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To: AaronInCarolina
We are apparently only hearing from 4 individuals (that I am aware of)... Van O'Dell, Thurlow (both Swifties), Kerry and Rassmann. Surely there are other living Viet Nam veterans that remember the incident. Do the Swifties cite any other Swifties as having been present? Was there an After-Action report (that wasn't written by Kerry)?

I have the book. There are other swifties who swore affadavits and were firsthand observers. In additon to Odell and Thurlow, they include Chenoweth and Pease who was the skipper of PCF-3 that was struck by the mine. The book only mentions Kerry's false after action report which ignored "Chenoweth's heroic action in rescuing the PCF survivors and Thurlow's action in saving PCF-3, while highlighting his {Kerry's} own routine pickup of Rassmann and PCF 94's minor role in saving PCF 3."

224 posted on 08/13/2004 8:08:49 PM PDT by kabar
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To: kabar
Hmm...

The author of Tour of Duty, Douglas Brinkley, has the five Swift boats skippered by:

John Kerry - PCF 94

Rich McCann - PCF 24

Skip Barker - PCF 3

Don Droz - PCF 23/ (April '69 casualty list has him as skipper of PCF 43)

Larry Thurlow - PCF 53/ (interview in reply 66, preceding, has Thurlow as skipper of PCF 51)

Immediately prior to the first command detonated mine explosion, the boats were in column of two.

The right column, lead boat was PCF 94

The right column boat no. 2 was PCF 24

The left column, lead boat was PCF 3.

The left column, boat no. 2 was PCF 23

The left column, boat no. 3 was PCF 53/51

Larry Thurlow, in the interview in reply 66, defined the columns and the reason; because while they had been up-river, a fishing wier had been set, leaving channels, in effect, along the left and right banks when heading back down-river.

Presumably the channels were set to direct the boats over the pre-positioned command detonating mines, one left and one right.

Larry Thurlow also states in the interview, reply 66, that his boat was PCF 51.

According to the author of Tour of Duty, PCF 24 had some sort of powerplant difficulties on this mission, enough to cause the combat troops and equipment aboard it, to be transferred to PCF 94 prior to all the boats heading up-river, beyond this same point of confict, earlier in the day.

Don Droz died on April 12, 1969 while skipper of PCF 43. (http://www.swiftboats.net/extras/casualties.htm)

241 posted on 08/13/2004 9:12:02 PM PDT by First_Salute (May God save our democratic-republican government, from a government by judiciary.)
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