2 Weeks of Hell: Vietnam’s Bloody Battle of Hamburger Hill...

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  • čas přidán 18. 06. 2024
  • The Vietnam War was a conflict in which the might of modern, military technology was pitched against an enemy who made up for the shortfall with tenacity and ingenuity. For the leaders of both sides, it was a war of wills with defeat seeming as unthinkable to those in Washington as it was to the North Vietnamese in Hanoi. At times, the war seemed more about destroying the enemy than achieving strategic goals and few places was this more apparent than in the jungle and on the hills of the Ashaw Valley in 1969. It was here that US and North Vietnamese forces would demonstrate their true grit and abject hatred for one another as they fought for a hill that had almost no real value in the unfolding conflict. On military maps it was known as Hill 937 in reference to its height in meters. To the locals it was known as Dong Ap Bia. To history it is known as Hamburger Hill. Welcome to Wars of the World.
    0:00 Introduction
    1:24 Operation Apache Snow
    4:25 Retreat to Hill 937
    9:07 Hamburger Hill
    13:56 Was it worth it?
    Prefer to listen on the go? Check out the WotW Podcast:
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    🎶🎶 All music from CO.AG
    / @co.agmusic
    Narrated by: Will Earl
    Written & Researched by: Tony Wilkins
    Edited by: James Wade & Kieran Kennerley
    History Should Never Be Forgotten...

Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @MarkNazer
    @MarkNazer Před rokem +290

    My brother Dan was the lead combat field medic during the battle of Hamburger Hill. He was honored with the Bronze Star with Valor. 50 tears later to the exact day of the final day of that battle he was laid to rest at N.H. Veterans Cemetery. My oldest brother Jim was also in Viet-Nam. He too a 101st Screaming Eagle (LRRP) All of you who served are true heros. THANK YOU ALL!

    • @patrobas9291
      @patrobas9291 Před rokem +8

      Sorry for your loss. My dear friend Nikko (Nicholas) Schoch was with B Co., 187th Inf Reg,101st AB Div. and on that fricken hill. Died from sever PSTD years later in Salt Lake City. He was the lead Medic. DSC, SSM, BSM with V x 2. Specifically named a hero of the battle at Dong Ab Bia. RIP Nikko! Me? I was At the 17th Field hospital in An Khe and later at the 18th Surg in Quan Tri

    • @johnceglick8714
      @johnceglick8714 Před rokem +3

      @@patrobas9291 My uncle was kia mid-3/68 , tail end of bloody TET , in SouthVietnams Central Highlands , 10days b-4 my 11th bday. He was near Pleiku , in 1st Cav. Airmobile . Still depressed about it currently , and taking ant- depressing meds.

    • @MarkNazer
      @MarkNazer Před rokem +9

      @@patrobas9291 So sorry for your loss as well sir. My brother was a medic at that nightmare of a hill. He had only been in country for a short period of time before going to Hamburger Hill. He may have not been the head medic at that time but eventually became the head medic. In my opinion for the men who fought there are TRUE HEROS. I can't even begin to imagine what it was like for those soldiers and everything they had to endure. The saddest and probably the toughest battle for those men wasn't the battle of Hamburger Hill, but the battle all of them had to fight amongst their own countrymen when returning home. This country, especially our own government owe those vets a big kiss on the ass. THEY ANSWERED THE CALL, DAMN IT! Those men won all the battles but because of Washington, our government, we lost the war. In any war throughout history when a battle was won you claimed the real estate and you fought on. In Vietnam when a battle was won we walked away just to come back and claim it again. How insane! It must be so difficult to keep morale up when a war is being fought like that. It is said there weren't any heros in Vietnam, well that is the furthest thing from the truth. Young men who was sent over 8,000 miles away from home to fight for freedom for a country that nobody had even heard of should be considered heros in everyone's eyes. All you need to do is just open them. I had 3 brothers drafted for that war, my two oldest brothers Jim and Dan went to Vietnam as a 101st Screaming Eagles. There are 17 and 14 years in age between my two oldest brothers and myself so naturally I was and still am very proud of them. I had two jackets sent home to me from my brothers. One of them had the map of Vietnam all hand stitched on the back of it which read my brother is serving in Vietnam. Like I said I was very proud of them and excited to wear it to school one day. When my grade school teacher saw it she sent me home and told me never to wear that jacket to school again. A school that my brothers also went to. A very small NH town with a population of approximately 1,000 residents at that time. A school where my brother Dan was an honor roll student all four years and had scholarship offers from many colleges, but because we already had a brother fighting over there he thought it was the honorable thing to do. It was a long almost 5 mile walk for me back home that day. I had no idea what I had done wrong. It was already a difficult time for me having to watch my mother cry everyday for 4 entire years isn't easy for kid at that age. Well my father and his 4 brothers were all in WWII at the same time. My dad and an uncle fought the Japanese while my other 3 uncles were fighting the Nazis. When my father found out about what the school had done he took off his only day off from work in 37 years and he worked 7 days a week. NO BULLSHIT! And addressed the school about it. I never had a problem wearing that jacket again. I apologize for going off point with my story, but was done to me that day was what the Vietnam vets went through on a daily basis when returning home from a nightmare just to have to live even a worse nightmare here. Like I said before anyone who answers the call are true HEROS and to you sir, I salute you for a job WELL DONE!!!!! THANK YOU VERY MUCH!!!!

    • @patrobas9291
      @patrobas9291 Před rokem +2

      @@MarkNazer Good day Mark. Thank you for your comments and condolences. I believe everyone was effected by Viet Nam. It changed our country's history.
      I know the jacket you were wearing. Saw several as you were wearing. Shame on the teacher. You should never have been so humiliated.
      I come from a long line of US Army officers and some grunts. Revolutionary War, Civil War, GF in WWI. Father in Battle of the Bulge and Korea as one of the first "whirleybird" pilots and highly decorated: SSM, BSM x 2 With V device. There are two books that I would recommend for you if you wish to "get" what we went through in the Ashau Valley and elsewhere. The Crouching Beast, Frank Boccia and A Shau Valor, Thomas Yarborough (Especially pages 187-188 ref Nikko.). I came back with an unrecognized PTSD that even today can get to me every now and again.
      I agree with your assessment of that conflict but one objective was we did stop "Communism" from spreading further down the SE Asian peninsula.
      Are you still in New Hampshire? I am from Boston. Let's go Celtics!!

    • @patrobas9291
      @patrobas9291 Před rokem +1

      @@johnceglick8714 Get better friend.
      I was in the "highlands" too.

  • @CrowSpirit1977
    @CrowSpirit1977 Před rokem +328

    A lot of good men died on 937 for nothing. It just churns my guts to think about that. I can't even understand how politicians are allowed to play with people's lives like that. It's disgusting and unacceptable!

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem +35

      And never seen any politician's son's that served in combat.

    • @jamesjeffers7270
      @jamesjeffers7270 Před rokem +16

      Just reference Black Sabbath's War Pigs lyrics and you will know this is what they have always done. The message is don't let them have that power over you.

    • @gregoryhagen8801
      @gregoryhagen8801 Před rokem +1

      Kennedy was a brilliant tactician.😵

    • @jamesjeffers7270
      @jamesjeffers7270 Před rokem +9

      @@gregoryhagen8801 A brilliant man and good person. Shame he couldn't be allowed to bring more light to people's lives! Horrible for America to see that on TV. But it should never be forgotten and always learned from.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem +1

      A lot of good men die in every war. I agree most died for nothing. I don't think we have had a valid reason for war since WWII.

