The Battlefield

The Battlefield A reflection on the 🇺🇸 Vietnam War 🇻🇳 — a time of courage, sacrifice, and lessons learned. A story of struggle, unity, and the hope for peace that followed

Soldiers on both sides fought bravely, families endured loss, and history was forever changed.

October 1944Close up of the partisan Stefano Candela known as 'Eolo', in a village of Piedmont (Piemonte), a region of I...
10/16/2025

October 1944
Close up of the partisan Stefano Candela known as 'Eolo', in a village of Piedmont (Piemonte), a region of Italy bordering France and Switzerland, sits at the foot of the Alps. Italy.

🇺🇸🇻🇳 Remembering the brave souls who fought in the Vietnam War. 🕯️⚙️ Every warrior carries a broken dream. 💭

10 October 1943The crew of HM Submarine 'UNISON' display their 'Jolly Roger' at Devonport, Plymouth, UK, having returned...
10/16/2025

10 October 1943

The crew of HM Submarine 'UNISON' display their 'Jolly Roger' at Devonport, Plymouth, UK, having returned from a successful 16 months in the Mediterranean.

This submarine took passage to UK from Malta for a refit on 9 September 1943 and after sailing from Gibraltar carried out a patrol west of Cadiz before arriving at Devonport on 28th to Pay-off. Refit work was completed in February 1944 and she recommissioned for trials and training duties in the 6th Submarine Flotilla based at Blyth. These duties terminated in May after she had been selected for transfer to the Soviet Fleet and she prepared for her new service at Rosyth.

🇺🇸🇻🇳 Remembering the brave souls who fought in the Vietnam War. 🕯️⚙️ Every warrior carries a broken dream. 💭

12 October 1939A French farmer driving a horse-drawn water cart waves his cap at the crew of a Light Tank Mk VI of 13/18...
10/16/2025

12 October 1939
A French farmer driving a horse-drawn water cart waves his cap at the crew of a Light Tank Mk VI of 13/18th Royal Hussars, 1st Infantry Division's recce regiment, near Arras in northern France.

🇺🇸 Bravery is not the absence of fear, but action in spite of it. 🪖🕯️ Remember the fallen, honor the brave. 🇺🇸

"The day when Daddy came home" - 15 October, 1945Gunner Hector Murdoch arrives home (at his new prefabricated house in T...
10/16/2025

"The day when Daddy came home" - 15 October, 1945

Gunner Hector Murdoch arrives home (at his new prefabricated house in Tulse Hill, London) on his birthday, greeted by is wife Rosina and his son John .
He has been away for four and a half years, three and a half years of which he was a prisoner of war
Hector had nearly died of cholera in Singapore. For 18 months, Rosina had no idea if he was alive or dead. 🪶 In every war, peace writes the final line of history. 🕊️🧭 Time moves forward, but our memories look back.

Staff Sgt. Salvatore A. GiuntaPresident Barack Obama presented the Medal of Honor for conspicuous gallantry to Staff Sgt...
10/16/2025

Staff Sgt. Salvatore A. Giunta

President Barack Obama presented the Medal of Honor for conspicuous gallantry to Staff Sgt. Salvatore Giunta, U.S. Army, in a ceremony held in the East Room of the White House Nov. 16, 2010 — the first living service member from the Iraq or Afghanistan wars to receive it.

When enemy forces in Afghanistan’s Korengal Valley ambushed then-Spc. Giunta’s platoon on the evening of Oct. 25, 2007, the infantry team leader braved heavy enemy fire to rescue fellow paratroopers.

(To veiw the 30-minute U.S. Army Africa video interveiw with Staff Sgt. Giunta, go to: Vicenza paratrooper to be awarded Medal of Honor from US Army Africa on Vimeo.

Giunta, of Company B, 2nd Battalion, 503rd Infantry Regiment, 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team, will be awarded the Medal of Honor, the U.S. military’s highest award for valor under fire.

The Hiawatha, Iowa-native is the first living service member to earn the award since Vietnam. The medal will be presented in a ceremony at a date and time still to be determined.

A 2003 graduate of Cedar Rapids Kennedy High School, Giunta has served two tours of Afghanistan. Now a staff sergeant serving in Vicenza, Italy, Giunta of Hiawatha, Iowa, knew of the nomination several months ago, but the announcement still came as a shock.

“This is a great honor, but it is not mine to take sole ownership of. I only did the next thing that needed to be done, and I was only able to do that because all of the men around me had the rest taken care of. It’s hard to take credit for simply taking the next step when so many steps had already been taken by everyone else,” Giunta said.

Not a day goes by that Giunta, now a staff sergeant serving at Vicenza’s Caserma Ederle, does not recall what he and fellow paratroopers faced that evening.

