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Music During the Vietnam War

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(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction – The Rolling Stones
Action – Freddy Cannon
All Day & All Of The Night – The Kinks
All I Really Want To Do – Cher
Baby Don’t Go – Sonny & Cher
Baby I’m Yours – Barbara Lewis
Back in my Arms Again – The Supremes
California Girls – The Beach Boys
Catch Us If You Can – The Dave Clark Five
Come See About Me – The Supremes
Downtown – Petula Clark
Eight Days a Week – The Beatles
Eve Of Destruction – Barry Mcguire
For Your Love – The Yardbirds
Game of Love -Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders
Get Off of My Cloud – The Rolling Stones
Hang On Sloopy – The Mccoys
Hello Vietnam – Johnnie Wright
Help – The Beatles
Help me, Rhonda – The Beach Boys
I Can’t Help Myself (Sugar Pie Honey Bunch) – Four Tops
I Feel Fine – The Beatless
I Got You Babe – Sonny & Cher
I Hear a Symphony – The Supremes
I’m Henry VIII, I Am – Herman’s Hermits
I’m Telling You Now – Freddie and the Dreamers
It Ain’t Me Babe – The Turtles
Laugh At Me – Sonny
Like a Rolling Stone – Bob Dylan
Mr. Tambourine Man – The Byrds
Mrs. Brown, You’ve Got a Lovely Daughter – Herman’s Hermits
My Girl – The Temptations
Nowhere To Run – Martha & Vandellas
Over and Over – The Dave Clark Five
Papa’s Got A Brand New Bag – James Brown
Satisfaction – The Rolling Stones
Seventh Son – Johnny Rivers
Shotgun – Jr. Walker & All Stars
Some Enchanted Evening – Jay & the Americans
Stop in the Name of Love – The Supremes
The Game Of Love – Wayne Fontana & Mindbenders
The In Crowd – The Ramsey Lewis Trio
The Last Time – The Rolling Stones
The Name Game – Shirley Ellis
This Diamond Ring – Gary Lewis & the Playboys
Ticket to Ride – The Beatles
Tracks of My Tears – The Miracles
Turn! Turn! Turn! (To Everything There Is a Season) – The Byrds
Unchained Melody – The Righteous Brothers
We Gotta Get Out Of This Place – The Animals
Wonderful World – Herman’s Hermits
Wooly Bully – Sam The Sham & Pharaoh
Yesterday – The Beatles
You Were On My Mind – We Five
You’ve Got Your Troubles – The Fortunes
You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling – The Righteous Brothers

1966

(You’re My) Soul and Inspiration – The Righteous Brothers
19th Nervous Breakdown – The Rolling Stones
634-5789 (Soulsville, U.S.A.) – Wilson Pickett
96 Tears – ? & the Mysterians
Ain’t too Proud to Beg – The Temptations
B-A-B-Y, Baby – Carla Thomas
Ballad of the Green Berets – SSgt Barry Sadler
Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down) – Cher
Barbara Ann – The Beach Boys
Barefootin’ – Robert Parker
Beauty Is Only Skin Deep – The Temptations
Black Is Black – Los Bravos
Born A Woman – Sandy Posey
Born Free – Roger Williams
Bus Stop – The Hollies
California Dreamin’ – The Mamas & Papas
Cherish – The Association
Cherry Cherry – Neil Diamond
Cool Jerk – The Capitols
Dandy – Herman’s Hermits
Daydream – The Lovin’ Spoonful
Devil With A Blue Dress On – Mitch Ryder & Detroit Wheels
Elusive Butterfly – Bob Lind
Gloria – The Shadows of Knight
Good Lovin’ – The Young Rascals
Good Vibrations – The Beach Boys
Guantanamero – The Sandpipers
Hanky Panky – Tommy James and the Shondells
Hooray For Hazel – Tommy Roe
Hungry – Paul Revere and the Raiders
I Am A Rock – Simon and Garfunkel
I Fought The Law – The Bobby Fuller Four
If I Were A Carpenter – Bobby Darin
I’m a Believer – The Monkees
I’m Your Puppet – Bobby and James Purify
Just Like Me – Paul Revere and the Raiders
Lady Godiva – Peter and Gordon
Lighnin’ Strikes – Lou Christie
Lil’ Red Riding Hood – Sam the Sham and the Pharaohs
Love Is A Hurtin’ Thing – Lou Rawls
Monday Monday – The Mamas and the Papas
My Love – Petula Clark
No Matter What Shape (Your Stomach’s In) – The T-Bones
Nowhere Man – The Beatles
Oh How Happy – Shades of Blue
Paint It Black – The Rolling Stones
Paperback Writer – The Beatles
Poor Side of Town – Johnny Rivers
Psychotic Reaction – The Count Five
Rainy Day Women – Bob Dylan
Reach Out I’ll Be There – The Four Tops
Secret Agent Man – Johnny Rivers
See You In September – The Happenings
She’s Just My Style – Gary Lewis and the Playboys
Sloop John B – The Beach Boys
Somewhere, My Love – The Ray Conniff Singers
Sounds Of Silence – Simon & Garfunkel
Stangers In the Night – Frank Sinatra
Stranger in the Night – Frank Sinatra
Summer In The City – The Lovin’ Spoonful
Sunny – Bobby Hebb
Sunshine Superman – Donovan

1967

A Whiter Shade Of Pale – Procol Harum
(We Ain’t Got) Nothin’ Yet – Blue Magoos
(Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher And Higher – Jackie Wilson
A Whiter Shade Of Pale – Procol Harum
Ain’t No Mountain High Enough – Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell
All Along the Watchtower – Jimi Hendrix (Bob Dylan)
All You Need Is Love – Beatles
Apples, Peaches, Pumpkin Pie – Jay and The Techniques
Baby, I Love You – Aretha Franklin
Baby, I Need Your Lovin’ – Johnny Rivers
Bernadette – Four Tops
Brown Eyed Girl – Van Morrison
California Nights – Lesley Gore
Can’t Take My Eyes Off You – Frankie Valli
Close Your Eyes – Peaches and Herb
Cold Sweat – James Brown and The Famous Flames
Daydream Believer – The Monkees
Don’t Sleep In the Subway – Petula Clark
Don’t You Care – Buckinghams
Everlasting Love – Robert Knight
Expressway To Your Heart – Soul Survivors
For What It’s Worth – Buffalo Springfield
Friday On My Mind – The Easybeats
Funky Broadway – Wilson Pickett
Georgy Girl – Seekers
Get On Up – Esquires
Gimme Little Sign – Brenton Wood
Gimme Some Lovin’ – The Spencer Davis Group
Girl, You’ll Be a Woman Soon – Neil Diamond
Green, Green Grass of Home – Tom Jones
Groovin – The Young Rascals
Groovin’ – Booker T and The MG’s
Happy Together – The Turtles
Here Comes My Baby – Tremeloes
Here We Go Again – Ray Charles
How Can I Be Sure – Young Rascals
I Can See For Miles – The Who
I Dig Rock and Roll Music – Peter, Paul and Mary
I Had Too Much to Dream (Last Night) – Electric Prunes
I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You) – Aretha Franklin
I Take It Back – Sandy Posey
I Think We’re Alone Now – Tommy James and The Shondells
I Was Made to Love Her – Stevie Wonder
I’m A Believer – The Monkees
I-Feel-Like-I’m-Fixin’-to-Die – Country Joe and the Fish
Incense and Peppermint – Strawberry Alarm Clock
It Must Be Him – Vicki Carr
Jimmy Mack – Martha and The Vandella
Kind of a Drag – Buckinghams
Let It Out (Let It All Hang Out) – Hombres
Let’s Live For Today – The Grass Roots
Light My Fire – The Doors
Litle Ole Man (Uptight-Everything’s Alright) – Bill Cosby
Little Bit O’ Soul – Music Explosion
Love Is Her and Now You’re Gone – The Supremes
Magical Mystery Tour – The Beatles
Mercy, Mercy, Mercy – Buckinghams
Mirage – Tommy James and The Shondells
My Cup Runneth Over – Ed Ames
Never My Love – Association
No Place To Run – Martha and the Vandellas
Ode To Billie Joe – Bobbie Gentry
On a Carousel – Hollies
Penny Lane – The Beatles
Pleasant Valley Sunday – The Monkees
Please Love Me Forever – Bobby Vinton
Purple Haze – Jimi Hendrix
Reflections – Diana Ross and The Supremes
Release Me (And Let Me Love Again) – Engelbert Humperdinck
Respect – Aretha Franklin
Ruby Tuesday – The Rolling Stones
San Francisco – Scott Mckenzie
She’d Rather Be With Me – The Turtles
Snoopy Vs. The Red Baron – Royal Guardsmen
Society’s Child – Janis Ian
Somebody to Love – Jefferson Airplane
Somethin’ Stupid – Nancy Sinatra and Frank Sinatra
Soul Finger – Bar-Kays
Soul Man – Sam and Dave
Sweet Soul Music – Arthur Conley
Tell it Like it Is – Aaron Neville
Thank the Lord for the Night Time – Neil Diamond
The Beat Goes On – Sonny & Cher
The End – The Doors
The Happening – Supremes
The Letter – The Box Tops
The Rain, the Park and Other Things – Cowsills
Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye – Casinos
To Sir With Love – Lulu
Waist Deep in the Big Muddy – Pete Seeger
White Rabbit – Jefferson Airplane
Windy – The Association
Your Precious Love – Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell

1968

(Sittin On) The Dock of the Bay – Otis Redding
1,2,3 Red Light – 1910 Fruitgum Company
A Beautiful Morning – Rascals
Ain’t Nothing Like the Real Thing – Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell
Baby Now That I’ve Found You – Foundations
Ballad of Bonnie and Clyde – Georgie Fame
Bend Me Shape Me – American Breed
Born To Be Wild – Steppenwolf
Bottle Of Wine – Fireballs
Cab Driver – The Mills Brothers
Classical Gas – Mason Williams
Dance To The Music – Sly & Family Stone
Delilah – Tom Jones
Do You Know the Way to San Jose – Dionne Warwick
Draft Morning – The Byrds
Elenore – Turtles
Fire – Crazy World Of Arthur Brown
Girl Watcher – O’Kaysions
Going Out of My Head – The Lettermen
Grazing in the Grass – Hugh Masekela
Green Tambourine – The Lemon Pipers
Happiness Is a Warm Gun – The Beatles
Harper Valley P.T.A. – Jeannie C. Riley
Hello, I Love You – The Doors
Here Comes The Judge – Shorty Long
Hey Jude – The Beatles
Hey, Western Union Man – Jerry Butler
Hold Me Tight – Johnny Nash
Honey – Bobby Goldsboro
I Got The Feelin’ – James Brown and The Famous Flames
I Heard it Through the Grapevine – Marvin Gaye
I Love You – People
I Say a Little Prayer – Aretha Franklin
I Thank You – Sam and Dave
I Wonder What She’s Doing Tonight – Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart
If You Can Want – Smokey Robinson and The Miracles
Indian Lake – The Cowsills
I’ve Gotta Get A Message To You – Bee Gees
Journey to the Center of the Mind – Amboy Dukes
Judy in Disguise (With Glasses) – John Fred and His Playboy Band
Jumpin’ Jack Flash – The Rolling Stones
La La Means I Love You – Delfonics
Lady Madonna – The Beatles
Light My Fire – Jose Feliciano
Love Child – Diana Ross and The Supremes
Love Is All Around – Troggs
Love is Blue – Paul Mauriat
MacArthur Park – Richard Harris
Magic Carpet Ride – Steppenwolf
Midnight Confessions – The Grass Roots
Mony, Mony – Tommy James and The Shondells
Mrs. Robinson – Simon and Garfunkel
Never Gonna Give You Up – Jerry Butler
Nobody But Me – Human Beinz
On the Road Again – Canned Heat
Over You – Gary Puckett and The Union Gap
People Got to Be Free – Rascals
Pictures of Matchstick Men – Status Quo
Piece Of My Heart – Janis Joplin
Piece Of My Heart – Big Brother and The Holding Company
Playboy – Gene and Debbe
Reach Out Of The Darkness – Friend and Lover
Revolution – The Beatles
Say It Loud (I’m Black and I’m Proud) – James Brown
Scarborough Fair – Simon and Garfunkel
Sealed With a Kiss – Gary Lewis and The Playboys
Shoo-Bee-Doo-Be-Doo-Da-Day – Stevie Wonder
Simon Says – 1910 Fruitgum Company
Since You’ve Been Gone – Aretha Franklin
Sky Pilot – Eric Burdon and The Animals
Slip Away – Clarence Carter
Soul Serenade – Willie Mitchell
Stay In My Corner – Dells
Street Fighting Man – The Rolling Stones
Summertime Blues – Blue Cheer
Sunshine Of Your Love – Cream
Suzie Q – Creedence Clearwater Revival
Sweet Inspiration – Sweet Inspirations
Take Time to Know Her – Percy Sledge
The Fool On the Hill – Sergio Mendes and Brasil ’66
The Good, The Bad and the Ugly – Hugo Montenegro
The Horse – Cliff Nobles and Co.
The Mighty Quinn – Manfred Mann
The Unicorn – The Irish Rovers
The Unknown Soldier – The Doors
The War Is Over – Phil Ochs
Theme from “Valley of the Dolls” – Dionne Warwick
Think – Aretha Franklin
This Guy’s in Love with You – Herb Alpert
Tighten Up – Archie Bell & the Drells
Time Has Come Today – The Chambers Brothers
White Room – Cream
Woman, Woman – Gary Puckett and The Union Gap
You Keep Me Hangin’ On – Vanilla Fudge
Young Girl – Gary Puckett and The Union Gap
You’re All I Need To Get By – Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell
Yummy, Yummy, Yummy – Ohio Express

1969

A Boy Named Sue – Johnny Cash
Aquarius/Let The Sunshinshine In – The Fifth Dimension
Atlantis – Donovan
Baby I Love You – Andy Kim
Baby It’s You – Smith
Baby, Baby Don’t Cry – Smokey Robinson and The Miracles
Bad Moon Rising – Creedence Clearwater Revival
Ball of Confusion – The Temptation
Black Pearl – Sonny Charles and The Checkmates – Ltd.
Build Me Up Buttercup – Foundations
Can I Change My Mind – Tyrone Davis
Color Him Father – The Winstons
Come Together” / “Something – The Beatles
Crimson & Clover – Tommy James & Shondels
Crystal Blue Persuasion – Tommy James and The Shondells
Dizzy – Tommy Roe
Do Your Thing – The Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band
Easy to Be Hard – Three Dog Night
Everybody’s Talkin’ – Nilsson
Everyday People – Sly and The Family Stone
Fortunate Son – Creedence Clearwater Revival
Galveston – Glen Campbell
Games People Play – Joe South
Get Back – The Beatles
Get Together – The Youngbloods
Gimme Shelter – The Rolling Stone
Gitarzan – Ray Stevens
Give Peace a Chance – John Lennon
Going In Circles – Friends Of Distinction
Good Morning Starshine – Oliver
Grazing In the Grass – Friends Of Distinction
Green River – Creedence Clearwater Revival
Hair – The Cowsills
Hawaii Five-O – Ventures
Honky Tonk Woman – The Rolling Stones
Hot Fun In the Summertime – Sly and The Family Stone
Hurt so Bad – Lettermen
I Can’t Get Next to You – Temptations
I’d Wait a Million Years – The Grass Roots
I’m Gonna Make You Mine – Lou Christie
In the Ghetto – Elvis Presley
In the Year 2525 – Zager and Evans
Indian Giver – 1910 Fruitgum Company
It Looks Like I’ll Never Fall In Love Again – Tom Jones
It’s Getting Better – Mama Cass Elliot
It’s Your Thing – Isley Brothers
I’ve Gotta Be Me – Sammy Davis Jr.
Jean – Oliver
Lay Lady Lay – Bob Dylan
Leaving on a Jet Plane – Peter, Paul & Mary
Little Woman – Bobby Sherman
Love Can Make You Happy – Mercy
Love Theme from Romeo and Juliet – Henry Mancini
More Today Than Yesterday – Spiral Starecase
Mother Popcorn Pt. 1 – James Brown
My Cherie Amour – Stevie Wonder
Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye – Steam
One – Three Dog Night
Only the Strong Survive – Jerry Butler
Polk Salad Annie – Tony Joe White
Proud Mary – Creedence Clearwater Revival
Put a Little Love In Your Heart – Jackie DeShannon
Ramblin’ Gamblin’ Man – The Bob Seger System
Reflections of My Life – The Marmalade
Ruby, Don’t Take Your Love to Town – Kenny Rogers and The First Edition
Run Away Child Running Wild – Temptations
Smile a Little Smile for Me – Flying Machine
Someday We’ll Be Together – Diana Ross & the Supremes
Spinning Wheel – Blood, Sweat and Tears
Sugar, Sugar – The Archies
Suspicious Minds – Elvis Presley
Sweet Caroline – Neil Diamond
That’s the Way Love Is – Marvin Gaye
The Chokin’ Kind – Joe Simon
The Worst That Could Happen – Brooklyn Bridge
These Eyes – The Guess Who
Things I’d Like To Say – New Colony Six
This Girl’s In Love With You – Dionne Warwick
This Magic Moment – Jay and The Americans
Time Is Tight – Booker T and The MG’s
Time of the Season – Zombies
Too Busy Thinking About My Baby – Marvin Gaye
Touch Me – The Doors
Traces – Dennis Yost and The Classics IV
Twenty Five Miles – Edwin Starr
Wedding Bell Blues – The 5th Dimension
What Does It Take To Win Your Love – Jr. Walker and The All Stars
When I Die – Motherlode
You’ve Made Me So Very Happy – Blood, Sweat and Tears

1970

(They Long to Be) Close to You – Carpenters
25 or 6 to 4 – Chicago
ABC – The Jackson 5
Ain’t No Mountain High Enough – Diana Ross
All Right Now – Free
American Woman – The Guess Who
Are You Ready – Pacific Gas and Electric
Arizona – Mark Lindsay
Ball of Confusion (That’s What the World Is Today) – Temptations
Band of Gold – Freda Payne
Bridge Over Troubled Water – Simon & Garfunkel
Call Me – Aretha Franklin
Candida – Dawn
Cecelia – Simon and Garfunkel
Child in Time – Deep Purple
Come and Get It – Badfinger
Come Saturday Morning – Sandpipers
Cracklin’ Rosie – Neil Diamond
Didn’t I Blow Your Mind This Time – Delfonics
Easy Come Easy Go – Bobby Sherman
Everything is Beautiful – Ray Stevens
Evil Ways – Santana
Express Yourself – Charles Wright and The Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band
Fire and Rain – James Taylor
For the Love of Him – Bobbi Martin
Get Ready – Rare Earth
Gimme Dat Ding – Pipkins
Give Me Just a Little More Time – Chairmen Of The Board
Green-Eyed Lady – Sugarloaf
Groovy Situation – Gene Chandler
He Ain’t Heavy He’s My Brother – Hollies
Hey There Lonely Girl – Eddie Holman
Hitchin’ a Ride – Vanity Fair
House Of The Rising Sun – Frijid Pink
I Just Can’t Help Believing – B.J. Thomas
I Know I’m Losing You – Rare Earth
I Should Be Proud – Martha & The Vandellas
I Think I Love You – The Partridge Family
I Want to Take You Higher – Ike and Tina Turner
I Want You Back – The Jackson 5
I’m Your Captain (Closer to Home) – Grand Funk Railroad
If You Let Me Make Love To You – Ronnie Dyson
I’ll Be There – The Jackson 5
I’ll Never Fall In Love Again – Dionne Warwick
In the Summertime – Mungo Jerry
Indiana Wants Me – R. Dean Taylor
Instant Karma – John Lennon
It’s a Shame – Spinners
It’s Only Make Believe – Glen Campbell
Julie, Do Ya Love Me – Bobby Sherman
Lay A Little Lovin’ On Me – Robin Mcnamara
Lay Down (Candles In The Rain) – Melanie and The Edwin Hawkins Singers
Let It Be – The Beatles
Lola – Kinks
Long As I Can See the Light/Looking Out My Back Door – Creedence Clearwater Revival
Look What They’ve Done to My Song – New Seekers
Lookin’ Out My Back Door – Creedence Clearwater Revival
Love Grows Where My Rosemary Goes – Edison Lighthouse
Love Land – Charles Wright and The Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band
Love On a Two Way Street – Moments
Love Or Let Me Be Lonely – Friends Of Distinction
Ma Belle Amie – Tee Set
Machine Gun – Jimi Hendrix
Make It With You – Bread
Make Me Smile – Chicago
Mama Told Me (Not to Come) – Three Dog Night
Mississippi Queen – Mountain
My Baby Loves Lovin’ – White Plains
My Sweet Lord” / “Isn’t It a Pity – George Harrison
No Time – The Guess Who
Ohio – Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young
O-O-H Child – Five Stairsteps
Patches – Clarence Carter
Psychedelic Shack – Temptations
Question – The Moody Blues
Raindrops Keep Fallin’ On My Head – B.J. Thomas
Rainy Night In Georgia – Brook Benton
Reflections of My Life – Marmalade
Ride Captain Ride – Blues Image
Run Through The Jungle – Creedence Clearwater Revival
Signed Sealed Delivered I’m Yours – Stevie Wonder
Snowbird – Anne Murray
Somebody’s Been Sleeping – 100 Proof and Aged In Soul
Something’s Burning – Kenny Rogers and The First Edition
Spill the Wine – Eric Burdon and War
Spirit in the Sky – Norman Greenbaum
Still Water – Four Tops
Thank You – Everybody Is A Star – Sly & Family Stone
The Bells – Originals
The Guess Who
The Letter – Joe Cocker
The Long And Winding Road/For You Blue – The Beatles
The Love You Save – The Jackson 5
The Rapper – Jaggerz
The Tears of a Clown – Smokey Robinson & the Miracles
The Thrill Is Gone – B.B. King
The Wonder of You/Mama Liked the Roses – Elvis Presley
They Long to Be Close to You – Carpenters
Tighter Tighter – Alive N Kicking
Travelin’ Band/Who’ll Stop the Rain – Creedence Clearwater Revival
Turn Back the Hands of Time – Tyrone Davis
United We Stand – Brotherhood Of Man
Up Around the Bend/Run Through the Jungle – Creedence Clearwater Revival
Up the Ladder to the Roof – Supremes
Vehicle – Ides Of March
Venus – Shocking Blue
Walk A Mile In My Shoes – Joe South
War – Edwin Starr
We’ve Only Just Begun – Carpenters
Which Way You Goin’ Billy – Poppy Family
Who’ll Stop The Rain – Creedence Clearwater Revival
Without Love – Tom Jones
Woodstock – Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young
Yellow River – Christie

1971

Brand New Key – Melanie
Aint No Sunshine – Bill Withers
Amazing Grace – Judy Collins
Amos Moses – Jerry Reed
Another Day/Oh Woman Oh Why – Paul McCartney
Beginnings/Color My World – Chicago
Bridge Over Troubled Water – Aretha Franklin
Bring The Boys Home – Freda Payne
Brown Sugar – The Rolling Stones
Cat Stevens – Peace Train
Chick-A-Boom – Daddy Dewdrop
Chirpy Chirpy Cheep Cheep – Mac and Katie Kissoon
Do You Know What I Mean – Lee Michaels
Doesn’t Somebody Want to Be Wanted – Partridge Family
Don’t Knock My Love Pt. 1 – Wilson Pickett
Don’t Pull Your Love – Hamilton Joe Frank and Reynolds
Draggin’ the Line – Tommy James
Easy Loving – Freddy Hart
Family Affair – Sly and the Family Stone
For All We Know – Carpenters
Funky Nassau – Beginning Of The End
Go Away Little Girl – Donny Osmond
Groove Me – King Floyd
Gypsys, Tramps & Thieves – Cher
Have You Ever Seen the Rain? – Creedence Clearwater Revival
Help Me Make It Through the Night – Sammi Smith
Here Comes That Rainy Day Feeling Again – Fortunes
Here Comes the Sun – Richie Havens
How Can You Mend a Broken Heart – Bee Gees
I Am I Said – Neil Diamond
I Don’t Know How to Love Him – Helen Reddy
I Found Someone Of My Own – Free Movement
I Hear You Knocking – Dave Edmunds
I Just Want to Celebrate – Rare Earth
I Love You for All Seasons – Fuzz
I Woke Up In Love This Morning – Partridge Family
If I Were Your Woman – Gladys Knight and The Pips
If Not For You – Olivia Newton-John
If You Could Read My Mind – Gordon Lightfoot
If You Really Love Me – Stevie Wonder
If – Bread
Imagine – John Lennon
Indian Reservation – Raiders
It Don’t Come Easy – Ringo Starr
It’s Impossible – Perry Como
It’s Too Late / I Feel the Earth Move – Carole King
Joy to the World – Three Dog Night
Just My Imagination Running Away With Me – Temptations
Knock Three Times – Dawn
Liar – Three Dog Night
Lonely Days – Bee Gees
Love Her Madly – The Doors
Love Story – Andy Williams
Maggie May/ Reason to Believe – Rod Stewart
Mama’s Pearl – Jackson 5
Man in Black – Johnny Cash
Me & Bobby Mcgee – Janis Joplin
Me and You and a Dog Named Boo – Lobo
Mercy Mercy Me – Marvin Gaye
Mr. Big Stuff – Jean Knight
Mr. Bojangles – Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
My Sweet Lord/Isn’t it a Pity – George Harrison
Never Can Say Goodbye – Jackson 5
Never Ending Song of Love – Delaney and Bonnie and Friends
One Bad Apple – Osmonds
One Less Bell to Answer – Fifth Dimension
One Toke Over The Line – Brewer and Shipley
Proud Mary – Ike and Tina Turner
Put Your in the Hand – Ocean
Rainy Days and Mondays – Carpenters
Riders On the Storm – The Doors
Right On the Tip of My Tongue – Brenda and The Tabulations
Rose Garden – Lynn Anderson
Sam Stone – John Prine
She’s a Lady – Tom Jones
She’s Not Just Another Woman – 8th Day
Signs – The Five Man Electrical Band
Singin’ The Vietnam Talkin’ Blues – Johnny Cash
Smiling Faces Sometimes – Undisputed Truth
Spanish Harlem – Aretha Franklin
Stay Awhile – Bells
Stick-up – Honey Cone
Superstar – Carpenters
Sweet and Innocent – Donny Osmond
Sweet City Woman – Stampeders
Sweet Mary – Wadsworth Mansion
Take Me Home Country Roads – John Denver
Temptation Eyes – The Grass Roots
That’s the Way I’ve Always Heard It Should Be – Carly Simon
The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down – Joan Baez
Theme from Shaft – Isaac Hayes
Timothy – Buoys
Tired of Being Alone – Al Green
Trapped By a Thing Called Love – Denise Lasalle
Treat Her Like a Lady – Cornelius Brothers and Sister Rose
Uncle Albert Admiral Halsey – Paul McCartney
Want Ads – The Honey Cone
War Pigs – Black Sabbath
Watching Scotty Grow – Bobby Goldsboro
Wedding Song – Paul Stookey
What’s Going On? – Marvin Gaye
Whatcha See Is Whatcha Get – Dramatics
When You’re Hot You’re Hot – Jerry Reed
Wild World – Cat Stevens
Won’t Get Fooled Again – The Who
Woodstock – Matthews’ Southern Comfort
Your Flag Decal Won’t Get You Into Heaven Anymore – John Prine
You’ve Got a Friend – James Taylor
Yo-Yo – Osmonds

If you would like to read more about the music during the Vietnam War, my brother in arms and Vietnam Veteran, Bob Staranowicz, wrote a few articles in 2012 about the music of the times. In addition to Vietnam, the first article also includes favorites from World War II and Korea.

http://m.burlingtoncountytimes.com/blogs/veteran-voices/music-during-the-wars/article_4a908e7a-2043-52e7-8b38-905c09bd475c.html?mode=jqm

Bob met with Adrian Cronauer and wrote about it here –

http://m.theintell.com/blogs/veteran-voices/good-morning-vietnam-inspiration/article_ac869772-da82-5851-9381-0a03b28ef236.html?mode=jqm

Bob’s last article is about Barry Sandler’s album: “Songs of Our Fighting Men – The Green Berets”-

http://m.theintell.com/blogs/veteran-voices/more-music-of-the-vietnam-war-era/article_958d89df-ddfc-5a7e-85a8-09b99c903095.html?mode=jqm

If you still haven’t had enough, you may also be interested in visiting another page of mine showing 40+ Vietnam War Videos with background music of the time.  Click here to be redirected:

https://cherrieswriter.wordpress.com/my-favorite-vietnam-war-videos-28/

Which songs were your favorites during this time?

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When Vietnam Veterans Felt the Love

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Anti War Protest 1967

So much has transpired during the 60’s and 70’s, a new generation was born and being a Vietnam Veteran was extremely unpopular during that time.  Thousands of stories have been told of their treatment upon returning home from this unpopular war; protesters heckled and disrespected them, friends stopped being friends, complete strangers felt violated in their presence and employers made it difficult to find jobs and would not hire them.  Many veterans hid in the shadows, keeping their Vietnam experiences to themselves – secrets, if exposed, would negatively impact them one way or the other. Not every vet was treated the same, many enjoyed positive experiences since returning home – picking up right where they left off and building a wonderful life for themselves and their families.

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Something in the air changed once the 80’s rolled around.  Vietnam Veterans of America was formed in 1978 and chapters began springing up all around the country.  I joined Chapter 154 in Mt. Clemens, MI in 1984, and felt a great relief, almost like being reborn after the first monthly meeting.  I was surrounded by veterans of every branch of the service, all close in age and strangers, yet I felt a special closeness to these men.  We were coming out of the closet and it was time to roar!  As the membership grew, we formed a color guard (I was a charter member), and marched in many of the local parades, winning 1st place trophies in most every event.  Spectators treated us with respect, standing when we passed and giving us a wonderful ovation.

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In November of the same year, the Wall in D.C. was unveiled and dedicated.  This was a powerful monument!  One that I felt started to bring the country back together again!  Chapter 154’s Color Guard and other chapter members rented buses and traveled to D.C. for a two-day adventure.  We presented wreaths at both the Wall and at the Monument for the Unknown Soldier.  Visitors supported us during these two ceremonies and once again, there was an outpouring of love and respect.

