MISIDENTIFIED PHOTOGRAPH SGT (posthumous promotion from SP4) Milton Cook (no middle name) of Detroit, Michigan, enlisted on 30 May 1967, began his tour in Vietnam on 21 December 1967 and was KIA while serving in Company A, 2nd Battalion, 39th Infantry, 1st Brigade, 9th Infantry Division. The photograph above of the soldier firing a machinegun is an official US Army photograph taken by Department of the Army Special Photographic Office photographer Robert C. Lafoon. As part of his official duties as a photographer he recorded the photo as being of PFC Milton L. Cook of Baltimore, Maryland, serving in Company C, 1st Battalion, 5th Infantry (Mechanized), 2nd Brigade, 25th Infantry Division. He also recorded the date of the photograph as 8 January 1967, more than 11 months before SGT Milton Cook arrived in Vietnam and 4 months before he even enlisted in the Army. Clearly they have been confused with each other due to their similar names, but the man pictured is definitely not the Milton Cook who was killed in action.
That seems stupid one you’re not gonna hit him or scare him and two he’s just gonna snipe you and then move locations like any sniper with a brain would do
MISIDENTIFIED PHOTOGRAPH SGT (posthumous promotion from SP4) Milton Cook (no middle name) of Detroit, Michigan, enlisted on 30 May 1967, began his tour in Vietnam on 21 December 1967 and was KIA while serving in Company A, 2nd Battalion, 39th Infantry, 1st Brigade, 9th Infantry Division. The photograph above of the soldier firing a machinegun is an official US Army photograph taken by Department of the Army Special Photographic Office photographer Robert C. Lafoon. As part of his official duties as a photographer he recorded the photo as being of PFC Milton L. Cook of Baltimore, Maryland, serving in Company C, 1st Battalion, 5th Infantry (Mechanized), 2nd Brigade, 25th Infantry Division. He also recorded the date of the photograph as 8 January 1967, more than 11 months before SGT Milton Cook arrived in Vietnam and 4 months before he even enlisted in the Army. Clearly they have been confused with each other due to their similar names, but the man pictured is definitely not the Milton Cook who was killed in action.
From vietnam wall of faces... MISIDENTIFIED PHOTOGRAPH SGT (posthumous promotion from SP4) Milton Cook (no middle name) of Detroit, Michigan, enlisted on 30 May 1967, began his tour in Vietnam on 21 December 1967 and was KIA while serving in Company A, 2nd Battalion, 39th Infantry, 1st Brigade, 9th Infantry Division. The photograph above of the soldier firing a machinegun is an official US Army photograph taken by Department of the Army Special Photographic Office photographer Robert C. Lafoon. As part of his official duties as a photographer he recorded the photo as being of PFC Milton L. Cook of Baltimore, Maryland, serving in Company C, 1st Battalion, 5th Infantry (Mechanized), 2nd Brigade, 25th Infantry Division. He also recorded the date of the photograph as 8 January 1967, more than 11 months before SGT Milton Cook arrived in Vietnam and 4 months before he even enlisted in the Army. Clearly they have been confused with each other due to their similar names, but the man pictured is definitely not the Milton Cook who was killed in action.
MISIDENTIFIED PHOTOGRAPH SGT (posthumous promotion from SP4) Milton Cook (no middle name) of Detroit, Michigan, enlisted on 30 May 1967, began his tour in Vietnam on 21 December 1967 and was KIA while serving in Company A, 2nd Battalion, 39th Infantry, 1st Brigade, 9th Infantry Division. The photograph above of the soldier firing a machinegun is an official US Army photograph taken by Department of the Army Special Photographic Office photographer Robert C. Lafoon. As part of his official duties as a photographer he recorded the photo as being of PFC Milton L. Cook of Baltimore, Maryland, serving in Company C, 1st Battalion, 5th Infantry (Mechanized), 2nd Brigade, 25th Infantry Division. He also recorded the date of the photograph as 8 January 1967, more than 11 months before SGT Milton Cook arrived in Vietnam and 4 months before he even enlisted in the Army. Clearly they have been confused with each other due to their similar names, but the man pictured is definitely not the Milton Cook who was killed in action.
Truly a "GET SOME!" moment.
