Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Fighter Pilot Tells Liberty Common High School Students about Vietnam War

Northern Colorado Connection: Fighter Pilot Tells Liberty Common High School Students about Vietnam War
Fort Collins, CO - He flew approximately 250 combat missions during the Vietnam War. Today, U.S. Air Force Col. (ret.) Ron McMillan completed two more assignments in front of students at Liberty Common High School.

Now a Fort Collins resident, McMillan said he enjoys speaking to students about his Vietnam-War experiences. "I've looked through your history book at the chapters on Vietnam and they have it about right," he said to students in Duane Staton's first-period and fourth-period history classes.

McMillan described his 27 years in the Air Force starting as a cadet in the Reserve Officers Training Corps. Growing up, he envisioned himself in the Navy. "I always thought I'd be in a submarine, but the Navy didn't have an ROTC program at the university I attended and the Air Force did," he said.


"I didn't plan on flying jets either," McMillan said. However, the better pay earned by pilots persuaded McMillan to give pilot school a try and he did quite well. From there, he became a pilot instructor and went back to college earning a graduate degree in Electrical Engineering.


Then the war in Vietnam broke out.


McMillan was sent to Korea and Hawaii for various planning, management and training assignments. He went to Vietnam first to provide tactical consultation.


Soon thereafter, he was deployed as a fighter pilot flying the Cessna A-37 "Dragonfly" jet fighter. "It was a good aircraft," McMillan recalled. "It had plenty of power."

"Whenever the situation got too hot, you could just push the throttle forward to get yourself out of there long enough to settle down and get yourself back into what you were supposed to be doing," he said about the plane.

The radio call sign of McMillan's squadron was "Dice." Pointing to the pair of dice he wore on the front zipper of his flight suit, he explained to students how each pilot in his squadron answered to a different number, for example "Dice 21."

McMillan's deployment in Vietnam occurred from 1969 through 1970. He spent most of his deployment at Bien Hoa Airbase north of Saigon and at other bases in Vietnam. "I didn't have occasion to interact often with Vietnamese people," he said.

Go to the link above to read the complete article

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Winners & Losers, by Gloria Emerson


Winners & Losers: Battles, Retreats, Gains, Losses and Ruins from the Vietnam War, by Gloria Emerson
WW Norton & Company, 1976
380 psges, plus notes and index. No photos.


Description
Now an American classic, this is a Vietnam book unlike any other, written by a woman who, after two years of covering the war for The New York Times, comes home wanting to once more love her country and to understand it.

In four years of interviews that Newsweek called "superb" Emerson traveled across America to speak to people who fought the war or who fought against it, to those who paid little attention and to others whose lives were changed by it.

Her reporting on a small town in Kentucky, which suffered high losses, is considered a remarkable enquiry into the meaning of war and its effect on us.

Winners & Losers is not just a book about the American experience, for she writes about the Vietnamese people as well with the same insight and brilliance that characterized her reporting during the war, which held her, and so many others, long after it was over.

Gloria Emerson covered Vietnam as a foreign corresponndent for The New York Times and won the GEorge Polk Award. Her articles on Vietnam and other subjects appeared widely in magazines. Winners & Losers won a National Book Award in 1978. Emerson is also the author of Some American Men; hr most recent boo is Gaza: A Year in the Untifada, which won the James Aronson Journalism Award for Social Justice.

Table of Contents
Foreword
1. Endings: One kind or another
2. Families: Together and Not Together
3. Small Places
4. Odd Things Not Yet Forgotten
5. Experts
6. Winners and Losers
Notes
Index

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Marine receives Navy Cross for heroic actions during Vietnam War

The GLobe (Camp Lajeune): Marine receives Navy Cross for heroic actions during Vietnam War
Working in pitch darkness with only the occasional flickering illumination from aircraft dropped flares above and suffering a leg and hand wound from mortar fire, Lance Cpl. Seath expertly crafted an operational M-60 machine gun from the pieces of two disabled weapons. Immediately and with devastating effects, he directed deadly accurate fire at the onrushing enemy, ultimately repelling the enemy’s assault." – Navy Cross citation.

Former active-duty Marine Ned E. Seath’s fellow Marines said the citation is almost a mere understatement of what the man did in his deployment to the Vietnam War. By eliminating countless enemy threats, he saved almost an entire company of fellow Marines.

