The Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States (VFW) is a non-profit veterans service organisation comprised of eligible veterans and military service members from the active, guard and reserve forces of the United States.
The VFW trace its roots back to 1899 when veterans of the Spanish-American War (1898) and the Philippine Insurrection (1899-1902) founded local organisations to secure rights and benefits for their service. Many arrived home wounded or sick. There was no medical care or veterans’ pension for them, and they were left to care for themselves. Some of these veterans banded together and formed organszations that would eventually band together and become known as the Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States. After chapters were formed in Ohio, Colorado and Pennsylvania, the movement quickly gained momentum. Today, membership stands at more than 1.5 million members of the VFW and its Auxiliary.
The VFW voice was instrumental in establishing the Veterans Administration, development of the US national cemetery system, in the fight for compensation for Vietnam vets exposed to Agent Orange and for veterans diagnosed with Gulf War Syndrome. In 2008, the VFW won a long-fought victory with the passing of a GI Bill for the 21st Century, giving expanded educational benefits to America’s active duty service members, and members of the guard and reserves, fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan. We were the driving force behind the Veterans Access and Accountability Act of 2014, and continually fight for improved VA medical centres services for women veterans.
Besides helping fund the creation of the Vietnam, Korean War, World War II and Women in Military Service memorials, in 2005 the VFW became the first veterans’ organisation to contribute to building the new Disabled Veterans for Life Memorial, which opened in November 2010. And in 2015, we became the first supporter of the National Desert Storm War Memorial which is planned for construction at Washington DC.
The VFW are now looking to reach out to eligible veterans in Ireland with the aim of establishing an Irish VFW Post. Please read details below.
Michael Coyne is one of the unknown number of Irish who fought in Vietnam. Working in Chicago during the 1960s, it was only a matter of time before the Vietnam War caught up with him.
Interview by Wesley Bourke
Published in Spring and Summer 2017 editions
I was born in Cornamona, Galway, 1945. When I was
seven, we moved here to Jenkinstown, Co. Meath, just outside Kilcock. We moved
up as part of the Land Commission. All our family, including myself, spoke
Irish. When I was 16 my mother was dying and my uncle arranged for me to go to
Chicago. On 17 May, 1962. I landed in New York and met up with my father’s
family there. I saw all the sights, like the Empire State Building. When I
first got to Chicago, I got a job with an Italian gardener. For six months, I
went around the suburbs cutting shrubs and that kind of thing. My uncle then
got me a job with an Irish-American Furrier by the name of Jerome McCarthy. He
gave me a job as an apprentice furrier. I got to do and learn everything about
furs. I had a great time going to and helping run the fashion shows in all the
big hotels in Chicago. In 1963, I turned 18 and had to sign up for the draft. I
got called up for the first time two years later. Jerome McCarthy managed to
get me off, based on my job being vital. I’ve no idea why a furrier was classed
as vital. This happened two or three times. You’d get called up, ready yourself
for going, and then you’d be told to go home.
Called Up and Film School
However, on 23 October, 1966, I was called up again. I went
through the medical again and all the other paperwork. They told me “it’s ok go
home”. I was on edge and apprehensive and I said ‘no, I want to go’. I was fed
up with it. That was it. Off I was sent to Fort Campbell in Kentucky. My boss
did not take well to me leaving him. Fort Campbell was our introduction to the
military. Here you got your hair cut, issued uniform, and learned the ideology
of the U.S. Army. Then it was down to Fort Stuart in Georgia for basic training.
This was another 6 – 8 weeks, I can’t fully remember. We arrived on a bus, the
Drill Sergeants were there to meet us “Out Out Out!”
they shouted. You had to be quick. Fort Campbell had taught us that much. In to
our billets, then 05:00 the next morning “Up Up Up!”
They told me “it’s ok go home”. I was on edge and apprehensive and I said ‘no, I want to go’. I was fed up with it. That was it. Off I was sent to Fort Campbell in Kentucky.
The training is the same the world over. The training didn’t bother me. I got on with it. I was skinny and fit. I spent my time helping the poor devils who were breaking down crying. After basic we were sent to Advanced Training School. Every now and then volunteers were asked for. One day an instructor came in and said “We need two volunteers”. Two of us put up our hands. “You! you’re going to Air Traffic Control. You! Coyne, are going to Film Projection School”. I had no idea what that was. Myself and the other guy thought to ourselves ‘great we got nice cushy numbers. I’ve no idea what happened to him afterwards. Another three-week course; this time learning all about recording and editing film. I did a test and passed it. The unit made all sorts of films on things like training videos. A lot of the guys in the unit had served in Vietnam and there was a lot of talk about their tours. They had been over there with the Film Projection Unit. They all said it was a piece of cake. So, I said I’ll volunteer for that.
