Thanks for your service! I was there in 67. Every one please remember the ones men and women that didn’t make it back home! ! Thanks
@SK-xv3hn7 күн бұрын
Excellent Bill! Served 2 tours, the 1st with: K/75 RGR E/58 LRP 4th ID LRRP
@michaelangileo2760Ай бұрын
Thank you for your service to our country. God bless you, sir. You are GREATLY appreciated.
@liamrooney53142 ай бұрын
What a raw, honest account of his experiences and views of the war. Yes, the war was misguided, but America still needs to appreciate your service. Thank you!
@tonygarcia3563 ай бұрын
Welcome Home! Thank you for your Vietnam Service! True heroes!
@kennethprice5628Ай бұрын
This man should be rated 100%
@a-d-dgamingchannel461526 күн бұрын
Thank you William Macleod. My family appreciate your service and the sacrifices you made. No amount of thanks can cover it but we are grateful. My dad fought in Desert Storm in the MLRS rocket system and he has such respect for Vietnam veterans. Said if not for them they wouldn’t have been able to do what they did in Kuwait. All the elements of war that we learned from in Vietnam is what kept so many of our boys safe in the years to come. A truly bittersweet sacrifice for life to survive by death. We are in the midst of heaven and truly in these moments of history we shine out and overcome darkness. You deserve 200% VA benefit
@micheandmikey3 ай бұрын
I'm watching this at work memorized, because Bill looks a lot like my dad, who also served 3 tours with the green Barrett in Vietnam. Such similar stories, wow. My dad is 78 (or did he just turn 79) I don't remember. Anyway, wow. I'll watch this again with my wife later. My dad has similar side effects from the agent orange, he can hardly bump his arms against anything without peeling his skin back, yet he's still tough as nails. One of my dad's best friends Terry was a helicopter pilot and saved my dad after a fire fight. They didn't know each other back in the late 60's but in about 1985 they became close friends and made the connection that they were on that same mission and Terry had rescued my dad. Terry, his wife and my parents are still very close and have skied, hunted, fished together for decades. Sending you all the best Bill!!! Take care!
@georgewashington33933 ай бұрын
Beret.
@AndreaEllenG-i7u3 ай бұрын
My brother in law was in Vietnam. One evening wherever they were some of the men decided to go to beach site for a shout swim. He didn't want to go. That evening all his friends were killed by the enemy on the beach. My mother-in-law prayed the rosary every day praying for his safety and his return to home. Her two other sons returned home from other conflicts. My husband was in the Korean war. Hes 91 now 🙏📿
@josephk43103 ай бұрын
Glory, be to God ☦️ Amen.
@harryallen99433 ай бұрын
Amen ! The feverent prayer of the righteous ❤availeth much .....
@harryallen99433 ай бұрын
What a righteous & wise man
@johnmchale42142 ай бұрын
God bless andrea
@AndreaEllenG-i7u2 ай бұрын
@@harryallen9943 Yes he's my soul mate.
@faganedwards1464Ай бұрын
Now this is a hero. Fighting for his country & his people
@keith019562 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service and Welcome Home
@AngusMacPherson-ch9wh11 күн бұрын
Thank you for your service Bill,you and and friends are true heroes, I wish I could say more but but I’m at a loss for words Sir 🇨🇦🇺🇸🏴
@AllAroundAtlanta3 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service!
@semperoccultus196911 күн бұрын
I was 1 month old when you arrived in country and 1 year old when you jumped off that chopper. Thanks for the account of your time.
@richardelias26743 ай бұрын
Semper Fi, 68-69, multiple Purple Hearts. 3/5, Phu Bia to An Hoa.
@sandeewood29483 ай бұрын
Welcome home brother thank you for your service you really need to put in for ptsd you will definitely be at 100 percent you earned it..nam vet 68/69 25th infantry division..
@rce593 ай бұрын
Thanks for your story.
