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2RHPZ
02-25-2006, 02:03 PM
Sapper Attack at Cam Ranh Bay

No place in South Vietnam, not even the huge base at Cam Ranh Bay, was secure from the surprise attack by elite sappers.

This article was written by Commander Arthur R. Lee, U.S. Navy (ret.) and originally published in the December 2001 issue of Vietnam Magazine.



.....

"Then he came alive, and tried to take over the boat," the coxswain later recalled. "We struggled with him, and he tried to jam the throttle forward to dump us. We managed to subdue him by clubbing him over the head. He was a powerful man who wore nothing but a black bathing suit. I'll tell you, we had our hands full."

Around his ankle, the sapper wore a rubber strap with a single round of AK-47 ammunition. We deduced that this was the man who had provided covering fire from the sand hill at the start of the attack. He had that one round left -- for what? Suicide? Perhaps. Maybe he had been swimming with his rifle, and had lost it before boarding the boat.

An explosive ordnance disposal (EOD) team came to retrieve the bodies of the sappers. The one near our generator had not thrown all his charges before he was killed. I approached the body cautiously. Was he still alive, and would he roll over and pull the pin on a grenade? Did he have a weapon? Although he appeared quite dead and had lain in the same position throughout the firefight, I didn't want to take unnecessary chances. I examined the body with my flashlight. He was larger than the South Vietnamese men I had seen. He was taller, perhaps my size, and with well-developed muscles in his arms, legs and shoulders. He wore only a black bathing suit, but around his waist was a black belt of heavy material. Affixed to the belt were about a dozen charges of explosives in solid 6-inch packs. At the top end of each charge was a thin copper-colored wire attached to the belt. All the sapper had to do was to pull the charge downward from the belt. The wire, as it pulled loose, armed the charge. Several bare wires, extending downward from the belt, gave a count of the number of charges he had already thrown. I had the strangest urge to reach down to touch the dead man -- but I knew better than to tempt fate. What if the least movement would set off an armed charge?

The EOD personnel approached the body with caution. They tied a line around the wrist of the dead sapper and, from a safe distance, rolled him over gently. I stood back even farther as they proceeded to remove his charges.

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Article (http://historynet.com/vn/bl-sapper-attack-1/)

GeraldDuval
02-28-2006, 10:58 AM
Good find. It's a shame that there isnt all that much good research on the vietnamese special forces like the Sappers and Dac Cong...