VFW Reunion Notice

As a member of the VFW, I was able to place a notice in VFW Magazine about our 2013 Reunion in Tulsa.  It was published in the March 2013 issue.

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I did not think that anyone would call regarding the notice.  But – surprise, surprise – I got a telephone call Saturday afternoon from Dale Fleming of Blackwell, OK.  He does not have an email address or even a computer.  He told me he plans to attend the reunion.  I sent him reunion information in the mail.

How the Jeep got its name…..

How the jeep * got its name…..

by Ray Cowdery

Few would have guessed when the military jeep was being developed in the early 1940s, that nearly three-quarters of a century later lexicographers and historians would still hotly debate the origins of the name jeep before it had become a brand name or trade name. Nobody needs to debate the etymology of the name jeep as it was applied to World War II American military 1/4-ton 4×4 trucks, as the genesis of that name is crystal clear. Continue reading

Arc Light

Arc Light marked beginning of B-52 involvement in Vietnam

By 1972, the war in Vietnam had persisted for more than eight years, characterized by a gradual, but massive buildup of U.S. forces.

That massive buildup began in April 1965, with the highly-publicized event of U.S. Marines wading out of the sea and onto the beaches of Da Nang, South Vietnam. Concurrent to this, and to support those ground forces, the Air Force deployed a portion of its tactical fighter-bombers to air bases located in South Vietnam and later Thailand. However, prior to this and in a less publicized move, Strategic Air Command deployed its first contingent of B-52 Stratofortresses to the tiny island of Guam in support of what became known as Operation Arc Light. Continue reading

Distinguished Warfare Medal

Distinguished Warfare Medal

Distinguished_Warfare_MedalThe Distinguished Warfare Medal is a United States military decoration announced by U.S. Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta on February 13, 2013. It is the first American combat-related award to be created since the Bronze Star Medal in 1944. The new blue, red and white-ribboned medal will be awarded to individuals for “extraordinary achievement” related to a military operation occurring after September 11, 2001. It is intended to recognize military achievement in cyberwarfare or combat drone operations for actions that do not include valor in combat. Continue reading

Legend of the Ho Chi Minh Trail

HCM TrlThe Ho Chi Minh Trail is arguably one of the greatest feats of military engineering in history, a Goliath of ingenuity and bloody determination. At its peak this 20,000km transport network spread like a spider’s web through Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia, an indestructible labyrinth through which the North Vietnamese fed the war in the South.

Without the trail, there could have been no war, a fact the Americans knew only too well. In a sustained eight-year campaign to destroy it they flew 580,000 bombing missions, dropped more than two million tons of ordnance on neutral Laos, denuded the jungle with chemicals, and seeded clouds to induce rain and floods. At one point Nixon even mooted the notion of deploying nuclear weapons. Continue reading

How Chuck Hagel Wound Up in Vietnam

Ordered to Germany, Pvt. Hagel wound up in Vietnam

By ROBERT BURNS | Associated Press – Thu, Jan 31, 2013.

                       

HagelWASHINGTON (AP)Chuck Hagel says a funny thing happened on his way to the Vietnam War as an Army private 45 years ago.

He almost went, instead, to Germany as one of nine soldiers entrusted with a top-secret shoulder-fired missile designed to shoot down Soviet MiG fighters in the event the Soviets launched an invasion of Western Europe.

After two months of training on the weapon in New Mexico, and while packing up for his flight to Germany, Hagel decided he’d rather go to an actual war — Vietnam. His Army superiors, however, seemed to doubt the sanity of that choice and decided it better take a closer look at his motives for volunteering for combat. Continue reading

Cruise Ship

Bud writes:

I’m sure you have heard about the cruise ship that lost power and left the passengers stranded for five days without power/running water/hot food.

cruise-ship-adrift

Well, I know of a group who were stranded for almost a year.  They had to eat out of cans that were thrown to them from a helicopter.  They were without cell phones and internet. Their only contact with the outside world was to write letters.  They didn’t get a change of clothes or a bath for weeks.  They slept on the ground and stayed soaked by the heavy rain for days at a time and people shot at them.

1st Platoon AO
1st Platoon AO

Don’t you feel sorry for those poor folks on the cruise ship?