Posted on 08/26/2004 3:37:29 PM PDT by Byron_the_Aussie
Lance Corporal Randall K. McGlone was an Artillery Scout Observer with Company L, Third Battalion, First Marines, Ninth Marine Amphibious Brigade. In 1968 his unit was deployed along the Cua Viet River, a key supply route which linked the South China Sea with Dong Ha. From the air base at Dong Ha, supplies were shipped to Khe Sanh. The following account is from McGlones 1992 autobiographical book, Guts and Glory, and describes an incident which took place when Lima Company were defending positions around the village of Mai Xai Ti, from almost continuous attack by North Vietnamese Army regulars.
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.....I decided the firing had to be coming from the grass huts. Despite the wet weather, I knew those huts would burn. I called for a repeat of the fire mission, with white phosphorous and high-explosive shells mixed. Again the rounds were right on target: eighteen rounds of high explosives and eighteen rounds of white phosphorous.
On the other side of the river was an inferno. The grunts laughed, grinned, and yelled, Get em, Mac. One grass hut was burning, and the other was smoking.
Anyone who has called in a great amount of artillery fire will tell you that the fireworks can hypnotize a man. Maybe it is in part because of the intense concentration of the forward observer. When a person calls for rounds to drop only fifty yards from the observer himself, he has to concentrate. But there is something else. The person calling in the fire gets the feeling that he is God, that the artillery explosions are his creations, that he has the power of life and death over others. And another thing: the beauty. If a person enjoys fireworks at Fourth of July celebrations, then he would enjoy watching the artillery do its work. Just watching the fireworks themselves can be mesmerizing.
I was now in such a state. Without being conscious of it, I had moved away from the protection of the bunker. I was exposed to shrapnel that was whizzing all around me. I just kept saying, Repeat, variable time, white phosphorous, and high explosives, danger close, fifty meters ..
The grunts were awed. I paid no attention to O.E., who kept motioning me to come back to the bunker, nor to the sergeants and others who urged me inside. I kept calling the artillery in even though shrapnel continued to hit all around me. I was in my own world. I had created the explosions, and the artillery would not hurt me.
Then a whistle in the air caught my attention, and I felt something hit my hand resting on my right thigh. I looked slowly down. The top of my hand was a mess of blood. Instantly O.E. and Sergeant Havelok were on top of me, dragging me back to the bunker.
While the platoon sergeant was wrapping my hand in a battle dressing, O.E. was lecturing. You crazy xxxxx. You almost blew yourself up. We tried to git you back in here. You just aint got sense enough to learn. I had to listen to this kind of talk for the next thirty minutes. I didnt have enough sense to learn, and O.E. didnt have enough sense to realize he was wasting his words.
For a moment I was shocked when I stared at the bloody battle dressing on my hand. But I was lucky at that. The shrapnel had hit only five inches from my private parts. If I had been as well endowed as some of the Romeos in the company claimed they were, it would have been a disaster.
Back at the headquarters bunker, one of the men said, You can get a Purple Heart for that.
I guess my eyes widened a little: getting a Purple Heart for an injury I had brought upon myself! I would never live that down. No, I was not about to accept a Purple Heart.
Anyway, that platoon sergeant had told me I had done a good job and we could leave off the artillery for a while. No more sniper fire came that day, so maybe the artillery had killed all the snipers, or at least had put them out of business for a while.
We found a corpsman in a nearby bunker. He was just finishing dressing the wound of another marine, and when he saw me, his eyes lit up. The last time I had seen him, he had broken up a fight between another marine and me, a fight in which I had received the worst of it.
I was happy to see him; it was kind of like a link to a happier time when, in comparison to now, we were both babies. He was regular Navy, friendly, and easy to get along with. He was always telling marines we were stupid. Why would anybody put up with all the bullshit, and then get stuck right out in the thick of it when fighting breaks out? You marines go to more trouble to get killed than anyone else in the world.
By now he had been in the field so long that he could have gone back to the ship at any time. But he stayed on the front, doing whatever he could to help the wounded.
Well, he said now, I see you havent learned your lesson. Anyway, youre still in one piece.
Well,, Im still needing you to pull me out of it, Doc, I answered.
He laughed when he learned how I had gotten hit by shrapnel. Well, you finally got a taste of your own medicine. This should make an interesting Purple Heart.
A Purple Heart would be nice, and I hesitated before answering, No, dont put me down for a Purple Heart.
He thought I was crazy and insisted he would do so, and said that the report would only say the wound was from shrapnel. But I would not go along. I could hear all the guys laughing and kidding me about going to all that trouble to wound myself just so I could be a hero. I finally convinced the corpsman not to write me up for the award.
You damn jarheads are crazy. You go through hell for all the glory, and when you get it, you turn it down. Okay. No damn Heart.
After he had cleansed the wound, which extended all the way down to the bone, and taped the skin back together, I thanked him and left. It would have been nice to talk awhile, but he looked exhausted.
I almost turned back to tell him I would like the Purple Heart after all. But thinking of the soldiers in many wars who had been so seriously injured, I felt totally unworthy of such an award. So, I left the bunker, knowing I would not be receiving a Purple Heart.
vets ping
I doubt "integrity" ever was part of the curriculum at Kerry's various European and New England prep schools.
John Kerry All tarnish, no "Shine".
"By now he had been in the field so long that he could have gone back to the ship at any time. But he stayed on the front, doing whatever he could to help the wounded."
This is what real soldiers and sailors do because they rely on each other and cannot stand to desert their comrades. John Kerry was in the service for himself and did not give a damn about his people, so it was bye bye suckers after 100 days.
Yep, I agree!
....I would not have believed at that time that people in the United States were burning our flag, and that some were actively sending aid to the North Vietnamese. It makes me sad to think of it today; back then, it would have broken my heart.
Bump
My CO told me to put myself in for a Bronze Star but upon thinking about it, I figured that I didn't really deserve it, I just wanted to get back to VN with tax free, flight pay and combat pay. Probably stupid on my part.
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Tomas, unfortunately I can't make calls to a 1-800 number from outside the USA. If you have another number for the show I will call. Regards, Byron
mAYbe check out the chatroom at regularguy.com.
Thanks, Tomas. I sent Roger an e-mail, inquiring whether he had a call-in number other than the 1-800 one. Regards, B
Listening to you now! Sounding good, Tomas.
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