Wednesday, December 28, 2005

GOOD MORNING VIETNAM! Chapter Eleven

Chapter 11: Villages

The area of Vietnam I was in was mostly farming villages that were not much more than huts with thatch roofs surrounded by jungle, banana trees, rice paddies or peanut patches. There may have been a small store or gas station if the village was by a road, but not much else at least in the areas I was. Trang Bang was the market place where everyone went for their food and things.

Trang Bang


Pictures of a typical village in our area


The Viet Cong (VC) or NVA controlled many of the villages. If the men were not fighting for the South Vietnamese Army, they were “drafted” by the VC. When we searched the small villages, we saw very few men of fighting age, mostly kids, women and old men. The young or middle aged men we did see, were either in the ARVN military, elderly, disabled or had been wounded and could no longer fight. I was riding a convoy through Trang Bang the day we were security for the mine sweepers, it was the first time I’d seen very many men of fighting age other than the ARVNs.

Most time we times we searched the villages as we came across them on patrol. Other times we were flown in near a village by chopper, in large groups to surround and search villages. Some of us were set up as a blocking force in case the VC tried to escape and others were sent in to do the searching. I did both jobs at one time or the other.



One day two companies from our battalion and a couple of squads of ARVN soldiers were flown in to sweep through a village where a fairly large force of NVA had been spotted. Our company, Company B, and one squad of ARVNs was dropped off on one side of the village to act as the blocking force. We were dropped off some distance away so no one would know we were coming and walked up nearer the village and set up in something like a long line part way around the village. Another company, and the other squad of ARVNs was dropped off on the opposite side of the village, spread out and started sweeping toward the village.

It didn’t look like anything was out of the ordinary was going on from our perspective, because we could see the villagers going about their normal activities. Then all of a sudden mortar rounds started dropping around us. It seems that the sweep might have driven the VC out of hiding and when they spotted us, fired in our direction. Our artillery forward observer called in a few rounds of artillery and the mortars stopped.

Both companies closed in on the village and when we entered the it, we rounded up all the villagers in a group. Some of our men guarded the people while the rest of us continued to search all the hooches.




Searching the villages almost never turned up very much, except for what I’ve already told you about. This time was not much different. My guess is that the NVA we were looking for had ducked down into well-camouflaged tunnels and hide. Those damn tunnels were every where. Interrogation of the villagers did turn up six suspected VC though. The company commanders decided that as punishment for harboring the VC, the village would be burned down. We were ordered to set fire to everything, which we did. It was really weird hearing the villager crying and screaming at us for what we were doing, but we did it and didn’t give it much thought. We looked at all the Vietnamese locals as suspect VC so there wasn’t very much sympathy for the people that tried to kill us.



We took the six suspect VC back to FSB Stuart where they would be picked up by chopper and taken back to Cu Chi for interrogation. While they were waiting for the choppers, the ARVNs started interrogating the prisoners. I guess they weren't talking, because at one point, the ARVNs covered their heads with sand bags, screamed at them, kicked them stuff like that. Then they laid them down in a puddle and once in a while poured water on their faces. This caused them to breath in the water and choke and cough a lot. We watched this go on until the choppers came for them. Word got back to us that most of the prisoners we captured didn’t make it back to Cu Chi. During the flight they were pushed out of the chopper one at a time by the ARVNs until someone talked. It worked.

I didn’t really give all this much thought at the time, but some years later it bothered me that we we would resort to such things. I now know that these people really had no choice but to do what the VC and NVA told them to do. The “allies” would retreat back to there bases at night and leave the whole country to the VC and NVA. If the locals were’t under the direct protection of the ARVNs, then they had no other choice but to hide the enemy, feed them, what ever. Torture and burning villages like we did, is what had so many locals hating us. I asked a villager that spoke some English one day if they were glad we were here “rescuing” them from the Communists. The answer was absolutely not! Most people hated us for just being here. First it was the French then us. They were tired of war and just wanted it to be over. Most people knew nothing but war their whole life, it had been going on so long. The villager said they were just farmers and all they wanted to do was grow rice and peanuts and be left alone in peace and they felt that would happen no matter who was running the country. So as long as we were there, there would be war. They just wanted us to leave so it would be all over. It didn’t happen for about six or seven more years, but it did happen.

7 comments:

Speckledpup said...

wow.
just happened on your blog.
interesting.
very
wow.

at a loss for words.
obviously.

I'll be back.

BTExpress said...

Thanks. That's quite a compliment.

BTExpress said...

Thank you too Jonathan. The first time I talked a little about my experiences in Vietnam here on my blog, I got comments like yours, "no one talked about it". That gave me the incentive to write as much as I could remember. One, so you all could get some idea what it was like and two, so my son and his offspring would know it too.

Yes, I did catch some crap about going to Nam, quite a bit actually, but mostly I got praise for doing what was asked of me. When I was stationed in Maryland after Vietnam, I used to take the train into NYC and then the Long Island rail road out to Smithtown where I lived. The LIRR train was a rush hour train and had a bar car. Since I wore my uniform to get the military rate, I hardly ever paid for drinks. Made me feel appreciated so the shit people gave me pretty much didn't bother me too much. Sort of like the good out weighing the bad.

One more benefit I've gotten from writing about Nam, is the thanks people like you have given me. Even though it's been 37 years since I was there, it makes me feel good even today. So thanks again Jonathan for that.

Wenchy said...

Wow... these pictures really brought this chapter home.

lecram sinun said...

Thanks for posting this. It's always great to get it from someone who was there! Really great post!

Megan said...

hi, sweetheart. i know it must be hard to think about these things, and i hope that over the years and through writing about it you've gained peace about what happened back then. at some point would you care to compare and contrast what went on during that war, and what's going on in iraq today? that might be too inflammatory for you, but the perspective of the people that you described--just wishing that we would go away--makes me wonder if the innocents in the middle east are hoping for the same thing. again, thank you for serving, and thank you for sharing.

BTExpress said...

Sis B, It's not hard at all and I've never blamed myself for anything I did that was wrong. I was ordered to do things and that was how we were trained. I never question orders, just followed them. You'll never live very long in combat if you don't immediately do what you are told. Now after the fact is another story. That's what this is all about.

You know, it's funny you should mention comparing Iraq to Vietnam. I wrote this whole thing at the end of this post comparing them, but deleted it. Not really about why we were in Iraq, but about how Vietnam vets were put down because we did our duty to our country and didn't run off and hide in Canada like so many others did. We should be proud of our military men and women, no matter how we feel about the politics of this whole mess we have gotten ourselves into in Iraq.

Woops, that's a topic for another day or Yahoo chat if you want to know how I feel.