Dispatches From The Tet Offensive...
There were times during the night when all the jungle
sounds would stop at once. There was no dwindling down
or fading away, it was all gone in a single instant
as though some signal had been transmitted out to the
life: bats, birds, snakes, monkeys, insects, picking
up on a frequency that a thousand years in the jungle
might condition you to receive, but leaving you as it
was to wonder what you weren't hearing now, straining
for any sound, one piece of information. I had heard
it before in other jungles, the Amazon and the Philippines,
but those jungles were "secure," there wasn't
much chance that hundreds that Viet Cong were coming
and going, moving and waiting, living out there just
to do you harm. The thought of that one could turn any
sudden silence into a space that you'd fill with everything
you thought was quiet in you, it could even put you
on the approach to clairaudience. You thought you heard
impossible things: damp roots breathing, fruit sweating,
fervid bug action, the heartbeat of tiny animals.
You could sustain that sensitivity for a long time,
either until the babbling and chittering and shrieking
of the jungle had started up again, or until something
familiar brought you out of it, a helicopter flying
around above your canopy or the strangely reassuring
sound next to you of one going into the chamber. Once
we heard a really frightening thing blaring down from
a Psyops soundship broadcasting the sound of a baby
crying. You wouldn't have wanted to hear that during
daylight, let alone at night when the volume and distortion
came down through two or three layers of cover and froze
us all in place for a moment. And there wasn't much
release in the pitched hysteria of the message that
followed, hyper-Vietnamese like an icepick in the ear,
something like, "Friendly Baby, GVN Baby, Don't
Let This Happen To Your Baby, Resist the Viet Cong Today!"
Sometimes you'd get so tired that you'd forget where
you were and sleep the way you hadn't slept since you
were a child. I know that a lot of people there never
got up from that kind of sleep; some called them lucky
(Never knew what hit him), some called them fucked (If
he'd been on the stick ...), but that was worse than
academic, everyone's death got talked about, it was
a way of constantly touching and turning the odds, and
real sleep was at a premium. (I met a ranger-recondo
who could go to sleep just like that, say, "Guess
I'll get some," close his eyes and be there, day
or night, sitting or lying down, sleeping through some
things but not others; a loud radio or a 105 firing
outside the tent wouldn't wake him, but a rustle in
the bushes fifty feet away would, or a stopped generator.)
Mostly what you had was on the agitated side of half-sleep,
you thought you were sleeping but you were really just
waiting. Night sweats, harsh functionings of consciousness,
drifting in and out of your head, pinned to a canvas
cot somewhere, looking up at a strange ceiling or out
through a tent flap at the glimmering night sky of a
combat zone. Or dozing and waking under mosquito netting
in a mess of slick sweat, gagging for air that wasn't
99 percent moisture, one clean brath to dry-sluice your
anxiety and the backwater smell of your own body. But
all you got and all there was were misty clots of air
that corroded your appetite and burned your eyes and
made your cigarettes taste like swollen insects rolled
up and smoked alive, crackling and wet. There were spots
in the jungle where you had to have a cigarette going
all the time, whether you smoked or not, just to keep
the mosquitos from swarming into your mouth. War under
water, swamp fever, and instant involuntary weight control,
malarias that could burn you out and cave you in, put
you into twenty-three hours of sleep a day without giving
you a minute of rest, leaving you there to listen to
the trance music that they said came in with terminal
brain funk. ("Take your pills, baby," a medic
in Can Tho told me. "Big orange ones every week,
little white ones every day, and don't miss a day whatever
you do. They got strains over here that could waste
a heavy-set fella like you in a week.") Sometimes
you couldn't live with the terms any longer and headed
for air-conditioners in Danang and Saigon. And sometimes
the only reason you didn't panic was that you didn't
have the energy.
Every day people were dying because of some small detail
that they couldn't be bothered to observe. Imagine being
too tired to snap a flak jacket closed, too tired to
clean your rifle, too tired to guard a light, too tired
to deal with the half-inch margins of safety that moving
through the war often demanded, just too tired to give
a fuck and then dying behind that exhaustion. There
were times when the whole war itself seemed tapped of
its vitality: epic enervation, the machine running half-assed
and depressed, fueled on the watery residue of last
year's war-making energy. Entire divisions would function
in a bad dream state, acting out a weird set of moves
without any connection to their source. Once I talked
for maybe five minutes with a sergeant who had just
brought his squad in from a long patrol before I realized
that the dopey-dummy film over his eyes and the fly
abstraction of his words were coming from deep sleep.
He was standing there at the bar of the NCO club with
his eyes open and a beer in his hand, responding to
some dream conversation far inside his head. It really
gave me the creeps -- this was the second day of the
Tet Offensive, our installation was more or less surrounded,
the only secure road out of there was littered with
dead Vietnamese, information was scarce and I was pretty
touchy and tired myself -- and for a second I imagined
that I was talking to a dead man. When I told him about
it later he just laughted and said, "Shit, that's
nothing. I do that all the time."
from Michael Herr, Dispatches
(Herr now lives in Delhi, NY