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Second Special Treat ??“ Submitted by B.J.
Cassady
July 16,
2005
Canadian Heroes ??“
submitted by B.J. Cassady
bj.Cassady@af-group.com
Did you know that
thousands of Canadians, including a Medal of Honor
winner, served with the
U.S. military in
Vietnam? Read on.
Although not directly
involved in the Vietnam War, Canada was part of
the International
Control Commission (ICC) set up by the Geneva
Conference in 1954. "Unlike Hungry
and Poland, which supported
North
Vietnam," writes Colonel Harry G. Summers,
Jr., in his Vietnam War
Almanac,
"Canada attempted to remain impartial.
However, it provided
economic assistance to
South
Vietnam." As a result of the
Paris Peace
Accords of 1973, the ICC was
superseded by the International Commission
of Control and Supervision
(ICCS). Canada and Poland remained members,
but
India was replaced by
Indonesia. "When it became apparent that the
North Vietnamese had no intention of living up to the accords," says
Summers, "Canada withdrew on July 31, 1973 and was replaced by
Iran."
Although pressured by U.S.
President Lyndon Johnson to become part of
the "Free World Military Forces"
(Australia, New Zealand, the Republic
of Korea, the Republic of the
Philippines, Taiwan and the Kingdom of
Thailand) which provided combat
troops to aid South Vietnam, the
Canadian cabinet believed that because of
its ICC membership Canada had
to remain its impartiality.
But while
Canada as a nation was not involved,
Canadians themselves
formed the largest foreign contingent in the
U.S. military during the
Vietnam era. Some estimate that their numbers
far suppressed the more
than 30,000 Americans draft dodgers who fled to
Canada to avoid military
service during
the war. While exact numbers are impossible to obtain,
from my work as a
military historian with the Canadian War Museum, I
estimate that of the many
thousands who served in the U.S. Vietnam-era
military, some 12,00
Canadians actually served in Vietnam itself.
This intermingling of
forces was not a new phenomenon. Since the
American Civil War, Canadians
have served in the U.S. military and, over
the years 40
have won the Medal of Honor, America's highest military
award. In the Spanish American War, for example, two brothers from
Nova
Scotia, Willard and Harry Miller, won the
Medal of Honor for conspicuous
bravery above and beyond the call of
duty.
Some Canadians also served in the American forces during both world
wars
and the Korean War. Conversely, over 35,000 Americans joined the
Canadian Army during World War 1 (recall that
Canada was fighting the
war from 1914 to
1917 before America became involved).
Again, in
World War II, some 30,000 Americans, encouraged by such war
movies as
Captain of the Clouds, joined the Canadian forces during the
period 1939 to
1941 while the United
States was still neutral.
Thus, when
the Vietnam War broke out, it was not unusual that Canadians
would join, or
allow themselves to be drafted into, the American military.
At a time
when the Canadian forces were being reduced the Vietnam War
afforded some
Canadians youths an opportunity to join the
U.S. forces
and to acquire skills they
would never have received in Canada, such as
learning to fly or repair
helicopters. Although some joined to fight
communism in
Vietnam, a good number joined for personal
reasons,
adventure, and some merely because of nothing better to
do.
Another was Larry Semeniuk of Windsor, Ontario. Formerly a member of the
Essex
and Kent Scottish (militia), Semeniuk decided in January 1967 to
join the
U.S. Army. He hoped eventually to be able
to further his
education with Army help and perhaps make the military a
career. He
became a paratrooper, and early in December 1967 deployed to
Vietnam as
a member of Company B, 3rd
Battalion 187th Regiment (Airmobile
Infantry), 101st Airborne Division. In
mid-January 1968, Semeniuk had
risked his life to save an officer from
drowning. Soon afterward he was
killed in action and posthumously awarded
the Silver Star. As the
citation on the award reads: "For heroism in
connection with ground
operations against a hostile force at Phuoc Vinh,
Republic of Vietnam.
At approximately 0600 hours,
17 January
1968, a patrol from Company B
set up an
ambush, parallel to a winding foot trail in Viet Cong infested
territory.
Two Viet Cong guerrillas walked down the trail toward the
machine gun manned
by Private First Class Semeniuk. Since it was still
dark, the enemy element
approached to within six feet of his position.