South Vietnam and Blackhorse
I went
down to the Administration Sergeant. He said no problem and did up the paperwork.
The next day he called me back. “You are not a U.S. citizen. Goddamn! I am going
to have to send all kinds of paperwork up to Washington to get security
clearance for you”. That was all sorted and in April 1967, I flew from Tacoma,
Washington to Cam Ranh Bay. Cam Ranh is located at an inlet of the South China
Sea situated on the south-eastern coast of Vietnam, between Phan Rang and Nha
Trang. I was so tired after the journey and the heat was killing.
In our
hammocks, we were told we’d be called at 07:00 to parade and get further
orders. I was flat out and missed the first call. At 11:00 there was another
parade. I fell in and my name was called. “Where were you at 07:00”. ‘I heard
nothing’ I said. “It’s going to cost you. You’re going up to Blackhorse”. I
didn’t’ know what that meant. I’d never heard of Blackhorse in my life. As it
turned out the Blackhorse were the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment. They were an
army within an army, famous for their exploits in World War II. The Blackhorse
Regiment deployed to South East Asia on 11 March, 1966. The Regiment
specialised for combat in a counterinsurgency environment. The units M113 armoured
personnel carriers were modified with two M60 machineguns with protective gun
shield mounted at the port and starboard rear of the vehicle, and a combination
circular and flat frontal gun shields added around the .50” heavy machine gun
mounted at the commander’s hatch. These modifications turned the M113 into an
armoured cavalry assault vehicle. In theatre, the troopers referred to it as
ACAV. The regiment was also equipped with M48A3 Patton tanks. The tank was
named after General George S. Patton of World War II fame. The unit also had a
helicopter company.
The Blackhorse Regiment deployed to South East Asia on 11 March, 1966. The Regiment specialised for combat in a counterinsurgency environment
Michael in Vietnam
While I was with Blackhorse, Base Camp was located approximately 3.7 miles south of the village of Xuan Loc on Route 2 and around 1.2 miles southeast of the village of Long Goia. Saigon was about 22 miles to the west along Route 1. When I arrived in Xuan Loc, Blackhorse were just coming off Operation Manhattan. This Operation, starting on 23 April, was a thrust into the Long Nguyen Secret Zone by the 1st and 2nd Squadrons. This zone was a long suspected regional headquarter of the Viet Cong (VC). 60 tunnel complexes were uncovered, 1,884 fortifications were destroyed, and 621 tons of rice was evacuated during these operations. Blackhorse had a reputation for carrying out effective Reconnaissance In Force (RIF) operations. Operation Manhattan ended on 11 May, 1967.
Two or
three of us paraded in front of Colonel Roy Farley, he himself only newly
appointed the regiment’s Commanding Officer on 8 May. The Regimental Command
Sergeant Major at the time was Donald E. Horn. “I see you’re an Irishman”
Farley said. “What’s that you have” he asked pointing at my camera. ‘I’m a
projectionist’ I said. ‘I show training films’. He bellowed out, “Aint got no
room for no training films here. You can be my driver”. That’s good I thought.
Well I was at that for about a week. One evening I was smoking pot with a bunch
of other lads. The next day the Colonel called me over, “Coyne I hear you were
smoking pot”. There was no point in denying it. “Right as punishment you are
going up with the scouts”.
Operation Kittyhawk and the Iron Triangle
An
ongoing operation at the time was Operation Kittyhawk. It began in April 1967,
and ran to 21 March, 1968. The Regiment was tasked to secure and pacify Long
Khanh Province. It achieved three main objectives: VC were kept from
interfering with travel by locals on the main roads, South Vietnamese were
provided medical treatment in programs like MEDCAP and DENCAP and finally, RIF
operations were employed to keep the VC off balance, making it impossible for
them to mount offensive operations. These operations brought us up to and into
Cambodia and around the famous Iron Triangle.
