Duc Duc Refugee Village Massacre

Duc Duc Refugee Village Massacre
Veterans Living In Peasant-Farming Village
I served with Jack Cunningham in Vietnam (Written 11 years ago)
An Earlier Attack On Duc Duc
KEN BURN'S/PBS VIETNAM WAR DOCUMENTARY
SOME EXPERIENCES OF US MARINE FIGHTING VILLAGE TERRORISM
Why doesn't the news media condemn leftwing violence in America
Viet Vet: The media doesn't condemn today's Left violence for the same reason they didn't in the war
ISISs Atrocities In The Middle East Recall Viet Congs 1971 Duc Duc Massacre
John Kerry Lies About All Vietnam Vets
Original Duc Duc Massacre Website
Duc Duc Resettlement Village In Late 1967
Experiences Of A Combined Action Program Marine
The An Hoa Project
Eye witness report of the massacre by Marine Dennis Sherman, who was on the ground
Eye witness report from a Marine Corps helicopter gunship pilot
A TRAGIC STORY OF A FAILED COMMITMENT "TO KEEP A VILLAGE FREE"
Details about the Duc Duc massacre
ISISs Atrocities In The Middle East Recall Viet Congs 1971 Duc Duc Massacre
One of the Original Websites for the Duc Duc Massacre

Eye witness report of the massacre by Marine Dennis Sherman, who was on the ground

 

 Eye witness report of the massacre by Marine Dennis Sherman, who was on the ground and received a Bronze Star

I was sent to Duc Duc in late January 1971 to be the "Senior NCO of the Marine Liaison Team."  The team consisted of me, the new guy, two Marine Lance Corporals, who had been there for a while, and really could have done everything that needed to be done by themselves.  

 

I lived in a little hooch just to the right of where the U.S. Army put a generator on the river side of the compound North (?).  Right behind the building that had "Quan Duc Duc" on it. 

 

I read the account that the Marine helicopter pilots wrote that is on your website.  That was the first I knew about the boats and the NVA battalions.  I was told later by the Army Intelligence Captain, who was part of Advisory Team 15, that it was elements of the T-89th and 90th Sapper Battalions that had hit us.  

 

We had been getting shelled on a fairly regular basis, but nothing super-heavy.  I was in the main bunker listening to RFVN about 0230-03000230-0300 hrs and they were just reporting that Lt. Calley had been sentenced.  We started taking pretty heavy mortar fire.  It hit the bunker that I was in and the building behind it.  The second mortar round that hit the building took out most of our medical supplies, including the IV bottles.   A Rocket-Propelled-Grenade (RPG) hit the chain link fence that the Army had put outside the bunkers for just this purpose, but the explosion still pushed through the bunker wall and I got hit in the head with a PRC Radio that I was trying to talk on.   We were on the radio pretty quick and found out that the Viet Cong terrorists were hitting several places all at once; so the cavalry so to speak, was spread thin.  

 

A mortar round hit the roof of the bunker and the ply board ceiling came down.  The Vietnamese Commanding Officer, Major Chin, came in very excited and yelled  "VC in compound."   An American Army Officer and I took an M-60 machine-gun and headed for another bunker.  We could see that most of the bunkers below us on the west side of the compound had been satchel charged and were gone.  We opened up with the M-60 just to let the Viet Cong know we were there and they  promptly returned the favor and wounded the Army Officer in the arm.  We could hear explosions all over, but I could not see what was happening on the village side of the perimeter.  We were the only folks on the west side of the defensive perimeter for a while, and finally a Vietnamese machine gunner came over and opened up on our side with us. 

 

After what seemed like an eternity, black hammer helicopters showed up and began to lay down some fire and things began to calm down on the west side of the perimeter.   When the sun came up, I was able to get over to the south side towards the former 5th Marine Base at An Hoa and could see that the village was a wreck.  The hooches were mostly burned down and there was a VC flag flying over the big blue building.   There were a few houses left, which were very close to the road that went from the compound out towards An Hoa. 

 

We had helicopter support and they were shooting and buzzing around the village.  Some of the South Vietnamese troops moved out to take back the village areas that the Viet Cong terrorists were still holding.  

