Vol 5 No. 1 TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS January 5, 1970
Index
DEFENSIVE FIREPOWER - Machineguns, tanks and tracks bolster the perimeter of Fire Support Base Pershing where elements of the 2d Battalion, 12th Infantry Warriors and 3d Squadron, 4th Cavalry Raiders take up night positions. (Photo by SP4 Jeff Hinman) |
Orphanage Gets ‘Service to the Line’
By SP4 GARY SCIORTINO
CU CHI - “Would you believe we have to check out our detail truck every day
to make sure there are not too many men aboard?” said Captain Edward J. Kellogg
from Arnold, Mo. civic action officer for 725th Maintenance Battalion.
That’s the kind of enthusiasm that goes into the battalion’s support for the
Catholic Rose Orphanage in Hoc Mon, 17 miles southeast of Cu Chi. The detail
truck leaves Cu Chi every day with soldiers who strive to better the living
conditions of the 125 children who live at the orphanage. The men paint
buildings, construct swing sets, jungle gyms, and see-saws for the recreation
area, kindle the kitchen’s cooking fires with wood from shipping crates they
tear apart, and haul fresh edible garbage in from Cu Chi to fatten up the
orphanage’s sole source of income - the pigs.
ONCE A WEEK they also provide a medical civic action program for the
orphanage with a little help from their friends at 25th Medical Battalion.
“These regular MEDCAP visits to the orphanage were originally planned to be
only for the orphans. But other villagers sneak in the back way to seek medical
attention too and we cannot turn them down either,” Kellogg stated.
The battalion also plans to provide the orphanage with money to buy needed
equipment which the nuns cannot afford to buy. Lieutenant Colonel Maxie O.
Redick, the battalion commander, has asked his men to donate money to a standing
fund for the orphanage every payday. The first collection, which was made in
November, netted more than $800. The battalion has already used part of this
money to buy a new electric water pump for the home’s well.
About 60 of the orphans come to stay with 725th troopers each weekend. The
unit takes this opportunity to see that the little visitors are well-fed and
well-entertained.
“We all take turns taking care of the kids when they come to visit,” said
Specialist 5 David L. Ault, a helicopter repairman from New Philadelphia, Ohio.
“It’s nice. It’s just like home.”
LOOK AT THE CAMERA! Lieutenant Colonel Maxie O. Redick of Arlington, Va., commander of the 725th Maintenance Battalion, initiated the program that provides regular support by his battalion to the Rose Orphanage at Hoc Mon. “I think these kids give us more support than we give them,” he said. (Photo by SP4 Gary Sciortino) |
Warrior Ambushes Rake Ho Bo Woods
By SP4 JEFF HINMAN
CU CHI - Two days after springing an ambush that netted Bravo Company of the
2nd Battalion, 12th Infantry two enemy soldiers, the Warriors set out to catch
more of the enemy off guard on a two day bushmaster operation that killed three
more of the enemy.
Operating in the X Sa Nho area south of the Ho Bo Woods, Bravo Company set up
three platoon-sized ambushes. At about 1830 hours the first platoon led by
First Lieutenant Tom McSee of Atlanta, Ga. engaged a small enemy force. One of
the enemy was killed.
McSee described the action. “We were checking out the area before setting up
for the night when we caught them by surprise. The enemy was sitting around a
destroyed hooch cooking a pot of rice big enough for seven or eight people. We
opened up on them killing one of them.”
AN HOUR LATER Bravo Company’s second ambush set up in an open area in a dense
line of brush. Four of the enemy were caught as they were patrolling the area.
First Lieutenant Larry Crawford of Worthington, Pa. said, “We spotted them
with our starlight scope. They were moving toward our position. When they were
only about 20 meters away we blew our claymore mines and opened up with grenade
launchers and small arms.”
During a sweep of the area after the fight the Warriors found one dead enemy,
an AK-47, three AK magazines and blood trails.
A SWEEP THROUGH the same area early the next morning turned up another dead
enemy hidden in heavy brush. A K-54 pistol was also found.
On one of the dead enemy a sum of approximately $150 in piasters was found.
He is believed to have been an NVA regimental political officer.
Dragons Quiet Talkative Foe
CU CHI - Hey, GI! ... Come and get us!” was the enemy’s cry to the men of
Bravo Company, 2d Battalion, 14th Infantry.
The GIs heeded the call and killed six of the talkative foe.
Specialist 4 Robert Barrett of Easton, Pa., said, “We were just setting up
our secondary defense of claymore mines when we heard them coming down the trail
right in front of our lines of claymores.”
“After the smoke cleared,” Specialist 4 Jim Williams of Montgomery, Ala.,
said, “we could still hear them trying to psyche us out, but we kept our cool
and waited for a light fire team to come in and shut them up.
Hound Section Surprises Enemy Command Unit
CU CHI - An element consisting of eight men from the first platoon of Alpha
Company, 1st Battalion, 27th Infantry clashed with an enemy element of 20 enemy
near Bao Tri, killing five in an hour-long firefight.