  • @lonestone55
    @lonestone55 Před rokem +465

    Vietnam was a political war. Thousands of lives and billions of dollars wasted for nothing. From a disabled vet.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem +40

      i have seen the actual paperwork on casualties and i estimate we lost 500k killed and the Vietnamese from both sides lost over 5 million. The govt lies to the American people about actual casualties from all wars.58k is an insult to those who gave all and those who served. Until we get an actual accounting of those who died, i refuse to visit the war memorial.

    • @livingood1049
      @livingood1049 Před rokem +33

      Like Afghanistan
      ×10

    • @amadeusagripino6862
      @amadeusagripino6862 Před rokem

      Thousands of lives lost so Raytheon could sell some more missiles. This isn't going to end until the MIC and the international banking cartel who controls it gets dismantled.

    • @TheBishop12
      @TheBishop12 Před rokem +4

      Ideological*

    • @bruceharris3627
      @bruceharris3627 Před rokem +4

      I agree with you all wars should be like that wasted lives

  • @Jamestele1
    @Jamestele1 Před rokem +31

    My dad was a 17 year-old drop out from the mountains in Colorado. Telluride was not a celebrity vacation place back then. My dad got in trouble for smoking pot, and they offered him jail or the U.S. Army, and a vacation package, all expenses paid to Vietnam. He saw his company get blown apart, and he was never right again. He spent his life addicted drugs, then the drink. RIP fy nhad.

    • @AllisterCaine
      @AllisterCaine Před rokem +7

      Holy shit... Says a lot about the US. Some things there are always way too backwards for all its proclaimed progressivnes. Being punished with a life of mental illness and PTSD for smoking weed. I feel sorry for what happened to your dad...

    • @judas2891
      @judas2891 Před 10 měsíci +3

      That's so sad. He is at peace now.🙏

  • @crackedoutclown
    @crackedoutclown Před 10 měsíci +36

    As an ex British army infantryman I can say without a shadow of doubt, that this particular battle is a perfect example of how the military thinks. What’s the reason for the fight? Their were enemies on a hill those enemies need to be killed. Why did it go titts up? Because the army functions on communication and that went to shit very quickly. We used to call this phenomenon ‘on the bus, off the bus’. One man tells you to get on a bus, some other man asks why you’re on the bus go over there, then the first man shouts at you and tells you to get back on the bus. And so it continues. Fun times.

    • @jafo766
      @jafo766 Před 8 měsíci

      On The Bu$e$ ? , Q- UP for this lad..Every time I turn on the History Channel a 100,000 of you blokes are laying down their arms and being marched off to build bridges in Burma or filling your boots with sand in Libya....my grandpa marched with Monty in Market Garden , we call it a KLU$TERFCUK....OUI !.....3rd Anti Tank Reg. Juno Beach.....thankfully it was not Dieppe eh !

    • @empirikal09
      @empirikal09 Před 6 měsíci

      You discovered water

    • @crackedoutclown
      @crackedoutclown Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@empirikal09 I’m guessing you’re either trying to be clever or witty! Whichever it is, you’ll need more context bud. Because that’s a fail of a statement, i think. 🤔

  • @airbrushken5339
    @airbrushken5339 Před rokem +82

    I was in the 2/502 Inf, 101st Airborne and my platoon spent my whole tour in the A Shaw Valley area, we constantly would fight these short battles in the 1970's, with the odd big ones. I walked point my whole tour... we would clear out areas and then be moved to a new area, only to go back in the same area and fight our way through again.
    I was surprised, as i grew up a farm boy and noticed the NVA dead or prisoners often had soft smooth hands, city folk, not farmers. I was to be the new team sniper, but we were so short of men, when our Team Sniper DEROSED, I just walked point. That area was pure hell, the NVA were great fighters, but so were we and many NVA died. My platoon averaged under 20 men many times, so we got replacements from 1st Cav who had been fighting VC down south, most of us took a Cav "newbe" as a partner, to help them understood how the NVA fought. I lost my new partner the first night. We had 5 dead and I'm unsure of how many wounded. I was lucky, because at first light, it was over and I did a check; I was out of Frags, no 45 cal magazines, all our claymores blown and one magazine in my rifle and 2 left (17 rounds each) ... blood trails everywhere. We blew some trees and CA'd to Firebase Bastone where we spent the day there getting new gear (even my Ruck sack was shredded), clothing, Ammo and a hot meal. They put us in a set of bunkers for the night and the next AM, it was same-same; some new guys from Eagle landed and we headed back into the Valley. All our medals, the "Brave Eagle" awards.... mean nothing, I lost my two closest friends, we were brothers.... and in the States you hated us .... Over 400,000 Vietnam Veterans have died AFTER they came home from illnesses directly related to Dioxin exposure, and no one cared. Thank you for your service??? I'm slowing dying, and my poor wife keeps hoping (I'm a 100% disabled) it will change... it won't.

    • @dionst.michael1482
      @dionst.michael1482 Před rokem +8

      Thank you for sharing your experience sir. Nothing I could say could ever express how grateful I am to read it so I will simply leave it at that. God bless you and your loved ones. Respect to you all 🙏

    • @vl647
      @vl647 Před rokem

      I could tell you about how the medical organisation is in fact a fraud. Without being a false conspiracy theorist, or criticizing the covid vaccine. Many seem to sense it but i.e. to start about this vaccine is even misleading.

    • @hankfanelli719
      @hankfanelli719 Před rokem +15

      I'm right there with you 3/5 calvary tank commander there in 69- 70 . 100% disabled and had many medical procedures and cancers related to agent orange exposure. Your right we're slowly becoming statistics from our service there.

    • @airbrushken5339
      @airbrushken5339 Před rokem +8

      @@hankfanelli719 Thanks for you kind thoughts. I so miss my friends,3 took their own lives after they found out they had advanced prostrate cancer .... and some crazy woman in congress thinks forest fires were caused by Jewish sponsored "Space Lasers" ??? You be safe ...

    • @FrostedSeagull
      @FrostedSeagull Před rokem +1

      Thanks for a great experience 👍

  • @robert.257
    @robert.257 Před rokem +26

    It's often said about war, Rich man's war poor man's fight. It's so true.

  • @TechnikMeister2
    @TechnikMeister2 Před rokem +19

    I wrote a book that was set in that vicinity. I crawled all over the location and was shocked to see that the dug in positions were all facing the open valley and very little was done to protect the flanks and rear. It was basic infantry defence stuff and it beggars belief that lessons from even WW2 were ignored. It really casts a grim shadow of the lack of good leadership at the time.

  • @thecalifornianadventurer3822

    My uncle Edward Sandoval was a medic with the 101st. I believe he was there. He never talked much about his experiences during the war. Rest well uncle. We miss you.

    • @scottowensbyable
      @scottowensbyable Před rokem +4

      My grandfather said my uncle Edward Swink was there. Carried a radio.

    • @melissart416
      @melissart416 Před rokem +4

      my uncle Roy H Snyder was a b para-trooper 101 air born division and my dad allways said uncle Roy fought the battle of hamburger hill my uncle lived until april of 1970......and was killed in Viet-Nam

    • @thecalifornianadventurer3822
      @thecalifornianadventurer3822 Před rokem +5

      @@melissart416 I'm sorry for your family's sacrifice. May he rest well.

