VIETNAM AND THE AMERICAN FIGHTING MAN
Written by: Mike RICE
USN Radioman, Dong Ha River Security Grp, Naval Support
Activity, Danang, Detachment Cua Viet (June 1967)
Viet Nam, to the American fighting man here, half a world from home, the name
means many things - almost none of them good.
It means the farthest place from those he loves. It means the CLOSEST place to
death. It may mean a rice paddy where he lost his best friend. It does mean a
war in which he most surely and quickly lost the last remnants of his own
boyhood.
It would be cruel enough without war. For Viet Nam is stagnant rice paddies,
red clay gumbo, prehensile jungle vines, bamboo thickets and 12 foot elephant
grass. It is weeks of 120 degree heat and 95% humidity, or drought and monsoon
and flood. It is a country of two seasons, hot and dry, and hot and wet. Or
mixed, for as one GI complained, "This is the only place in the world where
you can be shoulder deep in mud and have dust blowing in your face at the same
time". It is the residence of the inch long red ant, the Malaria mosquito, the
bamboo flea and the bamboo viper, the Russell viper, pit viper, cobra, banded
krait, four inch long cockroach and a couple of snakes that perform under the
aliases of Mr.Two Foot and One Step Charlie. Needless to say, ALL poisonous.
Spiders, lizards, rats, bats, leeches, flies and a million other insects - no
two alike, thrive here. So does Malaria, Jungle Rot, Typhus, Fungus, Immersion
Foot, Dysentary, Pneumonia, Sunburn, Heat
Prostration, Tuberculosis, Leprosy and a couple of Asiatic ailments we haven't
quite put a handle on yet.
They thrive, all of them. But, miraculously, so does the spirit of that
amazing being, the American Fighting Man. Every day he meets the challenges of
the cruel and agonizing war. He survives. He even triumphs. And what he has to
go through, few civilians know. And NO ONE knows who has not been to Viet Nam.
General Eisenhower, in another war, once exploded to a war correspondent, "I
get so eternally tired of the lack of understanding of what the infantry
soldier endures.....I get so fighting mad because of the general
lack of appreciation of real Heroism which is the uncomplaining acceptance of
unendurable conditions...." The uncomplaining acceptance of
unendurable conditions...... the statement could have waited for
a more appropriate war. This one.
The numerous muddy front lines in Viet Nam may complain, but it is the
healthy, time-honored fashion of the GI gripe. And the GI here DOES accept the
unendurable. He accepts 18 hour workdays with no women, booze or overtime pay.
And he accepts the million other little bitternesses of Viet Nam......the
Halozone tablet in a canteen of rice paddy water, the bites and stings of
insects, the grime, the dirt, the dust, the mud, the kind of sweat you bleed.
He accepts the facts of rotting wrist-watch bands, a "Dear John" letter,
reconstituted milk, canned meat, three salt tablets a day, last choice at the
C-rations, and when he can even find it, WARM beer. He hears Hanoi Hannah
reading our casualty reports each night over Radio Hanoi. Sees his friends
fall in battle, and he endures. And he endures the sight of a mortally wounded
child, the cries of pain and "MEDIC" and "CORPSMAN", the smell of DEATH and
the taste of FEAR, the prospect of the next patrol, the RAWEST emotions of
the battle, and his own dreams. For Viet Nam is these.
And, it is mumbled prayers under the sounds of incoming artillery, and
learning to laugh at things that aren't really funny. It is the fears and
doubts about yourself in battle, because you know if you stop to think about
them during battle it could get you killed. It is wanting a WAR STORY without
having to live it, and then living it and not wanting it. It is the PHONY war
story every man despises and the war story too TRUE to ever be told. It is the
fear of cowardice and fear of courage.
The American Fighting Man endures all of these, and performs everything his
country asks of him. For the task, he fuels himself on Courage and
Selflessness and Dedication and a Comraderie that no one who shares will EVER
really find anywhere else again, and he gets along on the most simple and
pathetic, most God-awful seemingly unimportant pleasures: the sweat wrinkled
photograph of a loved one, the sight of a Saffron yellow mail bag and a letter
from home - or mail addressed simply to "A fighting man in Viet Nam", a clear
stream with no leeches, or a nights sleep in a real bed. He cherishes hot
chow, cold beer or a cool breeze, or the reminders of home, a USO show, a
circled date on a Short-timer's calendar, a favorite tune over
Armed Forces Radio, or a week old copy of Stars and Stripes reassuring him
that America still exists. His satisfactions are a burst of insect repellant
on a leech's back or a dry cigarette.
