Adam Serna NajarPrivate First ClassD CO, 1ST BN, 9TH MARINES, 3RD MARDIV United States Marine Corps 03 May 1946 - 30 April 1968 Palm Springs, California Panel 53E Line 020 |
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The database page for Adam Serna Najar
I had seen your name on the WALL. I did not connect you with the Najar family from "el Valle". Today I learned that you were originally from Primera, TX. I knew your brother, Alex. We went to school together in Harlingen, Texas. Your friend, Tomas Gonzalez, informed me that your family had moved to Palm Springs, California. He visited with you when he was in the Corps. He went up to Palm Springs to see you. After that visit, you joined the Marine Corps. Tomas served a tour of duty in Nam from Nov 66 to Nov 67. He is back in Primera now. Tomas told me that you were very proud and wanted to be a Marine. I wish I could have known that you were in Nam in '68. I was there for my second tour. We from "el Valle" were few, but we served and fought with pride. Carnal, descansa en paz (Rest In Peace, my brother.) Semper Fi.
From a family friend, |
A Note from The Virtual WallIn late April 1968 it became apparent that the North Vietnamese Army was again moving across the DMZ into the area north of Dong Ha. On 29 April the ARVN 2nd Infantry Regiment sent its 1st and 4th Battalions in a pincer movement to locate and engage NVA units around An Binh. "Task Force Robbie", consisting of Delta 1/9 Marines reinforced with tanks from Alpha 3rd Tanks, was sent to relieve building pressure on the ARVN's southern flank."Robbie" ran into trouble at Cam Vu, about 5,000 meters west of An Binh, where a North Vietnamese blocking force was waiting for them. After taking 10 dead and 22 wounded in a six hour fight against a clearly superior force, "Robbie" broke off the contact and withdrew. The ARVN forces had absorbed 17 dead and 47 wounded, could not link up, and also withdrew. At this point the 3rd Battalion, 9th Marines, was brought into the fight, advancing toward Cam Vu. India 3/9 was the first to make contact, encountering an "L"-shaped ambush just north of Cam Vu. As 3/9's other three companies deployed in support of India, the NVA broke contact and withdrew under cover of artillery fire from within and north of the DMZ. The fighting around Cam Vu was paralleled by the engagement of the 2nd Battalion, 4th Marines, with elements of the 325th NVA Division at Dai Do some 5 miles to northeast of Cam Vu. These engagements - the 2nd ARVN Infantry, 1/9, and 3/9 at Cam Vu and 2/4 at Dai Do - were the opening engagements in what became known as the Battle of Dong Ha. While the Cam Vu fights cost the North Vietnamese at least 197 dead, Allied losses also were high:
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With all respect
Jim Schueckler, former CW2, US Army
Ken Davis, Commander, United States Navy (Ret)
Last updated 08/10/2009