Howie Belkin wrote: |
Ray you read your history right. Tet '68 was THE Tet everyone 'knows' about. While I have to respect the enemy soldiers as fierce, determined bastards, I have no respect for folk like Giap, and General Hguyen Chi Thanh who drew up the plans for Tet '68. How great a general are you if you don't care how many of your people you sacrifice? That was true back in Dien Bien Phu vs the overwhelmingly out-numbered French, and Tet '68 especially around Khe Sanh. Some top Vietnamese communists wrote after the war confirming that they thoroughly 'lost' Tet '68 to the point that the Viet Cong were no longer a viable force. Colonel and diplomat Bui Tin wrote "While the enemy's losses were insignificant, ours were enormous... we did not recover until 1972." Except of course politically, thanks to Walter Cronkite and company who like their media brethern today, grabbed defeat out of the jaws of victory. Every year had a Tet but none were as significant as 1968 - unless 'you were there,' having to live through it! clear right Howie |
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an excellent post on what really happened (sorry Dan Rather). In the 1968 Tet Offensive we kicked his butt all the way back into the stoneage, and he still remembers it very well. One estimate has 325,000 KIA on the little guys side of the street. By the end of the month of May the local VC were a rare find, and only existed in small pockets. Yes there were still a few here and there, but most of the leftovers had gone into the Laotian frontier. But what they never really expected was that some folks followed them back into Laos. (SOG teams)
We still get to hear about how successful they were in taking control of the U.S. Embassy (no they never had control). But they did manage to take control of Cho Lon and actually hold it for a couple of weeks till the 101st and a Panther Battalion evicted them in some of the most brutal house to house fighting the world has ever known to this day. Then there was the Race Track in Siagon (Sin Loi Victor Charles, but it's still Siagon in this old man's book). One batallion from the 101st took that place in one of the bloodiest actions ever seen in modern warfare (you won't see a photo op there as nobody likes to run with the 101st). When it was over there was about a company and a half standing, but the other guys knew they were not ever going to be welcome there again.
When Giap stepped on Superman's cape he had no idea what kinda dancing partner he had taken up with. Giap learned new names such as "snakeyes" , cobras, and best of all "class A loads." Met the folks from the 1st Air Cav, and 101st Airborne. By the month of June he was sending teenage kids to do his dirty work, and we were burying them just as fast
Lastly: I think everybody here needs to find a copy of "The Valley Of Decision". It's about Khe Sanh and the surrounding AO. It's not like the history chnnel ever dreamed it could have been. The book is very accurate. And after reading it you'll soon figure out who's got the facts and who did a TV show on it.
gary