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Seabee Teams In Vietnam 1963-1968 - 13 Man Teams That Helped Rural Vietnamese and who Fought Alongside The Special Forces (Paperback)
Loot Price: R398
Discovery Miles 3 980
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Seabee Teams In Vietnam 1963-1968 - 13 Man Teams That Helped Rural Vietnamese and who Fought Alongside The Special Forces (Paperback)
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Loot Price R398
Discovery Miles 3 980
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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American Baby Boomers--of the 1960's--are often portrayed in the
media as either in the mud of Woodstock or in the mud of Vietnam.
The truth is, just a small percentage--3% total--were in either
place. Most Baby Boomers were living normal lives doing normal
things. But for those who took an active part in the Cold
War--which we won--and which included Vietnam--this book is
dedicated to you. Book includes the records of the 13-man STAT
TEAMS (later known as Seabee Teams) that served in Vietnam. The
Navy Seabees were some of the first to show up for Vietnam's
struggle against communism. In 1954, President Ngo Dinh Diem wrote
a letter to President Eisenhower asking for military and economic
aid. In 1954 and 1955 an estimated one million refugees (mostly
persecuted Catholics) moved from the Communist State of North
Vietnam to the south (8% of the North's population). The Seabees
assisted them during their "Passage to Freedom." In 1956, Seabees
were assigned to survey Vietnam's roads. There weren't many. The
Seabees travelled by jeep and on foot with pack-mules. The
surveyors found that the bombers of World War II, the guerrillas of
Viet Minh, and the newly emerging guerrilla groups of the Viet Cong
had destroyed most of the bridges and sabotaged what few roads were
left. Beginning in 1963, Seabee Teams, with Secret Clearances,
arrived in Vietnam to assist the U.S. Army's Special Forces in the
CIA funded Civilian Irregular Defense Group (CIDG) program, and to
help the Vietnamese help themselves. The Seabees constructed
Special Forces Camps and outposts, airfields for the SF STOL-class
Caribou aircraft, and built connecting roads. These Seabee Teams
also helped the Vietnamese to better their living conditions
through thousands of projects in rural areas. The Seabee Teams in
Vietnam also earned Purple Hearts, Silver Stars, Bronze Stars and
many other medals. One Seabee Team member, Marvin Sheilds, earned
the Congressional Medal Of Honor while fighting alongside with the
Special Forces at Dong Xoi. In 1963, only approximately 10,000
Americans were in Vietnam and very little infrastructure existed.
This was before the eventual arrival of 2.1 million--over
time--Americans. Given the limited infrastructure--with hardly any
ports, roads and airstrips--it would have been near impossible to
get the 2.1 million eventual Americans--along with their equipment
(Beans, Bullets, And Black Oil)--delivered to South Vietnam and
support them. Many Vietnam Vets--including this writer--showed up
after 1965. Most of us took it for granted that the air bases we
landed in, roads we drove on, helo-pads we mounted out from and the
camps we lived in, or passed through, and the water and food and
fuel storage were somehow always there--or most likely didn't give
it a thought. But long before we arrived, military and civilian
engineers were busy preparing the "ground" to make it possible to
fight a war; and begin attempts to win the hearts and minds of the
South Vietnamese. A recent travel guide to Vietnam mentioned the
superior roads and infrastructure in the Southern portion of
Vietnam--as opposed to North Vietnam-- due to the American presence
there during the Vietnam War. --Kenneth E. Bingham, Seabee
volunteer, Feb, 2013
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