The Katy Times > Archives > News > Veterans remember Vietnam War

By Tracy Dang
Times Managing Editor

Published:

Thursday, February 3, 2011 9:24 AM CST
Members of the Katy Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 9182 and Houston
Chapter of the Vietnam Wars Veterans Foundations stood side-by-side to
host a Vietnam War remembrance ceremony Sunday afternoon, just as their
soldiers allied to fight against the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese
enemy four decades ago.The ceremony at the Katy VFW Hall commemorated
the 38th anniversary of the signing of the Paris Peace Accords, which
was intended to end the war on Jan. 27, 1973.The ceasefire agreement
ended direct U.S. military involvement and temporarily stopped the
fighting between North and South Vietnam until the North Vietnamese
forces and its Communist allies invaded the country two years later. The
fall of Saigon in April 30, 1975 ended the war as Vietnam fell under
Communist rule.The ceremony had a panel of American and Vietnamese
veterans that served during the Vietnam War, as well as a Vietnamese
woman who came to America as a young girl.Students from Katy, Taylor,
Morton Ranch and Mayde Creek High School students were also in
attendance as they learned about the Vietnam War from those who
experienced it first hand.American SoldiersDuring the presentation,
several Katy VFW members were asked to serve on a panel and share their
experiences during the war.Among them was Raul Herrera, who served in
the U.S. Navy as a radio and radarman from April 1967 to May
1968.Herrera was aboard the PCF-79, a swift boat patrolling the rivers
of Vietnam that intercepted a trawler sneaking 90 tons of supplies to
the Viet Cong.The trawler was first detected by an aircraft but later
fell off the radars. The swift boat knew the area well and fired an
81-mm motor round with a direct hit. The trawler ran aground near the
mouth of the Song Sa Ky River.David Lemak was a corporal in the U.S.
Marine Corps, serving in Da Nang from 1967-69.“I was what they called a
‘grunt’ and lived in the Vietnam villages for nine months, engaging in
enemy combat,” he said.Lemak was awarded two Purple Hearts for wounds
sustained during his service. One of those times was while he was on
patrol when a 60-mm motor exploded. He said the only reason he is alive
today is because it landed in the mud, smothering much of the
impact.Mike Warren served in the U.S. Army from March 1970 to March 1971
with the field artillery battalion supporting the 1st Brigade of the 1st
Cavalry Division.“We won every battle, but we were sent home before
anything was done,” he said. “We were winning when I came home. A few
years later, our U.S. politicians negotiated for the return of our POWs,
and I apologize for that.”And Katy VFW post commander Mike Mastrangelo
said the return was not easy. As an infantry platoon leader in the U.S.
Army from 1960-70, he fought for democracy.Upon his return, a young lady
yelled and spat at him in an airport.Mastrangelo returned and continued
to serve in the U.S. Army and retired after 30 years of service,
achieving the rank of colonel. He said it was gratifying see future
generations were not treated the same way when they returned from Desert
Storm and current conflicts.“It’s important to know that our soldiers
are going to be recognized when they come home because they were asked
to put their lives on the line,” he said.Vietnamese AlliesThe Katy VFW
was proud to invite members of the Vietnamese community in the Houston
area to sit on the panel and share their stories.Pastor Buu T. Chung was
a first lieutenant in the Republic of Viet Nam Air Force. He was shot
down twice, first in 1968 and again in 1971 when he became a prisoner of
war for 14 years.“I believe that during the Vietnam War, my 219th
Helicopter Squadron was the only Vietnamese Air Force unit that worked
closely side-by-side with our American counterpart in all of our
missions, the Green Berets of MACV-SOG,” he said.Chung’s rescue of an
American pilot and his Vietnamese flymate brought recommendations for an
Army Distinguished Medal, but he was captured the second time before it
became a reality.He was onboard a convoy of 10 military trucks
transporting 82 officer prisoners of wars when an escaped hen delayed
the trip, saving the convoy from an American attack on Hanoi for the
first time since 1968.“You cannot imagine our feelings,” he said. “We
were so happy and so proud of our ally’s flying ability and so glad to
see our friends beat up the bad guys.”He was released from imprisonment
in October 1984.Army of the Republic of Viet Nam Brigade General Nam Van
Nguyen served for 23 years. He participated in the Paris Peace Accords
as a representative of South Vietnam and later oversaw 50,000 Viet Cong
and North Vietnamese prisoners of wars.Nguyen had planned to show a
movie of the South Vietnamese Navy fighting against the Chinese
Communists that invaded the Arhipelago Hoang Sa and Truong Sa in January
1974.However, many in the Vietnamese military associations could not
make the ceremony as they continue to defend the spirit of freedom and
democracy in an unexpected protest against two Vietnamese politicians
who allegedly committed election fraud scheduled that afternoon.Victoria
Ai Linh Bryant also shared her story as a first-generation American.She
was born at the Air Force Base in Pleiku, where her father was stationed
in 1974. Her parents were separated during the fall of South Vietnam and
the evacuation in 1975. Her family was later reunited, and she left
Vietnam in 1978 to settle in Houston.Bryant emotionally thanked the
veterans for their service and credited their sacrifice for the
opportunity to grow up in America and enjoy the freedom and liberties
this country has to offer.

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