THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1967 The Doily Nebraskan Page 5 6 Huey s Charlies' Are Familiar Vietnam Symbols (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is the fifth in stallment of a scries on the war in Vietnam written by Howard Moffctt, Colleg iate Press Service corres pondent in Saigon. The Daily Nebraskan last semester ran another series by Moffctt, who was former editor of the Yale Daily News.) It was grey typical weather for the northern border of II Corps. Thick green jungle covered the foothills of the Crow's Foot. In the valley, algae-brown rice paddies surrounded a deserted village. Assault Formations Flying in tight assault formation, the first wave of six Heuy choppers topped a ridge at about a hundred miles an hour and slid toward the valley floor, 600 yards below. Two gun ship escorts were flying in front and beneath. Others, including the battalion commander's which hover ed above. Suddenly the river turned a bend and the landing con a send bar on its left bank was rushing up at us. The air erupted with red flashes and the stac cato burst of aerial rockets. Our machine guns were softening up In the tree line and brush thickets on the right bank of the river: that would be where Charlies were hiding, if by chance he was there at all. Captain Benson was half way out the side door, his feet resting on the chop per's skis. He looked very intent, almost grim, as if his features had been chiselled beneath his helmet. "Stick with me," he said. I was only too glad. Choppers Landing Then we were down, the skis settling briefly in the soft sand. Benson was gone; I stumbled after him. His men were already jumping from the other chop pers, fanning out across the sand bar in a running crouch, pouring rifle fire in to the right bank 40 yards away. I was not at my level headed best in this situa tion. For a few seconds there seemed to be nothing but the whoosh of helicopter blades and the orange spit flash and sharp report of rifles. I couldn't tell If we were also under fire. Many of Benson's men were down on one knee, continuing to fire at the thickets on the opposite bank. Others were running in the opposite direction, emptying their rifles into a jungle-covered slope that came down on our position about fifty yards to the left. Second Platoon The six whirly-birds were off and circling back to ward Pony to pick up the second platoon. I felt a little forsaken until I noticed Ben son and his radio man. They were standing up, apparent ly confident that there were no Viet Cong in the area. The captain got out his map to check his position. He tried- to verify It by ra dio to Pony, saw his first estimate did not check with terrain features on the map, and called to reclar ify. Satisfied, he sent one squad across the river to reconnoiter upstream, and watched his other men de ploying in a widening circle. Within minutes the sec ond platoon came in, each Huey touching down for just about seven sec onds, one for each man that came out the side doors. I was to go back in the lead chopper when the third platoon came in. Few Orders Benson was giving a few orders, studying the ter rain. Bravo Company would be here until after dark, when it would move out upstream, travel most of the night and set up three ambushes along a cluster of trails at the western end of the valley. Benson's two best pla toon leaders would have separate positions. The cap tain himself would take two platoons and cover the most likely exfiltration route. All three groups would ba within supporting distance of each other. The men were quiet, ex cept for some sporadic re connaissance by fire. An M-60 (.762 millimeter) ma chine gun had been set up on the sand bar, and now it began to chattier in the di rection of a village just over the brow of the river bank. Deserted Village It seemed deserted, but I asked Benson how he knew there weren't any women or children in there. Then I remembered the leaflets de claring the Crow's F o o t a war zone. He nodded: "Any body who's still in there has been warned that we'll shooting at them, sir." He kept calling me sir, even after I told him he was probably ten years my senior. The third assault group was coming In. I said a hurried good luck, looked once around the circle of men, and started toward the lead chopper as it came In across a paddy. I didn't make it. The Huey dropped its seven men and was off again before I was halfway there. I had better luck with the last chopper, which landed just a few yards away. We were up and off, cir cling the men on the s a n d bar below. As we headed, back toward Pony, Benson looked up and waved. I realized then that I had never gotten his first name. I returned to Saigon Sat urday morning. Sunday's headline said units of the 1st Air Cav. bad been hit by Viet Cong forces S8 miles north-northwest of Quinhon the Crow's Foot. First reports said the sky troopers took "moderate" casualties in a series of con tacts with an estimated battalion-size enemy force. Some 60 Viet Cong were re ported killed. UPI Reports United Press Internation al, however, reported that the multi-company 1st Bri gade force "suffered heavy casualties when they heli hopped into positions sur