Some Even Volunteered: The First Wolfhounds Pacify Vietnam
By (Author) Alfred S. Bradford
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th October 1994
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Asian history
War and defence operations
959.7043
Hardback
192
"Some Even Volunteered" provides a description and evaluation of the life and the achievement of the American soldier in Vietnam trying to "win the hearts and minds" of the Vietnamese. In a style reminiscent of Michael Herr in "Dispatches" but still his own, Bradford relates the story of the First Battalion of the 27th Infantry Regiment (First Wolfhounds) of the 25th Infantry Division as they pacified the district of Tri Tam. The First Battalion - which had the highest body count of any rifle battalion in Vietnam - was air-lifted into an NVA rest area south of Dau Tieng (IIId Brigade basecamp) in the district of Tri Tam on 24 October 1968. They had been ordered to interdict the NVA supply line that stretched from the Ho Chi Minh trail in Cambodia through Dau Tieng to Saigon. They were expected to complete their mission in three days, but they uncovered such an extensive network of headquarters, hospitals, supply, troop concentrations and local support, that the mission was extended to a week, then to a month, and finally to eight months. Eight months later, the Wolfhounds had succeeded. Their fire support base was assaulted three times, their Bridge base twice. They established four independent forts, ran missions throughout the Third Brigade Area of Operations, and accepted the surrender of dozens of Viet Cong and NVA. In effect, they had destroyed an NVA unit of their own size.
"I was hooked by the unusual style and, moreso, by the unusual approach to the familiar material . . . Articulate, sensitive, and intelligent . . . an unusually readable and persuasive narrative."-Robert W. Lewis North Dakota Quarterly
In this first-hand account of the operation of the First Battalion of the 27th Infantry, Bradford weaves the tale of the First Wolfhounds as they sought to pacify the Tri Tam district in South Vietnam. General readers through faculty.-Choice
"In this first-hand account of the operation of the First Battalion of the 27th Infantry, Bradford weaves the tale of the First Wolfhounds as they sought to pacify the Tri Tam district in South Vietnam. General readers through faculty."-Choice
ALFRED S. BRADFORD is John Saxon Professor of Ancient History at the University of Oklahoma. He earned his Ph.D. in classical languages and literatures from the University of Chicago. He served with 1/27th Infantry (Wolfhounds) of the 25th Infantry Division in Vietnam, September 1968 to August 1969. He was awarded the Bronze Star, Air Medal, and Purple Heart. He is the author of Philip II of Macedon: A Life from the Ancient Sources (Praeger, 1992).