Vol 3 No. 03 TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS January 15, 1968
Index
Unit Page | Unit Page | Unit Page | Unit Page |
1st Bde Commo 3 | 1/27 6 | 2/22 Photo 8 | 3/22 7 |
1/5 3 | 1/27 7 | 2/22 8 | 4/9 1 |
1/5 Photo 3 | 18th Mil. History 1 | 2/27 Photo 3 | 4/9 3 |
1/5 3 | 2nd Bde 6 | 2/49 ARVN 3 | 4/9 3 |
1/5 3 | 2/12 3 | 25th S&T 4 | 4/9 7 |
1/5 Photo 8 | 2/12 8 | 25th S&T Photos 4 | 4/23 1 |
1/8 Arty 7 | 2/14 6 | 3/4 Cav Photo 6 | Bob Hope 7 |
1/27 1 | 2/22 1 | 3/22 6 | Operation Atlanta 1 |
2ND BDE - U.S. Army tunnel rats aided by members of the Vietnamese Province
Reconnaissance Unit (PRU) have uncovered what 25th Div intelligence officials
believe to be the main Viet Cong underground infiltration route through the Iron
Triangle centered 48 Kms north-northwest of Saigon.
The tunnel complex was uncovered during the land clearing portion of
Operation Atlanta. According to 1LT Thomas Seitzinger, a 4th Bn, 23rd Inf,
platoon leader, his team of tunnel rats have searched some five miles of the
tunneling which generally runs in a north-south direction.
The exact length of the tunnel network is not known, however the PRUs stated
that it takes three days and nights to travel its length.
At several points the main passageway is interrupted by side tunnels which,
according to the PRUs, runs to Ben Cat on the eastern boundary of the Triangle
and to the Ho Bo Woods on the west.
“Every time we’d reach a point where the tunnel had collapsed from Air Force
bombs the PRUs would look around and say ‘dig there’ and sure enough we’d find
it again,” explains Seitzinger.
Seitzinger explained that the Viet Cong dug their tunnel by sinking shafts at
various distances to certain depths. They then dug connecting tunnels. This
was repeated over and over again. After the tunnel was completed the shafts
were filled in. The PRUs can spot the location of the shafts by the slightly
different color of the ground and vegetation around the shafts.
SSG Donald Neves of Greenville, S.C., has much admiration for the PRU’s as he
has worked and lived with them for the east 14-months.
“They would save your life in a minute,” said Neves. Recently one PRU they
call “Joc” was walking point, and spotted an anti-personnel mine about 50 meters
away, he was credited with possibly saving the lives of several men, explained
the two year veteran of Vietnam.
“Crawling through the tunnel has been kind of nerve wracking at times,”
remarked one of the tunnel rats.
“We’ve encountered snakes, spiders, bats and ants, Viet Cong bodies and dud
rounds and booby traps that we had to take out first,” he continued.
25th Div Needs Artists The 18th Military History Det has a requirement for a limited number of artists to work in the 25th Inf Div Combat Artist Program. Talented personnel interested in performing as combat artists should submit through channels three samples of their work to the Division Adjutant General. |
ARVNs Work With Recon Plt
3RD BDE - As part of a 25th Div program, two Vietnamese soldiers have
recently been assigned to the reconnaissance platoon of the 2nd Bn (Mech), 22nd
Inf.
Nguyen Van Thanh and Nguyen Van Ton were selected to attend the Quang-Trung
Military School in Saigon, after which they were attached to the 3rd Bde, 25th
Div, for duty with American units.
Their assignment to the reconnaissance platoon of the 2/22nd at first brought
some mixed reactions from the members of the platoon. The men felt that the
language barrier would prove too great, and were hesitant about having the two
Vietnamese with them. They couldn’t have been more mistaken.
Platoon Sergeant SSG Ray Russler, from Lewistown, Pa., remarked, “When they
came into the platoon, we showed them how to operate the different weapons and
how to drive the APCs. We only had to show them once.”
Thanh, from Tay Ninh, has become exceptional with the .50 cal. machine gun
and can disassemble and reassemble it faster than anyone else.
The GIs have also benefited from the merger. Thanh and Ton have lived in the
area, and know the countryside. Their knowledge of VC tactics is being passed
on to the Americans.
800 Pound Patient Just Too Heavy For Dust-off
2ND BDE - A dust-off was out of the question - the patient weighed 800
pounds. They could have put him out of his misery and faced the reaction of the
half-angry, half-curious crowd of Vietnamese.
So the men of Bravo Co, 1st Bn, 27th Inf “Wolfhounds,” did the only thing
possible: they called for the doctor to come to them.
While the soldiers eyed the farmers and the farmers eyed their wounded ox,
CPT Clark A. Gwin from Centralia, Mo., and an assistant hopped aboard a
helicopter for their first “house call” in Vietnam.
Moments before, a Wolfhound had wounded the animal when it charged him during
a search and destroy mission on the 25th Inf Div’s Operation Saratoga.
Gwin, the division veterinarian, arrived to find the animal tied, the wound
in its left rear leg already cleaned by a medic.
Working with his assistant, SP4 Wayne R. Gromely of Port Angeles, Wash., the
veterinarian sutured a severed tendon and bandaged the animal’s leg.
“The people looked worried about the animal,” said the doctor. “So I just had
the interpreter tell them how to change the bandage and not to work the animal
for a week, and it would be okay.
