungle, not knowing what’s beyond the next turn… a wired bomb, hanging shoulder high, high enough to take off your head… A mine buried beneath jungle decay, one fail step removes your legs… An ambush of

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cracking AK 47’s from beyond the darkness… A face-to-face surprise meeting of your enemy, as you push back the jungle, “who will be first to draw?”… The point man meets the enemy face to face as he fires a burst from his M-15, low to high, killing one and wounding another, the wounded runs until he bleeds to death. A rucksack full of money and documents covered in blood; sent to the rear… to be cleaned!

3. Another day out of sequence in a mosaic portrait of Vietnam, painted with hazy images of abandoned bunkers and rows of hootches with no enemy insight. The lieutenant, the point man and I leave the platoon at ease and move from bunker to hootch searching for signs of life. From one to another we move in stealth across the humus floor of jungle decay. Empty cans of mackerel and rice kernels litter the early morning shadows. I listen to a quiet stillness echo from empty bunkers and imagine the laughter and cries that filled their darkness.  I imagine men huddled in their protective cocoons made of sandbags and crumbling logs, fortifications to withstand an aerial assault as they think of family and friends at home.  I think of me in their world and see no difference, and yet I know things are not the same no matter how much I want them to be. We find a trail along the perimeter of the abandoned camp and move along its winding mark; moving toward the rear of our platoon, unknowingly! Ten or fifteen edgy soldiers huddled down on a trail with orders to shoot and kill, and the lieutenant, the point man and I are moving toward their rear. I hear the clicked engagement of bullet to barrel and feel the death I never knew. Staring down the barrel of an M-60 locked, loaded, and filling the sights of twelve M-16’s and two M-79 grenade launchers and I walk away unscathed…

4. I have more images of incomplete stories, no beginnings or ends, just images as I jump from the huey’s open door onto a hot LZ and run ten feet or more, falling on dry elephant grass, firing into the distance creating cover as more hueys return with soldiers who will jump until their last.  The tall elephant grass goes up in a blaze from rocket fire, which we must now evade.

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We run for higher ground and wait for the blaze to still, then walk single file through the burned out ash into the hills.  In the morning hours a chopping sound is heard, a four-man patrol heads out to observe. They returned with weapons and personal items they retrieve from four dead VC they killed with ease.  A wallet with pictures of family and friends; a bullet hole through its middle with blood stains within, the contents dispersed amongst the men, and when I think about that wallet I think about the stains within.

5. When I think of Vietnam, it’s often like waking from a dream, lost and confused with faded beginnings and never-ending ends. I see images of a forced evacuation for reasons unknown, and the calling of choppers to our landing zone. We’re told the hueys are too far away, the only chopper available is a Loach, and it’s on its way. The Loach is small, capacity of six; it’ll take a few trips so the evacuation will not be quick. We huddle down in the tall green grass as the Loach hovers above the verdant mat. I watch and listen as the chopper moans, the rotor wobbles and bends from the excessive load, just as the person next to me stands in its path, he didn’t know. I watched in slow motion from the tall grassy shade, watching his head fly, fly away. I was hesitant to go, but I ran to his side, he was laying on his back and still alive. His helmet saved him from the arrant blade. I found it dented and scarred lying in its would be grave. I saw death and he saw stars…

New Platoon Leader

Sometime during July, we got a new platoon leader whose name I cannot recall. He had graduated from a military school and thought he was John Wayne; he turned out to be indecisive and never earned the respect of the platoon. Lieutenant Norton rotated back to the divisional base camp, and I never saw him again in Vietnam.  The Army assigned officers to the field for six months then rotated them to the rear. I suppose this was to give them a chance for combat. In our case, it took a very good officer and replaced him with a very bad one.

