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The Attack

This part of the story follows my earlier post (the Dark) made a couple of days ago. I am writing these stories to preserve some of my memories from 51 years ago and also to show a clearer picture of what infantry combat was like for Marines in Vietnam at that time. We have had a lot novels written and movies made that showed some very odd and unrealistic views of ours and the army’s war back then and I am trying to provide an alternate and first-hand perspective in these stories. First, some background: in 1967 we Marines still had for the most part the older green cotton utility uniform, M1941 packs and suspender traps, and leather boots. Some of us had gotten the newer Jungle Boots but ominously, they had someone else’s names on them when we got them. We had just been issues M-16s and they were showing themselves to be unreliable and not particularly accurate. Our basic load was the utility uniform, usually minus underwear because if the heat and the fungus, jacket minus half or all the sleeves (or no jacket at all) M55 plate flak vest, steel helmet, rifle, ammunition, M26 frag grenades and sometimes Illumination and/or smoke grenades, poncho, small pack with C-Rations and razor, first aid pack, and two or three canteens of water. Occasionally, we also carried 66mm LAW rockets or a two pound block of C-4 for blowing bunkers and nearly always carried the extra machinegun belt of ammo or mortar rounds for the mortar men. This load was carried in the heat of the day – usually above 100 degrees and sometimes over 120 and always near 100% humidity.

The enemy consisted of three levels: at the most basic level, the local Viet Cong. They wore loose black or sometimes all-white “pajamas”, wore sandals and carried older bolt-action rifles and machine guns like the old Soviet DP and often carried local-made or Chinese- made stick grenades. They were part-time soldiers and often just drafted. They also surrendered pretty readily most of the time when they were cornered and were usually docile prisoners. The next level were the most feared, the “Main Force” VC, also known as the “Hard Core VC”. They were usually older, much more politically rabid, carried more modern weapons (often ours) and were the experts at the ambush, the night attack, the most cruel booby traps, and they were the ones who rarely took prisoners. The highest level were the North Vietnamese Army (NVA) (“Hard Hats”)and they were disciplined, physically fit, had good uniforms and modern equipment and weapons an almost always had B-40 (RPG) rockets and 82mm mortars organic to their units. They were tough, aggressive and never came in less than a battalion. If you thought that you were approaching a platoon of Hard Hats, you were wrong.

That morning after the incident with the infiltrator, a helicopter came in to take away our two dead from that night and we got some sort of new reporter and his cameraman with our new ammunition and C-Rations. He wore a bush jacket and had blond curly hair and he made it clear as soon as he landed that he thought that we were all war criminal and focused part of his time taking footage of the dead VC in our midst.

We were a hard bunch and he realized fairly quickly that we weren’t going to put up with too much from him – so he and his Japanese sound man quickly took the next helicopter out again.

We began the approach march to our objective, linking up with the rest of our battalion, and the day got hotter. We were moving through a succession of open areas and treelines and as always, we approached every potential cover for the enemy with wariness. Foxtrot Company ahead of us, hit a large booby trap and it was a monster. After you had spent some time in Vietnam, your ear became tuned to explosions and you could tell by the sound what kind of thing went off and you could pick out the screams mixed in with the detonation. This one was a 155m howitzer round suspended in the trees and it killed a dozen Marines and wounded several more. I won’t describe what I saw.

Sometime mid-morning, the other two battalion were in their blocking positions on the other sides of the objective, a long thin treeline on the edge of a wide, open field of tall yellow grass. I was in the center of our company which was in reserve, right behind the two assaulting companies – so I just broke into the open when the lead companies ran into the enemy defenses. The enemy opened up with several machineguns, including one heavy machine gun and we took casualties immediately. The leading companies recoiled and returned fire and the volume of fire, the noise was deafening. I had never heard that much sustained fire in my life and it was obvious that it really was an enemy battalion and they were staying put.

I lay down flat in the grass and tried to send an artillery fire mission but the medevacs were already going and a Sav-A-Plane was in effect that stopped all artillery and mortar fire in our area until the evacuations were done. I remember hearing the bullets crack as they went by and seeing long lines of grass fall where the bullet cut through. We were pinned down and it looked like it was going to be really tough to cross that 300-400m of open ground to get to them when it was our turn to attack.