Lance Cpl. Seath was serving as a machine gun team leader with Company K, 3rd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine Division, when he halted an assault of North Vietnamese soldiers July 16, 1966, from using an M-60 he reassembled from spare parts. Like most memories from Vietnam, his story of heroism was tucked away when his service in the Marine Corps ended.

Seven years ago, his story resurfaced during a battalion reunion celebration and the movement, started by Bill Hutton who served with Seath, to be recognized and awarded for his actions that day began.

Seath was awarded the Navy Cross, the second highest award for valor in the Marine Corps, in a ceremony at the National Museum of the Marine Corps Feb. 11, nearly 45 years after the battle during Operation Hastings ended. He was presented the award by Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus.

"All I could think was they’re going to be overrun us and they were going to kill us all," said Seath. "I had Hutton and Bennet on my flanks with fixed bayonets holding them off. They gave me a good two more minutes to make one good gun."

His unit, one of the four Marine battalions in Task Force Delta, was called into action to support Operation Hastings, an effort to push the 324B North Vietnamese Army Division out of the Quang Tri province in the Republic of South Vietnam. The company’s mission was to establish a blocking position in the middle of an enemy trail network.

Lead by platoon commander David Richwine, now a retired major general, Seath’s role was said to provide machine-gun fire in support of disrupting the North Vietnamese Army’s activity in the area.

After landing, Seath’s company soon came upon a reinforced enemy platoon in a defensive position, waiting for the Marines.

During the ensuing onslaught, Seath moved to obtain a disabled machine gun from a wounded Marine nearby, building an operational M-60 machine gun out of two inoperative weapons and quickly returned devastatingly accurate fire to the oncoming enemy.

One of the weapons simply malfunctioned, while another fire team, a few fighting positions away, would only fire semi-auto, said Seath. It was then that he pulled out a clean poncho, grabbed some grease and a brush, going to work on the two weapons in order to craft the one the Marines so desperately needed.

Richwine said Seath began laying down machine-gun fire in the prone position. As his field of fire in the prone position became obstructed by enemy casualties, he completely disregarded his safety as he kneeled and eventually stood up, fully exposed to enemy fire, and continued repelling the enemy’s advance.

"Everyone was fighting for their lives. Several Marines even had affixed-bayonets," said Richwine, remembering the close proximity of the advancing NVA. "Seath was providing well-aimed disciplined machine-gun fire, which ultimately killed their attack. It was a combined effort stopping the enemy. But Seath was the guy with the tool to do the job best – all while in the dark."

All that illuminated the sky that night was sporadic flairs from passing aircraft, but what lit the battlefield was the tracer rounds; red streaks from the Marines; green streaks from the NVA, said Richwine.

"If it weren’t for Ned Seath, I’d be buried right now … in Arlington [National Cemetery]," said Bill Hutton, who fought alongside Seath during that battle. "We were surrounded and out-numbered. But Ned didn’t quit. He went above and beyond the call of duty. He saved a company of Marines."

By this night, only the second night of the operation, Seath was very familiar of the possibility of dying on the battlefield for the sake of his fellow Marines. It was just 24 hours earlier when Seath selflessly rushed to the aid of two wounded Marines under heavy machine gun fire, which had already claimed the lives of two Marines, and dragged them to safety. For these actions he was awarded the Bronze Star with a V for valor, which was presented along with his Navy Cross.

"What Ned went through - what he did - is emblematic of the Marine Corps," Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus said. "This is one of the biggest honors I have. Ned Seath is a hero."

Monday, February 14, 2011

Vietnam War Collectibles, by David Doyle


Warman's Vietnam War Collectibles: Identification and Price Guide, by David Doyle
Krause Publications, 2008
Oversize, 250 pages plus index, full color photos of items


Description
Warman's Vietnam War Collectibles presents a nostalgic collection of militaria and memorabilia associated with America's longest-running, and perhaps most hotly debated war.

More than 1,000 spectacular color photographs showcase the artillery, clothing, helmets, publications, tools, uniforms, gear, vehicles, war trophies, currency and more. Detailed captions describe the items, where and how they were used and what they are worth in today's collectible marketplace.

-Includes historical photographs from the personal collections of indivduals involved in the conflict portraying many of today's "collectibles" in action.

- Arranged by branch of service - Army, Navy, Marine Corps and Air Force - for easy accesss.