“We spotted them running out of some hooches to our front,” said Staff
Sergeant Cosmo Trentacosta of Taft, Calif. “As soon as we were sure they were
V.C. we opened up with a heavy volume of fire,” he said.
Spreading his men out to cut off any escape routes, Trentacosta positioned
himself between the enemy and his element and directed the fire.
“While we were in contact Sergeant Trentacosta called in gunships and arty
while directing our fire.” said Specialist 4 William Steward of Flint, Mich.
After one hour of engagement the Communists pulled back into hedgerows.
Wolfhounds swept the area uncovering the bodies of five enemy. Upon
investigation it was discovered that the enemy element consisted of five
high-ranking officers with a security element of 15. Three enemy officers as
well as two security guards were killed.
Now that the Vietnamese dry season has begun, the average daily temperatures will start going up. Hot, humid climates take their toll - vital salt content of the blood is lowered due to sweating. Guard yourself against heat exhaustion by taking salt pills and always take plenty of water with you when going out into the field. DEROS. Do it the safe way. |
Page 2 TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS January 5, 1970
Decorated
SILVER STAR | |
SGT Clyde E. Paugh, F Co, 75th Rangers | |
DISTINGUISHED FLYING CROSS |
|
CPT Edward W. Cavanaugh, Jr., HHC, 2d Bde CPT Robert B. Connolly, HHC, 2d Bde |
SP5 Marvin G. Cottrill, HHC, 2d Bde |
BRONZE STAR FOR HEROISM |
|
LTC Frederick C. Delisle, HHC, 1st Bn, 5th Inf CPT Ralph G. Laubecher, B Co., 1st Bn, 5th Inf. 1LT Mitchell C. Meilstrup, HHC, 1st Bn, 5th Inf 1SG Frank Williams, C Co., 3rd Sqdn., 4th Cav SSG Phillip Bynum, B Co., 2d Bn, 22d Inf |
SGT Jose A. Oyola, B Co, 2d Bn, 22d Inf SP4 Kirk E. Maher, B Co., 2d Bn, 22 Inf SP4 John M. Saunders II, C Co., 2d Bn, 14th Inf PFC Steven Kirkegard, B Co, 2d Bn, 22d Inf |
Packard Sees Viet Prowess
WASHINGTON (AFPS) - Deputy Secretary of Defense David Packard, on his recent
return from a 10-day visit to Vietnam, outlined his impressions to newsmen at
the Pentagon.
Mr. Packard said he “was very impressed about the progress of the
Vietnamization program. At every one of the U.S. commands I visited, the
Commander had at the top of his priorities, Vietnamization. Second in the list
of priorities, pacification, and third, the responsibility to get on with his
fighting command, and I think that was a very encouraging thing.”
Mr. Packard talked about the success of the self-defense program, saying,
“The People’s Self-Defense Force has been organized with a rather large number
that essentially says that all the people in the village and hamlets, outside a
certain age group, are given an assignment to do something in support of their
village. I was very encouraged at what I saw there.”
In response to a question, Mr. Packard pointed out that the rate of U.S.
withdrawals depends on three factors: the Paris peace talks, the level of enemy
activity and the rate of progress in Vietnamization.
He found little encouragement in the first two factors but said, “I am
convinced that progress in Vietnamization is moving ahead so that we can
continue our withdrawals.”
Asked whether South Vietnamese forces could hold their own against the enemy,
Mr. Packard said there had already been a number of tests in which the South
Vietnamese had acquitted themselves well.
“Of course that Ben Het battle is the one you hear the most about,” he said,
“but there have been a great many other areas.
“For instance, the 1st ARVN Division has undertaken a number of specific
actions. They have had a killed-in-action ratio of 20 to one in their
engagements with the enemy. So, there has been quite ample evidence that they
can handle the job extremely well.”
ARC Bags Multitudes
The Red Cross distributed more than 27,000 “ditty” bags stuffed with
practical items to 25th Division troopers during the 1969 holidays and handed
out more than 500,000 bags throughout Vietnam.
The gift bags were a result of “Operation Shop Early”,’ a program which Red
Cross chapters spearheaded in some 1,500 communities last summer to make sure
that all American military personnel in Vietnam received a Christmas gift.
Local and national businesses, clubs, schools, churches, and individuals were
involved in making and filling the bags.
In addition to the bags, thousands of parcels of individually wrapped gifts,
books, cards, letters, and food addressed to “servicemen in Vietnam” were
distributed by the Red Cross.
RED CROSS “ditty” bags were distributed by members of the 35-voice division choir as it toured outposts during the holidays. An Army nurse tosses a gift package to troopers atop a bunker. |
4th Brigade Activated
SCHOFIELD BARRACKS - The 4th Brigade, 25th Infantry Division, under the
command of Colonel Charles E. Spragins, was activated Dec. 16 in ceremonies at
Lightning Field.
