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The Parliamentary
Secretary for Defence Support, the Hon. Dr Mike Kelly AM MP,
and Ms Jennie George MP met today with veterans of the 2nd D&E
Platoon who served in the Vietnam War as part of the Australian
Task Force (ATF), to discuss the acknowledgement of the Platoon
and its history in that conflict. For
many years now the surviving members of the Platoon have been
battling to have their record and role in the Vietnam War officially
recognised.
Dr Kelly said, "I
am pleased to announce that I have been able to bring this long
struggle to a conclusion by confirming that the Rudd Labor Government
and the Defence Department have been able to determine that
the Platoon did indeed exist and engaged in a series of important
actions in Vietnam as part of the Australian Task Force."
"I would like
to pay particular tribute to the courage and dedication of the
men of the 2nd D&E Platoon. They were a team that was effectively
born in battle, not having been formally raised and trained
as a sub-unit in Australia before deploying to Vietnam, but
being assembled in country in response to the particular security
requirements of the ATF. They were able to come together as
an effective fighting force thanks to the professionalism of
the soldiers and in particular the Non-Commissioned Officer
who led them, Corporal James Bertram Riddle," he said.
The action for which
the 2nd D&E Platoon should particularly be noted for was
the successful ambush they executed together with 2 Troop, B
Squadron, 3rd Cavalry Regiment, in May 1969 at Thua Tich. This
was a ferocious battle that involved the engaged troops taking
on a much larger enemy force beyond artillery support and through
many heroic individual and collective efforts were able to soundly
defeat the enemy without loss. Their success was a tribute to
their professionalism and the outstanding leadership and courage
of Corporal Riddle whose personal actions ensured the survival
of many members of the Platoon who would otherwise surely have
been killed.
"I am delighted
to advise these proud veterans that their role in the war will
be forever enshrined and acknowledged in the Official History
of the Vietnam War which is soon to be published. I was privileged
to have been able to meet with them personally and thank them
for their service to the country and the Australian Army. They
served and performed in the finest traditions of the Australian
Defence Force and they will have an honoured place in its history.
As part of my responsibility for education and training in the
ADF I intend to see that our future generations of Army leaders
will have the opportunity to not only be aware of this legacy
but to have the opportunity to learn from it," Dr Kelly
said.
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