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The capture of BA TO Ville
The Capture of Ba To Ville Vietnam
     Story By "Tex" Jim Alexander

 BaTo was 65-70 miles (110 KM) inland from Chu Lai
 We humped for 3 days so we could capture the village without being detected.  I was walking point for the company the day we captured the ville.  
 The company had a NDP (night defensive position) about a mile up the mountain from where the village was located.  I got up about 3 AM to disarm
the trip flares and claymores.  It was pitch dark in the jungle.  It was very difficult to get everyone together and keep them together going down the
BATO mountain in the dark.  We got to the bottom of the mountain about sun up.  It was about 500 yards from
the bottom of the mountain to where the ville started.  I ask if we could get the M-60 and other fire
power to move into position in case I started receiving fire as I ran to the ville.  It was very surprising
when I started running toward the village; I  never received any fire so everyone fell in and started toward
the ville.  We shot a dink as we entered the ville.

 Charlie Company 4/3, 11th Brigade secured the ville and was waiting on an intelligents group to chopper
in  with the interrogators.  They did not arrive that day so they told us to keep the ville secure that night and
 they would come the next day.  That night as soon as it got dark they started attacking us every way they
 could (small arms fire, mortars rounds, and zappers).  We fought all night.  Don Taylor was killed in that
fire fight and several others were wounded.   We were running out of ammo about midnight and called for
 a resupply chopper.  The chopper started in and saw all the fire power and said he couldn’t land in the hot
LZ.  He left and we thought we were going to be overrun because we were running out of ammo.  Another

 chopper heard the first pilot refusing to land and the second pilot told him to land the chopper and he would fly the ammo into LZ.  He saved our lives. 
He sat the chopper down in the dark and we unloaded the ammo and loaded the dead and wounded. We fought until early morning hours.  The fire fight
stopped about daylight.  We surveyed the area the next morning we found several dead dinks around our NDP.   Some were zappers that were just feet
away from our fox holes.  Other dinks attacked us form the river.  They floated quietly down the river and came up the river bank