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Home, Finally (Oliver North on
WASHINGTON
— Forty-three years ago this week, the fabled 101st Airborne Division
launched Operation Apache Snow — a major ground offensive against North
Vietnamese army invaders in the treacherous A Shau Valley. Though fighting
raged over hundreds of square miles of triple-canopied jungle, the focus soon
became a single terrain feature, a mountain, with peaks as high as 3,000 feet,
the Vietnamese named Dong Ap Bia, or "Mountain of the Crouching Beast."
The Americans who fought there called it Hamburger Hill.
By
the time the 11-day battle ended, 70 American soldiers were dead, and nearly
400 had been wounded. More than 600 North Vietnamese soldiers perished. The
only survivors of this epic battle to receive the thanks of their countrymen
for their courage and commitment were the North Vietnamese.
The
Americans who walked off that bloody mountain — and every other soldier,
sailor, airman, guardsman and Marine who served in Vietnam — returned home
to a bitterly divided country. The so-called mainstream media,
There
were no parades celebrating the bravery and perseverance of the 2.7 million
young men and women who donned a uniform and served in some of the most
difficult and dangerous conditions on earth. Until the Vietnam Veterans
Memorial — known as the "Vietnam Wall" — was dedicated in
1982, public accolades were sparse, and ceremonies outside the confines of a
military base, an American Legion hall or a Veterans of Foreign Wars post were
practically nonexistent.
Now,
five decades after their war began — and 37 years after its disastrous,
cataclysmic conclusion — those who fought in
Next
week's ceremony shouldn't come as a surprise to anyone. In the 2008 National
Defense Authorization Act, Congress directed the Department of Defense to
commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Vietnam War and "coordinate,
support, and facilitate" programs nationwide to recognize those who
sacrificed and served in
Appropriately,
the Memorial Day ceremony will take place in front of "the wall" that
has the names of the 58,282 Americans who were killed or remain missing in
action in
On
I
asked my dear friend Sammy Davis why it is important for
To
all of the soldiers, sailors, airmen, guardsmen and Marines who served during
Courtesy: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2885109/posts