Archive for Combat Infantry

What Sets The Vietnam Veteran Apart From All Other Wars by Jack Smith

Posted in The Vietnam war story with tags , , , , , , , , , on May 16, 2013 by pdoggbiker

jacksmith1Jack Smith was a veteran ABC News correspondent, as well as a media consultant. During his 26 years with ABC, he won two national Emmys, a Peabody and numerous other awards. He was the host for TLC’s award-winning series on the Vietnam War, The Soldiers’ Story. A decorated Vietnam combat veteran (Bronze Star and Purple Heart), Smith did extensive reporting and speaking on the Vietnam War and its aftermath, and has received wide recognition from the veterans’ community.  Jack’s father was Howard K. Smith of ABC News.

April 7, 2004: It is with heavy hearts that we at Military.com say farewell to Jack Smith, who passed away today. Jack was one of Military.com’s Advisors, a decorated Vietnam combat veteran, a great American, a close friend, and a true patriot. Although best known as a network journalist with ABC, his greatest legacy might just be his support of Vietnam Veterans. Wherever I would go with Jack, Veterans would stop him, give him a hug and thank him for helping them deal with the emotional experience of coming home from Vietnam. Like many others, I am thankful to have known Jack and blessed to call him a friend.   All will miss him. 

– Christopher Michel, Founder and President, Military Advantage

 [Editor's note: The text of this essay is taken from a speech given by Jack Smith at the Marin Breakfast Club on October 17, 2002.]

Jack Smith: Vietnam Memories

1

I served in Vietnam. And what follows is the story of my personal journey home from that war, a journey that has taken most of the last 37 years.

*****

If Vietnam had been a nuclear bomb it could scarcely have had more impact on America. The war tore our country in two and left deep wounds that still have not entirely healed. For those who fought it, as I did, and for those who demonstrated against it, as many of my friends did, Vietnam remains the formative experience of a generation.

2For right or wrong nearly 3 million Americans went off to serve in Vietnam. 58,000 were killed, another 153,000 were injured of crippled by bullets, shrapnel or disease. But there were no parades for those who came home. Instead, we were pushed under the rug along with the unpopular and divisive war we served in. Vietnam veterans became bitter, angry, truly the lost Americans.

I was wounded. But I was lucky. I was not crippled. I am well-employed. I have adjusted. However, for many years I shared the same bitterness as those veterans who were less fortunate than I towards the country that we all served so well, but which afterwards served us so poorly. It may sound silly, but war veterans need a parade…some sort of public acceptance so they can put the war behind them and get on with life. Vietnam veterans never got that, and that’s why so many of them for so long walked around carrying the war on their shoulders. A lot of Vietnam veterans never really left Vietnam, they never really came home.

 3

I fought in the bloodiest part of the bloodiest battle of the whole war, the Battle of the Ia Drang Valley. It was also the first encounter between North Vietnamese Regular Army troops and US soldiers, and it fixed the war-fighting tactics used by both sides for the remainder of the war. On the 17th of November, 1965, a day that is burned into my memory, my battalion (about 500 men) was walking away from a place called “Landing Zone X-Ray” in South Vietnam’s Central Highlands, a few miles from the Cambodian border. Along with other units of the 1st Air Cav Division, we had just fought in a major 3-day battle there and had decisively defeated 2 regiments of the North Vietnamese army.

4

It’s the battle that was depicted in the recent Mel Gibson Hollywood movie, “We Were Soldiers Once and Young.” Don’t look for me. I ended up on the cutting room floor. Anyway, the movie only depicts what happened in the first part of the fight. What happened afterwards was much worse. More men died in one more day of fighting than had in the previous 3 … and fewer men were engaged.

5

As we slipped through the jungle into another clearing called L-Z Albany, we were jumped by a North Vietnamese formation. Like us, about 500-strong, and like us, made up mostly of boys 18 or 19 years old. But they had been in-country for a year, and so they were greatly more skilled at fighting and killing. Hearing us coming, they quietly tied themselves up into the trees, uncoiled bandoleers of ammunition and snuck close in the chest-high razor grass.

6

Minutes after the guns opened up, we 500 were overwhelmed and fighting for our lives. Men rolled in the grass and stabbed at each other, gouged and punched, or blazed away at enemy soldiers just a few feet from them. I was lying so close to a North Vietnamese machine-gunner that I simply reached out and stuck my rifle into his face, pulled the trigger and blew his head off.

7

At one point in that awful afternoon as my battalion was being cut to pieces, a small group of enemy came upon me, and thinking I had been killed (I was covered in other people’s blood), proceeded to use me as a sandbag for their machine gun. I closed my eyes and pretended to be dead. I remember the gunner had bony knees that pressed against my sides. He didn’t discover I was alive because he was trembling more than I was. He was, like me, just a teenager. The gunner began firing into the remnants of my company. My buddies began firing back with rifle grenades–M-79s, to those of you who know about them. I remember thinking, oh, my God, if I stand up, the North Vietnamese will kill me, and if I stay lying down my buddies will get me…. Before I went completely mad, a volley of grenades exploded all around and on top of me, killing the enemy boy and injuring me.

It went on like this all day and much of the night. I was wounded twice and thought myself dead. My company suffered 93% casualties.

