Why River Patrol Was One Of The Toughest Jobs Of The Vietnam War | Battlezone | War Stories

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  • Опубликовано: 1 дек 2024

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  • @WarStoriesChannel
    @WarStoriesChannel  Год назад +24

    It's like Netflix for history... Sign up to History Hit, the world's best history documentary service with code 'WARSTORIES' for a huge discount!👉bit.ly/3vemUcD

    • @richardgraham7055
      @richardgraham7055 Год назад

      No wonder this 'documentary' sucked. It's nothing more than USN propaganda.

    • @DavidLouisLouis-qh9ni
      @DavidLouisLouis-qh9ni Год назад +1

      My digital image of the cover 👍👍👍 David Staudohar USMC USN SS USCG ret ‼️ American Patriot and Combat Veteran Marine 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

    • @jamesHadden-l6l
      @jamesHadden-l6l Год назад +1

      great vid thanks has any one seen any vids posted on the the Navy advisors in the junk force? Maybe the most forgotten aspect of the navy

    • @matthewclements8308
      @matthewclements8308 Год назад

      @@richardgraham7055 I love love love😍

    • @HdbdhGdhdh
      @HdbdhGdhdh 10 месяцев назад

      មកបិ see no​@@richardgraham7055

  • @cayo3955
    @cayo3955 Год назад +78

    I was a part of Small Craft Company 1st PLT in Iraq 04&05’. These guys laid the foundation for us and I’m thankful . (Also the PBR guys and the swift boat foundation sent us so many packages so we didn’t have to buy hygiene gear, candy bars etc. it was super cool of them and we really appreciated it)

    • @joanofarc708
      @joanofarc708 Год назад

      You've got to ask was that war sll in vain ,rip to all this brave men

    • @duderistdude6466
      @duderistdude6466 Год назад

      those Vietnam vets will always make sure that you're straight. Stand up guys who got the worse of it.

    • @trouserarmadillo8616
      @trouserarmadillo8616 5 месяцев назад

      In Ramadi?

  • @triumphmanful
    @triumphmanful Год назад +98

    My Hero Uncle saved some river boats when the VC started to mortar the boats. He ran aboard one boat and towed many others out into the bay. Out of the mortar range. He returned later and a fellow soldier noticed blood on his leg. He got a shrapnel wound and did not even know it. He was US Navy for 30 years. Got a Purple Heart Medal for that wound and some other medals. He was and is one of my special heroes !

    • @marstuv5068
      @marstuv5068 Год назад +5

      Respect!! ❤

    • @mephistoxarses8585
      @mephistoxarses8585 Год назад +2

      As a working man myself i have noticed (usually too late) that i have cuts and bruises (Some cuts that drew blood) and did not even notice until much later.
      I am not trying to even compare what i go through in a factory with soldiers that go through combat but just trying to say (maybe it's a male thing) that i can understand being scraped or wounded without noticing or even just dismissing it as a "i got cut...whatever"
      For what it's worth. Respect to your HERO uncle as i also had an uncle who fought in Vietnam......funnily enough he served the very year that i was born. 1970.

    • @thethaovatoquoc312
      @thethaovatoquoc312 Год назад +3

      To your uncle and all the military veterans from USA and Allies having participated in Korean War and Vietnam War, thank you for your service for trying to contain the spread of the deadly and toxic Communism which remains an existential threat to individual freedom, human dignity, and basic decency worldwide even to these days. Commies are a stain on humanity!

    • @vn6153
      @vn6153 11 месяцев назад

      What do you dogs come to our country for?

    • @jirikurto3859
      @jirikurto3859 10 месяцев назад

      @@thethaovatoquoc312 You couldn't be more brainwashed. So pathetic.

  • @edwinbest9256
    @edwinbest9256 Год назад +65

    I went to college with a man named Sam Watkins who was a great photographer and a veteran of river patrols. Spent hours on Friday nights watching his slides and listening to his stories. Brave doesn’t cover it. I deeply hope Sam is alive and well!

    • @al.march.7457
      @al.march.7457 Год назад

      you lucky man,have unique experience, i wish i would be you.

    • @gib59er56
      @gib59er56 Год назад +1

      If you know about Ken Burns` Civil War series (I have the 5 disk DVD collection) you will hear the diary entries of Pvt Elijah Hunt Rhoads U.S.A. and Pvt Sam Watkins C.S.A. Both are mere kids with not much School, yet they write more beautifully and skillfully than a college grad. of today. Their words and thoughts paint pictures in your mind as well and even better than famous authors of today. Their writings are comical at times, dreadful sometimes but always poignantly, bringing everything into clear focus. I am pretty sure you know about Burns` series on the C.W., but I highly recommend it to you if not. I have watched those DVD`s 100 times and well keep watching them. A masterpiece in every way.