The shining example of that old man in the veterans ball cap was once more of a badass then you will ever be.
I ALWAYS thank them for their service and let them know many of my generation are very grateful.
@@92GreyBluethank them for warcrimes? Nice!
@@stopstealingmyname5794ur braindead
@@stopstealingmyname5794 And a word from The Weakest Generation.
@@RidgeRunner-lz5ko they lost the war
Which was useless
when you don't know which trees are vietcong
Rip Milton cook
MISIDENTIFIED PHOTOGRAPH
SGT (posthumous promotion from SP4) Milton Cook (no middle name) of Detroit, Michigan, enlisted on 30 May 1967, began his tour in Vietnam on 21 December 1967 and was KIA while serving in Company A, 2nd Battalion, 39th Infantry, 1st Brigade, 9th Infantry Division.
The photograph above of the soldier firing a machinegun is an official US Army photograph taken by Department of the Army Special Photographic Office photographer Robert C. Lafoon. As part of his official duties as a photographer he recorded the photo as being of PFC Milton L. Cook of Baltimore, Maryland, serving in Company C, 1st Battalion, 5th Infantry (Mechanized), 2nd Brigade, 25th Infantry Division. He also recorded the date of the photograph as 8 January 1967, more than 11 months before SGT Milton Cook arrived in Vietnam and 4 months before he even enlisted in the Army.
Clearly they have been confused with each other due to their similar names, but the man pictured is definitely not the Milton Cook who was killed in action.
@@georgewashington3393 did PFC Milton L. Cook survive the war?
It appears he did
@@georgewashington3393need you at the FBI with that research… dang!!
Rambro
Dammit
You beat me
True hero.
Dang just seen this Vietnam vet shoot it from the hip & it shook him 😳 this soldier here was strong
Holy shit! That brother ain't playin!
This makes me want to meet this dude in person and shake his hand I wouldn’t have the courage to do that 😂
well, he died back in nam unfortunately
yup^ rest in peace milton cook
Nice, clip those Charlies like it ain't nothing! RIP Cook!
my Grandpa have this inside his storage, he was in Vietnam as Specialist until 1974
But you're Russian
he was firing because a nva sniper was spotted in the area
That seems stupid one you’re not gonna hit him or scare him and two he’s just gonna snipe you and then move locations like any sniper with a brain would do
Hell yeah 🔥
His name was. Milton Cook he was kill he did not make it home
Damn, did not know that... Will include it in description, thank you.
he was big kill
😞 prayers to him and his family
yeah :/ sadly the life expectancy of a machine gunner in Vietnam was seven to ten seconds after a firefight began.
Maybe it was because he was firing from the hip? 😮
GET SOME!
Get some baby!!!
R.I.P Milton Cook, thank you for your service in defending the country I'm proud to home.
MISIDENTIFIED PHOTOGRAPH
SGT (posthumous promotion from SP4) Milton Cook (no middle name) of Detroit, Michigan, enlisted on 30 May 1967, began his tour in Vietnam on 21 December 1967 and was KIA while serving in Company A, 2nd Battalion, 39th Infantry, 1st Brigade, 9th Infantry Division.
The photograph above of the soldier firing a machinegun is an official US Army photograph taken by Department of the Army Special Photographic Office photographer Robert C. Lafoon. As part of his official duties as a photographer he recorded the photo as being of PFC Milton L. Cook of Baltimore, Maryland, serving in Company C, 1st Battalion, 5th Infantry (Mechanized), 2nd Brigade, 25th Infantry Division. He also recorded the date of the photograph as 8 January 1967, more than 11 months before SGT Milton Cook arrived in Vietnam and 4 months before he even enlisted in the Army.
Clearly they have been confused with each other due to their similar names, but the man pictured is definitely not the Milton Cook who was killed in action.
I can't decide which is better, this, or the guy shooting the pot plants in Afghanistan with the M240.
Permanent hearing damage
NVA snipers need love too
This explains the Vietnam War in 20 seconds
"Get some "
Rocknroll intensifyes
Good morning vietnam🦅
"Gromit.
Did that tree just speak Vietnamese?"