8

I watched all the friends I had in the world die. It is not the sort of thing you forget. The battlefield was covered with blood and littered with body parts, and it reeked of gunpowder and vomit. I discovered with a shock, as other soldiers have, that the only thing separating me from meat hanging in a butcher’s shop was a thin piece of skin.

This sort of experience leaves scars. I had nightmares, and for years afterwards I was sour on life, by turns angry, cynical and alienated.

Then one day I woke up and saw the world as I believe it really is, a bright and warm place. I looked afresh at my scars and marveled, not at the frailty of human flesh, my flesh, but at the indomitable strength of the human spirit. In spite of bullets, in spite of hot metal fragments, the spirit lives on. This is the miracle of life. Like other Vietnam veterans, I began to put my personal hurt behind me and started to examine the war itself.

9

A footnote on the battle: As I mentioned when I began, it was a seminal event and the first encounter between the regular troops of both sides. It was how we developed the technique of search-and-destroy… essentially the same technique that George Custer used in the Great Plains… Have US forces troll for the bad guys, and when they attacked, kill them 10 to one with our superior firepower. And the North Vietnamese went along. Basically, both sides in the Vietnam War drew the identical conclusion from this first and terrible battle: that they could win by using attrition. What we didn’t understand then was that they were willing to pay a far higher price in lives than we were. More about this in a moment.

*****

When I went back to Vietnam a few years ago I met General Vo Nguyen Giap, the man who engineered the defeat of the French at Dien Bien Phu and then commanded North Vietnamese forces in the war with South Vietnam — and us. He conceded that because of the Ia Drang his plans to cut Vietnam in half and take the capital had been delayed ten years. But then, he chuckled, it didn’t make a difference, did it?

10

We won every battle, but the North Vietnamese in the end took Saigon. What on earth had we been doing there? Was all that pain and suffering worth it, or was it just a terrible waste? This is why Vietnam veterans don’t really let go, why many can’t get on with their lives, what sets them apart from veterans of other wars.

Nothing is so precious to a nation as its youth. And so, to squander the lives of the young in a war that, depending on one’s point of view, either should never have been fought, or we were never prepared to win, seems crazy. Yet, that’s exactly what happened in Vietnam. However justified the war seemed in 1964 and 1965 — and, remember, almost all Americans then thought it was — it no longer seemed that way after 1968. And no matter what you may remember of the war, we never really fought it to win.

11

When I was wounded it caused a minor sensation at home. My father is Howard K Smith, the former anchorman and TV news commentator, who was then at the peak of his career. That the son of a famous person should get shot in Vietnam was, in 1965, news. When I returned to the US after my tour in Vietnam, President Johnson, who was a friend of my father’s, invited me to a dinner party at the White House. I remember a tall, smiling man who thanked me for my service and sacrifice. I liked him then, I still do today. Yet, no one bears as much responsibility for the conduct of the war as he.

12

In the Gulf War we took 6 months to put half a million troops into the war zone. We were too timid to carry the fight to the enemy until the end, and we tried to keep the war contained to South Vietnam.

The result was that our enemy, a small country waging total war — that is, using all its resources — saw a super-power fighting a limited war, and concluded that if it could just sustain the 10-to-1 casualties we were inflicting for a while, then we would tire and leave, and it would win. After all, North Vietnam produced babies faster than we could kill its soldiers. Of course, Ho Chi Minh was right. After the Tet Offensive in 1968 we quit and began the longest and bloodiest retreat in US history. Dean Rusk, the then-Secretary of State, many years later ruefully told me, “They outlasted us.” And with the Sino-Soviet split and Vietnam’s success playing China and Russia against each other, the war also began to change its complexion and to look less and less like a Cold War proxy struggle. The fact is democracies don’t fight inconclusive wars for remote goals in distant places for very long.

13

Pham van Dong, Ho’s successor, said that. Lyndon B, Johnson harnessed his generals to a basically civilian policy — fighting the war piecemeal in the vain hope no one in the US would notice! As for the enemy, he treated Ho Chi Minh like a member of the congressional opposition: show him the US was tougher, and he’d give up. But Ho saw the incrementalism that resulted as a sign of weakness and hung on. Tens of thousands of young Americans died needlessly.

14

Whether the war was right or whether it was wrong, it was fought in such a way it could never have been brought to a conclusion. That now seems clear with time. What a waste. It’s why so many veterans of Vietnam feel bitter.

Well, we finally did get our parades and we finally did build our memorial on the Mall in Washington. These helped. But so many veterans were still haunted by the war, and I was, too.

15

13 Years ago, I watched the Berlin Wall come down and, as an ABC News correspondent, I witnessed firsthand on a number of trips the collapse of communism. The policy of containment worked! We won the Cold War. And however meaningless Vietnam seemed at the time, it contributed to the fall of communism. That was something to hold onto. Pretty thin and not wholly satisfying as a justification for what many of my friends and I went through in Vietnam. But at least it was something.

16

Then 9 years ago came an event that changed me; I had an opportunity to go back to Vietnam for ABC with ten other Ia Drang veterans, I traveled back to the jungle in the Central Highlands and walked the Ia Drang battlefield for several days in the company of some of the same North Vietnamese we had fought against nearly 30 years earlier. Did I find the answer to my question about the futility of the war? No, I don’t know if what we did in the war ultimately was worth it…We can talk about that afterwards… But what I did find surprised me.

