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Forty-second Job of Bob - In-country cultural writer; Laos, Viet Nam Part II - Date with fate post 55 - "Where's Cambodia?" "You're in Campuchia, you stupid men!"

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This entry was posted on 9/14/2011 1:30 AM and is filed under Jobs of Bob, Fate Fairies.


    By 2004, I had done enough research on the countries of our old Vietnam War era, I knew I could get from Vietnam to Cambodia and or Laos with minimal effort in regards to securing Visas.  I had sent the necessary paper work to the Vietnamese Embassy in Washington to get a multiple-entry Visa for that country.  But, my January 2005 trip being my first to the country, I planned to just stay in and around Saigon to get used to the country as it was nowadays, 30 years after our war there.  So, I made no effort to get Visas to the surrounding countries.  

    Like my research warned me, there was a horde of people at the airport continually waiting to greet or bid farewell to Vietnamese family either being repatriated or leaving the country.  To unsuspecting visitors like me, it could be overwhelming.  The pilgrims however, were harmless.  It was after all not 1968 or 1975.  I found a driver and he got me to my humble hotel near downtown Saigon. 

    The pollution was suffocating.  The heat was suffocating. The street and sidewalk vender operators on the burgeoning tourist streets were pesky.  The scooter and truck noise was deafening, The city was bulging with humanity.  But I laid up in my little hotel neighborhood for a couple days.  I struck out on several walks in the narrow and catacombed  streets of the once French city we had propped up as the capital of old South Vietnam during our war there.  I was nervous as hell.  But kids and people came out to see the stray American.  Apparently, few Americans make the journey to Vietnam.  Most of the people under 40 years old had never seen an American. Everyone was eerily...., nice. 

    One night at mid-night, I watched the Water Department crew fix a deep water pipe break by my hotel. They dug their deep hole in the street with shovels and a pick.

    I found out that the only job allowed surviving South Vietnamese soldiers (a defeated army) was to peddle the Cyclo bikes - three-wheeled carts used to transport goods...., and people.   The old operators of said bikes also slept in them.  There is actually a contemporary movie filmed in Vietnam starring Harvey Keitel called Cyclo, about an American Veteran who returns to 'Nam decades after the war. 

    It was my intention to get out of the city a bit so I hired a dude - or actually he adopted me - to drive me around on a scooter.  I could have rented a scooter myself but I would have been killed on the Saigon streets - no rules, other than, "biggest vehicle wins." 

    But, Scooter Dude's gig was too small to get me up to the Cambodian border. So, I hired one of hundreds of taxi dudes.  I also was interested in finding out if some remnant of  the old Bein Hoa military complex was still out east of Saigon. It was about 15 miles away if it was still there. I had heard many of my Army colleagues that had been stationed in 'Nam mention the joint.  It was the sight of an early Viet Cong attack on American and South Vietnamese Air Force personnel in November of 1964. That was before most Americans had ever heard of a strange place called...., Vietnam.  

    In an anti-climactic visit, Taxi-Dude pointed out the old air base was now an industrial complex. 

     "Coca-cola stored there now," Taxi-Dude said.  

    He spoke a bit of English and he said he learned it in Taiwan.  He told me the tale about how he was a draft dodger of the Vietnamese war with Cambodia in the late 1970s and the early 1980s.  The Vietnamese were tired of the then Cambodian regime's bandits wreaking havoc over the Vietnamese border. They finally decided to get rid of that architect of the Khmer Rouge "Killing Fields" of Cambodia, one crazy dictator named Pol Pot.  Ironic that the communist Vietnamese had to rid the world of the extreme communist Pol Pot and his Khmer Rouge pals who killed millions of innocent Cambodian people.  But, I digress. 

    Anyway, Taxi Dude had fled to Taiwan.  More Ironic poetry; a Vietnamese draft dodger.  Apparently 'Nam let him back home in the 2000s.  Somewhere during the story, said dude offered me the on-board meal...., cheap cookies and Coca-cola. 

    By the way, Taxi-dude said he knew how to get me up to the border of Cambodia. At one point it is only 50 miles or so from Saigon. I thought it was relevant history because Ol' President Dick Nixon sent a special armada into Cambodia in 1970 to hunt down Charlie Cong (what Americans called the enemy).  It had limited success, and President Dick got into trouble because he was accused of expanding the War after he said he was going to wind it down. 

    While Taxi-dude relayed his story in broken and painful English, we passed through muddy jungle trails just big enough for his beat up car to fit down.  You would think that just 50 miles from one of the biggest cities on earth, one might find a paved road.  

    One thing lead to another and it was clear Taxi-dude was good and lost.  Finally he stopped and asked a peasant woman if we were close to Cambodia.  Even I knew what she said by the way she laughed and pointed back down the road.  

    "If you have been on this road since the last cross road, you have been in Campuchia for about five kilometers.  You guys are already in Campuchia....,  stupid men."  

    I choked on my cookies as we sheepishly drove back into Vietnam past the sleepy jungle border soldiers on the Vietnamese-Cambodian border.  They took drags on their cigarettes and had their feet propped up. Their AK-47s just leaning against the guard hut. Taxi-Dude shrugged and waved like he was greeting old pals. I held my breath.  The guards just looked bored.  Apparently they do nothing during their lunch time. God bless communist ritualism.

