"I think the hardest part was Cu Chi," said Yee, who recently retired from
the Honolulu Fire Department as an administrative officer. "We were trying to
take a village outside of the base camp when we ran into heavy automatic
weapons fire. That's when I got it."
Yee, 59, said four battalions from the 25th Division were airlifted to the
Vietnamese highlands of Pleiku in 1965, and his unit was followed by boats
that landed in Vungtau in South Vietnam in January 1966.
That was "Operation Blue Light," then the largest and longest airlift of
personnel and cargo into a combat zone. More than 4,000 3rd Brigade infantry
men were airlifted to Pleiku in December 1965. Yee spent 90 days there on Huey
gunships, providing security for the base, then returned to Schofield Barracks
to join his unit as it was preparing to deploy to South Vietnam.
During the early 1960s, Schofield Barracks was the home of the Army's
premiere counter-guerrilla training center. There were courses in Asian
languages, jungle survival, warfare and military tactics, including rappelling
from helicopters and cliffs.
"Its training was different from conventional warfare," said Letoto, who
spent two tours in Vietnam. "The theory was to get people on your side."
"I firmly believe, just by the actions of my troops, we couldn't have been
better prepared. When the chips were down, my men performed because of their
training. One of my men told me that the training here was harder, except for
combat, where you could get killed.
"The Koolaus may look beautiful from afar, but they can be very
treacherous."
Yee said his unit was the first to be trained in UH-1 Huey helicopters,
which initially were used as gunships, armed with M-60 machine guns and rocket
pods.
"None of the Hueys had gun mounts and the M-60s were hung by bungee cords
from the ceiling of the helicopters," said Yee, who volunteered for three
Vietnam tours.
"You rode with the M-60 sitting on your lap. At Makua Valley, we learned
how to fire, (and) change the barrel of the M-60 before the helicopter reached
the end of the valley and turned around for another run."
The Wolfhounds' mission in January 1966 was to set up a base camp at Cu
Chi, which was west of Saigon and a Viet Cong rest area, Letoto said. "But
that was something we didn't know at the time."
Yee, who graduated from St. Louis High School in 1959, was wounded at Cu
Chi and was hospitalized for three weeks.
"We ran into a very sophisticated enemy force at Cu Chi," said Yee, who
retired from the Army Reserve as a lieutenant colonel after 32 years of
service. "It was the stomping ground for the VC. They had built an extensive
tunnel system and were well organized and well entrenched, having been there
since the French occupation."
Letoto said he is haunted by an ambush that took place in July 1966.
"It still stays in my mind. It was when three of my platoons had the
biggest casualties -- 32 were wounded and 24 were killed.
"That's when you see grown men cry. In combat, you become very close ...
people depend on each other. I remember before we got there, I got my men
together on the ship and told them that this was war and that some of them
might not be coming back.
"But it was still very hard when something like that happens."
But there also were lighter moments, according to retired Army Col. Milton
Goo, who was assigned to the division for five years, beginning in 1961.
He spent his last tour with the Tropic Lightning in Vietnam as a brigade
assistance intelligence officer.
"We were at Cu Chi in April 1966", said Goo, "and a brigade from Alaska had
been activated to round out the division ... The brigade, after being there
for a month, was given the responsibility of guarding one-third of the camp's
perimeter from 10 p.m. to 4 a.m.
"That night, you thought we were being overrun from all of the shooting
that was going on from that side of the perimeter. Monitoring their radio
frequency, you would think there were 200 to 300 people attacking the camp.
But when morning came, there was nothing there. No bodies. They were just
shooting at shadows and ghosts.
"It brought a chuckle to a lot us, and we wondered if it had been like that
when we first came into the country."
Goo, now civilian chief of operations for planning at Fort Shafter, also
noted that one of the battalion commanders was a guy from Hawaii, as were
several other key non-commissioned officers.
"We had written into our brigade SOP (standard operating procedure) that
all captured rice would be turned over to us because of its intelligence
value," Goo said.
"You can guess the real purpose ... at least we had something to go with
our C-rations."
During the Tet offensives of 1968 and 1969, the Tropic Lightning soldiers
-- who got their nickname, "lightning," from their telephone call sign during
the Guadacanal campaign in 1942 --were instrumental in defending Saigon. From
May 1969 through April 1970, the 25th Division was involved in the U.S.
Vietnamization program, but saw limited action in the Hobo and Bo Loi Woods.
From April through June 1970, they joined the Allied effort in the enemy
sanctuaries of Cambodia, confiscating tons of supplies and weapons.
Hawaii Army National Guard Brig. Gen. Clarence "Mert" Agena recalls
fighting in the Bo Loi Woods, where three companies of the Wolfhounds went in
to rescue a U.S. Army Ranger team that was pinned down.
An artillery officer with the Wolfhounds, Agena, 55, said the battle lasted
nearly four days and involved more than 200 Viet Cong and North Vietnamese
soldiers.
"I remember constantly being up in the air with the commander, riding in a
helicopter, trying to adjust our artillery fire," said Agena, who recently
received his first star as deputy adjutant general for the state of Hawaii
Department of Defense.
"Couple of months later, we made several thrusts into Cambodia, some
lasting several weeks. These were essentially search and destroy missions
because Cambodia was the sanctuary for the VC and the NVA (North Vietnamese
Army)."
Following the Cambodia campaign, the 25th Division resumed the
Vietnamization program.
In late December 1970, it began redeploying to Schofield Barracks. In early
May 1971, the 2nd Brigade was the last Tropic Lightning element to leave South
Vietnam.
During the Vietnam War, the Tropic Lightning soldiers were awarded 22
Medals of Honor -- the most received by any unit in the war.
Tomorrow
Bitterness runs deep among
some of Hawaii's Vietnamese, now about 10,000 strong.
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