Back then, the military fought "for the soverignty" of the U.S. When I was in Vietnam, I never knew exactly what we were fighting for. I did spend my last 6 weeks in a hospital in Okinawa. I was hit by sniper fire and he didn't miss. I almost became a one-armed man. I was lucky enough to have been worked on by a 49 year-old doctor who just happened to be at that hospital teaching other doctors if and when to remove a limb and he worked on me to save my arm.
The doctor that worked on me was from Johns Hopkins Hospital, which is about 60 miles from where I lived at that time. When I got back home, I called to ask if he was still on staff and I found out that he was. I told his receptionship who I was and that I wanted to come down and surprise and to thank him again. She set it up at the end of the day just a few days later. My Dad went along. When we met him, we ended up eating dinner in the hospital's commissary.
I would like to talk with your Dad sometime. I bet he has some really good stories. I don't talk much about the crap that I was in. It brings back too many bad memories. My Dad was career Army and was in three wars, however, although he was in Vietnam, he was mostly in administration. We were not there during the same years.
Great pictures.