The brigade, which replaced the demobilized 29th Infantry Brigade, becomes
part of the Pacific Reserve Force and returns to Hawaii, in name, the close ties
between Hawaii’s own 25th Infantry Division, now fighting in the Republic of
Vietnam northwest of Saigon, and the people of Hawaii.
AFTER A 17-GUN salute was fired and the brigade’s activation orders were
read, Major General Ben Sternberg, commanding general of U.S. Army, Hawaii,
presented Col. Spragins with the brigade color and the command of the new unit.
The historical association of the 25th Infantry Division and the State of
Hawaii dates back to Oct. 1, 1941, when the 25th was one of two divisions formed
from the old Hawaiian Division.
FOUR OF THE brigade’s organic battalions retain the same regimental
designations as units of the 25th Division in Vietnam: 2d Battalion, 5th
Infantry; 3d Battalion, 14th Infantry; 3d Battalion, 27th Infantry; and 5th
Battalion, 13th Artillery.
Other units of the new brigade are Troop H, 10th Cavalry; the 161st Aviation
Company; the 76th Engineer Company; the 425th Support Battalion; and the 50th
Military Intelligence Detachment.
TAKING COMMAND of the 2d Bn., 34th Armor at Fire Support Base Buell was Lieutenant Colonel William M. Greenburg, former 1st Brigade executive officer. Lieutenant Colonel Tommie G. Smith, the departing commander, has been reassigned to the 2d Field Force. |
V.A. Benefits Explained
A Veterans Administration representative will visit 25th Infantry Division
units to answer questions regarding benefits on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday
this week. He will be at Division Support Command Headquarters at 2 p.m.
Tuesday.
Wednesday he will visit Division Artillery Headquarters at 10:30 a.m.; 2nd
Brigade Headquarters at 1 p.m. and 3d Brigade Headquarters at 3 p.m.
Thursday he will be at the 1st Brigade movie theater at Tay Ninh at 1 p.m.
TROPIC LIGHTNING
Combat Honor Roll
Staff Sergeant Douglas Conn, while serving as platoon sergeant for the
scout platoon of Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 4th Battalion,
(Mechanized), 23d Infantry displayed heroic actions when his platoon came into
contact with a platoon of enemy soldiers while on night patrol in November.
When a reactionary force arrived at the battle area, Conn discovered that one
of his men was missing. Unhesitatingly, Conn organized his men and led them
through perilous area in search of the missing soldier.
When the unit came under intense enemy fire, Conn jumped from his armored
personnel carrier and ran through the barrage of fire. After locating the
missing man, Conn was informed that because of the weight of his pack the
soldier was forced to leave it behind.
Knowing that the pack contained a rifle scope, which could be of possible
value to the enemy, Conn began to assault the hostile positions. He braved a
dangerous hail of fire as he threw numerous hand grenades on the aggressors,
which forced the enemy force to withdraw. After securing the pack, Conn
returned to his vehicle and continued firing upon the fleeing enemy soldiers.
Tropic Lightning Tots
The Commanding General Welcomes
The Following Tropic Lightning Tots
To The 25th Infantry Division As
Reported By The American Red Cross.
Born To:
Dec. 15
PFC Ardie R. Copas, Co C, 1/5, girl
Dec. 19
SP4 John Bennett, 25th S&T, girl
SGT Joe M. Self, 2/27, boy
1LT Henry S. Abbot, PA&E, boy
SP4 Willie B. Halbert, Co. D, 2/22, girl
SP4 Cletus Lee, Co C, 1/5 boy
Dec. 20
1LT Berry Vokes, 1/8, boyDec. 21
SGT Bartholome Stanzione, Co. B, 1/5, boy
PFC Charles H. Morgan, Co. C, 4/9, boy
Dec. 24
1LT Timothy R. Maguire, Adv. Tm. 43, girl
SSG James E. Shults, 187 AHC, girl
SSGDavid R. Witter, Bty B, 1/8, girl
Dec. 25
PVT James Garrett, Bty A, 2/77, girl
PVT Ronald Tomkins, Co. C, 25th Med., boy
PVT Michael J. Self, Co C, 2/22, girl
SP4 James G. Brown, Co. D, 3/22, boy
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 Harris W. Hollis . . . . . . . Commanding General
MAJ Warren J. Field . . . . . . Information Officer
1LT John C. Burns . . . . . . . Officer-in-Charge
SP5 Harold O. Anderson . . Editor
SGT John Genitti . . . . . . . . . Production Supervisor
BATTALION CORRESPONDENTS
SP4 Dennis Bries SP4 Bill Frame SGT Bill Obelholzer SP4 Jim Williams SGT Wally Baker SP4 Frank Ditto SP4 Greg Stanmar SP4 Phil Jackson SP4 Pat Morrison SP5 Tony DeBiasio PFC Rich Fitzpatrick SP4 Jeff Hinman SP4 Ken Fairman |
2/22 4/23 4/23 2/12 2/34 2/14 2/14 2/27 3/13 2/12 1/5 2/12 DIVARTY |
SP4 Doug
Sainsbury SP4 Ken Barron SP4 Tony Crawford SP4 Craig Sampson SP4 Richard Sears SGT K.C. Cullen SP4 Dan Neff SP4 Henry Zukowski SP4 Brad Yaeger SP4 Frank Rezzonico SP4 Joe O'Rourke PFC Ray Byrne |
2/77 1/8 4/9 2/27 4/9 3/22 7/11 2/22 1/27 1/27 3/4 2/14 |
Page 3 TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS January 5, 1970
Tay Ninh Kids Clean Up During Festival
By SP5 DAN DELANEY
TAY NINH - About 1,200 Vietnamese children turned out during the holidays for
two days of crafts, games and cleanup activities in Tay Ninh City.
