Dear ream Chbang Neay Krudth,
Thank you for every thing you have done here and thank you for your
services.
Thavry






On Tue, Apr 6, 2010 at 4:10 PM, Neay K'rudth <[email protected]> wrote:

> I forgot to decipher the RPG: Rocket Propelled Grenade.
>
> Sorry.
>
> NKR
>
> On Apr 6, 12:37 pm, Thavary Ung <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Also RPG and...On Tue, Apr 6, 2010 at 12:13 PM, Thavary Ung <
> [email protected]> wrote:
> > > Hello Lok Neay Krudth,
> > > Please send some more if you have the(fighting with Vietcon story or
> Khmer
> > > Navy Story"
> > > Thank you in advance.
> >
> > > Thavry
> >
>  > > On Tue, Apr 6, 2010 at 1:30 AM, Neay K'rudth <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> >
> > >> Thank you all my Youngsters you all are great.
> >
> > >> Hello Perom:
> >
> > >> You look so familiar, did you go to Lycee Sisowath?
> > >> I sense that you are associated with the Khmer Republic Navy, what a
> > >> great bunch. You all kept your stuff together well. We, the straight
> > >> leg soldiers are not so well connected, for some reasons or another. I
> > >> guess many of us who managed to escape are morally crushed and felt
> > >> utterly defeated.
> >
> > >> Anyway, the good thing is that the Khmer Navy had a tradition as far
> > >> back as Funan. I read somewhere about the colonial French while trying
> > >> to negotiate the transfer of Chantabun (a former Khmer province right
> > >> across the border from Koh Kong) back to Khmer Kingdom from the Siem
> > >> in the late 1800, ran into a strange but comical phenomenon. The
> > >> French asked all the Khmer people in Chantabun  to register for Khmer
> > >> citizenship with the colonial administration. What happened was the
> > >> next day 90% of the sailors in the Siem navy were gone, only to be
> > >> found lined up in the front of the French Consulate to get a Khmer
> > >> Citizenship ID card. This greatly embarrassed the hell out of the Siem
> > >> King, that the whole Siem government went bezerk and begged the French
> > >> to stop the process immediately! Cheer, the Khmer Navy had really gone
> > >> places!
> >
> > >> And this one is from Neay Krud'th personally to our brothers the Khmer
> > >> Sailors:
> >
> > >> A Khmer Republic Army position south of Takmauv, on the east side of
> > >> Tonle Bassac river was surrounded for nearly a month and a half.
> > >> Ground intervention attempts could not breech the seize and reach the
> > >> distress unit. The unit ran low on food, ammo, and sustained a big
> > >> stack of KIA and wounded casualties.
> >
> > >> The two-star boss-man upstream, asked and receiced a squadron of our
> > >> Navy boys from up river, showing up with one slick RPB (the one with
> > >> the tandem M50 at the bow, and 2 M60 and a 60 mm mortar at the stern),
> > >> a cargo transport engin with a 40mm Anti-aircraft sitting vulnerably
> > >> on the top deck (wide open). And, oh I loved this one, and I named it
> > >> the real "McCoy". It sits real low close to the water line, it had a
> > >> recoiless 106mm inside the lower turret at the bow, and an M20 on the
> > >> upper turret. Neay Krud'th was given the mission to get on the command
> > >> boat (the McCoy) and assist the squadron commander in crossing the
> > >> enemy blockade, beach the cargo transport, and retrieve the wounded,
> > >> last but not least to hang around as long as possible to protect the
> > >> troop while they take a bath and resupply their drinking water after a
> > >> month and a half without bath and nearly died of thirst while living
> > >> on the edge of this beautiful river because they were practically
> > >> pinned down by all kinds of fires 24/7.
> > >> At about 1 PM we sailed down the river, Neay Krud'th was to be on the
> > >> bad McCoy (it had heavy armor, big gun and low profile) with the
> > >> Commander (another young lieutenant, an Ensign is that how you all
> > >> call him?). Overhead were the Red Eagles (AVNK helicopter gunships)
> > >> were helping us neutralize the first river bend. None of us navy or
> > >> otherwise liked curved road or river bends. The airstrike was over in
> > >> a few minute before we even can count 1.. 2.. 3.. get set and..go...
