N3Njeff wrote:
Great post. As a Vietnam war historian, I consider ANYONE who served in ANY conflict a Hero. They may not consider themselves hero's. I have heard the " I was just doing my job" But for a bomber pilot to go out and drop bombs and it end up being trees. Then finding a good target and told by your govt, You cant go there.
"well i did not do anything except drive a truck" I have heard that too. This comming from guys that would drive out of the base in truck full of stuff to wage war. Dirt roads full of potholes, dust and heat. Even the equipment was tested to its limits but the enemy was out there, behind the bushes and trees waiting. Waiting for the enemy hauling 2000 gallon tank trailers. Aiming there RPG's at the big white star on the door. They were in the Kill zone! AMBUSH AMBUSH AMBUSH, would call out when the Convoy commander had finally seen the cloud of smoke 2 mi up the road. Some times 10 min would pass before aircover would arrive on scene. The enemy would be gone! Drivers would be dead, equipment and supplies lost! Only when a unit level commander stepped up and took the matter into his own hands and came up with the "Hardened Convoy Concept" or know as GUN TRUCKS. This lesson would be learned again 35 yrs later. " I just drove a truck". Not hardly.
I just wish more americans felt the way I do.
Sorry for the rant.
CRS syndrome. It's a vicous cycle we go through ever day. Can't remember how to unsnap your helmet strap so when a round hits it won't twist your head off. Can't remember not to drive unarmored vehicles throught the center of Mogudishu. Can't remember to drive unarmored vehicles through the middle of Baghdad. Can't remember not to stand looking INTO the compound while you're in a guard tower...
It's not just the officers, though their screwups cost the most deaths. Everybody has that CRS syndrome, and it occurs right up to the day you leave the zone. It's just part of the game, I guess. Tired, hungry, grumpy, and just been yelled at. Then you get shot at--a few rounds over your head. The adrenaline makes you dumb as a bag of hammers if you let it.
And then there's the brass in the puzzle palace. They're so busy licking thier own balls that they don't have time to care about the little things ...like gun trucks and whether we're sending enough shooters in so the support personel dont have to do a duty they aren't trained for.
Every day of every war it happens. I guess just surviving your own commanders is a large art of the adversity...