Photos Aussies and Kiwi's in Vietnam

wow didn't know that aussie operate in kon tum ( central highland ) , wonder what the aussie and newzealand vet think about Vietnam now day and Vietnamese in general are there any type of hate like some American vet ?
 
Some go back all the time for holidays, others will not go near Vietnam. Quite a few veterans live in and around Vung Tau.
 
Some go back all the time for holidays, others will not go near Vietnam. Quite a few veterans live in and around Vung Tau.
cool tks for sharing so it similar to the American vet , a lot of them visit Vietnam now day , quite few chose to retired here too , while some don't visit vietnam at all , some hate Vietnamese and Vietnam . @digrar are you ex Vietnam war vet ?
 
No, my Father was too young to go to Vietnam (only just, had he been conscripted, he would have got through most of the training, but would not have deployed).
But my Battalion had one of Australia's most significant battles during the war and I visited Vietnam in 2006 for the 40th anniversary of the battle.
 
316852 Pilot Officer (PO) Ross Lester Mathieson, of Stanhope, Vic, at the controls of his Iroquois helicopter before a mission in Phuoc Tuy Province, South Vietnam. PO Mathieson is a member of No 9 Squadron, RAAF, based at Vung Tau, 35 miles south east of Saigon. The squadron supports troops of the 1st Australian Task Force (1ATF) in their operations in the Province.
#VietnamWarStories #Anzac #lestweforget #vietnamwarfootageandstories #vietnamwar #anzacs #australia #VietnamWarVeteran
Original description and photo sourced by:https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/C36609

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South Vietnam. 1968-07-09. Corporal George Stewart of Hepburn Springs, Vic, finds an umbrella handy during the Vietnamese monsoons while on Operation Blue Mountains in south-east Phuoc Tuy Province. A member of A Squadron, 3rd Cavalry Regiment, Corporal Stewart is seated on an armoured personnel carrier (APC) while taking part in the armoured/infantry sweep of the area north of the Long Hai Hills.
#VietnamWarStories #Vietnamwar #anzacs #vietnamwarvet #lestweforget #ANZAC
Original description and photo sourced by:
www.awm.gov.au/collection/C319175

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South Vietnam, 1967. Sergeant Mike Coleridge Of The 7th Battalion, The Royal Australian Regiment (7 RAR), at work as an Army PR Photographer In South Vietnam. A Painting Based On This Photograph By Bruce Fletcher Entitled "Mad Mik Again!" (Art28506) Was Presented To The Australian War Memorial In 1984 By Mr Coleridge.
#VietnamWarStories #VietnamVets #Anzac #VietnamWar #vietnamveteran #7rar #vietnamwarvet #lestweforget #anzacs
Original description and photo sourced by: www.awm.gov.au/collection/C49010

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Tram Bong, South Vietnam. 1968-02. Sergeant Bob Embery, 30, of Arana Hills, Qld, speaks to Vietnamese villagers in Tram Bong, a small settlement about a mile from the Task Force forward Fire Support Base during Operation Coburg. About 100 villagers lost their homes after the VC attacked the area. Australian troops were engaged in erecting new dwellings for the homeless villagers.
#VietnamWarStories #vietnamveteran #ANZAC #VietnamVets #lestweforget #VietnamWar #vietnamwarvet #anzacs
Original description and photo sourced by www.awm.gov.au/collection/C316806

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Bien Hoa Province, South Vietnam. 1968-02. Three 2RAR /NZ (ANZAC) (The ANZAC Battalion comprising 2nd Battalion, The Royal Australian Regiment and a component from the 1st Battalion, Royal New Zealand Infantry Regiment), soldiers check the mechanism of a 105mm howitzer during Operation Coburg. They are, left to right: Private Brian Simpson of Cairns, Qld, Sergeant Denis Dwane of Carterton, NZ, and Private John Howden of Reservoir, Vic.
#VietnamWarStories #vietnamveteran #VietnamVets #vietnamwarvet #ANZAC #lestweforget #anzacs #VietnamWar
Original description and photo sourced by
www.awm.gov.au/collection/C316804

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Escorted by officers of the 1st Battalion, The Royal Australian Regiment (1RAR), General (Gen) William Childs Westmoreland, Commander US Military Assistance Command Vietnam, pays a farewell visit to Australian troops in Bien Hoa province. The Australians had inflicted heavy casualties on a Viet Cong force which had attempted to overrun Fire Support Base (FSB) Coral and FSB Balmoral in north west Bien Hoa province only hours before Gen Westmoreland's visit. Left to right: 335116 Major Anthony William Hammett; Gen Westmoreland; and Lieutenant Colonel Phillip Harvey Bennett, Commander 1RAR.
#VietnamWarStories #vietnamveteran #VietnamVets #anzacs #VietnamWar
Original description and photo sourced by
www.awm.gov.au/collection/C1137578

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Harry the hat Hammet, or Tony, was an Olympian, representing Australia in the Pentathlon in Rome in 1960. Was killed in a plane crash after he left the Army.
His son Jim went to Somalia as a Private Soldier with 1RAR, before going to RMC and commissioning. Tony was CO 6 RAR, Jim was CO 8/9RAR and is currently Commandant of 1 Recruit Training Battalion at Kapooka. Bloody nice bloke.
 
