Betts, Perry, EO2

Equipment Operator
 
 TWS Ribbon Bar
Life Member
 
 Service Photo   Service Details
41 kb
View Shadow Box View Printable Shadow Box View Reflection Shadow Box View Time Line View Family Time Line
Current Service Status
USN Veteran
Current/Last Rank
Petty Officer Second Class
Current/Last Primary NEC
EO-0000-Equipment Operator
Current/Last Rating/NEC Group
Equipment Operator
Primary Unit
1967-1969, EO-0000, Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 5
Service Years
1967 - 1970
Other Languages
Vietnamese
Official/Unofficial US Navy Certificates
Order of the Dirt Sailor
Voice Edition
EO-Equipment Operator

 Official Badges 

Battle E US Navy Honorable Discharge


 Unofficial Badges 

Sea Bees Badge Vietnam Veteran 50th Commemoration Vietnam 50th Anniversary Florida Governors Veterans Service Award




 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
Chapter 1040Post 2420, Major J. M. Tillman PostPost 8Island X-11
Chapter 49CEC/Seabee Historical FoundationVeterans Associated With The Department of Veterans Affairs
  2012, Vietnam Veterans of America (VVA), Chapter 1040 (Life member) (Auburndale, Florida) - Chap. Page
  2012, Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States (VFW), Post 2420, Major J. M. Tillman Post (Life Member) (Lake Wales, Florida) - Chap. Page
  2012, American Legion, Post 8 (Life Member) (Winter Haven, Florida) - Chap. Page
  2012, Navy Seabee Veterans Of America, Inc., Island X-11 (Life Member) (Tampa, Florida) - Chap. Page
  2014, Disabled American Veterans (DAV), Chapter 49 (Life Member) (Sebring, Florida) - Chap. Page
  2015, CEC/Seabee Historical Foundation
  2019, Veterans Associated With The Department of Veterans Affairs


 Additional Information
What are you doing now:

Interesting how the Navy does not seem to want any mention of Seabees. Maybe that's why the only people who recognize the existance of us, are Marines!

My wife of 54 years and I live in Florida. We spend our time with Shirley sewing or going to the fabric store add in doctor visits. Plus she goes to her sewing group.

I stay away from people. I awake 3-4 AM. I walk then bicycle. Then stay inside. Thrursday is Publix grocery day. If I have a VA, Moffitt Cancer Center, or Vet Center appt. then get out.

 

   Other Comments:

For those not military the Vietnam Service Medal is shown serveral times because each bronze star means one of the operational items, The silver star means 5 bronze stars. So on the Timeline it automatically added additional same medal.

   

 Remembrance Profiles -  8 Sailors Remembered
  • Betts, Merle, TSgt, (1951-1954)
  • DeArmond, Marcus, PFC, (2010-2014)
 Photo Album   (More...



Vietnam War/Counteroffensive Phase VI Campaign (68-69)
From Month/Year
November / 1968
To Month/Year
February / 1969

Description
This Campaign period was from 2 November to 22 February 1969. When Admiral Zumwalt launched SEALORDS in October 1968 with the blessing of the new COMUSMACV, General Creighton Abrams, allied naval forces in South Vietnam were at peak strength. The U.S. Navy's Coastal Surveillance Force operated 81 Swift boats, 24 Coast Guard WPBs, and 39 other vessels. The River Patrol Force deployed 258 patrol and minesweeping boats; the 3,700-man Riverine Assault Force counted 184 monitors, transports, and other armored craft; and Helicopter Attack Squadron Light (HAL) 3 flew 25 armed helicopters.

This air component was soon augmented by the 15 fixed-wing OV-10 Bronco aircraft of Attack Squadron Light (VAL) 4, activated in April 1969. The lethal Bronco flown by the "Black Ponies" of VAL-4 carried 8 to 16 5- inch Zuni rockets, 19 2.75-inch rockets, 4 M-60 machine guns, and a 20-millimeter cannon. In addition, five SEAL platoons supported operations in the delta.