BULLETIN Elements of two Viet Cong regiments tried unsuccessfully to overrun the 25th Inf Div’s fire support base Burt on the evening of Jan. 1 and morning of Jan. 2. More than 355 communists of the 271st and 272nd VC regiments were killed in the 10-hour truce-shattering battle. See next week’s Tropic Lightning News for details. |
Three Large Viet Cong Base Camps Destroyed
1ST BDE - U.S. Air Force Control (FAC) pilots and the 4th Bn, 9th Inf, have
combined to spot and destroy three regimental-size Viet Cong base camps during
the opening phase of the 25th Div’s Operation Yellowstone.
A spokesman for the infantry battalion said that until recently the camps had
been home for the so-called “palace guard” - the Viet Cong regiments guarding
COSVN headquarters.
Flying for the 1st Bde, Air Force MAJ Bogue Harrison of Downs, Kans.,
discovered the first site. It lay about 5 kms south of the Cambodian border and
5 kms west of the brigade’s base camp at Katum.
Harrison called in to blast off cover over the camp with three air strikes
that dumped over 15,000 pounds of bombs on the installation.
Meanwhile, on the ground the Manchus had been operating in the same general
area. They uncovered 440 tons of rice and had killed seven Viet Cong in a brief
but furious fire fight while sweeping just to the south. With the report of the
base camp sighting, Bravo and Charlie companies moved in for the search.
They found a complex measuring 1500 meters in diameter containing 15 bunkers
approximately 12 by 20 feet to 14 by 40 feet, and some 20 of smaller
dimensions. Many had been destroyed by the air strikes and there were pools of
blood on the ground.
The camp yielded 400 pounds of rice; 40 pounds of plastic explosive; 5
bicycles; a typewriter; finance records for 10 VC companies; a CHICOM and a
Czechoslovakian rifle; a large pig and 57 chickens - the main course of an
impromptu barbeque the men enjoyed.
The next day the infantry-FAC team was in operation again, zeroing in on a
second regimental base approximately 1,000 meters northwest of the first.
The most elaborate of the three, this site contained thirty 30 by 60 foot
living hootches and a field hospital of similar size.
The searchers from Bravo Co found one area that had been cordoned off by
barbed wire. Battalion officers determined it was a prisoner-of-war compound
after finding a booklet of instructions on running a POW camp. It was written
in Vietnamese.
The direction included phrases in English for use in handling and
interrogating American captives. There was no sign the compound had been
occupied.
Also found in the base was an AM radio-telephone; two AK-47 assault rifles, a
15-pound CHICOM claymore mine and several of U.S. manufacture; two Russian anti
tank mines; and five rifle grenades.
Only 700 meters to the east, the ground-air team uncovered the third camp.
This site had been abandoned only a short time and was in the middle of a maze
of wide, smooth trails that showed signs of recent bicycle and even truck
traffic.
Charlie and Delta companies seized 6 new RPG-7 rounds still wrapped in their
protective cellophane; 30 unopened crates of AK-47 ammunition; 22 rounds of 82mm
mortar; 12 rifle grenades; and a CHICOM field telephone.
Page 2 TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS January 15, 1968
Decorated
Silver Star | |
MAJ Stephen R. Pawlik, HHC, 1st Bn, 27th Inf SSG James M. Lyles, Co A, 1st Bn, 27th Inf SGT Fred C. Du Bose, Co C, 3rd Bn, 22nd Inf |
PFC Howard L. Schafer, Co A, 1st Bn (Mech), 5th Inf PFC Joe Rekasis, Co C, 2nd Bn, 14th Inf |
Soldiers Medal |
|
SP5 James P. Puckett, HHC, 1st Bn (Mech), 5th Inf | |
Bronze Star Medal (Valor) |
|
LTC Alan M. Dean, HHB, 1st Bn, 8th Arty 1LT Phillip F. Zingarelli, Co D, 2nd Bn, 27th Inf PSG Wayne O. Knowles, Co C, 3rd Bn, 22nd Inf PSG Kenneth Gardner, Co D, 2nd Bn, 27th Inf SSG Richard Stegner, D Trp, 3rd Sqdn, 4th Cav SGT Jimmy Kolecek, Co D, 2nd Bn, 27th Inf SGT Orin C. Sutton, Co D, 2nd Bn, 27th Inf |
SP4 Bruce E. Hicks, C Btry, 7th Bn, 11th Arty SP4.Keith Reynolds, Co D, 2nd Bn, 27th Inf SP4 Roy Taylor, HHC, 2nd Bde PFC Benny Howell, Co D, 2nd Bn, 27th Inf PFC Michael C. Willet, Co D, 2nd Bn, 27th Inf PFC Earnest H. Peters, Co D, 2nd Bn, 27th Inf |
Bronze Star Medal (Merit) |
|
