A Vietnam GruntÕs
ÒGuardian AngelÓ
The street sounds to the soldiersÕ tread,
And
out we troop to see:
A single redcoat turns his head,
He
turns and looks at me.
My man, from sky to skyÕs so far,
We
never crossed before;
Such leagues apart the worldÕs ends are,
WeÕre like to meet no more;
What thoughts at heart have you and I
We
cannot stop to tell;
But dead or living, drunk or dry,
Soldier, I wish you well.
A.E. Housman, A Shropshire Lad
It was the late summer of 1970. My wife and I were returning from a
first-anniversary trip to Canada.
My Òsingle redcoatÓ appeared on the side of the road in northwestern New
York State in the person of an exceptionally well-uniformed soldier hitchhiking
south. He could have passed any
inspection that I had ever been in in my two-year Army tour, which had ended a
little more than two years previously.
Possible Òthoughts at heartÓ rushed into my
brain as I applied the brakes. Somehow I think Housman would have done the
same, having missed the earlier opportunity. I also thought the spiffy soldier might
be interesting company, making the long miles back to Chapel Hill, NC, where my
wife and I were in graduate school, go a little more quickly. That certainly proved to be the case.
As it turned out, our new traveling companion
was as eager to talk as I was to listen.
Maybe he was the king of all bull shooters and we can throw it all out
the window as such, but he certainly looked and sounded like the real thing.
He was, as I had suspected, a combat veteran of
Vietnam, and he was having a heck of a time getting adjusted to the relative
comforts of home and not living the life of a wild animal with people trying to
kill him. Just tuning his senses
back down to the level we take for granted was proving to be difficult, he
said. Just the other day, he told
me, he had heard a car backfire, and he instinctively hit the ground, which was
actually a sidewalk in this case. As
many veterans before and since have complained, he was also bothered by how
people were just going on with their lives as if there werenÕt a major war
going on, a war that he had so recently been a part of.
From my position in the driverÕs seat, he made me
feel a little like his psychiatrist—or at least his bartender—listening
to him unload. He also wanted me to
know that he wasnÕt just your average run-of-the-mill infantryman. He came from a military family, he said,
and General William Westmoreland, who was the commander of all our forces in
Vietnam when he had happened to encounter him there, had been a family
friend. His own father had been a
field-grade officer.
Instantly recognizing him, Westmoreland had
addressed him by his first name, ÒRich, what are you doing here?Ó The general
had expressed surprise that he was a mere enlisted man, but Rich had told him
that he was a ÒgruntÓ by choice, wanting to experience what the guys who do the
dirty work experience. Then he
proceeded to tell me about the otherworldly experience that he could have never
anticipated.
The Long-Range Reconnaissance Patrol
He was on a particularly dangerous LRRP, or ÒlurpÓ as he called it, in the jungle deep in enemy
territory with three other men.
Night had fallen, and while the other guys bedded down, it had been his
lot to do guard duty.
What he recounted next sounds a lot like he
might have unconsciously dozed off and been dreaming without realizing it,
except for the consequences of the Òdream.Ó The usual sounds of the jungle night were
suddenly joined by what sounded like someone walking toward him. Then, in the darkness, the figure of a
man began to take shape. He raised
his rifle and took aim, at which point the barely visible figure raised his
hand to the universally recognized ÒstopÓ position and said very clearly,
ÒRich, no!Ó
Completely disarmed by being addressed in clear
English by name, he listened intently to the stream of words that followed from
the unlikely visitor: ÒYouÕve got to get out of here,Ó the visitor said. ÒThereÕs going to be an arclight here within the hour.Ó
(He was using the U.S. military term for a massive B-52 carpet-bombing.) ÒThis whole valley is going to blow up.Ó
Then the strange visitor just seemed to melt
back into the jungle.
He knew instantly what he had to do. The figure who had come to him in the
night, he realized just as his eyes in the darkness caught up with what his
ears were hearing, was his father, who
had been dead for several years. He
quickly woke up his mates and told them what had transpired. He met some initial resistance to the
abandonment of their position, but he quickly overcame it. No one was willing to risk his life in
the face of such an omen. They
quickly retraced their route back to their base camp and no sooner had they
done it than, sure enough, the whole valley blew up. It really looked like no living thing
could have survived there.
