Tail Sticking out

Tail Sticking out

 

An UH-34 in the air at the Rockpile. If you look close, you can 
see T.L. Smith standing in the door of his UH-34 with the tail 
number 6 on it. How Many Marines have a picture of themselves 
taken in the field while flying a resupply mission to those of 
us who held the Rockpile? They were our "Life Line", and I'd 
like to be able to thank him after 45 years.
 
If you don't know about The Rockpile, the attach word file is 
from Time Magazine in Oct 1966. 
S/Sgt. Ted Dudley
 
Time Magazine, October 1966
 
The terrain was as tough as any the U.S. Marines had ever 
contested. It combined the horror of a Guadalcanal jungle with 
the exhausting steepness of the slopes at Chapultepec. Added to 
that were fusillades of bullets as ferocious as at Tarawa and 
showers of shrapnel that turned the forest into a tropical 
Belleau Wood. But "the Rock-pile," as Viet Nam's latest big 
battleground has come to be called, is weirdly unique. There, 
just south of the inaccurately named Demilitarized Zone, a task 
force of six Marine battalions has been battling two entire 
divisions of North Vietnamese regulars whose apparent aim is to 
invade Quang Tri province. So far the Reds have failed. Over the 
past few months, Hanoi's hordes have shifted away from their old 
infiltration route, the Ho Chi Minh trail, which empties into 
the isolated Central Highlands. Instead, more and more have been 
striking directly southward into the populous coastal plain (see 
map). The aim of the Marines' "Operation Prairie" is to cut 
those arteries from the DMZ and push the Reds so far west that 
they will once again be forced to use the trail.
 
Key to the fighting is "the Rock," a jagged, 750-ft. fang of 
granite that thrusts upward at the intersection of three river 
valleys and two enemy trails. During July's Operation Hastings, 
the Marines established a reconnaissance post atop the Rock, and 
a lone sniper fed by airdrops of C rations controlled the area. 
Now it is a Marine battalion command post, under almost steady 
siege. Across from the Rock rears the Razorback-a steep ridge 
whose sides are pocked with caves dug by the Japanese in World 
War II, but now occupied by North Vietnamese. Several hundred 
yards below the Rock, the Reds have dug "spider holes" from 
which they lob mortar fire and mount ambushes. Two miles to the 
south stands Hill 400, dominating the Rock-pile and infested 
with Reds. Last week the Marines moved simultaneously against 
the Razorback and Hill 400. By week's end, both were in their 
hands.
 
Snakes & Lanterns. Fighter-bombers seared both hills with 
flaming napalm, then returned with rockets, heavy fragmentation 
bombs and machine gun fire. For three days, the Reds on Hill 400 
hit back with mortar and small-arms fire so intense that Medevac 
helicopters could not land to take out Marine wounded. Finally, 
Marine pilots used 1,000-lb. bombs to blast craters deep enough 
to provide cover for the choppers, and a few critical cases were 
evacuated. Then the Marines moved out, stormed the hill with 
satchel charges,* and blasted the Reds out of their holes. They 
found a Communist regimental command post replete with 
underground rooms and trenches.
 
Near the Razorback, Marines were treated to an eerie spectacle 
at night: dim lanterns moving back and forth on the ridge across 
from them. "The North Vietnamese are afraid of snakes," sneered 
one Marine. "That's why they carry them flashlights." Whatever 
their purpose, the lights provided excellent targets for 
artillery and air strikes. To date, Operation Prairie has killed 
943 Reds, and the Marines have taken moderate casualties in the 
process.

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