 

We began trying to evacuate the wounded.  I can't tell you how many wounded there were, but they were being taken out on Ch-46 helicopters.  Old Vietnamese and young Vietnamese kept coming out of their burned village.  The sight that will always stick in my mind was a little two or three year old boy lying on the ground with a huge bandage around his little head and it was soaked with blood.  His eyes looked up at me and they were going back and forth like a metronome.  We were evacuating wounded villagers as fast as possible, but more would come. 

 

An old Vietnamese peasant was being carried on a bloody sheet by his family, little kids and some women.  There was a lot of blood and death and destruction all around. 

 

I couldn't figure out what the terrorists' military objective was.  The Viet Cong put up a flag in the village and they hammered us, but they must have known they weren't going to be able to hold it.  We had a lot of dead in the compound and in the village.  Most of the village was gone, and I don't know how many villagers were casualties.  We got their flag from the village and weapons from 33 KIA's.  It took several days of evacuating wounded and picking up bodies.  My ears rang for more than a day.  They had to send in a Navy ordinance disposal team to pick up all the unexploded grenades etc. that were lying around from an ammo bunker they blew up. 

 

The U.S. Army Officer, who was wounded, received a Purple Heart and I think may have been recommended for a Silver Star. (He had only 13 days to go on his tour.)   I was put in for a Bronze Star by the same Army Officer (The Army was easily impressed by Marines.) 

 

The Marine Corps sent in a lot of wood and tin to rebuild the village.  About two weeks later, I was pulled out of Duc Duc and I was sent to Hill 37.  After that I was sent to Hill 42 and eventually was sent home.

 

 

 

I don't know for sure why they hit the village, but it seemed unnecessary to me.   Most of what was there was destroyed.

 

The Army advisor Team members were:  CO Major Trapnell, he was from near Baltimore too.  A Staff Sergeant, who was born in London England, named Wallon.  The District Intelligence Officer was Capt. Brian Walls.  (I ran into him just a day after we got back to the states at BWI airport.)  Staff Sergeant Malcom Campbell was from Hagerstown Md.   Major Trapnell still lives in Towson, Md. (I think.) 

 

That is all of the American Team, who I can recall.

 

By  Dennis Sherman

 

 

Read the movie script about living and serving (24/7) in the Duc Duc Refugee Village
 ISIS’s Atrocities In The Middle East Recall Viet Cong’s 1971 Duc Duc Massacre
Reporter Richard Pollock
 
Were the brutal terror tactics unleashed by the North Vietnamese Communists and their Viet Cong allies during the Vietnam War a precursor to the tactics used today by the Islamic State in the Middle East?

A number of Vietnam veterans think so, and they’ve been waging a little-known campaign to get the U.S. government to recognize a March 29, 1971, atrocity committed by the North Vietnamese Army and Viet Cong guerrillas when they burned down 800 village homes, many with the inhabitants huddling inside. At least 250 men, women and children were wounded or killed.

The mass incineration of the village of Duc Duc was never recognized as a war crime like the My Lai massacre in which U.S. Army Lt. William Calley was convicted of killing 22 Vietnamese villagers. Calley’s life sentence was announced the same day the communists attacked Duc Duc.

“I thought Duc Duc represented My Lai. Everything was so one-sided in the media,” recalled former Marine Lance Cpl. Jack Cunningham to The Daily Caller News Foundation’s Investigative Group. He lived with the people of Duc Duc as part of the Combined Action Program, which was dubbed “the Peace Corps with Rifles.”

Cunningham has led a decades-long campaign for official recognition of the Duc Duc atrocity and has compiled a series of graphic, first-hand websites  that portray life before and after the massacre .

The fires that  burned the Duc Duc homes were so bright on the night of the attack, helicopter pilots 20 miles away in the city of Danang could see the flames.

“You can see there’s a big empty space where the houses had been. They were cardboard and tin houses. We called them hooches. They were gone. Just burned,” Cunningham said.

The Duc Duc village was a government-sponsored hamlet that housed refugees who had fled Viet Cong-held areas.

“There was no reason for them to set fire to the village,” recalled Marine Sgt. Dennis Sherman, who was stationed near Duc Duc.

“There was no military significance to the site. It was only refugees. But it was a way to ‘convince’ people to move back to their area. The message was: ‘See, the government can’t protect you from us,’” Sherman said. “The Viet Cong hated them. The Viet Cong’s attitude was ‘it’s us or you’re dead,’” he said.

