Friday, September 10, 2021

Vietnam Conflicts

Excellent, professional description of what transpired at link.

Repost 2017.

The only information I can find about this picture is that it was from the 282nd Assault Helicopter Company PS: Just found the unit's site and the picture but no more information unfortunately. There are ARVN in the pictures so the subjects might have been them or US. 282nd Assault Helicopter Company

 Arterial spray from a high speed projectile hitting someone on the skid. You can see the outline of the door gunner and the passenger in the blood. There is also blood UNDER the seat indicating it (the blood spray) came from out side. The blood stripes on the post and seat back are from severed Arteries. Bullet holes in the coke cans and ammo box indicate an AK type weapon. Blood spray shows very high retained bullet velocity. Poor guy probably never knew he was hit. With that kind of blood loss he would have died at once or gone into hypovolemic shock within moments even If the round hadn't taken his head off. (like a .50 would have.) Sad day for that boys mother. I hope they brought him home. --Ray

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Vietnam Conflicts

1,000's of photos here and took many hours to peruse.

May be an image of 4 people, people standing and outdoors

Indigenous Montagnard Kit Carson scout with crossbow, very invaluable due to their knowledge of the terrain & fearlessness of Vietcong.

 May be an image of one or more people and outdoors  

25 May 1967 Pleiku, South Vietnam:An unidentified soldier breaks down under the stress of combat and is comforted by a comrade following recent battle 55 miles west of Pleiku. Troops of the US 4th Infantry Division engaged a force of North Vietnam regulars near the Cambodian border.

 May be an image of 1 person, standing and outdoors 

U.S. Marine Larry Hilton with a custom 40-round M14 magazine, Vietnam.

May be an image of outdoors 

Mass Graves in Hue, 1969. Unidentified bodies of the victims of a Vietcong massacre of civilians during the Tet offensive, February 1968, about to be reburied in wooden coffins.

 May be an image of food 

13 Mar 1968, Quang Tri Exhausted GIs Rest in Front of a Ruin

May be an image of 2 people and people standing 


A young South Vietnamese soldier carries a fatally wounded fellow soldier after street fighting in the central market of the Cholon Chinese section of Saigon, . Viet Cong infiltrators on the western edge of the capital penetrated more than a mile into the city, triggering a battle that sent thousands of civilians fleeing in panic.

 No photo description available. 

One GI weeps over the body bag that holds his slain buddy. Others run down the trail to seek snipers who fired on their patrol

 No photo description available. 

Rocket killed a truck load of MP's opening day of Tet. Bodies recovered by unidentified APC crew & tank crew. Unit: Unknown Location: Near Tan Son Nhut, Saigon.

  No photo description available.

11 May 1967, Khe Sanh, Vietnam A wounded United States Marine is held in the arms of soldiers while awaiting medical attention during fighting of the Vietnam War on Hill 881 on May 11, 1967.

 No photo description available. 

A French soldier and Vietminh guerrilla who killed each other in hand-to-hand combat. Vietnam, 6 Nov 1950.

 May be an image of 1 person 

Alexis François Borella, also known under the nom de guerre Dominique Borella.Born in 1937, he joined the French military before being of legal age and served in Indochina.

He then fought with the Foreign Legion in Algeria and, after the putsch of 1961, became a member of the far-right, anti independence group, OAS.

Mercenary in Biafra in the late 1960′s, he then joined the Royal Khmer Armed Forces in 1974 where he became an officer in the 1st Cambodian Parachutist Brigade.A few months after fighting with his unit in the last battle against the communist troops in 1975, he joined the Lebanese Phalanges. 

He was killed on the 29th of September 1975 in Beyrouth.

 No photo description available.

03 Feb 1968, Hue Bodies of wounded and dead soldiers litter the streets of Hue, South Vietnam as a corpsman calls for assistance for his colleagues.

May be an image of 1 person 

02 May 1972, Quang Tri, South Vietnam. Out of the War. Quang Tri, South Vietnam: South Vietnamese soldier carries young victim of war after a truck in which the youngster was riding struck a mine four mile south of Quang Tri recently. 

No photo description available. 


Bodies of US paratroopers lie near a command post during the battle of An Ninh, 18 September 1965. The paratroopers, of the 1st Brigade, 101st Airborne Division, were hit by heavy fire from guerrillas that began as soon as the first elements of the unit landed. The dead and wounded were later evacuated to An Khe, where the 101st was based. The battle was one of the first of the war between major units of US forces and the Vietcong

No photo description available. 


8/29/1967 An Loa Valley, South Vietnam- After an air assault and helicopter gas attack, members of the U.S. Army's 1st cavalry entered An Loa Valley on foot. Here, they round up young prisoners taken from bunkers.

No photo description available. 