> > >> The little RPB was sent ahead of us to guide us around sand bars, and
> > >> to act as a bait for enemy fire. The river was so low in the dry
> > >> season, we were at a very disadvantage to say the least. Neay Krud'th
> > >> and the commander were standing inside the mid-section observation
> > >> cupola just upper and lower the gun turret sharing the ship ladder.
> >
> > >> We blasted our way with everything we had as we move around the bend.
> > >> Thank God KR did not pick on the RPB first, instead they waited for
> > >> the McCoy to come up across the crosshair of their Chinese 75mm
> > >> recoilless armor piercing rifle. We tried to shield and keep the
> > >> transport covered on our portside, it had too much explosive onboard,
> > >> one round of RPG and it will be decimated. It seemed like ages when we
> > >> reached the opposite bank from the friendly position. KR seemed to be
> > >> kind of lame, we only received light fire this time. As we prepare for
> > >> the final assault and beach the transport by applying a real heavy
> > >> dose of arsenal on the perimeter of our friendly position, the 40mm
> > >> DCA on top of the transport asked for a time-out, his gun kept on
> > >> jamming, and he was going to test fire it until it really run like the
> > >> real DCA (a couple hundred rounds per minute or something like that).
> > >> He kept messing with it, the gun was aimed on one particular spot
> > >> south of the friendly position. Its sputtered off and on for about 15
> > >> minute while we float around like ducks. Then we received our first
> > >> round of the 75mm recoilless on the starboard side of the McCoy, but
> > >> luckily it hit the water and exploded about 25 feet from the boat.
> > >> However, the fragments went flying, ricocheted, hitting stack of ammo
> > >> boxes that they hanged around the turret, and hit Neay Krud'th on the
> > >> left side of the face, gave him visions of every stars in the galaxy.
> > >> I heard the commander yelped and turned around saw him fell down from
> > >> my right side of the ship ladder straight to the bottom deck with a
> > >> big thud. Then the M60 gunner in the upper turret above my head and to
> > >> my rear yelped "lieutenant I’m hit", I turned around again, red blood
> > >> splashed down from his hand on to my turret and on my back.
> > >> In the absence of the rightful commander, while on the observation
> > >> turret, I had to take charge (sorry guys not to offend anyone, I mean
> > >> not in a sense of running the boat tactical formation and maneuvering
> > >> and such, but in the "return-fire" part of the battle).
> >
> > >> Just at that moment I could see KR popped out from every nooks and
> > >> cranny along the bank, the reason was that the 40mm gunner on the top
> > >> of the transport had been consistent on keeping his aim on the same
> > >> spot over and over, until KR were convinced that their fighting
> > >> positions were compromised and needed to get the hell out. They were
> > >> so panicky that they dropped everything they carried on the water's
> > >> edge, and run for their life, so terrified that they forget to run up
> > >> the bank and away, but instead ran along the water's edge like herds
> > >> of water buffalos. I yelled to the 106 gunner below, 10 O'clock!.....
> > >> 10 O'clock...., fast! Every piece of arsenal on the starboard of the
> > >> three boats went off like 4th of July. "Thou shall neither kill nor
> > >> cause to be killed" - Buddha forgive me! I've never intended to shoot
> > >> at anyone with a 106mm direct-shot, indescribable.... The rounds
> > >> completely wiped every commotion or movement on the bank. One round
> > >> hit something like a paper factory. Tons of confetti went up in the
> > >> air like NY Time Square tinker day parade.
> > >> While the big gun was cleaning up the rich target on 10 O'clock,
> > >> somehow the corner of my left eye caught something moving in the
> > >> horizon (amazing of how sharp we all were when we were young and
> > >> wild). Sure enough, one smart and courageous KR dude was climbing the
> > >> side wall of a shot up wooden house with an RPG slung behind his back
> > >> ( the roof of the house would provide the best position for him to
> > >> blow us out of the water. I yelled again to the gunner below, 8
> > >> O'clock fast! The 106 turret swung and locked at 8 O'clock like a
> > >> charm, the gun crew must have looked straight through the gun barrel
> > >> to aim. When the round met the wall of that red roof house the poor
> > >> dude was gone with the smoke, again a direct shot of a 106mm, and
> > >> overkill.
