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Little Bear 714
The
medic pointed to my blooddrenched arm... 
Contributed by Tony Lazzarini, Army Aviation

The following true story is a tribute to the men of A-Company, 25th Aviation
Battalion also known by the call sign, "Little Bear", who served their
country in the Republic of Vietnam.
In the final days of October 1967, an armored personnel carrier with numerous
troops on board rolled on top of a powerful anti-tank mine. The ensuing
explosion killed four men and severely injured several others on and around
the vehicle. Vulnerable and alone, their distress call for a dustoff (medical
evacuation) was responded to by the closest helicopter in the area. The
UH-1D ("Huey") Little Bear 714 was returning back to base from its lone
previous mission. Two round trips were needed to deliver the wounded to
a base hospital. It would take a perilous third trip in darkness to retrieve
the bodies of the dead.
Hastily we loaded the last of the dead into the helicopter. Above me the
rotor blades were spinning; frantically grasping for enough air to remove
us from the engulfing jungle. A voice in my flight helmet cried out, "We're
taking hits!" The crewchief's machine gun responded with a burst of yellowish
orange tracers that disappeared into the night-shrouded jungle. "I'm in,"
I shouted and squeezed into the small space behind my own machine gun.
We started to lift off when flashes of white appeared from the shrinking
earth below. I could hear the splats as the bullets searched the ship
for another host. I yanked back on the triggers of my weapon and fired
and fired. The burning armored personnel carrier remained as a marker
to soon fade and be forgotten, like its unfortunate crew. In the real
world, grieving parents would be left with only tears and memories. "Where
are you hit?" "What?" I replied. "Where are you hit?" again questioned
the medic. We were back at the landing pad of the base hospital. The last
body was being carried away on an olive green colored stretcher. The medic
pointed to my blooddrenched arm. "It's not mine," I informed him coldly
and turned back to re-enter my ship. Light from the well-lit pad revealed
a palette of blood left by our passengers. The rotor blades fan effect
had spray painted the inside of the Huey with a red sticky coating. Three
bullet holes ventilated the area around my perch. Jerry, the crewchief,
was staring down at a puddle of reddish-black fluid growing under the
tail boom. The pilot was shutting down the engine to examine a strange
whistling sound coming from one of the rotor blades. It would soon reveal
a .30 caliber incision.
Once again, in my seat behind the machine gun, I leaned back against the
bulkhead and closed my eyes. "I'll be back in the States in ten more days
and all of this will be forgotten," I said to myself.
I was wrong. I have never forgotten.
Spec. 4 Tony Lazzarini
Door Gunner-714 October 27, 1967
Iron Triangle

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