  • @billturner4427
    @billturner4427 Před 10 měsíci +42

    I was a crew chief/door gunner on Hueys down south in '69/'70. It is unconceivable that our government made us do this kind of ridiculous, grade-making operations so that military personnel could further their careers. It happened every day. We didn't loose the war, they did.

    • @jafo766
      @jafo766 Před 8 měsíci

      You did not loose the War , a B-52 induced Peace Treaty was signed.....NOTHING CAN $TOP THE U. $.A.F !

    • @bandlehars
      @bandlehars Před 6 měsíci

      United States never wanted to win that war anyway. They just wanted to give it back to France for the rubber plantations. Do your homework

  • @damienreilly8061
    @damienreilly8061 Před rokem +173

    I served in the 3-187 and got to meet some of those men who fought on that hill, it was truly an honor to have served in the unit and talk to those men who will forever be my brothers. 🇺🇲RAKKASAN! 🇺🇲

  • @tonyhelms8023
    @tonyhelms8023 Před rokem +32

    They followed orders and fought for each other. God bless all of them. May their sacrifice never be forgotten.

    • @anotherway007
      @anotherway007 Před 15 dny

      Following immoral orders is not honorable it's shameful. Those men that said no and went to Canada were fast more patriotic and real men than those that went to murder people that did nothing to the USA. They followed orders to destroy a beautiful country and poison the land for years to come.
      "Military men are just dumb, stupid animals to be used as pawns in foreign policy."
      Henry Kissinger

  • @tudiensamdict
    @tudiensamdict Před rokem +28

    It was a terrifying battle. I hate war. Thank you for sharing.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem +3

      All ilitary members hate war, but we serve and fight for our freedoms the way our forefathers did.

    • @chitaole8331
      @chitaole8331 Před 10 měsíci

      Nhưg bọn đế quốc Mỹ lại muốn chiến tranh để bán vũ khí.

  • @rogerborroel4707
    @rogerborroel4707 Před rokem +60

    I was on firebase Berchtesgaden firing the 105s in support of the battle. Hamburger Hill was directly across from us, and we saw the upper part of the Hill get browner and browner due to the artillery and airstrikes on it. It was a trip! Two weeks later I became an artillery RTO on an FO team, attached to B/2/506th Infantry till October of 1969. I DEREOS on 15th of December 1969.

    • @rogerborroel4707
      @rogerborroel4707 Před rokem +5

      @Eric Sellers Thanks, it's been 54 years, but I remembered!

    • @billgonzales8978
      @billgonzales8978 Před rokem

      most were drafted

    • @rogerborroel4707
      @rogerborroel4707 Před rokem +3

      @@billgonzales8978 But there were plenty of RAs too, i.e. volunteers.

    • @robwernet9609
      @robwernet9609 Před rokem +5

      My uncle rich was an artilleryman at firebase Bastogne in the a shau valley. He was on the 8 inch field gun tho. One of the things I remember him telling me was when he flew into fu Bai that on one of the he corrugated roofs of the quanset huts someone had painted "fu Bai is alright" lol always stuck with me. That and occasionally Huey crew chiefs would ask if anybody wanted to be a door gunner, he said he almost volunteered until he really thought about it. Why are they asking random guys if they wanna be a door gunner, I guess the attrition rate for door gunners during that time was extremely high. He changed his mind fairly quickly I guess as he didn't have it so bad at f.b. Bastogne. He had a relatively easy tour compared to what some of those poor guys went thru. The biggest action that occured while he was there, was about a dozen v.c. sappers tried infiltrating the wire...well they had a quad .50 at fu Bai that made short work of those guys. He said you couldnt really tell they were once human beings after those 4 .50s made mince meat of em.

    • @billgonzales8978
      @billgonzales8978 Před rokem +2

      @@robwernet9609 thanks Rob, my brother drated to nam was recon on helipter made it home ok man so long ago my brother 77

  • @lewie7820
    @lewie7820 Před rokem +22

    Have a friend who fought on hamburger hill. He said the leadership was stupid as hell.....

  • @d1agram4
    @d1agram4 Před rokem +53

    My dad had a guy who worked for him who got a silver star for his actions on hamburger hill.

    • @errickflesch5565
      @errickflesch5565 Před rokem +8

      Had "a guy" ? That's it? Would be nice to ask your dad the guy's name and post it so we can honor him. It would be nice to keep his name alive here.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem +4

      Sam Walton had a son who was SF and assigned to MACV/SOG. He also won a silver star in Vietnam.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem +3

      I knew a guy in nam who had received a silver star in WW II. He was a survivor of the Bataan Death March.

    • @purewater69420
      @purewater69420 Před 11 měsíci +1

      ​@@rondodson5736that is incredibly impressive to me

    • @andrebredell3293
      @andrebredell3293 Před 13 dny

      Johnny Jackson was awarded the Silver Star during the battle! His action led the final assault that proved to be successful

  • @NotThatGuyPal.
    @NotThatGuyPal. Před rokem +47

    My dad was there during 67-68 with the 1st Marine division 2nd battalion G-company. Was stationed at khe sahn but remembered hearing about how bad it was in the Ashau. Had a buddy he met in the states that was there and told my dad that he walked up on an enemy sleeping and put the barrel in the dudes mouth until he woke up and put his lights out. Straight hard f*cks.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem +1

      I know a guy who involved in the battle that Mel Gibson made the movie about called We Were Soldiers. He was a ranger medic.

    • @lionelhutz5137
      @lionelhutz5137 Před rokem +1

      Battle of La Drang, LZ Xray

    • @brucemacmillan9581
      @brucemacmillan9581 Před rokem +2

      I'm glad the US lost the war. US deserved every bit of grief they suffered for this piece of utter foreign policy stupidity.

    • @NotThatGuyPal.
      @NotThatGuyPal. Před rokem +7

      @@brucemacmillan9581 I wouldn’t say “lost”….. stacked them bodies 10 to 1 for the entire war. That’s a pretty hard ass whooping for North Vietnam if you ask me. Wiped the floor with they ass.

    • @alanhannigan9944
      @alanhannigan9944 Před rokem +7

      @@brucemacmillan9581 obviously your not American,BC if you were you would know that most of the soldiers were drafted,and had to go,they knew they were getting the shitty end of the stick,but they had too fight for each other 🇮🇪☘️

  • @melancholygirl840
    @melancholygirl840 Před rokem +35

    My heart goes out to the vets of Vietnam. They were treated like shit for a few that were jerks! My husband was a Vietnam vet and needless to say he never could let go. He ended his life 13 years and 2 days ago in front of me as I was trying to reason with him. It was a horrible place that our boys, men, girls,women just didnt need or have business to be! All political! 😢

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem

      I hope your husband found the peace in death he couldn't find in life. I also served in Vietnam. I don't believe we have had a valid war since WW II .
      MY BIGGEST COMPLAINT IS THEY ALWAYS HIDE THE ACTUAL FIGURES OF HOW MANY MEN WE LOSE. i KNOW WE LOST 5 MILLION IN
      VIETNAM, NOT58K. THEY HID WAR DEATHS. IF A MAN WAS KILLED IN AN ACCIDENT, SNAKE BITE, DISEASE, HE WAS NOT CONSIDERED IN THE CASUALTY COUNT. IF WOUNDED AND FLEW OUT OF COUNTRY FOR TREATMENT AND DIED, HE WAS NOT CONSIDERED BECAUSE HE DIDN'T DIE IN COUNTRY. THE MEMORIAL IS AN INSULT TO THE MEN WHO DIED AND ALL WHO SERVED THERE. ALSO WHAT ABOUT THE MEN WHO DIED AFTER LEAVING VIETNAM, FROM WOUNDS OR AGENT ORANGE ?. Or those like your husband ? He didn't die from suicide, he died from the horrors of war. He saw things no one should ever see or have to bear. Always be proud that he was a soldier who served because he loved his country.