> >
> > >> In a unison all three vessels including the transport swung left 9
> > >> O'clock with the McCoy on its starboard and the RPB on the portside,
> > >> went full speed, and finally beached right at the Kampong behind our
> > >> stranded friends. Cheers went wild like in a football game. What a
> > >> relief to watch our friends took turn to take a dip in the river, and
> > >> unload the supply up the bank, and load the bodies of their dead
> > >> comrades and the wounded onto the transport.
> >
> > >> I took the time to check on the lieutenant and the wounded gunner at
> > >> the bottom deck. The lieutenant somehow received a shrapnel on his
> > >> right foot but it was not serious, but the gunner gash on his left arm
> > >> was definitely serious. Bothe were patched up and flat on the
> > >> stretcher. The medic onboard was attending to both of them. As for
> > >> Neay Krud'th he somehow escape the shrapnel but got knocked senseless
> > >> and while trying to regain his footing on the ship ladder inside the
> > >> turret, accidentally step on a fire extinguisher and the darn thing
> > >> discharged foam all over his lower body. The freezing cold chemical
> > >> nearly froze my balls off. Didn't feel a thing until it was almost
> > >> over.
> >
> > >> We gathered the squadron at sundown, a turned back upstream to
> > >> Takhmauv, feeling solemnly for a good day worth of soldiering,
> > >> exhausted but satisfied. I was wrong about the shrapnel. When I took
> > >> of the flack jacket and hung it to the seat of the waiting Jeep, I
> > >> discovered a 2 inches long piece of steel stuck to the left shoulder
> > >> area of the jacket, it burned about 1/4 inch into the thickness of the
> > >> polyethylene protective mesh. My helmet had a tiny piece of steel
> > >> lodged between the steel surface and the camouflage cloth cover.
> >
> > >> The boss came-by and greeted all of us, and took care of our friends
> > >> on the stretchers. We were treated with a big feast that evening.
> >
> > >> It's good to be alive and still able to reminisce the good old day!
> > >> Meantime we shall continue to remember all of our heroic brothers as
> > >> long as we live. We were still too young when these horrible events
> > >> seized upon us, and lead us away from our intended destination.  Some
> > >> may think that we were either TOO BRAVE or TOO STUPID. But for better
> > >> or for worse, we gave all we had, and not regretting any moment of it.
> >
> > >> Neay Krud'th would like to express admiration and respect, and would
> > >> like to salute the passing and living brothers of the Khmer Republic
> > >> Navy!
> >
> > >> NKR
> >
> > >> On Apr 3, 12:18 am, "sacravatoons" <[email protected]>
> > >> wrote:
> > >> > Dear Ream Chbabng Neay Krud'th,
> >
> > >> > Firstly I would like to take my hat off to salute you from my heart
> as :
> >
> > >> >               " Tea-hean Mpey Buon Mong "
> > >> >                            The 24hrs Soldiers
> >
> > >> > Without you and others Khmer soldiers ,Cambodia would be captured in
> 3
> > >> months time as Vietcong had promised to Xihanouk.And also thanks to
> our Korn
> > >> brothers & sisters Khmer Kampuchea Krom who were coming in Cambodia to
> fight
> > >> & protect against the aggressor Vietcong & Yuon-Hanoi.
> > >> > Your patriosm to fight those Tmill are still in the heart of Khmer
> > >> Republicans untill today.
> >
> > >> > Pls share more your experiences during the War 1970-1975.
> >
> > >> > Cheers,
> > >> > Ung Bun Heang
> >
> > >> > Dear Youngsters:
> >
> > >> > > You all brought up a nostalgia which I could not resist:
> >
> > >> > > I am one of the survivor hippies of the era, which started in 1962
> > >> > > when I entered 6 grade in Lycee Sisowath, when the Beatles came
> out
> > >> > > with "I Saw You Standing There", and the Rollingstones came out
> with
> > >> > > "I Can Get No Satisfaction", and the long haired hippie named
> Scott
> > >> > > McKenzie was singing " If you're going to San Francisco.... Be
> sure to
> > >> > > wear a flower in you're hair......". Oh, the Animals were singing
> "The
> > >> > > House of the Rising Sun".