Sponsored jointly by James Teague, New Life Division of CORDS and his
Vietnamese counterpart, Van Nguyen Hoang, and supported by members of the 1st
Cavalry Division and the 25th Division’s 1st Brigade S-5 sections, who supplied trucks, rope,
water, food, a generator and about 33,000 piasters to the project, the entire
Youth Activities Festival was termed a huge, smashing success.
MEMBERS OF Boy Scout, Girl Scout, high school and various church groups
turned out by the hundreds to erect tents, build campfires and camping areas; and
demonstrate their decorative skills with rope, colored paper and costumes.
Sturdy bamboo towers 20 feet high with rope-bamboo ladders were constructed
using only rope and standard Boy Scout knots to keep them together.
ABOUT SIX truckloads of trash were hauled out of the Cao Dai marketplace to
the city dump and burned.
A fast-paced series of volleyball games highlighted the first afternoon’s
activities after all construction, inducing volleyball poles and net, was
completed.
FIRE! Brigadier General Thomas J. Camp, assistant 25th Infantry Division Commander, pulls the lanyard that sends the 700,000th round whistling from 2d Battalion, 77th Artillery howitzers since the unit came to Vietnam in 1966. The round was fired from Patrol Base Kotrc, a scant two miles from the Cambodian border. (Photo by SP4 Doug Sainsbury) |
Police Call Cops Medal for Rifleman
By PFC RICH FITZPATRICK
CU CHI - “If it doesn’t grow, pick it up” is a directive bellowed into the
ear of every trainee every day of basic training. Specialist 4 John Mack of
Windsor Locks, Conn., a rifleman with Alfa Company, 1st Battalion (Mechanized),
5th Infantry proved he learned this lesson well.
The Bobcats were on a sweep north of Fire Support Base Devin where Mack’s
track forged a water-filled crater. Something that doesn’t ordinarily grow in
any water filled crater caught his eye, a plastic bag. Mack halted the APC and
policed up the bag. It contained 5 RPG-7 rounds.
For nearly an hour he continued his police call in the water hole. The final
tally showed that he had policed up:
27 RPG-7 rounds
35 Chicom grenades
8 pounds of TNT
20 boxes of 51 calibre ammo
20 Chicom anti-tank mines
7 smoke grenades
2 aiming stakes
1 pound of documents
All the items were carefully wrapped in plastic or in NVA ponchos.
The day following the find Brigadier General D. S. Henderson, assistant
division commander, visited Devin to present Mack with a Bronze Star with “V”
device.
Recon Makes U Turn
Combined Force Foils NVA
By SP4 BRAD YAEGER
DUC HOA - Soldiers caught in the kill zone of an ambush are lucky to live to
tell the tale, and that’s how men of the 1st Battalion, 27th Infantry
Reconnaissance platoon feel after a recent patrol south of Duc Hoa.
Eleven men of the recon platoon were moving along a narrow trail near highway
TL10. It was a combined ambush patrol, with eight Vietnamese PRU’s (Provisional
Reconnaissance Unit members) along. As the patrol neared the main road, the
sharp crack of AK47s split the air, and everyone hit the ground.
“THEY WERE VERY CLOSE, the nearest about twenty feet; there were muzzle
flashes all around us” said Sergeant Ronald Kreinbrink of Quincy, Mich., leader
of the patrol.
“We fired back at the muzzle flashes and crawled for cover, although there
was concertina wire on the sides of the path which meant we were pretty well
stuck in the open,” he said.
After the initial AK47 fire, RPGs began to rain in from an estimated platoon
of enemy soldiers.
THE MEN RESPONDED with their M60 machine guns, M16’s and M79 grenade
launchers. One grenadier, Specialist 4 Greg Hall of Spokane, Wash., described
the action. “I wasn’t really scared until the RPG’s began coming in - then I
wasn’t sure whether or not they had us zeroed in.”
“I couldn’t fire directly at the enemy, since the concertina wire along the
edge of the path was right in front of me, and I was afraid my rounds would
ricochet and explode near me. I thought I saw movement near a shed, so I sent a
round in that direction” he said.
THE RECON PATROL and PRU’s put out such a volume of fire that the enemy was
forced to retreat.