CPT James P. Flowers, 25th Admin Co CPT Thomas H. Fickle, Co B, 25th Avn Bn CPT Douglas D. Humphries, HH&S Btry, 1st Bn, 8th Arty CPT Ray E. McCoy, HHC, 25th SST Bn CPT Roger J. Sullivan, HHD, 125th Sig Bn CPT Donald A. Tapscott, Co B, 4th Bn (Mech), 23rd Inf CPT Boyd B. Burkholder, HHC, 4th Bn (Mech), 23rd Inf CPT Robert V. Moss, HHB, 6th Bn, 77th Arty 1LT William M. Churchull, Co A, 65th Engr Bn 1LT Joseph M. Manna, Co E, 65th Engr Bn 1LT William H. Paulson, A Stry, 1st Bn, 8th Arty 1LT David A. Tucker, 25th Admin Co 1LT David A. Van Teslaar, Co A, 2nd Bn, 34th Armor CWO David S. Nobriga, Co B, 25th Avn Bn SGM Cecil F. Fors, HHB, 25th Inf Div Arty MSG Billy L. Pierce, HHC, 4th Bn (Mech), 23rd Inf MSG Leonard D. Sprankle, HHT, 3rd Sgdn, 4th Cav 1SG Russell S. Peterson, HO & Co A, 725th Main Bn SFC Robert L. Black, HHB, 25th Inf Div Arty SFC Norman T. Skowronski, Hq & Co A, 25th Med Bn SSG Joseph E. Morton, Co A, 1st Bn, 27th Inf SSG Larry Wenzel, Co B, 1st Bn (Mech), 5th Inf SSG Henry J. Brooks, Co B, 2nd Bn (Mech), 22nd Inf SSG Horace Crutchfield, HHC, 2nd Bn, 12th Inf SSG Peter D. Fee, Co D, 2nd Bn, 27th Inf SSG Theodore J. Hosbach, C Btry, 3rd Bn, 13th Arty SSG James W. Hicks, Co B, 2nd Bn (Mech), 22nd Inf SSG Perry D. Mowery, Co B, 2nd Bn (Mech), 22nd Inf SSG Wafals Walas Jr., Co A, 2nd Bn, 27th Inf |
SGT Roger J. Wilkins, Co A, 1st Bn 27th Inf SGT Kenneth N. Sweeten, Co B, 1st Bn (Mech), 5th Inf SGT Samuel Legleu, Co D, 2nd Bn, 14th Inf SGT Hillard Blackburn Jr., Co D, 2nd Bn, 27th Inf SGT Charles W. Bowden, HHC, 2nd Bde SGT Patrick J. Crilly, HHC, 2nd Bde SGT Robert J. Nelson, HH&S Btry, 7th Bn, 11th Arty SGT Robert L. Wassom, HH&S Btry, 1st Bn, 8th Arty SGT Oliver Wright Jr., Co D, 2nd Bn, 27th Inf SP5 William E. Beatty, A Trp, 3rd Sqdn, 4th Cav SP5 Prentis H. Minix, HHC, 65th Engr Bn SGT Larry L. Wilkinson, HHC, 3rd Bn, 22nd Inf SP4 George Tarsitano, Co B, 1 st Bn (Mech), 5th Inf SP4 John H. Burdick, HHC, 3rd Bde SP4 Irving J. Carisle, HHC, 2nd Bde SP4 Anthony J. Klimes, HHC, 2nd Bde SP4 Robert M. Lindberg, HHC, 2nd Bde SP4 Robert Lewis, HHC, 2nd Bde SP4 Boyd C. Lister, HHC, 2nd Bde SP4 Blake Madison, Co D, 2nd Bn, 27th Inf SP4 Eugene Orvosh, HHC, 2nd Bde SP4 John D. Richter, Co D, 2nd En, 27th Inf 5P4 Alexander V. Spahn, HHC, 2nd Bde SP4 Ronney L. Sutherland, HHC, 2nd Bn, 27th Inf SP4 Russell W. Camden, HHC, 1st Bn (Mech), 5th Inf SP4 Narlon Daniels, HHC, 1st Bn (Mech), 5th Inf SP4 Luis Garcia, HHC, 2nd Bde SP4 Jesse J. Goodyear, HHC, 2nd Bde SP4 Harry Hohnberger, HHC, 2nd Bde |
EDITORIAL
Year of Opportunity
What’s ahead for you in 1968? What do the next 366 days have in store? These are rather difficult questions to answer. However, there is one thing
you can be sure awaits you in 1968 and that is opportunity. There is the opportunity to become more skilled in your profession; to learn
more of what is happening around you; to gain skill in a field that may be new
and different; or to become more knowledgeable in your dealings with others.
All these and many more opportunities are waiting for you in the year ahead,
but you must be alert and willing to work to take advantage of them. You can’t sit back and simply wish good things will come to pass. Hard work
is the only thing that can make dreams and wishes come true.
At this time of the year, we have a tendency to make a number of resolutions
to improve our lot during the coming year. Unfortunately, most of these resolutions are forgotten by the end of the
month. So, rather than making a long list of resolutions, make just one
resolve. Resolve to take advantage of every opportunity for improvement that
presents itself in the coming year.
By doing so, you may find you have created a few opportunities of your own
for you and your family to live a fuller and happier life.
(AFPS)
Students Praise GIs
SAIGON (MACV) - More than 500 letters praising U.S. Forces members and
wishing them a Merry Christmas were sent by Vietnamese high school students in
Saigon to the Office of Information at MACV headquarters.
Carefully written in English, the letters cite the sacrifice of Americans
here, hope for long lasting friendship between the Vietnamese and the U.S., and
the traditional expression of good will during the holiday season.
The authors of the letters are members of Nguyen Duy Khang High School.
Wrote one student, “When thinking of benefactors, I can’t help thinking of
you who have come a very long way to help our people fight communist aggressors
. . . Be sure of our gratefulness for your presence in our war-torn fatherland.
The hardships you have been undergoing together with the Vietnamese people will
make the friendship between our two people an ever-lasting one.”
Another wrote, “Everyday I go to school . You are a young man who is
fighting for freedom and for the independence of my nation, and now day and
night you live in danger. Your sacrifice and your comrades’ are so great. I
know this and I think that all Vietnamese students know this.”
Some EM Due Language Test
WASHINGTON (ANF) - U.S. Army officals are giving the Army Language Aptitude
Test to certain Regular Army enlisted personnel whose records do not contain at
least a minimum score on the test.
In Department of the Army Message 841647, the Office of Personnel Operations
reminds commanders that AR 611-82, “Selection of Personnel for Language
Training,” requires that the language aptitude test be given to all qualified RA
enlisted personnel.
