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Dak To: America's Sky Soldiers in South Vietnam's Central Highlands
Edward Murphy

Presidio Press, 2007 - 400 pages

average customer review:based on 13 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended



This was a fantastic book

This true account of the 173rd in the central highlands of Vietnam kept me turning the pages. It is a must read for all who appreciate the sacrifices of our brave American soldiers.


dak to revisited

i was with the 2/1 cav in the central highlands at that time. the way it was written, was riviting,real life drama. my unit was mentioned in the book, noting the day i was wounded. my unit did not face the hardships of the BRAVE 173rd. god bless the memory of those that died. rocky









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DAK TO by Edward F.Murphy

I served in the 173rd Airborne Brigade at Dak To and at Cemetary Ridge in the'68 Tet Offensive.My best and worst memories are of Dak To.This book is accurate to a point.The main problems are the lack of an accurate kill ratio.I was greatly discouraged for many years until I read the U.S. Intelligence (Snoopy) reports which place the NVA loses between 10 to 14 thousand,resulting in the total distruction of the NVA 1st Infantry Division.The '68 Tet Offensive was greatly effected by the loss of man power at Dak To.An NVA Division was 30 thousand men strong,an American Battalion was around 440 men strong.Around 3,000 GI's against 30 thousand NVA.Their AK-47's worked flawlessly while our M-16's jammed with out mercy.Try making a combat assault with a worn out M-16 against AK-47's.It makes you wonder why we all did not receive Silver Stars with V devices?God bless those who died.The other problem I see is no one sees the pressence of OIL in South Vietnam as a reason to fight in Vietnam.The cheap and abundant supply of OIL there was more important than Iroq.I personally walked by OIL pumps around the Bien Hoa area while taking Jungle School training at the 173rd Airborne Brigade's Base Camp.Remember OIL prices jumped in 1973 when American troops withdrew from the Vietnamese mainland and again in 1975 when control of the off shore wells in Vietnam's waters fell to the Communist.The need to preserve our nations resources became evident in WW2 when we were cut off from foreign sources and we depleated our domestic reserves at an alarming rate.That is why we fought in Vietnam!And now in Iroq!Mr.Murphy's lack of insight is his main problem.


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What a great book!

Wow this was a really great book. This is the first novel I've read about the role of a paratrooper in war, and I'm glad i chose this book to be the first. Edward Murphy kept me hooked the whole way from start to finish. I couldn't ask for a better Vietnam war novel. Great book. I highly recommend this to anyone who likes to read war novels.


reviews: page 1, 2, 3



For one of Vietnam's bloodiest battles, America brought out its best.

Their officers and senior noncoms were drawn from the U.S. Army's elite. They were an all-volunteer paratrooper unit, General William Westmoreland's "fire brigade," dropped from the air wherever the fighting was heaviest. They were the "Sky Soldiers," men of the 173rd Airborne Brigade. And during the five months from June to November, 1967, they fought many of the bloodiest battles of the entire, decade-long Vietnam War at the small mountain hamlet in the Central Highlands called Dak To.

From their very first engagement with the North Vietnamese Army, when a whole company of paratroopers was nearly wiped out, to the savage, climactic battle for Hill 875, here is a riveting, hard-hitting account of how the Sky Soldiers plunged into some of Southeast Asia's most forbidding terrain, against a professional enemy who held no fear of the airborne. Denied food and water, cut off from support, facing annihilation, the beleaguered fighters finally faced down the North Vietnamese in a nightmarish Thanksgiving Day confrontation. As a result, three NVA regiments, crippled by the 173rd, were forced to sit out the crucial Tet Offensive of January, 1968. The most eloquent testimony to the courage of the Sky Soldiers came during the memorial service to their dead comrades, when pairs of jump boots were arranged in neat rows to represent each fallen paratrooper. It was a ceremony every survivor of the 173rd Airborne and the battle for Dak To remembers to this day.


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