NVA Diary Returned

Diary Returned to North Vietnamese Soldier’s Family

When Defense Secretary Leon Panetta visited Vietnam last summer and returned a soldier’s diary to the Vietnamese government he did it on one condition: that it would be turned over to the dead soldier’s family.  In a September ceremony in Vietnam, Vu Dinh Son was finally given the diary of his father, Vu Dinh Doan, who had left home for the war when Son was just 18 months old.

For more than 40 years, the diary had been in the possession of Vietnam War veteran Robert “Ira” Frazure, who removed it from a dead North Vietnamese soldier while the 7th Marines were policing the battleground following a fight in Quang Ngai province during Operation Indiana.

The diary was featured in a September episode of the PBS television show History Detectives, in which the show’s investigators solicit assistance from U.S. Defense officials and the government of Vietnam. Continue reading

What did Vietnam Soldiers carry?

US Infantrymen (grunts) carried either a rifle (M-16), or a machine gun (M-60, belt fed), or an M-79 grenade launcher. If the grunt was a radio operator (RTO-Radio Telephone Operator) he also carried a radio ON HIS BACK.

Medics, (whom may or may not have been authorized to carry arms, usually carried an M-16 or a .45 pistol).

Straight leg infantry (grunts) were issued back packs (RUCK sacks) with round edged aluminum frames. Airmobile and Airborne grunts could be issued those packs too. Mechanized Infantrymen were not issued RUCK sacks or bayonets, if they were; they were turned in later in the war.

All straight leg grunts carried an average of about 6 (1 qt) green plastic canteens attached to their rucks and at least 1 metal canteen cup which was used for either heating food or water. Straight leggers also carried 3 to 6 or more hand grenades and a maybe a bayonet. Plus 100 or 200 rounds of machinegun ammo, and two to four bandoliers of M-16 ammo (seven M-16 magazine pockets to the bandolier, each magazine normally loaded with only 18 rounds of 5.56mm; capacity was 20 rounds, but to preserve the magazine’s spring it was compressed with only18 rounds). All of these items were carried in the extreme humidity, thru knee deep mud, and up jungle strewn hill tops. Continue reading

The Power of Reunion

The Power of Reunion

By: Cassie Fenoseff, VFW Magazine Jan. 2003

The Power of Reunion: Reunions are emotionally uplifting experiences for everyone involved.

♦    You haven’t seen them in decades, yet they greet you with open arms.

♦    You have shared something life-changing with them, and you share a bond that no one else does.

This is the experience many veterans have when they attend reunions and see old comrades.   However, some are reluctant to attend.

Bo Senical, who recently attended his first military reunion after 30 years, described his fears.

“I thought too much time had passed, and they wouldn’t be the people I’d known in my youth. I was apprehensive that I wouldn’t be remembered.”

This is a common feeling many veterans get when the reunion invitation arrives. Others don’t want to allow bad memories to surface, or worry that they wouldn’t remember people, so they avoid going. Continue reading

VA Claims Backlog Milestone

VA Claims Backlog Milestone

Week of January 07, 2013

Fast Freddy says:

Milestone, my ass, it is going the wrong way. Just another government SNAFU that affects our military. BOHICA

The Veterans Affairs Department’s disability claims backlog edged above the 900,000 mark this week, with 608,365 — 67.6 percent — staying in the system more than 125 days. Claims backlogged more than 125 days increased 7.5 percent or 45,245 since January, 2012. In April, representatives of veterans services organizations described the backlog of 897,566 disability claims, with more than 65 percent pending for more than 125 days, as a “staggering” figure that denies veterans quick payment of benefits. VA plans to deploy its paperless Veterans Benefits Management System nationwide next year in an attempt to boost claims processing. VA Secretary Eric Shinseki has repeatedly vowed to eliminate the claims backlog by 2015. For more information on VA disability claims, visit the VA website at http://www.benefits.va.gov/compensation.

For complete guides on veteran benefits, visit the Military.com Benefits Center.

SOURCE: military.com