Increasing world-wide requirements for linguists make strict compliance with
the regulation mandatory, the message says.
The message requests that the records of RA enlisted personnel be reviewed so
that men will be tested or retested by Jan. 31, 1968, if they meet the
qualifications in AR 611-82, but do not have a minimum test score of 18 or higher in their records.
For enlisted men, qualifications include completion of high school or its
equivalent, General Technical Aptitude Area (GT) score of at least 100, and
completion of basic and advanced individual training.
Also, to be eligible for language training, applicants must have 14 months
service remaining upon completion of a 24-week language school course, 18 months
after a 37 or 47-week course, 13 months after any course in Vietnamese which is
more that 12 weeks long, and six months after completing Vietnamese language training on a temporary duty
basis.
Student Loans Available
WASHINGTON (ANF) - The Educational Assistance Program for U.S. Army
dependents is now in its fifth year.
The program began in August 1963, when The Adjutant General of the Army and
officials of the National Merit Scholarship Corporation (NMSC) signed an
agreement in which the Army dependents graduating from high school who are
declared finalists, semifinalists, or commended students by the NMSC.
Scholarships based on financial need as determined by the NMSC range from
$250 to $1,500. Funds for this program are provided by the Army Central Welfare
Fund.
To be eligible for an Army Merit Scholarship or an Army Educational
Assistance Loan, a student must be a dependent of an Army member who is on
active duty as of Jan. 10 of the student’s senior year in high school.
The student must take the National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test in March
of his junior year in high school.
Detailed information about the Army Educational Assistance Program is
contained in AR, 350-16 and DA Pamphlet 608-3.
35,000 Troops Leave Europe
Beginning in April, certain U.S. Army and Air Force units in Europe will be
redeployed to the United States, the U.S. Commander in Chief, Europe, announced
Dec. 20.
The announcement by Gen. Lyman Lemnitzer said planning action is underway and
the redeployment has been the subject of consultations in NATO since last
spring. At that time the U.S. proposed to redeploy up to 35,000 military
personnel from the Federal Republic of Germany.
The redeployment, involving about 31,000 Army personnel and 3,400 Air Force,
will continue over a number of months.
Army units involved are two brigades of the 24th Inf Div, and the 3rd Armored
Cav Regt.
The TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS is an authorized publication of the 25th Infantry Division. It is published weekly for all division units in the Republic of Vietnam by the Information Office, 25th Infantry Division, APO San Francisco 96225. Army News Features, Army Photo Features, Armed Forces Press Service and Armed Forces News Bureau material are used. Views and opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the Department of the Army. Printed in Tokyo, Japan, by Pacific Stars and Stripes.
MG F. K. Mearns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Commanding General
MAJ. Bernard S. Rhees . . . . . . . . . . Information Officer
1LT Larry Rottmann . . . . . . . . . . . . . Officer-in-Charge
SSG Dave Wilkinson . . . . . . . . . . . . Editor
SP4 Dave Cushman . . . . . . . . . . . . . Editorial Assistant
Page 3 TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS January 15, 1968
Careless Viet Cong Alerts 25th Troops
2ND BDE - A careless Viet Cong recently saved the lives of several 25th Inf
Div soldiers during Operation Yellowstone when he alerted them to impending
danger.
Helping to secure the growing Katum base camp being carved out of the jungles
of War Zone C, troops of the 1st Bn (Mech), 5th Inf’s Alpha Co, had been filling
sandbags and building bunkers all day. As darkness set in, they continued
preparing for the recurring mortar attacks.
“We had just finished placing the final row of sandbags on the bunker walls,”
said SP4 Robert Cribb, a team leader from Piscataway, N.J., “when all of a
sudden a trip flare went off down the line and our men opened fire.”
The team leader and three other men immediately dove into the roofless bunker
while three more mounted their armored personnel carrier to man its machine gun.
“We thought we were going to be attacked,” added SP4 Clarence Klausing of
Louisville, Ky., a forward observer.
Seconds after the men scrambled for cover, an enemy mortar round landed in
front of their bunker, a short five feet away from where they had been standing.
“If Charlie hadn’t been so curious to see what was going on, he would never
have tripped the flare,” commented PFC Joseph Misiaszek, a rifleman from Central
Falls, R.I.
“It’s a good thing he did, or we might have ended up in a heck of a bad way.
That round landed too close to where we’d been standing for any of us to have
got away unhurt.”
THE HARD WAY - SP4 Hilmar Murphy, a 1st Bn (Mech), 5th Inf, operations clerk from Williamsburg, Pa., sets up shop by his armored personnel carrier during a recent operation in the Boi Loi Woods. (Photo by SGT Roger Smith) |
CA Team Fights Way To Village
2ND BDE - An American civic action team guarded by Vietnamese forces had to
fight its way through a barrage of enemy fire to give medical treatment to
residents of a Hau Nghia Province village.
Five Viet Cong and several weapons were captured by ARVN forces in the action
around the village of Hau Hoa.
According to 1LT Stan McKee, civic action officer for the 25th Inf Div’s 1st
Bn (Mech), 5th Inf, Viet Cong armed with automatic weapons opened fire on the
friendly column as they moved into the northern edge of the village.
The Vietnamese troops returned fire, chasing the five enemy into another
company of the 2nd Bn, 49th ARVN Regt, which was moving towards the village from
the south.
McKee, a native of Atlanta, Ga., said that after the action was over “the
villagers were very receptive.”
“After our medics treated them for about two hours, the villagers brought us
food and seemed very glad we’d stopped by,” he said.
