The Lost Battalion: Controversy and Casualties in the Battle of Hue

The Lost Battalion: Controversy and Casualties in the Battle of Hue

by Charles Krohn
The Lost Battalion: Controversy and Casualties in the Battle of Hue

The Lost Battalion: Controversy and Casualties in the Battle of Hue

by Charles Krohn

Hardcover

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Overview

In 1968 in South Vietnam, a U.S. infantry battalion was ordered to charge a fortified North Vietnamese Army force 200 yards away over an open field with no artillery or air support. The defenders had every advantage. The Americans started moving across the field just before noon, every man a target. By the time they reached the tree line at the other side of the open field, nearly one half of the 400-man battalion was a casualty. Nine long, agonizing hours afterwards, U.S. artillery units began support fire, although the units remained desperately short of ammunition. The entrapped men saw their fate: death or captivity. Help from headquarters was neither offered or available.

The following night the battalion commander decided to make a run for it. It was a gamble with high stakes. But the battalion did make it through enemy lines to a mountaintop where the NVA could not follow. When the Lost Battalion finally escaped encirclement, after nine hours with no artillery or air support, and 30 hours of fighting against an enemy that outnumbered them three to one, the tragic episode disappeared from official memory and relevant U.S. Army records—as if nothing had happened. Krohn tells the whole story—and it tells it with the words of those present. That some of the testimony comes from those responsible is remarkable.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275945329
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 11/19/1993
Pages: 224
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.56(d)

About the Author

CHARLES A. KROHN, now retired, began his career as a Transportation Corps officer and transferred to the infantry in Vietnam while serving as the intelligence officer of the 2nd Battalion, 12th Cavalry, 1st Air Cavalry Division. He spent the last five years of his 20-year military career in the Pentagon, serving as a special assistant/speechwriter to several generals, including General H. Norman Schwarzkopf.

Table of Contents

Foreword
America's Best
Cast of the Past
Curtain Raiser
Reasonable Worries
Operation Rawhide
Rehearsing the Gladiators
The Death Battalion
Sweet Takes Charge
Historical Moment
Hue's Burbaning
Getting the Word at Camp Evans
From Camp Evans to PK-17
Dead in Our Tracks
Attack Now
Scudder, A Miracle Man
Cordite Stinks
Artillery Fiasco
Take a Break, Death Will Wait
Day Two: Hell's Last Circle
Saving the Living, Leaving the Dead
Leaving TFP: Our Only Hope
Hugging Jeff
Helvey's Raiders
TFP
Heroes Not Forgotten
After the Battle Is Over
Forgotten Favor Repaid
View from the Other Side
Who Won? Who Lost?
We'll Never Know
Ambiguous Facts
Tet, Meet Desert Storm
Pascagoula Flashback
Infantry Battalion Organization
Where Are They Now?
The Presidential Unit Citation
Maps
Photos of Key Participants, Locations

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