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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Sinking of Swift Boat PCF-119. A Confused , Disorganized, Multi-Unit Screw-Up Resulting In Friendly Casualties.
What is friendly fire? This is a military term which refers to the discharge of a weapon which results in death or injury among fellow soldiers or allies. Since the inception of warfare, friendly fire incidents have been a part it, however with the development of more sophisticated and deadly weapons it has made the problem increasingly rampant. In the Vietnam War, the...
Published 8 months ago by Bernie Weisz

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars An eyewitness unravels a tragedy of war.
As a young petty officer, James Steffes was assigned to PCF-12, a Swift Boat patrolling the inland waterways of Vietnam. In June of 1968, he took part in an operation to rescue the survivors of a sister boat, PCF-19, which went down due to two rockets impacting her hull. Three personnel died, one was classified as MIA, and two more were seriously injured...
Published on July 26, 2007 by R. Ballister


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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars An eyewitness unravels a tragedy of war., July 26, 2007
As a young petty officer, James Steffes was assigned to PCF-12, a Swift Boat patrolling the inland waterways of Vietnam. In June of 1968, he took part in an operation to rescue the survivors of a sister boat, PCF-19, which went down due to two rockets impacting her hull. Three personnel died, one was classified as MIA, and two more were seriously injured.
Eyewitnesses and the US Navy are in agreement on the facts above. What Steffes brings to light is that there are serious discrepancies in the related events both before and after the attack. While the attack was classified as "friendly fire" at the time, Steffes brings evidence to light that there may be more to the story, and presents a believable argument that the boat was sunk by hostile fire, using official documents and eyewitness accounts.
This book is well researched, and provides a glimpse into a little known and definately underappreciated facet of the US Navy in Vietnam. It is a good read for anyone interested in brown water operations, either current or past, or for those curious about the search for MIAs from the Vietnam War.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Sinking of Swift Boat PCF-119. A Confused , Disorganized, Multi-Unit Screw-Up Resulting In Friendly Casualties., May 9, 2011
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What is friendly fire? This is a military term which refers to the discharge of a weapon which results in death or injury among fellow soldiers or allies. Since the inception of warfare, friendly fire incidents have been a part it, however with the development of more sophisticated and deadly weapons it has made the problem increasingly rampant. In the Vietnam War, the definition of friendly fire excluded incidents in which members of the military deliberately fired on their allies, the South Koreans, Australians, New Zealanders, et al., as well as fellow soldiers. For firing on one's own troops a special term came about, called "Fragging." Fragging referred to the act of attacking a superior officer in one's chain of command with the intent to kill that officer. Fragging: Why U.S. Soldiers Assaulted Their Officers in Vietnam (Modern Southeast Asia) It was most commonly used to mean the assassination of an unpopular officer of one's own fighting unit. Killing was effected by means of a fragmentation grenade, hence the term. There were several factors that brought about friendly fire in Vietnam, such as the wild terrain and visibility during the monsoon season. When soldiers fought on land, sea, or air with which they were not familiar, or when being fired upon by enemy troops, the direction from which the shots were coming from were confusing, it can be explained why this may have occurred. The River Rats Of Vietnam With the addition of poor weather conditions, combat stress, when a soldier mistakenly believed that he was shooting at the enemy, and when a leader issued unclear or ambiguous orders, this was problematic when combined with conditions that prevented soldiers from using their own judgement. A prime example of this was the tragedy that occurred at Mi Lai on March 16, 1968. As Jim Steffes book will reveal, there were situations where it was difficult to determine whether a soldier or sailor was killed by friend or foe, and soldiers due to chagrin or fear of punishment have been known to conceal incidents of friendly fire. Unfriendly Fire: A Mother's Memoir (Singular Lives) The American military provided extensive training to their soldiers to try and prevent the tragedy of friendly fire, which could have had a negative impact on troop morale, mission success, and public image as well as causing death or injury. The impact could be even more deleterious if death occurred because of hostile fire, and for some peculiar, difficult to comprehend reason, it was indeed blamed on American friendly fire, which appears to be the case in the story of "Swift Boat Down."