    • @HumanHamCube
      @HumanHamCube 6 месяцев назад

      Thats "good" stuff. Amazing and heart breaking ​@gib59er56

  • @leebatt7964
    @leebatt7964 Год назад +44

    My younger brother was assigned to a patrol boat in Nam. He once told me he had never felt more alive than when he was out on patrol, he also told me he would never do it again in a million years. He has lived out the rest of his life as a farmer, father and husband. The most excitement he needed after Nam was bowling night and the occasional game of horseshoes. He is in his words, one of the lucky ones.

  • @XC797
    @XC797 Год назад +42

    Thank you to all who served . This was a brutal war .

    • @madeucedancinclub2452
      @madeucedancinclub2452 Год назад +3

      THE US NAVY WAS IN NAM IN 1954 , IN 1955 OTHER MILITARY FORCES ENTERED, THEN THE WAR GREW ,,, THANK FRANCE FOR NAM

    • @madeucedancinclub2452
      @madeucedancinclub2452 Год назад +2

      THANK YOU ,, I AM PROUD THAT I WAS NOT A DRAFT CARD BURNER

    • @narlywaves2371
      @narlywaves2371 Год назад

      You're thanking them for poisoning people and disfiguring kids.

  • @sonnywarren
    @sonnywarren Год назад +19

    RIP RM3 Samuel M Boyce USN
    A-92-2 River Assault Squadron 9 TF 117
    Feb. 21 , 1947 KIA Feb. 6 , 1968
    Vihn Long RVN
    Gone , but never forgotten 🇺🇸

  • @WizzRacing
    @WizzRacing Год назад +204

    First rule in the Nam.. Never get out of the boat...

    • @robertcombs55
      @robertcombs55 Год назад +46

      and NEVER turn your back on a Vietnamese with a weapon! Vietnam Vet 1968-69.

    • @marketablepresentations7824
      @marketablepresentations7824 Год назад +11

      They both make sense. I quess when the Vietnamese took over it was actually the Vietnamese cong taking over. And I questioned we trained them 😮‍💨

    • @JimD410
      @JimD410 Год назад +11

      Apocalypse now!

    • @Captain_Willard
      @Captain_Willard Год назад +1

      Kurtz got off the boat...

    • @JimD410
      @JimD410 Год назад +7

      @@Captain_Willard and he split from the whole f-ckin program.

  • @micahlcurtis
    @micahlcurtis 11 месяцев назад +8

    This what my dad did in Vietnam, scarred him for life. Rip dad

  • @judithcampbell1705
    @judithcampbell1705 Год назад +25

    I lived on an island in Miami Beach Florida and had friends who were drafted to Vietnam. They came back 'different ' and a few didn't come home at all. I met so many soldiers who were maimed and missing limbs. Horrible war that was.
    Thank you for sharing this.

    • @al.march.7457
      @al.march.7457 Год назад +1

      you lucky man,have a unique experience, i wish i would be you.

    • @Pleasurechest985
      @Pleasurechest985 Год назад +1

      Unjust war

    • @narlywaves2371
      @narlywaves2371 Год назад

      @@al.march.7457 y'all are so w/{e] ir(d. ]

    • @larryb982
      @larryb982 Год назад

      ​@@Pleasurechest985?

    • @steveyates1136
      @steveyates1136 10 месяцев назад

      Iraq and Afghanistan has left us with another generation of brave young men missing limbs.

  • @ridgerunner1652
    @ridgerunner1652 Год назад +33

    Worked with a guy at John Deere's in Waterloo, IA in early 70s who had a horror story of being on one of these river boats. Will never forget him and what he told me. 🙏

    • @larryb982
      @larryb982 Год назад

      What was his story ?

    • @revelation20232
      @revelation20232 Год назад +1

      Most combat vets don't talk about their time in war. Always be skeptical of someone who volunteers to tell you their 'war stories'

  • @wastelandradioshow8201
    @wastelandradioshow8201 Год назад +12

    Some who went there, never came back. Some who came back never left there

  • @TraitofSiNN727
    @TraitofSiNN727 Год назад +44

    *"..I was being ferried down the coast in a Navy PBR. A type of plastic patrol boat, a pretty common sight on the rivers.."* - Willard(Apocalypse Now)

    • @Jeremyramone
      @Jeremyramone Год назад +10

      Does Charlie boogie board?

    • @susiejones3634
      @susiejones3634 Год назад +3

      Powerful film.

    • @TraitofSiNN727
      @TraitofSiNN727 Год назад +8

      ​@@Jeremyramone *"..but sir it's Charlie's point.."*
      *'..Charlie don't SURF.."*

    • @TraitofSiNN727
      @TraitofSiNN727 Год назад +7

      @@susiejones3634 well a great story done by Joseph Conrad's heart of Darkness. My Great Grandparents were missionaries out in the Congo during the rule of King Leopold II and stuff I read in their diaries was like reading something from a horror novel. But Apocalypse Now is great adaptation. Including the scene with the French family dinner scene.

