This is primarily a travel blog in which I write about traveling in our motorhome. Our travels have

Nacogdoches, TX, United States
I began this blog as a vehicle for reporting on a 47-day trip made by my wife and me in our motorhome down to the Yucatan Peninsula and back. I continued writing about our post-Yucatan travels and gradually began including non-travel related topics. I often rant about things that piss me off, such as gun violence, fracking, healthcare, education, and anything else that pushes my button. I have a photography gallery on my Smugmug site (http://rbmartiniv.smugmug.com).

Tuesday, August 30, 2016

Uncle Sam Ain't Released Me Yet...Memoirs of a REMF, Chapter 51, The Shit Hits the Fan






Uncle Sam
Ain’t Released Me Yet

Memoirs of a REMF



Copyright© 2016 by Robert B. Martin, IV
All Rights Reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without express written permission from the copyright owner, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review or scholarly journal. I have attempted to recreate events, locales, and conversations from my memories of them.


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Chapter 51
The Shit Hits the Fan
“I thought a shit storm was coming, and I had no umbrella.”.............Barbra Annino
After I returned from leave, and before the party, I received two very official-looking pieces of mail. The return address on each was the Senate of the United States of America (see appendix for copies of the letters). The Georgia senators had responded to my letters in regard to the “State Flag Incident.”
The letter from Senator Russell was dated August 13, 1970 and the one from Senator Talmadge, August 12. Both of the senators informed me they were looking into the state flag situation. I did not know that their “looking into the situation” was going to ignite such a huge shit storm. It looked as though LTC Burke would be blindsided by at least two Congressional Letters of Inquiry. That could ruin his day. He must not have received his copies of the letters until after the big party or he would surely have said something to me. The shit was about to hit the proverbial fan.
I don’t remember exactly when I was summoned for my second trip to LTC Burke’s office, but the timing could not have been any better since I would be leaving Vietnam and the Army in just a few days. I was hoping to get out of Dodge before the dust had time to settle. I walked up the street to Battalion HQ and smiled at CSM Ojeda as he told me to report to the colonel. This time when I reported to the colonel, he did not give me an At Ease order. Instead, he kept me braced at attention and I just stared at the wall above his head and tried to turn my face into a stone mask. The tone of his voice told me he was not a happy man, and I was beginning to think I must have been nuts to have kicked over such a big bucket of shit. I had to keep reminding myself I had done nothing wrong, and I was completely within my rights, even though I was in the military.
The colonel was sitting at his desk, holding a letter in front of him. He informed me he had received Congressional Letters of Inquiry from the two senators from Georgia regarding his order to remove the state flags from display. He went on to say he was required by regulations to read each Congressional Letter of Inquiry to me and then to read me his response to each. In his responses, he was required to explain why he had issued the order and what, if anything, he intended to do about it. Regulations also required that each letter of response be an original. Form letters could not be used. Being as we had no personal computers back then, it meant each letter would be manually typed, but not by me. I was the H&HQ battery clerk, not the battalion clerk.
I don’t remember the wording of the letters and he did not rescind his order, but it was still a great victory for me as far as I was concerned. An E-5 enlisted man had challenged the battalion commander and gotten away with it. There was nothing he could do without being guilty of reprisal. I wanted to say something like “Gotcha!” but I was smart and kept my mouth shut. As I left his office, it felt like I was walking on air. I smiled like the Cheshire cat at CSM Ojeda as I left.
Let me explain something here. Every member of the military has the right to communicate individually with any member of Congress for any reason without requiring permission from his commanding officer. Commanding officers cannot limit this right or require prior notice or approval. I had done nothing contrary to Army regulations. The Constitution of the United States guaranteed this right.
Because of my urging others to write letters, there would soon be a line of soldiers outside of the colonel’s office, waiting to have their Congressional Letters and the colonel’s responses read to each one of them. I would be on my way to Danang and a Freedom Bird before he got to the end of the line.
In writing this narrative, I reviewed Article 138 of the UCMJ and its application to Congressional Letters of Inquiry. The UCMJ considered the letters I had written to my two senators a complaint, or grievance, in response to a perceived wrong committed against me. The UCMJ defines a wrong as a “discretionary act or omission by a commanding officer” that “adversely affects” the member personally. Several UCMJ examples of a wrong included the following two that seemed very similar to the “flag removal order.” 
A wrong has been committed when an order is either:
1. arbitrary, capricious, or an abuse of discretion, or
2. clearly or materially unfair
It seemed to me that both of these examples described the “flag order” to a T.