“And that’s the way ISIS is today,” former Marine Lance Cpl. Richard Thomas told TheDCNF. Thomas was stationed three miles away from Duc Duc.

Both the American media and anti-war activists, however, largely ignored communist atrocities and even praised the communists as good people.

The late anti-war activist Tom Hayden  wrote in the Los Angeles Times in January 2013 that “far from being faceless fanatics, the Vietnamese I met struck me as patriotic.”

But the Vietnam vets continue to raise their politically incorrect message that the U.S. government should regard the burning of Duc Duc as an atrocity.

Many of the G.I.s see a similarity to the tactics used by ISIS, whose guerrillas have beheaded, burned alive and hacked to death civilians who don’t support them.

“The Viet Cong would hack people to death with machetes and bayonets. It’s kind of like the way ISIS is doing right now,” said Thomas.

“The Viet Cong were known for going into a village, grabbing somebody’s parents, shooting one in the head and saying, ‘if you want mom alive, cooperate with us,’” recalled Sherman. “That’s how they operated.”

On the night of March 29, 1971, between 1,500 to 2,400 North Vietnamese Army regulars and Viet Cong guerrillas launched their assault on Duc Duc and on the nearby military base called the Fifth Marine Combat Base.

The attackers poured through two perimeters and overwhelmed the defenders — 150 ill-trained South Vietnamese soldiers and 11 American soldiers.

“There were probably 150 people against a minimum of 1,500 enemy. We were greatly outnumbered,” recalled Sherman who was on the base when the attack started and later received a Bronze Star for bravery.

With the troops preoccupied, the Vietnamese communists turned their attention to the defenseless people of Duc Duc. When the fires ebbed, a Viet Cong flag flew on top of one standing building.

The village was destroyed and never rebuilt. The survivors retreated further toward U.S. lines, but their whereabouts after the fall of South Vietnam in 1975 are largely unknown.

Noted Vietnam historian Robert Turner told TheDCNF that for the Viet Cong, “brutality was a key to their strategy. They made no distinction between combatants and noncombatants.” The terror tactics were dictated by the North Vietnamese Communist Party, which controlled the Viet Cong.

“Most of the brutality that I saw was because of official party policy, that is they were doing something because this is something the party told them to do,” said Turner, who also served in Vietnam. He is now a distinguished fellow at the Center for National Security Law at the University of Virginia School of Law.

Descriptions of ISIS operations against civilians in Iraq and Syria often recall the communist atrocity in Duc Duc.

“Survivors describe an ISIS killing rampage whose main objective was apparently to terrorize local residents,” wrote  Letta Tayler, a senior terrorism researcher at Human Rights Watch, of the June 20, 2015, assault on the Syrian City of Kobani. “By all accounts, this was a planned attack on the civilian population of this area.”

That narrative differs from actress Jane Fonda’s comments, who in a famous 1972 Radio Hanoi broadcast while the war was in progress, lavished praise on communist women fighters who sought to kill American pilots.

“I cherish the memory of the blushing militia girls on the roof of their factory, encouraging one of their sisters as she sang a song praising the blue sky of Vietnam — these women, who are so gentle and poetic, whose voices are so beautiful, but who, when American planes are bombing their city, become such good fighters,” Fonda said.  

READ  THE  WHOLE  STORY  AT:   http://dailycaller.com/2016/12/12/isiss-atrocities-in-the-middle-east-recall-viet-congs-1971-duc-duc-massacre/
 
 
 
  I found the following report from the 7th Marines Command Chronology dated March 4, 1968. Although the grid coordinates are incorrect the village names are the same as those where you served with CAP 2-9-2 (aka NOV 3).  It seems like the massacre in 1971 was  not the first time the villagers had been brutalized.
            Sandy              Another CAP Marine                                           
 
                     (d)      040500H:  Company I searched the area of (AT869571) and found 40  civilians KIA, 77  WIA, and 14 WIA  (at this point there are several letters   I can't read  ...Sandy ) 
The villages of  DUC DUC, PHU DA, and AN HOA  had been mortared, and the enemy had moved through the area burning huts  and throwing grenades at the civilians in their bomb shelters. The Viet Cong terrorists told  civilians that the reason for the raid was to force the people to return across  the river to the Arizona area and grow rice.
 