North Vietnam may have conquered the South, but it is losing the peace. A country that two decades ago had the 4th strongest army in the world, has squandered its wealth on quarreling with, and fighting wars against, most of its neighbors and is poor and bankrupt as a result. In Vietnam today, communism is dying. Unfortunately very slowly – but it is dying. You look at Vietnam today with its eager entrepreneurs and its frightened party bosses, and you wonder why they fought the war. Many North Vietnamese wonder the same thing.

17

More importantly, Vietnam is a country profoundly at peace. Because the North Vietnamese feel they won, they are not haunted by the same ghosts that we are. The memorials and cemeteries that dot the Vietnamese countryside, to most people we met, were just artifacts from another time. And people could not understand what our little group of gray-haired, middle-aged Americans was doing there, what demons were trying to exorcise, because they did not have those demons.

18

What struck me was the overwhelming peacefulness of the place, even in the clearing where I had fought. I broke down several times. I wanted to bring back some shrapnel, or shell casings, some physical manifestation of the battle to lay at the wall of the Vietnam Memorial in Washington…under the black granite of panel number three, where all my army buddies’ names are carved, more than 200 of them. But, do you know, search as I did, I could not find any battle debris. The forces of nature had simply erased it. And where once the grass had been slippery with blood, there were flowers blooming in that place of death. It was beautiful and still, and so I pressed some flowers and brought them back to lay at the foot of panel three. That is all that I could find in that jungle clearing that once held terror, and now held beauty.

*****

What I discovered with time may seem obvious, but it had really escaped me all those years on my journey home from Vietnam: the war is over. It certain is for Vietnam and the Vietnamese. As I said on a Nightline broadcast when I came back, “This land is at peace, and so should we be, so should we.” For me, Vietnam has become a place again, not a war, and I have begun letting go.

boots on wall

I have discovered that wounds heal. That the friendship of old comrades breathes meaning into life… We meet every year in Washington to read the names of the dead at the Vietnam Memorial… And even the most disjointed events can begin to make sense with the passage of time. This has allowed me, on days like this, to step forward and take pride in the service I gave my country, never forgetting what was, and will always be, the worst day of my life. The day I escaped death in the tall grass of the Ia Drang Valley. Thank you.

Rest in Peace Mr. Jack Smith!

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My Tri-fold Brochure for “Cherries”

Posted in The Vietnam war story with tags , , , , , on April 14, 2013 by pdoggbiker

Hey everyone, please take a look at the nifty tri-fold brochure  that I created for my book, “Cherries” in Microsoft Word.   To get it to work, I have to print both pictures on the same piece of glossy paper – one on the front and the other on the back, then fold it so the book cover is oriented as the front of the brochure!  (Click on picture to enlarge).  Let me know what you think…

cherry brochure1

Inside sleeve               Rear of closed brochure           Front cover

cherries brochure2

Inside view of fully opened Brochure

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.   Click on the title at the top of this page to be redirected to my main page – a directory on the right side lists similar articles and points of interest.

No Ticker-Tape Parade by Gary Jacobson (Guest Blog)

Posted in The Vietnam war story with tags , , , , , , , on April 3, 2013 by pdoggbiker

Greetings! I’m Gary Jacobson, of B Co. 2/7 First Air Cavalry.

Nam_CamoPatrolI have my fighting gear on, humping the radio for our Platoon Leader. I’m just about ready for our patrol out into the killing zone. Wanna come along? I know someone’s waiting to kill me out there…maybe today…maybe 100 yards away…maybe tonight, but I can’t think about it. A soldier thinking too much about what can happen will break down totally. You can’t afford to lose your edge. They say when you become a man you must put away childish things. Well, to become a soldier, you have to put away the boyish thinking you had back in “The World,” that’s for sure. You can never completely quell the fears all around you every minute, every day…but you can hide them way down deep where they don’t stare you in the face.

No Ticker-Tape Parade
by Gary Jacobson © December 2004

For that little southeast Asian charade
For that fiercest of games we played
They gave no welcome-home parade
Fighting for freedom…far and away in Vietnam
Knee deep in mud, blood and fear
Fear that’s lasted many a bloody year.

There was no ticker-tape parade, or such
No hurrahs…no cookies…no punch
Not so much as a half-hearted cheer
For surviving hell our most excruciating year.
Though we didn’t ask for much…
By a grateful nation we wanted only to be heard
Wanted folks to hear our tales of war’s absurd.

We had so bloody much hurt to get off our chest
For devotion to duty honored with our country’s best
Just wanting to be recognized
For boyish youth in cruel war sacrificed
But America was just too weary of war
To welcome back boyhood soldiers war bore.

Men sorely staggered by war’s bloody insanity
Face now a bleak destiny
Futures beset with demonic fear’s depravity
I guess that’s why folks back here couldn’t see
How young value systems were twisted for eternity
How on young boys was impressed war’s barbarity
Giving rise to upheavals witnessed in war’s inhumanity.

So embarrassed, folks back home gave no parade,
No welcome home accolade
For warriors wounded in body and spirit
Soldiers disillusioned, lied to, desolate…
Men laid low by moral depravity’s greatest hit
Were turned away while countrymen on us spit.

Folks back home called us every conceivable name
For erstwhile young princes held such contemptuous shame
Calling us depraved baby killers, castigated with blame.
We’d so much to talk about of where we did roam
But found the only ones welcoming our arrival home
Were our mothers…and beastly traumatic stress syndrome.