Danger Strikes Below
1ST BDE - Tunnel rats are constantly proving that it’s almost as dangerous
below the ground in Vietnam as it is above.
Take SSG Charles E. Howell of Houston, Tex., for instance. He recently
headed a three-man team of tunnel rats that explored diggings uncovered by Alpha
Co, 4th Bn, 9th Inf.
After wriggling through the tiny entrance, the trio crawled down the long
passageway without incident. The tunnel ended in a rising vertical shaft with
niches cut in the sides and a rope hanging in the center.
Spurred by typical tunnel-rat curiosity, Howell decided to see where the rope
led.
He had climbed only a short way, when he felt something slam into his
shoulder, numbing his side. Struggling to keep his grip on the rope, he looked
down at the bottom of the shaft. Another team member had trained his flashlight on the missile that had hit
Howell - a CHICOM grenade. Luckily it had failed to detonate.
The three men began to breathe again as they retraced their steps to the
surface, deciding to let the demolition team take care of the tunnel.
This GI Was Snowed Under By Big ‘Blizzard’ Of Letters
1ST BDE - It’s been a white Christmas for PFC Danny R. Adams - in fact he’s
almost been snowed under by a blizzard of cards and letters from home.
“For a while,” said one of Adams’ buddies, “whenever we got in a couple of
sacks of mail, it seemed like they’d automatically bring one down and give it to
Danny.”
Adams, a radio-teletype operator in the 1st Brigade’s Communications Platoon,
received an average of 15 letters a day during the first three weeks of
December.
“They were all from my home town,” the Rockfish, Va. native said. “But about
three-quarters of them came from people I’d never heard of. Finally I wrote my
folks and asked them what was going on.”
His family replied that a local paper had printed the names of the
community’s servicemen and asked that readers drop a line to them to show
support for their efforts.
“It’s a great idea,” Adams said. “It’s really encouraging to know people back
home are behind you.”
The soft-spoken Virginian is now keeping his mail safe in a laundry bag at
the brigade’s forward base at Katum.
“I’ve answered a few of the letters,” he said, “but it’ll be impossible to
reply to ahem all individually, so I’m going to write a letter to the paper to
tell them all how much I appreciate their writing.”
Wins CIB In Minutes
2ND BDE - A platoon leader arriving at his new 25th Inf Div assignment
literally jumped out of the chopper and into the fire, winning a Combat
Infantryman’s Badge within minutes.
2LT Stewart Eiden of Pasadena, Calif., hopped off a resupply helicopter as he
reported to the 1st Bn (Mech), 5th Inf, forward base camp in War Zone C.
While introducing himself to his platoon, Viet Cong gunners opened up on the
base camp with automatic weapons and recoilless rifles.
Eiden organized his men and assaulted through the perimeter to the suspected
enemy location. After the fight, LTC Fremont B. Hodson Jr., battalion
commander, pinned a Combat Infantryman’s Badge on the new “Bobcat.”
“I think he did a fine job for a man who hadn’t a chance to settle down and
learn the routine before his first combat action,” Hodson explained.
“It was a hot one all right,” commented Eiden. “It looks like the VC are
going to be my best teachers.”
Super Pow Does Job
1ST BDE - The Viet Cong started the encounter with automatic weapons - the
Manchus from Alpha Co, 4th Bn, 9th Inf, ended it with a blast.
Sweeping an area southeast of Tay Ninh, the U.S. troops received heavy
automatic weapons fire. They returned the fire and the enemy was silent.
Moving forward, the Manchus were met with a hail of CHICOM grenades. They
spread out and began trading grenade for grenade with the enemy.
Finally SP4 Jerry Mullinix of Adrian, Mich., ended the duel. After tying six
blocks of explosive together, with a hand grenade blasting cap as a firing
device, Mullinix crawled up to the slit in the ground from where the grenades
had been coming.
Pulling the pin, he tossed in his homemade “super-grenade” and did a rapid
low-crawl back to his buddies.
When the dust settled, Manchu tunnel rats investigated the tunnel that the
blast had exposed.
Hot Time In Old Shower Tonight
3RD BDE - During a recent mortar attack on the 3rd Bde, 25th Inf Div’s base
camp, a 2nd Bn, 12th Inf, officer had a very cool shower turn into a very hot
one.
1LT Tommy Giles III of Marina, Calif., Bravo Co’s executive officer, had just
finished a nice, cool, refreshing shower, when he heard the first of the
incoming mortar rounds hit.
“I wasn’t sure if they were incoming rounds, but just as I stepped out of the
shower,” related Giles, “a round exploded 25 meters from me.”
Immediately Giles headed for the safety of the nearest bunker and its
protection from the incoming rounds. The next round that came in was a direct
hit on the now vacated shower.
ON THE RUN - A “Wolfhound” from the 2nd Bn, 27th Inf, dashes through the twisted underbrush of a HoBo Woods’ landing zone as his unit comes under enemy sniper fire during a recent operation. (Photo by SP4 Joe Carey) |
Page 4-5 TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS January 15, 1968
By SP5 Terry Richard
The 25th S&T Bn can be justly proud of their motto: Without Delay. They have
earned it.
The battalion has the responsibility of supplying all divisional, plus
attached units, with the materials for completion of their mission. They also
must transport the goods from Tan Son Nhut and Saigon to Cu Chi, Dau Tieng and
Tay Ninh.
The battalion is organized into three companies: Headquarters, Supply and
Service, and Motor Transportation. The battalion is commanded by LTC Robert
Schwarz.
