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David Mitchell
After Major Smith's arrival we were all feeling a sense of releif. A sense of calm and normalcy.
I was getting to know him more than most others in our troop because I flew as his co-pilot in the C&C (Command and Control ship) almost every time he flew. (remember, I had asked out of the Scout platoon on my return from my stateside leave) I also flew often with our XO - Captain Bud Beauchamp (another good guy). Not so much with our Operations Officer, whos name I cannot even remember.
Major Smith and I were sort of forming a freindship, or more like older brother - younger brother. I think he was thirty one and I was twenty one. We just sort of clicked.
Then something quite unexpected happened. President Nixon ordered us into Cambodia.
This will no doubt bring about a mixed reaction from some of you - - (Kent State riots for example).
For us, having flown over a year along that southern Cambodian border, and seeing enormous build-up of NVA (North Viet Nam Army), and our monitoring of their large night-time troop flow into Viet Nam from just across that border, this was more than welcome news. Prior to this, we could not enter and engage those troops, no matter how obvious and threatening their positions were. At times we could see several companies (hundreds of men in khacki uniforms, and troop trucks parked in rows) practicing drill in the open fields less than a few hunded yards inside their border. And there were a few times whne we got into live fire exchanges with them that pulled us across the border, and we had to break off the contact and fly back across the border and leave them behind. Frustrating!
Oddly, two nights before that scheduled incursion, I was called into the Major's "hooch" (about three cottages down the walkway from mine). Major Smith sat me down with Captain Beauchmp around a table (his hooch was more roomy and furnished than ours).
He began to lay out an explanation of what was about to happen in two days. In addition to the shock of this news, I was stunned that I was included in this briefing, Honestly, I was one of about 35 officers and Warrant Officers in our Troop, and I probably ranked about 25th in senority.
TBC
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