    Talk about being a candidate for the National Geographic television series, Locked Up Abroad

    Note: This blog "Jobs of Bob" Category does not list the jobs chronologically - I write about the experiences as they pop up in my memory and I often revisit an older job.  Go to the Cooldadiomedia Web site and the 
Jobs of Bob Page  for an ordered chronology.

   Note: This blog "Fate Fairies" Category does not list the brushes with fate chronologically - I write about the experiences as they pop up in my memory and I often revisit an older event.  Go to the Cooldadiomedia Web site and the Fate Fairies Page for an ordered chronology.

                                 Wisconsin Military Service Person Special Mention of the Week
    (each week Cooldadiomedia mentions a Wisconsin service person killed in Iraq or Afghanistan)

    Army Private First Class Ryan Jeffery Larson, 19, Friendship, Wisconsin, died on Wednesday, June 15, 2011 in Kanadahar Province, Afghanistan. Insurgents attacked his unit with an improvised explosive device (roadside bomb). Larson was in a Stryker vehicle during mounted patrol. Private First Class Larson was assigned to Company B, 1st Battalion, 5th Infantry Regiment, 1st Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, out or Fort Wainwright, Alaska. 
    
The Wausa Daily Herald via their Web site mentioned Ryan was remembered as a dynamic student at Adams-Friendship High School. He was a 2010 graduate. Larson participated in cross country competition for four years. He also played trumpet in the band, was senior class president, played baseball, and was an honor roll student all four years in high school. Larson was also a member of the multiple championship wrestling team. The Daily Herald went on to say Larson's 4000 member Army unit deployed to Afghanistan in April of 2010. 
    
The Wisconsin State Journal noted Friendship is in Adams County, Wisconsin. The high school has around 500 students. Larson signed up for the army while still in school. The State Journal's Web site noted two other soldiers were wounded in the attack. The paper quoted Larson's high school principal Timothy Hodkiewicz as saying: "[Ryan] had a quality of quiet leadership, common sense, very personable, not the too-talkative type....He had the respect of everybody. A top-notch gentleman from top to bottom."
    
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel said Larson was remembered as having an infectious attitude, loved being involved in activities, and being a team player. He participated in the 103-pound wrestling weight class and finished his career with a record of 56-28. He had also played Little League Baseball when younger. 
    
The Web site hswrestling.com says Larson's former wrestling team was participating in helping establish a permanent memorial in honor Ryan to be placed at the high school. 
    
A Rockford Register Star obituary posted on legacy.com noted that Ryan Larson was born on October 29, 1991, in Rockford, Illinois. He moved to Adams-Friendship, Wisconsin, in 1992. At the time of his death, Private First Class Ryan J. Larson was survived by: His mother RaeAnn Larson; father Rick Himmel; grandparents Ron and Ellen Larson; grandmother Sophia Himmel; great-grandmother Myrtle Pavlak; uncles and aunts Ronald and Shelley Larson, Russell Larson, Ritchie Larson, Jim and Wendy Himmel, and Cindi (Marty Cielesz) Himmel.
    Army
Private First Class Ryan J. Larson was the 32nd Wisconsin military service person to be killed in Afghanistan since October of 2001. 

           
As of this blog entry's posting date:

    102,416 Iraqi civilians have been killed in Iraq since Spring, 2003 (actually documented).
    
    10,125 Iraqi Security Forces have been killed in Iraq since Spring, 2003.

    4,477 Americans have been killed in Iraq since Spring, 2003. 

    1762 Americans have been killed in Afghanistan since October, 2001.

    318 Coalition soldiers have been killed in Iraq since Spring, 2003.

    944 Coalition soldiers have been killed in Afghanistan since October, 2001. 

    1 American/Coalition casualty in Libyan "Operation Odyssey Dawn" since March, 2011.

    32,189 U.S. troops have been wounded in action in Iraq since Spring, 2003. 

    592 Wisconsin Service persons have been wounded in Iraq since Spring 2003.

    13,700 U.S. troops have been wounded in action in Afghanistan since October, 2001. 

    192 Wisconsin Service persons have been wounded in Afghanistan since October, 2001.

    107 Wisconsin Service persons have been killed in Iraq since Spring, 2003.

    34 Wisconsin Service persons have been killed in Afghanistan since October, 2001.

    3 Wisconsin Service persons have been killed in the U.S. related to "The War on Terror" since September, 2001.

    149 journalists (several nationalities) have been killed in Iraq since Spring, 2003.

    21 journalists (various nationalities) have been killed in Afghanistan since September, 2001.

    5 journalists (regional and independents) have been killed in Libya since March, 2011.

Wisconsin military service person special mention of the week, military casualty, and journalist casualty information sources: Committee to Protect Journalists; cnn.com; Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; washingtonpost.com; thehighground.org; 
Wisconsin Department of Veterans Affairs; iraqbodycount.org; www.defense.gov/news/casualty.pdf; and, icasualties.org .

 

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