Thursday, December 3, 2015

Fast Rifles

Via avordvet

"The Village" is a book about the Marine unit of Marine Lance Corporal Paul Fielder of Harvard. The web site at http://www.vvmf.org/thewall/Wall_Id=16043 

This photo of the Marine unit of Lance Corporal Paul Fielder was taken within two weeks of the attack that killed about one half of the unit including LCpl Fielder. He is seen here kneeling at the right.

No one was sure at first the concept would work--not in the summer of 1966. The village of Binh Nghia, in Quang Ngai province, was a battleground. The district chief at Binh Son was responsible to the province chief for the state of affairs at Binh Nghia and several other villages. He estimated that, during the past several years, 750 young men from that village had joined main-force VC units. Two independent VC companies and one full battalion were roaming the district. Of the 4,575 persons in the villages, 600 were known VC sympathizers. So the decision by the 7th Marines to establish a Combined Action Company in Binh Nghia was not made without an acknowledgement of the hazards involved.

Something had to be done. The morale of the local Popular Forces platoon was low and ebbing fast. They had been hit by the VC so often that their confidence was shattered. The enemy held the offensive and controlled the daily lives of the civilians. The guerrillas worked and lived at home, banding together at night for military excursions and political activities. Full-time regulars of the Viet Cong main force units entered Binh Nghia at will to seek supplies or hold meetings. Marine patrols and ambushes, operating from remote combat bases, made contact often, killing many soldiers and disrupting movements of large forces. But that alone was not enough. The villager scurried about with averted eyes, and the PFs clung to the shallow safety of their fort. It was obvious who controlled Binh Nghia.

2 comments:

  1. Picture must be fake. There are no brothers there. Everyone knows that the brothers were over-represented in the units that did the real fighting and dying.

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