Book on my Service in Vietnam, Written in 1996


From the Introduction in the book …

The following account is written from notes I made while in the hospital in San Antonio recovering from wounds I received while in Vietnam and from communications I had with 5th Special Forces Group when I was stationed at Fort Campbell in 1968 and 1969. More recently I read several books on Vietnam (in 1992), listed in the Bibliography, which aided me in the geography of the area and which put the fighting I was involved with in Phuc Long Province in context of what was happening in the country as a whole.

In 1993 I joined the Special Forces Association, Cleveland Chapter XLV, and I am currently the Secretary of the Cleveland chapter. Some of the former SF troopers in that organization read drafts of this account and helped me to clarify this work (especially the parts relating to operations in Vietnam) prior to the final copy. Their help was greatly appreciated.

In 1994 the Cleveland Chapter of the Special Forces Association (Jim Cole, President) was the host Chapter for the national convention, which was held at the Rockside Holiday Inn. During that convention I met Steve Sherman, also an ex Special Forces trooper, who is compiling a history of Special Forces people and activities. I acquired from him a set of the “Green Beret” a magazine published by the 5th Special Forces in Vietnam from 1966 to 1970. In addition, I re-viewed other material he had that allowed me to expand on the work I had been doing to write this book.

Lastly I have used the National Archives section of the Smithsonian Institute in College Park, Maryland. The military records of that period are now declassified and available for re-search. I have found many reports and references to the military action I was involved with by using this valuable resource. This has probably been the since most important resource to me and I do want to thank the researchers there who were able to dig out the records I needed with the limited information I was able to give them.

Every attempt has been made to accurately state what happened to the team, the camp and me. My original notes were done while recovering from severe wounds in the hospital and at the time there were things I could not remember (there were several weeks were I was in a delirious state and it took many months to get back to close to normal), especially some names of people. Materials I read in 1992 and 1994 brought back some of this loss. Sherman’s work with Special Forces personnel missing in action (MIA) or killed in action (KIA) when compared to the dates and times of some of the battles I knew of gave me a way to place some other names back in. I will state that although everything that I tell about in this book is accurate to the best of my knowledge it is possible that some of the patrol activity is not in the proper time sequence, I don’t think so but it is possible.

This is me in the Jungle in Vietnam in October, 1967

The link below will allow you to download the book, if you want, and at no cost.

Bu Dop 1967

America’s Next Super Aircraft Carrier Is Almost 50 Percent Complete | USS John F. Kennedy (CVN 79)


Published on Sep 5, 2018

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America’s Next Super Aircraft Carrier Is Almost 50 Percent Complete | The 2nd US Navy Ford-Class high-tech aircraft carrier has grown 70-feet longer and is now 50-percent structurally complete with the addition of the lower stern, Huntington Ingalls Industries announced.​ USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78) Flight Deck Activity | Life Aboard Aircraft Carrier https://youtu.be/yddGGgCdQtc USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72) Activity Crew Member | Life Aboard Aircraft Carrier https://youtu.be/6TSCKKZFb5s Deadly Aircraft Carrier Defense Weapon System | CIWS Close In Weapon System Gatling Gun In Action https://youtu.be/zMzUaRYFHwg “We are halfway through lifting the units onto the ship, and many of the units are larger and nearly all are more complete than the CVN 78 (USS Ford) lifts were. This is one of many lessons learned from the construction of the lead ship that are helping to reduce construction costs and improve efficiencies on Kennedy,” Mike Shawcross, Newport News’ vice president, John F. Kennedy (CVN 79) and Enterprise (CVN 80) aircraft carrier construction, said in a written statement. HII ship developers have been employing a newer construction strategy for the Kennedy, involving a handful of techniques intended to lower costs and call upon lessons learned from the building of the first Ford-class carrier in recent years, the USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78). With so much of the ship built, hundreds of structural units have been completed on items such as pipe assemblies, cabling, shafts, rudders and struts for the ship. The USS Kennedy will replace the USS Nimitz which is due to retire by 2027; the Ford-class carriers are slated to replace the existing Nimitz-class carriers on a one-to-one basis in an incremental fashion over the next fifty years or so. One of the construction techniques for Kennedy construction has included efforts to assemble compartments and parts of the ship together before moving them to the dock – this expedites construction by allowing builders to integrate larger parts of the ship more quickly. This technique, referred to by Huntington Ingalls developers as “modular construction,” were also used when building the Ford; the process welds smaller sections of the ship together into larger structural “superlift” units before being lifted into the dry dock, HII statements explained. Construction begins with the bottom of the ship and works up with inner-bottoms and side shells before moving to box units, he explained. The bottom third of the ship gets built first. Also, some of the design methods now used for the Kennedy include efforts to fabricate or forge some parts of the ship – instead of casting them because it makes the process less expensive, builders explained. HII ship developers have been making an aggressive effort to lower costs of the USS Kennedy. Officials have said that the cost of the USS Kennedy will be well over $1.5 billion less than the costs to build the first Ford-Class ship. The Navy received substantial criticism in recent years from lawmakers and government watchdog groups during the construction of the USS Ford for rising costs. Construction costs for the USS Ford wound up being several billion above early cost estimates. Cost overruns with the construction wound up leading Congress to impose a $12.9 billion cost-cap on the ship. At the time, Navy officials pointed out that integrating new technologies brings challenges and that at least $3 billion of the Ford’s costs were due to what’s described as non-recurring engineering costs for a first-in-class ship such as this. Nonetheless, service leaders have consistently said that the Navy is making substantial progress with efforts to lower costs for the Kennedy. Also, Newport News Shipbuilding – a division of HII – was able to buy larger quantities of parts earlier in the construction process with the Kennedy because, unlike the circumstance during the building of the USS Ford, the Kennedy’s ship design was complete before construction begins. As for the design, the Kennedy will be largely similar to the design of the USS Ford, with a few minor alterations. The Kennedy will receive a new radar and its aircraft elevators will use electric motors instead of a hydraulic system to lower costs.