The first platoon of Company B – known to 173rd paratroopers as “Battle Company” – were heading back to their base camp in Afghanistan’s Korengal Valley following a long day watching over fellow paratroopers in an Afghan village. It was the final day of Operation Rock Avalanche. Throughout the day, enemy radio intercepts spoke of an impending attack.

Evening was approaching as Giunta’s platoon stretched in to a snaking file down the spur to the Korengal outpost. Roughly thirty paces separated each paratrooper as the moved out.

Sgt. Joshua Brennan, a 22-year-old team leader from Ontario, Ore., on his second tour in Afghanistan, was up front. Behind Brennan, manning an M249 squad automatic weapon, was Spc. Frank Eckrode then squad leader, Staff Sgt. Erick Gallardo, 24, Chula Vista, Calif.

AH-64 Apache helicopters chopped the moonlit evening above as the platoon made their way down goat trails.

Giunta, who carried an M-4 assault rifle was just behind with his team. Pfc. Kaleb Casey carried his M249 squad automatic weapon, followed by Pfc. Garrett Clary with an M203, a 5.56 mm rifle combined with a 40 millimeter gr***de launcher.

Along their path, more than a dozen enemy fighters waited, readying their Russian-style rocket propelled gr***des, PKM 7.62 mm heavy machine guns, and Kalishnikov rifles. They had set up an L-shape, with an RPG and PKM at the apex of the formation. As Brennan walked just 30 feet from their over watch position, the enemy open fired.

An enemy RPG exploded, followed by a burst of machine gun fire. Brennan fell to the ground. Machine guns fired at the platoon’s flank. Eckrode was hit. He dropped to the ground, returned fire and tried to find cover.

Gallardo tried to run forward, but was met with RPG explosions and sustained machine gun fire. He returned fire and started back to Giunta’s position, falling into a ditch as an AK-47 round struck his helmet. Giunta jumped up, exposing himself to deadly fire, to assist his squad leader.

Giunta ran just a few steps when two enemy AK-47 rounds struck his body. The first shot hit the body armor on Giunta’s chest, the second hit over his left shoulder, striking a disposable rocket launcher strapped to his rucksack. But Giunta kept going, reaching Gallardo and dragging him back to where Giunta’s fire team had begun fighting back.

Gallardo got Giunta’s team online and the four paratroopers began bounding through withering enemy fire to rescue Eckrode and Brennan. Dropping for cover, they prepared fragmentation gr***des to throw at the enemy to cover their next move. Casey continued to fire his machine gun at enemy muzzle flashes, less than a half city block away. Gallardo counted to three and the team hurled gr***des toward enemy positions. Once they heard the explosions, they moved closer to their wounded comrades.

Eckrode called out. He was wounded, but still trying to fight. Gallardo started first aid on Eckrode while Casey, who found a bullet hole in his uniform, scanned for enemy targets.

Giunta and Clary kept running toward where Brennan fell, only to find two enemy fighters carrying a severely-wounded Brennan away. While still running, Giunta fired his assault rifle, causing them to drop Brennan and flee. Giunta emptied the rest of his magazine, killing one enemy. Giunta knelt down to help Brennan as Clary ran past, firing 40-milimeter rounds toward the retreating enemy.

Giunta saw Brennan’s injuries were severe and required more than he could offer there on the battlefield. He removed Brennan’s gear and began treating his buddy, while calling back to Gallardo for help. Brennan was trying to talk. Giunta reassured his friend as he tended to Brennan’s wounds.

Other paratroopers from the platoon were also wounded. Spc. Hugo Mendoza, was killed. Brennan, who was hoisted into a helicopter, later succumbed to his wounds.

“Giunta is a great friend and an outstanding paratrooper,” said Gallardo, now serving with Battle Company in Afghanistan. “His actions that day meant the difference between life and death to myself and other Soldiers. For that I am grateful.” 🇺🇸 Bravery is not the absence of fear, but action in spite of it. 🪖🕯️ Remember the fallen, honor the brave. 🇺🇸

Ernest Childers (February 1, 1918 – March 17, 2005) was a United States Army officer and a recipient of the United State...
10/16/2025

Ernest Childers (February 1, 1918 – March 17, 2005) was a United States Army officer and a recipient of the United States military's highest decoration, the Medal of Honor, for his valorous actions in World War II.