    • @MarkNazer
      @MarkNazer Před rokem +6

      I'm so sorry for your lost mam. People sometimes don't think or realize what the wives had to go through. So much was happening in our country during that era and the woman during this time were also changing. It was easier now for a woman to just up and walk away when times were tough. For the woman who took their vows for better or worse and meant it was no easy task, not during that time. To watch their husbands suffer from PTSD and flashbacks had to be so tough on them as well that they too would also suffer from PTSD. I'm so sorry for your lost and everything YOU also had to endure mam. If there was one good thing that happened to your husband, then it was probably being married to you, for you didn't leave when times got tough and still didn't leave when things got even tougher. NO, you stood by your husband the best you could. Wish there were more woman like you. I SALUTE YOU AS WELL. God bless you and may your husband REST IN PEACE

    • @davidschaadt3460
      @davidschaadt3460 Před 11 měsíci

      🙏🪖

    • @melancholygirl840
      @melancholygirl840 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@MarkNazer Thank you and yes some days it was a and is now a personal battle for me!

    • @bwana-ma-coo-bah425
      @bwana-ma-coo-bah425 Před 11 měsíci +1

      my mate crucified himself on a needle full of heroin 6 months after we returned.
      at least for him the torture has stopped. mine has not.

  • @davidbrennan3613
    @davidbrennan3613 Před rokem +129

    You can't even begin to imagine what these brave men went through ,it must have been hell on earth,I have nothing but the highest respect for those US soldiers

    • @revolutionaryleader9615
      @revolutionaryleader9615 Před rokem

      They are disgrace, they invaded Vietnam and got battered. 😂😂

    • @greasyflight6609
      @greasyflight6609 Před rokem +1

      @@revolutionaryleader9615 I can tell you have never served your Country...and are only able to point one of your fingers

    • @alanhannigan9944
      @alanhannigan9944 Před rokem +5

      Agree,if there was a hell on Earth it was atop that hill,I'm trying to imagine been 18 yrs old,seeing the carnage all around,and still have the guts to fight up that hill,awe-inspiring

    • @PikeBishop1
      @PikeBishop1 Před rokem +2

      Not even an average day on the Eastern Front in WW2.

    • @greasyflight6609
      @greasyflight6609 Před rokem +2

      @@PikeBishop1 Russians getting slaughtered there again.

  • @morganottlii2390
    @morganottlii2390 Před rokem +12

    I was 6 months old then. But I respect and Revere those brave men who fought for everything they were sent to do in a bad situation. May God Bless them, and I thank them for doing what they did. 👍🇱🇷

  • @aa64912
    @aa64912 Před rokem +19

    I had two friends in that action. One came home and one didn’t. October 1969 I landed in Vietnam. I’m 100% disabled now. Was the war worth it? I’m not sure but I would not hesitate to go again

  • @dannycallentinejr7306
    @dannycallentinejr7306 Před rokem +9

    I listened to stories from World War II to Korea to Vietnam at the dinner table at Thanksgiving Christmas at my dinner table there were Marines Army Navy submarine in US Air I never seen a more beautiful table in my life

  • @bradfordduarte1269
    @bradfordduarte1269 Před rokem +24

    My best high school friend, Peter V. Blazonis from Chelmsford, Massachusetts
    was killed on the 3rd and final assault up that good for nothing rotten hill. RIP Pete...

    • @onlythewise1
      @onlythewise1 Před rokem +2

      so long ago

    • @FrostedSeagull
      @FrostedSeagull Před rokem +3

      Bradford,
      It's important that you have remembered him.
      By remembering him. . . You have honoured him !
      .

    • @josephbrandt6778
      @josephbrandt6778 Před rokem +2

      Sorry for the loss of your dear friend....god be with you and may he rest in peace until you see him again..

    • @bradfordduarte1269
      @bradfordduarte1269 Před rokem

      @@josephbrandt6778 Thanks Bro....

    • @bwana-ma-coo-bah425
      @bwana-ma-coo-bah425 Před 11 měsíci

      and there is someone on the other side saying exactly the same thing,

  • @rockmyworldmusic
    @rockmyworldmusic Před rokem +10

    8:38 Imagine getting brutally wounded to take an insignificant hill, and the first day your troops capture it, they have to give it back. 😥

  • @deannalively4778
    @deannalively4778 Před rokem +76

    God bless our veterans. Happy Veterans Day to all. Thank you for your service

    • @user-ct3qm8wk7j
      @user-ct3qm8wk7j Před rokem

      US invaded Vietnam,your veteran is war criminal

    • @deannalively4778
      @deannalively4778 Před rokem

      @@user-ct3qm8wk7j those men didn't invade your country. If you want to blame someone, start with the French government who invaded your country and started everything. We were there to try to stop communism. Communism is such a fabulous institution. Stalin, Khmer Rouge, and the list goes on... those boys did what our government asked of them. If you want to blame Americans, you can blame the politicians. Lay off the veterans. They've been through enough

    • @user-ct3qm8wk7j
      @user-ct3qm8wk7j Před rokem

      @@deannalively4778 i am not vietnamese,i am chinese.china is no more communist,but socialism with chinese characteristics,it worked,china now second largest economy in the world.

    • @deannalively4778
      @deannalively4778 Před rokem

      @@user-ct3qm8wk7j then why say we invaded your country? We fought with your country in WWIi. Yes, your country is a manufacturing success but are you free? I'm honestly curious. I have been told that you have little freedom and although I have worked with people who are from China or traveled there I would like to hear from you. Do you still live there?

    • @user-ct3qm8wk7j
      @user-ct3qm8wk7j Před rokem

      @@deannalively4778 i didn’t mean US invaded my country but vietnam,korea,afghanistan,Iraq,random killing muslim by millions,is it war criminals? in china internet,it’s true that censorship exists,but doesn’t mean not free,i don’t know what you mean by saying free or you have to define freedom.china is still developing country and poor,ccp to lift chinese people out of poverty primarily,not caring about those political nonsense.i am still living in china.

  • @trj1442
    @trj1442 Před rokem +29

    Wow, that would have been hell, all for nothing.
    Another excellent episode. Thankyou for your awesome content.

    • @VikingTeddy
      @VikingTeddy Před rokem +1

      War is already a traumatix experience. Imagine accidentally firing rockets at your buddies, how do you deal with something like that?

    • @Schismatic1336
      @Schismatic1336 Před rokem +1

      @@VikingTeddy you never do.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem

      I did 24 years in uniform and never thought it was for nothing, at least until the libs took over this country.

  • @joejinnymarks8189
    @joejinnymarks8189 Před 9 měsíci

    Just found this channel as a world war fanatic its brilliant different info that i didnt no done a good job here

  • @user-qx7cz9ic3y
    @user-qx7cz9ic3y Před 6 měsíci +4

    I was shot 6 times on that hill from hell. I was lucky all 6 shots where on my legs i lost both legs but i lived. I was only 19 there were 35 seniors from my highschool drafted out of 35 drafted only 13 made it back home we got drafted the most deadly year

    • @davecalvo6418
      @davecalvo6418 Před 6 měsíci

      Damn dude, I'm sorry but I do thank you and all the vets for your service.