Continued in Chapter 52, Paranoia….

Monday, August 29, 2016

Uncle Sam Ain't Released Me Yet...Memoirs of a REMF Available in Paperback

ANNOUNCEMENT

Uncle Sam Ain't Released Me Yet...Memoirs of a REMF now available in paperback ($11.95) from Amazon (https://goo.gl/Ycisoz). Kindle edition to follow soon. Includes gallery of 100 photos.

Sunday, August 28, 2016

Uncle Sam Ain't Released Me Yet...Memoirs of a REMF, Chapter 50, Back in Hell for a Hell of a Party






Uncle Sam
Ain’t Released Me Yet

Memoirs of a REMF



Copyright© 2016 by Robert B. Martin, IV
All Rights Reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without express written permission from the copyright owner, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review or scholarly journal. I have attempted to recreate events, locales, and conversations from my memories of them.


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Chapter 50
Back in Hell for a Hell of a Party
“One does not leave a convivial party before closing time.”.........Winston Churchill
I had no choice but to return to the battalion once my seven-day leave was over. At least I only had about ten or so days left in-country and in the Army. Once again, 1SG Corbett saved me from CPT Bannon’s wrath by telling me I didn’t need to show up for work anymore now that my tour was almost over. I don’t know what they did about a replacement for me and I didn’t care. I took 1SG Corbett at his word, never went back to the CP, and stayed as clear of CPT Bannon as possible.
The first sergeant was also a short-timer and would be leaving Vietnam sooner than I. He would beat me back to the World by a few days. The senior NCOs in the battalion decided to throw 1SG Corbett a going away party on the eve of his departure. The 1SG invited me to the party, but I was reluctant to go. I was only an E-5 and everyone else at the party would be E-7 and above, including CSM Ojeda and the battalion commander, LTC Burke. I finally agreed to attend because I could see that the 1SG was not going to take no for an answer. He said it was HIS party, he could invite whomever he wanted, and he wanted me at the party. I dreaded the thought of being there with CSM Ojeda and LTC Burke. I would try to blend in with the wall.
My memories of the party are hazy at best. I remember going to the senior NCO hooch for the party. I didn’t speak to anyone; rather, I politely acknowledged everyone with a nod, much like a serf would to his lord. There was a bar was set up in a corner, so I walked over and made myself a drink, even though I probably still had a detectable blood-alcohol level from Australia. But I had a feeling that I was going to need more than one drink to make it through the night.
I didn’t mingle with the other partygoers. Instead, I kept my own counsel, off to the side, yet near the bar. Nobody paid me much attention, which was fine with me. After I had a couple of drinks, an officer standing near me walked over to me and ordered a drink. I looked around to see who he was talking to and realized he was talking to me. He had assumed that I was tending bar for the party. Why else would an E-5 be there? Not wishing to rock the boat, I went over to the bar and made the drink for him. Before I could walk away from the bar, another officer walked over and ordered a drink. I figured, “What the hell,” appointed myself bartender, and mixed VERY strong drinks for everyone. I was also drinking my share.
After a couple of hours, everyone, including me, was roaring drunk. At some point, I walked outside for some fresh air and either passed out, fainted, or just fell asleep. All I remember is waking up to find myself lying on the ground. I don’t know what time it was or how long I had been out, but the party was still going strong, so I got up and went back in. I was just in time to see 1SG Corbett get right up in LTC Burke’s face. 1SG Corbett called the lieutenant colonel a sorry son-of-a-bitch plus a multitude of other names. The lieutenant colonel was too drunk to respond adequately or do anything at all about it, and everyone else in the hooch just stood and stared with their mouths hanging open. A few minutes later, the first sergeant came over to me and, in a moment of apparent lucidity, said, “Martin, you have to get me up early in the morning so I can catch a ride to the airport before the lieutenant colonel wakes up and remembers what happened.”
How I managed to get myself up only a couple of hours later and wake the first sergeant I don’t remember. However, he did make a clean get away and I never heard anything else about the incident.

Continued in Chapter 51, The Shit Hits the Fan….

Friday, August 26, 2016

Uncle Sam Ain't Released Me Yet...Memoir of a REMF, Chapter 49, A Seven Day Leave







Uncle Sam
Ain’t Released Me Yet

Memoirs of a REMF



Copyright© 2016 by Robert B. Martin, IV
All Rights Reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without express written permission from the copyright owner, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review or scholarly journal. I have attempted to recreate events, locales, and conversations from my memories of them.