    • @brucegibbins3792
      @brucegibbins3792 Год назад

      Even now, the United States continues with its wicked ambitions of world hegemony at the on-going cost of millions of lives - two million, since WW2. Great numbers killed and lives destroyed will be the legacy left by the American Empire.

  • @dale7436
    @dale7436 Год назад +21

    Watching this reminds me, I was a sailor aboard an LST (905) that ran supplies to Saigon and other places along the river. I remember that we hosted an orphanage close to Vung Tao (sp), they could come on board the boat and were treated to candy and a meal and occasional gifts. Very friendly youngsters but I was only 19 at the time and I remember the second time they came to the boat that there was one young boy that it seemed that everyone one loved but the second time he was not with them.
    We found out that the Viet Cong had tricked him into throwing a hand grenade into a quanset hut, it killed five or six GI's, and the military had him in their custody. It did not change our feelings about the boy.

    • @tamaramorton8812
      @tamaramorton8812 Год назад +1

      How awful for that young boy. He was living in a war zone, so everything in his life was probably in such upheaval, but you’d think that would still deeply affect him and influence his perception of himself and of life.

    • @homenj3897
      @homenj3897 Год назад +2

      Vung Tau was in the Australian Sector. They took over the area and separated from the US because they thought our (USA) strategy was stupid and dangerous. Obviously they were correct, regretfully. Whole area was covered with VC, who were from this area. Australians had a huge battle killing over 1K and losing just under 100. The Vietnamese now have allowed the Australians to put up a memorial to honor their fallen. To my understanding this is the only memorial VN has allowed to an enemy. None for US, French or S Korea.
      There is a Buddhist run orphanage in this area, but several miles from the ocean so not sure it’s the one where this boy would have been from.
      What I think few Americans understand is that there was never a front line. There were millions of VC who live all over S Vietnam.

    • @al.march.7457
      @al.march.7457 Год назад

      its a shame.

    • @billywylie3288
      @billywylie3288 9 месяцев назад

      LBJ and his wife took financial control of Bell helicopter and made large investments in Genral dynamics just before he sent troops to Vietnam
      You are rhe one that was tricked
      Yall shove that war down thier throat for money and raw materials like rubber and opium There was never a South Vietnam

  • @markstephens5120
    @markstephens5120 Год назад +27

    My wifes step dad did three tours in Nam as Army Infantry, he was one of many that had to do and see things that most people cant even imagine. Nothing but respect. Love you Roger and thank you for your sacrifice and service. He onky speak of his experience to one person which is my niece that did two tours in Iraq and one in Afghanistan in the 1st Infantry. She joined on her 18th birthday and was in Bagdad for her 19th birthday. She is one of my true heros, she went on to become a drill instructor and made a career out of it. It's people like them that afford the rest of us to live the way we do. Never forget or take for granted what all of our veterans sacrificed for us! Thank you all from the bottom of my heart.

    • @bwana-ma-coo-bah425
      @bwana-ma-coo-bah425 Год назад +3

      It is Vietnam not Nam. What are you a redneck? In relation to Vietnam was the US under attack? And it seems the apple doesn't fall far from the tree.

    • @narlywaves2371
      @narlywaves2371 Год назад

      @@bwana-ma-coo-bah425 ❤️❤️

    • @narlywaves2371
      @narlywaves2371 Год назад

      They sacrificed for the government pockets you klown. These wars are not for us.

    • @larryb982
      @larryb982 Год назад

      ​@@bwana-ma-coo-bah425row row row your boat

    • @bwana-ma-coo-bah425
      @bwana-ma-coo-bah425 Год назад +1

      @@larryb982 was my comment too intellectual for you? probably, yes.

  • @twissracing530
    @twissracing530 Год назад +36

    My dad was a seabee in Vietnam he served from 68-71 and has a whole bunch of health issues because of it including agent orange and that was passed down to his kids.. he doesn’t tell us much of how it was over there so thank you for making these videos showing it!

    • @barryrammer7906
      @barryrammer7906 Год назад +6

      Very important fighting construction workers. They built most of everything in ever theaters of war since WW2.

    • @al.march.7457
      @al.march.7457 Год назад +2

      movie "apocalips today" showing much of how it was!

    • @al.march.7457
      @al.march.7457 Год назад +2

      @@barryrammer7906 is it like auxillary?

