The pounding waves made most of us “new recruits” dizzy, but the two veterans Tran Van Lien and Khong Duy Dinh remained calm as if nothing had happened. The two former special forces soldiers of Truong Sa, now in their seventies, were still enthusiastically at the top of the delegation setting foot on the islands.
Former water commando Tran Van Lien and Khong Duy Dinh take a souvenir photo at Sinh Ton Island. (Photo: Nguyen Tan Tuan) |
During the first days on the ship, when I had not yet been “knocked out” by the feeling of seasickness, I noticed two elderly delegates who always walked together, happily chatting and I guessed they knew each other before. It was true, later, when I set foot on Song Tu Tay Island and was officially introduced, I realized how lucky I was to visit Truong Sa archipelago on the same trip with these two veterans. They were not only the soldiers who had heroically protected the island in the past, but also the water commandos who “swam like dolphins, dived like otters”...
Slow motion footage
Just like on the mainland, the island has residents, children, a pagoda, a school, and a hospital. If we don't count the arduous journey to the island, life here is similar to that on the mainland, except that there are fewer people or the scale is smaller. While visiting, our group stopped to chat with a group of children, children of the military and civilians on the island. It was "revealed" that there were two former water commandos, two boys named Bac and Long (students of Song Tu Tay Primary School) who cheered and insisted on asking the two men to tell us stories about their old days fighting the enemy on the island.
So, under the cool shade of the maple tree, in the flower season, we went back in time with two veterans to those heroic and tragic days. Mr. Lien said: “At that time, our 126th Naval Special Forces Group overcame the dense siege and blockade of the modern Navy of the US - Puppet, relied on the people, infiltrated deep into the ports, used small, elite units, used powerful weapons, fought hard, fought dangerously. During seven years of fighting on the Cua Viet - Dong Ha battlefield, the Naval Special Forces fought over 300 battles, sank or severely damaged 336 combat boats, destroyed many means of war, and annihilated many enemy forces.
Contributing with forces across the Southern battlefield to sink and damage 7,473 ships, collapse hundreds of bridges and ports, kill thousands of enemy soldiers, destroy tens of thousands of tons of weapons, ammunition, and materials serving the enemy's war, together with the Southern army and people to defeat the American invaders...", Mr. Lien's voice was as steady as pages of living history.
“During the 1975 Spring General Offensive and Uprising, which culminated in the historic Ho Chi Minh Campaign, the Vietnam People's Navy coordinated operations and fought at sea, especially promptly coordinating with a part of the 5th Military Region's troops to quickly, boldly, secretly, and proactively liberate five islands of the Truong Sa archipelago, contributing to the complete and great victory of the nation. That was on April 11, 1975, our forces secretly departed from Da Nang and chose Song Tu Tay Island as the first island to occupy. On April 14, Song Tu Tay Island was liberated. On April 25, we completely liberated Son Ca Island. On April 27, we took control of Nam Yet Island. On April 28, we completely took control of Sinh Ton Island. On April 29, the Vietnam People's Army, including the C75 group consisting of forces from the 126th Special Forces Regiment, the 471st Water Special Forces Battalion and Battalion 4, including Uncle Khong Van Dinh here, completely controlled the Truong Sa archipelago. Specifically, do you want to hear how Uncle Dinh and his friends secretly landed in Truong Sa?
Former water commandos Tran Van Lien and Khong Duy Dinh were interviewed by TG&VN at Song Tu Tay Island, Truong Sa archipelago. (Photo: Nguyen Thi Hai Van) |
Immediately, all eyes turned to former special forces soldier Khong Duy Dinh. Mr. Dinh smiled gently and began to tell: “At 7 pm on April 11, 1974, we boarded a small fishing boat as a decoy. At that time, the enemy ship was patrolling the sea, with nets on board. We each carried a basket and lay down in the hold. The ship drifted around for about a week before reaching the island. Looking through binoculars, we saw the island vaguely. We boarded a rubber boat and quietly headed ashore in the dark, waiting for the order to attack the island. Being attacked by surprise, the soldiers on the island fought back weakly and then surrendered. We suffered no casualties, only a few people were lightly injured. A battle as light as a feather! After that, we occupied the entire Son Ca island. It was not until two days later that we saw foreign ships lurking outside, but we raised the flag to assert our sovereignty .”
