Hackworth is my great uncle, my family made me listen to his books on tape before i joined the army
@retprob3 ай бұрын
My dad served under your uncle. He always said that he was the BEST leader he ever had the privilege to work with. btw my dad served from 1942 to 1973. That tells you something!
@jerryg22327 ай бұрын
I knew Hack in 68-69. A great leader of men and selfless. A truth teller and didn't go along to get along.
@rebyosef10 ай бұрын
Hack was a great patriot. If you have not yet read "About face," you need to... A cautionary tale...
@jazzruff10 ай бұрын
Agreed..
@darbyheavey4065 ай бұрын
A great read and a great American patriot. I never understood my Dad’s attitude about regular officers until I read his book. RIP.
@Americal-v6r10 ай бұрын
Would have been good to have a high caliber leader like Hackworth when I served in the Nam. Hack was spot on about the war and was censored for it. A soldiers soldier who led from the front. learned understood and implemented the "out gurellia the gurellia" jungle tactics to his men in the delta. It was a kickass success but to late in the war and higher ups didn't listen. Hack and SLM Marshall wrote a book especially for the Army on Jungle warfare called the Viet Nam Primer. Its a highly sought after out of print book which commands a high price but worth it to anyone who fought or studies that war. Steel my soldiers hearts; About Face; Hazardous Duty; are recommended readings on what the Nam war was like for the Grunts who fought it, and for a first class leader of men like Col. Hackworth. RIP Col. Hackworth! 11Bravo Sir!
@michaeldineenSG20182 ай бұрын
John Paul Vann thought the same way. He got to know the people and really understood the difference. Hackworth saw the prosecution of this war going south and not getting better. I love your post sir. Made so much sense. Thank you fir your service. Welcome home.
@seller5597 ай бұрын
I met him twice in the early nineties. Helluva guy. Very friendly and engaging. More than happy to answer every question I asked him.
@mikechevreaux760710 ай бұрын
He Was a Soldier Not a Politician.
@John-px6fw10 ай бұрын
His book ABOUT FACE, is a must read.
@ratatomik10 ай бұрын
It literally changed my life.
@phillamoore1579 ай бұрын
The painful irony is that, that very speech could've been given yesterday, and been every bit as relevant, if not more.
@Americal-v6r8 ай бұрын
Agreed, hacks ability to apply Lessons Learned were effective in his strategy. Unfortunately then as well as today nothing is learned and Vietnam's continue, war after war after war. The corrupt politician's who start wars are being outed hopefully,the American people are starting to see and understand what these "wars" are and what they really generate. 1. Money;2. Power
@phillamoore1578 ай бұрын
@@Americal-v6r Amen... I think a LOT of people, American (and other countries) are starting to see just how deep the corrupt truly is. The problem is that what is left to do about it, at this point. *It's been made crystal clear that using laws, and an election system to fight filth who's corruption is SO BONE-DEEP that they refuse to "acknowledge", nor respect either of those institutions, will NOT work, because they either control, or have weaponized, both. When things get that bad, there's only one solution left. And, that's a horrifying reality.* 60million people died ridding the world of that EXACT...SAME....FITLH (one of them being my own grandfather). And, now look where we're at. We have deep-rooted antisemitic issues at literally EVERY....SINGLE....Ivy League school in America. We're in for some indescribably, dark days, friend.
@tomhorner560410 ай бұрын
I read about face. I searched a long time for this video and would have liked to see it in the full version. Thanks for showing it. I spent 12 years in the military from 1972 to 1984. I figured this video was supressed and not allowed to be seen. Hack watched a great Army in 1965 be so deteriorated by 1970. Lyndon Johnson knew the truth about the Gulf of Tonkin and 58,000 died in vain over a lie, and a war we should have never been in. Hack said it was the toughest war America ever fought and I believe he was right.
@Darling13710 ай бұрын
I've been looking for this forever. Thanks!
@ratatomik10 ай бұрын
Same here!
@ratatomik10 ай бұрын
Wow! You found it!!!!! Thank you so much. I've been looking everywhere for this bit of film for a long time. Where did you get it?
@josephkavanagh35562 ай бұрын
This was an archived copy I found. This is only a partial clip, I couldn't find the full interview anywhere
@crusader21128 ай бұрын
I got his book Steel My Soldiers' Hearts. 3 Chapters in, really good so far. Definitely a hero.
@bill50866 ай бұрын
I've been looking for this for years. I read About Face during Desert Shield and bought my own after we came home after the war, along with his other books. He was a voice of reason in a crazy world. RIP
@milesdee180610 ай бұрын
A true American patriot and one of the few who put his honor ahead of the orthodoxy. A real soldier's soldier and one of a kind. Here's a great short clip of him as well. kzbin.info/www/bejne/p5Swo5mkqpp3psk And a short military bio of this man's man: Colonel Hackworth lied to enlist in the Army at 15 and won a battlefield commission at 20 to become the Korean War's youngest captain. He was America's youngest full colonel in Vietnam, and won a total of 91 medals, including two Distinguished Service Crosses, 10 Silver Stars, 8 Bronze Stars and 8 Purple Hearts.