That was the first time the ghost of his father
had come to his aid in Vietnam, he said, but it was not the last. He began to be known as the man with the
guardian angel, and he became popular as a patrol mate. Others wanted to get under the blanket
of protection with him.
About Those B-52s
No doubt Rich and his team would have been blown
away—along with a lot of wildlife—had they stayed put. In spite of their spectacular
destructiveness, though, these B-52 raids in South Vietnam were not all that
militarily effective, at least against North Vietnamese troops. When I later told RichÕs story to a
combat veteran in our North Carolina Veterans for Peace organization, he said
there was nothing he dreaded like Òmopping upÓ after a B-52 raid. ÒWe almost always got hostile fire,Ó he
said, which suggests that the target might have been well chosen, but,
amazingly, the target had not been destroyed. I was later to learn why.
All of the B-52 attacks originated on the U.S.
island territory of Guam. North
VietnamÕs allies, the Soviet Union, had spy boats masquerading as fishing boats
near Guam. When the B-52s took off,
they radioed the news back to Moscow, who sent it to Hanoi, from whence it was
sent to the field in the south. At
their end, the North Vietnamese soldiers all carried simple, lightweight,
straight one-piece entrenching tools, and they were well trained in how to use
them. Wherever they were in the
south, news of an impending arclight somewhere in the
south meant that all of them began digging. By the time the bombers arrived they
would be far enough down into the ground that they were not vulnerable to the
bombsÕ massive shock waves, and it would take a virtual direct hit to kill or
immobilize them.
The great irony, then, in this amazing episode
is that it is likely that RichÕs adversaries in the jungle had the necessary
information to survive the impending attack that he and his patrol lacked,
absent the intervention of the Òguardian angel.Ó At the very least there was a breakdown
of communication within the U.S. military that would have cost the lives of
four valuable soldiers. If that was the case, it would not surprise me at all in light of my
own experience as I recounted three Veterans Days ago in ÒA Condensation of Military Incompetence.Ó
Now, as I said, there is a chance that Rich
Stowe was just putting me on (His last name was on the nameplate on his
chest.), although it certainly sounded like he spoke from his heart. If anyone reading this knows him or
might have had any association with the guardian angel episodes in Vietnam of
which he spoke I would appreciate it if they would email me and we can perhaps
have a sequel to this article.
Outlandish War Stories
Just because what Rich told me seemed too
strange to be true doesnÕt mean that it wasnÕt true. A couple of really crazy sounding
stories I heard, one from the beginning of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam
conflict and one from the end give the lie to that. The first came from a graduate school
classmate, a West Pointer, who had been with a small adviser outfit out in the
ÒbooniesÓ as was the common expression, and there was just no military action
at all where they were. Then one night
they became the surprise recipients of a Viet Cong mortar attack. So quiet had things been before that
they didnÕt carry their weapons around with them; they were all stacked, as in
peacetime, in their small armory.
So everyone rushed down to the armory, only to encounter a lock on the
armory door that wasnÕt supposed to be there.
ÒWho has the key to that lock?Ó the cry went
up. Someone knew. It was the special services officer, the
guy in charge of recreation. He put
the volleyball equipment in the armory and put the lock on to keep it safe. ÒSo where is the special services
officer?Ó
They knew generally where he was, but not
specifically. He was in the local
village, where he regularly spent the night with his Vietnamese
girlfriend. Fortunately, their Viet
Cong attackers lacked this crucial bit of intelligence. The mortar shelling had ended quickly
and the unarmed U. S. Army post was not overrun.
The second story came from one of my students
when I was teaching my own economic principles class in 1971-72. His outfit had had the job of removing
mines from around one of our major airbases as we were leaving Vietnam. I believe it was Bien Hoa, but I could be wrong in my recollection. At any rate, he told me, at one point
their metal detectors Òjust went wild,Ó sounding off over a wide area. They began digging, encountering first
the tail section and then unearthing an entire fighter jet. My recollection was that it was an
F-104, although my memory or my informantÕs identification could be faulty.
