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David Mitchell
About a week back, Jack posted a great story about a mortar attack.
Here is an episode that cost us one of our best local "buddies".
MORTAR ATTACKS - A Regular "Visitor"
Life on Vinh Long Airfield was relatively secure - at times even boring. A property the size of a regional shopping center had a perimeter that was well manned with plenty of little two-story guard shacks (manned 24 hours a day) and several small towers along the more exposed south and east sides. Barbed wire was everywhere, and the one main gate was heavily guarded.
But we still had an unwelcome visitor every few weeks - always late at night – usual after most of us were asleep for the night. Sometime in the middle of the night, a few small teams of Viet Cong would set up mortar tubes in the open fields out to our southeast and send us their life-threatening calling cards. I never learned if they were the smaller 60mm or the larger 80mm tubes, but it didn't matter - they were scary as hell and could wreak havoc on humans or our parked aircraft on the flight line. A few photos throughout the book show the "Revetments" (concrete walls) between parking spaces to cut down on the splash effect of mortar explosions. They might hit one, but the spreading lateral damage was partly mitigated by the revetements.

Looking down at the short end of our flightline - row after row of concrete "revetments".
It seemed like their usual target was our aircraft out on the flight line, but the noise was enough to wake us up and scare the crap out of us a few hundred yards away in our beds. I can recall jumping up in my underwear in sheer panic and scrambling down the hall of our hooch and into the bunker just ten feet from our back door. We would stand there in the dim light of a single bare bulb, listening to our Cobra gunships (a team always circling high above the airfield throughout the night), firing rockets down on those mortar tubes, as soon as they could detect the location of a flash from the tubes. It was usually over in ten or fifteen minutes, then back to bed.
The first several attacks scared the living crap out of me! I was quick to jump up and dash down the hall and into the bunker. But as time went on, I grew somewhat accustomed to sound and was slower to respond. I recall the last two times, someone actually had to come back in and wake me to get me up for my dash to safety.
TBC
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