Seeing the war daily on television made
Vietnam a condemned charade
People just too uncomfortable to honor with a parade
Returning warriors with souls burned-out
Who’d seen too much, no doubt
Waving the flag, all hale to their glory shout

Vietnam veterans buried “issues” down extra deep
Deep down in the dank where scary demons yet creep
Regurgitating violence that plumb our soul’s great depths
Forevermore haunted by comrades-in-arms’ deaths
Recurring memories of war’s hot fiery breath
Is it any wonder, vets now walk…so unafraid of death?

Parades are reserved for conquering heroes, glories to flaunt
Not for those whom Nam’s deep, dank jungles still haunt.
Not for those with compounded fears from a foreign land abused
With dread inlaid by vagaries of a non-caring world confused
Our fears earned fighting for home, freedom, beloved land
Great horrors, our people, did not even try to understand.

Beloved countrymen did not, would not, could not hear
Would not try their best to comfort a fellow man’s harrowing fear
By a nation we loved, unceremoniously denied
Promises not kept by a country we with all our hearts loved,
Bled for…died
For honor given, our country gave dishonor…

Yet Vietnam veterans still dream of the ticker-tape parade
Dreams still blow in the wind of a welcome home fusillade
For that war of a surety won by the blade
Lost only by politician’s bumbling charade
Our sacrifice in honor deprecated
Enslaving promises forever subjugated…decimated…trampled

That parade that should have been…
But never was…our nation’s great sin…

nam 2

To read more of Gary’s poetry, please visit his website:  http://pzzzz.tripod.com/parade.html

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.   Click on the title at the top of this page to be redirected to my main page – a directory on the right side lists similar articles and points of interest.

Veteran Speaking with School Kids (guest blog)

Posted in The Vietnam war story with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on March 4, 2013 by pdoggbiker

larryThank you Harry Larsen for allowing me the opportunity to repost your article on my “Cherries” website.

This is a Veteran’s Day presentation I gave at my daughter’s school on November 10, 2010.  I may have run slightly over my 10-minute window, because I wasn’t watching my watch. The kids (7th-9th graders) were attentive the entire time (thank you Lord!). Here’s (approximately) what I said:

I was standing at attention in my underwear at midnight with my head shaved. I tried to stay calm as a pack of wild-eyed Drill Instructors circled behind us like snarling wolves, then stopped inches from our ears to yap and bark out orders. I stared straight ahead at the words: ‘Commitment,’ ‘Honor,’ and ‘Courage’ painted in huge letters and wondered if I could ever meet that challenge.

That was my introduction to Marine Corps Basic Training; it was June 22, 1968, I was 23 years old, and I was in deep doo-doo.

Eight months later, I stepped off the plane in Vietnam and it was so hot, I felt like a limp washrag. I was still in deep doo-doo.

tentsI spent the next three months at Red Beach, practicing my trade as an artilleryman and then three months at An Hoa combat base. I had just been promoted to Corporal and I was heading back to Red Beach.

All my gear was packed in the back of a jeep and I waited. My driver was late. It was ten past ten a.m. when we reached the convoy meet-up point, only…guess what?…the convoy was gone. A Marine standing gate duty said, “If you hurry, you can catch up with them.” My driver, Private Boyle glanced over at me. If we missed this convoy, it could be a week before we’d catch another. And we’d be in trouble.

We headed out and cruised at 45 mph on that pot-holed red dirt road. I was thinking, “Vietnam is really such a pretty place…too bad it’s full of bad guys.”

By 10:25 a.m., we still hadn’t caught up with our convoy.

Then we spotted a HUGE puddle of water in the roadway ahead. It was about the size of this stage (where I’m standing).

Boyle downshifted and said, “I don’t want to get the jeep muddy, ‘cause I’ll have to clean it.” He engaged the 4-wheel drive as we entered the puddle.

Crack! Crack! Crack! AK-47 automatic rifle fire came from my right. I tensed my body and silently prayed, “God, don’t let them hit the driver.” I saw Boyle, white as a ghost, leaning over his steering wheel. I leaned forward too, and shouted, “GO! GO!” The jeep lurched forward and muddy water sprayed everywhere.

Crack! Crack! Crack! Now I couldn’t see the road ahead because our windshield was splattered with mud. Boyle started the windshield wipers; the wipers swung back and forth, back and forth, then they stopped in the middle of the windshield.

roadCrack! Crack! Crack! By this time, I’d grabbed my rifle and an ammo clip from my utility belt. I tried to insert that clip into my M-16, but I kept missing the slot because we bounced so much.

Crack! Crack! Crack! Boyle hollered, “Shoot!” And I hollered back, “I’m trying to.”

Crack! Crack! Crack! I finally got the clip in, chambered a cartridge and slipped it off safety. I swung my body and rifle out to the right and looked. We bounced again and I felt my helmet leave my head. As I watched it roll on the road behind us, I thought, “There go my letters from home.” I often stored letters for safekeeping between the steel pot and the Kevlar liner.

It was quiet again. I swung back in my seat and said, “I lost my helmet.”

Boyle asked, “You want to go back for it?”

I said, “NO!” and Boyle looked relieved. We picked up speed and were fishtailing now, but Boyle steered us back into the center of the road. I glanced at the speedometer; we were bumping along at thirty miles an hour.

Seconds later, we rounded a bend and saw a lone Marine with his rifle at the ready motioning for us to stop. I thought, “Oh good, there’s help for us out here.”

