What For?
By Patrick Flanagan
“Do you ever ask or think
about why we are here? “ There was a
momentary silence as Andy looked at me, quizzically and clearly had to stop for
a moment to think about what he would answer.
Then he answered, “Well, I
was drafted and our country needed us to fight back. I guess it is patriotism and my love for my
country.”
The sun was beginning to set
in the western hills of jungle as evening came closer and Andy and I settled
down into our night-time position as a listening post, listening for the enemy
in the dark and act as a defense against an enemy who was trying to kill us
all. I hated this duty and wished I was
back somewhat in the safety of my bunker at our firebase. But somebody had to do this. I’m just not sure why. Usually this duty rotated and tonight was our
turn. It was dangerous as only the three
of us were outside the protection of the base, hidden in the bush, the jungle,
listening until dawn once again came back to the world. Another day for us to live. We didn’t have a dugout here, or a trench to
cuddle up into. Just our army green
ponchos laying on the ground to act as a ground-cloth, our faces blackened so
that we would just fade into the jungle and become invisible. I often thought we were really hiding from
the enemy.
“Yeah, but we are in their
country fighting them. They aren’t in
our country. They never attacked us. We are blowing up their villages, their
homes, their schools. And it all seems
to be the right thing to do, but I’m not sure just why. Oh, sure, I know tonight a few of them might
try to sneak up on us, surprise our brothers in the base, and try to kill them
all. I certainly don’t want that to
happen, so I guess we have to stop them, kill them before they get that far. But why are they doing this? How did we all get here trying to kill each
other off?” as I posed the question a bit deeper.
“Well, they are Communists,”
Andy responded. “Their main philosophy
is to make us all communists and make us all live like they do, get rid of
capitalism and democracy. They want to
destroy our way of living and make everyone live the same way. We can’t allow that to happen.”
Brent had been quiet as he
listened to our lowered voices. He added
his two cents: “Well, I’m here just trying to stay alive. I know I have to spend a year doing what I
was told to do, and then hopefully go home, back to my wife and kids and try to
just live a comfortable life. I guess
somebody has to fight in order to make the world a better place. It just was my turn.”
“Well, how do we know whose
system is the best? I’ve never lived
under communism, but I do know they have schools, hospitals and cities just
like we do, and we seem to be trying to destroy it all in the name of
democracy. To date, the U.S. hasn’t lost
one school or hospital to the North Vietnamese.
Oh, yeah, maybe those friends of ours in the south of Viet Nam have lost
some, but we haven’t, yet here we are away from our families and risking our
lives. Does this really make any
sense? Brent, time to call the base and
give them a Sit-Rep so they know we are setup for the night and still alive out
here.”
Brent nodded his head,
picking up the handset on the radio and began to call in our situation. It was the custom to call into the base on a
regular basis. That way they knew we
were still alive. If we didn’t call on
schedule, then they would try to call us.
Maybe we were the silent dead.
“Andy, before it gets real
dark, check all the Claymores to make sure they are facing right and not
towards us.” Brent had put them all out
but it was always good to double-check.
God help us if they were facing the wrong way. Weapons don’t care who they kill; it is up to
the person firing them that really matters.
I always felt it was good to double-check everything and make sure that
safety was the priority. More died from
friendly fire than from the enemy.
“Andy, remember when I had to
kill the sapper using the Starlight Scope?
That was such a strange evening.
That poor North Vietnamese soldier was doing everything by the book, but
he didn’t know I had a machine that let me see him in the night. He crawled so slowly and quietly with his
explosives strapped on his back. He was doing
exactly the same things we were taught.
Thank God for the cross-hairs in the scope but I was amazed that it took
many minutes for him to move off of it.
Up until then, he just blended in with the jungle. He was moving so slow toward the barbed wire
defense that surrounded the other platoon.
If I hadn’t had that machine, he would have succeeded on his suicide
mission. Clearly he was going to blow
himself up so that they could attack.” I
paused for a minute as I retraced that night.
The Starlight Scope was brand new and I was one of the first to field
test it in actual combat situations. It
was huge in those days, and I was sworn to secrecy on it as I had security
clearance. It made night turn to day. As good as that soldier was, technology was
making it meaningless.
“Yeah, I remember, “ Andy
replied. “That was a
hell-of-a-night. I remember you calling
me up to take a look as you just weren’t sure you were seeing what you were seeing. I wasn’t even sure; it just all looked like
jungle blowing in the slight wind that night.”
“Amazing to think that it
took about three hours of watching the cross-hairs on that man before I was
even sure that it was a man and his intent was to blow us all up and kill us. Patience and just watching that the scope
didn’t move off the target. It seemed
like it took forever. A lot of time to
just think about how good he was in what he was doing. He had no idea that he was being watched by
an unbelievable machine. How many times
in those hours did I think he was like me?
He might have had a wife, a family, back home and here he was, going to
blow himself up and give that all up.