Private First Class Semeniuk
opened fire and wounded one of the
soldiers. The Viet Cong guerrilla wounded
and dazed, but still alive,
sprayed the area with his weapon. Private First
Class Semeniuk, without
regard for his own life, sat up and attempted to get
a better shot at
the enemy. He was fatally wounded in the chest, but the
instant before
he died, he fired his weapon killing the enemy soldier. The
Viet Cong
was established as a confirmed kill and was discovered to be a
battalion
commander."
Then there was Gary Butt who was born on
May 9, 1951, in Chateauguay, a
suburb of
Montreal. He wanted to learn to repair
helicopters, and saw
service in the
U.S. Army as a way to achieve this
objective He enlisted
at Plattsburgh, New
York, in 1968.
The
U.S. Army felt that Butt could best be used
as a rifleman with the
173rd Airborne Brigade. When asked to go to
Vietnam, Butt volunteer
because he felt he
owed it to the US. government which had invested
considerable funds in his training. He served in
Vietnam from July 1970
to April 1971. He
was killed April 3 while a sergeant with the 4th
Battalion, 503rd Infantry,
173rd Airborne Brigade. The only Canadian
awarded the Medal of Honor in the
Vietnam War was Spc. 4 Peter C. Lemon
of Norwich, Ontario. Lemon volunteered
for reconnaissance/commando
training in
Vietnam and joined the 1st Infantry Division
as a ranger.
When the 1st Infantry Division rotated home in March 1970, he
was moved
to the 1st Cavalry Division's Reconnaissance Company.
On
the night of April 1,
1970, some 300 - 400 North Vietnamese
unexpectedly attacked a fire support base near the Cambodian border.
During the battle, Lemon and another soldier were ordered to man an
abandoned .50-caliber machine gun. They were unable to get it to
function. A mortar shell soon hit them, wounding Lemon and killing his
friend. Lemon then returned to his original bunker, scooped up grenades,
and began throwing them amidst the attackers. When another friend was
hit, Lemon carried him under fire to the first aid station. Lemon was
wounded again while returning to his bunker, but continued battling the
NVA. An enemy soldier was causing havoc with well-placed rounds from a
grenade launcher. A well-aimed burst from Lemon's machine gun knocked
him out of action.
After about an hour of intense fighting, the enemy
assault petered out.
Lemon moved to a fortified bunker where he found a
badly wounded South
Vietnamese soldier. When the medics arrived, Lemon
refused treatment for
shrapnel wounds in his head, neck, leg and arm so that
the medics could
first take care of the badly bleeding ARVN soldier. Lemon
was evacuated
and spent a month recuperating in hospital and later was
presented the
Medal of Honor by President Nixon in a ceremony at the White
House.
Like many of their American counterparts, Canadian
Vietnam veterans who
returned home
discovered that their efforts were not appreciated. In
fact, there was a
great deal of anti-war hostility in cities such as
Vancouver and Toronto where a considerable number of draft
evaders had
settled. Accordingly, Canadian
Vietnam veterans quickly shed their
uniforms and tried to resume their lives. But they found themselves a
tiny minority isolated from other
Vietnam veterans. There were no
Veterans
Administration Centers in Canada where they could go for
assistance. They were prohibited from becoming full members of the Royal
Canadian Legion (the equivalent of the American Legion or Veterans of
Foreign Wars) and the general message from many of the branches and
members was that they were not welcome. It was not until after the
completion of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in
Washington that a few
began to publicly
acknowledge their Vietnam service.
Even worse than the
treatment of Canadian Vietnam veterans was that
accorded to many
of the families whose husbands or sons were killed in
Vietnam. Defenseless as a result of immediate
grief, some were verbally
assaulted by anti-war activists. Neighbors and
friends were
unsympathetic. There are families whose sons survived the war,
but were
damaged physically, mentally and emotionally by their
service.
The isolation of Vietnam veterans is much greater in
Canada than in the
United
States. Remembrance Day on November 11,
(Canada's version of
Veterans Day) is only
for those killed in the service of Canada. The
Royal Canadian Legion
excludes Vietnam veterans from participating in
its
national observances.
In 1986, Canadian
Vietnam veterans began to form groups in the
major
cities across Canada. There are now groups in
Halifax, Montreal, Ottawa,
Toronto, Winnipeg, Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver and Whitehorse. Together
they all are part of a
loose coalition.
About 80 Canadians were killed in the
Vietnam conflict. Most were young
members
of the U.S. Army and the
U.S. Marine Corps.
Canada's
Vietnam
veterans hope someday to build a
monument in honor of their sacrifice.
This article appeared in
Vietnam Magazine
(Perspectives)
By Fred Graffen
Jim
McQ