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CH 46, loai này của thủy quân lục chiến Hoa Kỳ.
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Night Tiger Stripe Camo Patterns
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Lính Nghĩ Gì
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CSVN Ra Kế Hoạch: Gom Vàng Toàn Dân – Vietnam plans to rob gold nationally
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Who was the Tiger Lady in Vietnam?
Madame Ho Thi Que, The Tiger Lady, courageously served in combat with the South Vietnamese 44th Ranger Battalion. Her exploits were legendary, even in the war torn region of South East Asia. She marched and fought with one of the most respected military units in Vietnam: the South Vietnamese 44th Ranger Battalion -“The Black Tigers”.
A pearl-handled .45 automatic on her hip, HoThi Que – “Tiger Lady” of the vital MeKong Delta in Suth Viet Nam watches the 44th Vietnamese Ranger Battalion march into the jungle in pursuit of Red Viet Cong Guerrillas. The Battalion – Recently awarded the US Presidential Citation for Extraordinary Hero- is under the command of Major de Van Dan, who is her husband. — Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS
Madame Ho Thi Que, or “The Tiger Lady”, had earned her reputation the hard way, and her fame had spread throughout South Vietnam.
Her husband, Major Le Van Dan – the commander of the 44th Rangers-was also a warrior. He had been awarded almost every South Vietnamese military medal that was issued. His 44th Ranger Battalion had been awarded the US Presidential Unit Citation – the first South Vietnamese unit to be so honored.
It was during the beginning of the American troop build-up in an unconventional war that would take thousands of American lives before it drew to a close. It was a war where American advisors fought side-by-side with their Vietnamese counterparts, often dying in the process. It was a war where the field advisor spent as much time trying to understand the nature of the people, their culture and his own existence, than he did his mission of containing Communist insurgency.
It was a war in which stories would emerge of great warriors and their performances on the field of battle; some apocryphal, some true. The story of the Tiger Lady was just such a story, a courageous and remarkable woman and soldier.
She serves as a combat master sergeant under the command of her husband, Major Le Van Dan (rear, with glasses), in the crack 44th South Vietnamese Ranger Battalion. The unit has never lost a battle or a gun- to the Red Viet Cong Guerrillas. The major and his fighting wife have seven children. — Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS
In 1965 the South Vietnamese people were shocked when they heard the news that Madame Ho Thi Que had been shot and killed by her husband, Major Le Van Dan. Major Dan was quickly arrested and jailed in connection with the death of his wife. On 5th May 1966, after a quick trial, he was sentence to serve one year in prison for the ‘murder.’
In court he had testified that Madame Que had attacked him with a knife when she had found him with a younger woman in the tiny village of Vi Thanh, a village often used by the 44th Ranger Battalion as a forward support base during their operations in the U Minh Forest.
He claimed to have shot her in self-defense, stating, “her jealousy was as fierce as her courage in combat.” The prosecutor had countered that the Major hated his wife and had killed her because he though her jealousy had ruined his career.
Other ranking South Vietnamese officers believed that Dan was distraught over the fact that he had been replaced as battalion commander of the 44th after the unit had suffered a disastrous defeat after being ambushed by two Viet Cong battalions. The rangers had lost 58 KIA and over 70 wounded, including all of the American advisors attached to the battalion. Shortly afterwards, while a full investigation was underway, he had been quietly transferred to a lesser position as a security officer in another area of operations.
There was a general consensus among many of his fellow officers that the Saigon government had been looking for an excuse to relieve Major Dan. A great deal of resentment had arisen against him because of the many heralded victories of the 44th Ranger Battalion, the reputation of the Tiger Lady, and his own personal success. Like his wife, Le Van Dan was a colorful figure. He had led his rangers on many successful combat operations, which made his fellow commanders pale in comparison. Wearing his maroon beret in place of a helmet, and armed only with a .38 caliber revolver, he was an inspiration to his men. He carried a lacquered swagger stick, which he used with dramatic flair in the heat of battle to exhort his rangers in the attack. But his success was not enough to protect him from petty jealousies of his fellow officers.
After the trial, Dan stated, “I accept the verdict. It was inevitable.” He showed no remorse for the death of his wife and long time companion.
Known as ‘Big Sister’ by the Vietnamese rangers who fought by her side, they remembered her for both her temper and her kindness. Many ranger had felt her wrath when she caught them stealing a chicken or looting a village’s belongings. She often reverted to swearing, shouting and sometimes even slapping the culprit to drive her point home. But at other times, her compassion and understanding were the soothing balm that comforted a wounded or dying soldier. She felt a deep sense of responsibility for all her ranger brothers.
When the “Tiger Lady” isn’t actually fighting alongside her husband and his Rangers, she helps to care for the wounded in the field. Her presence in the combat zone has contributed importantly to the high morale of the 44th South Vietnamese Ranger Battalion. The unit’s Tiger head insignia appears on her helmet. — Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS
Caring for the wounded on the battlefield, or approaching stubborn government bureaucrats to insure that a dead ranger’s family received the benefits due to them, as much a part of her personality as the open hate she harbored for the enemy. She would not hesitate to lend or give money to the wives and families of wounded or slain rangers to tide them over during their period of grief. She felt their pain, sometimes shaving her head in a sign of mourning. She attended the customary burials conducted for the dead, and through her mask of grief watchers stated that they could see her determination to settle the score. She set the standards for morale and esprit de corps in the unit during her service with the rangers, and her reputation became legendary and inspired the rangers until the cease-fire in 1975.
