One morning before dawn, Ed Fouhy, a former saigon bureau chief for CBS, went out to 8th Aerial Port at Tan Son Nhut to catch the early military flight to Danang. They boarded as the sun came up, and Fouhy strapped in next to a kid in rumpled fatigues, one of those soldiers you see whose wearniess has gone far beyond physical exhaustion, into that state where no amount of sleep will ever give him the kind of rest he needs. Every torpid moviement they make tells you that they are tired, that they'll stay tired until their tours are up and the big bird flies them back to the World. Their eyes are dim with it, their faces puffy, and when they smile you have to accept it as a toekn.
There was a standard question you could use to open a conversation with troops, and Fouhy tried it. "How long you been in-country?" he asked.
The kid half lifted his head; that question could not be serious. The weight was really on him, and the words came slowly.
"All fuckin' day," he said.
-Dispatches
There was a standard question you could use to open a conversation with troops, and Fouhy tried it. "How long you been in-country?" he asked.
The kid half lifted his head; that question could not be serious. The weight was really on him, and the words came slowly.
"All fuckin' day," he said.
-Dispatches
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