A Night in the Jungle – Col (Ret) Keith Nightingale

The unit wound its way carefully through the margin of jungle that showed the slightest hint of openness and level ground. The Deep Green had taken every ounce of reserve the unit had left and the Captain recognized that. He had migrated to the lead platoon and was anxiously searching for an acceptable night defensive position (NDP).

His appearance was indiscernible from his men. He wore no rank and his uniform was a carbon copy of theirs. Moreover, his shoulders ached with the biting grooves his ruck had cut into his body despite a large wrap of foam rubber and 100 mile an hour tape. Sweat poured off his face and into his completely soaked uniform. His Drive On towel was as soaked as his fatigues and now useless as for its intended purpose. Time to halt. Both his men’s condition and the waning light told him that.

He raised a Halt sign and dropped his ruck. He showed a 10-minute flash with his hands which brought the entire column to a sudden, near explosive drop. The immediate area reverberated with the collective drop of rucks, weapons and bodies. The area seemed to expel one collective wheeze as the troops settled on the ground, momentarily unmindful of what may be lurking beneath their exhausted bodies.

The radio operators and LMG gunners noted their quivering legs and knees and stretched them out on the jungle floor. Helmets quickly came off, a Drive On rag was automatically wiped through hair and for a moment, most troops just retreated within themselves to recover something of what they used to have.

Within a minute, the NCO’s began to course through the lines, re-arranging troops and creating a hasty perimeter-three platoons in a triangular position with the CP in the middle. The company commander sent out a squad to determine the final NDP and to determine the degree of transient threat.

The company was in a heavily used transient zone by the NVA and VC. The area was riddled with small and large trails. Less than eight kilometers to the West, intelligence had located a Binh Tram logistics camp that was both managing NVA transient units moving South and providing re-supply to the VC forces operating units transiting south, maintenance of their portion of the Ho Chi Minh Trail and supplying the VC elements that operated on the coastal plane. This was to be avoided at all costs as at least a regiment of NVA could be mustered in defense in very short order.

Rather, the company was to operate in the Green at the cusp of the more open plain area. The unit well understood that it could run into a major NVA force or a pair of VCs. Its task was to find these well used trails and ambush “with discretion.”

The company habitually operated independently of the battalion due to the unusual success in this type of operation. This was primarily due to the company commander and two PSG’s, all of whom had been previous advisors to the Vietnamese Rangers or Airborne elements. They received a tactical education that allowed them to read the terrain and its options as well as to discern what the enemy would probably do in an encounter. On numerous occasions, this saved the company from aimless wanders and allowed the “ambush with discretion” guidance to become a one-sided affair. The disadvantage was that the company was in the field more than its brothers.