Con Thien was a hill, 158 meters high! It was actually a cluster of three small hills. It was an ugly bare patch of mud! Local missionaries called it “The Hill of the Angels” due to the massive amount of casualties attributed to the hill. The hill was only large enough to accommodate a reinforced battalion. It was the northwest anchor of what we Marines called the “MacNamarra Line.” The “MacNamarra Line” was actually a 600-meter clearing constructed by the 11th Engineers as a buffer zone from the Laotian border to the South China Sea. The “Strip” was originally constructed for the placement of sensors to detect enemy troop movements, but the project was called off in favor of fortifying Khe Sahn.
Con Thien was clearly visible from 9th Marine Headquarters at Dong Ha to the south. We could also see Gio Linh a “Firebase” northeast of Con Thien. We knew that if the NVA overran Con Thien and Gio Linh they would have a clear path to the south. It was our job not to let this happen. We would run patrols and ambushes every day to keep the NVA on the move. We wanted to make certain they couldn’t build fixed positions in and around the area. It was a very hard job. We would destroy a bunker complex one-day and a couple days later it would be rebuilt. We actually found bunkers as close as 1500 meters to Con Thien. There was not much we could do about the NVA in the area though. We were very short-handed and had such a large area to patrol that the NVA could move around freely without much chance of detection. We would patrol an area and they would return as soon as we were gone. We had a couple of nicknames for Con Thien. We called it “Our Turn in the Barrel” or “The Meatgrinder.
Almost daily we would receive at least 200 rounds of NVA incoming. I don’t remember a day in which we didn’t get hit with incoming rounds of some sort. We also suffered something that was almost unheard of elsewhere in South Vietnam. It was called “shell shock” and it was not unusual. The constant pounding every day could make you go nuts. You would sit there on edge, wondering if the next round that came in would have your name on it. In official Marine Corps history they make mention of the “Die Marker” bunkers. They were supposed to be well reinforced with timbers and steel. My unit never got to try any of those. We were in Holes in the Mud! Echo Company 2/9 was on one of the small hills on the southern edge of Con Thien right next to the LZ and the main gate. We had hardly any protection at all. We caught more then our share of incoming because every time a chopper or a truck arrived they would shell the shit out of us. In the month of September 1967, from the 19th to the 27th, we received over 3000 rounds of incoming. I will never forget September 25th 1967. I thought the NVA were going to blow Con Thien off the map with artillery, rockets and mortars. We took over 1200 rounds that day. I don’t think there was hardly a spot on that hill not hit by an incoming round of some sort. To that point and time in the war, this was the most incoming rounds ever taken by a unit in Vietnamin one day. That’s a lot of incoming rounds for such a small place! There was almost no place to hide! Every time a Helicopter would arrive incoming rounds would follow. That made it very hard for us to be resupplied. During that week in September a helicopter didn’t touch down at Con Thien except for a Medevac; they just dropped the boxes of chow and mail out the doors without landing. The Marine Corps thought the Chopper’s were too valuable to lose. Every night Charlie would probe our lines to try and find a weakness they could penetrate and there was Always the ever-present threat of NVA snipers. That was also the time my high school buddy Louie Torrellas had a Russian rocket hit right next to his hole. I remember him staggering out of his hole with blood running out of both ears and his mouth. I never saw him again after that day. We medevac’d him out of there! In a week or so I received a letter from him on a hospital ship; he said he was going home. I was glad he was going home, but I wished it were Me! I remember rounds hitting all around us that day. I believe God was watching over us, otherwise we’d all be dead.
It was really hard on the “Brain Bucket” (your head) just sitting there waiting for the next barrage, the one that could take your life. The stress of the constant incoming artillery barrages could drive a man insane. It would have been different if we could have shot back at them. Then we would have been able to get a little relief. As If the situation wasn’t bad enough already, we also had to put up with the Monsoon rains. Our holes would fill with water; we’d have to bail them out four or five times a day. We also had “Emersion foot” and your feet would bleed and hurt like hell. Then there was the damn mud! You walked in it, you sat in it, you slept in it and you even ate it. There was just no escaping it!
I can remember helicopters not being able to land because of incoming rounds. Not only did we run out of Chow but that also meant no C-Rats toilet paper. So we started to tear strips of cloth from the bottoms of our trousers to wipe our Asses with. At one period we were not resupplied for over three days. During that time we actually scrounged around in our trash pits trying to find something to eat. At least the choppers came to pick up our wounded! The choppers kept flying over us and resuppling other units. I know the door gunner to the chopper that finally brought us chow saw the look in our eyes and decided he’d better drop chow out that door. We knew the pilots were only following orders but that didn’t change the fact that we were hungry and we were mean! There is nothing in the world meaner than a 20-year-old Marine hungry, angry with a loaded machinegun in his handsJ!
That was also the day I realized the Russians were supplying the NVA. It was one of many rocket barrages that day. We stayed glued to our holes most of the day. The rockets came screaming in and about 40 yd behind my hole a Rocket round dud stuck in the mud and it hit a Marineand didn’t go off. I was told the Marine’s Flak Jacket was stripped from him by the incoming Rocket that landed in his hole. The Marine lived to tell about it! I bet he counts his blessing every single day of his life! How lucky can you get? Why it didn’t go off is anyone’s guess. It was really eerie and everyone was afraid to go near it. We didn’t know if it was time-delayed, or what! We finally got up enough nerve to get out of our holes and went up to investigate. It was OD green and was about 12 ft. long. It had funny looking Russian writing on it. It really pissed us off. Not only did we have the NVA and the Chinese fighting against us, now the Russians were fighting us too!
I had “The Shits” (dysentery) and decided to take a chance and go out in front of my hole and dig a “Cat hole” and take a crap. Just as I was finishing up I heard the sound of rockets taking off in the distance. I also heard someone yelling “Incoming.” I was already half way up the hill by then! I hadn’t had time to fasten my trousers yet. I was holding them up with my hand and attempting to run the rest of the way up the hill to my hole but it was muddy and I slipped and fell. I scrambled the rest of the way to my hole on my hands and knees with my pants down to my ankles. I fell into my hole in a heap. The second my body hit the mud in the bottom of my hole a rocket round hit right next to it. The impact of the Rocket round threw mud all over us. The concussion made my ears ring and for a while I couldn’t hear anything, or for that matter even think straight.
When the incoming had stopped I tried to get out of my hole but I couldn’t. I was stuck in the foot and a half of mud in the bottom of my hole. I had to get my a-gunner to pull me out. When I finally got me out of my hole, I had my pants down to my ankles and I looked half-brown and half-white from lying in the mud. We all laughed our Asses off at how stupid I looked. It felt good to laugh again; there wasn’t much laughing going on at Con Thien during the month of September 1967. We had a poncho covering the top of our hole we were using for shelter from the rain. It was shredded from the Rocket blast. I believe that if I hadn’t hit my hole the split second that I did, I would have looked just like our poncho did! Swiss Cheese!
Just because we were receiving incoming rounds didn’t mean that patrols stopped going out. I remember a patrol trying to go out of our perimeter right in front of my hole. We started to take incoming rounds again and the Marines in the patrol were jumping into the closest holes to them. My a-gunner and I hit our hole, and five Marines piled in on top of us. It was great; it was the most protection we’d had in a long time. I remember thinking; I didn’t think my hole was capable of holding that many Marines.