The
Iron Triangle, or Tam Giác Sắt in Vietnamese, was a 120-square mile area in the
Bình Dương Province. It got its name due to it being a stronghold of Viet Minh
activity. The Triangle was located between the Saigon River on the west and the
Tinh River on the east and bordering Route 13 about 25 miles north of Saigon.
The southern apex was seven miles from Phu Cong, the capital of Bình Dương
Province. Its proximity to Saigon concerted American and South Vietnamese
efforts to destabilise the region as a power base for Viet Cong operations. The
Iron Triangle had a vast network of tunnels from which the Viet Cong operated.
The tunnels, built during the war with the French, was said to have a network
of over 30,000 miles at its height throughout North and South Vietnam. Hundreds
of miles of this network were in the Iron Triangle. They were especially
concentrated in the area around the town of Củ Chi.
Delta13Charlie
As part
of Kittyhawk, 1st and 3rd Squadrons were carried out Operation Emporia from 21 July
– 14 September. These were road clearing operations with limited RIF missions.
As I was the spare man, I used to regularly get called down to check things out
– foxholes and tunnels were very regular. I was up with the scouts for three
weeks. A replacement was needed on one of the tanks in 1st Platoon, Delta
Company, 1st Squadron, after a trooper was killed. I was transferred
there and that’s where I remained. In Vietnam, a Patton tank had a crew of five
(commander, gunner, loader, driver and back-deck gunner). My call sign was
Delta13Charlie. Delta meant D Company, 13 was our tank, and Charlie was me. As
in C for Coyne. Whereas Delta13 was the tank commander, Delta13Kilo was for
Kilock, and Delta13Foxtrot was for Fisher.
On our
Patton tank I was the back-deck gunner – otherwise known as the spare man. I
had an M60 machine gun, M79 grenade launcher, an M3 .45” grease gun, and an M16
assault rifle. We didn’t use the range finder down in the turret that much. In
the close environment of the jungle visibility was very poor. My vantage point
on top was critical. We lost four tanks in my time. I was also wounded four
times. RPG’s (Rocket Propelled Grenades) were a common enemy.
They’d
hit the tank and bits of shrapnel would go everywhere. We rarely saw Base Camp,
as we were constantly on operations. Food, fuel, ammunition, spare parts, were
all flown out to us by helicopter. The squadrons were very self-sufficient.
Tank engines were even changed in the middle of the jungle.
In the
Summer of 1967, the South Vietnamese presidential elections were being held. As
part of Operation Valdosta I & II, the regiment was tasked with providing
security at polling stations during the elections and to maintain reaction
forces to counter VC agitation. 1st and 3rd Squadrons operated in the Long
Khánh District. The presidential elections were held on September 3rd. The
result was a victory for General Nguyễn Văn Thiệu, who won 34.8% of the vote.
The operation was a great success. Voter turnout was 83.2%.
On one
occasion, up at Binh Long we were conducting a RIF. Lieutenant Reid came up one
day, “we need you to carry the radio and go up and check out a fork in the
trail with myself and Smithy”. Smithy was the Sergeant from Kansas City. I put
on the radio and went up to the fork about 1,000m up the trail. I was standing
behind. The Lieutenant and Sergeant Smith were in front to my left and right.
The Lieutenant said to me “check that trail there”. Smithy said “it’s ok I’ll
check it”. Up he jumped and went over. The next thing BANG! The top half of his
body was gone. His legs were still standing there. Hard to believe, but his
legs were still there. It was so fast. I looked down and parts of his rib cage
was sticking in my arm. Within a fraction of a second myself
and Lieutenant Reid were on the ground, our tanks were firing over our heads. The rockets that had hit us had gone on to hit the tanks. The Patton tank used the 90mm M377 canister anti-personnel round. This canister projectile was filled with 1,281 spherical steel pellets for use at short ranges. It was particularly effective against personnel in dense foliage. The tanks opened-up with everything. All around us the jungle started to come down around us.
Michael with the crew of Delta13
Continuing Operations
We went
from one operation to another. Patrols and more patrols. On 5 December, Colonel
Roy Farley was replaced by Colonel Jack MacFarlane. During this time, Donald E.