Headquarters Company supplies the battalion with all the mess hall personnel
and all of the staff at battalion level. The Supply and Service Company
receives, stores and issues materials for all divisional units, plus
attachments. The Motor Transportation Company is responsible for transportation
of materials from Saigon and Tan Son Nhut to Cu Chi, Tay Ninh and Dau Tieng.
Thanks to S&T the supplies are kept flowing at a quick smooth pace.
CONEXS ARE LOADED WITH GOODS AND STACKED IN THE CLASS II YARD. | |
LUMBER IS LOADED ONTO A TRUCK AT THE CLASS II YARD. | |
AVIATION FUEL IS PUMPED INTO TRUCKS. | |
MILK IS OFF-LOADED FROM A TRUCK. | |
ICE IS LOADED ON A TRUCK AT THE ICE ISSUE POINT. |
Page 6 TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS January 15, 1968
Wolfhounds Kill 41 Of 101st’s NVA Regiment
By SP4 Gary Gatliff
2ND BDE - At first they thought the voices coming from the deep rice to their
front belonged to the three-man listening post returning to the perimeter. They
continued to huddle in the bunker, trying to keep warm in the crisp early
morning air.
Then the first of nearly 200 mortar rounds began to fall all over the base
camp and the Americans knew they were in trouble.
“We’d just heard voices - VC voices - from the paddy when one RPG round
landed behind the bunker,” recalled one soldier of the 1st Bn, 27th Inf
“Wolfhounds.”
Shrapnel hit two men; all four in the bunker were shaken by the concussion.
“We started to fire to our front. They started dropping flares, and we could
see about 20 VC hitting us in groups of four or five,” the Wolfhound continued.
Before it was over, the 25th Inf Div soldiers had killed 41 enemy who staged
a fanatical, abortive assault on the battalion’s forward base camp.
Although the defenders first thought the enemy to be Viet Cong, intelligence
officers later identified them as members of the 2nd Bn, 101st North Vietnamese
Army Regt.
Ten Wolfhounds were wounded in the assault, which backfired when an enemy
diversionary assault failed to materialize.
But it was touch-and-go at moments. “A couple of them had gotten inside the
perimeter,” said SP4 Robert Caruthers of Middleport, Ohio. “There was a
position about 50 meters to our left and we could see a VC with an RPG moving
into the hedgerow between them and us.”
SGT Robert Matamoros, a squad leader from Westaco, Tex., landed a grenade
between the enemy’s legs. “He went down, but he was alive and trying to fire.
We finished him off with an M16,” he said later.
To Caruthers’ left, the three man position occupied by SGT Craig DeFyter and
two men of his fire .team had opened up on the advancing communists.
“The listening post was still out to our front, so we had to hold our fire to
the left side of our sector,” DeFyter recounted.
“Finally, we saw the L.P., coming in with the VC right behind them. We just
counted three men, then fired at anything that came along behind,” he said.
The listening post reached safety to the left of DeFyter’s position.
Meanwhile, artillery and mortar fire was pouring on the rice paddy and far
edge of the perimeter in a desperate attempt to halt the communist drive.
On the other side of the base camp, an ambush patrol spotted a 70-man enemy
force approach the perimeter, then mysteriously veer sharply away.
On the north, in Charlie Co’s sector, the battle raged on. “We were still
firing to the front when one VC came in from behind. He fired in the bunker and
got Baker in the foot,” Caruthers said. “I swung around to fire, but he ducked
away and headed outside the perimeter.”
PFC Joseph B. Baker, with a carbine wound in his foot, scrambled out of the
bunker and fired his grenade launcher. “The round landed right next to him and
I didn’t see him anymore,” the infantryman from Lovelander, Colo., remarked.
For the next half hour, ‘the Wolfhounds engaged four-man enemy teams trying
to penetrate the perimeter, despite the heavy fire enveloping the paddy.
“They’d try to come in, and if we didn’t kill them with small arms, we’d just
pin them down until the artillery and mortars got them,” Caruthers said.
When the attack slackened about 3:20 a.m., one and one-half hours after it
began, a medic made his way through sporadic fire to treat the men in the
bunker.
All four were evacuated, replaced by the listening post.
In the paddy to their front, 34 communists lay dead by their gear and
weapons, 11 of them within 2.5 meters of the perimeter. Three had died inside
the base camp.
Searching through nearby hamlets, Wolfhounds discovered four more bodies.
Heavy blood trails dotted the area, indicating more enemy had been killed or
wounded in the fighting.
In a stockpile near the battalion command post lay four AK-50 and one AK-47
assault rifles, one carbine, three RPG-2 rocket launchers, two Russian light
machineguns, 1,000 rounds of small arms ammunition, 115 various type grenades,
15 enemy mortar rounds and 13 rounds for rocket launchers.
Web Gear Deflects VC Bullet
1ST BDE - “You wear a steel pot and flack jacket and what saves your skin -
something that was never intended to defend you.”
SP4 Gerald Mitchell of Fort Worth, Tex., was commenting on the close call
he’d had recently while serving with the Recon Plt of the 2nd Bn, 14th Inf.
Mitchell was part of the first patrol sent out from his battalion’s perimeter
at Katum as the 1st Bde consolidated the base camp for the 25th Div’s Operation
Yellowstone.
As the patrol moved down a trail some 300 meters outside the perimeter,
Mitchell spotted what appeared to be the foundation of a hootch. As he went
forward to check it out, the Viet Cong opened up.
“I hit the dirt fast,” the Texas soldier said. “Charlie was close, maybe
within 20 meters. I began returning the fire when suddenly I felt something hit
my left side and slam me back.”