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June 12, 1986, our chapter members and Color Guard traveled to Chicago to participate in the scheduled “WELCOME HOME VIETNAM VETERANS” parade the following day.

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Friday promised to be a day of discovery and awesomeness – the excitement began bright and early.  The Color Guard had exited our hotel and stood on the corner brainstorming about how we were going to get to Navy Pier, a few miles away.  Walking there was not out of the question, but there wasn’t enough time before the parade started.  Picture this, fourteen of us standing there in full camouflage fatigues, berets, buckled cartridge belts, division patches, flags and M-1 Carbines with loaded magazines.  Of course, those “civilians” in the immediate area began moving away, giving us room, when suddenly, several Chicago Police cars came out of nowhere converging on our corner.  Dumbfounded, we stood perfectly still and didn’t have a clue as to what was wrong. After several moments of discussion and once the officers verified that all the rifles were “fixed” and could only fire blanks, they arranged to send a paddy wagon to transport us to Navy Pier.  I’m certain it was an act of kindness, but most likely was arranged to not upset more of the city’s citizens – some were probably unaware of the parade!

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The Navy Pier was jam packed by the time we arrived, more groups continued arriving by the busload.  Because of the congestion, the parade started 1/2 hour earlier – General Westmoreland and two legless veterans leading waves upon waves of veterans through the loop.  The veteran on the General’s right was pushed along the route in his wheelchair (forgot his name).  The other, Bob Weland, a forty year old former medic, lost his legs to a booby-trapped mortar round two months after arriving in 1969.  Ironically, he was ready to sign a contract to play major league baseball with the Philadelphia Phillies when his draft notice arrived.  Nevertheless, Bob was determined to march the entire parade route and do so his own way.  That meant pulling himself along with his hands, dragging himself upright, the bottom of his torso fitted with a specially fitted pad.  Westmoreland later complained that at times, he had to hustle to catch up with the former medic after falling behind.  Bob later went on to walk across the United States the same manner to raise funds for charitable organizations.

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Veterans carried banners of all kinds, most were organizational, either of military units or individual chapters of national organization like ours:  “VVA Chapter 154”, carried by family and chapter members who followed behind the Color Guard.  One that caught my eye in passing read, “There are no Strangers here, only friends we haven’t Met.”   Crowds were sparse initially and began to thicken the closer we came to LaSalle Street, so did all the emotions!  

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As this was Friday, the buildings were filled with employees hard at work.  When the lead sections of the parade finally arrived, employees hung out of building windows or joined other spectators on the sidewalks, standing 8-10 deep in certain areas.  They were cheering, yelling “Thank You” to the veterans, shaking hands, and offering standing ovations when each group passed in review.

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A young professional woman in the crowd was waving a newly purchased American flag and commented, I couldn’t help it!  I cried when I saw these guys and realized how many of them there were who went to Vietnam.  They look like all my brothers and every boy I ever grew up with.  I’ve kissed a few, I cheered every group that passed.  My hands are sore from clapping, and I think I may just take the rest of the day off.  This has been a very emotional day.” 

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One vet marching in the parade was overhead telling his friend, “Look at these guys!  Look at the love for each other.  Have you ever seen anything like this?  See…We’re not so bad after all!”

When we took the turn onto LaSalle street, the sight greeting us was unbelievable!  It was a bright sunny day, yet the street was enveloped in shadow as if we were entering a tunnel.  High buildings lined both sides of the street, keeping the street shaded and cooler.

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Confetti and shredded paper spewed from every opening and rooftop, floating down onto the troops like a snowstorm in the middle of summer.  Clumps of the stuff still hung from windowsills and looked like lava flowing from a volcano.  The roadway was covered in ankle deep paper snow, which offered the marchers an opportunity to clown around.  Wearing shit eating grins on their faces, many of the participants gathered “snow” , tossing it and one another and recycling clumps into the air.  This was a first for me…an honest to God ticker tape parade!

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Organizers expected 50,000 veterans and hoped it would begin a healing process for those participating.  Surprisingly it was the largest parade in Chicago history as 200,000 Vietnam Veterans and their families marched 2.5 miles from Navy Pier to Grant Park and half a million spectators lined the parade route welcoming them home.  It’s 11 years after the fall of South Vietnam and 26 yrs. since the first Vietnam Veteran returned home from the war.  Such a long time passing!

A parade is nothing more than a symbol, but symbols change a lot of minds.  Most vets couldn’t remember marching down LaSalle Street.  They only remember this dreamlike thing, the clouds of white coming down on them, their hearts jumping out of their mouths, many crying.  It’s what should have happened when they came home.  It’s what a grateful country does!

The Welcome Home Vietnam Veterans Parade was dubbed, “Woodstock for Vietnam Veterans,” the ultimate event to symbolically begin to close the real and imagined rifts between veterans and the rest of their countrymen.  One group stated, “the parade was the biggest group therapy session ever.”

The party at Grant Park is another story for another time.  Let’s just say that it was a night of bonding…like a family reunion.  Live entertainment performed at the band shell, groups sat around reminiscing, long lost friends found one-another and I never had to pay for beer once that night.  The good folks of Chicago took care of us well into the wee hours of the night.

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After the parade, out of town veterans called Chicago newspapers to say thanks to the city.  One vet was so overwhelmed, he paid $400 of his own money to run a thank you ad in the Chicago Tribune.  Hundreds more signed a large, “Thank You Chicago” banner at Grant Park, which was later presented to the city.  Bags filled with letters of appreciation and thanks arrived daily for the next couple of weeks.

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Those two years had a profound impact on my life and brought me out of the closet.  I was proud to be a Vietnam Veteran and wasn’t afraid to let people know.  I purchased a ball cap in 1985 with a Vietnam Veteran patch on the front and began wearing it wherever I went.  I’ve gone through dozens since, but continue wearing them till this very day in 2015.

 

For those Vietnam Vets willing to accept it…WELCOME HOME!

To all vets…THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE!

To everyone…God Bless!

NOTE:  The Chicago Tribune was used to gather information for this article.

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A Day in the Life of an Infantry Point Man in Vietnam

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By Sp4 Chuck Colgan / John Podlaski

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A husky, blonde haired soldier rises from his air mattress, quickly shedding his nightly cocoon, a damp, green camouflaged poncho liner, from around his body.  He scratched vigorously at a multitude of mosquito bites and then brushed off several biting red ants that had found their way inside.  He looks over the rest of his body, pats down his pockets and scrutinizes his boots for additional creatures that might be hiding there.  Comfortable with the results of his inspection, the soldier sits on a nearby log, powders his feet and inserts them into his damp boots, making sure to tuck his fatigue pants into the tops before tying the laces – a preventive measure to keep leeches and ticks from crawling up the legs.  Satisfied with the task, he mutters to himself, “One hundred sixty-eight days to go – more than half-way there.”

The sun works its way through the damp and chilly early morning mist which clings tightly to everything in the jungle. Assorted birds and insects thrive in this environment, and as if on cue, begin chattering, clicking and singing – ready to get on with their day.

“Damn varmints” he grumbles, draping his wet blanket over a couple tree branches to dry then started on a regiment of short stretching exercises.

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ration_report_MCI_10_small“What are you griping about now, Tennessee?” Asks another soldier, who sits on the top of his steel pot at the next position.  A scent of hot cocoa permeates from his canteen cup as it simmers on the top of a converted C-Ration can / stove; a heat tab burning inside the small stove glows steel blue in color, as the fire grows, fingers of yellow and red flame dart upward, lapping against the bottom of the metal cup – some are attracted to the large triangle shaped air holes punched into the sides of the can and flicker through – like the tongue of a snake, in an attempt to escape from their raging prison.  Staring at the flames of the burning stove can sometimes mesmerize a person enough to put them in a hypnotic trance. Ever happen to you? 

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“Them critters kept me awake for hours last night,” the blond soldier complained, “between them mosquitos buzzing in my ears and feeling things crawling over me, there was no way my brain was going to let me get some sleep.”  Tennessee whined, squeezed a small amount of toothpaste onto his index finger and used it like a toothbrush on his teeth, gums and tongue, spitting out the white foam residue onto the ground next to his lean to.

 “Boy, I thought you southern boys were used to shit like this,” his neighbor crowed.

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“It ain’t nuthin like this back home in Tennessee – only a dead person can put up with this kind of shit every night!”  The blond soldier stated  then rifled through his rucksack, pulling out a can of peaches that he’d been saving for a bit.  He took the treasure and sat back down on the fuzzy green covered log, rocking a small opener around the top of the can.  Before the top was fully disengaged, he stopped, folded the lid back and sipped at the sweet nectar inside.

The man next to him raised his canteen cup, blew into it a few times and took a nervous first sip.  The metal was still hot and he’d tried hard to avoid burning his lips on the rim.  “Want some cocoa?” He offered.

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“Nah, man, but thanks for asking,” Tennessee closed his eyes, chewed slowly on a single wedge of fruit, savoring every second of this special treat.

The platoon leader was making his way around the perimeter and briefing each team leader about the mission for the day. He saw Tennessee glowing and grinned as he walked toward him.

“Morning, Tennessee!” His voice was overly cheerful.  Tennessee quickly scrutinized his face, looking for any telltale signs that he might be the bearer of bad news.

“Morning, L-T!” He answered respectfully.

“Looks like you’ve died and went to heaven the way you’re carrying on with those peaches,” the L-T chuckled.

 “These are the best, sir.  Most guys here would trade their sisters for a can of peaches,” he raised the can toward the lieutenant in a toast and took another sip, smacking his lips loudly and smiling broadly at the officer.

The lieutenant nods and pulled a neatly folded map from his pants side pocket and takes a seat beside the young smiling soldier on the moss covered log. “You’re pulling point today, right?” 

“Roger that sir!”

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“Good!  Here’s the plan for today.  Alpha Company captured a Chieu Hoi a couple days ago who alleged that the VC have a large rice storage point and some bunkers here,” the lieutenant pointed to a position on the map, “and higher-higher wants us to check it out.  Other than giving us the location, he also mentioned there are only two guards covering the stash and they share a single AK between them. “

Tennessee looked up into the L-T’s eyes with an incredulous look upon his face.

“I know!  I know! I don’t believe it either,” the lieutenant nodded, “gunships fired on the area some yesterday, and artillery supposedly tore it up overnight.  If Charlie is still there, he should have a major headache by the time we arrive.  And with you pulling point, we should be able to get there by lunch – providing we get an early start—so plan to leave in 45 minutes.  Any Questions?”

“None, sir,” the point man answers.

The lieutenant handed the point man a much smaller version of map, “here’s your copy – our current location and the storage point are both marked in grease pencil.”

Tennessee nodded in appreciation and began to scrutinize the map – paying special attention to the area in between the two dots.

“Okay then!” The L-T stood, patted the man on his shoulder a couple of times then walked away toward the next team leader.

The platoon leader has a great deal of confidence in Tennessee, whose friends claim that he is the best point man in the company.  Months of experience have taught him to be sharp and listen to his sixth sense – the latter, saving his men on numerous occasions.  When he’s up front, his eyes continually search out any irregularities in the terrain – picking up on things as simple as a broken twig or a turned over leaf on the trail – either is sufficient to alert him of an enemy presence.  His ears analyze every sound heard from the jungle and his body is ready to respond in a micro-second if he senses danger.  He faces booby traps, punji sticks, snipers and ambushes every minute they are on the move.  Tennessee is an excellent map reader, uses the compass regularly and understands tactics in the event something goes awry.  Pick out the coordinates on a map and Tennessee will lead you safely to that very spot.

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When a new troop joins the company, he is advised by those around him to watch Tennessee.  “The sooner you learn what he knows, the better your chances are of getting out of here in one piece,” they all recited at one time or another.

 A 21 year old medic, who looked more like 18, was making the rounds.  He passed out malaria pills and salt tablets to everyone on the perimeter, stopping occasionally to inspect cases of jungle rot, athlete’s foot, boils and addressing any other maladies the troops might have.

“Today is big pill day.” he said when reaching the point man.  Doc was holding a large orange pill and a small white one in his right hand.  Orange pills are taken every Monday and the white ones daily to guard against the two most common strains of malaria.  Some guys purposely tossed the pills hoping that it was better for their digestive system.  Besides, contracting malaria was a way of getting out of the bush for a while and shamming in the rear until it passed.  Little did they know how much a person suffered from this disease.  Many never find out, but those who do…quickly regret their earlier decisions.

“C’mon Doc, I’m walking point today, and you know what that pill does to me.  It seems like I just took an orange one yesterday.”  The most common side effect of these pills are diarrhea and severe stomach cramps which hit so fast that a soldier seldom had time to step off to the side and drop his trousers.  Accidents were common place.

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“Yeah, time flies when you’re having fun. Just take it and don’t hassle me, man. Give me your hand!”  Doc extended his arm toward the blond soldier, both pills held between his thumb and forefinger.  Tennessee conceded, accepting the pills without another word.  Doc smiled briefly, nodded his head in appreciation and walked toward the next twosome.

When the platoon was together like this, the men talked more about those things they left at home than of the war. Popular topics centered on wives, girlfriends and women they fantasized about, followed closely by cars, other toys, family and topics so personal even the family was unaware.  They’d laugh at every opportunity!  Thus, maintaining their sense of humor to block out the darkness of war.

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The shortest men in the platoon (time wise – within a few days or weeks of going home) went to great lengths letting everyone know they were going home soon. It’s a bragging right they’re entitled to and a personal goal everyone hopes to reach; some of their phrases were hilarious.  The following was copied from another article on this website:

Sshort12hort-timers used to cajole with other short-timers on the amount of time they had left…it was like rank, the lower the amount of days left, the higher the ranking.  I remember some of the bantering:

“Hey man, I just broke fifty – I’m short.”

“That ain’t shit man, I got twenty-five and a wake-up.  I’m getting so short I have to play handball against the curb.”

“I’ve got ten left and a wake-up.  I’m so short, I have to look up to see down.”

“I’ve got one left and a wake-up.  I’m so short, I don’t have time for long conversations.”

My favorite was in the movie Platoon when King was assigned to the “shit burning” detail with Charlie Sheen.  King said something like this, “I’m so short, I could smell the fresh mountain air of Virginia and that fine aroma from the girl I left behind.  I can’t wait!”  Then he looked over to Charlie Sheen and said, “how many you got left, three-hundred and fifty what?”  Kind of puts things into perspective.

Their calendars were different versions of colorful pictures comprised of 365 small boxes – each day, one box was colored in, those remaining blank signified the number of days, hand carved walking sticks were popular in rear areas.  One thing for certain about this war was that every soldier in Vietnam counted down his days, knowing exactly – at any given time – how many more days he had left in country.  

MOVE OUT

The grunts exited the night lager position in a single file and follow behind the veteran point man.  Their heavy rucksacks feel like dead weight hanging from shoulders, most grunts have a tendency to lean forward at the waist when humping and occasionally bounce the rucksack to ease the pull of numbing shoulder straps and shifting the weight around.  Heads scanned the surrounding jungle and weapons held at port arms.  

It’s still early in the morning, the troops haven’t moved two hundred yards, and yet they were already drenched in sweat.  Green towels draped over their shoulders had double duty – cushioning under the ruck straps and for wiping sweat from their eyes and faces.  

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Following eight feet behind Tennessee, the next soldier carried an M-79 grenade launcher with a beehive round in the chamber (similar to a shotgun shell with buckshot). He wore a vest with multiple pockets that individually held a mixture of beehive, HE and smoke rounds which were easily accessible.  Before joining the Army, this ‘thumper man’ drove trucks for a living, so the men were quick to tag him with the moniker, “Cannonball”, a nickname he liked very much.

Cannonball was currently training to walk point and taking guidance from Tennessee for the next few weeks – an informal style of OJT without textbooks.  Tennessee prefers that his slack man, Cannonball in this case, carry an M-79 to back up his M-16, claiming that if ambushed, the two weapons together would keep Charlie’s head down until the rest of the platoon moved up.  As the two of them moved along, Tennessee pointed things out to Cannonball without saying anything: each time, the thumper nodded in recognition. Tennessee was impressed and thinks to himself, ‘He catches on fast—he’ll be good on point.’

The platoon made good time at first, but now, Tennessee found himself facing a massive wall of extremely thick green foliage.

 “Okay,” he said to Cannonball while dropping his ruck, “pass the word back to take a break.  Keep your eyes open and watch the trees,” he cautioned,  “I don’t like making all this noise, and if Charlie was nearby – he can hear it too.”

Cannonball nodded again and shifted his gaze upward scanning through the trees.

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Tennessee pulled a machete from a scabbard on his ruck and momentarily held it up like a Roman Gladiator’s salute, then attacked the seemingly impenetrable hedgerow.  It didn’t take him long to disappear through the narrow tunnel, the hacking sounds fading as he moved further away.

Finally, he stepped out from the thick vegetation and found himself standing  on a narrow hard packed trail; it followed the contour of the thick vegetation, hugging the edge of the jungle as it continued westward. On the opposite side of the trail and only a few feet away, head- high elephant grass and bamboo thickets filled a moderately sized clearing no deeper than the length of a football field. The point man squatted on his haunches and silently scanned both the trail and the terrain on the other side; periodically taking azimuths with his compass and referencing the small map he carried.  Satisfied, Tennessee retraced his steps to the platoon and called the platoon leader on the radio.

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“I found a trail that looked like it’s been used within the last week.  It skirts alongside the jungle – invisible from the air and looks like it heads toward that knoll you mentioned earlier. There’s a clearing on the other side of the trail but it’s covered with elephant grass and clumps of bamboo.  I’d feel more comfortable following the trail for a couple hundred steps and then we can cross over into the jungle again.”

“Roger that!” The lieutenant replied, “just don’t stay on it for too long.”

The trail snaked through the jungle and soon came to a blue line not far from the objective. Giving the men another short break, Tennessee moved upstream to find a safe point for the platoon to cross over.  

By now, the sun was directly overhead and bearing down upon the men; salty sweat continued to flow from every pore, aggravating their many scratches and sores – all trophies of living in the boonies.

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The heat and humping continued to take its toll and the stream was a blessing in disguise. Excessive sweating and extreme thirst prompted many of the men to scoop up water with their helmets, dumping it over their heads – enjoying the temporary chill and reprieve.  Others temp fate and filled their canteens from the waist deep stream, throwing caution to the wind, hungrily drinking the lukewarm water without first using iodine tablets and waiting the mandatory half hour to kill bacteria; they’ll be dealing  with the consequences soon enough.

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As Tennessee neared the objective, he noticed that portions of the triple canopy jungle were missing – holes just appeared randomly in the overhead canopy offering him a glimpse of the far away clear blue sky.  Dozens of trees and branches lay haphazardly across the jungle floor, scattered about like a handful of dropped toothpicks; small barren craters littered the area, their contents having erupted – covering everything in a layer of foul smelling residue.  Many of the larger trees were shredded but remain standing – shrapnel in various sizes and shapes are clearly visible, the imbedded steel sunk deep into the trunks and limbs – remnants of the rockets and artillery rounds that pounded the jungle the night before.  Now, it was an obstacle course!

“We’re getting close,” the point man whispered to Cannonball.  “See those three rocks shaped like an arrow head in the trail?” Tennessee pointed them out and saw his student acknowledge. “It’s a marker telling Charlie to stay off the trail because of booby traps.  So, this is as far as we go!” The point man dropped his rucksack and secured his trusty machete for another trek into the unknown.  “Pass the word back for everybody to take a break and keep quiet. also call the L-T and let him know that I’m checking things out and will be back in a short.”

Tennessee broke from the trail and traversed the obstacles in his path – climbing over some and then crawling under others.  After cutting a path through a clump of bamboo and working his way through fifty meters of destroyed jungle, he spotted the small staging area about a hundred meters away.  It’s unscathed and sitting intact under the natural camouflage and overhead vegetation.

When he returned, Tennessee called the lieutenant on the radio, “that’s right!  I can see six huts and two bunkers which are still intact – the nearby jungle isn’t even touched.  I also saw several chickens moving about in the open area near the huts strutting around and pecking at the ground like this was a normal populated village out on the side of the road.”

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“Okay,” replied the platoon leader, “remain in place and I’ll come to you so we can get some gunships to work over the area.”  

Fifteen minutes later, a light observation helicopter (Loach) arrived and hovered at tree top level.  The L-T guided the small chopper by sound only because of the thick overhead canopy.  It maneuvered overhead – changing direction periodically then stopping once the L-T was confident its position was directly over the objective.  A thousand feet higher, two gunships were circling in a lazy clockwise orbit awaiting instructions. The LOH pilot dropped two smoke grenades into the canopy below and moved away.  Now that the target was clearly marked, the gunships received permission to proceed.

Not one soldier on the ground saw the helicopters through the overhead foliage, but once the attack began, the cacophony of sound got everyone’s full attention.  A sightless opera began; rotor blades popped and continued to change in pitch when diving at the red smoke filtering through the treetops.  First one bird swooped in and then it was immediately followed by its wingman.  This background music continued in a low hum which was punctuated by the sound of rockets launching and exploding and the sound of a buzzsaw, ‘bzzzzzzzzzzzzt’, as mini-guns fired.  A split second later, thousands of rounds ripped holes through the jungle canopy and created a symphony of their own!

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After expending their ordinance, both gunships broke away and headed back to base.  Moments later, another pair arrived and remained in an orbit above – standing by until the LOH’s issued new orders. 

 The lieutenant informed the LOH pilot that his grunts were moving in to check the area and would keep them advised.  The pilot acknowledged and told the L-T that they’d hang around for a few in case they were needed. 

He then turned to the blond point man, “Tennessee, take two men and scope out the damage.  Move to the knoll and wait there until I give the word to move forward.  I’m moving the rest of the platoon on line so we can sweep in behind you.”

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“Wilco!” Tennessee responded, and then led Cannonball and the RTO into the obstacle course.  They soon arrived at the knoll and were greeted by the sight of damaged bunkers and burning huts, the smell of cordite and wood burning hung heavily in the air.  The trio remained vigilant and awaited the call to move forward.

“This is one part of this job I can do without.’ Tennessee whispered to the others, “my gut tells me that Charlie is still there; it’s just too damn quiet.”

CONTACT

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 The three soldiers moved to the remains of the first hut, it was smoldering sparking cinders blew through the air.  Suddenly, the ominous quiet was shattered by three unmistakable cracks from an AK-47. Tennessee instinctively slammed to the ground, unhurt, but from the corner of his eye, saw the RTO slump to the ground.  The point man heard the lieutenant’s voice calling over the radio, but the transmission was unanswered and seemed a thousand miles away.

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His body now on auto-pilot from the many hours of training and months of experience, Tennessee moved into action.  He’s unsure of where the enemy fire came from, but instructed Cannonball to fire some HE rounds at the bunkers and jungle beyond.  Tennessee fired small bursts into the tree line to his front, sweeping the area from one end to the other.  The rest of the platoon soon arrived and followed their point man’s lead and also fired at the nearby bunkers and into the surrounding jungle.  It turned into a “mad minute” as the platoon members reconnoitered by fire before moving forward to physically search the area.

  Tennessee crawled toward the wounded RTO and was half-way to him when several Ak-47’s opened up on the American patrol from the distant tree line;  rounds impacted near the point man resulting in puffs of dirt erupting from the ground all around him.  He moved like a racing serpent toward cover and the shot soldier.  He noticed a lot of blood on the RTO, but was relieved to find him still alive, both wounds not looking too serious.  

Tennessee shouted above the clatter of automatic weapons, “Medic! Medic!”  and then spotted the man on the other side of the clearing trying to get his attention.  Seeing a man hurt, the medic tucked his bag under his arm and darted straight across the clearing.

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“Dammit!” Tennessee cursed. “ Doc…Doc…get down!” He hollered.  The medic failed to heed Tennessee’s warning and luckily arrived unscathed – skidding to his side like a baseball player did on a close play into home plate.  “Talk to him Tennessee, we can’t let him go into shock,” the medic instructed, dropping to his knees beside the injured soldier and ripped open his shirt.

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“Boy, you’d do anything to get some sham time!” Tennessee stated nonchalantly to the wounded man, not really knowing what to say. The RTO was obviously in pain, and tried to force a smile. By now, most of the firing had stopped, and Cannonball repositioned himself to where the other two soldiers were focusing on the wounded man.  He glanced at the man lying on the ground, thankful to see that he was still breathing and then squatted and faced the tree line – standing guard and watching over them while Doc performed his magic.

Tennessee continued talking to the fallen RTO, “Hey man, you’ll probably get a medal for this.”

 “For…what?” The RTO’s voice was now a strained whisper.

“Uh…,” the point man thought for a second, “for being brave—what else do they give medals for?”  He quipped.

The hurt man tried hard not to think of his wounds. Doc had his chest bandaged, an IV running and was nearly finished bandaging his upper arm. Tennessee continued to talk and even though the man didn’t answer, the point man saw that he was listening. When the medic bent the man’s arm, he grimaced and sobbed in pain.

“Hell, pal, don’t sweat the small stuff,” Tennessee asserted, “by this time next week you’ll be back on the block with a CIB, Purple Heart, and Bronze Star.  Why, I’ll bet they’ll even have a parade for you.” Once again, the wounded man forced a weak smile.

Tennessee and Cannonball carried the wounded man to the platoon command post and set him down next to two other soldiers, both casualties during the short melee.  A medivac chopper soon arrived and hovered forty feet above the CP, a small metal seat on the end of a cable (jungle penetrator) snaked its way through a small opening in the overhead foliage and stopped when hitting the ground.  One at a time, each man was lifted aboard and were on their way within minutes to a top-notch medical hospital.

As usual, a sweep through the area didn’t come up with any dead enemy soldiers or discarded weapons.  They did, however, uncover a stockpile of bagged rice – enough to feed the local VC for months.  It was a huge find and made the higher-higher quite happy.

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Once the cache was destroyed, the platoon leader had his men hump to a finger of land not far from the enemy complex.  “We’ll set up here for the night,” he informed the platoon members and then assigned areas of responsibility to each of the team leaders.  “Get your positions finished quickly and then start clearing an area for a chopper to land with supplies.  There are things we need before it gets dark!”

“You okay?” L-T asked Tennessee when finally reaching him .

“I guess so. Yeah. I’m okay.”‘

“You did a good job today.”  

Tennessee nodded, “sure looked like more than two VC sharing a single rifle!”

The officer laughed. “Yeah, I hear ya!  It looks like we interrupted one of their local units getting resupplied today.  I guessed at least a squad of them!”

“We’ll never know, especially after not finding any bodies or weapons,” the point man declared.

Tennessee shuts down and the lieutenant can see that his mind is somewhere else. ‘It seems like every time somebody is hurt when he’s on point, Tennessee takes it personal.  Like it’s his fault!’ the officer thinks to himself, ‘no matter what I say, I’m not able to convince him otherwise.’

“I want good fields of fire cut tonight in case we have to stay here a couple of days – put your men on that high ground over there,” L-T ordered, pointing out the location.

Tennessee nodded and walked away with his team of four soldiers.

The platoon cut an LZ within the hour and soon two Huey slicks landed with a vital load of ammunition, water, C-Rations and the first hot chow the men had in over a week.  A red nylon bag garnered the most attention because of its precious cargo: mail from the world.

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By the time dusk arrived, all the work was done:  claymores and trip flares in place and two-man hooches erected from shared ponchos.   Many in the platoon were still reading their mail while a cloak of darkness began spreading over the perimeter.

Tennessee was sitting alone outside the shared hooch finishing a can of fruit cocktail when his bunk mate, Cannonball returned from an earlier task. “Got a minute Tennessee?” He asked.

“Sure, pull up a chair,” the point man said cheerfully – the hollowness in his eyes now gone.  

Back to basics for basic

Cannonball sat on the ground, his eyes downcast, Tennessee sensed that something was bothering him.

“What do you think of combat?” Tennessee quickly asked the former trucker.

“I don’t think I like it. It’s sure not like the movies, is it? I was pretty scared and didn’t quite know what to do.”

“Don’t sweat that. You did real good out there.  My first firefight happened when we walked into an ambush. I jumped into some bushes and stayed there – listening to those more experienced saved my life.  I learned over time and so will you.  But, you should know that you’ll always be scared.”

Cannonball looked at him incredulously. “You scared? You were as cool as a cucumber.  Did you know we were going to get shot at today?”

“I had a pretty good idea that Charlie was still there – just like I told you earlier.  The chickens looked fairly well fed and I saw some fresh-cut bushes outside the larger bunker. Remember when I told you to watch the trees?’”

“Yeah!”

“What were you looking for?”’

“Snipers, I thought.”

“Negative!  I’ve heard of snipers in trees, but I’ve never seen any. It’s too hard for them to get away. But I have seen the VC put booby traps in trees. If a grenade explodes in a tree, it could take out half the squad.  Always look for brown spots in a healthy-looking tree. But don’t just look at them… study them.  Most of that will come in time.

“If you’re going to be a point man, you need to be twice as good as the other guy. Don’t ever get careless and forget that there’s a man out there who wants to kill you and your friends. You have to get him first.  Point is no place for a dud. The CO isn’t picking on you when he asked you to learn my job. He thinks you’re pretty sharp and needs a man out front he can trust. I don’t complain about it because I know that if I told him I didn’t want it anymore, he’d go along and put somebody else there. But then if we got hit, I’d feel responsible.

“You’ll hurt. You’ll get so tired and sore, you’ll want to just quit right there. You’ll get blisters and callouses from the machete, and you’ll be counting the days to stand down, R&R and DEROS.

“Charlie is good, but you have to be better!”

It’s dark now, and the two men sat in the silence for a moment before calling it a night. 

It was a long speech for Tennessee.  It was a rough day, and he was tired. Mosquitos were already buzzing and biting exposed skin.  He wrapped himself up his green, nylon poncho liner and scooted onto his air mattress on the left side of the small two-man tent.  Suddenly, the saying, ‘snug as a bug in a rug’ ran through his mind and he let out a small chuckle.  Before nodding off, he simply muttered from inside his cocoon, ‘one-hundred and sixty-seven to go.’

Thanks for add

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GREEN BERETS: THE QUIET PROFESSIONALS

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Green Berets: The Quiet Professionals
For more than 60 years Green Berets have been at the forefront of America’s most dangerous humanitarian missions around the world.