Horn was the regiments Regimental Command Sergeant Major (RCSM). This was a new
rank introduced earlier in the year. From 14 December – 21, we conducted Operation Quicksilver. 1st
and 2nd Squadrons were tasked with the security of the highway between Bến Cát
and Phuroc Ninh. Its purpose was to secure routes that moved logistical
personnel of the 101st Airborne Division between Bình Long and Tây Ninh
Provinces. Cordon, search and Reconnaissance in Force (RIF) missions were
carried out. Quicksilver rolled into Operation Fargo, 21 December – 21 January,
1968. Fargo was a regimental seized operation. RIF’s were conducted in Bình
Long and Tây Ninh Provinces and Route 13 was opened to military traffic for the
very first time. When we drove over or found a tunnel, as spare man I was
always sent down to check them out. You grabbed your .45 and bayonet and down
you went. On one occasion, I jumped down and found a room with a Singer sewing
machine. In the corner of the room there was a trap door. I knew the Viet Cong
(VC) or North Vietnamese (NVA) soldiers were on the other side. And they knew I
knew they were there. I wasn’t going near it. So, I sat down and started
peddling away on the sewing machine. I sat there for around 15- or 20-minutes
peddling away. Crawling back up to the tank “nothing down there except a sewing
machine if you want it”. If I’d opened that door I wouldn’t be here now.
In the villages, I was always the one to drop down and talk to the villagers. I’d ask them “Where VC? Where VC?” they’d always reply “No VC! No VC!” The Sergeant asked me one day, “God Dam Coyney! How do you speak to them?” “I speak English” I told him. The Vietnamese spoke some English. Some better than others. One time this old lady shouted Number 1! Number 1! The guys on the tank just thought the villagers liked me. I knew what it meant – I was marked as a target. I got back up on the tank and told the commander, “they’re friendly’s, let’s go!”. You avoided a fire fight when you could.
“When we drove over or found a tunnel, as spare man I was always sent down to check them out. You grabbed your .45 and bayonet and down you went.”
On another day, we were the lead tank. We came up to a stream. I said to Danny Cline, “that looks like a mine”. “I agree”, he said. We stopped the tank and called in the engineer minesweepers. I could hear on the radio in my helmet, a captain shouting “come on move it! I have a schedule to keep to”. He sent down an intelligence officer, who was also a captain. He started kicking the ground with his foot. I was looking down from the top of the tank at him. Danny shouted, “Sir don’t go over there it’s not safe”. The officer replied back, “I didn’t do all that training in the States for nothing”. BANG! He went 100 feet in the air. All that we found of him was his boot. A straight up blast. His son wrote to me for some time after. I initially told him his father had stepped on the mine. Eventually I had to tell him he kicked it. He asked me why his father had kicked it? I told him he was under severe pressure to get the column moving again. I remember a chaplain arriving in camp. “Coyne you’re a Catholic, aren’t you?” I replied yes. “Report to the chaplain”. We took a walk into the jungle. There were two big pits. Around 14 American dead soldiers. The chaplain said a few words, but wanted me then to also say some prayers. I wasn’t a practising Catholic. All I could remember was the Hail Mary. “What’s that priest over there at that pit doing?” I asked. The chaplain replied, “that’s for the Protestants”. Can you believe that, even in the middle of Vietnam!
The Tet Offensive
On 30 January,
1968, the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese launched the Tet Offensive. Coinciding
with the Tết holiday (Vietnamese New Year). It was
one of the largest campaigns during the war. It was fought over three phases:
I. 30 January – 28 March; II. 5 May – 15 June; and Phase III. 17 August – 23 September,
1968. The offensive cantered around surprise attacks against military and
civilian command and control centres throughout South Vietnam.
When the offensive broke out on the night of January 30th, we were
actually across the border in Cambodia and had just gone through a continuous
fire fight to get there. When the offensive began, we then had to turn around
and fight our way back to protect Saigon. We left tanks and Armoured Personnel
Carriers (APCs) burning all along the road. But we had to keep moving. Rocket
Propelled Grenades (RPG) kept coming at us, but we had to keep going and get
through it. Saigon was a battlefield. Scenes just like what you would see on TV
today in Syria. The place was being torn apart.