  • @decafmocha211
    @decafmocha211 Před 7 měsíci +7

    My good friend in college fought in this battle. God Bless him and all the American and South Vietnamese soldiers.

  • @robwernet9609
    @robwernet9609 Před rokem +6

    My uncle Richard Wernet was an artilleryman at firebase Bastogne in 68-69. 8 inch field artillery, the biggest field artillery in the army inventory at that time. He had a relatively easy tour compared to most of those poor guys. The largest action that occured during his time there, was one night when about a dozen or so v.c. sappers tried infiltrating the wire. F.b. Bastogne had a quad .50 on base and according to him after they opened up on those guys with that quad.50 you couldn't really tell that they were once people. Just turned them into minced meat (his exact words). He told me that after seeing something like that at 19 years old, it changes you. You're just never the same person after that. I can't imagine.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem +1

      He was right, war does change you. I see so many people doing stupid things that could get them killed. I figure they have never faced death, so have no appreciation for life. War does that to you.

  • @tyme2boggie
    @tyme2boggie Před rokem +9

    Also amazing is that 101st fought another horrific battle at a place called Tam Ky, but was kept secret from the public due to the publicity of high casualties at Hamburger Hill. A recent book has been written about it called Courage Under Fire.

  • @philbrown9764
    @philbrown9764 Před rokem +9

    Even though I was at Chu Lai 68-69 1st MAW MAG 12 air base, I was still there. And from then until today, I’ve always wondered why were we there and what did we accomplish? The same answer comes to me…”I don’t know” and “nothing”. Either way…WELCOME HOME to my Nam Vet Brothers and Sisters. And to those that didn’t, SALUTE.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem +2

      I had a friend at Chu Lai around that time. He was in charge of the radio's there. His name was Jerry Caudle. He should never have been in combat. He came home with PTSD so bad he has never been the same.

    • @philbrown9764
      @philbrown9764 Před rokem

      @@rondodson5736
      I’m sorry to hear about your friend and what happened to him. And I’m sorry but his name doesn’t ring a bell for a couple or reasons…I’m bad with names and most of the people I remember used nicknames. I went by “Dallas” and I was a cook when I was there.

  • @aarondrennan5650
    @aarondrennan5650 Před rokem +11

    “When your time is up, your time is up in the Ashau valley”

  • @thesaints-7-andrew.
    @thesaints-7-andrew. Před rokem +2

    Watching from Greece.hi everybody.
    Great documentary.

  • @ralphwinfield2872
    @ralphwinfield2872 Před rokem

    Thank you very much.

  • @winstonparker6
    @winstonparker6 Před rokem +13

    P.O.W.
    M.I.A.
    Never Forget

  • @hankfanelli719
    @hankfanelli719 Před rokem +40

    Right after the marines moved off hamburger hill my army unit went up there for artillery security, I was a tank commander of the first tank up there and refused a handshake from some general that helicoptered in for a photoop. When we moved off the hill into the valley we got into one of the worst firefights in my year in the bush, we killed hundreds with only 3 tanks and 7 APCs, we lost 1 man and 7 wounded from an all night chaotic attack.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem +8

      Obviously the general was not there during the fighting. He didn't deserve to shake your hand.

    • @bradr2142
      @bradr2142 Před rokem +6

      Hank nothing but love and respect for you.

    • @nicholasmuro1742
      @nicholasmuro1742 Před rokem +5

      Not Marines...Army 101 Airborne.

    • @grider421
      @grider421 Před rokem +5

      i was at hamburger hill, huey crew chief. there were no marines on that hill. thank the 187th rockasans for taking the hill. 101st airborne. i never saw a tank in the mountains the 15th mech. was in the valley floor at fire base currahee but they could not navigate the mountains so you sir are full of it! we took territory and then left all over the country the idea was to kill as many nva as possible and we did a damned good job of it! by the way the vietnam war was about controlling the world drug trade by the cia and our corrupt government

    • @nicholasmuro1742
      @nicholasmuro1742 Před rokem +4

      @@grider421
      As soon as he said Marines, I figured it for bs. And then tanks?...lol

  • @AjaychinuShah
    @AjaychinuShah Před 6 měsíci +1

    Good content

  • @JerkMidik
    @JerkMidik Před 22 dny

    This reminded me of my granddaddy. Such a great man. Was in the airforce transporting men and supplies . he went out of this world how he wanted as peaceful as can be in his sleep,he was 27 years old . The other 6 passengers onboard were not so lucky as they were awake all the way up untill the nose of the plane struck the jungle floor.

  • @jakhaughton1800
    @jakhaughton1800 Před rokem +9

    When tactics has a small ‘t’. Those poor troops taking and retreating with such hideous loses is beyond belief.

    • @gregoryhagen8801
      @gregoryhagen8801 Před rokem

      Hamburger Hill, summed up that train wreak, that was the Vietnam war. THX, JFK.& LBJ

  • @nglstudios2844
    @nglstudios2844 Před rokem +27

    Hamburger hill is a really good Vietnam war film would recommend.

    • @alfredpaquin3563
      @alfredpaquin3563 Před rokem +2

      I was Battalion Commo Chief for 3/187 when the film came out. We were the first to see it before it eas released to the public,and by the way, we never wore "subdued " patches. I was with 2/11 FA for Ripcord in July 70.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem +3

      I always liked Apocalypse Now, but it was totally fiction. We worked in teams not alone like in the film.

    • @jamesjeffers7270
      @jamesjeffers7270 Před rokem +1

      Just watched it last night. So sad they saw their buddies die for a hill that meant nothing.

    • @gregoryhagen8801
      @gregoryhagen8801 Před rokem +1

      @@rondodson5736 "Platoon" was more realistic, I felt.

    • @dawnegan3984
      @dawnegan3984 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I did see the movie it was so real like 🕊️3 times they were pushed down than Fort thier way back up again 🕊️

  • @claudesledge5545
    @claudesledge5545 Před rokem

    WarsofTheWorld...damn,I thought the movie titled "Hamburger Hill" was kidding about the fighting scenario conveyed in that movie. This upload confirms my suspicion regarding troop maneuvers.

  • @stephen6whitehead398
    @stephen6whitehead398 Před rokem +4

    That battle was portrayed in the film"Hamburger Hill"!But the friendly fire incident was portrayed as fire from a 50cal:machine gun on the chopper!A bloody battle though!

  • @katherinegates1559
    @katherinegates1559 Před rokem +12

    ❤️🇺🇲❤️ Never Will Be Forgotten...❤️🇺🇲🇺🇲

  • @bluecollar58
    @bluecollar58 Před 10 měsíci +4

    It was never about taking real estate so the “ Hill “ was just where the enemy was concentrated.
    It was rare that they got large numbers of Regulars in one place so I’m not at all surprised they went all in.
    Sounds like they did a good job too.

  • @catdaddy3302
    @catdaddy3302 Před 7 měsíci +1

    My Buddy, Cpl. Rodney C. Rubisoff aka Rube, survived Hamburger Hill. He was a door gunner flying medivac with the 101 st. RIP Rube. ( he made it home.) 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻 it says here a medivac chopper crashed here. His did at low altitude. He got a Purple Heart 💜 and a Bronze Star that day.