They crept along the rigid rocks at the base of a mountain held by the militant group Ansar al-Islam in northern Iraq, commonly known as Iraq Kurdistan. It was the dead of night and nothing could be heard from these quiet professionals except the light footfall on the occasional loose piece of shale. It was just two days into Operation Iraqi Freedom in March 2003 and U.S. Special Forces were doing what they do best – unconventional warfare. They met up with Kurdish rebels lingering in the area surrounded by numerous Iraqi militant divisions. The rebels called themselves Peshmerga—“Those who face death”—and they were willing to fight for freedom. So, using small groups of 12 men, a task force — called Task Force Viking — led the Kurds to victory against the Ansar Al-Islam.

Operation Viking Hammer was a textbook U.S. Army Special Forces operation. The mission was to train, fight with, and lead guerrilla forces, and that’s exactly what they did successfully. More commonly known as the Green Berets, the elite branch specializes in unconventional warfare and has a rich history of fighting with and for the mistreated. Their motto is “De oppresso liber,” or in English, “To liberate the oppressed,” and they are some of the toughest soldiers in the world.

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Who are the Green Berets?

The Green Berets, so known because of their distinctive service headgear, are specialists in unconventional warfare (their original and most important mission), but they also have four other duties: foreign internal defense, special reconnaissance, direct action, and counter-terrorism. Because of these five missions, the Green Berets have the widest operational responsibilities of all the Special Operations Forces (SOF).

Unconventional warfare (UW)— also commonly known as guerrilla warfare or insurgency – is the action of aiding and bolstering a resistance movement with the aim of overthrowing an enemy force or government. This type of warfare is often done “underground” with guerrilla forces, requiring Green Berets to work and live with the locals – they live as the natives do, speak as they speak, eat what they eat, gain their trust, and win their support. Thus, they need to be highly skilled in language and culture, and they need the skills to effectively train foreign troops.

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They operate in 12-man teams, called Operational Detachment Alphas, or ODAs. Each member of the team has a specialty, making them a subject matter expert at a specific critical skill. The ODA is ideally led by a detachment commander and an assistant detachment commander, followed by an operations sergeant, assistant operations and intelligence sergeant, two weapons sergeants, two engineer sergeants, two medical sergeants and two communications sergeants. These 12-man teams have the mission of liberating the oppressed through aiding resistance movements and guerrilla forces. While winning the support of natives is their hallmark, Green Berets must be trained in combat tactics and reconnaissance, diplomacy, psychological warfare, and even disinformation. Because these quiet professionals must be so skilled in such a wide-range of activities, they have the longest and most complex qualification course in the U.S. military.

Becoming a Green Beret

It’s a small percentage of the military that become part of Special Operations, and an even smaller percentage that are able to wear the signature Green Beret. Azad Ebrahimzadeh is one such man.

It’s not the physical demand of training that causes three-quarters of candidates to fail. The psychological warfare is unbearable,

“I remember the lasting impression that the first SF guy I met left with me. He was charismatic, confident, and well spoken. I wanted to work with people of that caliber,” Azad, who more commonly goes by his call sign “Oz” (picture below), said about joining the military. “All I knew was that it was an honorable thing to serve my country. I was young and foolhardy. I was excited about the concept of saving lives and making a difference.”

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Azad Ebrahimzadeh, U.S. Army Green Beret Medic, Call sign: “Oz”, “Leonidas”.  Rank: Staff Sgt   Unit: Operated with 3rd Special Forces, 19th Special Forces and 20th Special Forces Group.  Tours:  Operation Enduring Freedom, Afghanistan, operations in Thailand, South Africa and Mozambique

Knowing little to nothing about the military, Oz joined at the young age of 17 after finding himself in trouble with the law. “I wasn’t prepared for what I was getting into,” says Oz, a SF Medical Sergeant. What was he getting into? A three-year program that boasts a washout rate above 75 percent.

Even though an SF Medical Sergeant goes through advanced additional schooling (each team member gets special training in their field to make them an expert), all Green Berets have to go through the Special Forces Assessment & Selection, or SFAS – a nearly 4-week long selection process where, as Oz put it, “essentially you get your ass handed to you the whole time.”

During SFAS, there’s no one motivating you – no one saying “you can make it,” or “you’re almost there,” said Oz. “There’s no one encouraging you.” With virtually no interaction between the staff and the candidates, you never know if you’re doing well or failing, according to the Green Beret medic.

There’s a common phrase often heard during training, uttered by the instructors: “Do your best, candidate.”

“How far do I go?” candidates often ask in regards to a training mission. “Do your best, candidate,” is the response.

“How do I know when I’m done?”

“Do your best, candidate.”

“They don’t teach. They assess. You’re given a mission and told to complete it, but not how, no specifics,” Oz says. “They want to see you solve complex problems while in intensely stressful environments.”

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It’s not the physical demand of training that causes three-quarters of candidates to fail. The psychological warfare is unbearable, Oz says. “When you go to SFAS, you aren’t told anything. You don’t know when you’re getting up or when you’re going to bed. You can’t mentally prepare for any single day and you’re never given any clues as to what you’ll be doing.”

Remembering back to one particular experience he had during the selection process, Oz recounted: “We had been conditioned to think that when the instructors set up the cones, we were going to go on a road march. Well, we had already gone on a long march of 10 or 15 miles, loaded with 65 lbs. We were already exhausted. We thought they were going to let us go to bed, then we saw the instructors laying out the cones again. We started getting worried because we didn’t want to fail, but we didn’t know if we were going to make it – we had already been at it for 20 hours a day for over a week already,” he said.

“I wanted to work with the best.”

After the instructor had the men line up to do it all again, he asked them who wanted to quit.

All was quiet.

The instructor asked again. A single hand was raised. Then, like a domino effect, several others raised their hands and so they pulled them out of line and were labeled as VWs – voluntary withdrawals.

“They think that they’re going home when they quit but what they don’t know is they have to stay for the remainder of the class to set up our course for training even though they won’t be able to participate,” Oz says. “That is the worst punishment of all – to watch your class keep going and to live with the regret of quitting.”

After the instructor asked once more if anyone else wanted to quit and no one else raised their hand, he ordered the remaining candidates to drop their gear and go to bed. “So it was completely a mental attack,” the Green Beret says

10 Green Berets who become Legends

Those who pass SFAS head to the Qualification Course where Green Beret soldiers are forged. One of the courses is a 70-day school, Small Unit Tactics or SUT, and is designed after the Ranger school, training soldiers to be leaders in a combat environment behind enemy lines, to which Oz said: “Which is a really nice way of saying we’re going to starve you, we’re going to beat you, we’re going to make your life miserable for 70 days and see if you can still hold it together.”

After SUT, it’s on to SERE-C school (Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape-High Risk) where candidates learn survival training. A simulation ensues where the candidate is taken hostage by enemy forces for three weeks. During this time they learn how to survive behind enemy lines, evade capture, resist interrogation, and plan and execute escapes.

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“The physical and mental strains these soldiers are put through are so intense that doctors closely monitor students after completion to ensure a healthy recovery”, Oz said. “I lost 27 pounds during my winter class.”

We do it because we gave our word. In our community your word is all you have.

Physical training is not the only kind of training a Green Beret endures. Each candidate is sent to a specialty course for an additional 25-56 weeks of highly-specialized training. As a Special Forces Medical Sergeant, Oz went through a 56-week long training program required for all Green Beret Medics, where candidates learn advanced trauma medicine and everything from veterinary medicine to dental medicine, x-rays, surgery, and even delivering babies.

“We’re the closest thing to a doctor the team will see in combat,” says Oz.

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Oz uses his skills as a Green Beret medic to help the locals.

All Green Berets have to be proficient in a second language, so they go to language school, held by the JFK Special Warfare Center, for another 25-56 weeks depending on the language. It’s important for Green Berets to be fluent in another language so as to communicate with locals they are helping.

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The final stage of the qualification course is a three-week exercise called “Robin Sage.” Robin Sage is the largest and most complex continuous training event in the U.S. military. Candidates from separate specialty courses are placed into an ODA to conduct a series of complex missions. All responsibilities fall on team members who are carefully observed and evaluated.

So why would anyone want to go through such training?

“I wanted to work with the best. The guys I saw with ‘Special Forces’ on their left shoulder set the standard,” he said. “They have an internal drive to constantly better themselves.” But there are qualities that Green Beret training can’t teach, and those qualities, according to Azad Ebrahimzadeh, must be inherent in the man willing to go the distance.

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“You need discipline. You’re going to be asked to do a lot of things in the Green Berets that you’re not going to want to do.” To go places you don’t want to go, to make sacrifices others will never know about. But you have to, he said, because if you don’t, people can die. “We do it because we gave our word. In our community your word is all you have. The Special Forces doesn’t make you into something you’re not; they don’t make you into someone who has integrity; they don’t make you into someone who has strength and courage. You bring that to the Special Forces. They just give you the opportunity to use those traits to make this world a better place.”

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Why the beret?

The beret hearkens back to the OSS veterans who served with the French Resistance during World War II and then became members of the 10th Special Forces Group, the US Army’s first Special Forces unit. The OSS teams wore the beret as a sign of compatriotism with the French Resistance. When these veterans joined SF, they continued wearing the beret, which was seen as early as 1954 being worn unofficially by other Special Forces members. Green became the color of choice, inspired by the British Commando-type beret adopted in 1942 and in honor of the Canadian Army design in rifle green after the First Special Service Force – the “Devil’s Brigade”. It wasn’t until Sept. 25, 1961, however, that the green beret was authorized as the official headgear of the US Army Special Forces.

This article was originally published on “Warrior Scout e-Magazine” on Apr 13, 2015 by Steffani Jacobs

For more information about this magazine, please visit:  http://warrior.scout.com/story/1427452-green-berets-the-quiet-professionals?s=155

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

Who was “Colonel Maggie”?

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Martha Raye. known as “The Big Mouth” was considered the female equivalent to Bob Hope, Martha Raye was an American icon. It was well recognized that Martha Raye endured less comfort and more danger than any other Vietnam entertainer.  

“Colonel Maggie,” Martha Raye, was an honorary member of the Special Forces.  She had received her prized Green Beret and the title of Lieutenant Colonel from President Lyndon B. Johnson, himself.

From 1964 to 1973, Martha traveled from camp to camp in isolated areas throughout Vietnam making eight (8) visits.  She would stay “in-country” from four to six months at a time–usually at her own expense–to be with the troops she so dearly loved. She used the nurse’s aide skills she learned back in the 1930s, and surgical techniques she picked up during World War II to help treat the wounded.  Whatever her official nursing qualifications, her assistance was often needed and very much appreciated.  Her presence, whether as entertainer or as a nurse, helped to make life bearable for so many enlisted troops and officers.

Martha was wounded twice during her visits with the Green Berets.

In May 1965 Martha began the first of her eight USO tours of Vietnam, visiting military camps and outposts.  She was accompanied by Earl Colbert, a guitarist, and Ollie Harris, a bass fiddle player. During one of her visits, she was performed with Johnny Grant, Eddie Fisher, and John Bubbles.

…to entertain our armed personnel wherever they needed a laugh, a song and a touch of home.

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In October that year, Martha was back in Vietnam with the USO for another six weeks. Until America ‘s withdrawal in 1974, Martha toured in Vietnam at least annually, sometimes with the USO (1965-1970) but most often on her own and at her own expense.

She was reported to have made several jumps from planes and helicopters. She received an Airborne Beret. BUT the Green Beret was what she wore the most.

I did not know this.  Don’t let the sun go down without reading this about Martha Raye. The most unforgivable oversight of TV is that her shows were not taped. I was unaware of her credentials or where she is buried. Somehow I just can’t see Brittany Spears, Paris Hilton, or Jessica Simpson doing what this woman and the other USO women, including Ann Margaret & Joey Heatherton did for our troops in past wars.  Most of the old time entertainers were made of a lot sterner stuff than today’s crop of activist bland whiners. The following is from an Army Aviator who takes a trip down memory lane:

“It was just before Thanksgiving ’67 and we were ferrying dead and wounded from a large GRF west of Pleiku. We had run out of body bags by noon,  so the Hook (CH-47 CHINOOK) was pretty rough in the back.  All of a sudden, we heard a ‘take-charge’ woman’s voice in the rear. There was the singer and actress, Martha Raye, with a Special Forces beret and jungle fatigues, with subdued markings, helping the wounded into the Chinook, and carrying the dead aboard. ‘Maggie’ had been visiting her SF ‘heroes’ out ‘west’. We took off, short of fuel, and headed to the USAF hospital pad at Pleiku. As we all started unloading our sad pax’s, a  USAF Captain said to Martha…. “Ms Raye, with all these dead and wounded to process, there would not be time for your show!”To all of our surprise, she pulled on her right collar and said …… “Captain, see this eagle?  I am a full ‘Bird’ in the US Army Reserve, and on this is a ‘Caduceus’ which means I am a Nurse, with a surgical specialty…. now, take me to your wounded!”

He said, “Yes ma’am…. follow me.”

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Several times at the Army Field Hospital in Pleiku, she would ‘cover’ a surgical shift, giving a nurse a well-deserved break.

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Ms. Noonie Fortin  is Maggie’s biographer and author or the book, “Memories of Maggie”.  Ms Fortin is a First Sergeant, (Retired), U.S. Army and retires with over 22 years of military service to our great country.  Noonie met with Martha Raye many times in order to write and finish this book, eventually becoming friends with Martha.  She also created a website dedicated to this entertainer and has amassed a huge collection of memorabilia spanning her entire career – the pictures below are part of that collection.

In 2003, Noonie Fortin received the following award:

The Vietnam Experience website and Vietnam Veteran Support Network Board wants to recognize your wonderful efforts at promoting and preserving the history of the Vietnam experience. You honor all veterans with your writings. Now we wish to honor your work, including your contributions at calling attention to Martha Raye.

Proudly display this website award on any and all of your websites. This award is given on this day – January 28, 2003 to the Noonie Fortin — Colonel Maggie Website

On behalf of the entire staff and Board of the Vietnam Experience,

Rev. Bill McDonald

First up is a photo that was donated by Kenneth Roberts. It is one of my favorite photos of Maggie that was taken in Vietnam. This truck became well known in the BanMeThout area in 1971. Photo was actually taken by Chris Crain!

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Maggie got around by many modes of transportation during the various wars. This picture became her favorite way to travel–on board a chopper. Photo donated by John Mitchell and taken in AnLoc in 1969.

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The next picture was sent to me by Tom “Stumpy” Burke. It’s him, Maggie, and Neil Coady at the II Corps Mike Force “Yard” village near Pleiku in 1969.

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The next two photos are a bit scratchy but still show Maggie’s caring for our troops. These photos were emailed to me by Bob Waller who said they were taken in late 1968 or early 1969 at the 5th Special Forces Group C-Team Officers Club in DaNang. The photo on the left includes L-R: USAF FAC LTC Ralph Albright behind the bar, and unknown soldier smoking, LT Bill Glendenning, Maggie, and LT Bob Waller. The picture on the right was taken the same night and that’s Maggie next to LT Bob Waller.

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In 1968 T/SGT Jeffrey Saddlemire had the absolute pleasure of being selected to present Maggie with flowers at the end of a USO show. He will never forget meeting “what a very sweet lady she was” at Tuy Hoa. He stated that “God has a special place in heaven for people like her. Rest in Peace job well done Maggie!”

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Maggie visited many units. One stop was on 2 November 1968 in DucCo. There she posed with CSM Guy Sullivan (on the left) and SP4 Kelley from the 1st Bn, 35th Infantry, 4th Infantry Division.

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Maggie flew into LZ Center (Hill 348), about 40 miles Southwest of DaNang, in 1968 to visit members of the Americal Division’s 3/21 Light Infantry, Company D–a.k.a. Black Death. This photo was submitted by Robert Boyd Jr. He is standing in the back on the right and his friend “Beard” is in the front holding his helmet upside down. Beard’s helmet was spotted by Maggie when she saw the words “F*** THE ARMY” written on it.  Recently Larry Henderson wrote saying that the soldier to Maggie’s left is Clarence W “Chief” Stoneroad from Oklahoma. Larry was working at the time in the bunker at the right rear of the photo. He said her visit was greatly appreciated by all the guys there.

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Whenever she saw a soldier, sailor, airman, marine, or coast guardsman without a St Christopher medal–she would hand him or her a brand new one. She got them from Chaplin CPT Michael Ortiz who donated this picture taken of him with her in 1968 while they were in NhaTrang.tumblr_mv727zhamY1qivon6o1_1280

Martha and her troupe performing for the 25th Division in Cu Chi – 1969

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John Wayne narrates this 1970 documentary which featured Gen. William Westmoreland, Lowell Thomas and others. Martha Raye was included to speak about her efforts to entertain our armed personnel wherever they needed a laugh, a song and a touch of home. Maggie was there simply to build morale just as she would be doing today if she was still around.

In 1993 Martha Raye was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom for her lifetime service to America .

Her final years were plagued by ill health. She suffered from Alzheimer’s disease and had lost both legs in 1993 from poor circulation. While in poor health and resting in the hospital bed, that had to be placed in her home, Martha and husband Mark Harris moved into a hotel after their home was completely destroyed by the 1994 earthquake. Raye died in Los Angeles at 78 of pneumonia on October 19, 1994 after a long history of cardiovascular disease.

In appreciation of her work with the USO during World War II and subsequent wars, special consideration was given to bury her in Arlington National Cemetery on her death, but on her request she was buried with full military honors in the Fort Bragg, North Carolina post cemetery as an honorary colonel in the U.S. Marines and an honorary lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army. She is the only civilian buried at this location who receives military honors each Veterans’ Day.

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Hand Salute! A great lady.

Raye has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, one for motion pictures at 6251 Hollywood Boulevard and the other for television at 6547 Hollywood Blvd.

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Please visit Ms. Noonie Fortin’s website for more on this great lady:  http://www.colonelmaggie.com/

Rev. Bill McDonald’s website:  http://www.vietnamexp.com

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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’ve created a poll to help identify my website audience – before leaving, can you please click HERE and choose the one item best describing you.  Thank you in advance!


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

Helicopter Nose Art during the Vietnam War

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Wikipedia describes Nose art as a decorative painting or design on the fuselage of a military aircraft, usually chalked up on the front fuselage, and is a form of aircraft graffiti.

While begun for practical reasons of identifying friendly units, the practice evolved to express the individuality often constrained by the uniformity of the military, to evoke memories of home and peacetime life, and as a kind of psychological protection against the stresses of war and the probability of death. The appeal, in part, came from nose art not being officially approved, even when the regulations against it were not enforced.

I’ve attached hundreds of unique color photos Huey’s, Chinooks, and more, showing how soldiers decorated their helicopters during the Vietnam War.  Most are elaborate, colorful, and often comical art inspired by Sixties and Seventies pop culture, music, cartoons and comics, psychedelia, and politics, as well as sex and booze.  The artwork personalizes an aircraft for its crew, because it is the crew members who name the aircraft and create the art, christening it with an identity of its own.

I’d like to offer a special “Thank You” to John Conway for allowing me to share many of these pictures from his Vietnam Helicopter Pilots Association (VHPA) Museum – donors of individual pictures are credited below.  The museum website is chock full of pictures, stories and other aviation information from the Vietnam War. The museum continues to grow and John welcomes any donations of images, stories or memorabilia for inclusion into the website and live exhibits. Please make it a point to visit the museum in the near future at http://www.vhpamuseum.org  

Quite a few of these pictures are not identified by unit or have additional details about the artwork.  If you can identify and provide that information, please get back to me.  Also, if anyone wants to contribute personal pictures of their ship’s artwork (Vietnam era) and back-up information, I’d be honored to add them to this article.  You can also mention whether or not I can forward copies to John Conway for the museum.

I hope you enjoy these!

Legend:

AHC – Assault Helicopter Company
AML – Air Mobile Light
ASH –  Assault Support Helicopter
AWC – Aerial Weapons Company
CAC – Corp Aviation Company
HH – Heavy Helicopter

 

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The 174th Dolphins, the “slicks,” adopted the above nose-art logo in mid-1967 that became a standard for several years. While there were a few individualized drawings used for nose-art on Dolphins, both before and after the ones depicted here, none were known to have been used on more than one aircraft at a time.  Photo by Jim McDaniel, 1967

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174th Assault Helicopter Company Dolphins – photo by J.C. Pennington, 1969 

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A/101 AVN Thunderbirds – Image courtesy of Jan Null

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Ray Cochran SF Huey in Phu Bai 1966 named “Gunslinger”

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Bob Hesselbein I took this picture of a C/16th CAV LOH in 1972. Here’s a side view taken at Dong Tam.

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Bob Hesselbein Killer Eggs with sharks teeth.

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Bob Hesselbein Three Darkhorse scout pilots: Tim Brennan, Hugh Mills and Mike King parked at a Cantho AAF revetment 1972

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 71 AHC Rattlers nose art Image courtesy of Jim Adams, 1st Platoon Leader, Dec. 68-Dec. 69

Hank Llewellyn  Interestingly, the photo, “71 AHC Rattlers – Image courtesy of Jim Adams, 1st Platoon Leader, Dec 68 – Dec 69” is of Medal of Honor recipient Col. Bruce Crandall’s door art. It was painted by CWO Sid Cowen. The doors adorned, then Major Crandall, Huey into the battle of the Ia Drang Valley, Nov 1965. The blue triangle indicates Alpha Company of the 229th AHB. The coiled serpent is formed in the shape of a “6” re: “Serpent 6” Crandall’s call sign. Photo is on display in the Pentagon “Hall of Hero’s”. Bruce returned to VN in1967 but was unable to locate the old doors that were refitted to each Huey he flew.

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Scott Henry – Black Cats of the 282nd Assault Helicopter Co, Danang

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Donated by Scott Henry

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Born Free Dian 211 ACR – Image courtesy of William Powis

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 Image courtesy of Jan Null

Nga Tran  –  Shark teeth painting terrified the enemy,

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F Troop (Air), 8th Cavalry Blue Ghosts

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I was the CE of Cobra 1 in the Cobra Platoon, 114th AHC, Vihn Long, 1965.
Image courtesy of Paul Kunkel

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155th Assault Helicopter Company Stagecoach

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116th AHC Wasps – Image courtesy of Pat Ronan

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190th Assault Helicopter Company Spartans

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117th AHC  Warlords

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The following 3 pics are of Warlord 043 donated by Charles H. Hallett Jr.   123 AVN Bn Co B Aero Scouts – Americal Division.  Supported troops in Happy Valley and A Shau Valley

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52nd Combat Aviation Battalion Flying Dragons

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176TH Assault Helicopter Company  Muskets 

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 Image courtesy of Jan Null

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 Early 20th ARA Bird – Image courtesy of Louis Barber

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F Troop (Air), 9th Cavalry

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D Troop (Air), 1st Squadron, 10th Cavalry

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Canned Heat of B & E troops, 1/9 Cav. Roger Snow, gunner,  can be seen standing behind the pilot’s door. The last three digits of the serial number were 555 so the ship was more often referred to as “Triple Nickel.  Image courtesy of Roger Snow

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240th AHC Greyhounds

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We used the Griffin call sign for the UH-1’s and the Little Griffin call sign for the LOH’s. I recall, some time before I left in 69, that we had to give up the Griffin call sign because some other unit was using it. One of the nose paintings was “Virgin Eater”. Another was “Cherry Popper.” This was based upon the logic that the mythical griffin only ate virgins – a perfect theme for young male pilots. Pilots’ names in this shot are; left as you face the chopper – CWO Bruce Sutton, and right as you face the chopper – CWO Richard Vonhatten.  Image courtesy of Pete Rzeminski, CW2 (8/68 – 12/69), HHC (Avn Det), 1st Brigade, 101st Abn Div

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 Here are a couple of pics from my time in ‘Nam….I was with the 114th AHC, and was assigned to our maintenance ship “Road Service”. I was with them from 1971 to 1972.   Image courtesy of CSM Ed Hepler

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 Razorback ship of the 120th AHC – Image courtesy of Joe Stone

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 Nose of the 391st Maintenance Detachment – part of the 68th AHC. This ship was called “Top Tiger Tail”. A Rare example of Nude artwork that was authorized See story on 68th AHC page under “Companies”.   Image courtesy of Dave Green 68th AHC Crew Chief

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 “Pink Pussy” – short lived nose art found on a rough and ready 117th Slick (circa 1967)   Image courtesy Al Bennett

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 Warriors 336th AHC – Image courtesy of Don “RAC” Raczon 

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 Warriors 336th AHC – Image courtesy of Don “RAC” Raczon 336th AHC

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 Image courtesy of Jan Null

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C Troop (Air), 16th Cavalry Dark Horse – Image courtesy of Jan Null

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 “Nice to see my ship represented. We were a Night Hawk that flew out of Soctrang with the 336AHC. They did spell my name wrong on the original. – Tom Wilkes”  – Image courtesy of Jan Null

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 Image courtesy of Jan Null

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 ‘Witchdoctor – 6 ‘  – Image courtesy of Bill Mc Donald, Pilot 128th AHC ‘Tomahawks’ Phu Loi. Vietnam 1967.

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 “Mad Tom” of the 121st AHC – This guys first name is tom. The last I heard he was running a catfish co-op in Alabama? In the early 70’s. He always caught the biggest fish. Got pics to prove it.  Image courtesy of Lowell L. Eneix

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 A Duck Strike on the Viking ship of the 121st AHC – Image courtesy of Lowell L. Eneix

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 “The Tin Bin” of the 121st AHC – Image courtesy of Lowell L. Eneix

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 “Tiger Lady” of the 121st AHC – in keeping with the 121st’s nickname – “The Soc Trang Tigers”  Image by Lowell L. Eneix

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 “Peg of my Heart” of the 121st AHC – Image courtesy of Lowell L. Eneix

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 “The Good Widow Mrs. Jones” of the 121st AHC – I think this was Capt.. Whites bird?  Image courtesy of Lowell L. Eneix

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 “The In Crowd” of the 121st AHC – I think this AC got transferred to a scout and got killed. Bad memory, Can’t remember his name but can see him clearly. Does anyone else have that problem? Hope it’s not just me.  Image courtesy of Lowell L. Eneix

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 “The Incredible Hulk” of the 121st AHC – This ship had some reason to be slung back to Soc Trang. On down wind it began to oscillate and the Chinook had to punch him off at about 300 feet. With about 40 guys watching including the AC. I had my camera and for the life of me don’t know why I wasn’t taking pic’s. Dam! makes me sick everytime I think about it. Image courtesy of Lowell L. Eneix

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 “Harvy” of the 121st AHC – Image courtesy of Lowell L. Eneix

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 “Kaptain Klutz” of the 121st AHC – Image courtesy of Lowell L. Eneix

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 “Buzz Off” of the 121st AHC – Image courtesy of Lowell L. Eneix

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 A “very” young me next to my aircraft’s nose art.  I was with the 117th AHC in 1969 at Plantation airfield.  Image courtesy of Dallas E. Figgins

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 We were Battery E (AVN) 82nd Artillery. We did not have a unit patch…The A/C markings were red skid tips to denote an artillery unit and the Cav artillery patch on the nose.  Image courtesy of Ed Lem

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 Warriors 336th AHC – Image courtesy of Don “RAC” Raczon 336th AHC

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68th Assault Helicopter Company Top Tigers – Image courtesy of Joe Stone

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 Image courtesy of Joe Stone

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335th Assault Helicopter Company Cowboys

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176TH Assault Helicopter Company Muskets

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 D 3/5 OH-23 “Raven” featuring nose art of the “Spooks” Scout platoon (circa 1967). The “Spooks” were the predecessors of the Warwagons and possibly the only unit to fly the Raven in combat.  Image courtesy of Richard Bench

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 This piece of Nose art lasted less than a month. This helicopter’s crew chief was the pilot NCOIC for the Aero rilfle plt’s birds. His name was SFC John R Rock. (AT this time the Sgt Rock Comics were hot). D/1/1 had deployed from Fort Hood to join with our parent squadron 1/1 Armored Squadron assigned to the American Div in Chu Lai. Enroute our orders were changed attaching the troop to 2/17 Cav, 101st. This was the period of time when the division went from Airbone, to Airmobile and back to Airborne (Airmoble) in less than 2 months. We had the first Cobras attached to the division and 1st Avn Bde units supporting the 101st were redesignated as 101 units . The Division had become the Army’s second Airmobile Division As soon as the change was “Officially Completed” The word came down from Division Hqs there would be no Nose Art in the division and Sgt Rock disappeared.      Image courtesy of Ray Knight

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 Nose art on F 2/17 Cav. ship. “Comanchero” designation carried over from the units days under Comapny A, 101st Aviation Bn.  Image courtesy of Richard Bittle

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 Sidewinders – 117th Guns (circa 1967) Image courtesy of Dale Garber

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170th AHC Bikinis

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 71 AHC Rattlers – Image courtesy of Jim Adams, 1st Platoon Leader, Dec. 68-Dec. 69

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227th Assault Helicopter Battalion 1st CAV

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Jim Toolis missing 61st AHC 6 and 1 on nose

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 Nose art for the BN commander of the 227th circa December 1970 (Lt Col Islan (spelling not sure)- Victor Call sign “Pouvoir 6”.  Image courtesy of Michael Dwyer, Sp 4, Victor call sign “Blivet”

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 Image courtesy of Jan Null

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 170th AHC Aircraft Flying Dragons – image courtesy of Steve Shepard, C troop 7/17

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2-227th AVN Vultures

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 “Strawberry Bitch” of the 121st AHC (Namesake of the B-24 now in the US Air Force Museum at Wright-Patterson AFB in Dayton, Ohio – ” I am pretty sure the pilot of that AC was the SON of the pilot who flew the B-24 on display at Wright-Patterson. Our company commander made him change it from “bitch” to “blonde” didn’t want any “nasty words” being displayed. So this just might be the only picture of the original “Strawberry Bitch” of the 121st” – Lowell Eneix     Image courtesy of Lowell L. Eneix

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SP4 Doug “Short Round” Walton Door Gunner on Casper 061 at LZ English 1968

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Casper Aviation Platoon was the only separate aviation platoon in the United States Army during the Vietnam War.  Casper was organized with the 173d Airborne Brigade on Okinawa in 1963 and arrived in country with the Brigade on May 5, 1965 becoming the first United States Army ground unit committed to the Vietnam War. Casper Platoon supported the Brigade until they all left Vietnam in August 1971.