Operation Adairsville began immediately on January 31st. Word was
received by II Field Force HQs to immediately re deploy to the Long Binh/ Biên
Hòa area to relieve threatened installations. At 14:00hrs 1st Squadron was
called to move from our position south of the Michelin Rubber Plantation to the
II Field Force Headquarters. The 2nd Squadron moved from north of the
plantation to the III Corps POW Compound where enemy soldiers were sure to
attempt to liberate the camp. The 3rd Squadron moved from An Lộc to III Corps
Army, Republic of South Vietnam (ARVN) Headquarters. It took only 14 hours and
80 miles to arrive in position after first being alerted. 1st and 2nd Squadrons
continued security
operations in the Long Binh/ Biên Hòa area and the area around Blackhorse Base Camp under Operation Alcorn Cove which began on 22 March. This was a joint mission with the ARVN 18th Division and 25th Division. This operation rolled into Operation Toan Thang – a joint operation involving the 1st and 25th Infantry Divisions. Toan Thang was the first of a series of massive operations combining the assets and operations of the ARVN’s III Corps and our II Field Force. The purpose of this operation was to maintain the post-Tet pressure on the enemy and to drive all remaining NVA/VC troops from III Corps and the Saigon area. A total of 42 U.S. combat battalions participated at one time or another in Toan Thang. The Tet Offensive allowed the regiment a chance to fight the enemy formations in open combat. Colonel MacFarlane was wounded in March 1968, and replaced on 12 March, by Colonel Leonard Holder. He was killed only a few weeks later on 21 March. Colonel Charles Gorder took command of the regiment on 22 March.
Purple Heart Citation for Michael Coyne, 23 April 1968
Awarded the Bronze Star
The VC and NVA launched Phase II of Tet in early May. This was
known as the May Offensive, Little Tet, or Mini-Tet. The enemy struck 119
targets throughout South Vietnam, including Saigon. 13 VC battalions, slipped
through the cordon and again turned Saigon into a battlefield. Mini Tet was
nearly worse than the main offensive. In early May, I came across a guy from Kentucky.
He was bent over, wrecked with worry. He had a wife and four kids. On 13 May, the
tanks and APCs were all lined up for a counterattack near Saigon. I can still
remember our Captain with a machete in one hand. As he dropped his hand with the
machete he shouted “CHARGE!”. We all rolled forward firing as we moved. Rockets
and tracer rounds came at us from all over. Bullets were flying everywhere. I was
on the top deck with the M60.
“I can still remember our Captain with a machete in one hand. As he dropped his hand with the machete he shouted “CHARGE!”. We all rolled forward firing as we moved.”
On the tank beside me my counterpart, a guy from Dakota Washington, was dancing away. Bullets flying all around. I thought he’s f**king gone. At the end of the battle we counted 14 to 15 holes in his clothes. Not a scratch on him. That’s the way it played out. He was off his head on drugs. As for the poor devil from Kentucky, his track got hit. They were nearly all killed. The whole unit had to pull back. All night long we could hear them. “Help, Help”. Awful shit. On 30 May, the tanks and the APCs were all in the rice paddies at Đức Hòa, a rural district in the Mekong Delta region. There was an intense fire fight. Nearly everybody ran out of ammunition. The Captain was standing with a prisoner. He said to us, “There’s four APCs out there and there’s nine of our wounded in them. We need two or three guys to go out there and get them”. He looked at me. I got my M16 and headed out with Staff Sargent Francis Hinnigan. It was like wading through mud. Next thing Hinnigan went down. Machine gun fire zeroed in on where we were. He was hit in the shoulder and leg. I kept going bullets were whizzing all around. I got hit. But I got there. There were nine guys wounded, some of them were in bits, legs and other parts missing. Another guy was wounded but he was able to give me a hand. We got them all into a track (M113 APC). I got into the front and drove them out of there all the time under fire. For his actions that day, Michael was awarded the Bronze Star with Valor.
Awarding of the Bronze Star
UNITED
STATES ARMY
[HEAD
QUARTER INFANTRY] FORCE VIETNAM
APO
San Francisco 96266
3
Oct 1968
[Central
order]
[Ref:
October 138X]
AWARD
OF THE BRONZE STAR MEDAL
..
TC 320. The following AWARD [is announced.]
COYNE,
MICHAEL US54811088 (SSAN: 368…39..0998) PRIVATE FIRST CLASS
E3
United States Army. COMPANY D 1ST SQUADRON …. ARMORED CAVALRY
REGIMENT.
APO
96257
Awarded:
Bronze Star Medal with “V” Valor …..