    • @barryrammer7906
      @barryrammer7906 Год назад +6

      @al.march.7457 No, we have full-time construction battalions. About 700 men per battalion. We work with every branch of the service. We build forward bases even for the army special forces. In WW2, SEABEES hit the beaches in Iwo Jima in the 2nd wave. Took a lot of killed and injured. 40% casualties, I believe. In the Second World War, we were islands hoping with Marines units. We were the first on the Normandy beaches and destroyed mine fields. This was before navy SEALS. We and full-time frog men, one of the inspirations to make that unit. Then, they built the causeway and bridges. In Alaska, they built the bases air strips. General Patton requested use of us to build his bridges and roads. But he made us wear army uniforms, lol. We are construction specialists of all the tades. We get combat training with the Marines. We carry weapons and use them. Then go back to work. We also have 2 amphibious battalions, 100 construction divers, and men each. To build underwater wires, fuel line docks even help ships if needed once in a while to fix battle damage. We were in every war since the second WW2. We can build anything and defend ourselves or even help Marines or army special forces if needed. We have been in the most theater's of war than anyone other units in the Navy. We even stole a train from the North Koreans on the Inchon landings to move supplies to advancing Marines. We have quit a good bit of history you never heard of. We always get mistaken for Marines or the Army, but we are proud branch of the Navy you have never heard of. Our motto is "can do" and "We built and fight." Hope this helps not bragging just proud to be one. We have much much more history than this brief summary.

    • @twissracing530
      @twissracing530 Год назад +2

      @@barryrammer7906 wow I had no idea about all that especially being the first on the beaches in Normandy! Thank you for sharing and thank you for your service 🙏🏼❤️🇺🇸

  • @exidy-yt
    @exidy-yt Год назад +17

    I was born just as the Viet Nam war was winding down, and saw Apocalypse Now in elementary school, so let me just make the legendary observation (probably already done before many times on this video) about the Nung river and the Mekong delta:
    "It's Charlie's point!" "Well, Charlie don't surf!"

  • @robertcombs55
    @robertcombs55 Год назад +21

    I served my year in a USAF Helicopter Sq; what we did was dangerous; but NOTHING as bad as the Brown River Navy...

  • @higgs923
    @higgs923 Год назад +7

    Served with CTF-116 stationed at NSAD BinhThuy in '71-'72. Thanks for letting folks know a bit of "What it was like."

  • @AHLUser
    @AHLUser 10 месяцев назад +2

    My Family Doctor was in Vietnam as a Field Surgeon. They tried a new idea to drop the surgeons into the LZ and start medical treatment on the way to the MASH in an attempt to increase the chances of survival for the soldiers. Unfortunately, over 50% of the doctors were killed in combat, and so the program was cancelled. He NEVER talked about it, but I saw his Purple Hearts, Bronze Stars & other medals at his funeral. He was a True Ef'fin Hero... and not a clown in a TV Sit-Com..!! Please produce a doc featuring the Nurses & Doctors.
    They are 'Unsung Heroes & Under Valued' as well as the Chopper Pilots and Field Medics. They ALL deserve a Memorial in DC and a HUGE token of sincere gratitude.

  • @leewhisenant4459
    @leewhisenant4459 Год назад +19

    My friend Moses was a gunner on a river boat. It messed up his mind and he never wanted any new friends or be around people. He could hit a target with my pos six shooter at unbelievable distances. I asked how as I was just a kid and he replied with when you’re aim is life or death you get good quick or die quicker. He once introduced himself and his wife by saying this is my first ex wife! I now understand what he meant. Rip brother! I hope his son is ok.

  • @ericarbib4183
    @ericarbib4183 Год назад +18

    I already heard of the patrol boats in Viet nam in 1974,. I was drafted in the Israeli defence
    forces together with an American the served 24 months as a petty officier 2 on the Mekong river.

    • @hippiesaboteur2556
      @hippiesaboteur2556 Год назад

      Man wow holy cow, I had no idea that IDF was even there or in any way involved in the war back then! Thanks for sharing & thank you for your service, Shalom!!

  • @paulslajchert937
    @paulslajchert937 Год назад +14

    I wonder what the lives are like today for each person in these videos are like

    • @CarlWithACamera
      @CarlWithACamera Год назад +4

      I know a Vietnam vet who fought in Da Nang. He built a sailboat in CA, a 26 footer. Sailed it around the world, traded it for a 36 footer, named Sunshine, and sailed that one halfway round the world, stopping here in The Philippines where he lives a peaceful life today. Terrific guy with horrific stories of one of the more violent parts of the Vietnam war.

  • @randyfirst5747
    @randyfirst5747 Год назад +1

    Kids fighting the fight of their lives in a horrible killer war. True American HEROS
    Thank you for your service
    Salute 🇺🇸

  • @krakrtreacysr907
    @krakrtreacysr907 Год назад +2

    My co worker and mentor Willard Ferguson was on a river boat in Nam.. one of the nicest you to ever met from Tennessee

  • @mikeschumacher9715
    @mikeschumacher9715 Год назад +4

    My uncle served 4 tours on the Mekong, with Riveron Force 113. Silver Star/V and Bronze Star/V as a Boatswains Mate.