Ten Viet Cong bodies lie in the street in Cholon where they were dragged by ARVN Rangers. 6 June 1968

May be an image of text that says 'ED-4321' 

Like the one I had to leave in '75. There was no description but I'm virtually sure it was across the street from the American Embassy, Saigon when the sappers burst through the wall in Tet '68.

 https://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/6934/2302/640/scan0001.1.jpg 

The End Of A Republic (My Citroen)

May be an image of 1 person

Aftermath, Tet Offensive, Charles A. Ekberg, 1968

No photo description available. 


Battle of Hue, Tet Offensive, 1968. Feb 15, 16 or 17, 1968, Hue city - Unidentified, Courtyard Rocket Attack, radio operator KIA, Corpsman went for help. Fire team accompanied by Priest rescued elements of Bravo, 1/5th Marines.

 May be an image of 3 people 

A Vietnamese woman and her two children, all terrified and in tears, seek refuge against a wall. Saigon (Vietnam), 1968.

  No photo description available.

Huế 1968-69.Weeping Women -- Two grieving women walk through a school yard where clothing of 250 victims found in a mass grave near Hue were spread for identification 

 No photo description available. 

Remnants of the 275th Viet Cong Main Force Regiment after engaging the 4-12th Infantry in Ho Nai Village. 1968

May be an image of 1 personl


Lieutenant-Colonel Hal Moore and Sergeant-Major Basil Plumley, photographed upon their return from the Ia Drang Valley, 1965. LTC Moore wore his Korean War-era HBT fatigues, while SGM Plumley wore first-pattern jungle fatigues.

No photo description available. 


Survivors covering the bodies of some of the 114 villagers in Dak Son killed by the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops in December 1967.

May be an image of 2 people 

Marines

 No photo description available. 

Navy Corpsman, "Doc", Compresses the chest of a Marine who was shot during a battle.

No photo description available. 


July 26, 1968. Two 1st Cavalry Division LRRP teams, Quang Tri, Vietnam.

May be an image of 2 people 

May be an image of one or more people and text 

Battle of Khe Sanh, 1968. Close-up of a marine from the US occupying force at the Khe Sanh base, on the border with North Vietnam.

 May be a black-and-white image of one or more people, people standing and outdoors 

A famous picture. A South Vietnamese Marine carries the dead body of a brother killed on Route 1, about seven miles south of Quang Tri Sunday, April 30, 1972. Marines were fighting to reopen the road in order to break the North Vietnamese siege of the provincial capital.

 May be an image of 1 person and outdoors 

During an ambush by the VC, an officer shouts orders as a wounded American soldier awaits evacuation near Saigon during the Vietnam War, 1969f

 May be an image of one or more people, people standing and outdoors 

ROK Soldiers. Unit of Korean soldiers stationed near Qui Nhon. The Koreans were fantastic fighters mostly because they didn't have to worry about any rules. When they fought the enemy anything and anyone (men, women, children) who got in the way were wiped out. This scorched earth policy got rid of your enemy quickly and without anyone to complain later.

May be an image of 1 person, standing and outdoors 


The child soldier is fighting for Khmer Republic - and prisoner is a member of the Khmer Rouge . Angkor Chey. Cambodia 1973

May be an image of one or more people

March, 30, 1966, near thede foot of the Chu Pong Massif, Ia Drang Valley

May be a black-and-white image of child and standing 


May be an image of one or more people 

A South Vietnamese Ranger smokes on the march, carrying an M1919 .30 caliber machine gun over one shoulder. 1973.

 May be a black-and-white image of 1 person and outdoors 

May be an image of one or more people and text 

 May be a black-and-white image of one or more people


January 01, 1965.
January 1965, Tay Ninh, South Vietnam, The bodies of dead Viet Cong insurgents killed in a government ambush litter the roadside

No photo description available. 

No photo description available.

Looks like someone got hit bad on the seat.  Interior of a helicopter used during the Vietnam War.

 May be an image of one or more people 

February 1968, Hue city. An ARVN M41 Bulldog tank supports ground troops from an ARVN Rangers unit during the house-to-house battle for Hue city.

 No photo description available.


May be an image of 4 people 

A Viet Cong prisoner sits next to corpses of 11 of his slain fellow guerrillas after a street fight in Saigon-Cholon on February 11, 1968. In the background are Vietnamese Marines that defeated a Viet Cong platoon holed up in the residential area. The prisoner was later taken out for interrogation.

No photo description available. 

23 Nov 1967, Dak To, South Vietnam. Soldiers of the American 173rd Airborne Brigade pass the bodies of their brothers killed during the fighting at Dak To, Vietnam. Allied forces captured a North Vietnamese fortress at Hill 875 during the fighting.

No photo description available.

Victoire de Jolivet, French Indochina, 1939.