Shaken, he began to look for blood. Unable to find any, he opened his shirt
and found a red hot AK-47 round nestled next to his skin at his belt line.
The bullet had passed through Mitchell’s ammunition pouch, magazine
ammunition and web belt.
“All I got out of it was bruised ribs, and a small burn.”
15-Man Platoon Stirs Up Trouble
3RD BDE - A 15-man reconnaissance patrol dropped into a VC hornet’s nest near
here recently and dropped out again after killing four of the enemy. There were
no U.S. losses.
The 25th Div troopers, part of the Recon Plt, 3rd Bn, 22nd Inf, were dropped
into the area west of Dau Tieng to set up daylight ambushes and check enemy
movement in the area.
Moving to their first position, a small enemy base camp was discovered.
“The floor of one of the bunkers just didn’t feel right,” related 1LT Richard
J. Prairie of Kankakee, Ill., the patrol leader, “so we decided to dig.”
Seventeen bolt-action rifles were found concealed under the false floor. A
two-ton cache of rice was found under another bunker in the complex.
Carrying the captured weapons with them, the men moved on. Moments later the
chattering of about 15 Viet Cong halted the “Tropic Lightning” soldiers.
Down the trail came a patrol of khaki-clad VC armed with AK-47 rifles.
Waiting until the VC were only a few feet away from the point man, SP4 James E.
Boggess of Jacksonville, Fla., the GIs opened fire and killed four of the enemy
patrol.
Suddenly the jungle was ablaze with tracers as what Prairie described as “at
least 20 automatic weapons” opened up on his small unit.
Jet fighters overhead began to make strafing runs within 15 meters of the
patrol’s flanks as they began to withdraw. Helicopter gunships from the 188th
Aslt Hel Co took up where the fighters left off in covering the patrols
withdrawal.
“The choppers wanted us to mark our position with smoke but we had thrown all
our smoke grenades for the jets,” said Prairie. “Then Colonel (LTC Thomas U.)
Harrold came in low over the treetops in his helicopter and dropped us some
grenades.”
With the airdropped smoke grenades, the patrol marked its position and three
helicopters swooped in and pulled them out as 105mm artillery began to pound the
area.
Curiosity Kills Four As They Watch FAC Circle
2ND BDE - A forward air controller’s final pass on a routine reconnaissance
mission recently led to the deaths of four curious Viet Cong.
Air Force CPT Harry E. Garrison of Elmer, N.J., was about to return to the
2nd Bde, 25th Inf Div, base at Cu Chi when he spotted ten armed Viet Cong
digging a trench on the northern border of the HoBo Woods.
“They were just sitting there watching me,” Garrision said, “so I just
circled around andwatched them.”
Calling for armed helicopters, artillery and an air strike, the captain
directed fire on the communist troops, resulting in four Viet Cong killed.
“They didn’t even try to get out of the area,” Garrison said. “Even when the
artillery was dropping, they just ran around in circles.
“I guess at first they were curious. The funniest part of it was that I
looked down on them, they looked up at me, then they just kept on digging.”
CLEARING THE WAY - With smoke still visible from a destroyed VC boobytrap, PSG Raymond Michael Jr. of the 3rd Sqdn, 4th Cav, directs his tank toward another objective during a 25th Inf Div operation in the Boi Loi Woods. (Photo by SP4 George Hairston) |
Page 7 TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS January 15, 1968
Hope And Troupe At Lightning Bowl
|
LAUGHS TOO - Comedian Bob Hope and part of his Christmas troupe as seen by nearly 10,000 screaming fans at the 25th Inf Div’s Lightning Bowl. Hope and his bevy of beauties visited the 12th Evac Hosp after the show. Shown are (from left) actress Raquel Welch, singer Barbara McNair, Hope, “Miss World” Madeline Hartog Bel, and actress Irene Dunn. The Hope aircraft was reportedly fired on while leaving Cu Chi and he later had this comment about the action, “Taking off from Cu Chi they took a couple of shots at us. Even the Cong gets sore when you don’t leave the girls behind.” (Photo by SP5 Rod Bryan) |
Steel Pot Saves Another Life
2ND BDE - A 25th Inf Div team leader lost a steel pot and gained four
souvenirs when an enemy armed with an assault rifle shot him in the head.
Fortunately for SGT Craig A. DeFyter of Holland, Mich., the steel-jacketed
bullet ricocheted around the top of his helmet liner before jamming between it
and his steel pot.
The incident occurred as the 2nd Bde soldier was helping fight off a
communist assault on a forward base camp of the 1st Bn, 27th Inf “Wolfhounds.”
When North Vietnamese gunners opened fire with mortars and automatic weapons
on the base camp, DeFyter and the two men in his position began to spray the
rice paddy to their front with fire.
“I was firing to the far left when someone out there shot an AK-50,” DeFyter
recalled. “The sound got to me about the same time as the round. It felt like
someone hit me in the side of the head with a sand bag as hard as the could.”
DeFyter’s helmet flew nearly 10 feet out of the position. Stunned by the
impact, he was later evacuated for medical treatment.
When friends returned the headgear, DeFyter found the bullet had entered the
front of the helmet, ripped through his girlfriend’s letter in his helmet liner,
then stopped on the right side.
“The first sergeant said I could keep it as a combat loss,” DeFyter noted.
“Now I’ve got four souvenirs - the letters, the liner, and I’ll probably be the
only guy in town with a hole in his steel pot and the round that made it in his
pocket.”
A Lost And Starved Fawn Becomes New Unit Mascot
3RD BDE - An almost starved fawn, abandoned by its mother in the jungles of
War Zone C was found by the men of the 3rd Bde, 25th Inf Div, recently during a
combat assault into the swampy jungle west of Dau Tieng.