  • @zeaksims165
    @zeaksims165 Год назад +2

    Thank you all for your service ❤❤

  • @oldViking66
    @oldViking66 Год назад +12

    I had an uncle he was a gunner on the back of a PT Boat ( I have a picture of him between what i think are 2 M60's ) he was a big Man over 6'2 and later a Navy seal he did go on to retire with the Navy he was Born and raised in Polk county, Florida.
    R.I.P. uncle Tommy

  • @bryanfreese5155
    @bryanfreese5155 Год назад +4

    I'm a Gulf War era veteran, salute to my Vietnam veteran brothers 🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @shAdOwstAlkEr945
    @shAdOwstAlkEr945 Год назад +31

    I learned more about the PBR (Patrol Boat-River) from Jeremy Clarkson during their Seamen special from The Grand Tour. Love the jet drive on those things.

    • @RogersGirl88
      @RogersGirl88 Год назад +6

      Apocalypse Now. Please rent it. Its one of the 100 best films of all time. One of the top 10 vietnam films of all time. And the best PBR film of all time.

    • @johnscanlon2598
      @johnscanlon2598 Год назад

      That was a good episode

  • @thenusjudice5756
    @thenusjudice5756 Год назад +4

    Had one school mate on a river patrol, 2 years older than me, was ambushed by the vc, came home ina coffin. Name was Tommy Eldridge. So sad, and I was in the lair force at the time, training to go to Southeast Asia, ended up in Viet Nam.

  • @WOMPITUS
    @WOMPITUS Год назад +7

    My dad was a River Rat. Spent his time on a swift boat.

    • @brickcitybeatdown
      @brickcitybeatdown Год назад

      No one cares

    • @WOMPITUS
      @WOMPITUS Год назад +2

      @@brickcitybeatdown lol I know

    • @RobertEckert-g4j
      @RobertEckert-g4j Год назад +4

      I care. Maybe I knew him. I was with the 9th Infantry Division RiverRats as an interrogator in charge of the POW boat.

    • @WOMPITUS
      @WOMPITUS Год назад +1

      @@RobertEckert-g4j My dad spent most of his time on a swift boat. 1970

  • @randallbroadus3213
    @randallbroadus3213 Год назад +8

    My brother in law was with the river patrol in Nam.god bless him may he R.I.P..Good man from Tennessee born and raised there.

  • @terryleericejr7349
    @terryleericejr7349 Год назад +3

    My Dad joined the Navy straight out of highschool he spent the last 2 1/2 years of war war 2 Vietnam war he did River runs

  • @bushmansa518
    @bushmansa518 Год назад +6

    Those Piggs look fantastic mounted to the vessel !

    • @Possum_13
      @Possum_13 Год назад +1

      Not too bad on a UH1 either!😃

  • @RaymondPringle-r1w
    @RaymondPringle-r1w Год назад +2

    I served on the Harnett county LST 821 while she was in viet nam an it took almost 10 years to stop the nightmares from that experience

  • @Alligator6002
    @Alligator6002 Год назад

    The ingenuity of a good ol' trusty tin can helping the feed on the.60 never ceases to make me smile.

  • @DougieFresh765
    @DougieFresh765 Год назад +7

    Navy PBR looked glamorous on Apacalypse Now

    • @cosmiccharlie8294
      @cosmiccharlie8294 Год назад

      Did you notice Bill Graham, the famous Rock Promoter on both coasts, was the front man for USO bunnies in that film? What a riot!

  • @chadL.321
    @chadL.321 Год назад

    Breaks my heart in a good way to see heart warming moments in the midst of war

  • @xavierfelix2567
    @xavierfelix2567 Год назад +5

    My best friend was on a pt boat patrolling the delta using a 50 cal. His stories still make me shudder!! He died young because of exposure to chemical elements..💔

  • @-east-coast-florist
    @-east-coast-florist 11 месяцев назад

    Wow great Documentary.
    Pops was with the Mobile Riverine Force on the Delta with the 9th Infantry..!! 67-68
    Much Respect to all who Put their lives on the line and Fought For our Freedoms..!! It’s Truly Appreciated.

  • @davidgrossman5104
    @davidgrossman5104 11 месяцев назад +6

    I was on a PBR from 1969 to 1970 , one of our jobs was to set up ambushes on the Vinh Te Canal which was close to Cambodian border . It was a huge infiltration route for the NVA into Vietnam. Spent a few nights on the beach so we had to get out of the boat , scary !

