Vietnam and Cambodia Recalled
It Still Hurts
by
Book Details
About the Book
September 26, 1970. I didn’t know if I would come home. I was a pilot on my way to Vietnam as a Forward Air Controller, or FAC. I really had no idea what to expect. Without planning to do so, I jotted down a thought as my military charter flight headed west. I continued to record what I saw, heard, felt, and even smelled, as the planned one-year assignment progressed. When completed, the journal notes formed a history of a segment of the Vietnam War, which included Cambodia. There, I directed air strikes by U.S. jet fighters, as they were almost the sole support for the Cambodians, who fought invading North Vietnamese and insurgent communist forces. Guilt from living well and returning unscathed, sadness for friends lost, and anger and frustration at my generation’s sacrifice in a war it wasn’t allowed to win, kept my journal notes unopened for years. Over thirty years later, there is still much history to be told about this remote, limited, unpopular conflict; so this journal is now written. It still hurts.
About the Author
Don Mercer has been a pilot since attending Virginia Military Institute. After graduation from USAF pilot training in 1970, he served at Bien Hoa, Republic of Vietnam, flying the Cessna O-2A as a Forward Air Controller in 1970-71. His call sign was Rustic 41 in flying combat missions supporting the Rustic Operation over Cambodia. He continued flying as a T-38 instructor pilot in the Air Force and then as a fighter pilot flying the F-105 in the Virginia Air National Guard. He worked in the insurance and investment industries for over thirty years. He resides in Virginia Beach, Virginia.