Boyle jammed on the brakes and we skidded to a stop beside the Marine. His fingers were white where he gripped his rifle. His eyes never left the road behind us as he asked, “What happened back there?”

Boyle answered, “We were ambushed! Where’s your base?”

“Two clicks away,” he replied, gesturing with his head over his right shoulder, “I’m manning a ‘listening post’ with a buddy. He’s gone to report the shooting and to see if we have to stay out here.”

“Did you see a convoy pass by here?” Boyle asked.

“Yeah, they just passed,” he replied.

“We can’t stay,” Boyle said, “we’re trying to catch up with them.”

I felt sorry for that lone Marine as I spotted his ‘outpost’; it was not much protection, just a small camouflage tent. As we sped away I silently prayed again, “God protect him.”

evansWe spotted the convoy moments later parked on the right shoulder of the road and Boyle pulled up behind the last vehicle. The Gunnery Sergeant was walking our way.

“What happened?” he asked, and we recounted our ambush story.

A twenty-something sergeant alongside him suggested, “Hey Gunny, let’s go back there and waste ‘em!”

Gunny paused, then replied, “No, we can’t take that chance.”

With that, I started breathing again.

Someone else said, “Hey, you guys have a flat tire.”

Sure enough, our right rear tire had a neat round hole in the sidewall. Boyle checked the spare that hung off the back and reported that it had holes too.

“You guys see this?” Another Marine was pointing at our hood.

He was pointing at a 6-inch crease in the hood on my side; it ended with a neat round hole punched through the metal. It was this far in front of where I was sitting. (I demonstrate with my hands about 20 inches.) My knees got rubbery and Boyle’s face turned white again.

Gunny said, “You can’t change your tire here we’ll take care of it when we get to Liberty Bridge.”

We bumped along on that flat tire for another twenty minutes before the convoy stopped again. Then I carefully checked all my belongings; no bullets had penetrated the passenger compartment.

Boyle checked with the other jeep drivers and learned that no one had a jack that would fit a jeep. Five other Marines and I positioned ourselves on the right side. I faced the hood. On the count of three we lifted, and held that jeep up until the flat tire was replaced with the spare tire from another jeep.

After we arrived at Red Beach I retold the story to our First Sergeant. He asked, “Why didn’t you shoot back?”

I said, “I had trouble loading my rifle, and by then the shooting stopped and I couldn’t see anyone to shoot at. Oh…and I lost my helmet on the road back there.”

He thhelmeten said, “Your helmet was a ‘combat loss.’ You won’t have to pay for it.”

I’m thinking, “That’s pretty cool.”

He scribbled on a form and tossed it at me saying, “Go to Supply and get a replacement.”

In the ensuing weeks I learned to zigzag every five steps wherever I walked after a bullet went BZZZT! past my head like a mosquito on steroids. I learned to dive on the ground when rockets or mortars landed nearby.

harry2We had many days of boring routine interrupted by moments of intense adrenaline-pumping excitement and fear.

I once saw a poisonous snake while on guard and hollered, “Snake!”

The guy with me was sitting on a case of grenades, he jumped off and forward and ran down the berm toward the wire. The grenades spilled out and he did a funny little dance trying to avoid them hitting him.

He asked, “Where?”

I looked and the snake was gone. There were several holes nearby where it could have entered.

“I don’t know. It disappeared,” I answered.

He thought I was joking, because sometimes I do pull pranks on people. But I wasn’t. Not that time.

On my way home in early 1970, I boarded a ship and when I saluted our flag, I was both intensely proud of my voluntary service and happy that I’d survived.

Three weeks later, I arrived at the San Diego airport. I saw one of those kiosk places where they sell stuff, and–since I hadn’t eaten a chocolate bar in over a year–I decided to buy some.

I planned to offer the gal a two-dollar tip (I was feeling generous) so I pulled a ten dollar bill from my wallet.

I went up to her and said, “I’d like two packs of Raleigh filters and two Almond Joy candy bars, please.”

She laid my cigarettes, candy bars and change on the counter. As I was picking it up, she shouted something about “killing women and babies.”

I quickly scanned my surroundings thinking, “Jeez! This is a terrible time to be without my rifle!” But everything appeared to be normal. There were no psycho killers on the loose here. I looked back at her and she never took her eyes off me. She was still screaming. I thought, “Oh, no…she’s mistaking me for someone else!” I scooped up my belongings and scooted out of there.

I was still a bit unnerved by my encounter with that “crazy” lady, so I stopped at an airport lounge and ordered a drink. As I ate my candy bars, some guys in the lounge were jeering, but I ignored them.

Several minutes passed then another Marine sat down beside me. I could tell by the single National Defense ribbon on his chest that he hadn’t been overseas.

He asked, “Can I buy you a drink?”

One drink is usually my limit, so I said, “No thanks.”

He asked, “Do you mind if I ask you a question?”

I was thinking, “Oh, no…he’s going to ask me how many guys I killed,” but I was polite and said, “It’s still a free country. Go ahead. Shoot.”

memory placqueHe asked, “Do many guys not make it back from Vietnam?”

He’s sincere – I knew what he meant was, “What are my chances?” And I’m thinking, “Oh God, what do I tell him?”

I asked, “What’s your M.O.S (military occupational specialty)?”

