May 12th, 1969
On May 11, 1969, I worked the day shift in
Alpha Battery FDC. I was relieved
at 1800 by the night shift. I ate chow, wrote some letters and went to sleep in
the small personnel bunker behind the Battery Command Post.
BOOM, BOOM, BOOM, BOOM. I awake in a fright. I check my wristwatch, the time is
0130 hrs. The impacts are almost continuous along with small arms fire. My first
thought is ground attack. I dress in record time only to realize that my rifle,
flack jacket, steel pot and ammo are all on a hook in the FDC Bunker. I and my
two bunker mates take a deep breath, go through the door of the Personnel Bunker
and run to the
FDC Bunker nearby. When we reach the FDC bunker, pandemonium is the rule
inside. All the radios and telephones are going. The Battery Commander, several
Officers and NCOs are in the bunker in addition to the FDC Crew. Moreover, all
the personnel appeared to be trying to speak at the same time. The one thing
that is very apparent to me was that Quan Loi was receiving a heavy ground
attack along the entire length of the perimeter of the base.
Person: “They [NVA] just knocked out the
Guard Tower on the perimeter over by
Number Four”
Person: “God Damn”
Person: “We’re in some deep shit tonight”.
Person: “Get the 105’s at Thunder Four to shoot the DefCons on our sector of the
perimeter”
Person: “Thunder IV says they won’t shoot them because they are in a “No Fire
Zone”.
Person: “Tell them to shoot the Mother Fuckers anyway”.
I hear friendly artillery from Thunder Four begin to impact on our sector of
the perimeter and the attack appears to slow temporarily.
Person: “Call Thunder Four and tell them we need some illumination in our sector
of the perimeter.
Person: “It’s on its way”.
Illumination “pops” over the perimeter.
I peer outside and get my first good look at what is happening. A “pall” of
smoke is hanging low. I can see shadowy figures running everywhere. The illumination
“dies” and it is “pitch” black except for the light from a few flashlights and
incoming ordinance impacts. The sound of small arms fire and mortar and rocket
impacts is almost constant. I see a flash and an RPG is fired at the Battery.
The night shift seems to have “control” of the situation. I realize that I can’t
do anything in the bunker except get in the way. I put on my flack jacket and
steel pot, grab my rifle, ammo and hand grenades and go outside the FDC Bunker
prepared “to go to war.”
I find me a fighting position outside the FDC bunker entrance which was not too
“exposed” and “lock and load” my rifle. I see a shadowy figure running across
the street from Headquarters Battery. I am ready to shoot, when I realize the
figure is one of the medics from Headquarters Battery bringing a stretcher to
FDC. I notice that the Medic has his back covered with shrapnel wounds and is
himself badly wounded. The tempo of small arms fire and rounds impacting again
begins to increase dramatically.
An Officer runs to FDC Bunker. He yells, “The gooks are coming through the wire;
lets go”. I follow him to the perimeter. After what seems like an “hour” we
arrive at the interior wire of the Battery and I am placed in a bunker in close
proximity to Number
Four gun pad. I am the only person inside it. Just as I get in the bunker,
Number Four is knocked out by an RPG. I see the flash, I hear no sound. Then I
hear yelling and screaming from the vicinity of the gun pad.
The tubes of the Mortar Platoon between us and the perimeter “pop”. Someone
yells, “There’s nobody down there; they’re all dead”. I see shadowy figures in
the mortar platoon area. I fire my rifle at them. I feel the rifle, but hear no
sound. The tubes in the Mortar Platoon Area quit firing. No penetration has been
made of our Battery Defenses by the NVA that I can discern. Small arms fire and
incoming ordinance goes from constant to sporadic for the next several hours. I
maintain my position on the interior perimeter. I continue to see shadowy
figures in the illumination, but they are headed toward the “Green Line”.
At about 0500, I am told to move further back into the interior of the
Battery
Area. I am in the area of Number Two or Number Three gun pads. At about 0600 we
begin to receive rocket fire. It lasts about 30 minutes. Several incoming rounds
impact in the Battery Area. About 0700, an Officer comes by my position and
says, “It’s all over”. I go back to FDC to do my regular shift. Chow is ready at
0800 hrs. I go eat “breakfast”, but it has no taste. I have lived to fight
another day.
I have never been the same after that night.
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