Why? And then, he didn’t know
that I was watching him move, and that I was going to have to try to kill
him. I admired his skill and how good he
was. I imagined myself doing similar
things yet it all just came down to each of us trying to kill each other. What bothered me a lot was that he must have
had family too, family at his home. And
it was all going to be gone in a brief moment of time. Why were he and I both doing this? Willing to give it all up. I guess we were both doing our job as well as
we both could. But somebody was going to
lose. For what?”
“Yeah,” Andy said. “That was quite some night. You were really good in discovering him. You had to kind of use the scope to look all
around and you caught him. And even
then, you weren’t really sure. Good
eyes, Pat.”
Once I was sure, we then had
to call the lieutenant to notify him. It
was clear that we had to stop the sapper and that meant we had to fire our
weapons on him to stop him. We couldn’t
fire until we got permission or unless we were being fired upon. So far, we still were all safe but I knew
time was running out. We had to kill him
before he got much closer to our barbed-wire defense. There had to be others behind him just
waiting to rush the base once the defenses were down. I knew where we were heading and it wasn’t so
nice no matter what.
“So is that what this is all
about,” I reminisced. “That I was saving
democracy and killing communism? In my
own small way. Is that how I justify
taking this man’s life away from his parents, his wife, maybe his kids. They will all get some of his medals, I
guess. He surely will get some medals
for having given up his life. Was he
also fighting to save communism? It was
the “big picture” and all of this was just a small snapshot of what we were all
doing? Maybe some of our brothers will
get some medals too. Just because I get
him doesn’t mean that it is all over.” I
remembered my fear that night, that some of my brothers might still be killed
or wounded.
The sun now was setting in
the foothills as darkness started to spread around where we had set up for the
night. It got so dark so fast in the
jungle as all the green vines turned to black.
Hopefully no moon tonight, let alone a full-moon. Full moon’s seemed to reflect against our
green ponchos and potentially could give away our position. It would be over eight hours of guarding now
until we could get up and go back to the base, our job of an outpost done for
the night.
“Brent, are you sure there
aren’t any of those damn ant hills around.
I don’t want to have to get up during the night and change position
because I happen to be in their way,” I asked.
“Yep, Pat. I checked.
No anthills and no snakes that I could see.” Brent was good at that. Nothing worse than being in the way of
Vietnamese Red ants in the middle of the night or getting bit by a snake. Only good thing is that snakes usually don’t
move in the night. Brent seemed like he
could always smell the critters out like that.
Pretty soon it would be total darkness and the time for talking would
end. Voices travel further in the night
and in the dark as the jungle seems to go into deep slumber with its own kind
of silence.
“You know Pat, sometimes I think
you think too much. It happens. It’s war.
We try to kill them and they try to kill us,” Andy responded. “Then, we believe in God; they don’t. Maybe that’s why; we are fighting for God.”
“Yeah, all I want to do is
stay alive,” Brent said. “That’s my
priority. If I have to kill to stay
alive, I will, quick, and sweet. I’m
good at it. And I’m still here as
proof. I don’t know ‘nuthin’ about
democracy or communism; just that it’s either me or them. It’s that simple. Nothing else really matters except me going
home. And all in one piece.”
I had to think about the God
comment for a moment. It was true that I
felt it wrong for a government to get involved in whether I believed in God or
not. I felt that everyone could make
their own decision in that area, even atheists, but they shouldn’t try to make
me like them. Maybe that was why we were
here doing all of this. There were a few
moments of just silence, and then the jungle moved in front of us with a rustle. Now just silence as all three of us looked at
each other in response to the swishing of jungle leaves up ahead. A small twinge of being alert and fearful. Our senses more alive than normal. A trace of adrenalin pumping.
“What’s that,” I whispered,
looking at Brent. Brent was good at explaining
the sounds of the jungle.
Brent whispered back: “I
think it’s just a few monkeys trying to find a place to safely spend the
night. It’s coming from the top of the
jungle. Something that monkeys like to
do and be above the other animals out here.
Not the NVA, they’d be making more noise and it would be different.” One could see the relief on Andy and my face
as it all made sense. Just monkeys.
“Well, time for us to get
sleep. Brent has the first watch, then
me and then Andy,” I reminded them. “One
thing that still bothers me. We got the
sapper that night, found blood in the area the next morning and it was all
over. We didn’t even get attacked. His body was gone but there was the blood all
over the jungle vines where he had been.
It was all over. But it really
isn’t. I still think about him, his
family, his life and how it was all gone for him. And that it could have been me instead, or
you, or one of our brothers in that platoon.
I still wonder today just why?
Why are we all here, doing this?
Why couldn’t we just stay at home, send our kids to school, be with our
families, maybe work on our houses or on our cars. Do the fun things. Build something; be constructive, instead of
this.”
In his plain home-grown St.
Louis wisdom, Andy replied with the last final words for the night: “Yeah, I
guess, but we wouldn’t get any medals for doing that. Good night, and sleep safe.”