A captivating expose of a National Serviceman's deployment to Vietnam. Brutally honest, this confronting memoir covers extensive military detail and personal revelation, so rarely told.
Serving in the Australian Army from 30 January 1969 until 29 January 1971, Peter McCann intimately shares his experiences as an infantryman undertaking recruit, corps, and operational training in Australia prior to deployment on active service and soldiering in Vietnam.
During that time, he served with 8 Battalion, The Royal Australian Regiment (8 RAR) for 12 months in Vietnam from November 1969-November 1970. This fascinating story focuses extensively on that period of his life and reveals how military service forever changed him.
The substantial amount of technical and educative detail included is nothing short of astonishing, though it's also prudently interspersed with humour and pathos. Returning to civilian life in Australia, McCann also raises some of his strongly held views on several issues of continuing interest within many veteran networks and wider community frameworks operating in Australia today. Beyond a record of military history, McCann's compelling 'in your face' account is a public disclosure of the author's inner soul. He explains how he coped and dealt with a range of related subsequent personal issues that might well have utterly defeated many other veterans.
Sprache
Produkt-Hinweis
Broschur/Paperback
Klebebindung
Maße
Höhe: 234 mm
Breite: 156 mm
Dicke: 29 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-646-88191-1 (9780646881911)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Peter McCann is a retired public servant and professed sports tragic. He's also a former Australian Army National Serviceman who served in Vietnam for 12 months (late 1969-late 1970) as an infantry soldier with 8 Battalion (8 RAR). As a member of the battalion's Assault Pioneer Platoon, its main roles were to establish and defend Fire Support Bases, demolish enemy bunker systems, destroy or disarm enemy laid anti-personnel mines and booby traps when engineers weren't available for those tasks, cordon off and search selected civilian centres, carry out search and destroy patrols, reconnaissance in force, and day and night ambushes.The author has a wide interest in military history and military weapons, not just that pertaining to the Vietnam war.