|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
The Vietnam War was not going well in 1968. The January Tet
Offensive-a tactical defeat but strategic victory for North
Vietnam-showed the U.S. military and the American public that the
enemy remained determined, no nearer defeat. Americans grew war
weary while politicians and military leaders could not agree on how
to win or how to withdraw. Between combat tours, the author served
as a U.S. Army company commander-a job he came to despise.
Experiencing what he perceived as a degradation in the Army's
senior command, he resigned his commission. Yet he needed money to
complete graduate school and volunteered to return to Vietnam as a
combat advisor. This memoir describes his participation in the
fiercest fighting of the war, on the Cambodian border, where he
almost died of hookworm and was shot in a night operation. In
Saigon to recuperate, he was tasked with creating an advisory team
to train South Vietnamese commandos to conduct raids in the swamps
south of Saigon, the Rung Sat Special Zone. For seven months they
were successful, with Worthington receiving seven combat
decorations.
From 1945 to 1973, 115,427 US military men were advisors in
Vietnam. Of these, 66,399 were combat advisors. Eleven were awarded
the Medal of Honor, 378 were killed and 1393 were wounded. Combat
advisors, officers and NCOs, lived and fought with Vietnamese
combat units, advising on tactics, weapons, and liaising with local
US military support. This is the story of my first tour as a combat
advisor 1966-1967. My training began at the Army Special Warfare
School in unconventional warfare, Vietnamese culture and customs,
advisor responsibilities, then Vietnamese language school. To get
to Vietnam, I had to hitchhike across the Pacific, a colorful
story. In-country I was senior advisor to a city infantry defense
force and then an infantry mobile rapid reaction force. The
author's respect for his Vietnamese comrades grew as combat
operations against Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army units and
conducting operations with US Marines were part of what we did. A
major battle is described where the 320-man Vietnamese battalion
makes a night helicopter assault on a 1200-man NVA regiment. And,
on a different night, the Viet Cong stopped the war for the author
to obtain a US Marine helicopter to med-evac a wounded baby.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
|