Childers was recovering from wounds in Naples when he was presented with the official Medal of Honor by General Jacob Devers. The citation reads:

For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at risk of life above and beyond the call of duty in action on 22 September 1943, at Oliveto, Italy. Although 2d Lt. Childers previously had just suffered a fractured instep, he, with 8 enlisted men, advanced up a hill toward enemy machinegun nests. The group advanced to a rock wall overlooking a cornfield, and 2d Lt. Childers ordered a base of fire laid across the field so that he could advance. When he was fired upon by 2 enemy snipers from a nearby house, he killed both of them. He moved behind the machinegun nests and killed all occupants of the nearer one. He continued toward the second one and threw rocks into it. When the 2 occupants of the nest raised up, he shot 1. The other was killed by 1 of the 8 enlisted men. 2d Lt. Childers continued his advance toward a house farther up the hill and, single-handed, captured an enemy mortar observer. The exceptional leadership, initiative, calmness under fire, and conspicuous gallantry displayed by 2d Lt. Childers were an inspiration to his men.
🇺🇸 Bravery is not the absence of fear, but action in spite of it. 🪖🕯️ Remember the fallen, honor the brave. 🇺🇸

Private First Class Jacklyn Harrell Lucas earned the Medal of Honor during the Iwo Jima campaign for unhesitatingly hurl...
10/16/2025

Private First Class Jacklyn Harrell Lucas earned the Medal of Honor during the Iwo Jima campaign for unhesitatingly hurling himself over his comrades upon one gr***de and for pulling another one under himself, absorbing the whole blasting force of the explosions with his own body.

🇺🇸 Bravery is not the absence of fear, but action in spite of it. 🪖🕯️ Remember the fallen, honor the brave. 🇺🇸

Rest easy brave warrior!
10/16/2025

Rest easy brave warrior!

10/16/2025
“John Basilone (November 4, 1916 – February 19, 1945) was a United States Marine Corps Gunnery Sergeant who was killed i...
10/16/2025

“John Basilone (November 4, 1916 – February 19, 1945) was a United States Marine Corps Gunnery Sergeant who was killed in action on this day during World War II. He received the Medal of Honor for heroism above and beyond the call of duty during the Battle for Henderson Field in the Guadalcanal Campaign, and the Navy Cross posthumously for extraordinary heroism during the Battle of Iwo Jima. He was the only enlisted Marine to receive both of these decorations in World War II.” 🇺🇸 Bravery is not the absence of fear, but action in spite of it. 🪖🕯️ Remember the fallen, honor the brave. 🇺🇸

A true Hero is laid to rest: Soldiers of the 3d U.S. Infantry Regiment (The Old Guard) had the sacred duty of rendering ...
10/16/2025

A true Hero is laid to rest: Soldiers of the 3d U.S. Infantry Regiment (The Old Guard) had the sacred duty of rendering honors for U.S. Army Command Sgt. Maj. Bennie G. Adkins in Section 12A of Arlington National Cemetery.

Adkins was awarded the Medal of Honor on September 15, 2014, for his actions as an Intelligence Sergeant with Detachment A-102, 5th Special Forces Group - Airborne, 1st Special Forces Command - Airborne, during combat operations against an armed enemy at Camp A Shau, Republic of Vietnam, from March 9-12, 1966. During the 38-hour battle and 48 hours of escape and evasion, Adkins fought with mortars, machine guns, recoilless rifles, small arms, and hand gr***des, killing an estimated 135 to 175 of the enemy and sustaining 18 different wounds.

Following his time in service, Adkins taught educational classes to help others pursue college education opportunities. He also founded the Bennie Adkins Foundation to provide college scholarships to non-commissioned Special Forces officers to help them transition to civilian life.
🇺🇸 Bravery is not the absence of fear, but action in spite of it. 🪖🕯️ Remember the fallen, honor the brave. 🇺🇸

On Dec 14th, 1944, Lt. Robert Nett was tasked with capturing a fortified position near Cognon, Philippines.As he led his...
10/16/2025

On Dec 14th, 1944, Lt. Robert Nett was tasked with capturing a fortified position near Cognon, Philippines.

As he led his men from E. Co under fire, Nett was shot in the throat. With adrenaline running and with souls to stack, he ignored his wounds and maneuvered towards the first line of defense, killing 7 of the enemy with his rifle and bayonet.

At that moment, he was shot in the chest. Still, with a collapsed lung, he continued to lead the attack, killing the enemy in vicious hand to hand combat until he was wounded a third time.

Bleeding profusely, he pushed his final attack on a 3 story block house with the help of machine gunners and flamethrowers; after which he relinquished his command to another officer and walked back unaided for medical treatment.

For his courage and leadership, Nett was awarded the .

Upon recuperating from his wounds, he joined back with his unit for the Battle of Okinawa until the end of the war. Nett continued his service fighting in Korea and Vietnam. 🇺🇸 Bravery is not the absence of fear, but action in spite of it. 🪖🕯️ Remember the fallen, honor the brave. 🇺🇸

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