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VVMC Pearlbrook Long Tan 06
A now symbolic battle, one that will always be remembered as a ferocious conflict, fought under extreme difficulties, that of the :
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" BATTLE OF LONG TAN " August 18th -- 1966 .
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WITH GREAT RESPECT AND IN HONOUR TO THOSE WHO SERVED AND TO THOSE WHO LOST THEIR LIVES
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' Will to win and be victorious against the overwhelming odds to hand '.
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| Click on this photo to take you to the official website of the ANZAC Day Commemoration Committee (Qld) Incorporated |
| Did you Serve in Vietnam - a very poignant poem |
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PRESIDENTIAL UNIT CITATION Delta Company 6 Battalion Royal Australian Regiment |
By virtue of the authority invested in me as the President of the United States and as Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the United States, I have today awarded the Presidential Unit Citation (Army) for extraordinary heroism to D Company, Sixth Battalion, The Royal Australian Regiment, The Australian ArmyD Company distinguished itself by extraordinary heroism while engaged in military operations against an opposing armed force in Vietnam on August 18,1966While searching for Viet Cong in a rubber plantation northeast of Ba Ria, Phuoc Tuy, Province, Republic of Vietnam, D Company met and immediately engaged in heavy contact. As the battle developed, it became apparent that the men of D Company were facing a numerically superior force. The platoons of D Company were surrounded and attacked on all sides by an estimated reinforced enemy battalion using automatic weapons, small arms and mortars. Fighting courageously against a well armed and determined foe, the men on D Company maintained their formations in a common perimeter defence and inflicted heavy casualties on the Viet Cong. The enemy maintained a continuous, intense volume of fire and attacked repeatedly from all directions. Each successive assault was repulsed by the courageous Australians. Heavy rainfall and low ceiling prevented any friendly close air support during the battle. After three hours of savage attacks, having failed to penetrate the Australian lines, the enemy withdrew from the battlefield carrying many dead and wounded, and leaving 245 Viet Cong dead forward of the defence positions of D Company. The conspicuous courage, intrepidity and indomitable courage of D Company were to the highest tradition of military valour and reflect great credit upon D Company and the Australian Army. Lyndon B Johnson The White House May 28, 1968 |
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A
huge thank you to Shadow, IBF.Oz, who jumped on his bike and rode over so we could post
this report and show our support for the VVMC. Without him we couldn't
have done it. If you see him around buy him a beer! (Hope Parko didn't see him
mauling Ruthie!)
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