And there IS humor, even here, not side splitting humor, but humor that fights
the grimness and makes it bearable. "Didja' hear? A couple of mosquitoes
landed over at DaNang Air Base the other day and Ground Support pumped 50
gallons of AVGAS into them before they realized they weren't F-4's", or "Hot
D*mn! Only 300 days and a wake-up, I'M SHORT". "It must be Sunday, they're
feedin' us Malaria pills again". And humor sprouts in the signs which GI's
brand their whereabouts, "No one would DARE mortar this place and end all the
confusion". On a roadside, "Drive carefully, the life you save may be your
replacement". On the fuselage of an ancient C-47 transport,
"Trans Paddy Airways", or outside a Marine's tent in Chu-Lai, "Chu-Lai Hilton,
VACANCY", or on the side of a C-123 used to spray defoliant, "Remember, only
you can prevent forests", and a much in evidence bumper sticker, "Support your
Fighting Men in Viet Nam".
There is a slang in his speech. Lots, every other word sometimes. His
dangerous, merciless adversary, the Viet-cong (VC or Victor Charlie in
military phonetics) becomes simply CHARLIE or OLD CHARLIE. And every little
Vietnamese street urchin becomes CHARLIE-SAN; though they usually rate the
affectionate GI pat on the head with the term, unless one has just run by and
stolen your wrist-watch. Then, you grab them by the neck.
Even though billets, hootches and tents are papered with Playboy foldouts, the
memory of American womanhood is distant in his mind; to be referred to as
Round Eye, Smooth Legged Woman who exists in the Land of the Big PX is about
all that is spoken. Air mattresses become rubber ladies, Piasters become "P'Z",
Military Payment Certificates become Funny Money, Replacements become Turtles
(because they take FOREVER to get here), and an enemy infested jungle becomes
"VC National Forest". Fighting Men are, Jet Jockeys, Groundpounders, Grunts,
Snuffies, River Rats, Stump Jumpers, Straightlegs and Saigon Warriors
depending on their unit, rating and/or assignment.Vietnamese
become Slopes, Gooks, Dinks and other assorted epithets. Montagnard Tribesmen
become Yards, and the enemy becomes (besides Charlie), Congs, Gooneys, Ho's
Boys or simply "The Bad Guys", and Charlie gets either Greased, Zapped,
Zonked, Massaged or simply Blown-away. Jets are referred to as Birds, Prop
airplanes
as Spads, Scooters or Tinkertoys. Snakes are Mr. No Shoulders.
And there is the Thousand Yard Stare in a Ten Foot Room and the Million Dollar
Wound (just serious enough to earn a ride Stateside). There is, too, a less
imaginative Alphabet Soup of letter abbreviations that lubricates the Language
and Paperwork. Samples: WIA (Wounded In Action), DMZ (De-Militarized Zone), LZ
(Landing Zone), FAC (Forward Air Controller), and so on....through VC, K'S,
PAVN'S, ARVN, MACV, TAOR, MPC'S, and a thousand OTHER combinations and
alphabetum. The war has a favorite phrase, in Vietnamese "Xin Loi"; which
means "Sorry 'bout that". It is employed for every stumble, oversight,
injustice, burp, blister or disaster. "Xin Loi", may be the LAST words Charlie
ever hears. And finally, everything succumbs to a GI rating system of Number
ONE (Satisfactory) and Number TEN (UN-Satisfactory). There are
no numbers in between. No GI wants any. In a GRAY, confusing WAR - a Number
TEN War - It's nice to deal in BLACKS and WHITES again.
So, WHO is this remarkable American our country has sent to Viet Nam? Who IS
this guy we pay the lavish sum of $65.00 extra a month and even forgive the
trouble of filling out Income Tax forms, for what can only be the most
underpaid work in the world? He is, of course, many men, many types, he is the
Cool, Mature, Professional Officer and he is the BATTLEWISE Non-Com on his
second tour of his third WAR. But MOSTLY, he's a YOUNG American (some COMBAT
UNITS average 18? years of age), who would prefer to be back home doing other
things, but who by chance of history is here. He VOLUNTEERED or by lack of a
deferment was DRAFTED, but he is here because he LOVES his Country. By all
accounts and opinions, he is the SMARTEST, STRONGEST, BEST TRAINED, MOST
SPIRITED and COMPETENT Fighting Man our Country has ever sent to war ANYWHERE.
He is YOUNG but he is OLD beyond his years because this war is a CRAM COURSE
in Maturity and Survival. Experts marvel at him. "In 60 years of
Soldiering and watching Soldiers", writes Military Affairs specialist S.L.A.
Marshall, "I have never seen higher morale than that of the U.S. men in Viet
Nam...The American fighter here can outwit, out-move and out-game anyone thus
far thrown against him. Their main gripe is that the enemy is loath to come
out of hiding. Their aggressiveness arises from pride in unit. The bond with
their buddies. A wish to get the job over...and an unfaltering belief in the
rightness of their task" General William C. Westmoreland, Commander of
American Forces in Viet Nam,calls him flatly, "The finest fighting man our
country has ever produced". There is a Sacred Brotherhood among Combat Vets.
There does not have to bespeaking or organized gatherings, there is merely
that look when eyes meet and you just KNOW. Understand and LOVE your Viet Nam
Vet...after what he has been through, he needs that above all else.
Written by: Mike RICE RM Dong Ha River Security Grp NSAD Cua Viet (June 1967)