rounding the communist force . . ." If casualties were moder ate, it means a good many men lost their lives. If they were heavy, it means sev-. eral units were virtually wiped out. What seems to have hap pened is this: One platoon from either Alfa or Charlie Company, sweeping the eastern slopes of the Crow's Foot, very quickly ran int o a Viet Cong force in the vicinity of a dirt road called Central Highway 506. From the number of American casu alties, it looks as though Victor Charlie knew they were coming. U.S. military spokesmen later said the fighting be gan about 10:20 a.m., when, an American platoon opened fire on a Viet Cong squad, which fled over a ridge line. Another 1st Cav platoon was heli-lifted in seven minutes later and im mediately came under auto matic weapons fire, from enemy positions about 1,000 years to the south. The bat tle took shape in the valley around Highway 506. The Viet Cong force was esti mated to be a full battalion, dug in in trenches and tun nels. NEWSWEEK's John Ber thelsen later reconstructed this story from participants in Saturday's fighting. "Valley 506" About Dec. 8 the shat tered 7th and 8th Battalions of the 18th VC Regiment be gan moving into "Valley 506" to harvest rice. Viet Cong defectors said they moved into the valley en masse because morale was so low that their political cadres feared small groups might desert. The valley floor Is check erboarded with rice ppddies about SO yards square. Hedgerows and lines of palm trees border each square. The Viet Cong dug complete systems under each hedgerow, and under the roots of the palms they hollowed out "spider holes" with firing apertures look ing out across the surface of the paddies. The 1st Cav reaction pla toon, heli-lifted into the bat tle area Saturday morning seven minutes after contact was made, landed in the middle of these paddies. It was caught immediately in withering fire. Hedgerow Fighting The fighting went on for eight hours, hedgerow by hedgerow. As the 1st Cav cleaned one out, the VC used their tunnels to vacate it and move back to the next. Air strikes and artil lery were called in every few minutes by the Ameri cans. By mid-afternoon, s i x companies (two battalions) of the 1st Cav were fighting in those paddles. Delta Com pany, down from its moun taintop radio station, was one of the hardest hit. The Viet Cong, or NVA as the 1st Cav preferred to call them, kept incredible fire discipline, waiting until the American troops were just a few feet from the hedge rows. Many of the bodies brought into the battalion hospital after the fight had bullet holes running diago onally up from the chest through the top of the shoul ders, indicating the men had been shot from under foot. Close Fire 1st Lieutenant Timothy Feener, commanding Del ta's Third Platoon, said lat er: "I was within three to five meters of a hedgerow. We were that close and suddenly we were taken under fire. Three to five meters and we couldn't see where it was coming from. I never saw a North Viet namese all day." About 6 p.m., the Viet Cong broke contact. The 1st Cav units pulled into defen sive perimeters for the night, while flares were dropped from circling heli copters and artillery and air strikes continued to pound the surrounding slopes. About 7:30 Sunday morn ing the battle began again, as the Americans ran up against an unknown size Viet Cong force in heavy bunkers. The fighting lasted only about 20 minutes. Seven Viet Cong were reported killed and there were no American casualties. Victor Charlie simply withdrew slipping out of the area along the winding streams and small game trails. Bravo Company never saw this fight, and might have been oblivious to it ex cept for radio communica tion with Pony. While its sister companies were do ing some of the bitterest fighting in recent weeks, Bravo had its own mission to perform at the other end of the Crow's Foot, 15 miles away. Bravo should be coming back In as I am writing it is Monday afternoon, the time they were due to leave the ambush zone if Charlie didn't show. These men command re spect: they do a thankless job that is hard to under stand not cheerfully, but without complaint. Film Critic Will Speak At Sheldon A noted film critic and columnist for The New Re public, Pauline Kael, will speak Thursday evening to the Nebraska Union Film Society at Sheldon Art Gal lery. Miss Kael is the first of three lecturers to address the Nebraska Regional Film Screening. The screening, sponsored by the Nebraska Art Gal leries and the Nebraska Un ion Film Committee, con sists of 11 films shown Thursday through Saturday for representatives from film socities throughout the Midwest. However, film society members and Sheldon film subscription ticket holders will be admitted to the three evening showings and lec tures, according to Norman Geske, director of Sheldon Gallery. Miss Kael will lecture fol lowing the 7:30 p.m. show ing of "Before the Revolu tion", an Italian movie. Miss Kael's opinions ap pear in a variety of maga zines, including Life, Vogue and Atlantic Monthly. She also contributes a monthly column to McCall's and has written a book, "I Lost It at the Movies". 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