 

 Team of proud American Marine veterans honor their lost buddies, and all Americans, who died in Vietnam, by having a Vietnamese peasant-farming refugee village 'Duc Duc' remembered.
(Don Eiferd, Dennis Sherman, George Dros, Fred Peterson, Richard Thomas, Bill Nimmo, Ronnie Armando Ponton, Jon Jones, Mike Smith, John "Jack" Cunningham, Auxiliary Supporter Alan Waugh [England]) 
 
Congressman Scott Garrett's of New Jersey is reviewing a request for a Congressional Resolution to remember the sacrifices of the Duc Duc Refugee Village in their supporting U.S. Marines during the Vietnam.
 
Recently, a special congressional investigation committee reviewed the details of the Duc Duc Resettlement Village massacre.  Although the massacre happened over 45 years ago, the details found out about this massacre by this special congressional investigation committee can not be released to the general public.
 
Although the details of this committee investigation of the Duc Duc Resettlement Village massacre can not be released to the general public, Congress Scott Garrett's staff are still reviewing, if a Congressional Resolution dedicated to the People of Duc Duc can be made.
 
 
 
"How do you ask a man to be the last man to die for a mistake?"
John Kerry  April 22, 1971
-   At the time of his statements before the United States Congress, television news reporters and cameras, and Vietnamese Communist Negotiators in Paris, France, John Kerry was still in the United States Navy.
 
 

 

Less than a month after the massacre of the Duc Duc Refugee Village,  Senator John Kerry became a spokesperson and negotiator for the communist government in Vietnam.   At the time, John Kerry was an officer in the United States Navy.
 

Sen. Kerry met with the Viet Cong government to negotiate a peace settlement without the authorization of our government:

"I have been to Paris. I have talked with both delegations at the peace talks, that is to say the Democratic Republic of Vietnam and the Provisional Revolutionary Government and of all eight of Madam Binh's points it has been stated time and time again, and was stated by Senator Vance Hartke when he returned from Paris, and it has been stated by many other officials of this Government, if the United States were to set a date for withdrawal the prisoners of war would be returned." (Vietnam Veterans Against the War Statement by John Kerry to the Senate Committee of Foreign Relations, April 23, 1971.)

 

Additional details, and EYE-WITNESS REPORTS of the massacre can be found by pressing the narratives at the top left of this webpage.

 

The below picture is U.S. Marine John "Jack" Cunningham in the village of Duc Duc, less than a year before the near 2,000 Vietnamese peasant homes were burned to ash.
Jack_Cunningham.jpg

 

Below is a picture of the last Americans to live and serve in this village.  About eight months after this picture was taken near 2,000 homes were ash.   (Don Eiferd, George Dros and John "Jack" Cunningham are among the Marines in this picture taken on August 13, 1970.)

CAP_Team_ima2ge.jpg
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                                            QUANG NAM, VIETNAM 

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                                      Military Map of the An Hoa Valley 

an_hoa.jpg

                                   

                                         The 'Other War' in Vietnam

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PLEASE  PRESS  THE  NEXT  LINK  TO  READ  THE  STORY  BEHIND  THE  ABOVE  LIFE  MAGAZINE  COVER:   http://home.earthlink.net/~life_magazine_67

 

 

                                                            THE  CHINESE  WARLORDS

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As the USMC Combined Action Platoons (CAP Teams) went fully mobile, many changes occurred. They lived out in the villages on a 24/7 basis and as such had less reason to worry about stiff barracks types checking them out. They didn't have a compound or a base to operate from, they selected a different spot every day in one of the hamlets to hunker down for the day. At night they split up and snuck into tactical positions around known VC routes. These were effective rugged combat teams that lived "in and behind enemy lines all the time." As such they developed individual and independent "looks" of identity. One time a Marine general commented that these teams looked like a bunch of Chinese Warlords. This team, from CAP 2-2-2, in the area west of Dai Loc obviously put on a show for this photos. But this is real and the men in there are serious combat veterans of many ambush and patrols where contact with the enemy occurred. This photo is from a well known CAP combat veteran Jack Cunningham whose combat reputation is beyond question. Jack is on the top row and is second from the right.     Semper Fi

By Bill Nimmo ‎ to VietnamWarHistoryOrg

 

 More Details About The Combined Action Program (CAP) at    http://www.capmarine.com/  and http://www.cap-assoc.org/