In 1899, de Jolivet family arrived in French Indochina and there, they turned this colonized land into their new homeland, creating their own life. In the Far East in the late 1930s, where storms were accumulating in a so far serene sky, de Jolivet family bought a property called Bao-Tan and made this place their home, hoping to stay there for several generations.

While in Europe the spectre of war was looming, French Indochina is somewhat forgotten by the mainland. However, they were in danger: the Japanese army was assembling at the Tonkin border.

For Victoire and her family, a slow and inexorable downfall into hell was about to begin, the Japanese and its horrors and violence were only the beginning of a nine-year war, even more terrible. All of them would be injured. Some of them died. For the survivors, forced to leave, it will be time for exile. An exile without bitterness, tempered by the hope that one day a new dawn will rise over Indochina, now plunged into its night.

No photo description available.


1968 - ARVN troops (Army of the Republic of Vietnam) advance through a burning town. The ARVN suffered 2788 killed during the Tet Offensive, and three times that number in wounded

 No photo description available. 

Battle of Dak To, November 1967

No photo description available. 


May be an image of 1 person 

I believe the man carrying the children is an American and the other 3 ARVN.


 No photo description available. 

"Koreans Bad Ass Dudes." 

 May be an image of 2 people 

US Marines Mike Cunningham and Ricky Riley (KIA 29 June 1968).

 May be an image of 1 person 

11 Feb 1968, Hue, South Vietnam.With a wounded baby in her arms, an elderly Vietnamese woman makes a plea for help as she arrives at a U.S. Marine aid station.

May be an image of text that says 'James Speed Hensinger RexFe' 

May be an image of text that says 'Hoading HARDSHIPS Body ong tho stubborn contimue have had to caused live in many rural RVNAF forced use pacify the area much hunger this DTA destroy the VC armed support them. when the secure the hide villages. Armed Forces village. not quickly vill you they will live your lives will above, the jungles and will places hide and the from and villages, you will be' 

May be an image of 2 people 

No photo description available. 

North Vietnamese POWs under questioning, surrounded by corpses. 1967.

No photo description available. 

1965 South Vietnam: The burned bodies of South Vietnamese children shown sprawled on ground after Viet Cong attack on village

6 comments:

  1. Hi Brock.......,
    'Just finished reading this post... 'Brought back lot's of memories..some should have stayed buried but that's another story...
    I was a "Squid!!" slang for a US NAVY Sailor.. My tour from 05DEC1966 till 23NOV1970.... PR-2 when I got out.. backtrac a bit... got duty aboard the USS PRINCETON LPH-5 AUG67-NOV69.. We went to 'Nam... MAY68-DEC68.. had GOLF CO. 2/26 Marines on board.. Yes they were the ones..Those that survived "THE DUCK FARM!!!" Also HMM-362 and 363 CH-34's!! All those guy's were "GOOD FRIENDS!!!" I was a "PR!!" Parachute Rigger!! Better known in the vernacular as an "Aircrew Survival Equipmentman!!!" I ran the "Loft!!"... Flight Equip shop.... and had another assigned duty... "Hanger deck and below POIC of the Stretcher Bearer Detail... We had a Full tilt Boogie On Board Hospital first deck below the aft hanger deck!!! and .......below that........... the Morgue.... that's another story...


    A lot of fotos you depict in this post was going on when I was "just off the coast by Da Nang!!!!!!".... 'Never got off the ship and "set foot" "In Country" but we were usually close enough to the beach that you could see people walking and the waves breaking on the sand .. also our "Screws" would churn up the bottom when the "Old Man" wanted to move!!

    Maybe before I die I will during one of my trek's back to NC I'll have to stop by.... Easier said than done... but I will!!!

    meanwhile, back at the ranch....

    "Blue Skyz......,"
    skybill

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Maybe before I die I will during one of my trek's back to NC I'll have to stop by.

      Come once Vietnam's border is open and we'll go there after your visit here!
      ************
      Parachute Rigger

      Bet the boys were nice to you! :)

      Delete
  2. Good morning, excellent post,haven't looked at all the pictures yet, but the ones you posted are very moving. If more people would see this maybe they would not be so anxious to start another visit to hell. Doesn't seem to matter to the PTB. Have seen enough Viet Nams and Afganistans and every thing in between to last several lifetimes. unfortunately the ones that need to see this won't, so much for trying to live a peaceable life, looks like time to gear up. Thanks Brock

    ReplyDelete
  3. unfortunately the ones that need to see this won't, so much for trying to live a peaceable life, looks like time to gear up. Thanks Brock

    May well be and you're welcome. By the way where do you live?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. okie doaky has left a new comment on your post "Vietnam Conflicts":

      Oklahoma, south central, thanks for asking,enjoy your blog along with other patriot ones. I really didn't want to see our United States in this condition and am afraid at my age may not ever see it rectified. Always alert though since the 60s. Stay safe and peace to you and yours.

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