------------------------------------------------------------

Chapter 49
A Seven-Day Leave
“The problem with escaping reality is you always have to come back to it.”..............Unknown
Friday, July 24, 1970, the day after the evacuation of FSB Ripcord, marked one year in-country for me. This was the day I would be going home had I not extended my tour, but I still had 39 days and a wake up remaining.
A cherry, fresh from the World, was assigned as my replacement. He was a young black kid; I don’t remember his name or where he was from. I will just call him Joe. I didn’t have time to get to know him before his arrest (just read on). He was a doper and probably a dealer based on the quantity of hard drugs discovered with him at the time of his arrest.
Joe moved into my hooch and I began trying to train him for the clerk’s job. I realized right away that he was not going to measure up. He was immature and irresponsible in addition to being a drug addict. All he talked about was the “hog” (Cadillac) he was going to buy in Vietnam (you could purchase a car at a steep discount, make payments while in Vietnam, and take delivery of the car when you returned to the World).
Joe wasn’t around most nights and would come dragging back to the hooch in the early morning hours. He couldn’t stay awake during the day when I attempted to train him. I only had five weeks left before going home, and one of those weeks I would be on leave (being in-country for a year made you eligible for leave), which had been approved earlier by CPT Austin before he was sent to Ripcord. 1SG Corbett told me not to mention my upcoming leave to CPT Bannon, our new BC.
One night around midnight, Joe came in from doing whatever he did at night and was high and acting crazy. He began stomping around and shouting nonsense. Then he took his M-16 from the wall and began loading it, saying he was going to kill some sergeant. It took me and four or five of my hooch-mates to take the weapon away from him. He then grabbed his bayonet and continued yelling about killing the sergeant. We subdued him again and took away the bayonet. This time we were smarter and didn’t turn him loose. We grabbed some parachute cord and tied him to his cot. He yelled most of the night but appeared to be somewhat sober by morning, so we untied him. A couple of days later, we received word that the MPs had found him in a road, unconscious, just outside of Camp Eagle. He was lying atop a briefcase filled with drugs. He was arrested, court martialed, and sent to LBJ (Long Binh Jail). The time spent in LBJ would not count as time on his tour. He would have to finish his twelve-month tour when he got out of jail. I used to wonder if he ever got his “hog.”
August arrived, it was almost time for my seven-day leave, and my replacement was in jail. 1SG Corbett again cautioned me against telling CPT Bannon, the new BC, that I was going on leave, or he might have it cancelled. The first sergeant said not to worry about it. He would take care of it. As I said before, 1SG Corbett was a very nice guy.
Early on the day of my leave, I hitched a ride out of the battalion area on the back of a truck. It was about 0700 hours (7:00AM) and I was on my way to the airport in Phu Bai to grab a ride to Danang and ultimately someplace other than Vietnam. As the truck was leaving the battalion area, it passed by our CPT Bannon as he was walking to the CP. Our eyes met and he shouted at me.
“Martin, where are you going?” 
“On leave!” I shouted as I waved good-bye to him. He stood in the road with his hands on his hips as I rode off into the sunrise.
Once I arrived in Danang, I had forty-eight hours to catch a flight to one of several approved leave destinations. If I was still in Danang after forty-eight hours, I would be sent back to my unit. It wasn’t as simple as deciding where I wanted to go and getting on the airplane. Soldiers going on R&R were the first priority. Soldiers going on leave were put on a waiting list in the order of their arrival. Soldiers going on leave got the leftover seats on R&R flights. There weren’t always any leftover seats.
Out of country R&R and leave destinations included Sydney, Bangkok, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Manila, Hawaii, Singapore, Taipei, and Penang. Kuala Lampur had been a choice but was removed from the list on July 1, 1969.
I was hoping for a flight to Tokyo so I could go to EXPO 70, the World’s Fair. On the flights leaving for Japan, there were either no seats available or my name was still too far down the waiting list. My forty-eight-hour window was closing fast, so I gave up on going to Japan and told the military booking agent I would take ANY flight to ANY destination. Just before my time ran out, I was assigned the last seat on a Pan Am 707 bound for Sydney, Australia. The distance was 4,500 miles and the flight would take nine hours, about half the distance and time as it was from San Francisco to Vietnam a year earlier.