Date
action: 30 May 1968
Theater:
Republic of Vietnam
[hostile
enemy on]30 May 1968 while serving as a machine gunner with
Company
D, 1st Squadron 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment in the Republic
of
Vietnam. On this date, Company D was engaged in an assault across rice
paddies
in the vicinity of Duc Hoa when they and several armored cavalry
assault
vehicles became mired in the [mud] When the assault was halted to
reorganize,
four armored cavalry assault vehicles 200 meters ahead, which
had
nine wounded crews in [them] were unable to withdraw. Upon learning of
the
problem Private Coyne immediately volunteered to join a team to retrieve
the
wounded. He moved through the soaked rice paddies under a constant
[smothering]
hail of enemy fire. Reaching the forward armored cavalry assault
vehicle
positions, Private Coyne moved from man to man and assisted in treating
and
moving the wounded men to the cover of [the armored] vehicle. Private
Coyne
and two companions then [….] free it from the mud and drove it through
a
continuing volley of enemy fire [to] the rear area from which the wounded
men
could be medically evacuated. Private Coyne’s unwavering devotion [to
country]
and great personal courage in the face of enemy fire were in keeping
with
the highest traditions of the military service and [reflect] great credit upon
himself,
his unit and the United States of America.
Authority:
By direction of the President under the provisions of Executive
Order
11046, 24 August 1968.
AOR
THE COMMANDER:
OFFICIAL:
CH. CHANTRELL, CHIEF OF STAFF
M,
WESTON JR
…AGC
(some text missing due to degradation of citation.
Malaria
I
caught malaria in mid-July that year. They flew me out of the jungle. I was so
sick. By the time I got to hospital and they did tests, the malaria had gone
into relapse. So, nothing showed up. Back on a chopper I was put and sent back
to my unit. Within twelve hours I’d passed out. I woke up on the fourth of
July, I could have sworn they were trying to kill me. I was sent from hospital
to hospital; Long Bihn hospital, Alaska, and then Valley Forge. I wouldn’t wish
malaria on anyone. My temperature was so hot my brain should have been cooked!
I never returned to Vietnam after that. My military service was effectively
over and I was ‘separated’ out on disability on 29 August, 1968. Colonel Gorder
was replaced on 15 July, by none other than Colonel George S. Patton Jr. The
son of General George S. Patton IV of World War II fame. RCSM Horn was replaced
around this time too with RCSM Daniel J. Mulcahey, who himself was wounded
sometime later. Colonel Patton requested that the regiment test the M551
Sheridan. 1st Squadron were the first to use the new tank. While all this was
happening, I was in hospital.
Separated Out and the War at Home
Vietnam Veteran Michael Coyne at his home in Jenkinstown, Co. Meath. (Photo: Ken Mooney)
After I
was ‘separated out’, I went back to work for the fur company in Chicago. My
boss’s son had got killed while I was in Vietnam in a car crash. He was
miserable. He couldn’t understand how
I’d survived Vietnam and his son gets killed in a car crash. I worked for a bit
with my brother in Indiana, got in trouble with the law. I eventually made my
way to London where I worked as an electrician, spent a year in Saudi Arabia in
1972 on the powerplants, we were pulled out when the 1973 Arab– Israeli War
broke out. Christmas 1973, I was broke. Wandering the streets, I looked up and
saw a sign for Bank Line Shipping. Days later I was on a flight to Panama to
meet my ship. That was another adventure.
I was
meant to be discharged in 1972. The U.S. Army office in London told me there
was a problem, as the office where I was inducted in Chicago had been burnt
down. In theory, I couldn’t be discharged. After I asked for back pay the paper
work was soon sorted and I was discharged from the U.S. Army on 22 October,
1972. I was not the same guy. One thing that stays with you after you have been
in a battle. You never want to be in another one. For a least five or six years
after the war I was a headbanger. I can’t remember mostly what I was doing. I
didn’t give a shit about anything and I couldn’t remember anything. My head was
a right mess. It still lingers.
Michael returned to Ireland in 1979. He became a founder member of the JFK Post, American Legion (Dublin), in 1996, he is also a member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Irish Veterans, American Veterans of Vietnam and the Blackhorse 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment Association. Michael later took a case against the U.S. government over the effects of Agent Orange. (Agent Orange was a chemical used to defoliate the jungles in Vietnam). He lives today in Jenkinstown, Co. Meath, with his wife Libby, two sons Thomas and Michael, and their daughter Vanessa.
In 2017 Michael returned to Vietnam. (Photos by his Tommy Coyne, Michael’s son)