@jazzruff10 ай бұрын
Been looking for this since reading About Face
@timothyjackson42858 ай бұрын
ive been waiting for this video.
@michaeldineenSG20182 ай бұрын
Spot on.
@mikesbaseballcards9 ай бұрын
My father was a Major with the 5th Inf(Mech) on the DMZ 69/70 at Alpha 4.
@10mmenjoyer9 ай бұрын
How did you find this? Where can I find the full thing?
@josephkavanagh35562 ай бұрын
It was on a television archive site. This is the only copy I could find
@KTB114 ай бұрын
Ain't nobody gonna talk about the beginning of this video? 😂
@momentomori10994 ай бұрын
Correct sir. It should not only be addressed by all those in attendance, but also by a special board of our peers.
@dr650riderarkansas86 ай бұрын
Can't remember if in About Face or Steel My Soldier's Hearts, Hack said something like the US forces couldn't stand the ARVN. I remember reading about a sort of unspoken agreement between the ARVN and the NVA, "you don't shoot us, we won't shoot you" and the NVA would wait on the US forces. Maybe someone who was there can verify? And remember Hackworth's predication of the fall of Saigon was very close to the actual date.
@joshearhart61423 ай бұрын
I like the old gurdle commercial 😅
@10mmenjoyer9 ай бұрын
Please tell me
@345mrse5 ай бұрын
The Cong were still around in ‘71? Hm.
@olafvidar93154 ай бұрын
The Hack!
@VanoyBrown29 күн бұрын
some of the things in Apocalypse Now were loosely based on some of his activities
@DrewHanks20839 ай бұрын
With all due respect sir, we had no business in Vietnam. Almost 60,000 American lives and untold hundreds of thousands on the communist side lost for absolutely nothing.
@eduardohope49099 ай бұрын
Which was what Col. Hackworth was getting at-- the United States sent people to Vietnam without a cause to fight for, whereas the people of North Vietnam were crystal clear about why fighting and dying were worth it. As Defense Secretary Robert McNamara (and probably Pres. Johnson and later Pres. Nixon) discovered and somehow could not accept, Vietnam was a civil war into which the U.S. inserted itself, not some 'domino' in a fear-mongering theory of Communism. So neither the French colonial power that gave up in 1954 nor the U.S. anti-communist power that took over the fight could hope to win. Hackworth went into it as just a soldier doing his duty and left an enlightened warrior conscious of the broader context and the imbecility and wastefulness of the involvement.
@Page-Hendryx6 ай бұрын
@@eduardohope4909 Well with all due respect, Hackworth was talking about the ARVN (South Vietnamese army) not having a cause to fight for.
@JoeLynnTurner6 ай бұрын
@@Page-Hendryxif you read About Face you know what he was for. It's as said above, he went in as an patriot soldier to do the only thing he was passionate about - serving his country. After couple years he became disillusioned to the state of things and lack of purpose for the war effort. In specific lack of purpose of sending American youngsters to die in a hopeless war fought without clear goals or right strategies, tactics or politics.
@sonnysantana54545 ай бұрын
Semper fi bro 24'th MAU 1/8 B' Co 1'st plt 81/85
@benwinter24202 ай бұрын
Did come across an opinion that it was all about control of the south China sea oilfields
@johnpagel83064 ай бұрын
Hackworth never earned the RANGER TAB. His unit was attached to the RANGERS for one operation in KOREA but attached doesn't make you a RANGER. He had to return 36 medals he did not deserve. He got alot of men killed 2/71966 because he didn't know what he was doing John Pagel B 1/327 101st ABN 1965-1966
@robertisham52794 ай бұрын
Were you in the tiger force?
@johnpagel83063 ай бұрын
@@robertisham5279 My company fought with them
@I0MSammy2 ай бұрын
Like all commanders he had a lot of responsibility. It might be true that he got some men killed but I think it is well understood that he was a capable commander due to all of his commendations and references. He also saved a lot of men's lives in Korea and Vietnam and a lot of people vouch for him. I looked up your credentials and I couldn't find much in terms of citation. If i remember correctly though, your battalion was the one that tried to frag the colonel right? So i am not surprised that you have bad things to say about him.
@I0MSammy2 ай бұрын
Also I just researched the ranger tab that you are referring to and Hackworth worked/served with a Ranger Company in Korea. Back then you could wear the tab if you were in more more than 30/90 days in a combat zone. Later on the requirements tightened to requiring the school.
@kevinh911025 күн бұрын
Bud, having a Ranger tab doesn't make you a Ranger. Being in Ranger Regiment does. Don't pass on misinformation to civilians watching this. And why do you feel the need to gatekeep Rangers considering how you are not one? Return 36 medals my ass, those are awarded to you - you don't get them on your own accord. Yes if you're in intense combat, men under your command are going to be KIA.
@Glen.Danielsen2 ай бұрын
Joseph, thanks so much for featuring this great patriot and thinker. He was so truthful, incisive. 🫡💛