  • @CSltz
    @CSltz Před 9 měsíci +2

    I had always wondered why hills had numbers. I found out years ago watching shows like this when they were on tv.

  • @jaredevildog6343
    @jaredevildog6343 Před rokem +7

    My uncle fought at hamburger hill and still won't talk about it .

  • @zillsburyy1
    @zillsburyy1 Před rokem +3

    good movie!

  • @mgunny05
    @mgunny05 Před rokem +51

    Those soldiers in this battle - all of them - were disciplined and balls the size of boulders, HEROES all. Incompetent political and military leadership made these MEN suffer. BUT they fought like HEROES IN true PROFESSIONALISM of a combat soldier. They are right there with any WWI WWII KOREA combat unit. Semper Fi 🫡🫡🫡🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺

    • @johnceglick8714
      @johnceglick8714 Před rokem +2

      God bless all USA VETS !!

    • @onlythewise1
      @onlythewise1 Před rokem

      yep kill or be killed

    • @johnceglick8714
      @johnceglick8714 Před rokem +3

      Ha! I lost my uncle mid 3/68 , tail end of bloody TET , in the Central Highlands of NAM , ,10 days b-4 my 11th day . TRAUMATIC !
      Seen neighbors sons , and friends bro sent there from 65-69 . Last one hm by late 71.

    • @firasajoury7813
      @firasajoury7813 Před rokem

      🤮

  • @ivanjerganoff280
    @ivanjerganoff280 Před rokem +2

    South Vietnam: yo, theres a hill...
    Us generals: say no more.

  • @_fast4lfa
    @_fast4lfa Před 5 měsíci

    I served in Charlie Company 3rd Battalion 187 infantry regiment from 2018-2019. Proud to be apart of the famous company known for this engagement. “CHOPPIN’ CHARLIE!”

  • @tklube308
    @tklube308 Před rokem +26

    Happy belated 247th birthday to all my Marine Corps brothers and sisters.

  • @Richard-jl8vd
    @Richard-jl8vd Před rokem +2

    To never forget history rewrites itself..... to all mankind may you .... RIP ... foreign and domestic

  • @robertrusnak620
    @robertrusnak620 Před 5 měsíci +1

    My father died on hill 812 near Khe Sanh. I never knew him but I heard stories of him . I know he watches over me and guides me along

  • @user-qp4sy2dp5b
    @user-qp4sy2dp5b Před rokem +3

    Yes that is true. Many lies were told and to this day continue like a bad habit. Every snake and nap that was let loose other than the one that strayed, was truly on the mark. I spoke to some that were on the firebase, and I quote...every shell launched was enjoyed at the enemy.

  • @kennethhamby9811
    @kennethhamby9811 Před rokem +18

    These men are hero’s ,all. The top echelon were fools. When you call on troops to do the impossible, you have no right to turn around and give their victories away as if they were nothing. This is the strategy that lost us true victory and peace in Vietnam.

    • @MikeHunt-fo3ow
      @MikeHunt-fo3ow Před rokem +4

      well said..

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem +3

      We did so much with so little and so few that when asked to do the impossible it was never a problem.

  • @Diablofeb4
    @Diablofeb4 Před rokem +2

    Hamburger hill is one of my favorite movies ever made!

  • @tonyjones1560
    @tonyjones1560 Před měsícem

    I knew a staff sergeant who survived this battle, back in the 1980s. He looked younger than I did, and I was 22-23 at the time. One day I saw him in uniform with a 101st Airborne patch sewed to his right shoulder. I joked that he was gonna get arrested for impersonating a combat veteran. After he set me straight for speculating that he must have been 9-10 years old, he told me about Hamburger Hill in horrific detail…not least, that the NVA muscled 12.7mm guns high enough up the mountain to fire *down* onto the Hueys and shoot their main rotors off. Other than the men who fought there, and their families, I wonder if anyone truly realizes how brutal a battle this was. For his part, the sergeant was one of the calmest guys I ever met. “After that, why would I be anything else?”

  • @j1st633
    @j1st633 Před rokem +6

    This conflict started When I started the 5th grade my parents I recall at the time worried whether this war would go on And The war was over during my senior year and high school.

  • @barneyrubble9309
    @barneyrubble9309 Před rokem +11

    If you can wade through it (it's a big heavy read) I can highly recommend reading "a bright shining lie" by Neil Sheehan if you really want to know the full history of the clusterfuck that was the Vietnam War.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem +2

      A book called Five Years to Freedom was also an excellent book about a Lt Rowe who was captured . He had total recall and wrote a book from memory about his five years as a prisoner and how he escaped. Later he was in charge of intelligence in the Philippines and was killed by a sparrow unit from the NPA (communist) in Manila.

    • @kevinshepard7796
      @kevinshepard7796 Před rokem +1

      @@rondodson5736 sounds like an interesting read

    • @kevinshepard7796
      @kevinshepard7796 Před rokem

      Will have to check that out.

    • @hubertwalters4300
      @hubertwalters4300 Před 9 měsíci

      @@kevinshepard7796 It is, I read it many years ago,I recommend it.

  • @BonnienClydeMiller
    @BonnienClydeMiller Před 10 měsíci +2

    Any battle or war that both sides measure victory by how many of your soldiers died compared to how many of the enemy you killed is a war that should never have happened.

  • @robertepinson5827
    @robertepinson5827 Před rokem

    YOU GOT THAT RIGHT BROTHER!!! WELCOME HOME!!!

  • @crossingkey4978
    @crossingkey4978 Před rokem +3

    My dad was friends with one of those pilots who shot at friendly. He was a captain in the Marines and was all messed up about it

    • @crossingkey4978
      @crossingkey4978 Před rokem

      The captain also claimed that he was asking for clearance to shoot and radio kept going out

  • @michaelanderson548
    @michaelanderson548 Před rokem +12

    What I never understood about that operation is why didn't we pull back, send in a bunch of Buff strikes, and then go in. It sounds like a big ego pissing contest...

    • @xXPlumpkinXx
      @xXPlumpkinXx Před rokem +4

      Vietnam specifically the A Shau, had a triple canopy. That's three layers of trees. Even if you pulverized the place, assuming it penetrated the foliage, the VC and NVA were top notch bunker builders. Its never as easy or as simple as "Bombing them" like many would like to imagine. And isnt all that war is in the end?

    • @DonFelixGallardo
      @DonFelixGallardo Před rokem +1

      @@xXPlumpkinXxnapalm to get rid of the trees and a few white phosphorus bombs to give the defenders something to think about while they burn and suffocate…

    • @jeremyking4755
      @jeremyking4755 Před rokem +3

      The airforce was dropping 1000 lb bombs on hill 937. Artillery was dropped HE and CS gas. They could not be unlodged without boots on the ground

    • @xXPlumpkinXx
      @xXPlumpkinXx Před rokem +2

      @@DonFelixGallardo Trust me man, I read over 100 books on the stuff, father is a Vietnam veteran. You can see it in Ukraine. You can see it WWII against the Japanese. And you saw it in Vietnam. Its just not that simple and it never will be. The guy commenting earlier is correct. We dropped more bombs on Ho Chi Minh Trail alone, than in the entirety of WWII. Think about that. It had little impact on the flow of supplies. A determined enemy simply rebuilds. And so they did I'm sure on Hamburger Hill. Im sure they knew exactly what they were up against. They were smart. And put heavy logs above them. These bunkers could withstand direct hits. Its just never as simple as "Bomb them" throughout history, even the soldiers on the ground often say, bombardments are almost more for morale, than anything... it sure looks like they catch hell, as shown in the movie A Thin Red Line. But its never as bad as you think because they hide in heavy bunkers to wait it out. They arent stupid, they knew our strategy.