My time for R&R arrived a few weeks after the new platoon leader took over the platoon. The popular R&R destinations in Vietnam were Hawaii, Bangkok and Sydney. I decided on going to Sydney Australia for reasons unknown. Bangkok was probably the most popular. The stories I had heard about it where often times unbelievable. The guys always had great stories about the parties and the women, mostly about the women. I remember one story about the massage parlors. The kind where one hundred girls dressed in evening gowns would sit behind glass windows waiting for their number to be called. You could buy a 24-hour escort and tour guide for $25, with an option to extend, but for me, Sydney was the place I wanted to go; like I said before, “just a naïve country boy!”

We were out humping in the jungle the day before I was scheduled to fly out for my R&R, when I noticed fresh footprints all over the trail. I informed the Lieutenant, but he figured the footprints were not that fresh. This was not what I wanted to hear, I was short and didn’t need that. I had heard stories about guys being killed on their last day in country, how ironic would that be, I didn’t want to take a chance. We followed the trail all day and the footprints were still as fresh as ever. Just before nightfall we set-up camp right there on the trail. I really felt uncomfortable with this; it was like sleeping in the middle of a freeway and I didn’t want to get stepped on!

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That night I handed over my M-60 with about 600 rounds of ammo to one of the FNGs, (his first mission) and he gave me his M-16 and a couple of bandoleers of clips. I felt very vulnerable with the M-16. It felt like a toy after carrying that M-60 for so many months. The next morning when I woke up I found a large tick stuck in my chest. I asked the medic to take it out and he tried using a cigarette to irritate the tick, but that didn’t work. Next, he just pulled on it and the body broke away leaving the head of the tick stuck in my chest. I grabbed it with my fingers and pulled the head out leaving a big hole in my chest. Ticks, leeches and mosquitoes sucked! But I was too excited about going on R&R to worry about those blood suckers; Hey, two weeks out of the jungle. The only thing better than that was going back to the world.

The Lieutenant came over and asked me to walk out on the left flank about twenty feet, I had never seen anyone walk flank in the jungle, but he was the man and I wanted to get on that bird, so I saddled up and walked out about twenty feet when I heard…

6. Crack! Crack! A sudden burst of sound and light from the thickness screams by my head, hitting a tree and sending bark across my face. I return fire into the thickness at my front and hear a burst of death, tap! tap!,  from friendly fire on my right, while the crack! crack!, continues from the thickness at my front. Others fire into the thickness as the Lieutenant pulls the pin of a grenade, tossing it into the thickness. It hits a tree, bouncing back, exploding into a soldier’s neck. I hear a large explosion and cries of “I’m hit! I’m hit!” I try to move to my right, and the tap! tap! of death is heard, and I fall back into the jungle decay and wait. The medic frozen in fear cannot move, a solder near, moves forward, removing his scarf, saving the blood from the wounded neck. I crawl slowly back through the jungle decay as the FNG  sits with gun and cries, “I didn’t know you were there”, he did not see, for fear is blind, and it’s okay, this time.

The Lieutenant asked me to explore the thickness of the ambush source, I said, “You’re crazy, I’m too short.” We called for a dust-off and they dropped a line. They pull the wounded up through the trees and we headed off to my LZ.

R&R

We cut an LZ in a small clearing that afternoon, and I flew back to the firebase on a “beautiful Loach OH-6 helicopter.” It was the same kind of helicopter that almost took my buddies head off, only this time it was taking me off, off the battle field for two weeks.  I flew on a C-130 Hercules Airplane from Camp Radcliff to Da Nang. I was shocked to see sidewalks and grass along the streets while I was at the Air Force base in Da Nang. I even had an ice cream cone in an air-conditioned ice cream parlor. Man! Those Air Force guys really had it made. I only had ice cream once before that day in Vietnam; it was because my platoon had the most kills for the week.  I stayed that night in Da Nang, then boarded a commercial jet liner for the flight to Sydney.

