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Robert Ankony

Remembrance
Suicide Prevention
LURPS Book Information
Publications
Blog
Photos
Law Enforcement Gallery Contemporary Gallery LURPS Gallery
About Dr. Ankony
About Dr. Ankony RSS Feed - Blog RSS Feed - Publications Search the site
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No Peace In the Valley

April 9, 1968, in the evening, Sergeant Doug Parkinson’s six-man long-range reconnaissance patrol (LRRP, or “Lurps”) team scrambled aboard a UH-1 Huey. They had just climbed Dong Tri Mountain outside the Marine combat base at Khe Sanh in search of the enemy. Although they never saw the enemy, a stray artillery shell nearly killed them all, and a Bengal tiger stalked them for several nights. Then, with B-52s set to bomb their position in preparation for a Marine sweep of the mountain, they almost fell 1,000 feet to their deaths as helicopters extracted them on long emergency ropes known as McGuire rigs. As Parkinson’s helicopter started up and its rotors began to spin, he glanced through the dust at dozens of other helicopters lifting off and said, “So much for Khe Sanh, lads. . . . I’d say we got off easy!”

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PostedAugust 16, 2015
AuthorRobert Ankony
CategoriesMilitary History, Vietnam War
TagsRobert Ankony, Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol, LRRP, A Shau Valley, Battle of Signal Hill Vietnam, US Army Rangers
2 CommentsPost a comment
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Perspectives

Nearly 30 years after the end of the Vietnam War, the myth that it was a 'bad war' still passes for history.

For the past three decades conventional wisdom in America has held that the Vietnam War was a "bad war," unlike the "good war" of World War II. But an argument can be made that the Vietnam War not only was a good war but was more vital to America's interests than World War II. To pursue this argument, we need to consider several factors: America's stance at the beginning of World War II; the Cold War; the Communist threat; and the foundation on which the "bad war" myth rests.

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PostedJune 13, 2015
AuthorCathy
CategoriesVietnam War, World War II
TagsRobert Ankony, Counterculture, Vietnam War Movies, Cold War
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Twenty-second and Last Patrol: A Struggle against Bad Luck

 At dawn, Friday, August 30, 1968, I woke inside my cockroach-infested hooch at LZ Betty, sixteen miles south of the Demilitarized Zone, to go on my twenty-second and last patrol. I was the sergeant and team leader of a five-man long-range reconnaissance patrol assigned to the First Cavalry Division’s First Brigade, whose area of operation was from Quang Tri City, near the coast of South Vietnam, to the heavily forested mountains out west, halfway to Laos.

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PostedMarch 5, 2015
AuthorCathy
CategoriesMilitary History, Vietnam War
TagsRobert Ankony, Tony Lee Griffith, Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol, LRRP, US Army Rangers
CommentPost a comment

Operation Delaware

As evening approached on April 9, 1968, Sergeant Doug Parkinson’s six-man long-range reconnaissance patrol (LRRP, pronounced “Lurp”) team scrambled aboard a UH-1 Huey. They had just climbed Dong Tri Mountain outside the Marine combat base at Khe Sanh in search of the enemy. Although they never saw the enemy, a stray artillery shell nearly killed them all, and a Bengal tiger stalked them for several nights. Then, with B-52s set to bomb their position in preparation for a Marine sweep of the mountain, they almost fell 1,000 feet to their deaths as helicopters hurriedly extracted them on long emergency ropes known as McGuire rigs.As Parkinson glanced through the dust at the dozens of helicopters lifting off, he said, “So much for Khe Sanh, lads....I’d say we got off easy!”

Read more …
PostedJanuary 7, 2015
AuthorCathy
CategoriesMilitary History, Vietnam War
TagsRobert Ankony, Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol, LRRP, US Army Rangers, A Shau Valley, Battle of Signal Hill Vietnam
1 CommentPost a comment
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