This is a story quite unlike anything I have ever come about. Jim Steffes was an engineer on a Swift Boat in Vietnam participating in "Operation Market Time," which he describes in his book as such" "It was a mission to stop the infiltration of men and material by sea along the entire South Vietnamese coastline; to provide gunfire support to friendly ground units; and to provide psychological warfare operations as needed. A system of patrol areas was set up to enforce the security of the South Vietnamese coastline to deny them to the enemy. Since the majority of friendly commerce moved by water using the coastline intermingling with a large commercial fishing industry, the problem of detecting enemy movement mixed with friendly watercraft became a complicated task. This was an advantage, which the enemy exploited, in the early days of the war. The patrol areas extended from the Demilitarized Zone at the North and South Vietnamese border all the way south, around the Ca Mau Peninsula and then northwest to the Cambodian border. PCF's, also known as "Swift Boats" were assigned to areas from the coastline to approximately 2 miles out at sea." River Rats Steffes was part of a six man team, usually cross trained to know each others jobs, that patrolled South Vietnamese waterways making sure that the vast array of sampans were not smuggling weapons, ammunition, or any contraband from the North to the South, in the enemy attempt to make the South China Sea a "Ho Chi Minh Waterway." He described his boat's duties, the PCF-12, as follows: : "Once on station, we began to check out the area for boat traffic and look for suspicious looking junks and sampans. Sometimes while proceeding toward a group of fishing sampans, one will break off and head away from the group. Immediately, the crew springs into Action Stations, the engines roar to life, and the fighting Swift Heads for the evading sampan." While it would make an interesting book per se about his ordeal on the high seas maintaining surveillance during "Operation Market Time," Steffes saved that for a second book he wrote three years later. Operation Market Time: The Early Years, 1965-66 Instead, this book focuses on the sinking of PCF-19, of which Steffes asserts: "For this author, the story that has whirled around in my head for all these years and the yearning to tell this story may be fulfilled."

Jim Steffes arrived in South Vietnam in April of 1968, two months after the Tet Offensive, which was a series of surprise attacks by the Vietcong and the North Vietnamese Army on distinctive cities, towns, and hamlets throughout South Vietnam. It was considered to be a turning point in the Vietnam War. The combined forces of the V.C. and the N.V.A. were about 85,000 strong, and began on January 31, 1968, the first day of the Lunar New Year, Vietnam's most important holiday. It took weeks for U.S. and South Vietnamese troops to retake all of the captured cities, including the former imperial capital of Hue. Despite the offensive being a flagrant military failure for the Communists, it turned into an ironic political and psychological victory for them as it dramatically contradicted optimistic claims by the U.S. Government that the war was all but over. On the night of June 15-16, 1968 Jim Steffes, as a crewman on PCF-12, was involved in an incident where a Swift Boat, PCF-19, was sunk with five crewmen perishing. Although it was later deemed "friendly fire, at the time it was two rockets fired from an unidentified aircraft that did the dirty deed. This Time We Win: Revisiting the Tet Offensive Close to the DMZ's nineteenth parallel, Steffes gives credible testimony in this book of both survivors and eye witnesses observing a lighted aircraft that maneuvered identical to that of a helicopter that was in the area of the attack. Steffes himself watched as his PCF -12 arrived at the sight of the sinking and observed the following: "I saw a round clear nose with what appeared to be two men sitting side by side in an aircraft. a red light under the aircraft was blinking and other lights were steady red and green. Mr Snyder (the Captain of PCF-12)was sitting on the edge of the gun tub when he saw the helicopter to starboard fire a rocket. I walked back to the stern as I passed the after control position, I felt a rush of heat and the hair on my neck stood up. I turned my head to see a small explosion in the water off our port beam. Apparently, the other aircraft fired a rocket that passed between our antennas and exploded in the water. Mr. Snyder must have heard it as well as PCF-12 jumped to max speed to clear the area. MiGs Over North Vietnam: The Vietnamese People's Air Force in Combat 1965-1975 We drove at this speed making zigzag patterns so as to not be a clear target." Later, after Steffes boat returned to port in Danang, he was asked to describe the helicopter he saw, which the artist drew based on this. The result drawn of Steffes description? A Soviet built M14 "Hound" helicopter!