Complementing the American naval contingent were the Vietnamese Navy's 655 ships, assault craft, patrol boats, and other vessels. To focus the allied effort on the SEALORDS campaign, COMNAVFORV appointed his deputy the operational commander, or "First SEALORD," of the newly activated Task Force 194. Although continuing to function, the Game Warden, Market Time, and Riverine Assault Force operations were scaled down and their personnel and material resources increasingly devoted to SEALORDS.

Task Force 115 PCFs mounted lightning raids into enemy- held coastal waterways and took over patrol responsibility for the delta's larger rivers. This freed the PBRs for operations along the previously uncontested smaller rivers and canals. These intrusions into former Viet Cong bastions were possible only with the on-call support of naval aircraft and the heavily armed riverine assault craft.

In the first phase of the SEALORDS campaign allied forces established patrol "barriers," often using electronic sensor devices, along the waterways paralleling the Cambodian border. In early November 1968, PBRs and riverine assault craft opened two canals between the Gulf of Siam at Rach Gia and the Bassac River at Long Xuyen. South Vietnamese paramilitary ground troops helped naval patrol units secure the transportation routes in this operational area, soon named Search Turn.

Later in the month, Swift boats, PBRs, riverine assault craft, and Vietnamese naval vessels penetrated the Giang Thanh-Vinh Te canal system and established patrols along the waterway from Ha Tien on the gulf to Chau Doc on the upper Bassac. As a symbol of the Vietnamese contribution to the combined effort, the allied command changed the name of this operation from Foul Deck to Tran Hung Dao I.

Then in December U.S. naval forces pushed up the Vam Co Dong and Vam Co Tay Rivers west of Saigon, against heavy enemy opposition, to cut infiltration routes from the "Parrot's Beak" area of Cambodia. The Giant Slingshot operation, so named for the configuration of the two rivers, severely hampered Communist resupply in the region near the capital and in the Plain of Reeds.

Completing the first phase of the SEALORDS program, in January 1969 PBRs, assault support patrol boats (ASPB), and other river craft established patrol sectors along canals westward from the Vam Co Tay to the Mekong River in Operation Barrier Reef. Thus, by early 1969 a patrolled waterway interdiction barrier extended almost uninterrupted from Tay Ninh northwest of Saigon to the Gulf of Siam.
   
My Participation in This Battle or Operation
From Month/Year
January / 1969
To Month/Year
February / 1969
 
Last Updated:
Mar 16, 2020
   
Personal Memories
   
My Photos From This Battle or Operation
No Available Photos

  702 Also There at This Battle:
  • Abbott, William, PO3, (1965-1969)
  • Adams, Roger, PO2, (1967-1976)
  • Anderson, Bill, PO3, (1967-1973)
  • Andreasen, Earnest, PO3, (1965-1969)
  • Arentzen, Willard Palmer, VADM, (1943-1980)
  • Armstrong, Joe, PO2, (1957-1987)
  • Armstrong, Thomas, PO3, (1967-1973)
  • Arnold, Charles, FN, (1966-1969)
  • Arsenault, Rick, PO2, (1965-1969)
  • Baggs, Edward, PO2, (1966-1972)
  • Ballard, Jim, PO1, (1959-1969)
  • Bard, Alan, PO3, (1966-1969)
  • Bassett, Michael, PO2, (1963-1972)
  • Bentley, Edward, CPO, (1951-1975)
  • Bernat, Robert, PO1, (1962-1970)
  • Bill, Clark, PO1, (1962-1982)
  • Blackburn, Larry, CPO, (1968-1988)
  • Borruso, Cam, PO2, (1966-1969)
  • Botonis, James, PO2, (1965-1969)
  • Bowren, Rick, PO2, (1961-1969)
  • Brady, Robert, LTJG, (1966-1969)
  • Brauer, Scott, PO3, (1966-1970)
  • Bravo, Ronald, PO2, (1963-1969)
  • Bricker, Kenneth, PO2, (1966-1970)
  • Briggs, Ralph, SN, (1968-1969)
  • Brown, Rodger, PO3, (1965-1969)
  • Brown, William, LT, (1961-1969)
  • Burns, Anthony, PO2, (1965-1969)
  • Burt, Paul, PO3, (1965-1969)
  • Bush, James S., SN, (1965-1969)
Copyright Togetherweserved.com Inc 2003-2011