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Albert Montillo
Vietnam
| U.S. Army, 3rd Battalion, 60th Inf. Reg., Bravo Company, 2nd Platoon, 9th Inf. Div.
Mr. Montillo shares what it was like to fire artillery and describes a harrowing engagement that Bravo Company experienced. (2:05)
Albert Watson
Vietnam
| 5th Infantry Division (Mechanized)
Newly commissioned out of ROTC, Albert Watson got to know Fort Benning really well. After his basic course, he went through Ranger school and Airborne school. At his first assignment, a very capable sergeant taught him how to be a platoon leader. (5:15)
The airliner was full of young soldiers and Marines, who left the cold of Spokane for the heat and humidity of Vietnam. Albert Watson was assigned to the 199th Light Infantry Brigade, a unit specifically designed for the war in Vietnam. Most of his time was spent in the flat delta, where you could see for miles. When they were sent north on an operation, the visibility in the jungle was more like five feet. (4:10)
There were booby traps galore in the Mekong Delta where platoon leader Albert Watson served most of his tour. His unit managed to avoid any injuries from them until they were sent north into the jungle, where they were tougher to spot. The men had to be cross trained because of the constant rotation of troops. You had to be able to step into another role to cover for someone who was no longer there. (4:01)
Albert Watson discuses the differences in tactics between operating in the delta and operating in the jungle. Encounters with wildlife were constant, from giant centipedes to elephants. Eventually, Watson was made Executive Officer where he had the headache of issuing constantly changing scrip. (5:16)
There was a new Brigadier General and Albert Watson was assigned to him as an aide. General William R. Bond was quite a character with a distinguished career, including escaping from German captivity and rolling into Berlin with the Russians. He liked to be in the field with his men and that proved to be his undoing. (3:17)
Coming home from Vietnam was not pleasant for Albert Watson. His mother was there at the airport to meet him as he was cursed and spit on by protesters. His parents got harassing phone calls at their home. He felt he had done what was right and he made the Army a career, which helped him get over the divided situation in the country. (4:32)
Aldo Carano
WWII
| Combat Camera Unit
Combat cameraman Aldo Carano, tagging along on a search mission for a downed B-29, wound up in the sea off Saipan when the search plane lost both engines. Now the rescuers needed rescuing. (7:08)
A Marine was joking with combat cameraman Aldo Carano about the new B-29's lined up on the airfield, just waiting there. Would the silver statues ever do some flying? Soon, they did, much to Emperor Hirohito's dismay. (3:39)
Aldo Carano enjoyed reading Ernie Pyle's articles in the San Francisco Chronicle, so he was delighted when Pyle paid a visit to the B-29 base on Saipan where he was stationed. (2:04)
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