My clothes consisted of two pairs of pants, a couple of shirts and some underwear and socks that I bought in Da Nang. I had approximately $350 in my wallet for seven days in Sydney. It turned out that was enough money. The flight to Sydney took quite awhile, about eight or nine hours. When I landed, I learned that it was wintertime there. I hadn’t considered that Sydney was in the Southern Hemisphere. It was hot and humid when I left Da Nang and when I stepped off the plane in Sydney it was cold.

There was an R&R Reception Center at the airport. I got a briefing about what to do and what not to do while in Sydney. After the initial briefing, I got a briefing from a young Australian woman about the sites to see, and the activities available to us while visiting Sydney. Right next to the Reception Center was a men’s clothing store. I bought a nice cashmere sweater, a pair of slacks, and a dress shirt and a few other miscellaneous items.

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I took a cab to the Bondi area to check in to my hotel.  The cab drove on the left side of the road, which really freaked me out. I think the cabby knew it because he was going pretty fast and weaving in and out of cars like a maniac.  We finally arrived at my hotel; it was just off the beach and it had a quaint Victorian look. The area around the hotel was mostly residential and quiet.   The Bondi area is famous for its beach. I only walked down to the beach a couple of times, the waves were huge and it was very cold. I walked around the Bondi area on my first day there to get a feel for the area. I bought some Fish and Chips from a street vendor. The Fish and Chips were wrapped in a newspaper and they tasted very good.  I also saw my first Rugby game in a park near the hotel. What a tough sport Rugby is. The players wore kneepads; however, they wore no other protective equipment. They tackled each with the fury of an NFL professional football player.

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The second night I went to Kings Cross. I called a cab from my hotel and told him where I wanted to go. I remember driving for what seemed like an hour on the wrong side of the road. Driving through what looked like Golden Gate Park in San Francisco.  We finally arrived at Kings Cross and the taxi fare was around ten dollars. It seemed rather high.

Kings Cross was where the action was in Sydney; nightclubs and bars were everywhere. Places with names like Whisky a GOGO, Texas Tavern, Bourbon Beefsteak and the Goldfish Bowl. You could listen to live music, dance on a dance floor and, most importantly, pick up women.

That first night I met a young lady and her two friends. We danced and talked about America and Australia.  They took me around Kings Cross, I believe we visited every bar there.  I got drunk and they took me back to my hotel.  I wanted the young lady to stay over, but she said that I was too drunk, and that we could meet tomorrow morning, and she would show me around Sydney harbor.

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The next day I called a taxi to take me to Sydney Harbor, and during the drive, still on the wrong side of the road, I asked the diver how much would the fare be from my hotel to Kings Cross, he said about two dollars. I told him that I paid ten dollars the night before and he asked me if I remembered seeing many trees. I said yes, and he said you were had. You took the scenic tour through Hyde Park at night. He said there are a few crooks that drive taxis, but most are honest. I told him that it could happen anywhere. He dropped me off at the Harbor, I met my friend, and we boarded a tour boat.

Sydney and Sydney harbor reminded me of San Francisco. The Sydney HarborBridge is similar to the Golden Gate Bridge, and there are areas in Old Sydney that have many Victorian buildings built on hillsides. The Opera House was still under construction, but you could still make out its distinctive architecture. After the harbor tour, we visited the Taronga Park Zoo and down town Sydney. I was amazed at how many tall buildings, and how many people there were in Sydney. I remember going into a souvenir shop while I was downtown. I noticed a cute stuffed Koala Bear and bought it for my niece; I don’t remember how much I paid for it.  However, while talking to the sales clerk he asked me where I was from. I told him California and he suggested that I let him take care of the packaging and shipping.  I thought this was a good idea so I paid extra, I think the packaging and shipping was more than the Koala Bear. Well my niece never received the Koala Bear and I was left wondering if it was lost during shipping or I was ripped off by a con man.  Some years later I told this story to a person that I had met at work, she was from Sydney. A week after our meeting I received a small box in the mail, it contained a small Koala Bear and a note that read, “Not all Australians are that way”.  I continued my site seeing tour of Sydney until I found a pub later on that day and popped in for a pint or two. The beer was very tasty, and I was very tired, so after the beers I went back to my hotel. I was supposed to meet my new friend at Kings Cross that night, but unfortunately, I could not make it.