A search of the area afterward produced four enemy bodies, along with three
new AK47’s with magazines. The dead enemy soldiers were NVA, and one was found
near the shed where Hall had fired his M79. The round had bounced off the shed
and exploded above the enemy soldier who had been lying prone.
Sergeant Kreinbrink said later: “The NVA had set up a U-shaped ambush, we
realized afterward. I think they were waiting to ambush our reaction force,
which was coming from Duc Hoa in jeeps to help. Fortunately we were able to
scatter the NVA before the jeeps got there.”
Mobile Artillery Force Roams Vam Co Dong
By SGT K. C. CULLEN
TAY NINH - An artillery battery is literally barging into remote enemy
stongholds thanks to a new tactic - “barge artillery” - recently adopted by 1st
Brigade, 25th Infantry Division forces.
The big guns are mounted on three barges left behind by the 9th Infantry
Division. They are manned by the artillerymen from Charlie Battery, 7th
Battalion, 11th Artillery, and infantrymen from Bravo Company, 3d Battalion, 22d
Infantry.
They deliver instant fire support to areas that were formerly reached by
perilous overland trips.
The howitzers are mounted two per barge. Ammunition and fuses are kept in
storage areas next to the guns. Navy riverine tango boats propel the barges and
river patrol boats packed with the infantrymen provide security during passage
on the Vam Co Dong river.
The guns can be fired enroute with barrels lowered to point blank level.
With a retinue of .50 caliber machineguns, 20mm cannons, M60 machineguns and
automatic 40mm grenade launchers the flotilla is virtually a fire support base.
After arriving at a firing location the barges are secured to the shore and
the guns are laid. The infantrymen fan out and dig in on the river banks to
provide all around security as the “On Time, On Target” redlegs fire in support
of ground operations.
Commanders describe the innovation as a combined Navy-artillery-infantry
tactic that adds a new dimension to containing the enemy in his own environment.
SP4 STEPHEN Delicato (right) of Sterling Heights, Mich., hands PFC James Brennan of Philadelphia, a 105mm round while loading ammunition on one of the artillery barges at Ben Keo. The barges carry guns on the Vam Co Dong river. (Photos By SP4 Dan Neff) | WHILE THE M102 howitzer breathes smoke from its tube, the loader chambers another round to prep a landing zone for the 4th Battalion, 9th Infantry Manchus in the Straight Edge Woods. The gun belongs to the 7th Battalion, 11th Artillery which is working aboard the 25th Infantry Division’s flotilla on the Vam Co Dong river. |
Page 4-5 TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS January 5, 1970
With Neil Armstrong at 12th Evac | |
Interviewing Miss World |
Christmas Filled with Hope (and Friends)
PHOTOS BY: SP4 JOE LOPER, SP4 RAY POMPILIO, 1 LT J.T. RICHARDS
Suzanne Charney | Connie Stevens | Theresa Graves |
The Golddiggers - 9 beautiful sets of legs |
Page 6 TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS January 5, 1970
Villagers Lend Hand
Dragons Rebuild Old School
By PFC GREG STANMAR
TRUNG LAP - The surplus of war was transformed into a cornerstone of
education recently when the Civic Action Team of the 2nd Battalion, 14th
Infantry Golden Dragons using a little ingenuity and lot of hard work helped
rebuild a school in Trung Lap.
The original structure was nothing more than a leaky roof supported by a few
rough hewn logs. Inside there was no lighting and a few wobbly benches for the
students.
“WE WERE ON a Medcap operation one afternoon,” said Captain Peter Levy of
Santa Maria, Calif., “and we stopped to look over the place and right then and
there we decided that the children here had to have a better school house.”
Most of the materials used for the reconstruction job had to be scrounged.
Some of the material used came from discarded 155 mm Howitzer cannisters and
wood came from shipping platforms. The artillery cannisters were used as
supports for new benches and writing tables. The shipping platforms were torn
down to provide planks and beams.
“THE ONE THING we had no trouble with was the labor problem,” said Sergeant
Tony Newcome. “The littlest kid to the oldest papasan pitched in to give a
hand.”
With the help of the villagers and the assistance of the five members of the
Army team the village’s new school building was completed in three days.
The only disruption in the building activity came when local Viet Cong took
offense to the enthusiasm the people were showing in the project and set up a
number of booby trapped 82mm mortar rounds. Luckily all the traps were found
before any of the people were harmed by them.
“OTHER THAN THAT single incident,” Newcome said, “The only other problem was
a small one, too many chiefs. Every ‘Papasan’ had some advice and helpful tips
on how to go about building this place. It’s a pretty good idea to go along
with them, because they are all like your grandfather, they’ve been doing
carpentry a lot longer than any of us.”
Levy made a final comment on the successful project, “I seriously believe
that this work has set the whole civic action timetable ahead about six months.”