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335th Assault Helicopter Company Casper

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174th Assault Helicopter Company Sharks

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BGYRR8 A Huey helicopter of the 121st AHC in Soc Trang, Vietnam, has the words, "Super Slick," and, "Lamont's Lament," painted nose art. Image shot 1967. Exact date unknown.

BGYRR8 A Huey helicopter of the 121st AHC in Soc Trang, Vietnam, has the words, “Super Slick,” and, “Lamont’s Lament,” painted nose art. Image shot 1967. Exact date unknown.

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48th Assault Helicopter Company Jokers

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Playboys 197th AHC 

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48th Assault Helicopter Company Jokers

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48th Assault Helicopter Company Jokers

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176TH Assault Helicopter Company Muskets

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48th Assault Helicopter Company Jokers

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 “The nose art is basically the standard design of several of our Huey’s but I added the name “Tumbleweed”. That’s what I called my ship.   The door art was a take off of a Sunday morning cartoon character. My CE at that point was a Sergeant John Sulfridge. We had to sneak the parts down town and have the art work done. I sent him in while I waited in the jeep. That was a mistake as you see my last name is misspelled. I was with D-Troop 3/5th From Sept ’70 to ’71. We changed our Unit to C 3/17 sometime before I left. I was the “Slick” Platoon Commander “Long Knife 26”.  Image courtesy of Mike Rokey

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 170th AHC Aircraft  Flying Dragons – image courtesy of Steve Shepard, C troop 7/17

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The Judge – Image courtesy of Pat Ronan

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176TH Assault Helicopter Company Muskets

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Donald Steigel Thanks to all the HAL-3 guys. PBR593

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213th Assault Support Helicopter Company Black Cats

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213th Assault Support Helicopter Company

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 Unique nose art on C 3/17 Huey reflecting the feelings of the time – Image courtesy of Ralph Chapman

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 Warriors 336th AHC – Image courtesy of Don “RAC” Raczon 336th AHC

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170th Assault Helicopter Company  Buccaneeers – Image courtesy of David Hooper

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 Found on the nose of the 1st Platoon Hueys in the 117th AHC, Little Annie Fanny led the Beach Bums, and later Warlords, into hot LZ’s from Kontom to Can Tho. She should be considered a traditional symbol of the American soldier’s fighting spirit – straight from the cartoon pages of the 1960’s Playboy magazine.  Images courtesy of James Fischer

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 Long Knife (D troop 3/5 Cav Lift Platoon) nose art 1971 Vinh Long RVN. “I seem to remember there was a flurry of nose art activity in ’71. The crew chiefs were taking their doors and stuff to an artist that was in the town in Vinh Long. Probably the same artist did the work on the “Dutchmasters” (B troop 7/1 Cav) aircraft”.  Don Callison D trp 3/5 Cav.  Image courtesy of M. Clark

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 C troop Lift bird with trademark Motto – Image courtesy of Bill Brooks

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The nose of our Night Hawk UH-1H, D Trp, 17th Cav, Da Nang, ’72. Wish it was in color.  Images courtesy of Rich Neely

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 121st AHC Tigers – Image courtesy of Jan Null

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361st Aerial Weapons Company Pink Panthers

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These last four pictures show the nose art of B57 bombers of the 8th TBS stationed at Phan Rang Airbase, Vietnam.  Donated by Joe Schwarzer

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Don’t forget to visit the VHPA museum in the near future at http://www.vhpamuseum.org  

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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’ve created a poll to help identify my website audience – before leaving, can you please click HERE and 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, helicopter nose art, Historical fiction, jungle warfare, Military, novels, protests, The vietnam war, The Vietnam war story, Veteran, veteran bashing, Vietnam blog pages, Vietnam book, Vietnam conflict, Vietnam veteran, war books, war stor, Wars and Conflicts

The Fragman

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Phil Viavattine responded to my “Nicknames in Vietnam” posting and submitted this story in the comment section.  I liked it and thought it was good enough to stand on its own – so I’m featuring it as a guest article.  Thank you Phil and Welcome Home! 

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I was First Fire team Leader 3rd Squad, 2nd Platoon “M” Co. 3rd Battalion 4th. Marines when we landed in Viet Nam April 1965. Cpl. Royster was the Squad Leader, Sgt. Wright was the Platoon Sgt.and Lt. Steve Kemple was the Platoon Commander. Prior to our amphibious landing up the Perfume River near Hue, my fire team and others unloaded ammo for the 9th Marines who landed ahead of us in Danang. It should be pointed out that up to this point there were no combat units in Viet Nam, so we had no information to go on as to exactly what was about to come. When we returned to our APA the Magauffin (better known as the Magoo) we were issued our personal ammo to carry ashore. The Platoon Sgt. and the Right Guide oversaw the issue of the ammo in the berthing area. There was no attempt to restrict anyone from taking as many fragmentation hand grenades as they wanted. In my 2 1/2 years in the Corps the one thing that they never ever let you handle unless you were on the grenade range are the M-26 frags! I knew that the sh_t was about to hit the old fan. So we better get our sh_t together right away. The general feeling as I recall was one of anticipation, fear and excitement. We did not think that whatever we were going into would last as long as it did. We were American fighting men and Marines with a proud tradition. Besides we were the 4th Marines with something to prove.

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Our first mission was one of a defensive nature protecting the airfield at Phu Bai. Our TAOR (tactical area of responsibility) was very limited and we were not trained for a long term defensive posture. In Hawaii we were trained as a jungle fighting, guerrilla warfare unit. So the first weeks there we experienced several cases of jitters from the Marines in the line at night. Now the Battalion Commander was getting tired of reports about Marines shooting at whatever (sounds & movement) and nothing to show for it. A directive was issued from Bat. HQ that stated that from now on if you hear something out there throw a M-26 fragmentation grenade at it and there will be something there in the morning (we were told that it was a directive from Battalion). That night it was pitch black, no moon and overcast. It was hot and humid and no breeze the mosquitoes were out in force. Out of nowhere there was movement right in front of my position. We could hear something moving very slowly.

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Nothing could be seen, but we knew it had to be a VC patrol trying to sneak by (the sweat was really pouring from us now and our hearts were about to pound right through our flack jackets). Very quietly I took a frag and motioned to my rifleman with me to do the same.

We took the frags and tossed them out to our front (after pulling the pins of course). When they detonated all hell broke loose.

Machine guns opened up , flares were popped, just about everyone was shooting it was a real battle (all one-sided I might add). The next morning there was a huge water buffalo laying there with over one hundred bullet holes in it. The Lt. comes up to me and wants to know why we threw the grenades. So I took full responsibility for the action and told the Lt. that the directive from Battalion was my reasoning for throwing the grenades and at least we had something to show for it. As I recall he did not appreciate my answer and the humor behind it. He had a look that could kill on his face (I’m sure he had to answer for it to the CO).

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Shortly after that a similar incident happened on hill 225. Machine guns had opened up and were shooting along the concertina wire flanking my teams positions. No water buffalo this time. While being debriefed the next day, I tell the Lt. that it was a real “FUBAR”, the Lt. tells me “Viavattine the Marine Corps is going to start charging you for those grenades”! I asked him how much they cost and what happens when my E-3 pay runs out. Again he did not appreciate my humor and knew I didn’t give a fat rats ass if they charge me or not. My men & I were going home. Besides what could they do; send me to Viet Nam.

We were on a Search & Destroy Mission and called an Air Strike on this VC Village. The bombs opened up a huge tunnel complex running through the area of the Vil. Now the Lt. wants me to take my fire team and recon this trail leading to the river.

Viavattine the Marine Corps is going to start charging you for those grenades

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The Company Gunny gives me a PRX-6 radio and a satchel of frags and orders to blow up any tunnels and caves (boy did he give it to the right guy). After patrolling down to the river and blowing up several tunnel entrances & some stores of rice we headed back to the Vil. On the way back I spotted a small building off in the jungle about 30 yards away. We deployed in front of the structure and there was a large, flat, upright stone about 5 feet from the entrance door. We got behind it, and everyone got 2 frags ready and we tossed them in. Well there were no VC in there, there was no roof anymore and the inside looked like hell. Mission accomplished, so we returned to the Company area. When we reported back in the Lt. wanted to debrief me and asked me what that big explosion was he heard just before we got back. I explained that we came upon a building that appeared to be a fortified structure, so we blew it up, with frags! Now the Lt. really comes unwrapped and says “ who do you think you are Viavattine! Mr. Hand Grenades or what”? Everything was always Mister something with him must be an Officer thing. Now he had raised his voice enough that several Marines nearby heard it and they started calling me the Fragman.

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Who do you think you are Viavattine! Mr. Hand Grenades or what”?

Minutes later the Lt. says he is going to go up and take some pictures of all the tunnels exposed. I asked him to let me take my team up there and recon and clear the area before he goes up (despite the incidents listed above the Lt. & we liked and respected each other, he once put me in for Meritorious Corporal). He tells me that’s OK, he would be taking the Radioman Offtadahl and the Doc (Navy Corpsman) with him. They were gone about 5 minutes when there was an explosion in their area (one of them stepped on a booby trap). We got there and all three of them were wounded. We called in a Medi-Vac and got them out.  All of them recovered from their wounds, which is to say they lived. Lt. Kemple later became a Naval Aviator, Marine Fighter Pilot, flying jets so he could stay in the Corps. Lt. Ahern ran into him in El Toro. He was now a Major. Me, I just became known as the “Fragman” and went home.

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Recently an entry was made in my Guestbook (Duty Log) from a Marine who served in Mike Company in 1968 and he recalled hearing about the “Fragman” and the M-26 grenade. I can only imagine what a sea story that must have turned into after 2 years time. Semper Fi!

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’ve created a poll to help identify my website audience – before leaving, can you please click HERE and 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, helicopter nose art, Historical fiction, jungle warfare, Military, novels, protests, The vietnam war, The Vietnam war story, Veteran, veteran bashing, Vietnam blog pages, Vietnam book, Vietnam conflict, Vietnam veteran, war books, war stor, Wars and Conflicts

Lessons of Vietnam – A Chat Between Three Veterans

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I was a featured guest last night on an internet TV show hosted by the North Carolina Vietnam Veterans Association.  Mr. Bill Dixon and Mr. Bob Matthews host the show, “Lessons of Vietnam” and use it to teach others about the Vietnam War and its Warriors.  We spent much of the hour talking about my book, “Cherries”, and how many of the events written were similar to their own experiences and earlier tours in Vietnam.  Both offered accolades for my blog site (this one), citing the many  articles, pictures, videos and visitor comments continue to keep the Vietnam War in the forefront – thus, maintaining an awareness and providing an education to those who visit.

We shared some laughs and also listened to a short story from an audience member who called in.  Thank you gentlemen – I had a great time and felt we could have continued for several more hours.  Good luck in future shows and symposiums that your group sponsors.  Thank you for your service and welcome home!

 I’ve provided a direct link to our show and urge everyone to check it out.  Click below to be redirected:

http://www.nissancommunications.com/playarchive.php?id=2jgiJhG3E74

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The NCVVI website has many videos available in their archives – all taped presentations from earlier shows.  If anyone is interested in visiting their website and scrolling through the archives (click on tv shows), here’s the link:

http://www.ncvvi.org

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).

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

The Story behind the famous “Saigon Execution” Photo

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South Vietnamese Gen. Nguyen Ngoc Loan, chief of the national police, fires his pistol into the head of suspected Viet Cong officer Nguyen Van Lem, also known as Bay Lop, on a Saigon street, early in the Tet Offensive on Feb. 1, 1968. (AP Photo/Eddie Adams)

South Vietnamese Gen. Nguyen Ngoc Loan, chief of the national police, fires his pistol into the head of suspected Viet Cong officer Nguyen Van Lem, also known as Bay Lop, on a Saigon street, early in the Tet Offensive on Feb. 1, 1968. (AP Photo/Eddie Adams)

Perhaps one of the most iconic images to come out of the Vietnam War this photo depicts a uniformed South Vietnamese officer shooting a prisoner in the head. When you look into it, however, there is much more to this photograph than first meets the eye. There is an undeniable brutality to this photo, but even Eddie Adams – who won a Pulitzer Prize for capturing this shot – later admitted that it didn’t tell the whole story and he stated that he wished he hadn’t taken it at all.

Looking at this image out of context, it appears as though an officer is gunning down an innocent prisoner, perhaps even a civilian. You are apparently witnessing a savage war crime. That is the reason this image was adopted by anti-war protesters as an indictment against the Vietnam War. Without understanding the background, there is no reason to think that is not the case. It seems like yet another image showing someone acting horrifically and immorally during war time. But, when you learn the story behind the man who is being executed in this photo, the image and the reasoning behind the execution becomes a little bit clearer.

This man’s name was Nguyen Van Lem, but he was also known as Captain Bay Lop.  Lem was no civilian; he was a member of the Viet Cong. Not just any member, either, he was an assassin and the leader of a Viet Cong death squad who had been targeting and killing South Vietnamese National Police officers and their families.

Lem’s team was attempting to take down a number of South Vietnamese officials. They may have even been plotting to kill the shooter himself, Major General Nguyen Ngoc Loan. It is said that Lem had recently been responsible for the murder of one of Loan’s most senior officers, as well as the murder of the officer’s family.

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According to accounts at the time, when South Vietnamese officers captured Lem, he was more or less caught in the act, at the site of a mass grave. This grave contained the bodies of no less than seven South Vietnamese police officers, as well as their families, around 34 bound and shot bodies in total. Eddie Adams, the photojournalist who took the shot, backs up this story. Lem’s widow also confirmed that her husband was a member of the National Liberation Front (Viet Cong), and that he disappeared before the beginning of the Tet Offensive.

After being captured with the bodies during the Tet Offensive, Nguyen Van Lem was taken to Major General Ngoc Loan. In a street in Saigon, Loan executed Lem with his .38 caliber Smith & Wesson.

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The photographer, Eddie Adams, had this to say of capturing the photo:

I just followed the three of them as they walked towards us, making an occasional picture. When they were close – maybe five feet away – the soldiers stopped and backed away. I saw a man walk into my camera viewfinder from the left. He took a pistol out of his holster and raised it. I had no idea he would shoot. It was common to hold a pistol to the head of prisoners during questioning. So I prepared to make that picture – the threat, the interrogation. But it didn’t happen. The man just pulled a pistol out of his holster, raised it to the VC’s head and shot him in the temple. I made a picture at the same time…

The General then walked up to Adams and said,  “They killed many of my people, and yours, too,” then walked away.

Was this the right thing to do?  As with so many things connected to war, the answer to that question is murky at best. Military lawyers have not yet decided with complete certainty whether or not Loan’s actions violated the Geneva Conventions relating to the treatment of prisoners of war, so there is no official decision on the matter. From Loan’s perspective, the man before him was a cold blooded killer who not only killed some of his friends and colleagues, but their families and other innocent people. This was a dangerous man, who in the name of patriotism nonetheless believed his political stance justified his actions, as presumably did General Loan himself concerning the execution. The question is- how would you have reacted, on both sides of the coin?

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This may have been the end of Lem’s life, but it was not the end of the story. The image of Lem’s execution, and public reaction to it, played a small role in bringing the Vietnam War to an end. Although that is no bad thing, it also demonized General Nguyen Ngoc Loan, which was something Eddie Adams was extremely sorry for. He was quoted as saying,

The General killed the Viet Cong; I killed the general with my camera. Still photographs are the most powerful weapon in the world. People believe them; but photographs do lie, even without manipulation. They are only half-truths. What the photograph didn’t say was, “What would you do if you were the General at that time and place on that hot day, and you caught the so-called bad guy after he blew away one, two or three American soldiers?”

Adams felt that, by taking the photo, he had ruined Loan’s life. He felt Loan was a good man, in a bad situation, and he deeply regretted the negative impact that the photo had on him.  In fact, Major General Loan later moved to the United States. When he arrived, the Immigration and Nationalization Services wanted to deport him partially because of the photo taken by Adams. They approached Adams to testify against Loan, but Adams instead testified in his favor and Loan was allowed to stay.   When Loan died of cancer in 1998, Adams stated, “The guy was a hero. America should be crying. I just hate to see him go this way, without people knowing anything about him.”

Additional Facts:

A few months after the execution picture was taken, Loan was seriously wounded by machine gun fire that led to the amputation of his leg. Following the war, he was reviled where ever he went. After an Australian hospital refused to treat him, he was transferred to the United States, where he was met with a massive (though unsuccessful) campaign to deport him.  In 1975, the former General, Nguyen Loan, opened a pizza parlor, which he ran until 1991, when his identity was discovered and he was forced to retire after receiving many threats.

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Loan and his wife at the pizza restaurant they opened in the D.C. suburb of Burke, Virginia at Rolling Valley Mall called “Les Trois Continents.”

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Widow Nguyen Thi Lop holding mementos of VC husband identified in picture

Nguyen Van Lem’s secret Viet Cong name, Captain Bay Lop, came from his wife, whose first name was Lop.  Nguyen Thi Lop knew her husband, Van Lem, was a Viet Cong officer. But until she picked up a newspaper in February 1968, she didn’t know he had been arrested—or that he was dead, until she saw Eddie Adams’ photo of her 36-year-old husband being executed three days before by Saigon’s police chief, Gen. Nguyen Ngoc Loan.

Newly pregnant and fearful of the South Vietnamese authorities, Lop took her two daughters, then 13 and 3, from their house near Saigon’s airport and moved in with relatives nearby. She struggled, working a multitude of odd jobs, until the war ended. After the war she was given a monthly pension, a “gratitude house” and a scholarship for her son who was born eight months after his father’s death.

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This story was initially published on March 19, 2013 by Lauren Corona on the website:  http://www.todayifoundout.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).

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Tagged: book sites, books war, cherry soldier, combat, Combat Infantry, digital books, execution picture on Saigon street, firefights, Grunts, helicopter nose art, Historical fiction, jungle warfare, Military, novels, protests, The vietnam war, The Vietnam war story, Veteran, veteran bashing, Vietnam blog pages, Vietnam book, Vietnam conflict, Vietnam veteran, war books, war stor, Wars and Conflicts

Burial at Sea (Guest Blog)

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This account is one of a kind.  A powerful one that touches your heart.  Tough duty back then – as it is now.  These are remembrances of a Casualty Notification Officer.

BURIAL AT SEA…..

by Lt Col George Goodson, USMC (Ret)

In my 76th year, the events of my life appear to me, from time to time, as a series of vignettes. Some were significant; most were trivial. War is the seminal event in the life of everyone that has endured it. Though I fought in Korea and the Dominican Republic and was wounded there, Vietnam was my war.

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Lt. Col. George Goodson (Ret) and family

Now 42 years have passed, and thankfully, I rarely think of those days in Cambodia , Laos, and the panhandle of North Vietnam where small teams of Americans and Montagnards fought much larger elements of the North Vietnamese Army.

Instead I see vignettes: some exotic, some mundane:

*The smell of Nuc Mam

*The heat, dust, and humidity

*The blue exhaust of cycles clogging the streets

*Elephants moving silently through the tall grass

*Hard eyes behind the servile smiles of the villagers

*Standing on a mountain in Laos and hearing a tiger roar

*A young girl squeezing my hand as my medic delivered her baby

*The flowing Ao Dais of the young women biking down Tran Hung Dao

AND……..

*My two years as Casualty Notification Officer in North Carolina, Virginia and Maryland

It was late 1967. I had just returned after 18 months in Vietnam.  Casualties were increasing. I moved my family from Indianapolis to Norfolk, rented a house, enrolled my children in their fifth or sixth new school, and bought a second car. A week later, I put on my uniform and drove 10 miles to Little Creek, Virginia. I hesitated before entering my new office. Appearance is important to career Marines. I was no longer, if ever, a poster Marine. I had returned from my third tour in Vietnam only 30 days before. At 5’9″, I now weighed 128 pounds, 37 pounds below my normal weight. My uniforms fit ludicrously, my skin was yellow from malaria medication, and I think I had a twitch or two.

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I straightened my shoulders, walked into the office, looked at the nameplate on a Staff Sergeant’s desk and said, “Sergeant Jolly, I’m Lieutenant Colonel Goodson. Here are my orders and my Qualification Jacket.” Sergeant Jolly stood, looked carefully at me, took my orders, stuck out his hand; we shook and he asked, “How long were you there, Colonel?” I replied “18 months this time.”

Jolly breathed, “You must be a slow learner Colonel.” I smiled. Jolly said, “Colonel, I’ll  show you to your office and bring in the Sergeant Major. I said, “No, let’s just go straight to his office.” Jolly nodded, hesitated, and lowered his voice, “Colonel, the Sergeant Major. He’s been in this job two years. He’s packed pretty tight. I’m worried about him.” I nodded.

Jolly escorted me into the Sergeant Major’s office. “Sergeant Major, this is Colonel Goodson, the new Commanding Office. The Sergeant Major stood, extended his hand and said, “Good to see you again, Colonel.” I responded, “Hello Walt, how are you?”

Jolly looked at me, raised an eyebrow, walked out, and closed the door. I sat down with the Sergeant Major. We had the obligatory cup of coffee and talked about mutual acquaintances. Walt’s stress was palpable. Finally, I said, “Walt, what the h-ll’s wrong?” He turned his chair, looked out the window and said, “George, you’re going to wish you were back in Nam before you leave here. I’ve been in the Marine Corps since 1939. I was in the Pacific 36 months, Korea for 14 months, and Vietnam for 12 months. Now I come here to bury these kids. I’m putting my letter in. I can’t take it anymore.”

I said, “Okay Walt. If that’s what you want, I’ll endorse your request for retirement and do what I can to push it through Headquarters Marine Corps.” Sergeant Major Walt Xxxxx retired 12 weeks later. He had been a good Marine for 28 years, but he had seen too much death and too much suffering. He was used up.

Over the next 16 months, I made 28 death notifications, conducted 28 military funerals, and made 30 notifications to the families of Marines that were severely wounded or missing in action. Most of the details of those casualty notifications have now, thankfully, faded from memory.

Four, however, remain.

MY FIRST NOTIFICATION…………

My third or fourth day in Norfolk, I was notified of the death of a 19 year old Marine. This notification came by telephone from Headquarters Marine Corps. The information detailed:

*Name, rank, and serial number.

*Name, address, and phone number of next of kin.

*Date of and limited details about the Marine’s death.

*Approximate date the body would arrive at the Norfolk Naval Air  Station.

*A strong recommendation on whether the casket should be opened or closed.

The boy’s family lived over the border in North Carolina, about 60 miles away. I drove there in a Marine Corps staff car. Crossing the state line into North Carolina , I stopped at a small country store / service station / Post Office. I went in to ask directions.

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Three people were in the store. A man and woman approached the small Post Office window. The man held a package. The Store owner walked up and addressed them by name, “Hello John. Good morning Mrs. Cooper.”

I was stunned. My casualty’s next-of-kin’s name was John Cooper!

I hesitated, then stepped forward and said, “I beg your pardon. Are you Mr. and Mrs. John Cooper of (address.)

The father looked at me – I was in uniform – and then, shaking, bent at the waist, he vomited. His wife looked horrified at him and then at me. Understanding came into her eyes and she collapsed in slow motion.

I think I caught her before she hit the floor.

The owner took a bottle of whiskey out of a drawer and handed it to Mr. Cooper who drank. I answered their questions for a few minutes. Then I drove them home in my staff car. The store owner locked the store and followed in their truck. We stayed an hour or so until the family began arriving.

I returned the store owner to his business. He thanked me and said, “Mister, I wouldn’t have your job for a million dollars.” I shook his hand and said; “Neither would I.”

I vaguely remember the drive back to Norfolk. Violating about five Marine Corps regulations, I drove the staff car straight to my house.  I sat with my family while they ate dinner, went into the den, closed the door, and sat there all night, alone.

My Marines steered clear of me for days. I had made my first death notification

THE FUNERALS……….

Weeks passed with more notifications and more funerals. I borrowed Marines from the local Marine Corps Reserve and taught them to conduct a military funeral: how to carry a casket, how to fire the volleys and how to fold the flag.

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When I presented the flag to the mother, wife, or father, I always said, “All Marines share in your grief.” I had been instructed to say, “On behalf of a grateful nation….” I didn’t think the nation was grateful, so I didn’t say that.

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Sometimes, my emotions got the best of me and I couldn’t speak. When that happened, I just handed them the flag and touched a shoulder.

They would look at me and nod. Once a mother said to me, “I’m so sorry you have this terrible job.” My eyes filled with tears and I leaned over and kissed her.

ANOTHER NOTIFICATION……….

Six weeks after my first notification, I had another. This was a young PFC. I drove to his mother’s house. As always, I was in uniform and driving a Marine Corps staff car. I parked in front of the house, took a deep breath, and walked towards the house. Suddenly the door flew open, a middle-aged woman rushed out. She looked at me and ran across the yard, screaming “No! No! No! No!! I hesitated. Neighbors came out.

I ran to her, grabbed her, and whispered stupid things to reassure her. She collapsed. I picked her up and carried her into the house.  Eight or nine neighbors followed. Ten or fifteen minutes later, the father came in followed by ambulance personnel. I have no recollection of leaving.

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The funeral took place about two weeks later. We went through the drill. The mother never looked at me. The father looked at me once and shook his head sadly.

ANOTHER NOTIFICATION……….

One morning as I walked into the office, the phone was ringing.  Sergeant Jolly held the phone up and said, “You’ve got another one, Colonel.” I nodded, walked into my office, picked up the phone, took notes, thanked the officer making the call and hung up. Jolly, who had listened, came in with a special telephone directory that translates telephone numbers into the person’s address and place of employment.

The father of this casualty was a longshoreman. He lived a mile from my office. I called the Longshoreman’s Union Office and asked for the business manager. He answered the phone, I told him who I was, and asked for the father’s schedule. The business manager asked, “Is it his son?” I said nothing. After a moment, he said, in a low voice, “Tom is at home today.” I said, “Don’t call him. I’ll take care of that.” The business manager said, “Aye, Aye Sir,” and then explained, “Tom and I were Marines in WWII.”

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I got in my staff car and drove to the house. I was in uniform. I knocked and a woman in her early forties answered the door. I saw instantly that she was clueless. I asked, “Is Mr. Smith home?” She smiled pleasantly and responded, “Yes, but he’s eating breakfast now.  Can you come back later?” I said, “I’m sorry. It’s important. I need to see him now.” She nodded, stepped back into the beach house and said, “Tom, it’s for you.” A moment later, a ruddy man in his late forties, appeared at the door. He looked at me, turned absolutely pale, steadied himself, and said, “Jesus Christ man, he’s only been there three weeks!”

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Months passed. More notifications and more funerals. Then one day while I was running, Sergeant Jolly stepped outside the building and gave a loud whistle, two fingers in his mouth and held an imaginary phone to his ear.

Another call from Headquarters Marine Corps. I took notes, said, “Got it.” and hung up. I had stopped saying “Thank You” long ago.

Jolly, “Where?”

Me, “Eastern Shore of Maryland . The father is a retired Chief Petty Officer. His brother will accompany the body back from Vietnam.” Jolly shook his head slowly, straightened, and then said, “This time of day, it’ll take three hours to get there and back. I’ll call the Naval Air Station and borrow a helicopter. And I’ll have Captain Tolliver get one of his men to meet you and drive you to the Chief’s home.”

He did, and 40 minutes later, I was knocking on the father’s door. He opened the door, looked at me, then looked at the Marine standing at parade rest beside the car, and asked, “Which one of my boys was it, Colonel?” I stayed a couple of hours, gave him all the information, my office and home phone number and told him to call me, anytime. He called me that evening about 2300 (11:00 PM). “I’ve gone through my boy’s papers and found his will. He asked to be buried at sea. Can you make that happen?” I said, “Yes I can, Chief. I can and I will.”

My wife who had been listening said, “Can you do that?” I told her, “I have no idea. But I’m going to die trying.” I called Lieutenant General Alpha Bowser, Commanding General, Fleet Marine Force Atlantic, at home about 2330, explained the situation, and asked, “General, can you get me a quick appointment with the Admiral at Atlantic Fleet Headquarters?” General Bowser said,” George, you be there tomorrow at 0900. He will see you. I was and the Admiral did. He said coldly, “How can the Navy help the Marine Corps, Colonel.” I told him the story. He turned to his Chief of Staff and said, “Which is the sharpest destroyer in port?” The Chief of Staff responded with a name.

The Admiral called the ship, “Captain, you’re going to do a burial at sea. You’ll report to a Marine Lieutenant Colonel Goodson until this mission is completed.” He hung up, looked at me, and said, “The next time you need a ship, Colonel, call me. You don’t have to sic Al Bowser on me.” I responded, “Aye Aye, Sir” and got out of his office in a hurry.

050716-N-0555B-033 San Diego (July 16, 2005) - Pallbearers of the Ceremonial Honor Guard carry the casket of retired Vice Adm. James B. Stockdale during a memorial service held aboard the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76). Hundreds of friends, family members and shipmates gathered to remember the former prisoner of war and Congressional Medal of Honor recipient who passed away July 5 in Coronado, Calif. U.S. Navy photo by Photographer's Mate Airman Apprentice Christopher D. Blachly (RELEASED)

I went to the ship and met with the Captain, Executive Officer, and the Senior Chief. Sergeant Jolly and I trained the ship’s crew for four days. Then Jolly raised a question none of us had thought of. He said, “These government caskets are air tight. How do we keep it from floating?” All the high priced help including me sat there looking dumb. Then the Senior Chief stood and said, “Come on Jolly. I know a bar where the retired guys from World War II hang out.” They returned a couple of hours later, slightly the worse for wear, and said, “It’s simple; we cut four 12″ holes in the outer shell of the casket on each side and insert 300 lbs. of lead in the foot end of the casket. We can handle that, no sweat.”

The day arrived. The ship and the sailors looked razor sharp. General Bowser, the Admiral, a US Senator, and a Navy Band were on board. The sealed casket was brought aboard and taken below for modification. The ship got underway to the 12-fathom depth.

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The sun was hot. The ocean flat. The casket was brought aft and placed on a catafalque. The chaplain spoke. The volleys were fired. The flag was removed, folded, and I gave it to the father. The band played “Eternal Father Strong to Save.” The casket was raised slightly at the head and it slid into the sea. The heavy casket plunged straight down about six feet. The incoming water collided with the air pockets in the outer shell. The casket stopped abruptly, rose straight out of the water about three feet, stopped, and slowly slipped back into the sea.  The air bubbles rising from the sinking casket sparkled in the in the sunlight as the casket disappeared from sight forever.