"Swift Boat Down" is the story of how this attack was wrongly convoluted into a friendly fire incident, with bodies missing from the morgue in Danang, paperwork botched, a sailor unfairly deemed missing in action, and most ignominiously, the subsequent investigation findings of friendly fire being strictly based on exclusion, i.e. the absence of wreckage incorrectly combined with a real event of friendly fire twenty four hours later. Because U.S. jets fired at one American Cruiser and one Australian Frigate within a short time span of the sinking of PCF-19, the events were incongruously linked. In the ladder event, the Aussie Frigate had 2 KIA's and 11 WIA's, but the crucial element was that pieces of U.S. missiles were found on both ships. The twisted logic, despite all evidence Steffes painstakingly documents throughout this book, from Vietnamese witnesses, divers that were on the wreck, the medic on the scene that processed the bodies, pilots that flew in the area, experts in Russian avionics, and even a trip back to Vietnam a decade later, still has this event incorrectly in the record books as a friendly fire incident. Friendly Fire Although the authors investigation has not changed this ruling even today, Steffes writes: I was determined to write this story regardless of the fact that the official findings will never be changed. In the political climate of 1968 with America's thoughts of war and ending it on most of their minds it is easy to bring a quick closure to this incident by calling it "friendly fire: and moving on. The media was satisfied and a war weary public felt that it was"just one of those accidents in war. I took the facts as I know that, coupled with testimony from other Marine, Navy, Coast Guard, and Air Force Veterans that were there and told the story as all of us believe it really happened I make the argument that given the proper atmosphere and time to investigate all areas of this incident a different finding may have been reached."

This faulty U.S. Government conclusion of the sinking of PCF-19 being attributed to friendly fire is attacked throughout the book. Steffes quotes a Major Stefannson, who when he tried to report his sightings of North Vietnamese helicopters existing over South Vietnam, was castigated as follows: "I too saw one of the NVA choppers up real close. It was reported to Division, but like many other things, I don't think we were believed. When we first reported seeing helicopters at night, an Army team from Saigon flew up to Battalion and took our observers into "custody." They tried to break our report, even accusing us of being influenced by funny cigarettes. I found the visitors from the South to be disgusting." Steffes points out that there were NVA sapper swimmers that were dropped off in the water by enemy choppers near these Swift Boat operations, and he believes PCF-19 ran into one of these swimmer drop-off missions. Why was this classified as friendly fire? Air Command repeatedly claimed no U.S. Aircraft was in the area of the sinking of PC-19 on the night of this tragedy. War on the Rivers: A Swift Boat Sailor's Chronicle of the Battle for the Mekong Delta The author insists that the key to this mislabeling was the events of June 16/17, with the attacks on the two allied warships. The attack of PCF-19 and the 2 warships both occurred within twenty four hours of each other, were both after midnight, both involved aerial attack on a sea vessel. Steffes postulates "It appears that higher commands wanted to give the impression that both events were related once the decision had been made to declare it 'friendly fire." Brown Water, Black Berets: Coastal and Riverine Warfare in Vietnam (Bluejacket Paperback Series) This quick, 160 page read is packed with facts, evidence, maps and photos that will truly make you ruminate as to what the truth was with PCF-19 and question why even today this is still wrongly classified as a "friendly fire" incident. Unquestionably, this book is an eloquent revelation that events are not as they appear to be, calling for justice awaiting the crew of PCF-19, for which they so righteously deserve.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Swift Boat Down answer question and asks questions, January 31, 2008
By 
J. Kitchens (Buffalo, NY USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Swift Boat Down is the real life factual account of the sinking of PCF-19 during the Viet Nam War. A lot of the book reads like the action reports and logs of the account at the time and there's not a lot of ways to misinterpret it. It answered many questions for me and some day I hope to meet the author and ask him about other events during hs tour in Viet Nam.