While the Vietnam War ended decades ago, the memories will never die. Warman's Vietnam War Collectibles helps to preserve those memories, while providing a visual reference for historians, collectors, re-enactors and veternans alike.

Table of Contents
Army
-Army medical Department
-Chaplain Corps
-Chemical Corps
Corps of Engineers
-Ordnance corps
---Ammunition
---Firearms
---Accessories
---Grenades
--Knives and bayonets
---Mechanized
Quartermaster Corps
---Boots
---Headgear
---Individual equipment
---Field gear
---Accoutrements
---Uniforms
---Subsistence and survival rations
-Signal Corps
-Transportation Corps
-Army Publications
-Insignia
-Personal GEar
-Military Payment Certificates
Navy and Marines
Air Force
War Trophies

Sunday, February 13, 2011

In Vietnam War Love Story, A Medallion Comes Home

NPR: In Vietnam War Love Story, A Medallion Comes Home

It was a love token worn through the blood-drenched rice paddies and jungles of the Vietnam War.

For Henri Huet, the Virgin Mary medallion was his one constant link to Cecile, the woman he loved. The celebrated Associated Press photographer carried it in his pocket or hung it around his neck. It was engraved for her baptism and when he left for the war, she gave it to him.

On assignment, the military helicopter Huet was riding in got shot down over Laos. Huet was killed. The medallion the size of a penny disappeared into the thickness of a bamboo forest, where it slept for nearly three decades.

This past week, the gold medallion was again in the hands of Cecile, the culmination of an extraordinary journey that took it across epochs and continents — and whose mystery was unlocked by a long-lost trove of letters.

———

Their story started in 1968 with an apple grabbed for lunch outside New York's Rockefeller Center. The 20-year-old Cecile Schrouben was about to bite into it when Huet approached her and told her it was no proper meal. He suggested oysters instead, a nod to the rocky coast of Brittany, where he grew up.

The lanky man with a roguish grin was irresistibly charming. They had lunch, "American-style" oysters scrubbed especially clean. Before long, the Agence France-Presse employee and the dashing AP shooter twice her age were a couple.

He was at AP headquarters, recovering from a leg injury suffered in Vietnam. She was an AFP archivist, receptionist and general gofer. They jetted off to Mexico, where Huet took her under his wing and taught her photography.

Duty called later in the year: Huet was sent back to cover the war.

He wanted her to join him in Asia — but not in war-ravaged Vietnam. Parting, she gave him the medallion — a baptismal gift from her godmother, in keeping with Roman Catholic tradition.

They wrote each other letters, hundreds of them. The correspondence lasted nearly three years. She wrote her last letter the day he died — when she woke up in the middle of the night, sensing a "need" to write.

———

It was Feb. 10, 1971. Huet, 43, had boarded a South Vietnamese military helicopter in the town of Khe Sanh, near the border with Laos, with a mission to inspect efforts by U.S.-backed forces to sever Viet Cong supply lines.

With him were three other legendary news photographers: Larry Burrows of Life magazine, Kent Potter of United Press International and Keisaburo Shimamoto of Newsweek.

In a flash of anti-aircraft fire, the chopper was gunned down. All four photographers were killed, along with seven Vietnamese troops, one of them a military photographer.

Along with the men, the camera equipment, and the military hardware, a tiny disc of gold also tumbled down from the skies above Laos. On one side was a relief of the Virgin Mary; on the other was etched, "Cecile, nee le 16-6-1947" — French for "born on June 16, 1947."

———

For 27 years, the keepsake lay on an overgrown Laotian hillside.

The wreckage from the downed helicopter was inaccessible to U.S. military investigators until 1992, when Washington restored diplomatic ties to the communist governments of Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam.

A U.S. search team found the crash site four years later. In 1998, a U.S. Army forensic team traveled to the site. Former AP Saigon Bureau Chief Richard Pyle and AP photographer Horst Faas, who won a Pulitzer Prize for his Vietnam coverage, were on hand for the start of the search.

The team, staffed with Laotian locals, found camera parts, broken watches, bits of wreckage — and the tiny cameo.

Pyle suspected it belonged to Huet because of the French. But he'd never heard the photographer speak about a Cecile, and a search of AP archive photos didn't turn up Huet wearing the medallion.

With no proof of ownership, the medallion stayed in U.S. Army storage. Until a woman came forward with a mysterious packet of letters.