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The next morning I called a personal friend, Lieutenant General Oscar Peatross, at Headquarters Marine Corps and said, “General, get me out of here. I can’t take this anymore.” I was transferred two weeks later. I was a good Marine but, after 17 years, I had seen too much death and too much suffering. I was used up.

Vacating the house, my family and I drove to the office in a two-car convoy. I said my goodbyes. Sergeant Jolly walked out with me. He waved at my family, looked at me with tears in his eyes, came to attention, saluted, and said, “Well done, Colonel. Well done.”

I felt as if I had received the Medal of Honor!

A veteran is someone who, at one point, wrote a blank check made payable to ‘The United States of America’ for an amount of up to and including his or her life.

THAT IS HONOR, AND THERE ARE TOO MANY PEOPLE IN THIS COUNTRY WHO NO LONGER UNDERSTAND IT.

This article originally published in The Marine Corps Gazette, Sept. 2007 and was re-posted on several other blogs and forums since then.  All pictures are taken from the internet and added for emphasis.

Read More: http://www.marinecorpsgazette-digital.com/marineco…

Click the link below for an interview with Retired Lt. Col George Goodson – posted December 22nd, 2009 Posted in The SandGram v1.0 

 http://www.thesandgram.com/2009/12/22/internet-legend-ltcol-george-goodson-usmc-ret/

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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’ve created a poll to help identify my website audience – before leaving, can you please click HERE and 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, protests, The vietnam war, The Vietnam war story

The “Napalm” Girl

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Another iconic picture from the Vietnam War.

You might not know her name, but you’ve probably seen a photo of Kim Phuc – She is well-known as the terrified young girl in an iconic photo from the Vietnam War.

The terrified girl had ripped off her burning clothes while fleeing. The children from left to right are: Phan Thanh Tam, younger brother of Kim Phuc, who lost an eye, Phan Thanh Phouc, youngest brother of Kim Phuc, Kim Phuc, and Kim’s cousins Ho Van Bon, and Ho Thi Ting. Behind them are soldiers of the ARVN 25th Division. (AP Photo/Nick Ut)

By chance, you might have read a report or a story on American main stream media over the years that asserted that Kim Phuc, the little nine year old Vietnamese girl running naked from the napalm strike near Trang Bang on 8 June 1972, was burned by Americans bombing Trang Bang.  The picture communicated the horrors of the Vietnam War in a way words never could, helping to end one of the most divisive wars in American history and later becoming a symbol of the cruelty of all wars for children and civilian victims.  This picture was one of the reasons the US lost as the whole world sees it.

And so the perception continued…

Unfortunately the public never realized that no American had involvement in this incident near Trang Bang that burned Phan Thi Kim Phuc. The planes doing the bombing near the village were VNAF ( South Vietnam Air Force) and were being flown by Vietnamese pilots in support of ARVN troops on the ground.

The Vietnamese pilot who dropped the napalm in error is currently living in the United States. Even the AP photographer, Nick Ut, who took the picture was Vietnamese.  Most American soldiers had already left the country by then, the Paris Peace Accords were signed several months later.

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AP photographer, Nick Ut

Here are the front pages of some newspapers when the picture and story published the following day:

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This event was witnessed and reported by UPI television correspondent Christopher Wain, and also reported at the time, by noted correspondent Peter Arnett. Other journalists who were not there, through assumption, sloppy work, or malice, have since reported that the attack was by US aircraft, and have further embellished the story with time.

The facts behind the picture:

The incident in the photo took place on the second day of a three day battle between the North Vietnamese Army (NVA) who occupied the village of Trang Bang and the ARVN (Army of the Republic of Vietnam) who were trying to force the NVA out of the village.

Kim Phúc and her family were residents of the village of Trang Bang, near Saigon (now Ho Chi Minh City) in South Vietnam. On June 8, 1972, she and  her family were at the pagoda attending a religious celebration  when South Vietnamese planes dropped a napalm bomb on Trang Bang, which had been attacked and occupied by North Vietnamese forces.

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Kim Phúc joined a group of civilians and South Vietnamese soldiers who were fleeing from the Caodai Temple to the safety of South Vietnamese forces who held positions 300 meters up the road.  One of the South Vietnamese Air Force pilots mistook this group for enemy soldiers (seeing weapons and uniforms within the group as he passed by 100 ft. overhead at 300 mph, he thought the group might be leading an attack on those nearby friendly forces).  The pilot diverted from his planned bombing run of the enemy bunker complex to attack the charging group. The bombs contained napalm, a highly flammable fuel, which killed and badly burned the people on the ground.  The bombing killed two of Kim Phúc’s cousins and two other villagers. The iconic black-and-white image taken of children fleeing the scene won the Pulitzer Prize and was chosen as the World Press Photo of the Year in 1972.

Thumbnails of the film footage showing the events just before and after the iconic photograph was taken.

Less publicized is film shot by British television cameraman Alan Downes for the British ITN news service and his Vietnamese counterpart Le Phuc Dinh who was working for the American station NBC, which shows the events just before and after the photograph was taken. In the top-left frame, a man (possibly Nick Út) stands and appears to take photographs as a passing airplane drops bombs. A group of children, Kim Phúc among them, run away in fear. After a few seconds, she encounters the reporters dressed in military fatigues, including Christopher Wain who gave her water (top-right frame) and poured some over her burns.  As she turns sideways, the severity of the burns on her arm and back can be seen (bottom-left frame). A crying woman runs in the opposite direction holding her badly burned child (bottom-right frame). Sections of the film shot were included in Hearts and Minds, the 1974 Academy Award-winning documentary about the Vietnam War directed by Peter Davis.

Journalists pour water over the burns of 9 year old Pham Thi Kim Phuc (center) who was injured in the accidental napalm bombing during a battle in Trang Bang. The iconic image by Nick Ut of Kim Phuc running was taken moments before this one. Trang Bang, South Vietnam, June 8, 1972

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Journalists pour water over the burns of 9 year old Pham Thi Kim Phuc (center) 

After snapping the photograph, Ut took Kim Phúc and the other injured children to Barsky Hospital in Saigon, where it was determined that her burns were so severe that she probably would not survive.  Kim remained hospitalized for 14 months, and underwent 17 surgical procedures, including skin transplantation, before she recovered from the burns.  Grateful for the care she had received she later decided to study medicine but struggled to come to terms with her deep physical and psychological scars.

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 Kim Phúc and mother at the hospital

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Ut continued to visit Kim Phúc until he was evacuated during the fall of Saigon.  

Life afterwards…

As a young adult, while studying medicine, Phúc was removed from her university and used as a propaganda symbol by the communist government of Vietnam. In 1986, however, she was granted permission to continue her studies in Cuba. She had converted from her family’s Cao Đài religion to Christianity four years earlier. Phạm Văn Đồng, the then-Prime Minister of Vietnam, became her friend and patron. After arriving in Cuba, she met Bui Huy Toan, another Vietnamese student and her future fiancé. In 1992, Phúc and Toan married and went on their honeymoon in Moscow. During a refueling stop in Gander, Newfoundland, they left the plane and asked for political asylum in Canada, which was granted. The couple now live in Ajax, Ontario near Toronto, and have two children.  In 1996, Phúc met the surgeons who had saved her life. The following year, she passed the Canadian Citizenship Test with a perfect score and became a Canadian citizen.

 She said, looking back, that three miracles happened on that dreadful day:
  • The first was that, despite suffering extensive third degree burns to her left arm, back and side, the soles of her feet were not burnt and she could run.
  •  The second was that after she collapsed and lost consciousness the photographer, Nick Ut, took her to Barsky Hospital in Saigon.
  • The third was that her own mother found her there later that day whilst searching for her children.
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 She believed that no man could ever love her with her disfigurement 

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Goodwill Ambassador for Peace.

On November 10, 1994, Kim Phúc was named a UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador.  In 1997 she established the first Kim Phúc Foundation in the US, with the aim of providing medical and psychological assistance to child victims of war. Later, other foundations were set up, with the same name, under an umbrella organization, Kim Phúc Foundation International.

She has dedicated her life to promoting peace and providing medical and psychological support to help children who are victims of war in Uganda, East Timor, Romania, Tajikistan, Kenya, Ghana and Afghanistan.

Kim Phuc, now 52, lives near Toronto, Canada, with her husband and two children, Thomas and Stephen.

The Girl in the Picture: The Kim Phúc Story, the Photograph and the Vietnam War by Denise Chong is a 1999 biographical and historical work tracing the life story of Kim Phúc. Chong’s historical coverage emphasizes the life, especially the school and family life, of Kim Phúc from before the attack, through convalescence, and into the present time.

The Girl in the Picture deals primarily with Vietnamese and American relationships during the Vietnam War, while examining themes of war, racism, immigration, political turmoil, repression, poverty, and international relationships through the lens of family and particularly through the eyes and everyday lives of women. Kim Phúc and her mother, Nu, provide the lens through which readers of The Girl in the Picture experience war, strife, and the development of communism in Vietnam. Like Chong’s first book, The Girl in the Picture was shortlisted for the Governor General’s Literary Award for non fiction.

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Audio tapes of President Richard Nixon, in conversation with his chief of staff, H. R. Haldeman in 1972, reveal that Nixon mused “I’m wondering if that was fixed” after seeing the photograph.  After the release of this tape, Út commented, “Even though it has become one of the most memorable images of the twentieth century, President Nixon once doubted the authenticity of my photograph when he saw it in the papers on 12 June 1972…. The picture for me and unquestionably for many others could not have been more real. The photo was as authentic as the Vietnam War itself. The horror of the Vietnam War recorded by me did not have to be fixed. That terrified little girl is still alive today and has become an eloquent testimony to the authenticity of that photo. That moment thirty years ago will be one Kim Phúc and I will never forget. It has ultimately changed both our lives.”

Author’s note:  No single photograph turned public opinion against the war in Vietnam; no single image “expedited” its end. The war’s confusing aims and uncertain policy objectives, its duration, and its toll in dead and wounded all were far more decisive to its outcome.

For additional articles about Kim Phúc and this “famous” photo, click the links below:

http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/22/world/kim-phuc-where-is-she-now/ – CNN special June 25, 2015

http://www.kimfoundation.com/modules/contentpage/index.php?file=story.htm – more info about Kim’s foundation

http://www.warbirdforum.com/vphoto.htm  –  responding to the myth.

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Tagged: book sites, books war, cherry soldier, combat, Combat Infantry, digital books, firefights, Grunts, Historical fiction, jungle warfare, Military, novels, protests, The vietnam war, The Vietnam war story

Meaning of Coins Left on a Soldier’s Grave

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You may have visited a cemetery before and may have seen a headstone with coins on it.  Do you know why?  This article descrives the meaning of placing a coin on the grave marker of a soldier that has made the ultimate sacrifice in the line of duty.

Of course, for some cultures it has different meanings.  The ancients would place coins with the deceased with a belief that it would cover the fee to have them cross the river Styx.  The tradition of leaving coins with members of the military, especially men or women that may have died in combat, dates back to the Roman Empire.

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For the United States, the practice became popular during the Vietnam War.  With all of the political turmoil in the 60’s and 70’s surrounding the war, it was a way for friends and comrades to visit a fallen friend and leave a coin as a marker to the family that they had been there to pay respect, without having to contact the family directly, and possibly make a bad situation worse.

As for meanings of different denominations of coins, a friend, or an acquaintance that visits may only leave a penny.  A nickel would be left by someone that may have been through boot camp or trained with them, while someone that served in another platoon in the same company may leave a dime.  A quarter would be left by someone that served in the same outfit or was with the soldier when they died.

Some Vietnam veterans would simply leave coins as a “down payment” to buy their fallen comrades a beer or to play a hand of cards when they would finally be reunited.

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Pennies are left on graves, most of all, in remembrance of the deceased. Leaving a coin from your pocket is a way to leave a part of yourself at the burial site. The coin is a visual reminder that, even in death, the memory of the deceased lives on. It is also a sign of respect to the dead, as it shows that their memory has value to you and is something you want to commemorate.

This is a tradition that has been held onto by members of the United States Military.  The money left at graves in national cemeteries and state veterans cemeteries is left in place for a time, but is eventually collected, and the funds are put toward maintaining the cemetery or paying burial costs for indigent veterans.

The Air Force fighter pilots throw nickels into the grass at grave sites.  This tradition began in the early 50’s when phone calls on public phones were only a nickel.  Prior to leaving on a dangerous mission, pilots would toss a nickel into the grass so his team mates could notify the next of kin if he didn’t make it back.

Jewish people leave stones on headstones – there are many variations to this practice, but most popular is that cemetery visitors leave a pebble or stone as a token to commemorate their visit.  The amount of pebbles gathered over time, unofficially, represent the level of mourners who had visited the grave site.

No matter what the original intention of the coin or pebble may be, it seems clear that when left on a headstone it’s a symbol of remembrance and respect. A way of telling all who pass by that the person buried there was loved and visited often.

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The information used in this article was obtained from Snopes.com (http://www.snopes.com/military/coins.asp).  Variations of this information is also posted on multiple blogs and websites by various authors throughout the internet.  

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Heroes of the Vietnam Generation

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USMC Platoon Leader Vietnam

By James Webb

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Personal pics of James Webb in Vietnam

The rapidly disappearing cohort of Americans that endured the Great Depression and then fought World War II is receiving quite a send-off from the leading lights of the so-called 60’s generation. Tom Brokaw has published two oral histories of “The Greatest Generation” that feature ordinary people doing their duty and suggest that such conduct was historically unique.

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110920092243-william-bennett-story-topwpid-photo-sep-14-2012-622-pm1Chris Matthews of “Hardball” is fond of writing columns praising the Navy service of his father while castigating his own baby boomer generation for its alleged softness and lack of struggle. William Bennett gave a startling condescending speech at the Naval Academy a few years ago comparing the heroism of the “D-Day Generation” to the drugs-and-sex nihilism of the “Woodstock Generation.” And Steven Spielberg, in promoting his film “Saving Private Ryan,” was careful to justify his portrayals of soldiers in action based on the supposedly unique nature of World War II.

An irony is at work here. Lest we forget, the World War II generation now being lionized also brought us the Vietnam War, a conflict which today’s most conspicuous voices by and large opposed, and in which few of them served. The “best and brightest” of the Vietnam age group once made headlines by castigating their parents for bringing about the war in which they would not fight, which has become the war they refuse to remember.
Pundits back then invented a term for this animus: the “generation gap.” Long, plaintive articles and even books were written examining its manifestations. Campus leaders, who claimed precocious wisdom through the magical process of reading a few controversial books, urged fellow baby boomers not to trust anyone over 30. Their elders who had survived the Depression and fought the largest war in history were looked down upon as shallow, materialistic, and out of touch.

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Article in Life Magazine, 1967

Those of us who grew up, on the other side of the picket line from that era’s counter-culture can’t help but feel a little leery of this sudden gush of appreciation for our elders from the leading lights of the old counter-culture. Then and now, the national conversation has proceeded from the dubious assumption that those who came of age during Vietnam are a unified generation in the same sense as their parents were, and thus are capable of being spoken for through these fickle elites.

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In truth, the ” Vietnam generation” is a misnomer. Those who came of age during that war are permanently divided by different reactions to a whole range of counter-cultural agendas, and nothing divides them more deeply than the personal ramifications of the war itself. The sizable portion of the Vietnam age group who declined to support the counter-cultural agenda, and especially the men and women who opted to serve in the military during the Vietnam War, are quite different from their peers who for decades have claimed to speak for them. In fact, they are much like the World War II generation itself. For them, Woodstock was a side show, college protestors were spoiled brats who would have benefited from having to work a few jobs in order to pay their tuition, and Vietnam represented not an intellectual exercise in draft avoidance, or protest marches but a battlefield that was just as brutal as those their fathers faced in World War II and Korea.

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WW II vet Herman Clemenson (center), with his grandson Eric (Operation Iraqi Freedom) and son Jim (Vietnam)

Few who served during Vietnam ever complained of a generation gap. The men who fought World War II were their heroes and role models. They honored their father’s service by emulating it, and largely agreed with their father’s wisdom in attempting to stop Communism’s reach in Southeast Asia .

The most accurate poll of their attitudes (Harris, 1980) showed that 91 percent were glad they’d served their country, 74 percent enjoyed their time in the service, and 89 percent agreed with the statement that “our troops were asked to fight in a war which our political leaders in Washington would not let them win.” And most importantly, the castigation they received upon returning home was not from the World War II generation, but from the very elites in their age group who supposedly spoke for them.

Nine million men served in the military during Vietnam War, three million of whom went to the Vietnam Theater. Contrary to popular mythology, two-thirds of these were volunteers, and 73 percent of those who died were volunteers. While some attention has been paid recently to the plight of our prisoners of war, most of whom were pilots; there has been little recognition of how brutal the war was for those who fought it on the ground.

lost_soldiers_coverDropped onto the enemy’s terrain 12,000 miles away from home, America ‘s citizen-soldiers performed with a tenacity and quality that may never be truly understood. Those who believe the war was fought incompletely on a tactical level should consider Hanoi’s recent admission that 1.4 million of its soldiers died on the battlefield, compared to 58,000 total U.S. dead.

*** Those who believe that it was a “dirty little war” where the bombs did all the work might contemplate that is was the most costly war the U.S. Marine Corps has ever fought–five times as many dead as World War I, three times as many dead as in Korea, and more total killed and wounded than in all of World War II. ***

Significantly, these sacrifices were being made at a time the United States was deeply divided over our effort in Vietnam . The baby-boom generation had cracked apart along class lines as America ‘s young men were making difficult, life-or-death choices about serving. The better academic institutions became focal points for vitriolic protest against the war, with few of their graduates going into the military. Harvard College , which had lost 691 alumni in World War II, lost a total of 12 men in Vietnam from the classes of 1962 through 1972 combined. Those classes at Princeton lost six, at MIT two. The media turned ever more hostile. And frequently the reward for a young man’s having gone through the trauma of combat was to be greeted by his peers with studied indifference of outright hostility.

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What is a hero? My heroes are the young men who faced the issues of war and possible death, and then weighed those concerns against obligations to their country. Citizen-soldiers who interrupted their personal and professional lives at their most formative stage, in the timeless phrase of the Confederate Memorial in Arlington National Cemetery , “not for fame of reward, not for place or for rank, but in simple obedience to duty, as they understood it.” Who suffered loneliness, disease, and wounds with an often-contagious elan. And who deserve a far better place in history than that now offered them by the so-called spokesman of our so-called generation.

Mr. Brokaw, Mr. Matthews, Mr. Bennett, Mr. Spielberg, meet my Marines.

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Personal picture of James Webb

1969 was an odd year to be in Vietnam. Second only to 1968 in terms of American casualties, it was the year made famous by Hamburger Hill, as well as the gut-wrenching Lifecover story showing pictures of 242 Americans who had been killed in one average week of fighting. Back home, it was the year of Woodstock, and of numerous anti-war rallies that culminated in the Moratorium March on Washington. The My Lai massacre hit the papers and was seized upon by the anti-war movement as the emblematic moment of the war. Lyndon Johnson left Washington in utter humiliation.

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Richard Nixon entered the scene, destined for an even worse fate. In the An Hoa Basin southwest of Danang, the Fifth Marine Regiment was in its third year of continuous combat operations. Combat is an unpredictable and inexact environment, but we were well led. As a rifle platoon and company commander, I served under a succession of three regimental commanders who had cut their teeth in World War II, and four different battalion commanders, three of whom had seen combat in Korea. The company commanders were typically captains on their second combat tour in Vietnam , or young first lieutenants like myself who were given companies after many months of “bush time” as platoon commanders in the Basin’s tough and unforgiving environs.

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The Basin was one of the most heavily contested areas in Vietnam , its torn, cratered earth offering every sort of wartime possibility. In the mountains just to the west, not far from the Ho Chi Minh Trail, the North Vietnamese Army operated an infantry division from an area called Base Area 112. In the valleys of the Basin, main-force Viet Cong battalions whose ranks were 80 percent North Vietnamese Army regulars moved against the Americans every day. Local Viet Cong units sniped and harassed. Ridgelines and paddy dikes were laced with sophisticated booby traps of every size, from a hand grenade to a 250-pound bomb.

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The villages sat in the rice paddies and tree lines like individual fortresses, crisscrossed with the trenches and spider holes, their homes sporting bunkers capable of surviving direct hits from large-caliber artillery shells. The Viet Cong infrastructure was intricate and permeating. Except for the old and the very young, villagers who did not side with the Communists had either been killed or driven out to the government controlled enclaves near Danang.

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In the rifle companies, we spent the endless months patrolling ridgelines and villages and mountains, far away from any notion of tents, barbed wire, hot food, or electricity. Luxuries were limited to what would fit inside one’s pack, which after a few “humps” usually boiled down to letter-writing material, towel, soap, toothbrush, poncho liner, and a small transistor radio.

field-of-fire-coverWe moved through the boiling heat with 60 pounds of weapons and gear, causing a typical Marine to drop 20 percent of his body weight while in the bush. When we stopped we dug chest-deep fighting holes and slit trenches for toilets. We slept on the ground under makeshift poncho hootches, and when it rained we usually took our hootches down because wet ponchos shined under illumination flares, making great targets. Sleep itself was fitful, never more than an hour or two at a stretch for months at a time as we mixed daytime patrolling with night-time ambushes, listening posts, foxhole duty, and radio watches. Ringworm, hookworm, malaria, and dysentery were common, as was trench foot when the monsoons came. Respite was rotating back to the mud-filled regimental combat base at An Hoa for four or five days, where rocket and mortar attacks were frequent and our troops manned defensive bunkers at night. Which makes it kind of hard to get excited about tales of Woodstock , or camping at the Vineyard during summer break.

We had been told while training that Marine officers in the rifle companies had an 85 percent probability of being killed or wounded, and the experience of “Dying Delta,” as our company was known, bore that out. Of the officers in the bush when I arrived, our company commander was wounded, the weapons platoon commander wounded, the first platoon commander was killed, the second platoon commander was wounded twice, and I, commanding the third platoons fared no better. Two of my original three-squad leaders were killed, and the third shot in the stomach. My platoon sergeant was severely wounded, as was my right guide. By the time I left, my platoon I had gone through six radio operators, five of them casualties.

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These figures were hardly unique; in fact, they were typical. Many other units; for instance, those who fought the hill battles around Khe Sanh, or were with the famed Walking Dead of the Ninth Marine Regiment, or were in the battle of Hue City or at Dai Do, had it far worse.

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When I remember those days and the very young men who spent them with me, I am continually amazed, for these were mostly recent civilians barely out of high school, called up from the cities and the farms to do their year in hell and then return. Visions haunt me every day, not of the nightmares of war but of the steady consistency with which my Marines faced their responsibilities, and of how uncomplaining most of them were in the face of constant danger. The salty, battle-hardened 20-year-olds teaching green 19-year-olds the intricate lessons of the hostile battlefield. The unerring skill of the young squad leaders as we moved through unfamiliar villages and weed-choked trails in the black of night. The quick certainty when a fellow Marine was wounded and needed help. Their willingness to risk their lives to save other Marines in peril. To this day it stuns me that their own countrymen have so completely missed the story of their service, lost in the bitter confusion of the war itself.

16 Feb 1968, Hue, South Vietnam --- A U.S Marine keeps his head low as he drags a wounded buddy from the ruins of the Citadel's outer wall during fighting. --- Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS

16 Feb 1968, Hue, South Vietnam — A U.S Marine keeps his head low as he drags a wounded buddy from the ruins of the Citadel’s outer wall during fighting. — Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS

Like every military unit throughout history we had occasional laggards, cowards, and complainers. But in the aggregate, these Marines were the finest people I have ever been around. It has been my privilege to keep up with many of them over the years since we all came home. One finds in them very little bitterness about the war in which they fought. The most common regret, almost to a man, is that they were not able to do more for each other and for the people they came to help.

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It would be redundant to say that I would trust my life to these men. Because I already have, in more ways than I can ever recount. I am alive today because of their quiet, unaffected heroism. Such valor epitomizes the conduct of Americans at war from the first days of our existence. That the boomer elites can canonize this sort of conduct in our fathers’ generation while ignoring it in our own is more than simple oversight. It is a conscious, continuing travesty.

Former Secretary of the Navy James Webb was awarded the Navy Cross, Silver Star, and Bronze Star medals for heroism as a Marine in Vietnam.  He went on to become a US Senator from Virginia.  While at Annapolis, varsity boxer Webb once got into the ring with Oliver North.

Wikipedia notes that “Webb’s father, a career officer in the U.S. Air Force, flew B-17s and B-29s during World War II, dropped cargo during the Berlin Airlift, and was later involved in missile programs.”

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This article was originally published on:  Black Hills Veterans Writing Group – http://www.battlestory.org/

Additional pictures added by John Podlaski and obtained from the internet. 

Mr. Webb – Thank you for your service, sir!  Welcome Home!  God Bless!


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The Story of the POW/MIA Flag

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600x265xpowflag.jpg.pagespeed.ic.mnJSpOVFowNewt Heisley, with the POW/MIA flag he designed. (Copyright Don Jones Photography)

*Heisley planned to add color to the black-and-white image, but those ideas were dropped

Article by Marc Leepson.

You see it everywhere—the stark, black-and-white POW/MIA flag—flying in front of VA hospitals, post offices and other federal, state and local government buildings, businesses and homes. It flaps on motorcycles, cars and pickup trucks. The flag has become an icon of American culture, a representation of the nation’s concern for military service personnel missing and unaccounted for in overseas wars.

From the Revolution to the Korean War, thousands of U.S. soldiers, Marines, airmen and sailors have been taken prisoner or gone missing. But it took the Vietnam War—and a sense of abandonment felt by wives and family members of Americans held captive—to bring forth what has evolved into the nation’s POW/MIA symbol.

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The POW/MIA flag is inextricably tied to the National League of POW/MIA Families, which was born in June 1969 as the National League of Families of American Prisoners in Southeast Asia. Its mission was to spread awareness of the mistreatment of prisoners of war at the hands of their captors. It was the brainchild of Karen Butler, wife of Navy pilot Phillip Butler, who had been shot down over North Vietnam in April 1965, and Sybil Stockdale, whose husband, Navy Commander James Bond Stockdale, was the highest-ranking POW in North Vietnam. Stockdale had been held prisoner since September 1965, when his A-4 Skyhawk went down over North Vietnam.

In 1971, League member Mary Hoff came up with the idea of creating a flag as the group’s symbol. Her husband, Navy pilot Lt. Cmdr. Michael Hoff, had been missing in action since January 7, 1970. Mary Hoff called the country’s oldest and largest flag-maker, Annin Flagmakers of Verona, N.J.

“Mary Hoff called out of the blue. I had no idea what the League of Families was when she called,” Norm Rivkees, then Annin’s vice president of sales, said. “She then explained everything and I went to our president, Randy Beard. There was no hesitation. He just said: ‘Absolutely. We would be honored [to create a flag].’”

Rivkees turned over the job of designing the flag to Annin’s small advertising agency, Hayden Advertising, where the task was assigned to graphic artist Newton F. Heisley.

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Heisley, who died in 2009, had served in World War II as a C-46 twin-engine transport pilot with the 433rd Troop Carrier Group. After coming home from the war with a Bronze Star, he received a degree in Fine Arts from Syracuse University and worked as a graphic artist at the Pittsburgh Post Gazette before going to work for Hayden.

After getting the POW/MIA flag assignment, Heisley sat down at his drawing table and sketched three different designs. The one he chose had an image of a gaunt man in profile, with a guard tower and a strand of barbed wire in the background—the design that we recognize today.

When Annin began producing the flag, Heisley was still tweaking its design. He planned to add color to the black-and-white image, but those ideas were dropped.

Heisley modeled the flag’s silhouette on his 24-year-old son, who was on leave from the Marines and looking gaunt while getting over hepatitis. Heisley also penned the words that are stitched on the banner, “You are not forgotten.”

As Heisley told the Colorado Springs Gazette in 1997, the flag “was intended for a small group. No one realized it was going to get national attention.”

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It took nearly a decade, but the POW/MIA flag began getting attention in a big way in the early 1980s. In 1982 it became the only flag, other than the Stars and Stripes, to fly over the White House, after it was first displayed there on POW/MIA Recognition Day. In 1989 the flag was installed in the Capitol Rotunda.

It also has the distinction, historians and flag experts believe, of being the only non-national flag that any federal government anywhere in the world has mandated to be flown regularly. That began with a 1990 law to recognize the POW/MIA flag and designate the third Friday of September as National POW/MIA Recognition Day.

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In 1998, Section 1082 of the Defense Authorization Act—codified as Title 36, Section 902 of the U.S. Code—mandated that the POW/MIA flag be flown over the Capitol, the White House, the Korean and Viet-nam Veterans Memorials, the offices of the secretaries of State, Defense and Veterans Affairs, of the Selective Service System, and on the grounds or in the lobbies of every major military installation, every post office and all VA Medical Centers and national cemeteries on six days: POW/MIA Recognition Day, Armed Forces Day, Memorial Day, Flag Day, Fourth of July and Veterans Day.

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Since then, some states have passed laws that also mandate flying the POW/MIA flag. Oregon, for example, requires that the POW/MIA flag be flown on or near the state capitol on the same holidays as the national law. In Washington, a 2002 law requires every state agency, every state institution of higher education, and every county, city and town to display the flag on the same six holidays. Florida requires the flag at state parks year round. Arizona enacted a law requiring the POW/MIA flag to be flown over every town and city hall, Superior Court building and county office on the designated holidays. And in 2011, Idaho became the first state to require that the POW/MIA flag be flown over all state buildings, 24 hours a day, seven days a week “or until such time as all our unaccounted for and missing members of the Armed Forces return.”

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Today, there are more than 83,000 American service men and women – over 33,000 of them Sailors – missing in battle since WWII. Behind that number are thousands of families who have endured the loss and uncertainty of waiting for their loved ones to finally come home

pow-mia-pewter-biker-jacket-pin_2084067Marc Leepson, arts editor and senior writer for The VVA Veteran, is the author of seven books, including Flag: An American Biography, a history of the American flag from its beginnings to the 21st century.

Originally published in the June 2012 issue of Vietnam magazine. 


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Operation Dewey Canyon – Sappers Attack Marines on FSB Cunningham

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By Michael R. Conroy – All photos were obtained on the internet and inserted into this article by John Podlaski.

