Khe Sanh was located on the Laotian border, just a notch South of the DMZ, it was a high mountain area, hard to supply.  The one road, running east west into Laos from the Vietnamese coast was mostly dirt and narrow, jungle growing up to and over the road, were it was ground back by truck traffic. Route 9 followed the river valleys into the black depths of the mountains, climbing and clinging to the mountainsides, switchbacks and river crossings slowed the convoys down. Steep cliffs offered protection on the down side and delivered NVA satchel charges and hand grenades from above. It was a dangerous road; the roughrider supply convoys only friend was speed to blast through any trouble spots. I remember well the convoy run where I almost got left behind. It was our turn to be security for the supply convoy’s called roughriders. Al and Tim were next to me on the last truck in line, we were seated by the tailgate. The convoy was going like a bat out of hell, we were bouncing and swaying, and the dust was painting us red. B-52 bombers had bombed and rebombed the area, our roadside cratered with bomb craters, one of which the back of the 6x happened to be sliding into. All I could think of was jumping clear of the truck and stood up to jump, Al grabbed my flax jacket and pulled me back in as the driver spun tires and clawed out of the crumbling crater rim. Al was yelling at me never to do that again because the drivers have orders not to stop for anything. I shook at the thought of being stranded alone on that jungle road, a road easily cut by the enemy. Khe Sanh was at the end of the line of combat bases strung from the coast to the Laos border, the end of civilization.

   Alex, Joe (Chester) and I spent the day gathering medical gear, listening to the Chief Hanes give us last minute instructions about staying alive, the weekly Malaria pills we passed out, it was a court marshal offense if you got Malaria and had no preventive malaria medication in your system, and just before we broke up for our units we were given some tooth pumice to clean our teeth. Strange yes, years later I read that was standard Navy procedure. Earlier, while eating a lunch of c-rations, watching Joe heat up a can of Sapggitti and meatballs, he had just punctured alternating holes in the can’s lid, not cutting the lid and folding it back for a handle, watching his can heat up with the red tomato sauce oozing out of the holes like blood, I was hit with a intuitive insight that Joe was going to die. That had never happened to me before, I shook off the thought and did not say a thing, and I was not going to say, “Joe, you’re going to die.” 

   We said our goodbyes and split up, following short timer corpsmen to our companies. Being led to my new outfit a NVA sniper fired a shot at us, I heard for the first time a bullet flying by my head, dropping to the ground, the Corpsmen I’m to replace, called 7-up, anxiously asks if I’m okay. 7-up introduced me to all the Marines in the Platoon, showing where I would bunk, what squad I would stick with. The base was mostly underground, dug down deep when the NVA hauled cannon by hand over the mountains. The line Company’s were living on the perimeter’s edge, looking out into the killing fields. A no-mans land, tangle foot barbed wire crisscrossed the ground, with tripwire flares to warn of enemy movement at night. Buried in the ground was 55 gallon barrels full of c-4 plastic explosives, diesel fuel and old dirty ammo, connected to detonating devices in our fighting positions. Mines were buried and claymores were in position in front of us. The bunkers were stockpiled with ammo and hand grenades, the bunkers were both home and fighting areas. The trench had emplacements built with sandbags and timber; you could almost walk around the whole base in that trench unexposed and was it muddy when it rained. The base was heavily damaged, blown up bunkers left gapping holes, both ammo dumps had blown in the past, casting explosive rounds about. Most of the sandbags around the bunkers were torn and tattered fluttering in the breeze, making it look shabby.   The marines were pretty rough looking with ripped, dirty clothes, unshaven, smelly, but friendly.

    Bonding with the marines was easy I found, you’re there to keep them alive and the grunts want to keep you alive so you can keep them alive. That’s one thing I do miss, we had nothing but ourselves, and so we took care of each other. The marines were very helpful telling me what gear I would need and asking if I wanted a rubber lady, with me replying “ thanks but no, I’m engaged back home”. They laughingly replied it was an “air matterss”, not a girl.

   The days there started melting in a blur, killer teams, Platoon and Company size patrols and one Battalion size sweep of the area North of Hill 881N. The word was spread to load up with three days worth of c-rations and all the ammo you could carry; we were going to Hill 881north.  Early the next morning we were lined up in squads along the airstrip of metal. The sun was just coming up; helicopters in the distance could be heard. Next, the sand blasting us as the rotors picked up dust and grit and hammered it into our skin. Settling into the web seats, we flew to our LZ. The ride took minutes and flared into a hot landing, running off into a firestorm of NVA artillery and mortar fire, we waved good-bye to the chopper pilot. We ran for our lives, I just picked out a familiar face and keep one step behind Chip, running and running, out of breath and finally diving for cover. I was so scared, I only wanted to pee, kneeling in this crater and peeing and peeing. Collecting the wounded and dead the platoon moved to a safer area. A chopper was called back to pick them up, another barrage of mortars, all the good landing zones were zeroed in by the NVA.