A GIANT STEP - Everyone pitched in as the civic action team of the 2d Battalion, 14th Infantry renovated a school at Trung tap. One spokesman said the operation moved the battalion’s civic action program forward six months. (Photo by SP4 Greg Stanmar) |
Scout ‘Bush Nabs 3
Tomahawk scouts from the 4th Battalion (Mechanized), 23d Infantry, struck
again in a rubber plantation just south of Fire Support Base Rawlins and
successfully completed another ambush. The scouts’ success with ambushes in the
same area has been frequent, as they continue to dominate their area of
operation.
Sergeant Cleman Quade of Jackson, Mo., who led the patrol, said, “Soon after
our tracks dropped us off for the night, we spotted movement. They were moving
our way, so we quickly got into position and set the trap.”
A small enemy element moved into the kill zone of the ambush and the scouts
opened up with their organic weapons. When the smoke had cleared, one body was
found with an AK-47.
“It was really dark out in those rubber trees,” replied Private First Class
Joseph Ewing of Decatur, Ill. “So we set up again near the body, hoping other
enemy would come back for it.
The scouts hadn’t sustained a casualty and now the long wait began to see if
the enemy would return for the body. No enemy appeared after the action and a
sweep the following morning revealed two more enemy dead about 50 meters from
the ambush site. Two AK-47’s, field gear, and food that the enemy had been
carrying were found.
Enemy Gets Rice Ration, Safe Conduct Pass Too
By SSG JACK R. ANDERSON
CU CHI - The enemy is getting fed, thanks to a new psychological operations
program now underway in Tropic Lightning’s 3d Brigade.
Brigade psychological operations personnel are air dropping packets of about
one kilo, one day’s ration, of rice on suspected enemy infiltration routes and
staging areas.
It’s not the rice, but what’s in it, that’s important to the 3d Brigade’s
pacification program.
“Each rice packet contains chieu hoi leaflets and a safe conduct pass. We’re
hoping this induces enemy soldiers to give themselves up under the auspices of
the Vietnamese government’s open arms program,” said Captain Frank E. Smith,
Arlington, Tex., the brigade’s civil affairs officer.
Each rice drop is targeted.
“We drop the rice in the same area in which it was captured. We know the
enemy is short of food in these areas, and he’s more likely to pick up the rice
we drop,” Smith said.
All rice used in the program is captured from enemy food caches.
“This project isn’t costing anybody anything, and it’s of great value to the
chieu hoi program,” Smith said. “We hope to see an increase in hoi chanhs
because of it.”
ARVNs Join Recon Team
DUC HOA - A month ago the reconnaissance platoon of the 1st Battalion, 27th
Infantry Wolfhounds consisted of 32 Americans and one ARVN interpreter. Now it
has 24 ARVN soldiers and 17 Americans.
In each of the platoon’s four scout teams there are four G.I.s and seven
ARVNs who work together on daytime missions and team ambushes.
The ARVNs are learning new methods of combat operations. Besides the new
methods the ARVN soldiers are trained in the maintenance of jeeps,
three-quarter-ton trucks and two-and-a-half-ton trucks which are used
extensively by the platoon.
Ask Sgt. Certain
DEAR CERTAIN: There is a dangerous new conspiracy afloat in the division’s
area that I hope you will tell your readers about. Intelligence reports
indicate that hoardes of little men, grinning widely and pedalling bicycles with
ringing bells, are travelling throughout the division AO yelling “Here come
good humorsan. Forty-nine flavors. Nuoc mam ripple this week’s special.” This
conspiracy is endangering morale. Will you pass on the alert?
MAJ DILEMMA
DEAR MAJ: We have indeed heard of this hail of hostile bell-ringing. I myself
was accosted by one of the conspirators as I left Cu Chi base camp the other
day. Needless to say, I immediately did what I should. These men are
detrimental to esprit, and besides they don’t have nuoc mam ripple. They only
have Vam Co Dong water ice and water buffalo revel.
DEAR SERGEANT CERTAIN: The other night I had the choice between reading your
column and an Agatha Christie mystery novel. The butler did it.
OIC, TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS
DEAR 0: I’m pleased to be in such good company. By the way, sir, Sergeant
Certain has recently finished a book which should be in your conex-libraries
soon. It’s entitled “How I Won the War,” or “Certain Victory.”
Page 7 TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS January 5, 1970
25th Replacement Detachment
Cu Chi’s ‘Harvard Hotel’
By SP4 GARY SCIORTINO
CU CHI – “Our primary concern here is to relieve the anxieties of soldiers
newly assigned to a hostile territory, prepare them for processing into the
division, and see that they are assigned to their respective units as quickly as
possible,” stated Captain Albert F. Harvard, commander of the 25th Replacement
Detachment, 25th Infantry Division.
The first day a replacement arrives in the division, the detachment’s cadre
explain the division’s policies to him and prepare him for in-processing. He is
also welcomed to the 25th Infantry Division by its commanding general, Major
General Harris W. Hollis, or one of his senior representatives.
“I DO NOT CARE if only one replacement comes in, all this is still done for
him on the first day that he arrives,” Harvard said. “It is our policy to see
that no one who comes through here is held up from getting to his destination.”