@Gunsandfun19613 ай бұрын
Thanks for your service
@AndreaEllenG-i7u3 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service 🙏
@jinyingjiang462810 күн бұрын
Thanks for service. God Bless you.
@1949LA-ARCH3 ай бұрын
Welcome home brother, thank you for your service for our country. 😊I remember every date from landing in Nam to being hit to hospital to my DEROS. The older I get, the more I remember, crazy right ? I came back to the world at the end of August 1970. We are very much alike brother, God bless you. I have had bladder cancer 4 times plus lung cancer with a lobectomy of right lung. I never smoked.😊 I am 75 years young.
@a-d-dgamingchannel461526 күн бұрын
You can feel his pain about the whole thing but when he spoke about the guy taking his place that tripped a grenade. Deep hurt right there. What a vivid moment to recount. God bless you sir.
@janhorton51977 күн бұрын
Thank you Bill.
@richardgiel59803 ай бұрын
Ty sir welcome home
@rbmcdonald19773 ай бұрын
Thank you for serving!
@JeffDonley-mq1ru3 ай бұрын
Thank you. You are a hero.
@boonedockjourneyman79793 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@richardelias26743 ай бұрын
Two weeks of orientation, I arrived in Vietnam one day and was in the bush the next day. The difference between the Army and the Marine Corps. Welcome home.
@3putt548Күн бұрын
I’m sure many soldiers in that war wish they could have their memories totally erased. So many lives lost as well as the horrors of PTSD. God Bless them!
@johnnybravoBoyahАй бұрын
Great interview Bill ,Godspeed Sign: E4 Marine
@tertessa3 ай бұрын
Thank you Sir...
@joefrieson51003 ай бұрын
Enjoyed his story.
@dannymcdaniel16523 ай бұрын
I was in military ( army ) from very late 1969 ..in fort poke/North Fort Tiger land from there to veitnam 1970/1972 before I got seen back to the States..sad welcoming home
@amandawhisnant22703 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service, and Welcome Home!
@Lordestroyer3 ай бұрын
Thank you sir!
@hudson55733 ай бұрын
Thanks Bill!
@bwfiibwfii16422 ай бұрын
Thank you is not enough ❤
@1murder9926 күн бұрын
Hey Bill glad you made it home, hope you are well. I was the Forward Observer for A company 1st 46th Infantry of the 198th Light Infantry Brigade. When I got there in October 1968 they moved the battalion up to LZ Baldy. We patrolled around Baldy until they moved us to LZ Professional in May of 1969. At some point during this time the 46 was transferred to the 196th Light Infantry Brigade. In May I went back to B Battery 1st 14th Artillery of the 198th.
@AaronJoseph-t4bАй бұрын
Honors & Kudos words aren't enough,my late bro-cousin served in " Desert Shield" & Sariavo where we almost lost him while he was on nightwatch,became Master Sgt. At discharge,lost him to a brain aneurysm R.I.P. brother
@Mike-nw6ge27 күн бұрын
I listened to your interview. I could see the horrific in your eyes. I could not imagine seeing all that.
@johncarlson81252 ай бұрын
Love you brother
@sparklemonkey118 күн бұрын
Excellent American story.. I salute you.
@ronaldwarren522029 күн бұрын
USARV Special Troops, Long Binh 68/69. I was a draftee and am now at 80% too. I have a dining room set that was made in Vietnam. What a shock that was when I saw that label! Welcome home brother.
@davidreynolds64773 ай бұрын
LBJ and his buddies needed their shares in the defence industry to keep going up that’s why the Vietnam war was started I live in the UK and followed the war from the 60s until it ended and I have nothing but respect for all those who served
@choosetolivefree25 күн бұрын
I have every bit as much respect for those who refused to serve, maybe even a little more. People think it would be the coward way out. False. It takes a lot of moral courage to refuse, facing not just legal repercussions, but social as well. You'll be a pariah just for doing the right thing.