SP5 Lawrence Jenness from Fairfield, Maine, spotted the small, brown baby
deer as Co A, 3rd Bn, 22nd Inf, was moving off the landing zone. Jenness, head
medic with Co A, picked up the fawn which was too weak to run.
“It had become so weak that the creature surely would have perished in a few
more days,” commented the medic.
After several thousand meters of traveling through thick bamboo, the company
finally stopped for the night. The exhausted medic sent the fawn into Dau Tieng
on the resupply helicopter.
Alpha Co’s new mascot is rapidly regaining his strength back in its new home.
Well Worn Trail ‘Dead’ Giveaway
1ST BDE - A well-worn trail deep in War Zone C recently led to the end of the
line for a Viet Cong platoon leader and six of his men.
Co B, 4th Bn, 9th Inf, discovered the six-foot wide footpath in dense jungle
near the Cambodian border. The unit was on a search and destroy mission as part
of the 25th Div’s Operation Yellowstone.
Because of the fast-approaching dusk, CPT Alfred W. Baker, company commander
from Oak Hill, W. Va., postponed a detailed search of the area until the next
day, when his men were reinforced by Co C.
The two Manchu companies moved out at dawn. Intelligence reports indicated
the presence of several hard-core Viet Cong and North Vietnamese elements in the
general area.
About 500 meters from the perimeter, the whole world seemed to explode. Co C
had made contact with the perimeter of a platoon-sized VC base camp. For 15
minutes the air was solid lead as machine guns, AK-47s and M-16s sought out each
other’s positions.
Bravo joined the battle on Charlie’s left flank, and together the two Manchu
companies silenced the determined enemy.
Through the dusk and smoke, the VC were seen dragging nine or ten comrades
into the brush. Seven bodies were left behind - among them that of a soldier
identified by documents found in his wallet as a lieutenant - a member of the
Communist party for 20 years.
Arty Turns Engrs
DIV ARTY - When the twelve 105mm howitzers of B and C batteries, 1st Bn, 8th
Arty, moved into position at Fire Support Base Maryland, priorities had to be
met.
Since the range of the howitzer depends on the elevation of the tube, all
obstacles must be cleared for the flight of the projectile.
When dense jungles and lofty trees outlining the perimeter of the fire
support base, the trees had to go since they were in the line of fire.
Using demolition charges, MAJ Jesse Ramos of Phoenix, Ariz., the 1st Bn’s
executive officer, packed the hollow of the obstructing trees with the
explosives.
In less than an hour both batteries could provide pinpoint artillery fire in
any direction.
Page 8 TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS January 15, 1968
Gifts, Food For Dau Tieng Kids
3RD BDE - Christmas is the time of year for giving and doing for others.
This was what the men of C Co, 2nd Bn, 12th Inf “White Warriors,” had in mind
when they gave a Christmas Party for some of the children from the village of
Dau Tieng.
There were 42 happy, smiling faces there. At first, the children were just a
little shy. After the candy, hotdogs, hamburgers, and ice cream were served,
Santa Claus arrived on the scene. Once the children saw the many gifts Santa
had to give away, it took a lot to control them. It seems that the little
children were really fascinated by Santa Claus and had learned something about
the meaning of Christmas.
The two men of the 3rd Bde, 25th Inf Div, really responsible for the party
were SGT Kenneth L. Anderson and SGT David N. Glass. These two men had written
home to their parents and friends telling them of their plans. The response was
tremendous. They, along with other men of the company, started receiving
packages from family and friends as well as churches and clubs. They took stock
of all they had and really came up with a terrific party for the children of the
village.
“It really was fantastic the way the men contributed their time and energy
toward the party,” said CPT Vernon Smith, “They were really thinking of others
and truly have the Christmas Spirit.”
UNLOAD ‘EM - Some of the 18 tons of rice found by the 2nd Bn (Mech), 22nd Inf, is unloaded from tracks of the battalion and was later loaded aboard CH-47 Chinooks for the flight to Dau Tieng. (Photo by SP4 James Friar) |
Well Marked Rice Caches Found Near Saigon River
3RD BDE - Over 18 tons of polished rice and four bicycles stored in multiple
hidden caches have been found by Bravo Co, 2nd Bn (Mech), 22nd Inf, in a sweep
near the Saigon River, 72 kms upstream from Saigon.
As part of a search and destroy conducted by the 3rd Bde, 25th Inf Div, the
3rd Plt was sweeping down a jungle path with security out 30 meters on the
flanks when they ran into the first 18 bag cache. The rice had been stacked in
100 pound bags, placed on logs to keep it off the ground, and covered with
plastic.
A small trail led from the main path to the cache, and had bent branches and
small bits of paper to distinguish it from the hundreds of other trails in the
area.
As the platoon continued down the path they found 12 more trails with the
camouflage marking, each with an 18 to 25 bag cache at the end of the trail.
Most of the rice had been placed on raised log platforms with tin sheeting, 10
feet by 12 feet in diameter. Two permanent caches in 8 foot deep bunkers were
also found.
POINT MAN - SP4 Enrique Loranca, a squad leader from Marietta, N.Y., scans the terrain ahead as elements of the 1st Bn (Mech), 5th Inf, move through a fire lane deep in the Boi Loi Woods. (Photo by SGT Roger Smith) |
Thanks to:
Joe Carey, 25th Admin. Co.,
for sharing this issue,
Kirk Ramsey, 2nd Bn., 14th Inf. for creating this page.
This page last modified 11-04-2005
©2005 25th Infantry Division Association. All rights reserved.