    • @RandyFrazier-oz2gf
      @RandyFrazier-oz2gf 10 месяцев назад

      Did you know my brother Pete Frazier battle of Snoopys nose? 20 mm cannoner bronze star purple heart

    • @RandyFrazier-oz2gf
      @RandyFrazier-oz2gf 10 месяцев назад

      Did you know Pete Frazier Snoopys nose

    • @davidgrossman5104
      @davidgrossman5104 10 месяцев назад

      @@RandyFrazier-oz2gf I’m sorry sir , I did not know him

  • @PanamaSticks
    @PanamaSticks Год назад +1

    Coworker of mine was on a gunboat in 'Nam. He said they spent a lot of time cruising up and down the river. When they weren't stopping and inspecting boats, they were simply waiting for VC to take pot shots at them from the jungle lining the river.

  • @thenusjudice5756
    @thenusjudice5756 Год назад +3

    Another school mate
    Who was 2 years younger than me was a door gunner on a Huey, didn’t make it back home neither, Robert Shuptrine was his name.

  • @RogersGirl88
    @RogersGirl88 Год назад +10

    The best movie ever made involving the brown water navy was Apocalypse Now. If youre reading this and havent seen that movie, rent it now! Its a Vietnam war interpretation of the novel Heart Of Darkness about an english river boat man traveling up a river in africa.

  • @BuckCaballero
    @BuckCaballero Год назад +3

    The first half of the documentary was what I was interested in, the second half was but a pipe dream for it didn't take long for Saigon to fall after the U.S. pulled out.

    • @scotishjohn
      @scotishjohn Год назад

      😢tue😊😊

    • @darb4091
      @darb4091 9 месяцев назад

      Funny how it was repeated 50 years later.

  • @premierhoner614
    @premierhoner614 10 месяцев назад

    We salute you all brave souls. From Capetown South Africa..

  • @robertmonfort7794
    @robertmonfort7794 Год назад +6

    My first Chief in the Navy was a "river rat" That dude was unflapable. I served with him in the 80's on a submarine.

    • @mx-k
      @mx-k 10 месяцев назад

      My boat was T-cup SSBN 628. I also rode the Bluefish and Stoney-J

  • @charleswheeler3689
    @charleswheeler3689 Год назад +5

    I understand that the Riverine force was reactivated in the early 2000's.

    • @grayhawk66
      @grayhawk66 Год назад

      Yes it was the Marines had it, then turn it over back to the Navy Expeditionary Warfare Command.

  • @jwfinley7808
    @jwfinley7808 Год назад +1

    I remember the war! My uncle was in it. I'll never forget how it was at home. I dont know how it was in Vietnam. I Hear many many story's.

  • @gloriawilson3241
    @gloriawilson3241 Год назад +1

    My older brother served on a Navy PBR and received a Purple heart and Bronze Star. His name was Bill Wilson.

  • @francisbusa1074
    @francisbusa1074 7 месяцев назад

    Heart breaking how we were suckered into a war we never should have gotten into. So many valiant warriors who lost their lives. So many came back never to be the same again. The corruption of our military industrial complex, our government and the South Vietnamese government was breathtaking. Many of us who served were gullible youths who believed the propaganda fed to us. We didn't even know to question it. So terribly tragic for all involved...
    I'm still proud of our service, as we truly believed we served a good cause, and were willing to risk our lives to "liberate" S. Vietnam.

  • @georgezink8256
    @georgezink8256 Год назад +5

    Combat wounded Vietnam 67/69 combat engr.

  • @tomlu6249
    @tomlu6249 Год назад +2

    So glad it worked all worked up according to plan

  • @Prepper319
    @Prepper319 10 месяцев назад

    thank you !
    to ALL the men & women who served . as salamu alaykum ❤

  • @Air-bear
    @Air-bear Год назад +6

    Gadfly here 🤫
    Running up a inlet that is too shallow. That depends on the time of year
    You need a local scout 😬

  • @jeromecorcoran3212
    @jeromecorcoran3212 Год назад +25

    John Kerry's fraudulent lie about himself was based upon these brave men.

    • @dbeaus
      @dbeaus Год назад +9

      Kerry spent 2 years in Vietnam, no one has ever proven what he said to be false. Where were you hero? I was there in 69 but we had the pleasure of walking every where we went. Up north, very few rivers, no roads. Respect to those who were in those boats.

    • @100perdido
      @100perdido Год назад +2

      Kerry should have easily avoided the military and Vietnam but he didn't. What's your story?

    • @100perdido
      @100perdido Год назад

      @@dbeaus I found an old book on naval history and it turns out that the navy named a river boat tactical maneuver for John Kerry.

  • @rickswineberg
    @rickswineberg Год назад +1

    The Grand Tour brought me here.

  • @jona_KardCiv1
    @jona_KardCiv1 Год назад +1

    My Father served on a PBR in 1967, out of a base further north on the Mekong.

  • @JRey-re9rl
    @JRey-re9rl Год назад +7

    We had no business helping the French, in their pursuit to regain rule of Viet Nam and the opium trade; and, we had to business in violating the sovereignty of the people of Viet Nam.
    Our soldiers, sailors, Marines, and airmen should never have been sent.