———

In 2004, Helene Gedouin, an editorial director at French publishing house Larousse, came across "Requiem," a book by Faas about photographers like Huet who were killed in action in Vietnam and Indochina.

The book inspired her to delve deeper into the life of Huet, who was a relative of hers through marriage — one of his brothers had married her aunt. She met Faas, and two years later they co-authored a book on Huet.

In the fall of 2006, upon return from a photojournalism conference in the south of France, Gedouin found an email in her inbox.

"Hello, I have nothing to do with Henri Huet," the message read, "but it turns out — by the greatest happenstance — that I have in my possession a correspondence from Henri Huet that he wrote to a woman. They are love letters, and there are about 400 of them. I'd like to meet you."

The letters were addressed to a Cecile Schrouben. In one of them, he mentioned a small town in Belgium where she was born. Gedouin went through the local phone directory, called all the Schrouben households she could find — and in the fourth call, found Cecile's brother.

"I said, 'could you call your sister and tell her that we have something in our possession that she had lost?'" Gedouin recalled.

"The next day, she called me."

———

The letters were all the proof the U.S. military needed to release the medallion.

Pyle got in touch with American authorities after learning about the letters from Gedouin.

"When I called the (U.S. Army) laboratory director in Hawaii and told him this, he was ecstatic," Pyle recalled. "He said: 'That's it, that's the final proof. That's what we needed.'"

Larry Burrows' son Russell, as a relative of a crash victim and one who has had repeated contacts with the U.S. military about recovering items lost, was sent the medallion in a Federal Express parcel last fall.

Cecile told AP she had stored the letters in a box in a Paris apartment where she once lived. In a chaotic move, she left them behind.

A young man who had helped the new owner move in noticed them. Intrigued by the epistolary romance, he gave them to his mother for safekeeping.

Why the woman came forward after holding on to the letters for 15 years remains a mystery. Gedouin declined an AP request that she provide a way to contact the woman.

———

Huet was born in Dalat, Vietnam, in 1927, the second son of four children to a high-society Vietnamese mother and a French civil engineer for France's colonial government in Indochina.

Pyle has described Huet as one of "the three finest people that I ever met in my life;" Cecile calls him one of the two "best" people she has known. "Lost over Laos" — a book by Pyle and Faas about the photographers in the crash — cites a U.S. officer calling Huet the bravest man he'd ever seen.

Colleagues and acquaintances describe Huet as modest, discreet, full of integrity and compassion — and a charmer of women.

He spent his early years in the care of his mother's family. His father then had the children sent to his family home in France. A turbulent youth, he eventually settled down and studied painting. He took up photography while in the French navy.

In the 1950s, he married a Russian-Vietnamese woman, and had two children with her. But the marriage didn't last.

"He was a mystery man," said Pyle. "The only reason we didn't know anything was that he never told anyone anything."

———

In a small ceremony this past Tuesday, Russell Burrows gently handed a Ziploc bag containing the medallion to Cecile at the opening of an exhibit on Huet's work at the Maison Europeenne de la Photographie in Paris. The show is co-curated by The Associated Press.

"Such a small thing for such a big story," Cecile said. "It's made a long journey." Over a black sweater, she wore a three-pointed silver pendant that was designed by jeweler Georg Jensen — the first gift Huet gave her.

Cecile declined to show the letters Huet had written her, saying the correspondence was private. She said that Huet, who was an intensely discreet person, didn't intend for them to be made public and she wanted to protect his memory and intimacy.

Cecile left New York for France in the mid-1970s. She worked at now-defunct TWA airlines and then Air France, and married in 1978 — becoming Cecile Blumental. She and her husband have two daughters. Now 63, she has five grandchildren.

She says her five-year-old granddaughter will get the medallion one day.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Hays man's work creates Vietnam records data

HDNews.com: Hays man's work creates Vietnam records data
Korean War veteran himself, Richard Coffelt thought Vietnam War veterans received little or no respect when they came home.

With particular interest in local veterans and those who died in the war, Coffelt, a Hays attorney, began reading to learn more about them, such as their company and unit.

Rather than learning more, he discovered that little was known.

That discovery led to a lifelong project that culminated in 2002 with the Coffelt Data Base.

Coffelt was honored by the Vietnam Veterans of America 939, Hays, recently and presented a plaque in recognition of his work.

He began in the 1980s by looking for a book, listing names of those who died in the War, said JoAnn Jennings, Coffelt's wife.