 Rickettsia

That night I felt a little dizzy and nauseated in my hotel room. I started to perspire quite heavily and could barely stand-up. I realized that something was not right, and I called the front desk. I told the desk clerk that I was not feeling well, and that I wanted to go to the emergency room, and could he please call a cab. This nice old guy came up and helped me down to the cab. He told the cab driver to take me to the emergency room quickly. On my way there, in the back seat of the cab I became very disorientated,

I stepped from the cab into an abyss of conscious uncertainty, where lights swirled in a vortex of muffled voices, and faces contorted into fragments of dark and light.  I moved between two worlds, juxtaposed within a mysterious matrix that pulled and pushed my sanity, like waves lapping upon a fragile beach stretched into oblivion.

A few days later, I remember waking up to the sound of voices, voices giggling and talking about my tan. When I opened my eyes, I saw three of the cutest student nurses I had ever seen.  They were giving me a cool sponge bath. My first words were, “I must be in heaven!” The nursing students laughed and told me that I had been sleeping for two days, and that my body temperature was as high as 106 degrees. One of the doctors came around and said they were going to move me into an isolation room, because they had originally thought that I had malaria, and now, because I hadn’t responded to treatment, they would call in a jungle disease specialist, Dr. Campbell.

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I was removed from the ward and taken to an isolation room that same day. Sometime that day Dr. Campbell came in and asked me if I had noticed any unusual bites or rashes on my skin. I told him that I had removed a tick from my chest about two weeks earlier, just as I was leaving the jungle. He asked to see the spot and I showed him. He had some blood work done and within the hour, I was put on a regime of tetracycline. The diagnosis was Scrub Typhus, an acute infectious disease common in Asia that is caused by a bacterium called Rickettsia.  It’s transmitted by ticks, fleas, and lice, and characterized by sudden fever, painful swelling of the lymphatic glands and skin rash.  Within a day, I was feeling better.

Dr. Campbell came by one day and asked if he could take a picture of the bite on my chest. He wanted to use it for future publications. I said that it was okay. I thanked him and told him that I was feeling better. He said that I would stay in the hospital for another week or so, and then I would be discharged.

The girl I had met at Kings Cross and her two friends came to visit me a couple of times. She said that the hotel manager told her what had happened, and that she wanted to see if I needed anything. I told her that I was doing better now, and that I would be out of the hospital in about a week.

The hospital staff was very friendly to me, especially the nurses. One afternoon, about a week after my hospital admit, a nurse came into my room and said that I had a phone call from the USA. The call was from my mother. The army had called her, and told her that I was in the hospital in Sydney, and gave her the phone number. I told my mother the story, and that I was okay and would be released from the hospital in a few days.

The army gave me a few extra days after my release from the hospital, so I continued my R&R. I returned to my hotel at Bondi Beach and found that the staff had gathered up all my personal things and had stored them away for me.  I settled into the same room and called one of the nurses I had met at the hospital.  She became my tour guide for the rest of my R&R. We became very good friends and she continued to write me while I was in Vietnam and a few times after I returned home.

In the end, I stayed in Sydney for three weeks, two weeks in the hospital and one week as a tourist. I don’t remember the flight back to Vietnam, but I’m sure I wasn’t happy about returning. I returned to my unit and picked up where I left off.

