SGT.
Gordon D. Yntema
Rank
and organization: Sergeant, U.S. Army, Company D,
5th Special Forces Group (Airborne).
Place
and date: Near Thong Binh, Republic of Vietnam, 16-18
January 1968.
Entered
service at: Detroit, Mich. Born: 26 June 1945, Bethesda,
Md.
Citation: For
conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in action at
the risk of his life and above and beyond the call
of duty. Sgt. Yntema, U.S. Army, distinguished himself
while assigned to Detachment A-431, Company D. As
part of a larger force of civilian irregulars from
Camp Cai Cai, he accompanied 2 platoons to a blocking
position east of the village of Thong Binh, where
they became heavily engaged in a small-arms fire fight
with the Viet Cong. Assuming control of the force
when the Vietnamese commander was seriously wounded,
he advanced his troops to within 50 meters of the
enemy bunkers. After a fierce 30 minute fire fight,
the enemy forced Sgt. Yntema to withdraw his men to
a trench in order to afford them protection and still
perform their assigned blocking mission. Under cover
of machinegun fire, approximately 1 company of Viet
Cong maneuvered into a position which pinned down
the friendly platoons from 3 sides. A dwindling ammunition
supply, coupled with a Viet Cong mortar barrage which
inflicted heavy losses on the exposed friendly troops,
caused many of the irregulars to withdraw. Seriously
wounded and ordered to withdraw himself, Sgt. Yntema
refused to leave his fallen comrades. Under withering
small arms and machinegun fire, he carried the wounded
Vietnamese commander and a mortally wounded American
Special Forces advisor to a small gully 50 meters
away in order to shield them from the enemy fire.
Sgt. Yntema then continued to repulse the attacking
Viet Cong attempting to overrun his position until,
out of ammunition and surrounded, he was offered the
opportunity to surrender. Refusing, Sgt. Yntema stood
his ground, using his rifle as a club to fight the
approximately 15 Viet Cong attempting his capture.
His resistance was so fierce that the Viet Cong were
forced to shoot in order to overcome him. Sgt. Yntema's
personal bravery in the face of insurmountable odds
and supreme self-sacrifice were in keeping with the
highest traditions of the military service and reflect
the utmost credit upon himself, the 1st Special Forces,
and the U.S. Army.

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