Because of illness, Coffelt often finds speech difficult, so Jennings speaks for him with his nodding consent.

Taking notes on yellow legal pads, he researched in the Hays Public Library and Forsyth Library at Fort Hays State University and amassed a sizeable personal library of books on the war.

For many years, the couple's vacations were research trips to the National Archives in Washington and Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library where Coffelt researched letters of condolences written to families.

It was necessary to get clearance to access the archives and hand copy the letters, Jennings said.

Coffelt hired a graduate assistant to continue the work after he returned home, she said.

Some information existed identifying war dead at the division level, and Coffelt purchased those microfilm and printouts.

However, after about 10 years searching for a definitive source of names and unit identification, he realized there was none and began creating one. He continued reading books, borrowing material through interlibrary loan, using grave-marker applications and traveling to Washington and Austin, Texas.

"I was a teacher, so we spent every spring break in the Johnson Library Archives," Jennings said.

Using these research tools, Coffelt was able to piece together the information he sought. The Internet was the turning point for the project, and Coffelt transferred his information to a computer document.

As word of what he was doing got out, he was contacted by relatives and former military personnel for information about friends and relatives. He always responded and directed the person to sources when he could.

Eventually Coffelt learned of two others, Richard Arnold and David Argabright, doing similar research. The three began working together as a team.

Together, they have compiled a database of more than 58,000 who died in the Vietnam War with more than a million pieces of data.

The database was deeded to the National Archives in a dedication ceremony in June 2002. In honor of Coffelt's contribution, it was named the Coffelt Data Base.

However, Coffelt made one stipulation, that it cost no one to access it, Jennings said.

The database can be downloaded by going to www.virtualwall.org/wkgpages/vwdb4.zip

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Sailors to the End, by Gregory A. Freeman


Sailors to the End: The Deadly Fire on the USS Forrestal and the Heroes Who Fought It, by Gregory A. Freeman
William A. Morrow, 2002
278 pages, 16 pages of photos, plus list of the 134 men killed, notes, acknowledgments and index



Description
Sailors to the End tells the dramatic and until now forgotten story of the 1967 fire on board the USS Forrestal during its time at Yankee Station off the coast of Vietnam.

The aircraft carrier, the mightiest of the US fleet, was preparing to launch attacks into North Vietnam when one of its jets accidentally fired a rocket across the flight deck and into an aircraft occupied by pilot John McCain. A huge fire ensued, and McCain barely escaped before a thousand-pound bomb on his plane exploded, causing a chain reaction with other bombs on surrounding planes.

The crew struggled for days to extinguish the fires, the5,000 men on board experiencing different kinds of hell--some trapped in damaged compartments waiting to die, some battling rivers of flaming jet fuel in order to rescue their buddies. Almost all of them were innocent 18-and 19-year olds, but in an instant they were thrust into a tragedy that nearly destroyed the ship and took the lives of 134 men.

Written with the intensity and excitement of a thriller, and based on never-before-disclosed information and extensive interviews with the fire's survivors, here is the first full, minute-by-minute account of the disaster.

Told through the stories of a dozen sailors, including John Beling, the carrier's beloved captain who was made a scapegoat for the disaster, Sailors to the End follows the Forrestal from its home in Norfolk, Virginia through its mission in Vietnam.

Focusing on the fateful fire and its aftermath, this book provides a gripping tale of heartache and heroism as young men find themselves trapped on a buring ship with bombs exploding all around them.

Sailor to the End also corrects the official view of the fire, providing evidence that the US government compromised the ship's safety by insisting on increased bombing despite the shortage of reliable weapons.

For 35 years, the terrible loss of life has been blamed on the sailors themselves, but this meticulously documented history shows that they were truyly the victims and heroes; deserving recognition for their efforts during a sweeping tragedy that until now has only been a footnote in history. Gregory A. Freeman dramatically brings this story to life, creating a work that is both riveting and moving.