After a refueling stop in Darwin on the northern coast of Australia, we landed in Sydney and went through customs. Because we were soldiers direct from a war zone, the Australians were afraid we might have drugs or Playboy magazines in our possession. Yes, Playboy. Playboy was considered pornography by Australia in 1970. It was illegal for anyone in Australia to have a subscription to the magazine, and any such magazines mailed to Australia were confiscated. I did not have any drugs or Playboy magazines, but my bag was searched anyway. The soft-sided, zippered suitcase that had traveled with me from the World to Vietnam had been sitting beneath my cot for the past year and the zipper had corroded. A great deal of care was required in zipping and unzipping the bag. I managed to get it unzipped for the customs officer, who proceeded to remove every item from it. After he was satisfied I had no contraband, he pushed the suitcase and contents back over to me to repack. I threw everything back into the suitcase but I couldn’t get it zipped up. The zipper would not budge. There was a rush to get through customs and out of the airport, and I was holding up the line. Not having any other option, I picked up the bag and walked out of the airport hugging it to my chest with clothes hanging out of it. I would need to purchase a new piece of luggage for the return flight.
A bus was waiting to take us to an airport building that held a men’s clothing rental store. Some guys had come directly from the field to the flight and had nothing but the fatigues they were wearing. Most of us had little or no civilian clothing, but we could rent whatever clothing we needed from this place. You could rent pants, belts, shirts, suits, sport coats, sweaters, raincoats, shoes, or almost any other type of apparel except for socks and underwear, which we were required to purchase. After being decked out in what we hoped was the latest Australian fashion, we were transported to our hotels. It would probably be safe to assume that a bar was the next item on everyone’s agenda after throwing their bags into their rooms.
Everything was quite inexpensive in Australia (compared to the U.S.). My money would not have gone nearly as far in Japan as it did in Australia. I took $400 U.S. with me, which I exchanged for about $500 Australian, and lived like a king for the week. Well, maybe not quite a king. A king wouldn’t have stayed in the small, windowless room next to the elevator shaft in the El Camino Real, a real dump of a hotel. I had not selected the room. The Army had done that for me. The hotel must have been the Army’s low bid. At least the hotel was located in the King’s Cross section of Sydney.
I understand that the area is somewhat rundown these days, but in 1970, it was where the action was, and like I said, everything was cheap. A mixed drink in most bars was only $0.50 Australian. At the more upscale establishments it might set you back $0.75 Australian. Almost every bar had a happy hour, but instead of the drinks being half price, the drinks were FREE, but only if you could fight your way to the bar. If you ordered at your table from a waitress, you had to pay for the drink. Not all bars had happy hour at the same time, so, if you were smart, you could go to one bar with a 5:00 to 6:00 PM happy hour and when it was over walk a few doors down the street to another bar with a 6:00 to 7:00 PM happy hour and so on.
Bars were not allowed to serve mixed drinks before noon but, for some reason, Irish Coffee was not considered a mixed drink, which meant you started out rather early in the day drinking Irish Coffee and switched to mixed drinks at noon. I believe I managed to maintain a steady blood alcohol level for the entire six days (they called it a seven-day leave, but it was only six nights) in Sydney.
I never left the city. I had seen enough of the “outback” and wasn’t interested in seeing more of it. I was perfectly happy to stay in the city. You could take a cab to any part of it for less than $1.00 Australian, including tip. You simply rounded the fare up to the next 10 cents. For example, if the fare was $0.63, you gave the driver $0.70 and his tip was $0.07. If the fare was $0.60, you gave him $0.60 and he got no tip. That’s just the way it was done.
There was an Army-Navy Club, in which American servicemen on leave from Vietnam were welcomed as guests. The club was male only, comprised mostly of retired Australian military. The ambience was dark mahogany, old leather, and cigar smoke. In addition to a first-class dining room with linen table clothes, the club had a lounge area with a fireplace (it was winter in Australia) and a lot of over-stuffed leather chairs and couches. A very good steak dinner with all of the trimmings and a mixed drink only cost $5.00 Australian. I ate there several times with other soldiers on leave.
I took time out from drinking twice. I went to the movies to see the new film M*A*S*H, (it later became the hit TV series). The role of Radar O’Reilly reminded me a lot of my job as H&HB Clerk. Years later, when telling a friend about my job in Vietnam, he started calling me Radar. 

        I also went to the theater and saw the musical production of Hair. The end of the first act had to be changed slightly because of Australia’s anti-porn laws. Normally, at the end of the first act all of the actors and actresses would be dancing under a large parachute so you were unable to see them. Then suddenly the parachute would be pulled off, leaving everyone standing there completely nude. But in Sydney when the parachute went up, you only caught the barest glimpse, just enough to notice that everyone was naked before all of the lights went off and the theater was in total darkness. When the lights came back on, the stage was empty.

Continued in Chapter 50, Back in Hell for a Hell of a Party....