After her death in mid December 1965, one of her daughters came to Soc Trang (the home base of the 44th Ranger Battalion at the time), trying to collect some of the debts owed to her mother by a number of the rangers. The family was having a difficult time making ends meet with the mother gone, and the father in jail.
Little is known of the Tiger Lady’s childhood except that she lived for a time in the Imperial City of Hue. In the war against the French, she served as an intelligence agent for the Viet Minh until the later part of 1953, just prior to the French disaster at Dien Bien Phu. During this period she met and married her husband, Le Van Dan. When the two of them saw that the Communists were taking over the Viet Minh, and that they were determined to rule the nation, the couple left the movement.
Within a year, Dan had joined the Vietnamese Army. Madame Que joined, too, rising to the rank of master sergeant during the remainder of the colonial period.
But her legend was built on her deeds on the battlefield with the Biet Dong Quan (Rangers) in the early sixties. She was often seen at the height of battle, moving forward under intense enemy fire to aid wounded rangers. The Tiger Lady led by example, almost always up front with the lead company. She often charged headlong across open rice paddies with the assaulting rangers, inspiring them to victory. Her courage and sincerity were never questioned. She stalked the battlefield armed only with a pearl handled Colt .45, wearing a helmet with black and yellow stripes and the black tiger head – the symbol of the 44th Vietnamese Ranger Battalion.
The Viet Cong knew her well. Stories were told that they had named her “Madame Death”. It was reputation well earned and richly deserved, for she could be as dangerous as any combat soldier. She had seen war as few Americans would ever see it. She wore numerous medals testifying to her courage and her prowess in combat. Just a few months prior to her death, she had survived a ferocious battle with a guerrilla estimated at a thousand strong. An American advisor was killed in that fight and another severely wounded. She came out without a scratch.
The mystique and legend of the Tiger Lady continued to grow long after her untimely death. She was a warrior bigger than life and a heroine of unparalleled magnitude. Among the rangers and ranger advisors who served with her, her memory will never die.
This article was originally published by “Surplus Sammy” on the “Firebasenam Vietnam Forum”, March 14, 2009.
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CÁNH TAY NỐI DÀI của Viêt cộng nằm trong truyền thông hải ngoại
Có người căng biểu ngữ tố cáo bộ ba Nam Lộc, Trúc Hồ, Việt Dzũng là cánh tay nối dài của Việt cộng tại hải ngoại. Nhưng chưa ai trưng bằng chứng về hai nghệ sĩ Việt Dzũng và Nam Lộc là cánh tay nối dài. Riêng Trúc Hồ thì trước mắt có SBTN về làm phóng sự tại Việt Nam. Có thể xem đây là một bằng chứng, nhưng chưa đủ sức thuyết phục vì chưa có lời giải thích thỏa đáng TẠI SAO SBTN có thể ngang dọc xuyên suốt Việt Namtrong lúc Giám Đốc, phóng viên, cameraman đều là những người bề ngoài tõ ra chống cộng kịch liệt. |
GIAO LƯU VĂN HÓA |
Năm 1999, vấn đề giao lưu văn hóa được Việt cộng nâng lên hàng quốc sách. Tại Hoa kỳ, chúng sử dụng tên nằm vùng Lê Quý Biên (cùng Trần Khánh Vân) móc nối với nhiều người trong đó có Đỗ Ngọc Yến, chủ báo Người Việt ở Nam Cali. Truyền thông đại chúng hải ngoại là đích nhắm của tập đoàn mafia đỏ. SBTN từ từ cũng rầm rộ lên, nhưng nổi nhất là khi truyền hình VC VTV4 phát hình ra hải ngoại Tấm ảnh nầy chụp ngày 22 th5, 1998 . Từ trái là Lê Quý Biên (xe cán chết tại Hà Nội vì chiếc chân què). kế đến là Nguyễn Xuân Phong (lãnh sự Việt cộng),rồi đến Đỗ Ngọc Yến (cũng từ trần), sau cùng là Võ Tá Chước. |
Sau nầy có SBTN về Việt Nam Làm phóng sự mang chiếu khắp nước Mỹ qua hệ thống vệ tinh. Người phóng viên đi dễ dàng khắp nước Việt Nam là Thanh Toàn, con trai của cố ca nhạc sĩ Trần Thiện Thanh, một người chống cộng nổi tiếng. Đó là một điều lạ! | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Thanh Toàn trong nhạc hội trợ giúp Thương Phế Binh VHCH ở Garden Grove, Nam Cali, với quân phục Nhảy Dù QLVNCH, súng colt lủng lẳng. Nhảy dù là binh chủng Việt cộng thù nhất. Vô lý!
NGUỒN: See more posts from Vanessa Nguyen
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