“Motor T (truckdriver/mechanic),” he replied.

I was thinking, “That’s good. At least he’s not a grunt.”

“Well,” I said, “if you keep your head down when the bullets start flying, you’ll do okay.”

He thanked me and then he hopped off his stool.

I noticed he hadn’t even touched the Coke he ordered, so I swung around in my stool and saw him thirty feet away in a huddle talking with two other new Marines. Next thing, they’re off down the concourse with a spring in their step and smiles on their faces.

As I returned to my drink, I prayed, “Oh God, please let me be right.”

The ten years following my involvement in Vietnam were not pretty ones, I made a mess of my life and had flashbacks and nightmares. I made bad decisions and I was in trouble, with nowhere to look but up. Finally, in a quiet place at work and in desperation I called out, “Oh God, please help me!”

At that instant, I was comforted with an inner peace that I cannot describe. I knew in my heart that everything would turn out all right. It was months later that I realized that God had taken away my post-traumatic stress. A year after that, God brought me to my wife and in the years that followed, He gave us six wonderful children, including Miss Virginia. God gave me back my life.

I thank and praise God because I owe everything to Him.

Commitment, Honor, and Courage. You don’t have to become a United States Marine to embrace those values. If you haven’t held those values in the past, you can start today. You can make a difference here at school, in your neighborhood, in your own homes.

And remember, in your darkest moment, when you are desperate, when there is no solution in sight, you can call out to Him, and God will help you.

Thank you very much for your kind attention

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G.I. Pocket Guide to Vietnam (circa 1965)

Posted in The Vietnam war story with tags , , , , , , , , , , , on February 22, 2013 by pdoggbiker

vietnamI don’t recall seeing one of these books upon my arrival in Vietnam during 1970.  However, many report having received them from the Department of Defense prior to leaving the United States.  It is an interesting read with many pictures – 75 pages long.  Click on the link below to open and read.  Does anybody recall this guidebook?

Pocket guide to Vietnam

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Soldier Poem

Posted in The Vietnam war story with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on February 14, 2013 by pdoggbiker

soldier

Just a Common Soldier

by A. Lawrence Vaincourt

He was getting old and paunchy And his hair was falling fast,
And he sat around the Legion,Telling stories of the past.

Of a war that he once fought in And the deeds that he had done,
In his exploits with his buddies; They were heroes, every one.

And ‘tho sometimes to his neighbors His tales became a joke,
All his buddies listened quietly For they knew where of he spoke.

But we’ll hear his tales no longer, For ol’ Joe has passed away,
And the world’s a little poorer For a Soldier died today.

He won’t be mourned by many, Just his children and his wife.
For he lived an ordinary, Very quiet sort of life.

He held a job and raised a family, Going quietly on his way;
And the world won’t note his passing, ‘Tho a Soldier died today.

When politicians leave this earth, Their bodies lie in state,
While thousands note their passing, And proclaim that they were great.

Papers tell of their life stories From the time that they were young
But the passing of a Soldier Goes unnoticed, and unsung.

Is the greatest contribution To the welfare of our land,
Some jerk who breaks his promise And cons his fellow man?

Or the ordinary fellow Who in times of war and strife,
Goes off to serve his country And offers up his life?

The politician’s stipend And the style in which he lives,
Are often disproportionate, To the service that he gives.

While the ordinary Soldier, Who offered up his all,
Is paid off with a medal And perhaps a pension, small.

It is not the politicians With their compromise and ploys,
Who won for us the freedom That our country now enjoys.

Should you find yourself in danger, With your enemies at hand,
Would you really want some cop-out, With his ever waffling stand?

Or would you want a Soldier His home, his country, his kin,
Just a common Soldier, Who would fight until the end.

He was just a common Soldier, And his ranks are growing thin,
But his presence should remind us We may need his likes again.

For when countries are in conflict, We find the Soldier’s part
Is to clean up all the troubles That the politicians start.

If we cannot do him honor While he’s here to hear the praise,
Then at least let’s give him homage At the ending of his days.

Perhaps just a simple headline In the paper that might say:
“OUR COUNTRY IS IN MOURNING, A SOLDIER DIED TODAY.”

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Watch Full Length Documentary “Vietnam in HD”

Posted in The Vietnam war story with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on February 13, 2013 by pdoggbiker

Thanks to YouTube, I am able to post all six segments of this documentary(approx 45 minutes each) on my blog.  This film documents the Vietnam War in the words of Americans who served there.  It features home movies and real archival footage collected during a worldwide search and now shown in High Definition.  Many scenes are graphic in nature and viewer discretion is advised.  It’s best to watch in full screen.

“Over 2.5 million Americans served in Vietnam
It’s not the war you know – it’s the war they fought!”
 