   The companies were spread out by now, with their platoons in traveling formation, point, command, rear and flanks. The Battalion started their sweep to the south, to search and destroy enemy bunker complexes and supply dumps. It was just jungle and steep mountain trails, walking was hard with roots and vines tangling my boots at every step. The triple canopy vegetation made for gloomy vision at noon. The bunker complex was well hidden, we stumbled on to it as we swept over the mountainside, we were lucky, the NVA had run. They only liked to fight on their terms, not the marine’s terms. The marines had their bases in the open for all to see, the NVA bases were unseen. Set up 122mm rockets, ammo and rice was found, blowing up the rockets and ammo, then pissing on the slashed sacks of rice was little payback to us. 

   These were steep mountain jungles and our walk back to base was against the grain of the jungle, the Battalion didn’t follow the natural valleys and trails, we hacked our own trail, this lasted 3 days and nights. It was a hard hump, a forced march, no sleep, just walk and walk, day and night, 5 minutes catnap on the trail every hour, lean back on the ground, use your helmet as a pillow and hope you don’t get left behind. As we neared the base, a narrow canyon peppered with dry tear gas had us scrambling for our gas masks. The men were beat and I was fading fast, the base was in sight and little did I know it would be a dash for life. Between the toe of the hill and base was a long flat open area and the enemy gunners were waiting for us to cross. Run, run for your life, a bunker, a trench, and any thing out of sight. Later at our lines, Chip and I cooked some c-rations and lay there for two days recovering. The men were not soft; lack of good food was partly to blame. Some had been eating C-rations for months and as I would find out, you don’t gain weight on them. A glass of milk was a thought beyond reality; a hamburger, get out of here, you want to get punched? Ham and eggs, canned; pork slices, beef and potatoes, ham and lima beans, chicken and noodle, spaggitti and meatballs and other meals for a choice of 12. 

   The act of taking a shower was a life or death event there. First it was 100 feet from the trench in a small depression, out of line of fire from snipers, yet open to motors, rockets and artillery fire. The water point was another 100 feet away. To carry the water and take a shower was next to impossible, why die to be clean. Spit baths out of the helmet, was about the only daily hygiene. The out house was there too, rumors of marines being killed using it floated about. Just think, to die using a toilet or shower. Civilization had taken a hard right turn the minute we left Dong Ha. We were alone, in the middle of nowhere.

  May 17, 1968, I had no time to mourn my friend’s death, when word was passed down to me that Joe (Chester) was dead, machine gunned while going to the aid of a wounded marine. We had only been there 20 days; I had been 99% scared to death more times then I 
Would ever hope for in the past 20 days and Joe was dead. I was sorry. The pain would have to wait, you can’t dwell on death at times like these, it would draw you down. Be scared, but don’t think about death. Never.

   May 1968, a month of dying, it has been called “Bloody May” for good reason. More marines were killed during that month then during the February TET offense. 723 marines, 330 Army men and 37 sailors were killed in III MAF that month. The time is now called the ”May Mini Tet”. The NVA 304th Division was operating in our area, testing us for weak points in the lines, ambushing Platoon and Company sized patrols, ambushing the supply convoys on Rt. 9. One 2/1 platoon, hit while on convoy security, had NVA throwing explosive charges off the sheer rock cliffs that lined the road onto the truck beds, the marines were hit hard. Another platoon on road sweep security prematurely set off a NVA ambush that turned into a battle.

   The Battalion S-3 combat records (declassified) state:
“Mine sweep team accompanied by reinforced platoon “F” and two tanks triggered enemy ambush at initial range of approximately 25 meters. Contact subsequently revealed reinforced NVA Company and prepared bunkers. Road sweep element immediately reinforced by remainder of company, Company assaulted enemy position and later repulsed counter attack. Company “G” was dispatched to reinforce Company “F” and killed 3 NVA at rear of Company “F” while linking up. Company “E” 2/3 with two tanks dispatched from bridge 3 to reinforce “G” and “F”.  “E” 2/3 swept through enemy position killing 16 NVA, for a total of 65 NVA killed.”.  2/1 lost 18 KIA, 44 WIA, and two tanks destroyed.

   My friend, Corpsmen friend Jon Peters was creased on the forehead running through a blast of automatic fire, during that action his medical bag took the brunt of it, I was amazed counting the bullet holes in it the next day. Just another day in Hell and no way to escape back to civilization, except in a body bag. 

                                             Next: June and July 1968