@davidreynolds647725 күн бұрын
@ you live in the country you should fight for the country
@jameswhite-i2v3 ай бұрын
Bill, you need to file for PTSD and unemployability ( VA form 21-8940 ). Also get with a DAV , VFW or American Legion service officer to help .. It took me 8 years to get my 100% with help from DAV..
@bradr21423 ай бұрын
Absolutely with back pay.
@joanmarymccormack6877Ай бұрын
That is terrible u had to wait so long. Uncle Sam in my arse
@Americal-v6rАй бұрын
@17:42 "there was quite a bit of anger about the stupidity of this war and so on". Yea,.same scenario for my experience. I was with The 196th Light Infantry off LZ Center Oct.1970-Feb1971. we did a patrol East of Heip Duc and was ambushed,booby trapped, for days until hardly anyone left. I was one of the senior on time served and had to take over a squad. I didnt want it but that was Nam. Same scenerio on a grunt went outside the night permiter to vacate. Word went down the line,"don't shoot" well when he came back in he came in on a different angle and two green seeds fired the grunt up and we had a KIA to send out the next morning. I will never forget hearing those shots ring out and the grunt saying dont shoot! It Seems almost yesterday and its been over 54 yrs ago. Ho Chi Meign said:"who ever wishes to seize Vietnam must kill us to the last man". Nobody listened.
@jerrykap443 ай бұрын
Great interview Bill. I was in and around Chu Lai for most of my 1-year Army tour. Our times there overlapped a bit. While I was in the rear with the gear running the mobile Army POL lab in the Navy Tank farm, we were hit regularly with Katyusha 122mm rockets starting with Tet. You above all deserve to be rated 100% by VA. Once you're at 70% you can then put in for unemployability that will get you100%. Never take no for an answer and keep filling until you get it. Also use your local Veterans Service Office to help you with this, definitely worth doing. I believe Matt Hindra is now setting me up so I can tell my story on USA Warriors Stories. My purpose is to help other vets. If you have any suggestions, please get in touch.
@mikegallegos128428 күн бұрын
Sorry Brother prayers for you that you receive your 100% I too served with the Americal 198th LIB lot of crazy things happened there. Sad we have fight for our benefits. God bless you .
@MrTelecasterIV3 ай бұрын
His eyes says it all, he lost his soul out there...
@georgewashington33933 ай бұрын
My grandfather's eyes were like that. Like he was always seeing through you to something else. He was a browning m1919a4 gunner at the battle of pork chop hill in Korea and his assistant gunner was KIA there.
@MrTelecasterIV3 ай бұрын
@@georgewashington3393 Indeed, sometimes you see them snapping back into this world and then they are back to war again. No words can describe the psychological torture and horror veterans and soldiers have to carry their whole lives. They deserve the best of the best and must be treated with the utmost respect. A sincere thank you for your grandfathers offer. God Bless.
@georgewashington33933 ай бұрын
🍻
@robertkelley19902 ай бұрын
Thank u for your service u should be at 100 percent for your service God Bless .
@dougruss88103 ай бұрын
Informative
@TechnikMeister23 ай бұрын
I was an officer with Australian 3 RAR in VN during those dates. By late 1968 the war was lost due to Westmorelands incompetance in employing WW2 infantry tactics against an insurgency. Even in Afghanistan, they still used forts which they called Fire Bases. It was no different to fighting the Indians in 1870. We would go on penetration patrols for two weeks at a time. The US would heli in and then get evac'd before dark back to base, achieving nothing. The Marines knew what the problem was but they were ignored. Even after Abrams took over, he could not get permission to change tactics becuse the war by them was being run out of the White House. By 1970, we were spending all our time doing recon because we would be in a position to conduct rescue missions of moron US soldiers who got caught out. The AATTV (SAS) won four VCs doing just that.
@dougdownunder5622Ай бұрын
The Great untold story of Vietnam tactics. US arrogance prevented adopting Australian guerilla war tactics.
@impacking3 ай бұрын
Welcome home Sarge.
@fload46d3 ай бұрын
Present arms, brother.
