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VIETNAM NOTES

by

Robert Flynn

These incidents took place in Vietnam, but it's about any violent conflict. It's not about me, it's about the very real nightmares we can find ourselves living, if we don't reason things out for ourselves but continue to let movies, television, and the violent fantasies of others, do our thinking for us.

For the year that I was there, my job mostly consisted of driving a truck and slinging sandbags; I never lost any close friends or killed anyone. There is still a feeling of guilt for not having suffered "enough", even though what I experienced puts me through almost overwhelming grief sometimes, for the people involved in what I saw. It's senseless, but it's almost as if, by having more pain, I could somehow lessen the pain of others carrying horrors that would make my memories seem like welcome relief to them. There were some who went through much more, and some who went through much less, but in the end what matters is that we try to learn from all our experiences and then use them to benefit ourselves and others.

At times I'm filled with anger and resentment, for the stupidity and gullibility of a major part of the human race. The vast ocean of shallow, psychotically romantic hype-fodder called humanity that doesn't have the sense to see the reality of pain, grief, and horror of war and death. Even those are all just words that don't begin to convey the convoluted tangle of feelings involved. Then I remember that if I'd known then what I know now, I'd never have gone to that miserable place myself, but I didn't know. I couldn't have known what is so obvious to me now, until after the experience. I don't mean to imply that I think the world could destroy all it's weapons and then everything would be paradise. Evil is a very real thing and sometimes must be fought. I doubt for example that a loving note to Hitler would have changed the fate of six million Jews, but "the young want to die nobly, the wise, to live humbly."

Evil takes many forms. One of them is the willingness of governments, businesses, and individuals to corrupt and steer youthful naiveté, exuberance, and strength toward terrible destruction because of petty dedication to their own purposes; no matter what the cost, as long as the cost doesn't seem to be directly their own.

****

I'd only been in the country for a few weeks, when a couple of guys and I went into the village of Duc Pho to get haircuts. We were excited and sort of mesmerized by the fact that we were actually in a tropical country, in a war, and all on our own. Sort of like going to Disneyland for the first time and finding a sign inside warning "Assassins in the park, enter at your own risk." We walked into the town orphanage, which was a small, high-walled schoolyard, with a large, rambling building inside, where the barber was located.

I sat down in a rickety chair, laid my rifle up against the wall next to me, and the barber began cutting my hair. Suddenly he jumped aside as another Vietnamese grabbed my rifle, jacked a round into the chamber, put the muzzle inches from my nose and shouted "NOBODY MOVE!"

My friends could do nothing, as he glared at me over the top of the sights, I clearly realized that my time on earth was over; that I was a dead man. I remember being suddenly sick with sadness for myself, and thinking that it wasn't fair. It just really wasn't fair at all! We looked at each other for what seemed forever, and then he smiled.

He said. "Everything OK, no problem, nobody shoot!"

Then he lowered my rifle, handing it to me, and said sternly "You no do! You no leave weapon alone, ever! No do ever, or you maybe die!"

He was in civilian clothes, but turned out to be an officer in the South Vietnamese Army. It may come as no surprise that I always remembered what he said and especially the way he said it. For the first time I realized that it was no game, it was all too real. Nothing and nobody can save me if I get careless. Whatever our age, childhood is over the day we lose that sense of immortality, and it never comes back. It's odd how sure we are that we're aware of everything, until we suddenly get shocked into the reality of how little we actually perceive.

****

One night we were sitting in a bunker watching a battery of 105mm Howitzers during a fire mission. They were about 100 yards away and firing right over a group of huge boulders that had a bunker sitting on top. It was in a perfect spot to watch the perimeter. As they fired again, an unexpected flash and boom split the night, and a billowing mushroom of smoke and dust shot from the bunker on the rocks. Somehow a round had been fired point-blank into the bunker from one of the cannons. We didn't know whether or not anyone was in the bunker until a minute later when the most agonized, piercing, terrified scream that I'd ever heard cut through the dead silence that followed the explosion. At least one man, no doubt badly wounded, was buried in the collapsed bunker. For a while there was horrifying silence, then another awful, long, anguished scream, then silence. Then another scream, then whimpering. This went on for what seemed like a couple of hours, although I doubt if it was actually that long. The sounds slowly grew weaker until they either got him out, or he passed out, or he died. We never knew which it was.

We'd just crawled into our cots after another exhausting day of digging holes and filling sandbags, (we usually called them mudbags for good reason), when a series of jarring explosions put us on our feet, grabbing for boots, rifles, ammo, and set us running from our tents to the bunkers. I'd only been in country for a short while and other than a few incoming mortar rounds, nothing much had happened in that time. As I ran out of the tent, more explosions went off, and then I saw something that still sends chills up my spine. The bunker out on the perimeter in front of me, full of guys in my Company, was exploding with huge sprays of sparkling fire jetting from the door and windows, and everyone was running for cover, in total confusion.

We grouped up and formed a secondary perimeter behind any cover we could find, but the attack was over as quickly as it had begun and then the cleaning up began. Luckily I didn't have to pull the dead and wounded out of the bunkers, but was in one of them moments later, to replace the guys they had hauled out. The dirt floors of the bunkers had been drenched in blood and it created patches of gooey mud with a chilling odour. The sandbags and wooden bracing had been blown apart, and my fear was more that it would all collapse and bury us than that the VietCong would attack again. The rest of the night, while very scary, was uneventful.

We saw what had happened the next day. The VC had crawled across rice paddies in front of us and crept in through concertina wire, trip flares, and claymore mines. They had jacked-apart some metal bars covering a drainpipe, using the pipe to crawl under a dirt road, and crawled up and down a weed-filled ditch, behind seven or eight bunkers full of wide-awake men, on a moonlit night. They had then simultaneously thrown three or four satchel-charges into each bunker. As the charges exploded they made a quick and clean escape, but that wasn't the end of it. After a couple of days in the high heat and humidity, the blood-saturated dirt began to rot. For the next couple of months, while we were in the area, we had to sit in those damaged bunkers at night, surrounded by the overpowering stench of rot and death.

Several times, as we were heading to the perimeter to pull guard duty, we were told that intelligence had been received that we should expect a massive offensive, with the possibility of being overrun by a "human wave" attack. That didn't happen or I wouldn't be writing this but add up the horror of that smell, with the fear of the attack and you have nights guaranteed to test your nerves for the rest of your life, whether anything happened or not.

****

I slammed the shift into a higher gear, bouncing and laughing with my "shotgun- rider" and flying down the road toward somewhere - it didn't really matter where- we hoped we could find some cold beer and a safe place to sleep. As we barreled through villages, we could tell how the people there felt about things. If they smiled and waved they were friendlies. If they frowned and threw rocks they were VC, or VC sympathizers. Hopefully all we would get was a dent or two from rocks, it could always be worse.

 

Continuation