On a replacement’s second day in the detachment, he receives a briefing on
all the services available to him which will facilitate his stay with the
division. “If a replacement has not received orders assigning him to a unit
within two days, I personally make sure that there is a good reason for the
delay,” stated Harvard.
THE REPLACEMENT detachment also provides billeting for persons who are
returning home, dust-off patients who are returning to their units after
receiving medical attention at Cu Chi’s 12th Evacuation Hospital, and persons
returning to up-country units after R&R.
Replacements that are assigned to units at Cu Chi report to their units the
same day they get their orders. Those who are assigned to units outside Cu Chi
are first sent to in-country training, whereupon the replacement detachment
issues them their permanent M-16 rifles.
OVER THE PAST YEAR the replacement detachment has come to be nicknamed
“Harvard’s Hotel” - not without cause. Since December, 1968, the detachment has
doubled its billeting capacity and eliminated all use of cots. The May addition
of a security room in which replacements and transients can store their
valuables has negated major thefts in the area. The mess hall was also
completely remodeled, and it received such an excellent rating on its last
inspection that Major General Hollis, commanding general of the 25th Inf. Div.,
decided to visit the mess hall himself.
“We try to make the replacement detachment’s facilities as clean and
comfortable as we possibly can,” remarked Harvard. “I believe the people that
we serve appreciate it.”
LIFE AT HARVARD’S HOTEL - Orientation, a smile from a doughnut dollie, orders for a new unit, and, of course, a few more sandbags to fill - it’s all part of a replacement’s first few days at the 25th Replacement Detachment. (Photos by SP4 Gary Sciortino) | |
Page 8 TROPIC LIGHTNING NEWS January 5, 1970
Detainee Leads Way to NVA Camp
By SP4 JOHN W. FRAME
TAY NINH - An enemy suspect detained by Alfa Company, 4th Battalion
(Mechanized), 23d Infantry recently led Tropic Lightning soldiers to a company
size enemy base camp.
Three suspects were detained late one afternoon by Alfa Company, while
operating deep in the Crescent area, eight miles east of Tay Ninh City. At day-break the next
morning Alfa Company headed back to the Crescent, aided by the detainee to
search for a suspected enemy base camp.
“After checking out a number of fruitless leads we were beginning to wonder
if the suspect knew where he was going, but we were going to give him one more
chance,” said Captain Robert Zonne, of Burlington, Ontario, Canada. As often
happens, the one last chance paid off.
While crossing one of the open fields, approaching a dense woodline, the
detainee stopped suddenly, and pointed directly into the woodline,
simultaneously dropping to his knees, as did the Tomahawks.
After several minutes of reconning by fire into the woodline, the Tomahawks
found a company-sized enemy base camp less than 30 minutes vacated, the rice
still boiling in the pots.
The suspect pointed out the bunker he had occupied the previous night, and
told the Tomahawk Infantrymen to look out for empty ammunition cans, because
they were probably boobytrapped.
After carefully examining each of the 15 bunkers and finding miscellaneous
ammunition, food, and clothing, the Tomahawks destroyed the bunkers and
proceeded into the jungle, hot on the heels of the enemy.
Cav Taxes VC Take
CU CHI - Nobody likes a tax collector but imagine the plight of the South
Vietnamese peasant-farmer who pays taxes twice over.
One payment of course goes to the Republic of Vietnam - the other to the
shadowy Viet Cong Infrastructure.
Being a VC tax collector can be a very profitable occupation, according to 3d
Brigade acting S-5 officer Captain Frank Smith of Arlington, Tex. “The VC tax
collector gets a percentage of everything he takes in. Since he sets the tax
rate too, the more he taxes, the more he makes.”
The average peasant-farmer is hit for about 500 piasters annually or its
equivalent in rice, according to Smith. This doesn’t seem much by American
standards but when one considers the average Vietnamese farmer makes only about
10,000 piasters a year, it takes on more significance.
In return for the tax money, the farmer receives absolutely nothing - not
even a receipt. If his tax collector is captured or leaves the area, he has no
way of proving to the new collector that he has already paid for the year.
And there is no special court of appeals. Smith points out that for those
who do refuse to pay, there are public denunciations, beatings and even murder -
examples for others who might follow suit.
“About 90 percent of the people in Hau Ngia Province still pay these taxes -
mostly out of fear,” pointed out Smith. “What we’re trying to do is get the
people to point out the district collectors. Last week the people tipped us off
about a husband and wife tax team working Rung Dau village. Working with the
3/4 Cav’s mini-cav and the National Police, we caught the wife with more than
5,000 piasters in small bills stuffed in a sand bag. It’s a start and
hopefully, a breakthrough,” he concluded.
TURN IT UP! SP4 Bob Dunn of Detroit, and SP4 Angel Mendez of New York install speakers all around their Golden Dragon home, Fire Support Base Patton II so the Bob Hope Show could be heard by men who didn’t make it in from the field for the performance. (Photo by PFC Ray Byrne) |
Ready Regulars Scuttle Ground Attack at Crook
By SGT K.C. CULLEN
FSB CROOK - A busy night for the defenders of fire support base Crook spelled
disaster for a sapper team of NVA in an early morning attack.