6-9 round bursts!! Get some! RIP.❤
This man don't fuk Around !! 🤣😆✌️👍
That’s called spraying the area
The soldier that is shooting did not die
No. Milton Cook is dead
@@Phan-Xu yes one who is KIA is from Detroit the one on the video is from Baltimore he did not die
@@anthonyr5869 I saw his image on WALL OF FACES.
@@Phan-Xu yeah but it’s a mistake
@@Phan-Xu both have the same name
Coolness aside, I can't imagine the fear of firing a machine gun and not even knowing where the target could be.
He was so badass
Good moment, but it was for the cameras.
That's one badass motha.
Bro thats so cool
Nov 14 1965.
What is the background song called mate?
From vietnam wall of faces...
MISIDENTIFIED PHOTOGRAPH
SGT (posthumous promotion from SP4) Milton Cook (no middle name) of Detroit, Michigan, enlisted on 30 May 1967, began his tour in Vietnam on 21 December 1967 and was KIA while serving in Company A, 2nd Battalion, 39th Infantry, 1st Brigade, 9th Infantry Division.
The photograph above of the soldier firing a machinegun is an official US Army photograph taken by Department of the Army Special Photographic Office photographer Robert C. Lafoon. As part of his official duties as a photographer he recorded the photo as being of PFC Milton L. Cook of Baltimore, Maryland, serving in Company C, 1st Battalion, 5th Infantry (Mechanized), 2nd Brigade, 25th Infantry Division. He also recorded the date of the photograph as 8 January 1967, more than 11 months before SGT Milton Cook arrived in Vietnam and 4 months before he even enlisted in the Army.
Clearly they have been confused with each other due to their similar names, but the man pictured is definitely not the Milton Cook who was killed in action.
He is the true Rambo, Stalone is the White Rambo then
That machine gun will rout the Charlies hiding in the bush?
Thats the idea, yeah, that or either to make them keep their heads down.
If he moves, he's VC.
If he doesn't move, he's a well-discipline VC.
Sir, your hearing loss is not service related
Where certain people congregate.
I bet he love shrimpin
Suppressing fire
👍
Woah
GET SUM BABY 0:10
SSS cat ?
That’s a large amount of ammo to shoot skywards. 😂😂 He must be a pacifist cause all those rounds go straight over the enemies heads.
I work with a black guy here in Alabama that fought in the Vietnam war. I asked what where you carrying in the war he sed M/60
sadly is imposible they are the same, the guy of the video died in service.
MISIDENTIFIED PHOTOGRAPH
SGT (posthumous promotion from SP4) Milton Cook (no middle name) of Detroit, Michigan, enlisted on 30 May 1967, began his tour in Vietnam on 21 December 1967 and was KIA while serving in Company A, 2nd Battalion, 39th Infantry, 1st Brigade, 9th Infantry Division.
The photograph above of the soldier firing a machinegun is an official US Army photograph taken by Department of the Army Special Photographic Office photographer Robert C. Lafoon. As part of his official duties as a photographer he recorded the photo as being of PFC Milton L. Cook of Baltimore, Maryland, serving in Company C, 1st Battalion, 5th Infantry (Mechanized), 2nd Brigade, 25th Infantry Division. He also recorded the date of the photograph as 8 January 1967, more than 11 months before SGT Milton Cook arrived in Vietnam and 4 months before he even enlisted in the Army.
Clearly they have been confused with each other due to their similar names, but the man pictured is definitely not the Milton Cook who was killed in action.
What the fuck was bro even shooting at?😂
He’s suppressing the area before they advance
GET SOOOMMMMMEEEEEEEEE UHHHHHHHH 💪🏼🫡😶🌫️
Bro is literally shooting at nothing 💀
威嚇射撃か面制圧が目的なのでは?と、巧妙に偽装を施されていて完全に環境に溶け込んでいるから何処に潜伏しているか分からないので取り敢えず面制圧を試みたみたいな感じかな?と、後は奇襲されない様に威嚇したとか?かな??と。
多分、撃ってる小隊からは見えてないけどアンブッシュしている相手からはよく見えてると云う状態だと思われます。
@@tokoname19790803 what
800 yards clear...lol
Copy removing that direction
Get some get some get some
Bro, it's brown, not black
Sorry but your hearing loss is not service related
GET SOME , GET THOSE FUCKIN GUNS UP BABY!
spray n pray