I enjoyed the book and hope that other will also.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Swift Boat Down, March 10, 2008
By 
Thomas Martin "clawhammer" (O'fallon, IL United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Execellent account of war time tragic event. Very well researched
and documented. Accounts Coming from personell who were on scene
made the book extra special. "Well Done" Jim Steffes.
Tom Martin PCF54
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4.0 out of 5 stars Author Achieved His Goals, July 1, 2011
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This review is from: Swift Boat Down: The Real Story of the Sinking of PCF-19 (Paperback)
In the epilogue of this book the author, James Steffes, describes his goal in writing it as being to describe the mission of the Swift Boats and to tell the true story of the sinking of PCF-19. At other places in the book, he expresses his desire to provide closure to the families of the men who were lost and to those who knew them or were involved in the incident.
In my opinion he achieved these goals as much as is humanly possible.
At the time of the sinking of PCF 19, I was a Second Class Petty Officer serving aboard the YR71 at Danang. As described in the book, YR71 was the repair facility and docking location for the PCF's of Coastal Division 12 of which PCF-19 and PCF-12[James Steffes' Swift Boat] were a part.
My job was to maintain and repair the radio and radar equipment aboard the Swift Boats and I had dealings with all the boat crews. In relation to PCF-19, I have vivid memories of Ed Cruz and Frank Bowman who lost their lives aboard PCF=19.
As I recall, those of us on the YR71 received the news of the sinking of PCF-19 first thing in the morning of June 16 or 17. I personally was devastated by the news. Wanting to understand what had happened, I engaged in a conversation with a crew member of PCF-12. After speaking with the author and comparing notes on the phone, we both agree that it was most likely the author, James Steffes, whom I spoke to. In that conversation the crew member, whoever he was, described the firefight with what they believed to be enemy helicopters. This conversation exactly matched the description James Steffes provides in the book.
In the aftermath of the board of inquiry[described in the book], I experienced an interaction with a higher level of authority which proved to me that the Navy had no desire to be forthcoming regarding the sinking of PCF-19. The author and I also discussed that incident. That incident only adds fuel to my belief that the author is right on in his assesments and beliefs regarding the sinking of PCF-19. Those of us on YR71 and people at home were provided with several story lines before being told it was "friendly fire".
James Steffes also achieved his goal of providing a form of closure,to me personally and no doubt to many others. The memory of that incident has been a painful one I have carried with me these many years. It is much less painful to believe, as I now do, that the crew of PCF-19 did not die in a so called friendly fire incident.
Jim has also achieved another goal which I consider important. He has not only written a lasting memorial to the men of PCF-19 but to all the men of the Swift Boats by describing who they were and what the mission was. I would recommend this book to anyone who was there, anyone interested in Naval history and anyone who values the truth. Anyone who want's to know what "Swift Boating" really is should read it.
A tremendous amount of research went into this book. James Steffes, partly from what he lived and partly from the volume of his research, I believe has become the prime historian regarding Operation Market Time. From our conversation, I could tell he knows a lot more about the history of Operation Market Time and Naval forces in Vietnam than could be included in this book. I understand he has written a fiction book regarding Swift Boats. I understand the title is Operatio Market Time, the Early Days. I Plan on purchasing that book as well.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Excellent Investigation, July 29, 2008
This review is from: Swift Boat Down: The Real Story of the Sinking of PCF-19 (Paperback)
The author has obviously spent much effort in investigating an over-looked incident in Vietnam which had significance to men's lives and to our country's motives with regard to the Soviet Union during those years. Mr. Steffes has also provided an interesting book that those of us who were there - and those who weren't - will enjoy reading.
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Swift Boat Down: The Real Story of the Sinking of PCF-19
Swift Boat Down: The Real Story of the Sinking of PCF-19 by James Steffes (Paperback - November 16, 2005)
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