“You know they say the World War II guys were the best generation.
Well, those who fought wars since… were the best of their generation.
They  went… they served… they sacrificed… and they fought like tigers…”
 

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“Air Story” Out of Vietnam (Guest Blog)

Posted in The Vietnam war story with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on February 12, 2013 by pdoggbiker

“Air Story” Outside of Vietnam
By Lawrence E. Pence – Colonel, USAF (Ret)

For most servicemen who served in Vietnam, the Freedom Bird was that civil airliner which took them back to the land of the big PX at the end of   their tour. Mine was a bit different sort of Freedom Bird. In mid-1967, as a junior Air Force Captain, I was detailed to 7th AF HQ in Saigon as an Air Technical Intelligence Liaison Officer, short name: ATLO (the “I” gets left out, as people look strangely at anyone who calls himself an ATILO, thinking he is somehow related to Attila the Hun). My job was to provide 7AF and the air war the best technical intelligence support that the Foreign Technology Division of AF Systems Command (my parent organization) could provide, in whatever area or discipline needed. Also I was to collect such technical intelligence as became available. This was a tall order for a young Captain, and this assignment provided much excitement, including the Tet Offensive.

crusaderAt that time, Operation Rolling Thunder was underway, the bombing of military targets in North Vietnam. The weather in NVN was often lousy, making it difficult to find and accurately strike the assigned targets, so a radar control system was set up to direct the strike force to their targets. This system was installed in a remote, sheer-sided Karst mountain just inside Laos on the northern Laos/NVN border. The site could be accessed only by helicopter or a tortuous trail winding up the near-vertical mountainside, so it was judged to be easily defensible. The mountaintop was relatively flat and about 30 acres in size. On it was a tiny Hmong village called Phu Pha Ti, a small garrison of Thai and Meo mercenaries for defense, a helicopter pad and ops shack for the CIA-owned Air America Airline, and the radar site, which was manned by “sheep-dipped” US Air Force enlisted men in civilian clothes. Both the US and NVN paid lip service to the fiction that Laos was a neutral country, and no foreign military were stationed there, when in reality we had a couple of hundred people spread over several sites, and NVN had thousands on the Ho Chi Minh trail in eastern Laos. This particular site was called Lima (L for Laos) Site 85. The fighter-bomber crews called it Channel 97 (the radar frequency), and all aircrews called it North Station, since it was the furthest north facility in “friendly” territory. Anywhere north of North Station was bad guy land.

400px-LS85_Phou_Pha_ThiThe Channel 97 radar system was an old SAC precision bomb scoring radar, which could locate an aircraft to within a few meters at a hundred miles. In this application, the strike force would fly out from Lima Site 85 a given distance on a given radial, and the site operators would tell the strike leader precisely when to release his bomb load. It was surprisingly accurate, and allowed the strikes to be run at night or in bad weather. This capability was badly hurting the North Vietnamese war effort, so they decided to take out Lima Site 85. Because of the difficulty of mounting a ground assault on Lima Site 85, and its remote location, an air strike was planned. Believe it or not, the NVNAF chose biplanes as their “strike bombers!” This has to be the only combat use of biplanes since the 1930′s. The aircraft used were Antonov designed AN-2 general purpose ‘workhorse” biplanes with a single 1000hp radial piston engine and about one ton payload. Actually, once you get past the obvious “Snoopy and the Red Baron” image, the AN-2 was not a bad choice for this mission. Its biggest disadvantage is, like all biplanes, it is slow. The Russians use the An-2 for a multitude of things, such as medevac, parachute training, flying school bus, crop dusting, and so on.

Antonov_AN-2_Colt_Yellow

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antonov An-2

An AN-2 just recently flew over the North Pole. In fact, if you measure success of an aircraft design by the criteria of number produced and length of time in series production, you could say that the AN-2 is the most successful aircraft design in the history of aviation! The NVNAF fitted out their AN-2 “attack bombers with a 12 shot 57mm folding fin aerial rocket pod under each lower wing, and 20 250mm mortar rounds with aerial bomb fuses set in vertical tubes let into the floor of the aircraft cargo bay. These were dropped through holes cut in the cargo bay floor. Simple hinged bomb-bay doors closed these holes in flight.  Pretty good munitions load to take out a soft, undefended target like a radar site. Altogether, the mission was well planned and equipped and should have been successful, but Murphy’s Law prevailed.

A three-plane strike force was mounted, with two attack aircraft and one standing off as command and radio relay. They knew the radar site was on the mountaintop, but they did not have good intelligence as to its precise location, it was well camouflaged, and could not be seen readily from the air. They also did not realize that we had “anti-aircraft artillery” and “air defense interceptor” forces at the site. Neither did we realize this. The AN-2 strike force rolled in on the target, mistook the Air America ops shack for the radar site, and proceeded to ventilate it. The aforementioned “anti-aircraft artillery” force – one little Thai mercenary about five feet tall and all balls – heard the commotion, ran out on the helicopter pad, stood in the path of the attacking aircraft spraying rockets and bombs everywhere, and emptied a 27-round clip from his AK-47 into the AN-2, which then crashed and burned. At this juncture, the second attack aircraft broke off and turned north towards home.

The “air defense interceptor” force was an unarmed Air America Huey helicopter, which was by happenstance on the pad at the time, the pilot and flight mechanic having a Coke in the ops shack. When holes started appearing in the roof, they ran to their Huey and got airborne, not quite believing t he sight of two biplanes fleeing north. Then the Huey pilot, no slouch in the balls department either, realized that his Huey was faster than the biplanes! So he did the only thing a real pilot could do -attack! The Huey overtook the AN-2′s a few miles inside North Vietnam, unknown to the AN-2′s as their rearward visibility is nil. The Huey flew over the rearmost AN-2 and the helicopter’s down-wash stalled out the upper wing of the AN-2. Suddenly the hapless AN-2 pilot found himself sinking like a stone! So he pulled the yoke back in his lap and further reduced his forward speed. Meanwhile, the Huey flight mechanic, not to be outdone in the macho contest, crawled out on the Huey’s skid and, one-handedly, emptied his AK-47 into the cockpit area of the AN-2, killing or wounding the pilot and copilot. At this point, the AN-2 went into a flat spin and crashed into a mountainside, but did not burn.ATT00072