    • @edwinsalau150
      @edwinsalau150 Před rokem +1

      I think you’ve been reading too many magazines or watching too many movies? As long as I was on the ground in that country(few years) in uncle Samuel‘s Marine Corps. I read about those things you’re talking about since I came home. We called them Arch Light Strikes! they were fantastic and they worked. Kind of think that you were never there? Were you ever in uniform?

  • @user-xx4tx9gl1u
    @user-xx4tx9gl1u Před rokem

    Bravo

  • @AllAroundAtlanta
    @AllAroundAtlanta Před 7 měsíci

    Tough men. Thank you for your service.

    • @pan2aja
      @pan2aja Před 7 měsíci

      Thank you. Sincerely yours the Military industrial congressional complex

  • @headshot8888
    @headshot8888 Před rokem +6

    I would imagine there was tremendous political pressure on the military leadership to create some good news articles for the sheep to eat. No strategy at all. Just go up there and get em. I would never been able to survive the insanity. Full respect for those on that hill. Both sides.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem +2

      We lost a lot more than 58k in Vietnam. Vietnam lost more than 5 million killed.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem

      Good point. We were soldiers. I had nothing against those i killed. We were just doing our jobs. It wasn't personal. I also mourn for those we fought against and killed.

    • @vinhlong7347
      @vinhlong7347 Před 2 měsíci

      @@rondodson5736fake data again and again

  • @DavidSmith-ss1cg
    @DavidSmith-ss1cg Před rokem +43

    The Old capitol city of Vietnam, Hue, is pronounced "Hway," NOT "Hyou." Helpful Dave assists again.
    Ho Chi Minh was a BIG fan of the US, whose BONE-HEAD Foreign-service officers(in the OSS and Department of State) betrayed Vietnam and gave it back to France AFTER promising to help that new country establish it's independence. Such a shame, as an independent, America-admiring Vietnam would have been an IDEAL US base of operations to keep an eye on China(and maybe influence the Chinese civil war between Chaing Kai Chek and Mao Zedong) and favorably change the course of History in favor of Capitalist Democracy instead of Communism.

    • @SimoN-vf8ps
      @SimoN-vf8ps Před rokem

      Maybe keeping in good relations with France was the better choice seeing half of Europe having commie """""revolutions"""" and coups🤔🤔🤔

    • @Axle778
      @Axle778 Před rokem +2

      I commented the same. Thought someone would catch it too.

    • @marc2638
      @marc2638 Před rokem +2

      Actually there was an OSS officer who told the American government exactly what you just commented,,, unfortunately money makes the decisions on a.war.table not tactics and victories

    • @Jeromus1970
      @Jeromus1970 Před rokem +4

      Ho also tried to see Woodrow Wilson during the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 but was blown off. He had hoped that the US would champion self-determination for Vietnam like they were for the the parts of Europe previously under the Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian Empires.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem +4

      But now the Vietnamese govt does not support China and two years ago joined a group of nations from Philippines, Taiwan, India, Japan, Australia and the U.S. who actually battled China after they built a base on a Philippine Island. That base is now manned with Philipino and American marines. There are fighter pilots now assigned to Philippine bases, the old navy base in Manila has been reactivated and manned by American and Australian sailors. They are also building an Air Force base on Palowan Island.

  • @LanceRomanceF4E
    @LanceRomanceF4E Před 2 měsíci

    The movie Hamburger Hill was filmed in the Philippines in late mid 80’s and I flew an F-4E from 3TFS from Clark AB in this movie…just a quick fly-by simulating a napalm drop like was actually done in the real fight.

  • @josephgrosso8731
    @josephgrosso8731 Před 4 měsíci

    The movie portrayed the horror, valor and utter futility of the battle and entire war.
    RIP those many young men who died for nothing before they experienced life.

  • @Ro6entX
    @Ro6entX Před rokem +12

    My dad used to work with a gentleman that was with the 101st and in Vietnam but unsure if he was in this battle. I personally don’t consider Vietnam And Korea as losses. We beat North Korea & Chinese back, they did not take over. North did not conquer all Vietnam while we were the main fighting force so we did our job there, and didn’t fall until after we left, save for handful of troops still there at end. South Vietnamese lost the war.

    • @Chevelle602
      @Chevelle602 Před rokem

      The Korean war was a success. South Korea is evidence of that.

    • @noahdunaway
      @noahdunaway Před rokem

      It was a political war and our corrupt politicians in the U.S. gave it up after getting rich from it . I lost some close brothers there.

    • @kennethhamby9811
      @kennethhamby9811 Před rokem +3

      We fought a war in a country that really didn’t care who ruled them.

    • @noahdunaway
      @noahdunaway Před rokem

      @@kennethhamby9811 just like America today, people just don’t care how corrupt our politicians are.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem +5

      If you had been there , you would consider them as losses. I was there and i do consider them losses, but by the politicians, not the soldiers.

  • @rubengutierrez5102
    @rubengutierrez5102 Před rokem +6

    The N. Vietnamese could fight their asses off! I respect the N. Vietnamese!

  • @dennisaustin2115
    @dennisaustin2115 Před rokem +2

    When the war started from Desert Shield to Storm the Batalion Commander called a formation and said men we are going in and there will be know more Hamburger Hills in my Unit. A guy named Friedley was standing next to me and said OMG we're all going to die. One of the few funny moments of the war. C CO 3-187 IN Rakkasan. Another was four days after cease-fire and the 502d was marching in Ticker-Tape Parade back home already we found out the war was over; We didn't know and appearantly neither did the Iraqi's. We found out from VOA radio.

  • @chrisscott1731
    @chrisscott1731 Před rokem +2

    God bless the men I have had a chance to know that fought for us here ❤️

  • @captango
    @captango Před rokem +3

    Young men at their finest treated like dirt. 🇬🇧

  • @belkheir59
    @belkheir59 Před rokem +5

    Young people who lose their lives far from their family and country, not even knowing the real reasons for this butchery decided by politicians who are not wise enough.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem +2

      Our govt counted on that ignorance. Today people are more educated and the military cannot fill their needed quota's to get people to join up.

    • @ronkostars4258
      @ronkostars4258 Před rokem

      @@rondodson5736- Nobody wants to join the woke military under the worst Commander in Chief in American history.

  • @galesams4205
    @galesams4205 Před 2 měsíci +1

    My unit worked Hill 881 north then to Pl-Rurang and cambodia. 10 days in then about face back in country. Armor can destroy the enemy base camps and arms caches. 4 div. B co.

  • @RayoBeatz
    @RayoBeatz Před 5 měsíci

    if video could have been taken of it it would be the most apocolyptic scene id imagine there was so much going on i bet no one could really see what was what pure chaos

  • @ericrichards6252
    @ericrichards6252 Před rokem +25

    Just returned from a wonderful trip to Vietnam. I have always been amazed at how the people have forgiven America for trying to bomb them from the face of the planet. Perhaps, we in the West, have still a lot to learn about life. We certainly do not have the moral high ground with this conflict.