Copy of Dewey Canyon Map Website

The mission of Operation Dewey Canyon was clear — disrupt and destroy enemy logistics in the A Shau Valley, particularly in the NVA’s Base Area 611. As described by Samuel Lipsman and Edward Doyle in Fighting for Time, part of Boston Publishing Company’s multivolume Vietnam Experience, Base Area 611 “straddled the Vietnamese-Laotian border just north of the A Shau Valley and south of the Da Drong River….More than three-quarters of the base area was believed to lie in Laos, along Route 922. This route later joined Route 548 to provide easy access for the NVA into the Da Nang-Hue coastal region.”

NVA engineering units, inactive for months, had reopened several major infiltration routes. This included increased enemy activity along Route 922 as it enters the A Shau Valley in the Republic of South Vietnam from Laos. The intelligence reports brought additional scrutiny on the border areas. Enemy forces laid down heavy volumes of anti-aircraft fire against U.S. Helicopters and other responding high-performance reconnaissance aircraft. Surveillance reported sightings of sophisticated wire communications networks and major engineering works throughout Base Camp Area
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611 with, at times, more than 1,000 trucks per day on the move south.Evidence strongly indicated that major elements of the 6th and 9th NVA regiments were attempting to work their way eastward through the A Shau Valley. There they could be reinforced by three battalions of the 812th Regiment, which after the Tet Offensive of 1968 had pulled back into the jungle sanctuary on the border for resupply and infusion of replacements, and by elements of the 4th and 5th NVA regiments, which had withdrawn into the A Shau Valley and Laos under constant U.S. and ARVN pressure during 1968.
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It seemed obvious that the NVA intended to launch a Tet offensive of some kind in 1969, although probably not of the devastating magnitude of the 1968 Tet. Any form of victory, even one of minor or only temporary tactical value, could have a significant influence upon the civilian population of South Vietnam and the United States, with a more far-reaching effect upon bargaining positions at the Paris peace talks then underway. The enemy’s jungle logistics system would therefore have to be destroyed before it could be used.No longer content to simply hold ground and fight insurgent forces within South Vietnam, U.S. commanders decided that it was time to take the battle to the North Vietnamese Army. To address the threat of a North Vietnamese invasion from Laos they would strike at NVA headquarters and logistics elements in the border areas, thereby denying the enemy access into the critical populated areas of the coastal lowlands of Quang Tri, Thua Thien and Quang Nam provinces.
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                                                                       General Raymond G. Davis
General Creighton Abrams, the MACV commander, wanted an operation to be conducted during the winter period of 1968-69, believing that it had great tactical promise in advancing the issues of the war. General Raymond G. Davis, the 3rd Marine Division commander, had discussed such an operation with General Richard Stilwell, XXIV Corps commander.
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a-shau-valleyIt would not be easy, for the enemy had chosen the site of their base camp well. The terrain in the A Shau Valley was as inhospitable and formidable as any in Vietnam.Dewey_Canyon_photo_IBecause of its experience operating in the rugged mountains and thick jungle canopy of western Quang Tri province, the U.S. 9th Marine Regiment was selected to conduct Operation Dewey Canyon. The men of the regiment were mentally and physically prepared for the rigors of Dewey Canyon’s terrain. They brought to the operation experience in jungle survival and landing zone construction, as well as skills in the conduct of mountain warfare, including heliborne operations and the fire support base concept.1During the five-day planning period allowed for the operation, an XM-3 Airborne Personnel Detector picked up evidence of enemy troop concentrations atop a 2,100-foot-long ridgeline 4 1/2 miles from the Laotian border which would be developed into Fire Support Base Cunningham, the eventual command center for the operation.

Phase One of the operation, including all pre-D-day activities dealing with getting the artillery support established in the area, began with the opening of three fire support bases (Henderson, Tun Tavern and Shiloh) on January 19.

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After the area had been mostly cleared by aviation ordnance, Company I, 3rd Battalion, 9th Marines (I/3/9), and Company M, 3rd Battalion, 9th Marines (M/3/9), conducted heliborne assaults into landing zones (LZs) India and Mike 1700 meters apart on Co Ca Va Ridge. This is a boomerang-shaped ridge approximately a half-mile long, running linearly east to west, with its southern flank an almost sheer cliff to the valley below. Meeting no resistance, the way was clear for Company K, 3rd Battalion, 9th Marines, and engineers to sweep in and begin construction of the fire support base.

DEFENSE DEPT PHOTO (MARINE CORPS) A192845

DEFENSE DEPT PHOTO (MARINE CORPS) A192845

There was no secrecy involved in the creation of a fire support base. It was an anthill of activity, a major engineering feat and the scene of massive organized confusion as chain saws bit into the huge jungle hardwoods. Numerous explosions sent rocks, splinters, tree limbs, even whole trees, raining down through clouds of choking, rising dust.

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The rapid buildup of support facilities at FSB Cunningham was impressive, essentially turning the fire support base into a mini–combat base. When placed atop a dominant terrain feature, the fire support bases were defensible but, as “fixed” forward positions established in the enemy’s territory by forceable entry, they were beacons and targets quickly placed under constant observation by the enemy.

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From the moment the Marines landed on Co Ca Va Ridge and began their construction efforts they were under constant enemy surveillance. It was soon obvious to the NVA observers that this was the operational command center for all Marine operations in the area. Accordingly, an NVA sapper unit was ordered to do a feasibility study upon which to formulate assault plans against the fire support base.

DEFENSE DEPT PHOTO (MARINE CORPS) A192682

DEFENSE DEPT PHOTO (MARINE CORPS) A192682

The Marines knew the enemy’s tactics well. Accordingly, the infantry dug their fighting holes, usually two-man positions, no more than 50 feet apart. As much barbed wire as could be obtained was strung in several different configurations all around the outpost, with additional barriers, such as flares, trip-wire booby traps and anti-personnel mines, placed at what were perceived to be the most likely avenues of enemy approach.

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Interlocking fields of fire for individual and crew-served weapons were established so that the defenders achieved a 360-degree integrated pattern of defensive fire. Outposts with good vantage points were established. Listening posts were also established that would intercept attacks or attempts at infiltration before allowing enemy forces to approach close to the defensive lines. Because of their forward and exposed natures, the location of those outposts was continually changing. Additional protection for the fire support base was provided by constant patrols around the position.

The fire support base in no way resembled a secure area with all the trappings of a permanent installation. As operations proceeded, empty ammunition crates were broken down and utilized as footpaths. Garbage disposal, although a problem, was never a high priority. Plastic and cardboard wrappings, expended artillery shells and empty C-ration cans quickly stacked up. Due to the proximity of large stores of ammunition, engineering explosives and powder charges, trash fires were not allowed. The trash pits and bunkers were almost immediately infested with legions of mice and rats.

DEFENSE DEPT PHOTO (MARINE CORPS) A800573

DEFENSE DEPT PHOTO (MARINE CORPS) A800573

The bunkers were dark and musty. Beds were made of whatever could be scrounged or improvised. There were no windows. Available electricity was reserved for communications and equipment. New men soon learned that peanut butter, when burned, made a dim candle. Inside the bunkers the men attracted hordes of voracious gnats and mosquitoes. Insect bites became ulcerated wounds constantly irritated by salty sweat. Every sore turned into jungle rot.

Photo-2--Cunningham, Mail was infrequently delivered. Hot meals were a thing of the past. Supplies were low and, for several days at a time, nonexistent. The men found themselves eating cold C-ration spaghetti for breakfast and being thankful to have it. There was little water for cooking or shaving and not much more for drinking.

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Then there was the constant enemy fire. There was nothing routine about being on the receiving end of an artillery barrage, even when the attacks came daily or hourly and there were no casualties. Nerves were constantly frayed. Marines in underground positions held their breath and cast nervous eyes to straining timbers as loose dirt sifted through their accumulation of timbers, runway matting, sandbags and logs overhead. Equipment was damaged and efficiency impaired. The effect was cumulatively debilitating.

DEFENSE DEPT PHOTO (MARINE CORPS) A192685

DEFENSE DEPT PHOTO (MARINE CORPS) A192685

Finally, there was the danger of ground attack. A sapper unit of the NVA 812th Regiment had been assigned the mission of attacking FSB Cunningham. Its primary objective was to penetrate the Marine defenses and inflict maximum casualties, destroy equipment, ordnance and installations, and then withdraw. A sapper attack was not designed to seize and hold or occupy a prominent terrain feature.

The sappers took the time to professionally and skillfully plan their attack. A week was devoted to executing a detailed reconnaissance of the fire support base. The terrain was minutely analyzed, defensive patrol patterns studied, crew-served weapons’ positions plotted, obstacles sketched and estimates made of the time that would be required to breach defensive barriers.

DEFENSE DEPT PHOTO (MARINE CORPS) A800583

DEFENSE DEPT PHOTO (MARINE CORPS) A800583

By February 16, 1969, the NVA sappers were ready to commence their attacks on FSB Cunningham. The period between their final reconnaissance and the commencement of their attack was allocated to briefings and rehearsals. Sand tables had been prepared from detailed sketches made of all the Marine installations. All possible approach routes had been carefully reviewed and the concept of terrain appreciation utilized in developing the plan of attack. The natural and man-made obstacles had been plotted. The Marines’ flares and detonation devices had been located. Each sapper was given precise instructions on his mission. Supporting fire concentrations had been planned, checked and rechecked. The attack signals, passwords, and withdrawal and rally point signals were memorized by all hands. The sappers used a flare system as a source of communications: red — area hard to get into; white — withdrawal; green — victory; green followed by white — reinforcements requested. Personnel, ammunition and weapons were carefully checked.

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The sappers were organized into five groups. Group 1, led by Comrade An, consisted of 16 men divided into four-man teams. The first team was assigned to attack the command operations center and mortar positions. The second team was to attack to the right and link up with Comrade Bong’s Group 2 at the helicopter landing zone. The third team was to attack to the left, assault through the landing zone and link up with Group 3, led by Comrade Tan. The fourth team was to attack to the front toward the landing zone.

Group 2 consisted of 15 men divided into four teams led by Comrade Bong. His first four-man team was assigned to attack and destroy the artillery fire direction control center and other battery facilities on the east end of the fire support base. The second team was to attack artillery positions to the right while the third four-man team attacked artillery positions to the left. The remaining three-man team was designated the group’s reserve force.

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Comrade Tam’s Group 3 consisted of 12 men divided into four three-man teams concentrating on the west end of the fire support base. The first team was assigned to attack artillery positions to the left. The second team was to attack to the right, advancing and exploiting contact with the Group 1 leader, Comrade An. The third team was to attack directly forward and then link up with a fourth group, led by Comrade Pha, for the mop-up operations. The fourth team would be held in reserve.

Pha’s group was organized to function as the extraction force to assist in the withdrawal of the groups assaulting specific objectives. A fifth group of over 100 men would provide the assaulting forces with a base of fire utilizing RPGs, mortars, automatic weapons and small-arms fire.

The attack forces moved out from their various base camps at 7:30 a.m. Using previously reconned routes, they executed a covered approach to their final assembly areas. Movement as initiated many hours prior to the assault phase as the sappers had deliberately chosen the most difficult avenues of approach to the target in order to avoid observation.

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By 6 p.m. all the NVA sapper groups were only 100 meters outside the concertina-wire obstacles surrounding FSB Cunningham. The NVA sappers slowly crept to assault positions just outside the defensive wire, aided by reduced visibility. There was little moonlight and a thick blanket of fog enveloped not only the fire support base but all routes of entry to it. Although the approach was slow and cautious, the assault itself would be made with utmost speed. The sappers assumed that the majority of the defenders would be driven into their bunkers by the mortar attack that would precede their assault. The sappers knew that once the defensive obstacles were breached under this covering fire, the bunkers would become death traps for the Marines.

In anticipation of the Lunar New Year (or Tet) cease-fire, the roaring of the big artillery pieces on FSB Cunningham fell silent at midnight, although the allied countrywide 24-hour truce went into effect at 6 p.m. on February 16.

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At precisely 2 a.m., the NVA mortar sections commenced placing accurate supporting fire on previously plotted primary targets, mortar positions, the command bunker, artillery positions and communications bunkers. The Marines could hear the mortar rounds as they were tubed. The devastatingly accurate mortar fire forced the Marines into their bunkers where they felt safe due to a minimum overhead cover of at least four layers of sandbags.

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n the midst of the noise, damage and confusion, it was immediately obvious that key installations were the target of the intense barrage. The Marines in fighting holes on the perimeter kept their heads down.

The Marine defensive positions were manned on the northern slope by the men of Lima Company, 3rd Battalion, 9th Marine Regiment (L/3/9). Defensive positions on the flanks and along the southern edge of the ridge were manned by a combination of Marines from the artillery units and Colonel Barrow’s headquarters group. In addition, a reaction force of 50 Marines from the communications, engineer and staff sections of the headquarters group were on standby as a reserve defensive force.

The mortar barrage reached a crescendo at 2:15 a.m. as the NVA assault groups began their efforts to breach the defensive obstacles. The initial assault wave came from the northeast. The sappers made liberal use of bangalore torpedoes fashioned from half-pound blocks of TNT lashed together between bamboo sticks. The ingenious attack route lay through one of the many trash dumps with well-worn paths leading to every major battery facility.

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Mats, brush and other local materials were thrown across the barbed wire obstacles. As the mortar fire was lifted, rocket-propelled Chicom grenades, satchel charges and the bangalore torpedoes created the impression that the mortars were still firing, serving to keep the defenders on the perimeter positions inside their bunkers. The Marines were suffering from too many head-ringing explosions to notice the difference. For hours before the cease-fire began, the artillery batteries at the fire support bases had been hammering away in direct support of other defensive positions. The cacophony of noise was deafening. The NVA sappers who broke through the defensive wire barriers tossed concussion grenades and satchel charges into every open hole they could find. The RPGs and automatic weapons fire of the NVA base group was concentrated on the firing slits and ports of the bunkers. Although the situation was confusing, the Marines quickly realized that they were under ground attack and responded ferociously, organizing an effort to clear the base in the face of heavy enemy mortar and recoilless rifle fire.

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The sapper attack was an unforgettable experience for navy Lt. Cmdr. (chaplain) David Brock, who later told the division chaplain: “During the early moments of the attack, an NVA soldier stuck his head into the tent where I and two others were rising, but fortunately, did not throw a grenade inside. A grenade was thrown into a small bunker a few feet away, killing two men.”

Chaplain Brock remembers: “The firefight lasted until almost 7:45 a.m. and during this time I stayed with the doctor in the Aid Station in order to administer last rites and to help with the wounded. For two hours it looked as if the Aid Station would be made a last stand. During the firefight various thoughts went through my mind, such as: Would we live through this? Will the men be able to hold out? How were the young men on the lines doing? I must admit that I was scared but the feeling soon passed because we were too busy. The others were afraid too but not one of them showed his fear. As a matter of fact, it warmed one’s heart to see just how well these young men did in the face of death.”

Lieutenant Commander Brock was one of the regiment’s rather unique lot of chaplains, who almost seemed as if they were handpicked to serve with this particular group of hardnosed Marines. Brock had seen action in the European Theatre of Operations as a U.S. Army sergeant in World War II. He earned a Navy Commendation Medal with combat “V” and a Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry with a Silver Star in Vietnam.

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The officer in charge of the fire support base was partially buried in a caved-in bunker during the mortar attack. As he crawled out, he came face to face with one of the sappers. The Marine had a grenade in his hand but was too close to the enemy soldier to use it. He leaped on the surprised enemy soldier and bludgeoned him to death with the heavy base of the grenade.

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Using his personal knife as his primary weapon, the company gunnery sergeant killed several of the sappers in hand-to-hand combat. Marines from the 106mm battery, who had manned a machine gun in the southeast portion of the fire support base, assaulted and killed six NVA soldiers who were attempting to organize a strong point inside the perimeter. The cooks from India Battery accounted for 13 enemy killed when they manned a .50-caliber machine gun.

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NVA sappers toss satchel charges into bunkers; by combat artist LtCol Michael Leahy

The defensive perimeter had been penetrated by several dozen sappers wearing only olive green shorts and skullcaps. They all carried packs full of explosives and were armed with shoulder-fired RPGs, satchel charges, bamboo mines, small arms and grenades.

The artillery battalion’s fire direction control center was put out of action, as was one howitzer. During the period from 4:10 a.m. to daylight only one of the Marines’ mortars remained in action. The mortar team stayed with their weapon throughout the assault, re-establishing communications with the commander in the fire direction control center and firing a total of 380 rounds.

Corporal Jim Best recalls the attack as a blur of indistinct memories. “There were red and green tracers flashing overhead, men screaming and explosions everywhere. I lay there hugging the ground thinking I may not get out, wondering if we’d been overrun.” Although penetrated, the Marine lines held and at times only a scant five feet separated the combating forces. Men not actively engaged in direct confrontations with the enemy forces were busy coordinating HEAT (high-explosive anti-tank) and illumination artillery fire or providing other support services. Artillery officers were coordinating fire missions while at the same time an air officer was on the radio requesting helicopter gunship support.

Lieutenant Raymond C. Benfatti, commanding officer of Company L, was severely wounded by an impacting rocket-propelled grenade during the initial moments of the attack. Ignoring his painful injuries, Benfatti steadfastly refused medical evacuation and boldly shouted words of encouragement to his men. He directed their fire against the infiltrating sappers and two supporting infantry companies until the hostile sapper unit was ejected from the perimeter.

Despite the enemy rounds impacting all around him, Lieutenant Benfatti quickly organized a reaction force and supervised his Marines in evacuating the casualties and replacing wounded Marines in defensive emplacements. As the enemy support units pressed their attack upon the perimeter, Benfatti continued his determined efforts, repeatedly exposing himself to intense hostile fire as he directed the efforts of his men in repulsing the enemy attack.

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A flare ship was called on station to provide illumination outside the perimeter wire. It would remain on station throughout the night as the battle raged until dawn. With flares lighting up the night, a group of clerks, radio operators and engineers began a systematic drive to eliminate the enemy forces within the perimeter. Throughout the battle, Benfatti called for artillery fires from the batteries located on the mutually supporting firebases to surround FSB Cunningham in a curtain of hot steel. This supporting fire prevented enemy reinforcements and exploitation of breaches in the wire and also rendered impossible the retreat of the sappers already inside the compound.

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At about 5:30 a.m. the Marines completed the reorganization of their positions and began slowly but methodically to break up the sapper attack. As Dawn broke, the spirited defenders were mopping up the remnants of the enemy assault force. Contact, however, was not broken until 7 a.m.

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Jim Best described the end of the battle: “The fighting slowed and it was a few moments before I realized that the fire support base was dead silent. There were no sounds, only the fear of not knowing the exact situation.”

As the sun rose, the light and warmth it brought created a calming sense of temporary peace at FSB Cunningham. When it became apparent that the NVA had withdrawn for good, the counting began. Lieutenant Benfatti, who would win the Silver Star Medal for his actions during the attack, supervised the medical evacuation of casualties and ascertained the welfare of his Marines, resolutely refusing medical attention for his own wounds until all the other wounded men had been cared for.

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The Marines found a total of 25 NVA bodies inside their defensive wires. One of those bodies was that of a sapper officer. Documents found on his body were examined, translated and analyzed by the 15th Interrogator/Translator Team, revealing the detailed planning of the attack described above.

Searching the enemy bodies, the Marines captured 26 RPG rounds, 25 Chicom grenades, 253 bamboo explosive devices, seven rifle grenades, 12 packs, two radios, 11 AK-47 rifles and numerous signal flares. The packs contained large quantities of marijuana and other drugs.

“The use of narcotics,” platoon leader Milton J. Teixeira said, “mad them a lot harder to kill. Not one of the gooks we had inside the perimeter had less than three or four holes in him. Usually it took a grenade or something to stop him completely.”

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A final tally of the battle damage revealed four Marines killed in action, 46 Marines wounded in action and 37 NVA killed in action. In “E” Battery, 2nd Battalion, 12 Marines, had taken heavy battle damage. Surveying the smoke-shrouded fire support base, Colonel Barrow said: “They’ll probably think twice from here on out before taking on another Marine headquarters group. These lads did a fantastic job in what could have been a nasty situation. They were 100 percent professional fighting men; good Marines all the way.”

This article was written by Michael R. Conroy and originally titled, “Sapper Attack in the A Shau”, and published in the August 1991 issue of VietnamMagazine. 

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Ghost Warriors (Guest Blog)

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War-Stories.com
Tiger Force Recon Ghost Warriors  
by: TJ McGinley
Tiger Force Recon
1/327/101st Abn. Div.
Vietnam 1968-1969
© Copyright 2009

This article originally appeared on the following website:  http://www.war-stories.com/ and is printed here with the permission of the author.

In November of 1968, I was walking slack for 1/327/101st Airborne Divisions recon team  “Tiger Force,” in the jungle covered mountains of the Central Highlands, about 50 miles west of Hue, South Vietnam.  John Gertsch was walking point that day when we came across a well-used trail.  Gertsch stopped and put his left fist up, which meant that everyone stop and be perfectly quiet.  Then he spread his hand out in an open gesture, which meant, quietly, get down and pay attention.  We did.  Gertsch and I checked the trail for tracks and any another other signs of enemy activity.  We found fresh prints and reported back to the lieutenant, who told us to set up an ambush.

Within 15 minutes, a small patrol of six NVA appeared on the trail.  We waited until they were in the right spot, made sure there were no more NVA behind them and then opened fire.  Afterward, we cleared the trail, cleaned up any evidence that we were there and left the area.  One of the NVA soldiers was an officer and was carrying maps and paperwork.  We walked to a suitable site and requested a helicopter to pick-up and take the NVA paperwork to the rear to be analyzed.

We hiked for another hour and set up a night defensive position.  Early in the evening, Gertsch, Zeke, Campos and I, quietly discussed the day’s events before taking our defensive positions.  As I sat in silence, just listening to the jungle, I reflected back on just how I got to be in this elite unit of sky soldiers.

When the United States first started sending significant numbers of troops to Vietnam, we were using WWII tactics., which didn’t work against the North Vietnamese, who were waging guerrilla warfare, and it soon became apparent that superior firepower and company-sized units were ineffective.  A group of 180 men moving through the jungle are loud, the noise carrying for miles and allowing the enemy time to react to our presence.

Late in 1965, a young and highly decorated Lt. Col. in the 101st Airborne Division, David Hackworth convinced his superiors we would have a greater success using smaller, well-armed, camouflaged units that could move quietly through the jungle. The first of these groups comprised from hand-picked, experienced volunteers from the First Brigade of the 101st.  They became known as Tiger Force.

I was the second of nine children, four of which were the draft age in 1967.  The oldest was in the Marines already; one was in military school, and another was about to graduate from high school.  I’d just graduated and had no plans for college.  Besides, I felt if I went to Vietnam the chances of my brothers going would be slim.  It worked, I went, and everybody else stayed home.

I arrived in Bien Hoa, Vietnam, on April 4, 1968, and spent a month or so in additional training in the 90th replacement.  Afterward, we flew north to Camp Eagle where I spent a single night before I took the first of countless helicopter rides along with a few other new guys and me, we were “Cherries” going to the firebase, Veghel.

The replacements and I spent one-hour there then walked out through the jungle to meet my company on a hilltop overlooking the mountains and valleys of the Central Highlands.   Little did I know that walking through some of the most difficult and remote terrains in South Vietnam would be what I did for the next fourteen months.

Vietnam was divided into three zones. The northern zone was I Corps which consisted of battle grounds like the DMZ, The Rock Pile, Khe Sanh and the closest supply routes from North Vietnam into the south, the A-Shau Valley. I Corps was manned by conventional large scale, well armed, well trained and well resupplied NVA Regular Army Divisions. Farther south, II and III Corps were dominated by enemy units called the Viet Cong that used more of a guerrilla warfare tactic.

2 Squad, 2 Platoon, C Co. 1/327/101 1968

2 Squad, 2 Platoon, C Co. 1/327/101 1968

Because I was unmarried, I was assigned the job of walking point for Charlie Company, 1st/327, 101st Airborne Division, a line company with roughly 120 men.  During the month of May 1968, we operated in an area fifty miles west of Hue know as the Ruong-Ruong Valley.  During a daily patrol, we discovered something that illustrated how determined our enemy was.  We walked into a natural cathedral fashioned by an eighty-foot canopy, covering a 300-yard diameter clearing, and surrounded on three sides by a river.  The overhead foliage is camouflaging it from the air.

In its center, we found one of the largest caches of enemy weapons ever found during the Vietnam War.  The inventory included five Chinese 85mm Howitzers, several crew-served anti-aircraft guns, hundreds of rifles, mortars, anti-tank weapons and in the surrounding jungle, 58 Russian trucks filled with misc. equipment.  When the officers reviewed a topographical map, they could trace the enemy’s route to transport the weapons from Laos, through the A-Shau Valley and into the Ruong-Ruong where we found them.

85 Howitzers in the Roung-Roung Valley 1968.

Above Photo: 85 Howitzers in the Roung-Roung Valley 1968

Under normal circumstances, we never stayed in one location longer than one night but with all this enemy weaponry to protect we were told to do something I had never done before — dig in.  I wasn’t much of a believer in foxholes. I preferred the idea of silence and camouflage over digging a hole. However, this time, my excavation was six feet long, four feet wide, and two feet deep.

I felt that they knew exactly where I was in this hole, and regardless of how deep I could dig it, it wouldn’t do me any good.

Humpin' the trail.

Humpin the trail

On our second day at this site, we heard that a friendly unit would penetrate the perimeter at our sector.  From out of the jungle came the most impressive group of soldiers I had seen to date, Tiger Force, clad in French camouflage fatigues, and carrying sawed-off shotguns and AK47s.  None of them wore a helmet; these men had a look of people who meant business.  I had walked point long enough and knew that a helmet was a detriment in the ability to hear, so I never wore one.

Tiger Force camped with us that night, and their quiet confidence and field expertise drew me in like a magnet.  I knew at that moment, that if I were going to spend the next several months in the jungle, I wanted to be with people who knew what they were doing and this unit of about thirty men had that effect on me.  In the morning, I discovered that the Tigers had vanished, slipping silently into the jungle while we slept.

Charlie Company stayed at the site until all the weapons had been either removed or destroyed. Afterward, we continued our mission and headed west toward Laos. When we reached the border, we turned north. The NVA used The A-Shua Valley as an important supply route to funnel weapons and supplies, such as what we found in the Ruong-Ruong Valley.  At certain times of the year, the rains prevented Americans from moving into this valley because aircraft wouldn’t be able to support them.  The enemy used this time and weather to their advantage.  Our objective was to protect a corps of engineers who were planting a minefield across the western entrance to the valley off the Ho Chi Min trail from Laos.

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Ashau Valley

On The first of June 1968, we were on a mountain overlooking Laos to our west and the A Shau to the east. That afternoon we witnessed the single most spectacular display of firepower I had ever seen. We watched a B-52 strike along the center of the valley.

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B-52 Arc Light Mission

We could not hear the planes or the bombs as they fell, but the explosions were incredible to watch.  We were about 10 miles away, and felt the percussion, and then heard shrapnel flying through the trees above us. Those who were not lying on the ground – suddenly became a part of it.  The barrage threw trees and debris hundreds of feet into the air, the blasts, continuous without any time elapsing between detonations.

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Our commander was Tom Kinane, who had an uncanny ability to look at a topographical map and knew where the enemy was.  He also informed us that getting past the fortifications around the Valley would be the most dangerous part of our mission.  He was right!   There were semi-permanent NVA complexes both above and below ground on several of the high ridges.  It was between two of these fortifications that my squad walked into an ambush while on patrol.  Within two minutes, nine of the eleven men were wounded.  Only the man at the rear of the column and myself were not wounded.

The rugged mountains along the Laotian/South Vietnamese border harbored thousands of NVA troops. 1968.

All the enemy had to do to stop the advance of the Americans was to wound a few of us, and everything would grind to a halt.   They knew that we would cut a hole in the jungle to accommodate medevac helicopters.  This gave the NVA time to regroup and better prepare for the advancing Americans.

By the morning of June 3rd, we had worked our way to a point high on a ridge facing north.  To the west was the Laotian border, to the east, open terrain of the valley floor and just ahead of us to the north on the other side of the entrance to the valley was a large mountain.  The U.S. military identified it was Hill 937; the Vietnamese called it Dong Ap Bai, and a year later Senator Ted Kennedy called it “Hamburger Hill”.

We descended from the south down the mountain to the floor of the AShua Valley.  Once there, our objective changed from exploring jungle covered mountains – most of which were virgin – never seeing humans prior to our visit, to protecting a unit of engineers on one of the most heavily used NVA infiltration routes into the south. The engineers needed somebody to watch over them as they laid a minefield across the northern entrance to the valley.  The valley floor comprised of 8-foot high Elephant grass but no dense jungle or cover, so it was imperative that this operation wrap up as quickly as possible.

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Elephant Grass – each strand has razor sharp edges

Orders soon came around requiring the 1/327 to find out if there was any enemy activity on Hill 937.  Delta Company led the way followed by Charlie Company in support.  Once on the valley floor, our personal security evaporated.  For the first time in months, large groups of men have totally exposed themselves with without a canopy, jungle, and no place to hide in this enemy stronghold.

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Finally, we reached the other side of the valley and started our ascent up Hill 937.  Soon Delta Company began receiving fire from somewhere to our front.  It wasn’t long before we encountered reinforced bunkers, heavy machine gun fire, and mortar rounds from what seemed like every direction, way more fire power than we’d experienced to date.  Our orders were to find out if there was enemy activity up there, not to take the hill.  As soon as we confirmed that the hill was occupied, we pulled back and returned to our sanctuary on the other side of the valley floor where we called the Air Force to deal with the mountain stronghold.  By the time we returned to our overlook position, the entire battalion was on the valley floor protecting the engineers.

For the next three hours, jets dropped napalm, 250-pound bombs, and what seemed like everything except nukes on this hill – green tracers from NVA anti-aircraft guns chased the aircraft across the sky.  Never have I seen such bold action taken by the enemy as I did that day.  This hill was different from all the mountains we had explored so far because of its strategic location, guarding the Laotian border and the entrance to the valley.  To our north and southwest, massive mountains bordered the valley, the Laotian border was to our west – we finally realized that we were standing in the middle of the Ho-Chi-Minh Trail.

