Many are talking about Episode 27 of the 18th Airborne Corps podcast, which tells the incredible, inspiring story of Army Lt Colonel Ken Nguyen. Ken's story is one shared by many Vietnam war refugees, ~ 1.3M of whom now live in the US.
[1 of 7]
Ken was born in Saigon in 1975, just before the capital of S. Vietnam fell to the communists. His father [pictured here, 1959 with Ken's Mom], an LTC with the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN), was captured, tortured, & forced into hard labor & political indoctrination
[2/7]
This picture of Ken's family (Ken is the baby) in March 1975 is the only photo the family was allowed to keep; all other photographs of Ken's Dad in uniform, along with any remnants of his uniform, were destroyed by the communists.
[3 of 7]
[4/7] Ken tried to escape Vietnam at age 12 in 1982 and was captured & put in a Communist Prison. Eventually his family escaped in a boat to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and were granted political asylum to the United States as political refugees. [pic: Ken + sister in Saigon in 1980]
[5 of 7]
Ken’s father finally left Vietnam in 1995 and never recovered emotionally from the war or its aftermath; he died in San Francisco just after 9/11, feeling like he’d lost his country and been abandoned by the Americans that encouraged him to fight the north.
[6 of 7]
Ken, who joined the Army after watching the 9/11 attacks live on television, has always served in his father’s honor. Here's Ken and his Mom at his Armor OBC graduation in 2005.
[END]
18th Airborne Corps podcast, Ep 27 [available now on Apple podcasts] is the story of hardship and incredible odds, one that was difficult for Ken to tell. It's also a story of who we are as an Army: a diverse force representative of the greatest values across our country.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
All month we're honoring the 70th anniversary of the rebirth of the XVIII Airborne Corps, a unit established on Fort Bragg on May 21, 1951.
One of the main symbols of the Corps to the world is the Iron Mike statue on Fort Bragg.
Here is Iron Mike's story.
[1 of 21]
[2 of 21]
The story starts with this man. You know Robert Sink. He commanded the 506th (aka the 5-Oh-Sink) in WWII and is portrayed by Dale Dye in Band of Brothers (and Robert Gould in A Bridge Too Far). There's also a Distinguished Visitors house on Bragg named after him.
[3 of 21]
Well, you may not have known that Robert was the 6th commander of the XVIII Airborne after its rebirth in 1951. He commanded the corps from 1957 - 1960.
In 1958, Sink ordered his staff to build a monument representative of the Corps.
This unit, the XVIII Airborne Corps, was established toward the end of WWII for a single purpose: to command and control all the airborne forces during the final airborne assaults planned to strike into Holland and Berlin and end the war.
[1 of 11]
[2 of 11]
Once the Germans surrendered, this Corps was no longer needed and was promptly deactivated.
By 1951, however, the world was once again in conflict.
[3 of 11]
A new war was raging in Korea that required an enormous commitment of forces. Even more ground troops were needed to keep the Soviet Union in check.
For this latter requirement, 70 years ago this month the XVIII Airborne was reborn on Fort Bragg.
THE SHORT LIFE AND FAST TIMES OF THE VANGUARD BRIGADE
A Top Of The Marne Week thread
[2 of 22]
The story of the 3rd Infantry Division's short-lived 4th Brigade Combat Team is the saga of the Army's modularity redesign, a series of ambitious force structure changes intended to move the Army from a division-focused force to a BCT-focused force.
[3 of 22]
It's a confusing tale: the story of a combat force built while deploying, then restructured while deploying, then shut down. It’s also the story of the remarkable ability of the American Army’s NCO corps to adapt to change.
25 years ago today, April 26, 1996, at 9AM, the 24th Infantry Division, stationed on Fort Stewart, Georgia since 1975, cased its colors in a formal ceremony on Cottrell Field.
Minutes later, the division reflagged as the 3rd Infantry Division.
[1 of 7]
[2 of 7]
3ID, initially formed for entry into WWI, served in West Germany throughout the Cold War. The Rock of the Marne had moved from Germany to Fort Stewart to start a new life.
The Clinton Administration's focus on force reduction in Germany brought about this action.
[3 of 7]
In the 1990s, President Clinton looked to drastically cut the Army and reduce our military footprint in Germany.
Clinton was put in office on his domestic agenda and with the Cold War over, we no longer needed a massive, multi-division land force in Germany.
THE STORY OF KEITH L. WARE: 1ID's FIGHTING GENERAL
Keith Ware from Denver, Colorado, looms large in the 1st Infantry Division Vietnam War history.
Keith's story, however, is inspirational beyond his Vietnam service with the Big Red One.
It starts with the WWII draft.
[1 of 7]
[2 of 7]
In 1941, at age 25, Keith was drafted into the Army to fight in Europe. In years, he rose to become a Lieutenant Colonel and by 1944 he was given command of a battalion in the @3rd_Infantry.
Keith was a fighting commander: out front with the boys, leading on patrols.
[3 of 7]
On the day after Christmas, 1944, Keith was wounded while leading an attack on a German machine gun position in Sigolsheim, France, an action for which he was awarded the Medal of Honor.
#TDIDCH: April 7, 1954 - The birth of the Domino Theory.
The Domino Theory was a philosophy that drove much of American national security policy during the Cold War.
That theory, long firmly embraced in the late 1940s, was given its moniker 67 years ago today.
[1 of 8]
[2 of 8]
The domino theory suggested a communist government in one nation would quickly lead to communist takeovers in neighboring states, each falling like a perfectly aligned row of dominos.
The National Security Council included the theory in a 1952 report on Indochina.
[3 of 8]
But the theory had never been publicly articulated until April 7, 1954. This was during the decisive battle between Viet Minh & French forces at Dien Bien Phu. It appeared the French might lose [they did] and communist forces would gain control of the North [they did].