@reddiver7293Ай бұрын
A good man, who fought among other good men. American men who gave the cause their all. Over 57,000 good American men perished in that war. And for what? For precisely the things President Eisenhower tried to warn us about in his final speech as President: the military industrial complex. Everybody lost in that war except for companies that sold arms and munitions. Our nation owes a debt of gratitude to this fine man and his brothers in arms. They deserved better.
@TheDustysix3 ай бұрын
I met a Gimlet from Detroit, Ralph Hickerson. Indian Rocks Beach, Florida. 2003 or so.
@kennethprice5628Ай бұрын
Welcome home brother, 72 yo Navy Veteran
@georgewashington33933 ай бұрын
"Killed a bunch of people and you give me an ice cream and a warm beer." Damn, the vietnam war was messed up. I hope the vietnam vets can find peace in their lives.
@suttonmatthew3 ай бұрын
A breat interview and account of a participant.
@fload46d3 ай бұрын
He should have gotten at least a silver star.
@PaloDuro10213 ай бұрын
Oh wow, this guy was literally in HELL for a year.
@timothywellington415429 күн бұрын
Man, thank the Lord the for all in what you have done in Veitnam T.L.W.
@vgoose5028 күн бұрын
Hay Bill I found out after enlisting to stay away from the draft my number was 366, yes 366 it was leap year. Oops but what an education in I Corp, if you can call it that. Welcome home brother.
@arthurbrumagem38445 күн бұрын
He’s AO “ certified only because he had boots on the ground in Vietnam, that’s all it takes
@a.m.phaneuf61643 ай бұрын
He enlisted, was RA, regular army…but he said he prefix was AR not U.S. I don’t understand.
@hudson55733 ай бұрын
I did 24 years and I don't know what he meant.
@scottankers66903 ай бұрын
My guess is he just inadvertently said AR but meant RA. I always wonder why guys say they were about to be drafted so they enlisted. Why is that better? Either way he ends up in Nam.
@hudson55733 ай бұрын
@@scottankers6690 I watched one video where a guy was about drafted that enlisted first. He said he did it because he was told by enlisting 3 or 4 years he'd receive training that would keep him from being in the infantry. He received training in a communications job of some kind. When he arrived at his unit in Vietnam, they told him they needed him as a rifleman.
@billnlpaw3 ай бұрын
E5? Walking point? Interesting.
@richardgogan6553 ай бұрын
@@scottankers6690 Exactly ----when enlisted in the US Army 1969 my records and "dog tags" were RA (regular army) ----but if you were drafted your tags were US ------to be honest by the time you completed basic training no body even talked about it no one even cared -----how other guys saw you was really about the kind of guy you were -----just that simple !
@arthurbrumagem38445 күн бұрын
He should have said RA prefix not AR prefix - RA stands for regular army
@richardgogan6553 ай бұрын
correct ---11 charlie MOS was a mortar squad or mortar platoon
@arthurbrumagem38445 күн бұрын
It’s an 81 Mm mortar not 80Mm
@arthurbrumagem38445 күн бұрын
The NVA didn’t have a 52 machine gun, they had a 51. This guy can’t remember weapons at all. Age is a casualty
@ryanlawrence9010Ай бұрын
Back when it wasn't voluntary ✌️🇺🇲 Real hereos. Gramps Merchant Marine WW2, uncle Marines.
@bhoran11523 ай бұрын
👍
@sixsixsix.Ай бұрын
I'm no combat vet, but I know not to be out in the open and be a sitting duck. What was this officer thinking?🤦
@pd22103 ай бұрын
Anyone vet this guy?
@matthewpoisson68603 ай бұрын
Vet how? He's my uncle.
@bradr21423 ай бұрын
@@matthewpoisson6860good blood line. Bet you just love this guy and his presence..
@arthurbrumagem38445 күн бұрын
I’m sure his memory of many things is clouded after all these years. I am not sure I remember everything like it really was. He likes the attention but most would