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The secret war: Vet pens second
book on covert campaigns in
Laos, Cambodia, North Vietnam
REVIEW: NORTH COUNTY TIMES - San
Diego, CA
By: GARY
WARTH - Staff Writer
As
the Vietnam War becomes a
distant memory for many
Americans, at least one local
veteran is doing his part to
tell people about another war
they may have never even known.
J. Stryker Meyer, an Oceanside
resident and North County Times
columnist, is a former Green
Beret who served two tours of
duty with Special Forces, which
fought covert operations in
Laos, Cambodia and North Vietnam
during the years of the Vietnam
War.
Meyer, 61,
who was told he could not talk
about his experience for 20
years, has now written about his
experiences in two books
published by
RealWarStories.com:
"Across the Fence" (2003) and,
most recently, "On the Ground"
($24.95).
Both are
subtitled "The Secret War in
Vietnam." The cover of his
newest book also states: "They
were wounded or killed in places
where they never went."
"Vietnam was 40 years ago, and
today, there's a lot of people
who don't know where Vietnam
is," Meyer said. "Today, a lot
of people don't know about the
Vietnam war, and especially the
secret wars."
The book, which includes several
photos Meyer accumulated from
friends over the years, has many
first-person accounts of several
chilling encounters with enemy
forces in Laos.
"I never took pictures," he
said. "We couldn't keep diaries,
and we signed a document saying
for 20 years, we would talk to
no one about these missions. And
that meant no pictures, no
diaries. I was pretty much
lame-brained and followed the
rules. Fortunately, some friends
of mine didn't."
As he set out to write the book,
Meyer found he didn't need a
diary. Narrow escapes, fiery gun
battles and other encounters
with the enemy were not memories
easily forgotten, he found.
In the introduction to his book,
Meyer revealed how shackled he
sometimes is to the war his
country would not acknowledge
for years.
Describing a tranquil scene of
his daughter practicing piano at
home while he gazed at some
wind-swept trees in the
distance, Meyer wrote how the
image triggered a flashback to
North Vietnam.
"We made for a stand of trees
about 100 meters away, although
the thick vegetation made it
agonizingly slow," he wrote. "My
throat felt parched and tight
from moving so quickly. I knew
every second that ticked past
decreased the odds of us getting
out."
The flashback continued, and
Meyer described seeing trees
swept by the wind of approaching
helicopters as he reloaded and
emptied his rifle. His
daughter's voice snapped him out
of the flashback.
"We don't always know when or
why, but these memories come
back to us, reminders of what we
did and who we were in another
time," he wrote.
Although his memories are vivid,
Meyer turned to his friend and
former Green Beret John Peters
for help, as he thought Peters
could tell his own story better.
Peters not only wrote his own
chapter, but edited, rewrote and
contributed so much to the book
that he was given a co-author
credit. Meyer said the new book
reads more like a novel than his
last book because of Peters.
"He's one of these scary-bright
people," Meyer said about
serving with Peters. "He was
fearless."
The book is not a historical
perspective of why America
crossed the Vietnam border for a
secret war. Rather, it's the
story of the men who fought the
war, often with the help of the
Bru, members of the Montagnard
tribe, whom Meyer described as
"just four months out of the
jungle and loincloths." The Bru
were 14 to 18 years old. and,
while not skilled in modern
warfare, were an asset to the
Americans because of their
fierce hatred of the North
Vietnamese, who had driven them
off their ancestral lands.
In one chapter, Meyer's
description of the Laotian
countryside is a startling
juxtaposition of the brutality
he saw in combat.
"Moving north along the
ridgeline, we began gradually
descending, often encountering
one beautiful new vista after
another," he wrote. "The
mountain atmosphere sparked fond
memories of skiing in the
Rockies and hiking, without a
gun, along the Presidential
Range in New Hampshire's White
Mountains."
At noon that day, his team found
an area overrun with thousands
of wild orchids, which reminded
him of ones he saw selling for
$5 to $50 back home in a New
Jersey flower shop. The men ran
through the field like happy
children, he wrote, picking the
flowers and sticking them in
their hair, teeth, behind their
ears and in buttonholes.
About four hours later, Meyer
and his small team came across
North Vietnamese Army soldiers.
Meyer radioed for air support
and three other men on his team
ambushed the approaching enemy.
The Americans were trapped for a
while, and Meyer described his
air support as "the most
beautiful napalm dive I'd ever
seen."
Meyer writes matter-of-factly
about gun battles and said he
has no idea how many enemy he
killed during his two tours, but
even during the heat of battle
his conscience at times was
triggered.
Spotting a sniper with a
rifle-propelled grenade (RPG)
climbing into a tree, Meyer
wrote that he put the man in his
sights of his CAR-15, a Colt
submarine gun. For the first
time in his 16 months of
missions, Meyer extended the
stock of the collapsible gun to
stabilize his aim for a far
shot. While many of the men he
had shot were not even visible
through the thick forest, Meyer
could clearly see this target.
"It was the one time in Vietnam
where I actually had a soldier
in my sun sights for several
minutes," he said. "I could see
him in a tree maybe 200 yards
away. I could see him pick up
the RPG. At one point, one of my
guys moved and he saw him. He
put his round in his RPG and I
had this moment where I thought
of my third-grade Sunday School
teacher saying, 'Thou shalt not
kill."
Meyer wrote that he silently
hoped the sniper would back
down, but as he watched him aim
at one of his men, he fired his
shot.
"In a troubling way, it seemed
unfair, or unsportsmanlike," he
wrote. "But war is not designed
to be a sporting contest. If the
situation were reversed, I had
little doubt what he would opt
to do."
Meyer and his fellow troops were
often in such kill-or-be-killed
situations. Three chapters of
his book are dedicated to a
firefight that cost the lives of
18 Green Berets, the biggest
single-day loss in the history
of Special Forces.
After two tours of duty and
clashes with a commanding
officer who he said almost got
him killed, Meyer left the Army
and Vietnam. He never returned
to either, but said he would one
day like to visit Vietnam.
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