> >
> > >> > > Neay Krud'th was playing drum for the original band "Seila", and
> on to
> > >> > > play drum for the Boys (the Khmero-Anglais H.S. kids behind our
> > >> > > school), then went on to play professionally for the Khmer
> National
> > >> > > Radio and TV Band in the Rock'n Roll section of the band with
> young
> > >> > > and sexy Var-So-Vy as the singer. Our usual hang out location was
> on
> > >> > > Rue Pastor between Lycee Sisowath and Khmero-Anglais, or Phsa Chah
> > >> > > were the old Majestic movie house was, were we use to congregate
> to
> > >> > > watch all the beautiful and wealthy girls go shopping, and when
> time
> > >> > > to eat there were tons of good old authentic chinese of all
> varieties
> > >> > > you can order from, goat noodle soup anyone?
> >
> > >> > > 1970 the war came and our funs and laughters ended. Neay Krud'th
> was
> > >> > > shipped out to war fighting VC and KR south side of the City such
> as
> > >> > > Saang, Koki Thom, Neak Lueung etc, as a young/green/scary platoon
> > >> > > leader, leading untrained, inexperienced troops into firefights
> with
> > >> > > VC, NVA, and the latter part KR.
> >
> > >> > > One fateful night, KR attacked in the middle of the night, raining
> > >> > > RPG's on our defense post to dislodge us from the wooden bridge we
> > >> > > were tasked to hold at all cost. What funny was that one of the
> troop
> > >> > > was listening to the US Army radio, and as he was rushing to man
> his
> > >> > > machine gun, his transistor radio fell to the ground inside his
> > >> > > trench, and the volume for some freakish reason got louder. I was
> > >> > > manning the mortar, and talked to the gunship overhead, but the
> radio
> > >> > > kept belching out " Bridge Over Trouble Water" by Simmon and Art
> > >> > > Garfunkel, then "Let It Be" by Paul McCartney, we couldn't do a
> thing
> > >> > > about it so we just enjoyed it, and what a party we had! I could
> not
> > >> > > tell what other song came on after that because was my ears were
> > >> > > bleeding and clogged up from the continuous blast of my mortar
> tube.
> > >> > > My eyes tears up everytime I hear the song plays on the radio here
> in
> > >> > > the US.
> >
> > >> > > Yes definitely, we salute the memories our brothers whose idea of
> > >> > > freedom and fun are always something worth dying for.
> >
> > >> > > I am so impressed with you youngsters for your passion in seing
> the
> > >> > > homeland move past these pains and sufferings toward happiness,
> > >> > > freedom, peace, prosperity, and security.
> >
> > >> > > May the spirits our our ancestors assist us in this endeavor.
> >
> > >> > > MAKE PEACE NOT WAR! (if we can avoid it)
> >
> > >> > > MKR
> >
> > >> > > On Apr 2, 1:26 am, "sacravatoons" <[email protected]>
> > >> > > wrote:
> > >> > >> My dedications to Khmer-Hippies who died in cold blood during
> > >> > >> KhmerRouge's era
> > >> > >> Cheers,
> > >> > >> Ung Bun Heang
> >
> > >> > >> Psychedelic rock-n-roll, long hair, and bell bottom pants were
> some
> > >> of> the other "trademarks"
> > >> > >> > of the hippie culture...or shall i say subculture. I remember
> my
> > >> older
> > >> > >> > brother who was a
> > >> > >> > big time hippie...he literally worshipped Jimi Hendrix and
> Carlos
> > >> > >> > Santana. Ahhhh those days. There were
> > >> > >> > some happy times until the Year Zero!!!
> >
> > >> > >> > You are right, Lok Bong Sacrava, they were harmless to the
> public
> > >> as
> > >> > >> > far as I can remember. Furthermore, their fashions, values, and
> > >> > >> > practice, rapidly influenced popular music, television, film,
> > >> > >> > literature, and the arts, and especially the promotion of
> > >> > >> > multiculturalism particularly in the US of A. Even though their
> > >> > >> > culture and values spread out like wild fire to the 'old'
> worlds
> > >> such
> > >> > >> > as Cambodia, there was quite a resistance from traditionalists.
> > >> > >> > Speaking from experience, my parents never approved of or
> accepted
> > >> my
> > >> > >> > older brother's idea of hippie-ism.
> >
> > >> > >> > -Bora
> >
> > >> > >> Hippie's Slogan 500.jpg
> > >> > >> 140KViewDownload
> >
> > >> > > --
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> >
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> >
> > >> >  Khmer Republic Soldier 450.jpg
> > >> > 144KViewDownload- Hide quoted text -
> >
> > >> > - Show quoted text -
> >
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