  • @sarahpham540
    @sarahpham540 Год назад

    Thank for your service

  • @ronniewilson9820
    @ronniewilson9820 Год назад +4

    How many commercials can you cram into a documentary? Damn!

  • @jimmyjrleonard6798
    @jimmyjrleonard6798 Год назад

    Really enjoyed this video.. please put out more content

  • @bbb462cid
    @bbb462cid 6 месяцев назад +1

    PBR Streetgang, this is Almighty

  • @joelbrown259
    @joelbrown259 Год назад +16

    I WAS THERE IN 1969-1970 PBR DIVISION 514 MEKONG DELTA/BA SOCK RIVER, BIEN THEY. I LIVE NOW IN ISRAEL RETIRED USN. NOW I LIVE WITH PIJ/HAMAS FIRING ROCKETS. BAD GUYS NEVER STOP. FORTUNATELY MY AREA IN ISRAEL HAS BEEN SPARED ANY DIRECT SO FAR HITS. PRAY FOR MANKIND TO HAVE PEACE NOT WAR.

    • @robertcombs55
      @robertcombs55 Год назад +1

      The end of the world will start with the Russians and Chinese TRYING to destroy Israel. I served in Combat in Vietnam 1968-69...I pray my death is quick and painless in the next war.

  • @paranormalskeptic3893
    @paranormalskeptic3893 Год назад +1

    I had a cousin who did 2 tours in the Mekong Delta. Died in a car crash when he got back to the states.

  • @davidcerullo7976
    @davidcerullo7976 Год назад +1

    The South Vietnamese defection rate was 50%.

  • @SkyPilot54
    @SkyPilot54 9 месяцев назад +1

    John Kerry disgraced the courage of so many brave men

    • @francisbusa1074
      @francisbusa1074 7 месяцев назад

      Unfit for command! I remember him quite well when the two of us served aboard Gridley DLG-21 in '67 and '68. This was when he was just an ensign. He was still planning to take his movie camera and volunteer to serve in country, so he could document his heroic exploits on film. This was supposed to make him the second JFK Navy hero future President. Unbelievable.

  • @angloaust1575
    @angloaust1575 Год назад +1

    River deep mountain high
    Every valley exalted
    Every mountain laid low!

  • @jhsrecordsentertainment4972
    @jhsrecordsentertainment4972 Год назад +2

    Recon "tunnel rats" life expectancy was less then months. No one who served was less than other. Semper Fi.

  • @garytotty3971
    @garytotty3971 Год назад +8

    you need to spend a week in the Ashau Valley or the Que Son Valley, and learn what it is to be a tough place

    • @steveyates1136
      @steveyates1136 10 месяцев назад

      Did you spend time in either place, or have you just seen a couple movies?

  • @patrickbowles7888
    @patrickbowles7888 Год назад +1

    No man left behind for the enemy to find

  • @timothypeterson1166
    @timothypeterson1166 Год назад +1

    God Bless All our Troops 👍

  • @joebournat
    @joebournat Год назад +5

    Poor guys. Sucked into a war that should never have been and which they had no chance of winning. It doesn't take away the bravery of men forced to be there but my God, what a waste.

    • @johnscanlon2598
      @johnscanlon2598 Год назад +1

      Would have easily won if it weren’t for politics

    • @John-um6pm
      @John-um6pm Год назад

      The friggen democrats didn't want to win. Fact.

  • @stevenwiederholt7000
    @stevenwiederholt7000 Год назад

    Its Rapidly Becoming A Long Time Ago. We're all in our 70's, 80's.

    • @RandyFrazier-oz2gf
      @RandyFrazier-oz2gf 10 месяцев назад

      Did you know my brother Pete Frazier Snoopys nose

  • @ballyhoo48
    @ballyhoo48 Год назад +3

    I have great admiration for these brave guys sent to war by people sitting at home with their families.
    This does come across as a propaganda film but then I guess they all were.

  • @ZEWlistener
    @ZEWlistener Год назад

    My brother in law served with PBR RIV DIV 512 69 - 70. He rarely speaks about his time over there, but when he does it is about the incredibly brave men he served with.

  • @georgewaller2370
    @georgewaller2370 11 месяцев назад

    God bless the Americans that fought and those that didn't make it home

  • @nobrenobre1
    @nobrenobre1 Год назад +4

    The American vision of Vietnam is so beautiful, that they didn't want it!

  • @johnbrown5565
    @johnbrown5565 7 месяцев назад

    There are 11,000 miles of navigable water in Vietnam. Some 8,000 Coast Guardsmen served in the brown water Navy. A few were KIA, 50 or 60 wounded. People told me for 50 years the CG never went to Vietnam. The Riverine services shut down the transfer of arms by sea and river by late 1968. We boarded and searched hundreds of sampans and fishing boats. The tracers you see in this film are only every third round.
    U.S. Coast Guard '68 '69 and the "Gulf of Tonkin Yacht Club".

