Once a Warrant….Always a
Warrant!
Story by CW3 Anastasios G.
Christian
It was a hot humid day in
Danang, Vietnam. Our team had just
returned from rucking the hills in Quang Nam Province followed by a one-hour
helicopter ride back to the airfield.
We disembarked the helicopter as the strifling heat burned through our
lungs. Everyone was exhausted, sweaty
and filthy. The medic assisted some of the team in removing leeches from their
bodies while the team leader went over the next day's schedule. It was about 1800 hours when we finally
settled down and relaxed along China Beach.
Sounds like it could have been 1969 doesn't it? Try again….. it was actually June 1999.
We had just wrapped up the last
investigation of our 30 day mission in Vietnam. The reason for humping through the mountains was not a combat
patrol, but for an investigation of an unresolved missing in action (MIA) case
in Vietnam. The helicopter ride wasn't
on a UH-1 (Huey) but rather on a Russian MI-17 (HIP), flown by contracted
Vietnamese pilots. Yes, China Beach
does exist. But we were not on R&R
nor were we in tents. We were staying at a hotel our last two nights in Vietnam
that just happened to be on China Beach.
Following a long day's work, our
nine-man team decided to take a swim in the hotel's salt-water pool. A few other Americans began to show up
poolside. Following some introductions
and small talk we discovered they were former soldiers that had fought in
Vietnam during the war and were back for their 30 year reunion. They were all Army soldiers who served with
the 17th Cavalry, 101st Airborne Division. They too had a long day…..physically and emotionally. They had just returned from hilltop 386
where they held a memorial service for one of their good friends who lost his
life and was also a Medal of Honor recipient.
Shortly after, I was introduced to
a gentleman named John. We began
talking and swapping Army stories (like all good soldiers do) when he told me
he was a former Warrant Officer. He
flew UH-1 helicopters during the war.
We instantly bonded and our friendship had been forged.
I told him we were part of Joint
Task Force-Full Accounting (JTF-FA) and our mission is to achieve the fullest
accounting possible of missing Americans as a result of the war in Southeast
Asia. We were just finishing up our 30 day mission. John was thrilled to learn the military continues to search for
MIAs and immediately requested my assistance in obtaining information on two of
his fellow Warrants from the war that have been missing since 1969. Being a fellow Warrant and understanding
his concern, I told one of the team members to go get his lap top computer. I searched our database and found the
information John had been seeking for 30 years. He nearly broke down in tears as I told him the status of his
friends' cases. They were both still
active cases that we continue to investigate.
His wife commented to me that John has been searching for information on
his friends for years and that it had always troubled him not knowing what ever
happened to them. The information he
researched on the internet had been inaccurate. He couldn't get an honest answer about his friends until that
day.
As I think back, it's quite ironic
I met John and his buddies from the 17th Cavalry. I was only seven years old when they were
fighting in Vietnam. To have met him in
Vietnam 30 years later and to put his mind to rest on such a troubling issue
was quite gratifying for me. Was it fate
that we would meet? Who knows and it
really doesn't matter. What does matter
is there was something more to it than just one soldier talking to another
former soldier. It was one Warrant
talking to another Warrant as if there were no gap between our ages or years of
service. One of the reasons I decided
to become a Warrant Officer is the camaraderie and professionalism we share
among each other that cannot be found anywhere else in the Army. John was pleased to learn the reasons for
becoming a Warrant Officer have not changed in 30 years.
John continued asking me questions
about today's Warrants. I answered his
questions and ensured him the Warrant Officer Corps is stronger than ever. I could see the pride glowing through his
eyes as he lifted his glass and toasted the Warrant Officer Corps. The rest of the evening I spent meeting the
other veterans and telling more war stories.
From that point on, I was known to all as "hefe" (slang for
chief).
I will never forget that evening on
China Beach when I met a former Warrant Officer named John. The stories he
shared with me about his fellow Warrants during the war were priceless. I told the group of vets they were one of
the reasons we continue to do what we do.
For the families and friends of those who lost loved ones in the war, we
will continue our mission of achieving the fullest possible accounting. As the evening drew to an end, I turned to
John and thanked him for his selfless service to our country, shook his hand
and said, "once a Warrant, always a Warrant."
CW3 Anastasios G. Christian
is an All Source Intelligence Technician serving as a Vietnamese analyst with
Joint Task Force Full Accounting, Camp Smith, Hawaii (1998-Present). Previous
assignments include 3rd Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division
(1980-1984) where he served as an intelligence analyst and deployed with the brigade S-2 to
Grenada. Served as an intelligence
analyst S2, 1-62 ADA Battalion, 25th Infantry Division
(1984-1988). All Source Intelligence
Technician with the 525th Military Intelligence Brigade, 18th
Airborne Corps (1988-1992) where he deployed with the Corps to Panama (Just
Cause) and Southwest Asia (Desert Shield/Storm). He returned to Hawaii (1992-1996) to serve in the G2, 25th
Infantry Division and deployed to Haiti in support of operation Uphold
Democracy. Chief, All Source Section, 103rd Military Intelligence
Battalion, Fort Stewart, Georgia (1996-1998).