During the long war in Vietnam, the men of the 1st Australian Task Force (1ATF) undertook many cordon and search and clear operations to defeat the NVA and VC from operating in population centres. This remarkable photograph was taken from an Australian army M113 by Stuart Courtenay, a soldier in the 5th Battalion the Royal Australian Regiment, during the 1969 battle of Binh Ba. It is remarkable because of what it shows. This candid and uncensored real-life colour photograph shows Vietnamese civilians seeking cover behind an Aussie APC during the operation.
The Battle of Binh Ba (6–8 June 1969), also known as Operation Hammer, occurred when Australian Army troops from the 5th Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment (5 RAR) and the 1st Armoured Regiment (1 Armd) fought a combined force of People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN) and Viet Cong (VC), including a company from the PAVN 33rd Regiment and elements of the VC D440 Battalion, in the village of Bình Ba, 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) north of Nui Dat in Phuoc Tuy Province.
The battle was unusual in Australian combat experience in South Vietnam as it involved fierce close-quarter house-to-house fighting, although the majority of enemy killed was through heavy United States supporting artillery and air-bombardment.
In response to PAVN/VC attempts to capture Binh Ba the Australians assaulted the village with infantry, armour and helicopter gunships, routing the VC and largely destroyed the village itself. Such battles were not the norm in Phuoc Tuy (the province the Australian 1ATF had primary responsibility for), and the heavy losses suffered by the communists forced them to temporarily leave the province. Although the Australians did encounter PAVN/VC Main Force units in the years to come, the battle marked the end of such large-scale clashes, and ranks as one of the major Australian victories of the war.
??

Caption from Australian War Memorial photographic archive:
Binh Ba on the first day of the battle. The 5th Battalion, The Royal Australian Regiment (5RAR) began a search-and-clear of the village of Binh Ba, following an attack on a Centurion tank. The operation evolved into an extensive firefight and search of the village with tanks and infantry.

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Phuoc Tuy Province. c June 1966 - February 1967. Australian soldiers eat from ration packs around their M113 APC

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1971. Trooper Neville Taylor of No 26 Patrol, F Troop, 2nd Squadron, Special Air Service Regiment (SASR), waits in the scrub for the helicopter pickup at the end of a patrol.

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2 April 1967. Troops of 7th Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment (7RAR), climb aboard the train which moved the main body of the unit from Seymour, near Puckapunyal, to Sydney for movement by sea to Vietnam.

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Preparing orders before moving out on Operation Coburg are Major Peter Hotop of Hampden, NZ (right), and Captain Barry Sinclair of Fielding, NZ. Major Hotop is the Officer Commanding W Company, 2RAR /NZ (ANZAC) (The ANZAC Battalion comprising 2nd Battalion, The Royal Australian Regiment and a component from the 1st Battalion, Royal New Zealand Infantry Regiment), and Captain Sinclair is his second-in-charge. The operation was staged fifty miles north of the 1st Australian Task Force (1ATF) Base at Nui Dat and was one of the most successful for the Battalion.
#VietnamWarStories #HeroesInUniform #neverforgotten #vietnamvet #HERO #vietnamveteran #VietnamWar #ANZAC #neverforget #anzacs #lestweforget
Original description and photo sourced by www.awm.gov.au/collection/CAM:68:0178:VN

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Operation Goodwood, 1st Battalion, The Royal Australian Regiment (1RAR). The Platoon had at least one contact per day, mostly with a lot of sniper activity. A Company (A Coy), 1RAR, was commanded by 57052 Major Kimble Anthony Patterson, of Nedlands, WA; 2 Platoon, A Coy, 1RAR, was commanded by 44088 2nd Lieutenant Alexander (Alex) Molnar, of Adelaide, SA. The tanks of 1 Troop, C Squadron, 1st Armoured Regiment were commanded by 2783093 Lieutenant Brian John Sullivan.
#VietnamWarStories #ANZAC #VietnamVets #australianmilitary #vietnamveteran #anzacs #HeroesInUniform #VietnamWar #1rar #lestweforget #neverforgotten #australia
Original description and photo sourced by:
www.awm.gov.au/collection/C1179160

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Twin brothers Ron (left) and Terry Farrell pictured at Nui Dat in 1969. Ron served with HQ V Force, while Terry was a gunner with 161 Battery. At the time, they were believed to be the first set of New Zealand twins to serve in a war zone at the same time since the Second World War.
#VietnamWarStories #anzacs #ANZAC #newzealand #VietnamWar #LestWeForget #VietnamVets #vietnamveteran #HeroesInUniform #neverforgotten
Original photograph and text sourced from the following: vietnamwar.govt.nz/photo/farrell-brothers-1969

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Di An, South Vietnam. June 1970. While an American instructor feeds in the rounds, Corporal Mick Schneider of Mt Lawley, WA, fires a burst from an M60 machine gun during range practice, about fifteen miles north east of Saigon. He was one of a small number of NCOs who joined the Australian Army Training Team Vietnam (AATTV), and attended an eighteen day course at the American Advisor School. As part of the enlarged role for AATTV, these men will work in Mobile Advisory and Training Team (MATTs) with South Vietnamese regional and popular force soldiers in Phuoc Tuy Province.
#VietnamWarStories #salutetoservice #ANZAC #VietnamVets #vietnamveteran #lestweforget #remember #HeroesInUniform #neverforget #neverforgotten #salute #vietnamvet #VietnamWar #salute
Original description and photo sourced by;
www.awm.gov.au/collection/C327182

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