What had happened was easy to piece
together. Getting spare parts
through the normal requisition process was slow, bureaucratic, and
cumbersome. These Air Force guys
had done what, no doubt, others in a similar position had done. This buried F-104 had been reported as a
combat loss so it could be used for its parts as the need arose. When the order came for the entire unit
to abandon Vietnam, they were stuck with an airplane that they werenÕt supposed
to have. This could have been a
career killer for the commanding officer.
There was nothing left for him to do, as he saw it, but to dispose of
the $1.4 million plane by burying it.
He must have envied his Navy counterparts caught in a similar situation,
who could simply dump the surplus airplane into the ocean.
Tragic War Stories
The Vietnam War, as all wars are, was a lot more
tragedy than it was farce. The
tragedy had certainly left its mark on perhaps my closest friend in the North
Carolina Veterans for Peace. He was
a former Navy medical corpsman who had been a member of the graves registration
team at Khe Sanh during the shelling
there. His was the thankless job of
preparing the bodies of those killed, for shipment back to the States for
burial. As tough as that experience
was to live with, though, it was not the really big weight that he still
carried around in his heart. That
came from the time he cared for Vietnamese children at the Marine hospital at Dong
Ha. While he was away on another assignment
the hospital experienced a Viet Cong mortar attack and several of the children
he had become close to had been killed.
His survivorÕs guilt over that was much stronger than anything he felt
over Khe Sanh, as one might
well imagine.
The second experience that really sticks with me
came from a former Marine lieutenant in our antiwar organization who had
previously impressed me with his story of his flat refusal of a suicidal attack
order from a commanding officer flying safely in a helicopter well above
him. I was studying at a table in
the large open space one night at UNCÕs undergraduate library. He had found a copy of the June 27,
1969, issue of Life magazine that had the photographs
of each of the 242 soldiers who had been killed in one week in Vietnam. He began to pick out one Marine after another
and describe to me in intimate and gory detail how each of them had died. They had all been close associates of
hisÉand this was just one week.
Fortunately for me, my closest scrape with
Lyndon JohnsonÕs Vietnam madness came when I was on mid-tour leave from my safe
office job in Korea in late January of 1968. I donÕt know if it still works that way,
but members of the military could fly almost anywhere for free on military
aircraft as long as there was space available. I had already spent a very memorable
week in Japan that way. My next
goal was to see Taipei, Taiwan.
Nothing was available to that destination out of Tachikawa
Air Base outside Tokyo, so I caught a flight in that direction to Kadena Airbase in Okinawa. I spent a rainy day touring there,
taking the military bus down to Naha and back to Kadena,
where the only flight available was to Clark Air Base in the Philippines. I signed up for it and waited for it to
be called.
As I was standing in the terminal, I slowly
became surrounded by a growing number of young Marines. I was 25 years old at the time, but I
felt like I was almost a lifetime older than those young men around me. They all looked to me like they were
right out of high school and really clueless. They werenÕt so clueless as to effect
the sort of rah rah, gung ho attitude that soldiers
had in the early days of, say, World War I. The bloom was well off the Vietnam War
for Americans by that time.
The call for their flight came before mine
did. At that point I heard the guy
next to me say with bitter mock enthusiasm, ÒOh boy, Vietnam,Ó as they lined up
to board the plane. Years later,
reflecting upon what my Marine and Army friends had told me about their Vietnam
experiences and much else that I had read, I tried to capture the moment with
the following poem:
"Now boarding...for Danang, Vietnam,"
A shudder went through the hall
Among the young men around me
--Many names there bound for a wall.
As they left the island terminal,
Refreshed by a brief overnight,
Their mood was deep resignation:
Time to get into the fight.
For
their return to "the world,"
Many
forever would wait.
'Twas the time of the big offensive,
Midwinter of sixty-eight.
November 5, 2015
See also ÒMartial Machismo,
at What Cost?Ó
Home Page Column Column 5 Archive Contact