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Hill 937 before the major battle and assault

Time was crucial, and we knew we were being watched from the surrounding mountains.  The engineers finished their job just before nightfall, and now it was time to leave.   As we prepared to move out incoming mortar rounds began falling on us from the surrounding mountains, and then artillery fire landed from somewhere in Laos. We had to move, and the only direction open to us was south, straight down the center of the valley.

The A-Shau Valley 1968

Ashau Valley 

It was my turn to walk point,  and without a moment’s delay, we took off at a rather fast pace. It was getting dark fast, and we moved quickly through the elephant grass, suffering and getting cut to ribbons by the razor-sharp blades.  However, it was much quicker than trying to cut our way through the dense jungle.  We slowed down after an hour when coming across crumpled barbed wire and rotting sand bags.  I knew we had found the abandoned Green Beret camp that was overrun by the NVA in 1966.  The discovery put me in my place, and I realized what I was doing and where I was – walking point through one of the most dangerous locations on the planet in 1968, the A-Shau Valley in the middle of the night.

TJ McGinley

TJ McGinley.

I encountered two separate groups of NVA soldiers during our march. Americans seldom moved at night, so our adversaries didn’t know just what to do when I appeared out of the vegetation.  They ran! Not wanting to broadcast our location, we didn’t give chase or expel many rounds at the fleeing enemy.  I didn’t know the size of the force we had encountered, and they didn’t know how many of us there were. It was an instantaneous mutual understanding among adversaries in this very odd situation, to leave well enough alone.  Firefights raged all through the valley as the NVA probed encamped units of Americans in the dark of night.

We slowed our pace now that we were out of range of the artillery that pursued us. After what seemed like weeks the most beautiful dawn that I can remember unfolded. We had radioed ahead to an American unit to be expecting our approach from the north. What they saw must have resembled a scene from a Steven King novel. From out of the early morning mist came a unit of ghost soldiers.

Ashau Valley shrouded in fog during early morning recon.

The elephant grass, which we mostly ignored, had cut us to shreds. We were completely out of food, low on ammo, water, and strength. We had been up for 48 hours straight and the last eight we had walked, at night, through ten miles of one of the most enemy infested locations in all of South Vietnam.

Later that day the First Brigade of the 101st was extracted from the AShau Valley after being in the jungle of the Central Highland for more than three months.

During their five-day stand-down at Camp Eagle, several members of Charlie Company including myself decided to join Tiger Force.  It was in this elite group of paratroopers that I first met men who could “out-Indian” the Indians.  This recon team consisted of about 30 well-seasoned, handpicked volunteers.

Left: Zeke Blevins, John Toberman, Dave Fields and TJ McGinley. Right: Sparks, Rader Rick, Zeke Blevins, and Stan Parker.

Left Photo: Zeke Blevins, John Toberman, Dave Fields and TJ McGinley.
Right Photo: Sparks, Rader Rick, Zeke Blevins, and Stan Parker

Under the command of Lt. Fred Raymond, John Gertsch, Dave Fields, and others, Tiger Force worked with a smoothness and efficiency that even surprised the enemy.

Tigers ran recon for the First Brigade and would be the unit called on if one of the line companies was in trouble or needed help. But our specialty was ambush and recon.

Gertsch, as he was known, was a master in the field, teaching all who were near the ways of the jungle and how to use it to our advantage.  In his words, “how to be there, but not be there.”  When there was any fighting going on, you could find John diving into it doing what had to be done to get his fellow paratroopers out of danger with no thought for his safety.

One day we were hit and pinned down by a well-planned NVA ambush. Gertsch was on point.  Instead of pulling back, John crawled forward alone. The NVA didn’t see him until he came up in the middle of their perimeter. Before we knew what happened, Gertsch had killed most of them and returned with three prisoners.

Tiger Force, July1968

Tiger Force 1968

Another time John led the Tigers on a two-day hunt through the AShau Valley chasing a PT-76 NVA tank. Nobody stopped us to ask what we’d do if we caught up with it. The tank made it back across the Laos border before we caught it. Gertsch stomped where angels and devils feared to tread.

Tiger Force had seen more action than any other unit in the Division. And John was the best of the best.  Anyone who’d been wounded twice by claymores, and still walked point, had more nerve than any one man deserved.

John was ending his third consecutive tour with Tigers when he was chosen as “Soldier of the Year” and asked to represent the 101st Airborne Division at an annual reunion in Fort Campbell, KY.  John knew Tiger Force was heading back into the notorious AShau Valley and knew that they needed his experience for this dangerous mission. He made a decision to stay in-country and help his unit on this mission. As it turned out, that decision became costly for all of us.

Tiger Force was choppered into the AShau Valley on July 17, 1969, and ambushed two days later. The platoon leader was hit and wounded severely, Gertsch moved forward and then dragged him to a sheltered position. John assumed command of the heavily engaged platoon and led his men in a fierce counterattack that forced the enemy to withdraw and managed to recover two wounded comrades.  A short time later, Tigers were attacked again. John charged forward firing as he advanced. Together, John and the other Tigers forced the enemy to withdraw a second time.

Some time later his platoon came under attack for the third time, this time by a company sized NVA element.  John suffered a severe wound during the onslaught, he continued to fight and noticed a medic treating a wounded officer.  Realizing that both men were in imminent danger of being killed, John rushed forward and positioned himself between them and the enemy.  He continued to provide cover fire while others moved the wounded officer to safety.  John, however, was mortally wounded.

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John Gertsch, July 1968.

By the end of the Vietnam conflict, Tiger Force had seen more combat than any other unit in the 1st Brigade of the 101st ABD becoming one of the highest decorated units of its size in the military at that time.  Sixty percent of its members earned the Bronze Star with “V” device for valor, thirty percent received Silver Stars, and two Tigers received The Congressional Medal of Honor.

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Lt. James Gardner, C.O. of Tiger Force KIA Feb. 7, 1966, was awarded a Purple Heart,  three Bronze Stars, two Silver Stars and The Congressional Medal of Honor.


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My mentor and good friend John Gertsch was KIA in the AShau on June 19, 1969. In all, John was awarded three Purple Hearts, three Bronze Stars with “V” device, five Silver Stars, and for his actions on July 19, John was awarded The Congressional Medal of Honor.

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David Hackworth briefs Gen. Julian Ewell (right)

Our commander and founder, Col. David Hackworth died at his home on May 14, 2007.  David participated in every conflict the U.S. fought WWII through Vietnam.  David earned eight Purple Hearts, eight Bronze Stars, ten Silver Stars, and two Distinguished Service Crosses and was nominated for The Congressional Medal of Honor three times.

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Fred Raymond is still in the military. He works for the Department of Veterans Affairs and holds the rank of Major General. Fred still has the respect of all who had the honor of serving under him.

Being a member of this elite unit of Ghost Warriors was the pinnacle of my brief time in the military.

TJ McGinley
Tiger Force Recon
1/327 – 101st Abn. Div.
Vietnam ’68-’69

Author TJ McGinely
is an active member of War-Stories
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Suicide Mission (Guest blog)

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Suicide Mission

Ty Carter fought in Afghanistan and became a hero. Now he has one more enemy to fight: PTSD.

BY YOCHI DREAZEN
PORTRAITS BY IAN ALLEN

It was October 2009, just days after a brazen Taliban attack on a remote American military base in eastern Afghanistan killed eight of the 53 members of his unit and wounded 27 others. The trim 29-year-old had hauled ammunition to pinned-down U.S. troops and killed close to a half-dozen Taliban fighters. His acts of bravery helped keep the tiny base from being completely overrun and later earned him the Medal of Honor, the U.S. military’s highest commendation. Carter didn’t feel like a hero, however. Alone at night, tossing and turning in his bed, he couldn’t escape the sounds of that fateful firefight and the sight of Spc. Stephan Mace — immobilized after his legs had been blown away — begging for help, tears streaming down his dirt-covered face. Carter had raced across the battlefield and treated the 21-year-old’s wounds, but, ultimately, Mace died during surgery just hours later. Carter felt that he had failed his comrade; if only he’d moved faster, he thought, Mace would have lived. And though Carter’s platoon sergeant encouraged him to feel proud about having helped save other troops, “I couldn’t really hear him,” he said during a recent speech in Maryland. “I was more focused on getting to my bunk, burying my head into a pillow, and not existing. I wanted to find a deep hole and just disappear.”

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The final months of Carter’s yearlong deployment passed by in a blur of fear and despondency. He went out on every combat patrol he could, hoping that the adrenaline would wash away the crushing feeling that he was a failure. The descent only continued when he returned home to Colorado’s Fort Carson in the summer of 2010. Car rides evoked memories of the roadside bombs that wounded his friends in Afghanistan. Even mundane trips to a shopping mall led to crippling panic attacks; the lights seemed too bright, the music too loud, the other shoppers too pushy and intrusive. Alcohol, he soon found, dulled the pain. His weekend sprees — often including top-shelf liquor, crowded bars, and drunken cab rides — typically cost him around $500. And his relationships with women were nothing but a series of short-lived affairs in which “I was a prick,” he admits today. But the breaking point came at his next post, Washington’s Joint Base Lewis-McChord, where he began showing up late for military formations and reeking of alcohol. Carter’s commanders had had enough. A frustrated noncommissioned officer said he would bust Carter down in rank, effectively ending his military career, unless he got his act together.

It was just the prod he needed.

Gradually Carter came to accept that he had post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD. The signature wound of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, post-traumatic stress has been linked to, among other fallout, a suicide epidemic that has taken the lives of more than 2,500 U.S. troops since the conflicts began. But this isn’t unique to American soldiers: PTSD also affects those in the Israeli, British, and Canadian militaries, among many others, though at rates far lower than in the United States. That’s because few other militaries in the world have been continuously at war for so long or have sent their sons and daughters off to fight on distant battlefields as often. British troops have fought alongside American ones in Iraq and Afghanistan, though for shorter amounts of time and often in less dangerous parts of the two countries. A recent study by researchers at King’s College London found that just 2 to 5 percent of British war veterans experienced symptoms of PTSD, a fraction of the 21 to 29 percent among U.S. troops.

Today, Carter’s fight isn’t against a heavily armed Taliban militant, but against the social stigma attached to post-traumatic stress. The 34-year-old staff sergeant devotes his days to traveling around the United States delivering speech after speech — to strangers he doesn’t know, but whose night terrors he well understands — in an effort to convince troops and others not only that the psychological reaction is real, but also that seeking help is a sign of strength, not weakness. It’s a lonely fight, however. No other living Medal of Honor recipient publicly talks about personal experiences with PTSD.

“Post-traumatic stress is natural. You’ve been through combat. You’ve seen and done things you never thought you were capable of doing. You’ve lost friends. You’ve lost your illusion that the world is a safe place,” he told Foreign Policy in June. “There’s nothing wrong with you if you come back from combat with post-traumatic stress. There’s something wrong with you if you don’t.”


ptsd2SOLDIERS HAVE BUCKLED UNDER THE STRAIN OF WITNESSING AND COMMITTING HORRIFIC ACTS OF VIOLENCE FOR AS LONG AS HUMANS HAVE TAKEN UP WEAPONS AGAINST ONE ANOTHER. In The Iliad, Achilles experiences such overpowering sadness and rage after his closest friend dies outside the walls of Troy that he contemplates suicide. Achilles later publicly mutilates his friend’s killer in revenge. In The Odyssey, Homer plaintively asks, “Must you carry the bloody horror of combat in your heart forever?” For centuries, soldiers have returned from combat beset by lifelong bouts of depression, anxiety, and sleeplessness. They have felt disfigured and debased by war, even if they suffered no physical injuries. “I don’t believe I am the same being I was two weeks ago,” a Civil War soldier named Walter Lee wrote to his mother in 1862. “I don’t think as I used to and things don’t seem as they did.”

The names given to those types of psychological and emotional responses have changed over time, but their high human toll has remained grimly constant. Soldiers shattered by the carnage of World War I were told they had shell shock. By 1919, 38 percent of the veterans in U.S. military hospitals were “mental and nervous cases”; by the mid-1930s, that number had spiked to more than 56 percent. During World War II, military doctors said soldiers suffered from “combat fatigue” — an inability to fight due to anxiety, depression, and listlessness. The mental and emotional strains were so intense throughout that war that roughly 438,000 U.S. troops were discharged from the military for so-called psychiatric reasons, a little-known statistic that gives a sense of the anger, depression, and guilt that had built up in those fighting on the battlefields of Europe and the Pacific.

“I was more focused on getting to my bunk, burying my head into a pillow, and not existing. I wanted to find a deep hole and just disappear.”

The Vietnam War took an even higher emotional toll. Troops fought guerrillas who wore no uniforms, hid among civilians, and emerged from the shadows to kill and maim American soldiers before disappearing again. U.S. forces responded with acts of sheer savagery, from the wholesale slaughter of civilians to the mutilation of enemy corpses. Some soldiers smuggled drugs and alcohol onto their bases, and returned home with severe substance-abuse problems; others killed their own officers and enlisted personnel in what became known as “fragging.” Veterans returned to the States feeling like they’d left essential parts of their humanity on the battlefields of Vietnam. One veteran of three combat tours told clinical psychiatrist Jonathan Shay that, physically speaking, he returned looking almost exactly the same as when he had left; his psychological state, however, was another matter. Old friends didn’t recognize the angry, moody, and occasionally violent man who had come home. “I’d be sitting there calm as could be, and this monster would come out of me with a fury that most people didn’t want to be around,” he told Shay. “It wasn’t just over there. I brought it back here with me.”

In 1980, the American Psychiatric Association finally gave a name to what many veterans would spend the rest of their lives fighting: post-traumatic stress disorder. The association’s official diagnostic manual said that those most at risk had “experienced an event that is outside the range of usual human experience and that would be markedly distressing to almost anyone,” such as a serious threat to the patient’s own life or the sight of other people who had been killed or grievously wounded. Common symptoms, the association said, included vivid nightmares, flashes of anger, insomnia, and substance abuse. A few years after the war, the Department of Veterans Affairs estimated that roughly 750,000 Vietnam veterans were at risk of developing some form of PTSD.  Later studies argued that the rates were slightly lower, but there is no question that traumatic stress was the single darkest legacy of that war. In 2011, nearly four decades after the last U.S. troops were airlifted out of Saigon, 299,076 Vietnam veterans were still receiving benefits for PTSD, far more than for any physical wound.

Most mental health professionals, both inside and outside the military, fear that post-traumatic stress will exact a heavier toll on the veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan. As in Vietnam, U.S. forces battled enemies they couldn’t see, and they guarded against buried bombs that they often had little chance of spotting or defusing. But unlike in Vietnam, many troops did two, three, or even four tours through the war zones (Carter deployed to Afghanistan twice). More than 2.6 million U.S. troops have circled through Iraq and Afghanistan since October 2001; the Department of Veterans Affairs estimates that up to 20 percent of those troops, or some 520,000 U.S. service members, have some form of post-traumatic stress. Not only that, but some of the senior officials who sent U.S. troops to war, such as Robert Gates, wrestle with their own psychological responses as well.

Gates served as defense secretary, first for George W. Bush and then for Barack Obama, during the Iraq and Afghanistan troop surges. Even though Obama asked Gates to stay on through the end of his second term, the defense chief declined and left in 2011. The horrors of war, the impact of combat on U.S. troops, he told me, left him fundamentally changed. He is haunted by memories of the thousands of young soldiers, airmen, sailors, and Marines he visited in military hospitals around the world as they recovered from lost limbs or hideous burns. Gates personally wrote condolence letters to nearly 3,000 families.

“I think that there’s a form of post-traumatic stress for those who are not directly involved in the battle but who see the consequences of the battle, who are watching the wounded being brought in, who are watching the procession of dead soldiers on the tarmac getting, being taken, onto the planes and things like that,” he told me in April 2013, two years after leaving the Defense Department. “I began to wonder, frankly, toward the end of my time, whether I had some measure of it myself.”

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On Aug. 26, 2013, Staff Sgt. Ty Carter received the Medal of Honor for actions in Afghanistan.

CARTER IS AN UNLIKELY HERO. As a shy, freckled teenager from California, he joined the Marine Corps in October 1998, right after graduating from high school, but was honorably discharged in 2002 after getting into a fight with his roommate. He spent the next five years working odd jobs, such as cleaning the bottoms of yachts, assembling furniture for Home Depot, and delivering packages for UPS. By 2008, Carter had soured on civilian life and decided that he was better suited for the military, which, strained by the long wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, was desperately looking to recruit new troops. He enlisted in the Army and spent a year training at Fort Knox in Kentucky with his new unit — Blue Platoon, Bravo Troop, 3rd Squadron, 61st Cavalry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division — but he didn’t quite fit in. A loner growing up, Carter struck many of the other soldiers as standoffish and a bit prim. “We had a platoon full of guys that were on a lighter side of life [who] liked to joke around,” retired Sgt. 1st Class Jonathan Hill later told CNN. “Carter really never got involved.… He thought it was immature,” he said, adding that Carter “really didn’t make friends with a lot of guys.”

In the summer of 2009, Carter’s unit shipped off to Afghanistan. It was the height of the surge there, and the Pentagon was flooding the country with tens of thousands of troops. He landed at a base known as Combat Outpost Keating, which would soon become shorthand for the bravery, folly, and tragedy of the Afghanistan war — and also would become the nightmare that would haunt Carter for years to come.

COP-keating

On the evening of Oct. 2, unbeknownst to the U.S. troops, hundreds of Taliban fighters silently took up positions a short distance away from Keating’s sandbagged walls. They struck just before sunrise, lashing the base with mortars, rocket-propelled grenades, and machine-gun fire until they had breached the makeshift walls surrounding the outpost and had forced their way into the base itself. “Enemy in the wire at keating,” a young soldier messaged to a nearby base. “ENEMY [sic] IN THE WIRE ENEMY IN THE WIRE!!!”

Carter had just awoken and was in his Army-issued workout gear when he heard the gunfire. He grabbed his body armor, M4 assault rifle, and as many rounds of ammunition as he could carry, and he sprinted toward an armored Humvee parked at the southern end of the compound. Bullets crashed near his boots, snapping small plumes of sand and dirt into the air around him. To Carter, “it looked like it was rain hitting desert soil.”

“In Iraq and Afghanistan, U.S. forces battled enemies they couldn’t see, and they guarded against buried bombs that they often had little chance of spotting or defusing.”

Once at the Humvee, he found two soldiers, Spc. Stephan Mace and Sgt. Justin Gallegos, trapped inside. He gave his ammunition to them and then charged back through heavy gunfire to grab more. By the time he returned, the vehicle — taking fire from all directions — was rocking on its tires, and two more soldiers had squeezed inside; within minutes, a series of rocket-propelled grenades smashed into it. The heavy machine gun mounted to the Humvee’s turret was destroyed, sending shrapnel cascading down and wounding three of the five men.

Trapped in a disabled vehicle and largely out of ammunition, Gallegos, Mace, and Sgt. Vernon Martin made a run for the nearby tactical operations center, one of the most fortified structures on the base. They didn’t make it. Gallegos had almost reached the building when he saw Mace drop to the ground; as he made his way back toward the fallen soldier, Gallegos was killed by a volley of Taliban bullets. Martin was hit in the leg and managed to crawl under a nearby building, where he died. Back in the Humvee, Carter, horrified, watched Mace crawl through the dirt, blood smearing behind his blown-off legs, while bullets and rocket-propelled grenades punctuated his friend’s movements. Mace was just a few yards away, crying for help. Although Carter knew it was too dangerous to leave the Humvee, he raced onto the battlefield anyway, pulling Mace to safety and performing emergency first aid on him. He kept the soldier alive until Mace could be airlifted to a larger base and rushed into surgery. The firefight raged for more than 12 hours before U.S. combat aircraft helped the battered survivors of Blue Platoon repel the attackers.

“There are some images that last with you,” Carter said during a speech this past summer, using a version of the language about Mace that he inserts into virtually all his public remarks. “When a man who is suffering and bleeding out in front of you is asking for help and you say no, what kind of person are you? How do you come back from that?”

In the days after the firefight, Carter and the other survivors of the Keating battle were transported to a larger base to escape the active battlefield. One night, Hill, Carter’s platoon sergeant, noticed him standing alone in the dark, shoulders slouched and head down, holding his M4 rifle across his waist. In a later interview with an official Army magazine, Hill said he could see that Carter “was hurt bad on the inside.” When he asked Carter what was wrong, the soldier “looked me in the eyes and he had tears streaming down his face. And he says, ‘I just couldn’t save him.’ I hugged him and he hugged me and we both cried right there,” Hill said in the interview.

Hill introduced Carter to the world of therapy — and took him to the first session of the counseling that Carter credits with saving his life. Carter became indebted to Hill and the other soldiers who had encouraged him in this, especially when he got word that Spc. Edward Faulkner, who had fought at his side during the firefight at Keating, died of a drug overdose in the fall of 2010, just months after he’d returned to the United States. The medical examiner said that post-traumatic stress was a “contributing” factor in his death. Faulkner had the same symptoms as Carter, but he hadn’t managed to get help in time. “I could be just like Edward Faulkner,” Carter says. “I had the nightmares. I had the flashbacks. I had the anxiety. I had the chemical dependence, in this case alcohol. But what I had that he didn’t have was the support. And that was the difference.”


BY THE SUMMER OF 2013, CARTER FINALLY BEGAN TO FEEL THAT HE WAS GETTING HIS POST-TRAUMATIC STRESS UNDER CONTROL. He’d re-enlisted, done a second yearlong deployment through Afghanistan, married a woman whom he had met online, and had a baby girl with her, making the third child for the family — he had a daughter from his first marriage, and she had a son from hers. He had fewer and fewer flashbacks, and he had managed to sharply reduce his drinking. Carter knew that his superiors had nominated him for a Medal of Honor, but he didn’t think he would get it, and he certainly didn’t think he deserved it.

Others felt very differently. In early July, an officer at the Pentagon called Carter to ask whether he’d be able to take an important call from a high-ranking military officer in a few days’ time. Carter said no — he and his family were about to leave for a road trip through an area with poor cell-phone reception — but he recognized the urgency in the officer’s voice and promised to find a place where he’d be able to take the call. A short time later, Carter pulled his camper to the side of an Oregon highway to take a call from the president of the United States. Obama thanked Carter for his service, said he had approved Carter for the honor, and told the stunned soldier that he looked forward to meeting Carter and his family in Washington, D.C.

On Aug. 26, 2013, Carter stood at attention in the East Room of the White House as the president draped the star-shaped medal around his neck. Mace’s mother, Vanessa Adelson, attended the White House ceremony along with relatives of Keating’s other fallen soldiers. Carter, Obama said, was a hero, both for what he did during the fighting at Keating and for his willingness to speak out about his own struggles with PTSD. “Let me say it as clearly as I can to any of our troops or veterans who are watching and struggling,” Obama said. “Look at this man. Look at this soldier. Look at this warrior. He’s as tough as they come. And if he can find the courage and the strength to not only seek help, but also to speak out about it, to take care of himself and to stay strong, then so can you.”

In his own remarks, Carter urged the American people to learn to treat those suffering from the “invisible wounds of war” with more understanding, empathy, and support. “Know that a soldier or veteran suffering from post-traumatic stress is one of the most passionate, dedicated men or women you’ll ever meet,” he said. “Know that they are not damaged. They are simply burdened with living when others did not.”

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Staff Sgt. Ty Carter, part of the White Platoon fire team, 8-1 Cavalry, 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division, provides overwatch on a road near Dahla Dam, Afghanistan, in July 2012. (Photo courtesy of Army News Service)
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 (Clockwise from top left) Spc. Ty Carter, Spc. Cody Floyd, Spc. Christopher T. Griffin, Sgt. Eric Harder, Sgt. John Francis, Staff Sgt. Kirk Birchfield, Sgt. Scott Potempa, Spc. Michael Scusa, Pvt. Edward Faulkner and Pfc. Daniel Rogers gather for a “thank you” photo at Combat Outpost Keating, August 2009, for the canned foods donated by Harder’s mother and her friends. Soldiers had a very limited diet at the remote outpost, with hot food being rare.

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Staff Sgt. Ty Michael Carter and his family, son Jayden, wife Shannon, daughter Sehara, and daughter Madison in a family photo taken on their farm in Yelm, Wash., in July 2013. (Photo courtesy of Carter family) 

ON AN UNSEASONABLY COOL MARYLAND MORNING IN EARLY JUNE 2014, CARTER WALKS ONTO THE STAGE IN AN AUDITORIUM, LOOKS OUT OVER A CROWD OF HUNDREDS OF UNIFORMED AND ARMED POLICE OFFICERS, AND TELLS HIS STORY FOR THE 30TH TIME THIS YEAR. Although an introvert, Carter is a natural public speaker who talks without notes, maintains eye contact with the crowd, sprinkles jokes into his remarks, and paces the stage with the confidence and swagger of a motivational speaker.

“When trauma hits you, it changes your perception of reality,” Carter says. “If you let this eat at you, you can compartmentalize all you want, [but] it will come up. Things don’t ever go back to how they were.”

During the hourlong talk, Carter doesn’t sugarcoat the impact of post-traumatic stress. He tells the police officers that it has left him with chronic acid reflux, pounding headaches, and high blood pressure. He cautions that counseling isn’t like going to a doctor, where a physician can diagnose an illness and provide a quick cure. Instead, good therapists, he tells the crowd, provide the tools that allow those who are traumatized to find ways to heal on their own. “When you go to counseling you have a festering wound,” he says. “They help you open it up, and let it drain out, and close it back up. You go to counseling again, open the wound, let it drain out. Every time you do that, it hurts a little less.”

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When it comes time to take questions, Carter isn’t shy about using profanity or admitting to things the Army would probably wish he’d keep private, such as sometimes wearing his Medal of Honor while drunk. When a police officer asks about the perks of being awarded the honor, Carter doesn’t hesitate: attending the Miss America pageant and hugging the winner.

“Know that a soldier or veteran suffering from post-traumatic stress is one of the most passionate, dedicated men or women you’ll ever meet,” he said. “Know that they are not damaged. They are simply burdened with living when others did not.”

But the vibe in the room changes when another officer asks how long police should wait before entering a building where a troubled veteran might be holed up after a severe psychiatric episode. Carter has a simple answer: Hold off as long as possible to see whether the veteran can be persuaded to leave willingly. Many soldiers, himself very much included, have training in marksmanship and know how to build homemade explosives and booby traps. Taking a more aggressive approach, he warns the audience, could exact a horrific toll on the officers involved.

“At my house, because I have land, it’s 100 yards from my front door to my front gate, which has cameras up with 360-degree visibility,” he says in a chilly, flat monotone. “In combat we got constant reports of enemies wearing our uniforms. So if I’m having an episode, and you’re breaching, and I think you’re harming myself or my family, I will defend myself to the death. Also remember that I have been outnumbered, surrounded, and low on ammo — and I still fought. So with the knowledge that I have and the experience that you have, I don’t care how many [officers] you have.… Maybe one of you will survive.”

The officers, who had been laughing moments earlier when Carter talked about Miss America, sit silently. Several leave the room.

After the speech, Luther Reynolds, the assistant chief of police for Montgomery County, Maryland, looks on as Carter poses for photos with some of the officers. The chief says that police officers, like soldiers, are often forced to either confront or carry out acts of violence. The stigma that surrounds mental health in the military exists in the police force as well; in both communities, reaching out for help is not seen as empowering. Reynolds says he hopes that Carter can inspire at least a few of the officers. “He carries a unique level of credibility because of who he is and what he’s gone through,” Reynolds says. “We have to change our culture so people are more open about what they’re going through. He can hopefully help us do that.”


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IT HAS TAKEN FIVE YEARS, BUT CARTER SAYS THAT HE FINALLY HAS MADE IT THROUGH FOUR CONSECUTIVE MONTHS WITHOUT A NIGHTMARE AND FEELS LIKE THE WORST OF THE TRAUMATIC-STRESS SYMPTOMS HAVE FINALLY BEGUN TO DISSIPATE. “The flashbacks aren’t flashbacks anymore,” he says. “They’re more like faded memories.”

Still, he acknowledges that changing the stigma that surrounds mental health in the military will take time. “There is progress, but it’s very slow, and it’s not going to happen now,” he says. “People are going to fight it.”

He’s right. Carter began his career at Fort Carson, a base that had some of the biggest problems with stigma and suicide in the entire Army. In one particularly striking incident, soldiers from the 3rd Brigade Combat Team of the 4th Infantry Division designed a fake “Hurt Feelings Report” and left copies near a sign-out sheet for those seeing one of Fort Carson’s doctors. The document began, “Reasons for filing this report: Please circle Yes or No.” The choices included: “I am thin skinned”; “I am a pussy”; “I have woman like hormones”; “I am a Queer”; “I am a little bitch”; “I am a cry baby”; “I want my mommy”; “All of the above.” There was a blank space for soldiers to fill in the “Name of ‘Real man’ who hurt your sensitive feelings.”

Senior leaders from Obama on down routinely emphasize that post-traumatic stress, depression, and other psychological effects can be as deadly as physical ones.

The military is devoting enormous amounts of money toward eradicating that type of stigma. A Congressional Research Service report estimates that the Pentagon spent more than $4 billion on mental health treatment between 2007 and 2012, pouring money into hiring more counselors, designing and conducting mandatory psychological health training for all troops, and creating new teams of therapists that are assigned to specific military units in order to build a rapport and comfort level with the soldiers. Senior leaders from Obama on down routinely emphasize that post-traumatic stress, depression, and other psychological effects can be as deadly as physical ones. But for these efforts to work, first the military’s culture and value system must fundamentally change.

The Army is the definition of a hierarchy, and younger soldiers won’t truly believe that they can seek help without destroying their careers until top generals and senior sergeants — those specifically selected for their resiliency and inner strength — begin to publicly share stories of their own struggles with combat stress, PTSD, and depression. Dozens of generals and high-ranking sergeants served in Iraq and Afghanistan. Many were at bases that came under regular insurgent attack, many lost friends, but all had to wrestle with the emotional impact of attending battlefield memorial services, writing condolence letters to grieving families, and visiting field hospitals where young troops who had lost limbs or suffered horrific burns writhed in pain. So far, only a small number of them have been willing to talk about what they saw — three generals, as far as I was able to identify in the course of researching my book.

