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 on 16-18 January 1968, while advising civilian irregulars from
Camp Cai Cai. Sergeant Yntema accompanied two platoons to a blocking
position east of the Village of Thong Binh. They became heavily engaged
in a fire fight with the Viet Cong. Assuming control of the force when
the Vietnamese commander was seriously wounded, Sergeant Yntema advanced
his troops to within 50 meters of the enemy bunkers. After a fierce
fire fight, Sergeant Yntema withdrew his men to a trench which offered
them protection while still allowing them to perform their blocking
mission. Under the cover of machine gun fire, a company of Viet Cong
maneuvered into a position effectively surrounding Yntema's platoons on
three sides. A dwindling ammunition supply, coupled with a Viet Cong
mortar barrage which inflicted heavy losses on the exposed position,
prompted many of the South Vietnamese troops to withdraw. Seriously
wounded and ordered to withdraw himself, Sergeant Yntema refused to
leave his fallen comrades. Under withering small arms and machine gun
fire, he carried the wounded Vietnamese commander and a mortally wounded
American Special Forces advisor to a small gully 50 meters away to
shield them from the enemy fire. Sergeant Yntema continued to repulse
the attacking Viet Cong during their attempts to overrun his position
until, out of ammunition and surrounded, he was offered the opportunity
to surrender. Refusing, Sergeant Yntema stood his ground, using his
rifle as a club to fight the approximately fifteen Viet Cong attempting
his capture. His resistance was so fierce that the Viet Cong were forced
to shoot him in order to overcome him.
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