  • @erin19030
    @erin19030 Год назад +2

    Great film. I felt like I was there again.

  • @johnscanlon2598
    @johnscanlon2598 Год назад

    So well narrated

  • @RandyFrazier-oz2gf
    @RandyFrazier-oz2gf 10 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the reply

  • @Hảo_Nguyễn_Cuối_Tuần
    @Hảo_Nguyễn_Cuối_Tuần Год назад +1

    5 years of service + 5 years of political prison camp + 15 years of poverty as 2nd class citizen & we finally arrive in US in 1995.😊

  • @erin19030
    @erin19030 Год назад +2

    Charlie was told to get off his boat and swim for his life. If he didn’t we lobed one over from a safe distance.

    • @scottyfox6376
      @scottyfox6376 Год назад +1

      Right on top of Charlie sounds like a pretty safe distance to me.😉

  • @prissprissy2251
    @prissprissy2251 Год назад

    Nobody should have been in Vietnam they were not a threat to us or any Western country we should be ashamed of ourselves they are beautiful and forgiving people all they did was defend their country against aggression

  • @thethaovatoquoc312
    @thethaovatoquoc312 Год назад

    To your dad and all the military veterans from USA and Allies having participated in Korean War and Vietnam War, thank you for your service for trying to contain the spread of the deadly and toxic Communism which remains an existential threat to individual freedom, human dignity, and basic decency worldwide even to these days. Commies are a stain on humanity! Perhaps just like the South Korean, the South Vietnamese feel forever grateful and indebted to the sacrifices of US and Allie troops during the eternal fight between good versus evil.

  • @baiazhar7213
    @baiazhar7213 7 месяцев назад

    These protests played a significant role in shaping public opinion and ultimately influenced U.S. policy regarding the Vietnam War. It’s a testament to the power of peaceful protest and the impact that ordinary citizens can have on the course of history. Why?

  • @americanlegend1000
    @americanlegend1000 Год назад

    Great video. I wish I could hear the too soft audio.....

  • @Wilt8v92
    @Wilt8v92 Год назад +1

    Those Detroit Diesel sound good,no mistaking those mkfkrs..

    • @6milemary419
      @6milemary419 Год назад

      Wow! Were there other factories, aside the Telegraph Road location?

  • @Captain_Willard
    @Captain_Willard Год назад +1

    Up the Nung River, 75 clicks past the Do Lung bridge

    • @RandyFrazier-oz2gf
      @RandyFrazier-oz2gf 10 месяцев назад

      Did you know my brother Pete Frazier Snoopys nose

  • @BrianLevine-vd6bn
    @BrianLevine-vd6bn Год назад

    My friend the Reverend Ron Teal did two tours in a PBR. Became a Reverend when he got back.

  • @MrKashia95
    @MrKashia95 Месяц назад

    First rule of being in foreign waters avoid the dark objects in the water.

  • @rustyjohnson9558
    @rustyjohnson9558 Год назад +2

    We came, we rode, we smoked, we left. How many ship loads of cigarettes were senselessly smoked for nothing. We are searching these dangerous peasants.....calmly puffing on a Winston. And the music, God, the music.....still hear CCR in my sleep.....

  • @laurasalazar9222
    @laurasalazar9222 Год назад +1

    My first cousin Warren Terrebone did 3 tours in Vietnam & survived all 3 tours just to come back to get killed on the Mississippi River when his Tug boat he was working on was hit by a Ship , never ever finding the tugboat , RIP Cuz !!!!!

  • @erin19030
    @erin19030 Год назад +2

    Little known were the 105 Howitzers on floating barges. This was Army, not Navy !

    • @JosephDowling-i9b
      @JosephDowling-i9b Год назад

      There were also barges rigged with sleeping quarters, a kitchen, showers etc. that served as a floating home base for several PBRs.

  • @TheDuffpaddy
    @TheDuffpaddy Год назад

    My neighbor was on those boats. He told me stories . 2 boats blown out from under him. God bless

  • @andyrobinson5159
    @andyrobinson5159 Год назад +4

    This would be a good show if the TRUTH was in it!!

  • @baiazhar7213
    @baiazhar7213 7 месяцев назад

    The war had profound effects on all parties involved and continues to influence U.S. policy and international relations today. It's always crucial to learn from history to avoid repeating past mistakes and strive for peace and understanding among nations....how aout Iraq or any African countries or Middle east influence

  • @BarryRobinson-n2z
    @BarryRobinson-n2z Год назад +1

    My uncle Rodney Moss did 3-tours doing this!