Hard work makes success
In the windy sun of Truong Sa, the two soldiers of the past sometimes talked with the children, sometimes confided in the soldiers standing guard at the end of the island. I went to Mr. Lien and said jokingly: "You walk so well, I can't keep up."
He shared: “Being healthy is thanks to the training process when I was a water commando. In the past, training was very difficult. Normal soldiers only had 3-4 months, but water commando had to spend 10 months to a year. A company (about 50-100 people) could only select about 10 people to do the task of attacking bridges and ships. Choosing water commando can be said to be second only to commando on unnumbered ships. Saying that is not a comparison between military branches, but to imagine that training and training a real water commando to fight the enemy is not simple.”
For example, during training, soldiers must swim 30 km (turbulent swimming). Swimming in the sea, taking advantage of the waves and wind to push and swim from one island to another; if swimming in rivers, it is about 10 km, that is, swimming in standing water (no buoyancy). If training in Cat Hai, it is usually swimming from Cat Hai to Hon Dau or from Cat Hai to Do Son or from Cat Hai to buoy number 0... Must practice hard to succeed!.
Mr. Dinh added: “In winter, the weather in the North is as cold as 5oC; to train our physical strength, we were called up in the middle of the night, sat outside the well, wearing only underwear, then someone would scoop up a bucket of water, let it drip from above our heads, one by one, when the water ran out, we could go in”. Mr. Lien further emphasized: “Even higher is training the spirit, camaraderie, being ready to sacrifice ourselves, giving life to our teammates”.
A flowering Maple tree stretches against the blue sky at Song Tu Tay Island, Truong Sa archipelago. (Photo: Minh Hoa) |
Sacrifice and fight
In a choked voice, Mr. Lien recalled: “I am alive today thanks to my teammate, Mr. Hoang Cao Bien, from Thai Binh , in the battle of Thuy Tu bridge. Mr. Bien and I won all the battles. It was at the battle of Thuy Tu bridge that the incident happened.”
“The explosive block usually has two fuses. We approached the bridge but for some reason the timed fuse did not work. As the team leader, I signaled to pull the fuse immediately, but Mr. Bien signaled to me that I was the team leader and had to return to report to the battalion. At that time, we were underwater, there was no room for argument, and the enemy was on the shore. I dived out of the foot of the bridge, and Mr. Bien below pulled the pin immediately. He gave me the chance to live and took the sacrifice for himself,” he said.
“In reality, during fierce battles, many unexpected situations occurred. The martyrs Tien Loi and Anh Xuan were discovered by the enemy when they approached the foot of the bridge. Anh Xuan immediately pulled the detonator, destroying the bridge. Both of them died. At that time, we were very brave, crossing to Son Tra with explosives to attack ships and some roasted rice. If the opportunity had not come, we would lie there for 5-7 days, nibbling on roasted rice to sustain ourselves. When we had sunk the ship, we would return,” Mr. Lien recalled.
The ship’s whistle sounded loudly, signaling that it was time to return to the ship. We bid farewell to Song Tu Tay and headed to Da Thi submerged island. The afternoon sea was deep blue and windy. I was silent as I watched two old friends arm in arm on this memorable journey.
I thought of what Mr. Lien shared: “I hope to have more health to participate in the trips, not only to find comrades who have sacrificed but also comrades who are still alive. Going to Truong Sa, seeing my children and grandchildren always holding their guns firmly, protecting the Fatherland, I am very proud. I hope that the generations today and tomorrow will always share the will to protect the sea and islands of our homeland, every inch of land that our ancestors shed blood to protect must not be lost.”
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Final episode: Rescue at sea, a peacetime mission
Source: https://baoquocte.vn/truong-sa-trong-toi-tu-hao-dac-cong-nuoc-truong-sa-ky-ii-270802.html
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