Back In Nam

My plane from Sydney landed in Da Nang and after processing in; I flew on a C-130 Hercules Airplane from Da Nang to Camp Radcliff. I stored away all of my civilian clothes and personal items at Battalion Head Quarters and was re-issued my equipment.  I think it was the next day that I flew by chopper to LZ Hardtimes, and then out to the jungle to meet up with Fox Force. Everyone thought that I had gone AWOL, (absent without leave) while in Sydney. After two weeks, and I had not returned, the Lieutenant assumed that I had gone AWOL and contacted  Battalion Head Quarters. It took a few more days until they sorted it out, and finally contacted my mother to let her know where I was.  I don’t remember much about this time in Vietnam. I know the days were long and I was getting short and the platoon mostly patrolled the areas around the firebase, with little enemy contact.  All of the original Fox Force guys had gone and I was the old timer and I remember feeling responsible for showing the new guys how to survive in the jungle.  I was a Spec 4 with over eight months in country, mostly in the jungle carrying an M-60 machine gun, and many airborne combat assaults.  I had learned a lot about survival in Vietnam.   I knew that the small things that were often taken for granted, were the things that could save your life. I knew the most important thing was to take care of your buddy, because together you fight as one and survival is the one thing we all had in common.

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After about two weeks back with the platoon, I was called back to Camp Radcliff to receive a promotion.  The first night back at Camp Radcliff, a friend and I went out to a couple of clubs to have a little fun. We partied very hard and we were drunk when the CID pulled up in their jeep, as we were walking back to our barracks, and asked for our identifications. They began to hassle me about my hair being too long and that I needed a shave. I explained that I had been out in the boonies for the last few weeks and hadn’t shaved or cut my hair. I told them I just arrived that day and didn’t have time to get a haircut or shave. They didn’t seem to care and I thought they were being abusive, so I said a few words they didn’t like, so they put me in their jeep and took me to the brig. While at the brig, they found some OJ’s in my pocket. OJ’s were marijuana and it was illegal; so they arrested me and called my first sergeant and I was placed on house arrest.

 Choices made from Choices made

I remained at Camp Radcliff for a few more days and then flew out to our battalion’s firebase to receive, not a promotion, but a demotion, an article fifteen and E-1 ranking. I also was fined $250.00 and reassigned to a line company. At this point, I was disgusted with the army and only wanted one thing, “to go back to the world!” I stayed on the firebase for weeks it seemed, waiting to officially receive my punishment, I often thought about the guys in Fox Force, and how they were doing. I felt that I had let them down, being one of the seniors in the platoon. But after thinking about this crazy war, I realized that things happen because we make choices, “Choices made from Choices made,” and on, and on, never ending choices that we make, some right, some wrong, in the end just choices.

I met all the guys in the 4.2 mortar platoon while on the firebase. They taught me how to load the C-4 plastic on the mortar rounds. It was interesting and fun, especially yelling, “Fire in the Hole” and dropping the round down the tube. That was a rush!

I met another guy whose job it was to hook and unhook the sling load from helicopters as they came in or flew out of the firebase. He showed me how to unhook a load without getting shocked, if done wrong you got hit big time, “sounds analogous to my tour in country!” He had a comfortable job for firebase standards. He and I would party in his bunker, sometimes with 5 or 10 guys. We would drink and smoke and listen to music or just tell stories about home or stories about the bush.  I liked him a lot, because we had so much in common.  He didn’t let life live him, he lived life. He had a sensitivity about himself that I liked. He did take life seriously, that’s why he seemed to always enjoy every second of his life. Then one day my time on the firebase ended, I was sent to Charlie Company.  Charlie Company was out in the jungle when I joined them. I was assigned to a platoon – and became a line grunt the rest of my short time in Vietnam.

 Late Afternoon

 Distant memories blur the horizon like smoke across battlefields

Where figures move in a surreal flight of spiritual metamorphosis

Like butterflies into the darkness of night

Where the sound of jungle wraps around your thoughts

Until the crackling whip of fear pierces your being

With projectiles of uncertainty

And you know those ghostly places and faces of jungle

Will forever cast shadows across your path

Shadows that will merge into the shade

Of your late afternoon

unnamed (28)

First Fox Force reunion Albuquerque New Mexico 2000.  Jim is standing far left.

 To see more of Jim’s work, please visit:   http://evationonline.com   a website of potpourri…poetry, video’s and short stores, etc…..

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