A couple of firsts: (1) The first and only combat shootdown of a biplane by a helicopter, and (2) The first known CIA air-to-air victory. As an addition to this story, there is a painting of this shoot down on prominent display at the University of Texas Dallas Research Library in Richardson Texas. Also, the throttle quadrant from the downed AN-2 is displayed along with other Air America memorabilia. Have you ever seen an Air America one kilo gold bracelet? Not many of those around. Last year, the CIA finally turned over all of the Air America records to UTD. There was a reunion of dozens of CIA and Air America personnel at the event, which included several panel discussions, open to the public. The helicopter involved was actually a civilian Bell 205 which looks like the Bell UH-1H or Huey.
WJY

“Cherries” Named Best Audiobook of 2012

Posted in The Vietnam war story with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on January 28, 2013 by pdoggbiker

Page One
“Every book begins with Page ONE”

PAGEONELIT.COM celebrates over 20 years online

Pageonelit.com is a Writer’s Digest Top 101 writer site for 2009!

#1 Google Search for Literary Newsletters on the Internet

PageOneLit.com was the first online literary newsletter and ranks first in Google searches for literary newsletters. PageOneLit.com has been featured by the USA Today, N.Y. Times, and Chicago Tribune newspapers.

# 1 Literary Newsletters Website out of 1,770,000 (GOOGLE)
# 3 Newsletter Website search out of 90,200,000  (GOOGLE)
# 9 Author Interview Search out of 4,000,000  (GOOGLE)

PageOneLit.com was one of the first Literary Newsletter Websites online. Older than Google and MySpace.

On January 21, 2013, PageOneLit.com named “Cherries – A Vietnam War Novel” by John Podlaski – BEST AUDIOBOOK OF 2012
CherriesCDdraft2 (1)safe_image.jpg
     This is a proud moment for John Podlaski – recipient of the “Books and Authors Award for Literary Excellence“.  John commented on the audiobook, “This was way more difficult than writing the book.  I bought the equipment and tried to record the story myself, but fell flat and learned early on that I was not an actor.  Thereafter, I solicited experts and chose Michael Sutherland to tell my story.  He brought the story to life – developing distinct voices for 23 different characters…it was like listening to a great movie.  Barbara Battestilli, Copy Editor of the novel, monitored tone, pace and voice deflections for consistency throughout and also compared Michael’s readings with the actual book text – ensuring unabridged authenticity.  The success of this audiobook would not have come without them.”
     When notified by contest officials of his good fortune in winning the audiobook category, the e-mail included the following quote from one of the contest judges, “One HELL of a book!!!
     “Cherries” is a story about a young, naive, teenage soldier who is sent to Vietnam, with others his age, to fight in an unpopular war.  Dubbed “Cherries” by their more seasoned peers, these newbies suddenly found themselves thrust in the middle of a nightmarish scenario for which not even their worst dreams could prepare them; as such, they were hardly ready to absorb the harsh mental, emotional, and physical toll that the conflict would eventually take on them. Literally forced to become men overnight, the Cherries had to learn quickly to make life-or-death decisions, the consequences of which not only impacted their own lives – but also those of their fellow soldiers.  This is a story about their rite of passage.
      The author provides links of the complete first six chapters of the novel for your listening pleasure.  If you wish to listen and/or purchase the audiobook in its entirety, please click here:   Listen to Cherries audiobook   
     To see the final list of all contest winners, please click on the following link: http://www.books-and-authors.net/BooksoftheYear2012.html

Zippo Lighters from the Vietnam War

Posted in The Vietnam war story with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on January 9, 2013 by pdoggbiker

lighter 33

One of the icons of the Vietnam War is the Zippo lighter.  Sure they are wind-proof and guaranteed by the manufacturer to light every time – if it didn’t, it was replaced for free – perfect for Vietnam.  Everyone had one – even if they didn’t smoke cigarettes.  Next to a P-38 can opener, a lighter came in handy for lighting a heat tab or C-4 when cooking meals or making coffee in the field.

Tattoos are popular today and allow recipients an opportunity to “advertise” those things they feel strongly about.  Could be a picture, scene, saying or even foreign characters.  Back in the day, engraving Zippo lighters was the rave in Vietnam.  Every one of them was unique and “advertised” a bravado saying, homage to their units and reminders of those back home.

I had one with a saying, but have absolutely no idea what happened to it.  Today, the Vietnamese and personal vendors are selling those that metal detectors have uncovered throughout the country.  Some are real and others counterfeit – made to look like they survived the elements for the last forty years.  I have included about forty pictures of various engraved lighters from the internet for your viewing pleasure.  If you still have one, take a picture of it and send it via my email and I’ll add it to this blog.

lighter 26 lighters27 lighterr29 lighter 25 lighter38 lighters28 lighter29 lighter30 lighter31 lighter32 lighter34 lighter9 lighter8 lighter5 lighter6 lighter4 lighter3 lighter20 lighter21 lighter22 lighteer7 lighter lighter2 lighter19 lighter18 lighter17 lighter16 lighter15 lighter14 lighter13 lighter12 lighter11 lighter10

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