You-are-there stories of ambushes and patrols on the Mekong in the Vietnam War Developed specifically for the Vietnam War (and made famous by the 2004 presidential campaign), Swift Boats were versatile craft “big enough to outrun anything they couldn’t outfight” but too small to handle even a moderate ocean chop, too loud to sneak up on anyone, and too flimsy to withstand the mildest of rocket attacks. This made more difficult an already tough mission: navigating coastal waters for ships and sampans smuggling contraband to the Viet Cong, disrupting enemy supply lines on the rivers and canals of the Mekong Delta, and inserting SEALs behind enemy lines. The stories in this book cover the Swift Boats’ early years, which saw search-and-inspect operations in Vietnam’s coastal waters, and their later years, when the Swift Boats’ mission shifted to the Mekong Delta’s labyrinth of 3,000 miles of rivers, streams, and canals. This is an intimate, exciting oral history of Swift Boats at war in Vietnam.
This is an intimate, exciting oral history of Swift Boats at war in Vietnam.
... 168 Ho Chi Minh, 126, 137 Hoffman, Roy F.: Christmas in Cambodia and, 48, 49; Kerry's fitness to command and, 3, ... 64, 66, 67–69; Sampan incident and, 58; SBVT letter and, 5–6, 188, 191 Holden, William P., 191 Holloway, Wayland, ...
In many cases, the rivers became so narrow there was barely room to maneuver or turn around. The only way out might be into a deadly ambush. This is not a Vietnam memoir filled with political discussions or apologies.
The ROE for Task Force 116 authorized PBR units to “ demand the identification and a declaration of intent and to stop ... In all engagements with enemy NHHC VN Collection Engineman 3rd Class Larry A. Thomas behind his PBR's 40mm ...
Covering more than four decades, Tour of Duty is the definitive account of John Kerry's journey from war to peace. Written by acclaimed historian Douglas Brinkley, this is the first full-scale, intimate account of Kerry's naval career.
Steffes tells the "real" story of the incident off the coast of North Vietnam on June 16, 1968 that sunk PCF-19.
This report by the U.S. Navy represents the first comprehensive scholarly attempt to piece together the operational history of the U.S. Navy in South Vietnam from the first coastal patrols...
For Erwin, the marine's story resurrects memories of sailors patrolling narrow rivers and canals, their naive sense of invincibility shattered by Viet Cong patiently waiting in bunkers with rockets.
base, Lieutenant William C. Fitzgerald, Lieutenant (j. g.) Anthony C. Williams, Chief Engineman Harold H. Guinn, and Boatswain's Mate First Class Leo E. Pearman, were swept into the fight as the situation became desperate.
This book explores those craft, and also gives an account of Task Force Clearwater, a much smaller operation in the extreme northern part of South Vietnam.