While I was lying there, a single Marine F-4 Phantom approached and crossed over me, very low and perpendicular to the enemy line. Our Forward Air Controller (FAC) must’ve had him under his control because the F-4 made his pass and then turned around us one more time and passed directly over me again to make his bombing run. We were one edge of a small triangle bordered by three Marine battalions, separated by only a few hundred meters, so he had to drop whatever he had with extraordinary precision or he would kill some of us.

So he was flying very low and slow – so slow that the plane was making that distinctive moaning sound Phantom usually made when they were slowing for landing. Then I saw a whole, solid wall of muzzle flashes coming from the enemy treeline and the enemy was standing up, at least a hundred of them, pouring fire at that Phantom as he approached. Without flinching, that pilot dropped four “Snakeye” 500 pound bombs (The Snakeye had a tail fin assembly that popped open upon release to form a broad cross at the rear of the bomb, slowing it drastically to allow the bombing aircraft to escape the blast). They fell directly on the enemy position and huge clouds of dirt, debris, rooftop and trees soared high in the air and after the sounds of the blasts faded, all the enemy fire stopped and we raced up and forward to get them. When we got into their position we discovered that the enemy had concrete and sandbag bunkers, barbed wire and mines but the four bombs killed many of them and those that could ran away into our blocking battalions and we could hear the gunfire in their direction as they ran into them.

I saw that phantom turning towards Danang. There was smoke behind him but with Phantoms always smoking it was hard to tell if he had been badly hit or not. I would love to find out who the pilot was and buy him a case of whatever he wanted to drink.

1 posted on 03/15/2018 11:23:46 AM PDT by Chainmail
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To: Chainmail

Thanks for sharing this memory and thanks for your many years of service. Keep posting your recollections.


2 posted on 03/15/2018 11:40:06 AM PDT by D_Idaho ("For we wrestle not against flesh and blood...")
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To: Chainmail

Harrowing... thank you, Chainmail.


3 posted on 03/15/2018 11:43:30 AM PDT by NFHale (The Second Amendment - By Any Means Necessary.)
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To: Chainmail

Again, a riveting account of a terrifiying situation. Do you have a Ping list? If not, maybe you could start one. I was in college during the years of the war ending. I didn’t know anyone, at the time, who was in Viet Nam. So sorry for ignorance and naïveté about the realities of the Viet Nam War.


4 posted on 03/15/2018 11:56:07 AM PDT by originalbuckeye ('In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act'- George Orwell.)
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To: Chainmail

Bttt.

5.56mm


5 posted on 03/15/2018 11:58:59 AM PDT by M Kehoe
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To: Chainmail

I do believe the F4 Phantom had the most accurate bomb-sight of the Vietnam War, and my memories of the F4 can be found in this story: http://www.projectdelta.net/wrong_valley.htm


6 posted on 03/15/2018 11:59:55 AM PDT by DJ Taylor (Once again our country is at war, and once again the Democrats have sided with our enemy.)
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To: Chainmail

Thanks for your service and your descriptive account.

I (born in April of 1963) slept peacefully that evening largely because of men like you that fought to protect our freedoms which are still under attack to this very day.

May God Bless you and keep you and your family from all distress.


7 posted on 03/15/2018 12:18:56 PM PDT by infool7 (Observe, Orient, Pray, Decide, Act!(it's an OOPDA loop))
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To: Chainmail
You previous entry literally dropped my jaw. I forwarded it to a number of people.

Thank you for sharing this. You are truly an original source for history.

10 posted on 03/15/2018 12:51:24 PM PDT by Ciaphas Cain (Progressives do not want to destroy us because we hate, but because we are sane.)
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To: Chainmail

You gotta figure, with the dog and the phantom, Someone upstairs was looking out for you


11 posted on 03/15/2018 1:06:06 PM PDT by Spruce
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To: Chainmail

Link to “The Dark”, please.


13 posted on 03/15/2018 1:55:25 PM PDT by Cletus.D.Yokel (Catastrophic, Anthropogenic Climate Alterations: The acronym explains the science.)
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To: w1n1; tet68; BroJoeK; DesertRhino; blueunicorn6; C19fan; Nifster; Gay State Conservative; ...
The next installment of my memories..

Semper Fi

16 posted on 03/15/2018 3:31:36 PM PDT by Chainmail (A simple rule of life: if you can be blamed, you're responsible.)
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To: Chainmail
This old Army guy was never ordered to SE Asia but I've got to say that the guys who were...Army,Navy,Air Force and Marines...did themselves *damn* proud.

