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Da-Chief
09-11-2007, 22:31
11 Sept 2007
I struggled to put something up today 9/11 but found this to be fitting for our site.. brotherhood, Something I feel the Nation is lacking again. I thank the AP for this article..
How do you thank a brother who saved your life? Injured Marine to meet corpsman who saved him
By Israel Saenz - Corpus Christi Caller-Times via AP
Posted : Tuesday Sep 11, 2007 18:14:14 EDT

CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas — Stateside, July 28, 1968, was a typical summer day.

The Boston Red Sox defeated the Washington Senators 10-8 at the capitol’s D.C. Stadium. Psychedelic rockers Jefferson Airplane played San Francisco. “The Green Berets,” with John Wayne, had audiences filling theaters to see a heroic vision of U.S. operations in Vietnam.

Halfway around the world, a Texas man experienced that war without the glory.
Lance Cpl. Henry “Hank” Fletcher, then a 19-year-old attached to Kilo Company, 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines, lay in a patch of grass for six hours that day with a hole in his chest. A rocket-propelled grenade struck only several feet away, peppering him with shrapnel.

His eyes were closing when a young Navy corpsman from Phoenix named Jerry Walker — who had traversed through automatic and sniper fire to get to Fletcher — sealed his wound using a pack of cigarettes.

Fletcher survived. Both men left the war behind and started careers and families. Fletcher still lives in Alice, Texas, and now works as an Exxon Mobil Corp. operating technician. Walker, after a career in the Navy, has worked in San Bernardino, Calif., for eight years as a juvenile court judge.

Walker says he was just doing his job patching up other men that day; Fletcher, however, will meet the man he says saved his life at a company reunion Wednesday in San Antonio. It’ll be their first meeting since their days in Vietnam.
Both men easily conjure up memories of the fight. Fletcher — who gives an animated description — imitates Russian-made automatic fire. Walker — who, for the most part, stays unemotional in his account — closes his eyes to picture one fatally wounded fellow soldier only feet away. One he didn’t get to in time.
At the end of July 28, 1968, 21 of the 115-man Kilo Company were dead, with about 60 wounded. It began with a routine operation to interrogate villagers in the Quang Nam province.

“At the same time we were interrogating villagers, they sent one platoon out to check the rest of the area,” said Fletcher, 58.

Fletcher’s group was left to watch the 30 villagers when word of hostile fire came — and with it an order to charge a nearby tree line filled with North Vietnamese troops.

“They told us to get in line and charge, which is very bad,” Fletcher said. “You open yourself up like that — it’s a desperation move.”

The Americans, cradled by the L-shaped tree line they fired at, immediately were pinned down by automatic fire and RPGs from the foliage. Fletcher’s charge toward the tree line was cut short when a rocket exploded a few feet away from him. It was 1 p.m.

“Shrapnel went through my flak jacket,” Fletcher said. “I felt the heat from blood running down my chest. That’s when I went down.

“I thought I was going to die. I thought about my mother.”

Fletcher had a collapsed left lung. Walker, then 20, went to work, avoiding fire to place battle dressings on wounded men. Corpsmen typically went into the field with about 60 dressings. Walker used all of his, and some others he had to scrounge around for.

“The first several Marines I got to — they were all killed,” Walker, 59, said by phone from California. “There was one, he was in this indentation in the ground. Every time I tried to pull him up, they would try to shoot me. That’s when I saw Hank.”

Walker remembers treating Fletcher because he used his last pack of cigarettes to seal his wound.

Fellow corpsman Wayne Caron, 21, was shot in the arm as he moved between wounded men. As he got to another man, he was shot in the leg. He tried to crawl to the aid of another Marine when a rocket round killed him.

The death of Caron — who was awarded a Medal of Honor — left the corpsman crew even more short-staffed. Walker and three other corpsmen were left to aid what would end up being about 80 casualties.

“It got kind of frustrating. When I was behind a bump and I’m trying to get someplace, someone keeps trying to blow my head off,” Walker said. “I don’t think I ever really thought about what I was doing at the time. It was just an obligation you had.”

Walker lost track of how many men he treated that day, much less how many of those men lived.

Fletcher stayed conscious the whole time, with enemy fire passing by him and a piece of metal moving around in his chest. Picked up at 7 p.m., he arrived at a hospital near Da Nang at about 1:30 a.m.

“Arms gone, legs gone, faces messed up — you name it,” he said, describing the cafeteria-size emergency room. “All the tables were full, from one end to the other.”

Hospital officials kept Fletcher in an intensive care unit for six days before he went back into battle. He was wounded two more times before leaving Vietnam that Christmas Eve.

In a photo taken the day after the battle at Walker’s camp, he stands holding a cigarette, wearing the same clothes as the day before, and not smiling. He would finish out his tour and leave the country in May 1969. After graduating from officer candidate school, he went back in January 1973. He stayed there until a month before the U.S. evacuated Vietnam in 1975.

The Kilo Company holds annual reunions around the country. It will be the first Walker and Fletcher attend.

Walker steadfastly deflects a sense of pride about what he did that day, although he says he’s glad Fletcher’s still around. Fletcher is not short in gratitude — or nerves — about meeting the corpsman:

“How do you thank the person who saved your life?”