An estimated 20 of the enemy attempted to pierce the wire and use their
satchel charges against the defenders. Their efforts were in vain as the
members of Charlie Company, 3d Battalion, 22d Infantry, stifled the attackers
before they had a chance to utilize their lethal charges.
Listening posts, starlight scopes and radar all came into play in the
discovery of the repeated attempts by the enemy to approach the wire in small
groups. Organic weapons and artillery spelled doom for the invaders during
their attack on this forward base of the Regulars.
A sweep of the area in the morning by Charlie Company turned up six dead
enemy and one wounded enemy who relinquished valuable information. Two AK-47
assault rifles, more than 40 Chicom grenades, three RPG-7 launchers, satchel
charges and small arms ammo also fell into the hands of the Regulars, along with
an enemy radio.
Things aren’t getting any drier for the Warriors of the 2d Battalion, 12th Infantry as they work out of Fire Support Base Pershing in the Mushroom area. (Photo by SP4 Jim Williams) |
Wolfhounds Seek Home for Orphan
By SP4 PHIL JACKSON
CU CHI - Nguyen Van Sam (Sam to his friends) has been living for two months
with 2d battalion, 27th infantry’s Delta Company supply people.
“We first noticed Sam one night in our NCO club playing the slot machines,”
said Sergeant Howie Habas of Brooklyn, N.Y.
“It was an instant friendship,” said Staff Sergeant Richard Del Carpini,
Warwick, R.I. “Sam came over to our hootch that evening, spent the night and
has stayed since,” Del Carpini said.
The guys in Delta supply had a Christmas party for Sam.
“Some of the guys are saving some of the unopened candy, games and gifts that
were sent from home to give to Sam,” Del Carpini said.
Sam was living with Charlie Company, 2 battalion, (mechanized), 22d infantry
in Tay Ninh. The company was sent to Cu Chi to work with the 2d Bn, 27th
Infantry Wolhounds. Realizing that he could not return to Tay Ninh because the
Triple Deuce men had no papers on him, Sam decided to stay with the Hounds.
“I first thought that possibly I would adopt Sam,” Habas said. “But being
single, and sharing an apartment in NewYork City with an 11 year old who is used
to an uncomplicated type life, would be too much for Sam,” continued Habas.
“What I would like to do is first take care of the paper and legal work
necessary to allow Sam to stay with us. Then either get him into a school or
maybe an orphanage,” Habas said.
“Right now I am stuck as what to do. I am open to suggestions. Hanging
around with us is fun for him now, but it offers no future.”
Golf Pro Becomes Army FO
CU CHI - A California golf pro has hit the tour this year as a forward
observer for the 2d Battalion, 77th Artillery.
“I think being an FO in Vietnam will compare with the life of a golf pro in
civilian life in one respect; in both lines of work you have to put in a lot of
hours.” That’s First Lieutenant Stephen Brown’s analysis of his new job. Brown
lives in Middletown, R.I. He was assistant pro at El Niguel Country Club in
Laguna Niguel, Calif.
Brown’s interest in golf developed when he was twelve. As a result of his
father’s occupation - a Navy Captain who commands Destroyer Division 202
home-ported in Newport, R.I. - Brown has played golf throughout North and South
America.
“We moved so much when I was younger that I ended up going to several grade
schools, and two high schools. But I played on the golf teams at each of the
high schools,” Brown said.
In 1963, Brown placed fourth in the State High School Golf Tournament in
Virginia during his junior year.
“That was one of my better rounds in those days. I hit 17 greens and shot 78
for the tournament,” he said. Today, the Army pro shoots closer to 70.
SAFETY INNOVATION - APC drivers for the 1st Battalion (Mechanized), 5th Infantry ride atop the drivers’ hatch using extension laterals to control the vehicle. The Bobcats’ own invention has saved many drivers from the the shocks of exploding mines and boobytraps. (Photo By PFC Rich Fitzpatrick) |
Dragons Down Six in Brush
CU CHI - “It was just about over by the time we got there,” was how Private
First Class Pete Fleischhauer of Bend, Ore., described recent Golden Dragon
contact that netted six NVA dead.
The battle began when a command and control helicopter spotted an unknown
number of enemy in light brush. A Stinger gunship from the 116th Assault
Helicopter Company worked over the area before Charlie Company, 2d Battalion,
14th Infantry were lifted into the region.
“Those ships really did a job on that brush,” said Specialist 4 Bill Noland.
“By the time we got there, it was just a matter of counting the dead and taking
prisoners.”
Thanks to:
Roger Welt, 4th Bn., 23rd Inf., and a Tropic Lightning News correspondent,
for sharing this issue,
Kirk Ramsey, 2nd Bn., 14th Inf. for creating this page.
This page last modified 02-25-2006
©2006 25th Infantry Division Association. All rights reserved.