 

TREASON: The True Legacy Of John McCain


Published on Mar 21, 2019

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John McCain made several propaganda tapes for the Vietnamese, betrayed the families of POWs as a Senator, covertly supported ISIS terrorists in Syria, and seditiously undermined President Trump with his “repeal and replace” vote while shopping the fake Russian Dossier to the FBI and various news outlets. SUPPORT INDEPENDENT MEDIA! SUPPORT THE TRUTH IS VIRAL!!! The Truth Is Viral’s independent, investigative journalism takes a lot of time, money and hard work to produce. Please support my efforts to “Save Lives and Win Souls for Jesus Christ in these very last days,” by donating whatever won’t put you out by clicking this link:

 

Building The Ultimate Tank


Published on Jan 19, 2018

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The invincible looking tank, the bully on the battlefield. See how these behemoths are constructed, and how they are near perfect engineering feats. First Broadcast in 2004. Content Provided By ITV Global. Any Queries Please Contact Us at hello@littledotstudios.com Subscribe to Spark for more amazing science, tech and engineering videos – https://goo.gl/LIrlur Follow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SparkDocs/ Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/spark_chann… #Tank #Militarytechnology #militaryvehicles #engineering #technoloogy #science #construction #building #history

Building The Ultimate Aircraft Carrier | Building the Ultimate | Spark


Published on Jan 16, 2018

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The Aircraft carrier, the largest fighting machine ever built, every country wants one, but only 9 countries on Earth can afford one. First Broadcast in 2004. Content Provided By ITV Global. Any Queries Please Contact Us at hello@littledotstudios.com Subscribe to Spark for more amazing science, tech and engineering videos – https://goo.gl/LIrlur Follow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SparkDocs/ Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/spark_chann… #Aircraftcarrier #militarytechnology #militaryvehicles #mobliestructure #construction #planes #boats #weapons

F-35 Program Costs Jump to $406.5 Billion in Latest Estimate


Published on Oct 9, 2017

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F-35 Program Costs Jump to $406.5 Billion in Latest Estimate The cost of the F-35 jet program, already the most expensive U.S. weapons program ever, is estimated to climb further as the plane’s production period gets extended, according to figures submitted to Congress on Monday. Total acquisition costs for Lockheed Martin Corp.’s next-generation fighter may rise about 7 percent to $406.5 billion, according to figures in a document known as a Selected Acquisition Report. That’s a reversal after several years of estimates that had declined to $379 billion recently from a previous high of $398.5 billion in early 2014. Read more: https://goo.gl/vmBLUh

Why America’s Enemies Still Fear the B-52 Bomber?


Published on Oct 10, 2017

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Why America’s Enemies Still Fear the B-52 Bomber? The B-52 Stratofortress first flew in 1952 and ended its production run in 1962, so the 76 B-52Hs in Air Force service are older than nearly anyone flying them. Trump is literally accurate in stating that “your grandfather” may have flown the plane, in that there is at least one family with three generations of B-52 crew members.

 

Veterans Day Ceremony and Unveiling of World War 1 Monument November 11, 2018


This was filmed on Veterans Day November 11, 2018 that was the 100th anniversary of the end of the World War (later to be World War I)  but at that time was thought to be the war to end all wars. This event was to celebrate both the 100th anniversary of the end of that war and the unveiling of the monument that was placed in the Nordonia Hills Veterans Memorial Park.  This park was was started by American Legion Post 801 where I am the Commander and the master of ceremony for the event.  The Veterans of Foreign Wars post 6768 provided the 21 gun salute.

This park in an ongoing project which is only about 50% done as of March 2019. If you might like to help us finish this project visit our website at http://www.NHVMP.com. We have just created a foundation to handle the completion of the park and expect the paper work will be finish by mid year (things are delayed because of the recent government shut down).

David Pristash Post 801 Commander and president of the park foundation

 

 

Documentary: USS Forrestal Aircraft Carrier Disaster


Published on Aug 18, 2015

Note: the analysis is good but some how it repeats itself. That actual informative part is only about 30 minutes or so then it repeats.

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The USS Forrestal (CV-59), formerly AVT-59 and CVA-59, was a supercarrier named after former Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal. Commissioned in 1955

Why The Space Shuttle Was Doomed From The Start | Space Shuttle: The Human Time Bomb | Spark


Published on Mar 30, 2017

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This documentary investigates the tragedy, exploring the true reasons why the orbiter Columbia so catastrophically exploded as it re-entered the Earth’s atmosphere, 200,000 feet above the skies of Texas. Six American astronauts and Israel’s first spaceman died when their spaceship literally broke up around them. Was it a genuine one-off disaster or an accident waiting to happen? Originally broadcast in 2003. Content licensed by DRG Distributions. Any queries, contact us at hello@littledotstudios.com Subscribe to Spark for more amazing science, tech and engineering videos – https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMV3…