    • @ericrichards6252
      @ericrichards6252 Před rokem +3

      PS- deepest respect to all those who lost their life.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem

      I don't think we have had the high ground in any war since WW II. We had the chance in 9/11. We should have just nuked the place and ended it. Then they would never have dared attack us again and all those lives that were lost and destroyed would still be with us and whole.

    • @billgonzales8978
      @billgonzales8978 Před rokem +1

      there will be wars and rumors of wars?

    • @Jleed989
      @Jleed989 Před rokem +2

      They asked for our help in the war then sat back and let us take the brunt of it

    • @dg7708
      @dg7708 Před rokem +2

      Ask the helicopter pilots who worked for the south and got their hands cut off by the northern communists how they feel. A lot of Vietnamese people fought and died so they didn't have to live under a communist regime. They continued to fight for another 2 years after the US left.

  • @motojunkie8348
    @motojunkie8348 Před rokem +24

    We should of never been there. Same with Korea, Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria etc....
    I wish we would of stayed isolationist.

    • @petercarr3686
      @petercarr3686 Před rokem

      2 out of 4 ain't bad

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem

      I don't feel we have had a valid war we should have been involved in since WWII.

  • @nixdapogs
    @nixdapogs Před rokem +1

    I saw the movie on VHS when I was a kid. The scene where the guy had his guts out scared me 🤢

  • @deltasix138
    @deltasix138 Před 6 měsíci

    My friend served with the 3/187 at Hamburger Hill, his name is George Keene. He passed away from drinking to much and it destroyed his liver. 😢

  • @patriotsunited8947
    @patriotsunited8947 Před rokem +12

    Imagine if this was taught in modern day history classes, maybe the rainbow coalition wouldn't be what it is in 2022. This is what we call teamwork, its no so much about likes and tweets.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem

      The truth is the govt lied about everything in Vietnam. Now i also believe since they lied about Vietnam they also have lied about all other wars and also about everything else.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem +2

      Today people are more educated and more informed as to things actually happening, that is why the military is having a hard time meeting its recruiting goals.

    • @diego2fuego869
      @diego2fuego869 Před rokem

      what is the rainbow coalition

    • @billgonzales8978
      @billgonzales8978 Před rokem

      remember all those soldurs were DRAFTED they did not want tobe there

    • @scotabot7826
      @scotabot7826 Před 9 měsíci

      These spoiled, weak minded kids of today, I'm afraid would fold up like a deck of cards if they were faced with just half of what these Heros stood up to. I have very, very little faith in the kids of today. Not all, but those kinds of kids are fewer and farther between these days. Most "advanced education" businesses these days have completely destroyed the minds of the ones who have attended them. So, so, sad, but we ALL are going to reap the damages of several generations!! Just read your history books folks!!

  • @Asegh
    @Asegh Před rokem +4

    Remember? At the end of the Oh Chi Min trail? “NaMoDiaTangVongBoTat” phonetically pronounced. A prayer to a bodhisattva to help all those who have passed from whatever nation at the end of the trail.

    • @brucepickess8097
      @brucepickess8097 Před rokem

      Ho Chi Minh.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem +2

      I have sympathy for all who fought and especially those who died from both sides. I have been back twice to Vietnam since the war. People were very friendly and country beautiful. I know i have met soldiers i probably fought against. I am happy to call them friends now. We were all soldiers and we didn't kill because we hated, we killed because we were soldiers.

  • @Wolfmoon81
    @Wolfmoon81 Před rokem +1

    This was brought to by the incompetence of the higher brass.

  • @f4tweet
    @f4tweet Před rokem +12

    God Bless the grunts.

    • @rondodson5736
      @rondodson5736 Před rokem +1

      I was a combat troop but i respect the support troops who supplied us because without them we couldn't have accomplished our missions, so respect to any who served with honor. That means kerry and mccain did not serve with honor.

    • @dianajones7162
      @dianajones7162 Před rokem

      @@rondodson5736 good old trump dodge the draft but you suck him.

    • @f4tweet
      @f4tweet Před rokem +1

      @@rondodson5736 What?

  • @johndilivio2770
    @johndilivio2770 Před rokem +6

    Ashau valley was always a bad place

  • @paulbrown6338
    @paulbrown6338 Před 8 měsíci

    Lost two of my OCS buddies on that hill, so young to end up like that.

  • @stephenwilliams8302
    @stephenwilliams8302 Před rokem +4

    If America had spent the money involved on the war in investment in Vietnam they would have won hands down

    • @billgonzales8978
      @billgonzales8978 Před rokem

      IF ?

    • @seattledreamer9901
      @seattledreamer9901 Před 9 měsíci

      The South with carbine M2, and Thompson while the North have AK and B40. After Tet Offensive 1967-1968 the South had M15 - M16
      The U.S. withdrew from Afghan, it fell in 2 weeks.
      The U.S. withdrew from South VN, it fought helplessly for almost 3 years (2 years and a half)

  • @issacendischee3637
    @issacendischee3637 Před rokem +1

    Honour to fallen and respect those who remember them for our freedom much love

  • @MadAdventure919
    @MadAdventure919 Před rokem

    When the soldiers look back and see the horror of the war and think to themselves. It didn't worth the sacrifice.

  • @davidcomtedeherstal
    @davidcomtedeherstal Před rokem +4

    Happy Armistice Day!

  • @johndilivio2770
    @johndilivio2770 Před rokem +3

    Americans took the hill then left north vietnam troops return to hill

  • @Kalashnikingz47
    @Kalashnikingz47 Před rokem +1

    This was basically an "I want it because you have it!" & an " I don't wanna give it up, because you want it!" ?

  • @terryslota2224
    @terryslota2224 Před 10 měsíci +1

    3rd Batt. 7th Marines ChuLai,RVN 10/65-11/66

  • @howardsmith8430
    @howardsmith8430 Před rokem +5

    “The vital coastal city of Hew” 😂😂😂

    • @edwinsalau150
      @edwinsalau150 Před rokem

      Was it close to DUNG HA HA?Clue me in?

    • @howardsmith8430
      @howardsmith8430 Před rokem

      @@edwinsalau150 Don’t have a clue about that comment. Sorry.

    • @edwinsalau150
      @edwinsalau150 Před rokem

      @@howardsmith8430 do you know the difference between the city of HUE and hew? There is a difference! For the uninitiated of course!

    • @howardsmith8430
      @howardsmith8430 Před rokem +1

      @@edwinsalau150 The city of HUE is pronounced HWAY with a soft H

    • @edwinsalau150
      @edwinsalau150 Před rokem

      Peruse your post.You may want to edit out Hew.

  • @hailduetschland3972
    @hailduetschland3972 Před rokem +4

    Hamburger Hill- Viet Nam
    Modern Afghanistan ..

    • @petercarr3686
      @petercarr3686 Před rokem +2

      North pole- South pole my friend

    • @hailduetschland3972
      @hailduetschland3972 Před rokem

      What is truly upsetting is that Our love ones Go and Die, in the Millions JUST TO HAND IT OVER BACK TO TERRORIST,
      our love ones don't meant nothing,
      Many of our soldiers passed and were liquidfied and blended with Bullets in this Hamburger Hill,
      For no reason, just like Afghanistan

  • @kaela2758
    @kaela2758 Před rokem +2

    My grandfather fought at hamburger hill. I never got to meet him.

  • @robertengland8769
    @robertengland8769 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Having seen the movie predator, I can see they got some of their ideas from actual combat footage such as this.