Table of Contents
1. Cast YOur Fate to the Wind
2. The Safest Place to Be
3. Young Men and Old
4. Their Greatest Fears
5. Journey to Vietnam
6. On Yankee Station
7. Fire on the Flight Deck!
8. ONe Minute and Thirty-Four Seconds
9. Stay on the JOb!
10. Keep Up YOur Very Good WOrk
11. They Were Sailtors to the ENd
12. I Don't Want to Screw Up
13. I'm Ready to Go
14. Injuries, Multiple, Extreme
15. Investigations
16. Iceland
Epilogue
Killed on board USS Forrestal July 29, 1967
USS Forrestal Flight Deck (illustration)
Notes
Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Index

Monday, February 7, 2011

A Life in a Year, by James D. Ebert


A Life in a Year: The American Infantryman in Vietnam, 1965-1972, by James D. Ebert
Presidio Press, 1993
345 pages plus 10 pages of photos, Appendix, Glossary, Notes, Bibliographyand Index

Description
Finally, a book that focuses completely on the life of the "grunt" (infantry soldier) in Vietnam. The voices of more than sixty army and marine infantrymen speak with restrained elegance of their experiences from induction to the jungles and rice paddies of "Indian country" to their return to "the World".

From I Corps in the north to IV corps in the south, and from the early days of 1965 to the American withdrawal in 1972, A Life in a Year offers a unique look at the grunt's war in Vietnam - as seen through the eyes of the soldiers trhemselves. The insights of these combat veterans are woven into the narrative, giving the reader a sense of what it was like to serve in an infantry unit fighting Viet Cong guerillas and North Vietnamese regulars. Veternans can compare their own experiences who served in different time periods during the Vietnam era and in different parts of the country.

Civilians and veterans who did not experience life in the "boonies" will appreciate the author's candid explanation of the war in terms that will help them to better understand the individual soldier's experience.

This lively, topical account will appeal to both scholars and casual readers alike.

A Life in a Year is sure to become a classic and is a valuable addition to Vietnam War literature.

Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. Induction
2. Basic Training
3. Advanced Individual Training
4. Going
5. Arriving and Processing
6. Being New
7. First Combat
8. Humping the Bush
9. Hazards of the Field
10. Changing and Coping
11. Offensive Operations
12. The Bitter Angles of our Nature
13. Civilians?
14. "Short!"
Epilogue Eating the Toad
Appendix List of Interview Subjects
Glossary
Notes
Selected Bibnliography
Index

Photos
Ed Hoban, I Corps, F Troop, 8th Cavalry, gfall of 1971
Robert Bonesteel, 9th Marine Regiment sniper, fall 1967
Jack Freitag, scout observer with Company F, 2nd Battallion, 1st Marines, 1st Marines Division, July 1966
Doug Kurtz, 9th Infantry Division, Dong Tam, 1969
James Stanton, 1st Marine REgiment, 1st Marine Division, Hill 55, summer of 1969
Randall Hoelzen at LZ Jamie in August 1969
William Harken and Stephen Frederick in basic training posed photo, Company D 2nd Battalion, LTAS Devils, Fort Lewis, Washington
Sgt Stephen Frederick, 101st Airborne Division, Central Highlands
Jerry Johnson and "Kim", Highway 13 north of Saigon, June 1969
Leonard Dutcher, Chu Lai, spring 1968
Dwight Reiland and 3 unidentified, Firebase Bastogne 1971
John Merrell and "Ramona" (a monkey), Central Highlands, March 1969
Jerry Severson, Operation Junction City, spring 1967
Glen Oldstad, M113 Armored Personnel CArrier near Nui Ba Den, 1968
Marine Jeff Yushta and two buddies, I Corps, 1969
Tom Schultz, Central Highlands, August 1968
Tom Schultz, 6 unidentified members of his mortar squad (including one African American), Tay Ninh Province, winter 1968.
Marine Tom Magedanz, "Happy Valley" near the DMZ, 2 July 1970
Mike Roberts, 4th infantrt division machine gunner, An Khe, July 1971
Machine gunner Layne Anderson, LZ Gator, Chu Lai, September 1968

Thursday, February 3, 2011

3 Feb, 2011, New Books: Vietnam in Wonderland, Published and Authored by William M. Price

Benzinga: Vietnam in Wonderland, Published and Authored by William M. Price in October of 2010, Offers Honest Perspective on American History

Those that seek the truth and delve into the difficult questions about the war in Vietnam and this turbulent era in American history can now order the groundbreaking book, Vietnam in Wonderland by William M. Price.

Eastlake, MI (PRWEB) February 3, 2011

Vietnam in Wonderland, published in October of 2010 by author William M. Price, is now available for purchase via the book's website, Amazon.com, and Lulu.com. This breakthrough book chronicles the experience of Price himself and fellow Marine, Major Jerry Piatt. But this book covers much more than other Vietnam war stories; it delves into the questions surrounding this undeclared war and the bigger picture of the impact this period had and continues to have on the course of American foreign policy and society at large.