To this day I'm enraged by the words and actions of the likes of LBJ,Kerry,Fonda and many others.And I'll bet those who were ordered there feel the same way times ten.

19 posted on 03/15/2018 5:46:29 PM PDT by Gay State Conservative (You Say "White Privilege"...I Say "Protestant Work Ethic")
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To: Chainmail

bump


21 posted on 03/15/2018 6:39:49 PM PDT by Deaf Smith (When a Texan takes his chances, chances will be taken that's fore sure)
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To: Chainmail

Thank you for the ping. Somehow I missed The Dark, but I’ll be reading that later. Yes, by all means write it all down now before you begin to forget.

I’m also that age (born in ‘48). Me and my best buddy, Gary, decided to join up in 1967, he the Marines and me the Army.

I got a few letters from him from Vietnam while I was stationed in Germany. I could tell he was scared and I was worried for him. Then the letters stopped.

About a year later, I got another letter from him saying he had been shot in the chest while he was in Vietnam and that his esophagus had been partly destroyed and they had to replace part of it with a plastic (iirc) piece.

After spending almost a year in the big Naval hospital near the Great Lakes, they gave him a medical discharge and sent him home. But he kept getting constant infections and spent the rest of his life (about ten years) in and out of hospital. He’s not on the Wall and I always felt that was unfair. Getting shot in Vietnam is what killed him. I’ve always wondered how many others died from their injuries, like he did, years later?

Anyway, I lost a cousin, two good friends (including Gary), and a couple of acquaintances from my old high school days, not to mention at least one Army buddy who was sent there and died. I was never sent there, so I don’t know exactly what you went through, but I know it was bad. So I am saluting you, my friend. Thanks for writing this down, and I’m glad you made it out okay in one piece!


25 posted on 03/15/2018 7:47:10 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: Chainmail

bttt


26 posted on 03/15/2018 11:22:40 PM PDT by Cvengr ( Adversity in life & death is inevitable; Stress is optional through faith in Christ.)
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To: Chainmail

Thank you for writing; please continue as able. THIS is history at its best.

The F-4 Phantom was a superb combat aircraft that only got better as it was further developed. The men at McD-D should be proud of what they made. It was also in the ‘right place at the right time’ for its pilots to show off its superb characteristics. I’m not saying we should “go back’ to it; that’s absurd. Rather, present day aircraft designers should study it (among others), and get their heads in the right frame of mind.

This particular Phantom driver exemplified excellence in the CAS mission: marksmanship, persistence in the face of enemy ground fire, care and extra risk to himself to protect the friendly ground force. I would like to think this was standard practice for him.


28 posted on 03/16/2018 5:23:22 AM PDT by NorthMountain (... the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed)
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To: Chainmail

Good story keep ‘em coming.


29 posted on 03/16/2018 7:39:31 AM PDT by TTFlyer
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To: Chainmail

Semper Fi bump


30 posted on 03/16/2018 7:49:34 AM PDT by real saxophonist ( YouTube + Twitter + Facebook = YouTwitFace.com)
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To: Chainmail

Thx, well done. S/F ...


32 posted on 03/16/2018 8:04:11 AM PDT by oh8eleven (RVN '67-'68)
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To: Chainmail
Forgot to mention ... the F4 Phantom is my favorite plane for obvious reasons. Saw hundreds of air strikes during my tour throughout Leatherneck Square, but the one memory I'll never forget is an F4 screaming south coming out of the DMZ and doing a barrel roll over the firebase (C-2).
We stood on the guns cheering and waving like it was a basketball game. Still gives me goose bumps.
34 posted on 03/16/2018 8:29:18 AM PDT by oh8eleven (RVN '67-'68)
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To: Chainmail

Don’t pay it no nevermind, as we used to say...
It don’t mean a thing, not a god damned thing.
Everyone’s nam experience was not the same but
parts were alike.

I wasn’t in the boonies, as an A-4 mechanic I was
mostly slave labor working to keep those flight hours
up. Of course Luke lobbed mortars and 122 rockets at us
from time to time and Tet was pretty exciting.
Didn’t burn any hooches, but bombed the shit out of
some folks though.
We had a radio link to the cockpits in our line shack
and could hear our pilots talk about their work, that
lasted until one caught a golden BB and flamed in, he
screamed all the way down. They took out the com link
after that, bad for morale.
Welcome home Bro.


45 posted on 03/16/2018 3:45:48 PM PDT by tet68 ( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
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