Tag Archives: Hoi An

New MACV website

Speaking of my old “gun jeep” with its pedestal-mounted fifty caliber, there’s a new web site, a blog really, for MACV units, mainly advisors to ARVN and RF-PFs. Some commenter mentioned my old assignment, Moc Bai (Que Son District, Quang Nam Province), saying it was near something called Hill 65. Which led me to post this in reply:

“I was assistant later senior at Moc Bai in ’69, MAT I-11. Never heard the hill called 65. It was LZ Baldy to Americans, Nui Que to the Vietnamese. Americal’s 196th LIB was there for much of ’69 before Vietnamization sent the unit home, though troops with time left were dispersed elsewhere. We missed their good artillery and all the good scrounging since the RF-PF supply system was a bad joke.

“They were replaced by the 7th Marine Regiment whose artillery wasn’t as good and the scrounging became outright stealing because they weren’t so willing to supply us with food, fuel and ammo. In first half of ’70 I was night duty officer in the TOC at our headquarters up the road in Hoi An. Later I doubled up on delivering new radio codes to outlying MATs, some far beyond any other American unit. G-d knows how they survived without supply.

“Hoi An’s MACV compound then occasionally got mortared but nothing serious. The compound’s buildings were said to originally have been built by the East India Company. The town’s harbor was a stop on the ‘Silk Road’ made by sail from Europe to China for hundreds of years before the American war.”

Hardly anyone I have ever met, combat veteran or REMF, in all the years since ’70 ever understood what a MAT was or what an “advisor” did. All but two of the books and all of the movies have ignored us. Now, at least, we finally have a Web site.

The Japanese Bridge

Japanese Bridge,HoiAn.JPG

Built in the late Sixteenth Century by Japanese merchants in the southern central Vietnamese port town of Hoi An (a stop on the old Silk Road), the bridge is said to have supernatural powers, perhaps owing to the monkey and dog gods that guard its either ends. Clicking through a passel of photos, taken by Snoopy the Goon on a recent family tour of Viet Nam and Cambodia, I recognized the bridge immediately. Although I think it was a different pastel color when I knew it as an Army advisor in 1969-70. Posted with STG’s kind permission.

Viet Nam redux

OCS buddy Jerry Noga has returned from what he jokingly calls his "second tour" in Viet Nam, with the news that "the Vietnamese people are very interested in having tourists" and the tourism is "safe, comfortable and relatively inexpensive." The worst part was "the LONG plane ride." He used The Indochina Tour Company (for which I can’t find a link), which furnished "guides and drivers at each airport and major city," but there are other outfits just as good. He even checked out my old MACV compound in Hoi An. "It is now a school and a hospital," with the only sign of war "the old French bunker out front." That’s good news, indeed.

Returning to Viet Nam

Jerry Noga, a retired Army officer and an old OCS classmate, will spend the week after Christmas traveling in Viet Nam with a buddy. He’s planning to stop in at Hoi An, south of Da Nang, the only readily-visitable place where I spent much time, so I’m hoping for a decent photo of what the old MACV compound there looks like now. These trips are an idea more and more veterans have succumbed to in recent years. I’m still trying to convince my old no. 2 to return with me "to those thrilling days of yesteryear," but so far he’s resisting. Says he didn’t leave anything there, except some blood and he doesn’t miss it.