In the book, Price points to the inspiration that spurned this endeavor:

"Vietnam in Wonderland is a looking glass, waiting to be viewed by anyone willing to risk the protection and security of their personal comfort zone. People still talk of the 60's. But, the ambiance of the time is seldom investigated with serious consideration for its contribution to the enigmatic outcome of that decade. It was my new friendship with a retired Marine Major that stirred old ghosts from their hiding places. Jerry Piatt, my new friend and I, recognized the convivial effect their lost presence had on our frequent meetings. These visitors from the past had not been distilled through decades of political correctness, revised history, or subjective social agendas, which had disfigured most among the living. We learned to welcome their new haunt, thankful for the grace they brought to our lives and the contribution they made to Vietnam in Wonderland."

Vietnam in Wonderland is a relatively short book, just over 90 pages, but exposes the complete picture of both the fighting in Vietnam as well as a unique perspective on the conditions at home and the mindset of a nation. Price also addresses the lasting effects and pervasive questions that still revolve around the era.

"This book is for those that want to understand the lasting effects of the war in Vietnam more clearly. They want to know what animated this war and how history will tell the story. They want to understand what the era did to the moral compass of our society," says Price. "These are hard questions and I think my experience and the experience of Major Piatt will shed some light and offer something in the way of answers."

Initial reviews of Vietnam in Wonderland have been resoundingly positive.

"What a unique and powerful perspective! William Price communicates his first hand experience with great effectiveness and fervor. I can honestly say this little book has something that sets it far apart from the sea of literary work covering this controversial war. I recommend reading with an open mind and a little humility. A terrific text and dose of reality." (Review submitted by dympha on October 17, 2010)

History is the result of the subjective evaluation of events, made by previous generations. Price believes that forty years may be a sufficient amount of time to revisit the Vietnam experience and take a more honest look.

To read reviews of Vietnam in Wonderland, or to purchase the book, visit WonderlandsWarinVietnam.com.

About William M. Price:
William M. Price is a Vietnam Veteran; he is a native of Michigan, enlisted in the United States Marine Corps for three years from Sept 1966 to Sept of 1969. He served in Vietnam from April 1967 to June of 1968. In addition to authoring and publishing this book, he is married with six children and currently has six grandchildren.

3 Feb 2011, Vietnam War News: Veterans remember Vietnam War

Katy Times: Veterans remember Vietnam War
By Tracy Dang
Times Managing Editor

Katy, Texas -- Members of the Katy Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 9182 and Houston Chapter of the Vietnam Wars Veterans Foundations stood side-by-side to host a Vietnam War remembrance ceremony Sunday afternoon, just as their soldiers allied to fight against the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese enemy four decades ago.

The ceremony at the Katy VFW Hall commemorated the 38th anniversary of the signing of the Paris Peace Accords, which was intended to end the war on Jan. 27, 1973.

The ceasefire agreement ended direct U.S. military involvement and temporarily stopped the fighting between North and South Vietnam until the North Vietnamese forces and its Communist allies invaded the country two years later. The fall of Saigon in April 30, 1975 ended the war as Vietnam fell under Communist rule.

The ceremony had a panel of American and Vietnamese veterans that served during the Vietnam War, as well as a Vietnamese woman who came to America as a young girl.

Students from Katy, Taylor, Morton Ranch and Mayde Creek High School students were also in attendance as they learned about the Vietnam War from those who experienced it first hand.

American Soldiers

During the presentation, several Katy VFW members were asked to serve on a panel and share their experiences during the war.

Among them was Raul Herrera, who served in the U.S. Navy as a radio and radarman from April 1967 to May 1968.

Herrera was aboard the PCF-79, a swift boat patrolling the rivers of Vietnam that intercepted a trawler sneaking 90 tons of supplies to the Viet Cong.

The trawler was first detected by an aircraft but later fell off the radars. The swift boat knew the area well and fired an 81-mm motor round with a direct hit. The trawler ran aground near the mouth of the Song Sa Ky River.

David Lemak was a corporal in the U.S. Marine Corps, serving in Da Nang from 1967-69.

“I was what they called a ‘grunt’ and lived in the Vietnam villages for nine months, engaging in enemy combat,” he said.