Carter returned home without any serious physical injuries, but he has still endured a wrenching readjustment process. He once credited Shannon, his second wife, with helping to bring him back from the brink, but their marriage crumbled within three years. Their ongoing divorce proceedings have grown increasingly nasty, in part because they’re fighting over custody arrangements for their daughter. Carter is currently living alone in a small hotel room.

His professional life is also becoming increasingly unsettled. Even though he has long spoken about serving 20 years in the military, which would allow him to retire with full health and pension benefits, he recently asked the Army for permission to retire this fall so he can accept work with Operation Wounded Minds, a nonprofit organization that his father created to help veterans with post-traumatic stress. But Carter also wants to weigh offers from the private sector: He has been approached by ghostwriters who want to turn his story into a book, and he has spoken with Hollywood producers about possible movie projects. Either path could be hugely lucrative: As a staff sergeant, Carter earns roughly $35,500; movie or book projects could easily bring him hundreds of thousands of dollars.

In uniform or out, Carter won’t be leaving the public stage anytime soon.


size0AFTER HIS TALK IN MARYLAND, CARTER POSES FOR DOZENS OF PICTURES, OFTEN STOPPING TO SPEAK QUIETLY WITH ONE OF THE POLICE OFFICERS. Once the auditorium empties, he drops down into a padded chair, slumps back in the seat, and chugs a bottle of water. Carter says that recounting his story to groups across the country leaves him physically and mentally exhausted, but he sees it as a way of repaying a debt to the soldiers who died in the attack that led the Pentagon to label him an American hero. “I can’t save a life with a machine gun anymore,” he says. “Maybe I can save a life this way.” With that, he politely excuses himself.

Set to meet several top police commanders for beers, he wants to swap his dress uniform and medal for a T-shirt and jeans. It is clear that he is looking forward to spending a few hours without the Medal of Honor, and all that has come with it, hanging around his neck. “When I come to events like this I have to put on a face,” he had said earlier. “I really do value the times where I can take it off for a few hours and go back to being myself.”

Yochi Dreazen is the managing editor for news at Foreign Policy. This article was adapted from his recent book, The Invisible Front: Love and Loss in an Era of Endless War, which came out Oct. 7, 2014.

Portraits by Ian Allen for FP; Medal of Honor photo: Alex Wong/Getty Images; personal/family images via U.S. Army.

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

A Lasting Memory of Vietnam (Guest Blog)

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My friend, Duke Barrett is the author of  “The Wall of Broken Dreams” and had recently posted this story on one of the Facebook Veteran Groups. It is posted below with his permission – I pulled various pictures from my collection and added them to help visualize the story.

With veterans day just around the corner, I was compelled to post this essay I wrote of a day in the life of an infantryman.  I recently had the honor of partaking in “The 50th Commemoration of the Vietnam War” ceremony this past April at Ft. Irwin, Ca. Having done so, this well-meaning event couldn’t help but stir up a few old, and I mean old, lasting memories. Here, below, is but one.

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Good manners require that I be cordial to all visitors but one in particular, the one from the deepest recesses of my mind, the one who makes a number of unannounced visits, the one I find most annoying and treat it as such. Let’s call that visitor a “lasting memory,” and seared into my being or not, to that blast from the past, so to speak, I say “enough already.” Call me rude.

Allow me to explain. Many years ago, June 23rd, 1966 I was part of an undermanned reconnaissance platoon of the 1/8 Cavalry, of the 1st Air Cavalry Division, Airborne. We had just been airlifted into the immediate area surrounding the city of Tuy Hoa, South Vietnam, along the picturesque South China Sea. Our mission was to assist an overwhelmed 101st Airborne Division who were locked into some heavy fighting with a large number of Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army regulars in the hills surrounding Tuy Hoa. This hardened and highly trained unit of paratroopers had only recently been engaged in some intense close-order combat at Dak To, north of Kontum, where we too had just completed operations.

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As our platoon anxiously awaited orders just inside the relatively secure perimeter of the 101’s fire support base, my buddy Frank and I reminisced about life “back in the world.” I remember telling Frank how I’d rather be home for my sister’s birthday, that particular day of June 22nd, rather than chasing bad guys through the jungles of Vietnam. Well as luck would have it, our orders were just as we’d expected. No birthday celebrations for you Mr. Barrett. How’s bout another reconnaissance patrol into an area ripe with North Vietnamese Army troops first thing in the morning on a nearby hillside? “Hey, that’s cool,” I thought. I mean, that’s what we do; we’re paratroopers. Who in their right mind would pass up an opportunity like this? Home is overrated. On a positive note, at least this patrol was going to put us on a hillside that led to a mountain top where It could be a little less jungle-like, a wee bit less humid and maybe even cooler, like, you know, only in the high 90’s. Life can be good at times.

Just after dark we settled in our temporary accommodations for a good nights rest as visions of NVA danced in our heads. At the dawn’s early light on June 23rd, following a night’s rest, we rolled out of our beds, took hot showers, had breakfast and coffee and then turned in our room keys as we checked out at the front desk. (I kid) Actually, as soon as we woke up we rolled out of our poncho liners, which like us, were on the damp ground, grabbed our weapons, checked our gear for large insects and snakes, saddled up and boarded the waiting choppers for the short flight to the Army Special Forces compound on the nearby hillside. Call us grunts.

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Immediately upon our arrival at the SF compound we linked up with a squad from another brigade with the sole intention of beefing up our anemic numbers. The attached squad came from the “blues” an elite element of the 1/9 Cavalry, of our division reconnaissance company. The 1/9 Cav saw more combat than any other fighting unit in all of Vietnam, and that’s a fact. Great! This could be seen as either a good sign or a bad sign depending on one’s perspective. It turned out to be not so good. Action was the word of the day.

As our reinforced reconnaissance platoon left the compound and headed farther up the hillside as ordered, we made enemy contact only minutes following our departure. The designated point squad for this patrol happened to be our third squad and in short order they killed three NVA soldiers who were at the trails edge in what appeared to be a futile and fruitless search for water. A thorough search of the enemy corpses for intelligence purposes yielded little if any information and so off we went again. The trail, more or less an animal trail soon turned into an extremely wide trail. That, you all, is not cool. I didn’t understand why we were walking on that trail as our recon platoon and patrols usually operated on the sides of any given trail, especially a wide and obviously used trail. Chances of even more contact soon became apparent by the significant numbers of freshly dug foxholes and como wire adjacent to this South Vietnamese version of a mountain freeway. The million dollar question was just how many troops did these foxholes and wire constitute?

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Our platoon sergeant, Sergeant Blease, a hardened Korean War survivor of the “Battle of Pork Chop Hill” soon realized that we’d stumbled upon something far larger than our relatively small number of troops were manned and equipped to handle, prompting him to call for air-support in the form of helicopter gun-ships. In no time they arrived and peppered the ground to our immediate fore with rockets and M-60 machine-gun fire. In the process of this strike, a hot expended shell casing fired from an M-60 machine gun went down the back of my fatigue shirt. It burned like hell and pissed me off. Call me an ingrate.

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1/8 Cav. Airborne Delta Recon at Bong Son, Oct. 66-Duke center front, Sergeant “Rock” Musial, combat legend, center standing. Some of these men were lost between 12/66 and Valentine’s Day 67

Shortly afterward Sergeant Blease ordered a more stealth like recon of the immediate area and summoned my buddy Frank, a Davy Crockett re-incarnate, for this undertaking. Frank, a God- fearing, guitar pickin,’ good ole country boy from North Carolina, was ordered to scout the real estate that lie ahead and given the opportunity to pick one good man to go with him. As luck would have it, he picked me, and I’m sure it was because we were best of friends. Opposites attract, I was a city guy, a “rock ‘n’ roller,” Frank, well, he chewed tobacco. My question, is that any way to treat a friend?

So off we went, quietly and cautiously, and I mean cautiously, for about a hundred yards up a trail that was abundant in thin trees that provided little cover. Due to the encounters we’d already experienced this day, we had a gut-feeling that we’d soon have our hands full, of action that is. Call us seers.

Approaching some broken foliage just off of the trail, I can still picture Frank slowly pulling back a branch from a bush, motioning to me with his finger pointed downward, indicating a target, slowly lifting his M-16 rifle and firing a short burst of rounds into the dug-in enemy position. That’s when things got heated.

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You know that old saying “monkey see-monkey do?” Well, that was pretty much my role in this close encounter of the worst kind. Frank pointed and fired. Then I fired. He threw a grenade, and I threw a grenade. Then we both fired into the enemy position with Frank putting another head shot on the remaining pith-helmeted NVA gunner, momentarily silencing the enemy position. Not to be outdone, I fired my weapon and tore apart tree limbs and the like. In a split-second, a full fusillade of withering, angry automatic weapons fire poured down on us like monsoon rains. Well assured that they now harbored even more ill intentions towards us, we high-tailed it, or, as they say, in-country, “di-di mau’d” back down the trail, much less cautious and stealth like than our recent approach.

In our tactical retreat to the rear, we rolled, jumped and somehow outfoxed the speeding projectiles intent on maiming us as they flew between our legs, whizzed past our ears, under our arms and kicked up dirt and debris all around us. The foliage along our escape route became a victim of the high-powered rounds intended for our demise and nearly caused an environmental forestry disaster.

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I must emphasize an important point here. If it were not for Frank’s keen eye and innate survival skills, it is highly likely that our platoon would have walked right into that well concealed and camouflaged L-shaped ambush and at a minimum; we’d have been torn to shreds if not annihilated. I came to this conclusion as the intelligence debriefing days later informed us that we had encountered an enemy regiment. That’s like thirty-seven good guys vs. five hundred or more enemy. Not particularly good odds, even for a bunch of cocksure paratroopers. Incidentally, as a result of this action, Frank was awarded a well-deserved Bronze Star with “V” device.” The “V” is for Valor.

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For the rest of the day things only got worse. The third squad had again been ordered up and told to make yet another recon of the trail in spite of Frank’s warning of the impending perils that lay ahead. As feared by Frank and I, in no time another fusillade was withered upon our brothers, taking down both the point man and squad leader. The two of them, Private Raymond and Staff Sergeant John L., were then used as live bait as the surviving members took cover. The survivors immediately regrouped and launched a heroic but futile attempt at rescue only to be driven back by an overwhelming force. In the interim the two dying troopers that lay on the trail bled-out.

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The enemy had been attempting to surround us for some time and had it not been for some dog-eat-dog fighting, they may have succeeded. The NVA probed us from all directions and never succeeded at figuring out just how “small” in numbers we were. The close in air support certainly hindered their effort as well but came with a price to both sides. A short-round rocket fired from one of our supporting gunships landed in our midst, killing a “cherry,” a newly assigned NCO. This poor guy, Sergeant Honorario, never knew what hit him. He took a large piece of shrapnel to the chest which opened him up like a can of c-rats. Others were wounded as well, including my buddy Frank and my squad leader, Staff Sergeant Grimm. The concussion from the exploding rocket threw us all as if we were nothing more than ingredients in a tossed salad. In the melee, Frank took shrapnel or a bullet to the upper arm and, as a result, he was momentarily incapacitated, much to my chagrin. Our attached squad from 1/9 suffered two casualties as the NVA again attempted to flank our position immediately following the explosion that knocked us down but not out.
Following the deadly blast of friendly fire, those of us from the second squad who were at a minimum, disoriented but unscathed, cleared our heads and waited for the ringing in our ears to stop as we took up a defensive position at the trails head. Void of any cover whatsoever, like a large tree, stump or a culvert, our position were entirely at the mercy of our NVA tormentors.

Virtually pinned down by the NVA machine guns, we waited nervously for a full-on frontal attack. Hundreds, if not thousands of hostile rounds were fired at us all afternoon and miraculously they missed their intended target. “Combat 101,” in regard to any firefight situation with an enemy, dictates the elimination of any crew-served weapons, such as mortars and machine guns, and the North Vietnamese were applying this lesson to the best of their ability. Our task for the remaining daylight hours was to observe the trail and stop any unwelcome intruders from entering our perimeter.

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Protected only by my army issued helmet and an M-16 rifle, I positioned myself next to our M-60 machine gunner, Specialist Steve, and laid in anxious wait. With our gunner being to my immediate left, the expended cartridges fired from his weapon would fly past me and land to my immediate right, creating a mess of white hot, hollow cylinders. Incoming rounds fired at us by the NVA swept in motion from right to left, hitting the expended cartridges that were only inches from my head. These empty cartridges then flew up and about, made a tingling sound while airborne and crashed harmlessly back onto the jungle floor. Try as I may count the number of times that I covered my head with my bony left hand in a ridiculous attempt to stop the bullets from penetrating my helmet and head, strained my already challenged mathematical abilities.
After some hours of this torture and the seemingly bleak situation that had paid a visit upon us, I began to believe that we may survive this day, if not only to suffer another. Think positive. The NVA never realized our weakened state but soon came to understand our resolve as we beat back some probes. As hard as it was to believe, the enemy machine guns stuck to their fields of fire. Not once did they ever make an adjustment. I mean had they moved their gun another foot or so in our direction, they may have well brought about an unfavorable ending in our quest for survival. I for one am eternally grateful for their taking a position and sticking to it. No flip-flopping here.

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Fortunately for us, headquarters were well aware of our dire situation and ordered a nearby company, from the second battalion of the seventh cavalry to re-enforce us. They air-assaulted into a landing zone in our vicinity late that afternoon. For reasons unbeknownst to us, the NVA withdrew from their fighting positions and disappeared into the vast jungle. As re-enforcements moved in to link up with us, they too lost a couple of good men and in turn killed some the NVA, which were plentiful in numbers around the contested area.

I had been alerted to watch and listen for “friendlies” that were to approach from the same direction the bad guys had been determined to assault us from.  As an end to a nightmare or an answer to a prayer, the point man from the 2/7 Cav, followed by the rest of his company, arrived at dusk, as per schedule. I’ve got to tell you that in all of my life I’ve never been so damn happy to see anyone as I was when I laid eyes on that weary and dirty infantryman. I kick myself time and time again for not getting that troopers name. To say thank you is hardly sufficient. I mean, what can you say? To that trooper and his band of brothers, speaking for the entire recon platoon I say, “Gentlemen, we thank you from the bottom of our hearts.” Call us grateful.

Shortly after our brief rendezvous with the seventh, we licked our wounds, gathered up our dead and wounded and headed for another landing zone for extraction of our casualties, under the cover of darkness. All along the way that evening and early morning, we could hear voices of the enemy who were apparently close by. In the darkness of a fully canopied jungle, we couldn’t see a thing and prayed that the NVA could not hear us. It was anything but easy carrying the dead, in the dead of night, on make-shift stretchers, as the bodies would get caught up on “wait a minute” vines, all but stopping our movement, but we prevailed. At daybreak, hungry, worn and weary, we arrived at our objective, the LZ, where we set up a perimeter and waited for the med-evac chopper to evacuate our casualties.

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Being both tired and famished following an especially long day and night, we were left to wonder when the division was going to send us a re-supply chopper. You know, like food and water. That would have hit the spot. Instead, division ordered us to run another recon patrol of the immediate area. I’m convinced those back in the rear calling the shots believed us young troopers to be every bit as fit and hydrated as young camels. Well, we then reluctantly but dutifully moved out on yet another patrol. Surprisingly, at this point of the mission, morale had yet to peak.

Only a little more than a couple of clicks from the LZ, our luck began to change for the better, in the form of Divine Intervention. Yeah, that’s right. Miraculously, a lone chicken sent from Heaven above or maybe Tuy Hoa or even more probable, from the recently ravaged and abandoned village we had just come upon. As we readied to scout out the village, the chicken unwisely let his presence be known by clucking even louder than the refreshing sounds of the nearby enemy-body laden creek where we refilled our canteens. Following a thorough recon of the village, the chicken became our main point of focus. Suffice it to say that the poor scrawny little chicken didn’t stand a chance. As stated previously, life can be good at times. You know, like when you catch a break or a chicken. Call us thirsty. Call us hungry. Call us Vietnam Vets.

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If you like to read more about Duke Barrett’s book, then visit him on its website:   http://www.dukesbrokendreams.com/

Here is the address of Duke’s blog which is filled with additional stories like the one you just read:  https://eldorado90.wordpress.com/

Also, Duke has recently put together a great 5-min. slide show video with pictures of the war (some personal) and set to music from Jimmy Ruffin. Click here to see it on YouTube   https://youtu.be/ISLKU_MQ83o/


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’ve created a poll to help identify my website audience – before leaving, can you please click HERE and 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, helicopter nose art, Historical fiction, jungle warfare, Military, novels, protests, The vietnam war, The Vietnam war story, Veteran, veteran bashing, Vietnam blog pages, Vietnam book, Vietnam conflict, Vietnam veteran, war books, war stor, Wars and Conflicts

Veteran’s Day Special Report from WGN-TV

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Hey everyone, this is the story that appeared on WGN News on Veterans Day, 2015.  
I traveled to Chicago in August and interviewed with Sarah – portions are included in this video. Please take five minutes to watch the piece. Welcome Home Vietnam Vets!

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POSTED 9:00 PM, NOVEMBER 11, 2015 on WGN-TV, BY SARAH JINDRA, UPDATED AT 10:10PM, NOVEMBER 11, 2015

Click below to be redirected to the article and videos

About a decade after the Vietnam War ended, cities across the country began hosting “Welcome Home” parades for Vietnam veterans.  while fighting in the trenches of Vietnam, many young Americans saw things they didn’t want to see and did things they didn’t want to do.

The song “We Gotta Get Out of This Place,” by The Animals became their anthem.  And they lived for the moment they got to get back on the plane and leave Vietnam.

“Oh my God, we survived. And when the plane took off, we all cheered. It was a big, big thing,” recalls Vietnam veteran, John Podlaski.

Podlaski is one of the lucky soldiers who made it out.  He was finally able to take a deep breath and return to the country he served.

But he returned to protests and flag burning, aimed not just at the government for its involvement in the war, but at him too.

“It was a heck of an experience or account,” says Podlaski, “to see the tomatoes coming at you, raising their fists and they’re hollering at you.  Everybody was kind of embarrassed. I don’t want to go out and show myself.  To become a Vietnam vet, from that point on, it was kind of a secret. You kind of just took it in the closet and left it. You didn’t want anyone to know.”

Radio personality, Bob Leonard felt the same way when he came back from Vietnam.

“When I came home, people started spitting at me and calling me a baby killer,” says Leonard. “By about the 4th or 5th person who said baby killer and spit at me, I had had enough.”

Leonard grew out his hair and moved to Puerto Rico.  For the next 16 years, he denied serving in Vietnam, even after moving back to the U.S.  But that all changed in Chicago on June 13, 1986.

On that day, Leonard agreed to help host a “Welcome Home” parade for Vietnam veterans. Parade organizers in Chicago found out he was a Vietnam veteran and asked him to help host. He agreed and says that day changed his life.

“Everything changed,” says Leonard.  “My whole mindset changed. From that point on, it was OK to be a veteran.”

While some veterans felt the parade was too little too late, 125,000 thought it was just what they needed to finally be thanked and to feel welcome home.

As Leonard hosted, Podlaski marched in the parade.  He later wrote a book about his experience in Vietnam to help others understand what they went through.  Watching the parade broadcast today is still emotional.

“A lot of people didn’t go,” says Podlaski.  “It was 15 years too late. ‘Don’t welcome me home today, because I don’t wanna hear it.’  But for me, I was thrilled to death.”

During the parade broadcast, President Reagan made a statement to those watching, acknowledging the long overdue welcome home. “Clearly the welcome home received by many of our brave men and women who served in Vietnam was less than they deserved.  And that’s putting it mildly. Today, however, Americans are making up for that.”

The scars of war, emotional and physical, were on display that day.  As was the stark reminder, that some Veterans never even got to choose whether to attend a parade.

For more Information on “Cherries,” by John Podlaski: https://cherrieswriter.wordpress.com/

And this is a link to our commercial-free hour-long documentary that aired on most Tribune stations beginning last weekend:  http://salutingourvietnamveterans.com/

IF YOU ARE INTESTED IN VIEWING THE PARADE, SEGMENTS ARE AVAILABLE ON YOUTUBE.  HERE’S THE DIRECT LINKS:

PART 1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KlOlHExChT8

PART 2: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9z5QMWVBHLs

PART 3: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uWRUJ0PeZ-w

PART 4: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9OpKzFJqRgU

PART 5: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u8mEG3Ffp7M

 


 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’ve created a poll to help identify my website audience – before leaving, can you please click HERE and 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, helicopter nose art, Historical fiction, jungle warfare, Military, novels, protests, The vietnam war, The Vietnam war story, Veteran, veteran bashing, Vietnam blog pages, Vietnam book, Vietnam conflict, Vietnam veteran, war books, war stor, Wars and Conflicts

Lost to history: the Canadians who fought in Vietnam

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50 years since the U.S. ground war began, there’s a push to remember the 134 Canadians killed

By Chris Corday, CBC News Posted: Nov 10, 2015 5:00 AM PT Last Updated: Nov 11, 2015 6:37 AM 

rob-mcsorley

Vancouver’s Rob McSorley is one of at least 134 Canadians killed in action fighting for U.S. forces during the Vietnam War. (L Company Ranger 75th Infantry Archives)

At only 17 years old, B.C.’s Rob McSorley knew he wanted to go to war, and it didn’t matter if it wasn’t in a Canadian uniform.

Now, 45 years after his death in the jungles of Vietnam, his sister is finally learning how much he mattered to the American soldiers with whom he served.

June-Ann Davies says in 1968, her brother was tired of school at Templeton Secondary in East Vancouver, and decided joining the military would cure his boredom.

The war in Vietnam was still raging and Canada wasn’t officially participating, but McSorley was determined to be at the heart of it.

“I think he wanted adventure, which he could get out of the U.S. military as opposed to the Canadian military,” said Davies, who now lives in Kamloops, B.C.

McSorley’s parents tried to reason with him: He wasn’t an American, and it was actually illegal for him to fight in a war that didn’t formally involve Canada.

But McSorley was going to Vietnam, with or without their support.

“When they were putting up a bit of a fight, that’s when he said, ‘Well, you either sign the papers, or I’m going anyways and I’ll lie about my age,’ ” Davies recalled.

Rob McSorley

Canadian Rob McSorley, left, is pictured in March 1970 with two members of his U.S. Army Ranger regiment after a dangerous reconnaissance mission. McSorley was killed in action only weeks after this photo was taken. (L Company Ranger 75th Infantry Archives)

His parents grudgingly signed the forms, and McSorley travelled just across the B.C. border to Blaine, Wash., to enlist in the U.S. army, which was accepting anyone who came through the door.

Two years later, what was supposed to be the adventure of a lifetime ended suddenly. McSorley was shot by North Vietnamese soldiers.

Davies still remembers being in bed when the doorbell rang at their Vancouver home, and a telegram delivered the news about her older brother.

“It was awful. Terrible. Yeah, it was the worst day,” she said.

“He only just started his life when it ended. Because he’d just turned 19 two weeks before.”

Rob McSorley uniform

McSorley is remembered as a brave soldier within his unit of the L-Company Rangers. (Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund)

According to Davies, her family felt isolated after her brother’s death. No one they knew in Canada had relatives who had joined the U.S. military, let alone gone to Vietnam.

“Afterwards, my parents didn’t say a lot about it, other than to say that my brother was a hero,” Davies said.

20,000 Canadians enlisted; at least 134 killed

McSorley was certainly not the only young Canadian to fight and die in the conflict.

Canada never officially joined the fight with U.S. forces in Vietnam, and eventually harboured tens of thousands of American draft dodgers and deserters.

But much more quietly, a steady stream of young Canadians was crossing the border in the opposite direction.

Canadians in Vietnam

An estimated 12,000 Canadians served in combat roles in Vietnam. Pictured in a 1968 CBC News story are three Canadians: Ron Payne of Galt, Ont., Richard Dextraze of Montreal and Arthur Fisher of Niagara Falls, Ont. The men served in the same U.S. marines unit. (CBC)

The Canadian Vietnam Veterans Association estimates that about 20,000 Canadians enlisted, although other historians think that number may have been as high as 40,000.

Ron Parkes

Canadian Ron Parkes was with one of the first U.S. battalions to join ground operations in the Vietnam War in 1965. (Ron Parkes/CVVA)

The association believes 12,000 Canadians actually served in combat roles in Vietnam.

Some were dual citizens who may have been living or working in the U.S., but many other Canadians volunteered, driven by a conviction to fight communism, or by a love of adrenalin.

By the end of the conflict, it’s believed at least 134 Canadians had died or been declared missing in action.

To put that number in perspective, 158 Canadian soldiers were killed during the mission in Afghanistan.

Many Canadians came home from Vietnam with their lives completely changed.

“I’m proud of my service,” said Canadian Ron Parkes, who enlisted in the U.S. military during the Cuban missile crisis.

The Winnipeg veteran was deployed to Vietnam in the summer of 1965, serving with one of the first American brigades to join the ground war.

Today, Parkes is president of the Canadian Vietnam Veterans Association, which he co-founded in 1986.

Struggle for recognition by the legion

According to Parkes, Canadian Vietnam veterans were ignored or forgotten for years after the war.

“When I came back and brought up the subject, it was always ‘Who cares? We weren’t there. We weren’t in it,’ ” Parkes said.

“When I went down to the Royal Canadian Legion, they wouldn’t accept us, our service. So for many years they just forgot about it.”

The government of Canada has never formally acknowledged the citizens who were killed or declared missing in action in Vietnam, but according to Parkes, in 1994, the Royal Canadian Legion officially recognized Canadian Vietnam veterans for regular membership.

“It’s been a long struggle to get the word out, but we’ve persevered and accomplished quite a few things now,” Parkes said.

Canadian names still being added to memorial

The name of every Canadian who died fighting for the U.S. in the war is listed on the expansive Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C.

McSorley

Canadian Rob McSorley’s name is on the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., alongside the 58,000 U.S. servicemen killed in the controversial war. (Patti Jette/CBC)

Some, like McSorley, are officially on record as being from Canada.

North Wall

The ‘North Wall’ Canadian Vietnam Veterans Memorial was dedicated in Windsor, Ont., in 1995. (Don Davies)

Other Canadians aren’t remembered that way at all —  listed only as being from the American towns or cities where they enlisted.

In 1995, some American veterans took up the cause for their Canadian colleagues and privately funded a memorial that was built in Windsor, Ont.

“The North Wall” Canadian Vietnam Veterans Memorial now lists the names of 138 Canadians who died in the war, but the number still grows today.

It includes 134 Canadians who were killed in action for the U.S. military, and four other Canadians who died in Vietnam while serving with the International Control Commission, the three-country body charged with supervising the 1954 partition into South Vietnam and North Vietnam.

“The main thing is to remember those that made the supreme sacrifice,” Parkes said.

‘Without Rob… I would be gone too.’

American Bruce Bowland says he never thought much about the idea that some men in the U.S. military were actually Canadian volunteers.

Bowland was only 19 years old when he was deployed to join the fight in Vietnam.

That’s where he met and became fast friends with Sgt. McSorley from Vancouver, who at age 18 was actually younger than Bowland, but had already fought in a number of battles.

Bruce Bowland

American Bruce Bowland, second from left, was 19 when he was deployed to Vietnam. His closest friend, Canadian Rob McSorley, was killed during a mission the two were on in April 1970. (John Burford)

“Rob told me he was a Canadian and he enlisted in the American army so that he could go to Vietnam,” Bowland told CBC News from his home in Gainesville, Fla.

“And I told him, ‘You’re crazy,’ ” Bowland laughed. “He was a gung-ho guy, man, a great man.”

Rob McSorley

Colleagues say B.C.’s Rob McSorley was a fearless soldier who died protecting other members of his unit on April 8, 1970. (L Company Ranger 75th Infantry Archives)

McSorley’s U.S. Army Rangers unit was sent into what was known as “Mission Grasshopper” in the A Shau Valley, when they were suddenly caught in a battle with North Vietnamese soldiers.

“[Rob] said ‘Wow, this is really cool. I feel like John Wayne!’ ” Bowland recalled.

“That’s the type of guy he was. He knew his job, he did his job, and you knew he always had your back.”

It was on that same mission on April 8, 1970, that Bowland was planning to “walk point,” leading his team toward the jungle to make sure it was safe.

But he says McSorley wanted to be the leader that day, so he took the spot from Bowland, telling him he was a more experienced soldier.

The young Canadian was checking the bush for signs of the enemy when he stumbled upon a group of North Vietnamese soldiers.

They opened fire on each other, but McSorley’s gun jammed. He was sprayed with bullets and fatally wounded.

Bowland says his life was only spared because the enemy had their sights trained on his Canadian friend.

“Without Rob sacrificing his life for me, I would be gone, too. I wouldn’t be here. I wouldn’t have a son and two daughters. I wouldn’t have a grandson,” Bowland said.

“Rob gave up a lot of things, and I often wonder what his life would have been like if he would have come back and got married and had children. But he sacrificed his whole life for us, and I’ll never, ever, ever forget that.”

June-Ann Davies

June-Ann Davies of Kamloops, B.C., lost McSorley, her brother, in the Vietnam War. Her husband, Don, has thoroughly researched McSorley’s experience in Vietnam, hearing directly from the men who were there when he was killed. (Chris Corday/CBC)

‘He didn’t want to be a bystander’

In Kamloops, McSorley’s sister June-Ann Davies and her husband, Don, have spent many years learning about her brother’s service in Vietnam.

Don Davies has spent many long nights researching the war stories of a brother-in-law he was never able to meet.

“I’ve got heavy into it, finding out about him, and I do find it very emotional. Even though we didn’t meet face-to-face, I feel I know him as a man,” said Davies, holding back tears.

“He did what he thought was the right thing to do, and he didn’t want to be a bystander. And that’s Rob and everything I’ve heard about him.”

Over the last decade, June-Ann and Don Davies have made contact with Bowland and a number of the Rangers who fought alongside McSorley.

June-Ann Davies says their stories about her brother have changed her life.

“Even after all these years, it’s still emotional, but it’s also healing.”


 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’ve created a poll to help identify my website audience – before leaving, can you please click HERE and choose the one item best describing you.  Thank you in advance!

 


Tagged: Canadians in Vietnam war, Historical fiction, jungle warfare, Military, novels, protests, The vietnam war, The Vietnam war story, Veteran, veteran bashing, Vietnam blog pages, Vietnam book, Vietnam conflict, Vietnam veteran, war books, war stor, Wars and Conflicts
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