Lemak was awarded two Purple Hearts for wounds sustained during his service. One of those times was while he was on patrol when a 60-mm motor exploded. He said the only reason he is alive today is because it landed in the mud, smothering much of the impact.

Mike Warren served in the U.S. Army from March 1970 to March 1971 with the field artillery battalion supporting the 1st Brigade of the 1st Cavalry Division.

“We won every battle, but we were sent home before anything was done,” he said. “We were winning when I came home. A few years later, our U.S. politicians negotiated for the return of our POWs, and I apologize for that.”

And Katy VFW post commander Mike Mastrangelo said the return was not easy. As an infantry platoon leader in the U.S. Army from 1960-70, he fought for democracy.

Upon his return, a young lady yelled and spat at him in an airport.

Mastrangelo returned and continued to serve in the U.S. Army and retired after 30 years of service, achieving the rank of colonel. He said it was gratifying see future generations were not treated the same way when they returned from Desert Storm and current conflicts.

“It’s important to know that our soldiers are going to be recognized when they come home because they were asked to put their lives on the line,” he said.

Vietnamese Allies

The Katy VFW was proud to invite members of the Vietnamese community in the Houston area to sit on the panel and share their stories.

Pastor Buu T. Chung was a first lieutenant in the Republic of Viet Nam Air Force. He was shot down twice, first in 1968 and again in 1971 when he became a prisoner of war for 14 years.

“I believe that during the Vietnam War, my 219th Helicopter Squadron was the only Vietnamese Air Force unit that worked closely side-by-side with our American counterpart in all of our missions, the Green Berets of MACV-SOG,” he said.

Chung’s rescue of an American pilot and his Vietnamese flymate brought recommendations for an Army Distinguished Medal, but he was captured the second time before it became a reality.

He was onboard a convoy of 10 military trucks transporting 82 officer prisoners of wars when an escaped hen delayed the trip, saving the convoy from an American attack on Hanoi for the first time since 1968.

“You cannot imagine our feelings,” he said. “We were so happy and so proud of our ally’s flying ability and so glad to see our friends beat up the bad guys.”

He was released from imprisonment in October 1984.

Army of the Republic of Viet Nam Brigade General Nam Van Nguyen served for 23 years. He participated in the Paris Peace Accords as a representative of South Vietnam and later oversaw 50,000 Viet Cong and North Vietnamese prisoners of wars.

Nguyen had planned to show a movie of the South Vietnamese Navy fighting against the Chinese Communists that invaded the Arhipelago Hoang Sa and Truong Sa in January 1974.

However, many in the Vietnamese military associations could not make the ceremony as they continue to defend the spirit of freedom and democracy in an unexpected protest against two Vietnamese politicians who allegedly committed election fraud scheduled that afternoon.

Victoria Ai Linh Bryant also shared her story as a first-generation American.

She was born at the Air Force Base in Pleiku, where her father was stationed in 1974. Her parents were separated during the fall of South Vietnam and the evacuation in 1975. Her family was later reunited, and she left Vietnam in 1978 to settle in Houston.

Bryant emotionally thanked the veterans for their service and credited their sacrifice for the opportunity to grow up in America and enjoy the freedom and liberties this country has to offer.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Field techniques from the Vietnam War: Locating caches & scaring ducks

FP: The Best Defense, Tom Rick's Daily Take on National Security: Field techniques from the Vietnam War: Locating caches & scaring ducks
I'm always amazed at how refined field craft can become. Here are a couple of things that struck me in that essay by Col. Hoang Ngoc Lung, a former senior South Vietnamese intelligence officer, from Sorley's The Vietnam War: An Assessment by South Vietnam's Generals:

Floors, too, were good candidates for caches. The most effective way to detect them was to pour water over the dirt floor. Places that had been excavated would absorb more water at a faster rate than those that hadn't...

"The sapper threat was recognized and given high priority by security units. Small outposts took inexpensive measures for detecting infiltration which were nevertheless effective, such as raising dogs, geese and ducks on the outer perimeter of their positions...To deal with geese and ducks, they [the sappers] attached a stalk of blackened water potato plant to the end of a walking stick and dangled it upwind in front of the birds. Thinking they saw snakes, the birds did not dare make a sound. Another way they distracted the ducks and geese was to run green onion leaves on the sappers' bodies. The smell frightened the birds because they thought they smelled vipers." (pp. 118-119)