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Steel My Soldiers' Hearts: The Hopeless to…
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Steel My Soldiers' Hearts: The Hopeless to Hardcore Transformation of the U.S. Army, 4th Battalion, 39th Infantry, Vietnam (edition 2002)

by David H. Hackworth (Author)

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In January 1969, one of the most promising young lieutenant colonels the US Army had ever seen touched down in Vietnam for his second tour of duty, which would turn out to be his most daring and legendary. David H. Hackworth had just completed the writing of a tactical handbook for the Pentagon, and now he had been ordered to put his counterguerilla-fighting theories into action. He was given the morale-drained 4/39th--a battalion of poorly led draftees suffering the Army's highest casualty rate and considered its worst fighting battalion. Hackworth's hard-nosed, inventive and inspired leadership quickly turned the 4/39th into Vietnam's valiant and ferocious Hardcore Recondos. Drawing on interviews with soldiers from the Hardcore Battalion conducted over the past decade by his partner and coauthor, Eilhys England, Hackworth takes readers along on their sniper missions, ambush actions, helicopter strikes and inside the quagmire of command politics. With Steel My Soldiers' Hearts, Hackworth places the brotherhood of the 4/39th into the pantheon of our nation's most heroic warriors.… (more)
Member:michaelholmes
Title:Steel My Soldiers' Hearts: The Hopeless to Hardcore Transformation of the U.S. Army, 4th Battalion, 39th Infantry, Vietnam
Authors:David H. Hackworth (Author)
Info:Rugged Land (2002), Edition: 1, 512 pages
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Steel My Soldiers' Hearts : The Hopeless to Hardcore Transformation of U.S. Army, 4th Battalion, 39th Infantry, Vietnam by David H. Hackworth

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Col Hackworth (Retired) talks about how he was given one of the worst units in Vietnam and turned them from terrible apathetic soldiers with a high causuality rate to an effective unit with high esprit de corps and a lower causuality rate while actually putting a hurting on the enemy.

Gives you a on the ground perspective of what it was like in Army combat units in Vietnam. Both when it was in poor shape and after Hackworth had the unit in their best form. It's an honest look at how life was which makes it fairly graphic in parts. ( )
  Chris_El | Mar 19, 2015 |
Most of the LT reviewers have commented on the author focusing on his own point of view. However, given the many Vietnam combat books that have been written about personal experience this book is exactly this, a personal experience. It gives some insight into how a leader like the author views his own leadership.

I suggest reading it with another book that gives far different points of view

Everything We Had: An Oral History of the Vietnam War ( )
  carterchristian1 | Aug 31, 2010 |
This was an adequate book with lots of great lessons and stories. I think it would have come off better had it been written about the good Colonel by someone else rather than by him. The fact that a unit's performance is a direct reflection on their commander makes it well nigh impossible for the commander in the TOC during a time of high performance to avoid coming across as a typically ambitious self-promoter of the type Hackworth himself criticizes.

I can't speak to the credibility, but the fact that all these stories of Hack's outstanding leadership are coming from his own pen or from the mouths of former subordinates speaking to him dulls the impact.

There are other weaknesses, but I think they all serve to further the narrative and get the point across. For instance, throughout the book Hackworth harshly criticizes the higher-echelon brass for their obsession with body count, yet body count and kill ratio are the very measures he uses time after time to describe his units successes under his command.

Telling, perhaps, how pervasive the pressure was for kill-count that even a man ideologically opposed to the idea and its usefulness--and an intelligent, independent man at that--was so thoroughly indoctrinated into that mode of thought.

I just think Hack would have made a better book working with a ghost writer or co-author of some standing. The book was more valuable than it seems, and I got less, I think, than I could have from it (though still a great deal) simply due to the fatigue of reading a dozen worn-out cliches and trite similes on each page.

One hell of a story, though. ( )
  linedog1848 | Jul 19, 2010 |
The story of how Colonel David Hackworth took the ragtag 4th Battalion/39th Infantry and completely turned it into a disciplined fighting unit. After reading General Hal Moore's "We Were Soldiers Once...and Young", and then reading this book, I can't help but compare and contrast these two books, not only for the battles they depict, but also for the difference in personalities of both the soldiers in their battalions, as well as the commanders themselves.

What struck me at first about Hackworth (who sadly passed away in 2005), is that the man pulls no punches regarding what he thinks. In my opinion, this is perhaps a weak point of his which I'll get into in a minute. "Hack" was definitely a man with serious fighting prowess, and he certainly had the medals to show for it (2 Distinguished Service Crosses, 9 silver stars, and a shit load of purple hearts, among many others). He was also not a man to be content with doing things "by-the-book", nor did he tolerate weakness from his subordinates, but rather lead from the front and demonstrated by example. Apparently, his best solution for changing how his battalion operated, was to weed out the incompetent. In a way, the transformation of his battalion is the stuff they show in films, where the new guy comes in, shakes things up, and turns the under-achievers into stars.

However, for all this man's warrior attributes and leadership qualities (both of which he has in spades), two things bothered me about Hackworth. One was that the man was extremely egotistical. So much to the point that it seems that if you didn't tune yourself to his "way" of thinking, then you were automatically a "fucking idiot" to him. This not only extended to his subordinates (which he usually fired), but also towards his superiors (although many of them were pencil-pushers who had very little clue). He didn't seem to like any ideas but his own, and he let people know that. Second, was that I got the feeling at numerous points throughout the book, that Hackworth (perhaps subconsciously), really enjoyed the killing. Now granted that he was a man in the profession of arms, but I got the sense he enjoyed not only controlling people in battle, but also being able to take the lives of other with ruthless efficiency. While these things did concern me about Hackworth's character and integrity, the points me made at the end of the book regarding leadership and micromanagement, along with warfighting, definitely made sense.

In comparing this book to "We Were Soldiers Once...and Young", it's interesting to note that the enemy, terrain, people, and battles were different, yet they both fought in the same war, but with different tactics and mindsets. Furthermore, in contrast to Hackworth's profanity filled tirades and crude language, Hal Moore seemed to have a certain eloquence to his voice. Also, it's interesting to note that both men had serious gripes about how the Army and the war was being handled, yet Moore seemed content to work around his problems and keep his men focused, whereas Hackworth always seemed to want to burn the bridge down and smear whoever he thought was responsible for the issue.

In short, I found this book to be a very interesting read, not only regarding the Vietnam War, but also about leadership and a very interesting military officer. ( )
  Hiromatsuo | Apr 29, 2010 |
(posted on my blog: davenichols.net)

Colonel Hackworth's memoir Steel My Soldiers' Hearts records his experiences in Vietnam with the US Army 4th Battalion, 39th Infantry. Hackworth, a staunch disciplinarian who believes strongly in maintaining order even under the worst of conditions, describes how he arrived at the battalion when the unit was suffering low morale, poor preparedness, and dangerous security, and then transformed the men into a first-rate combat team.

Hackworth's style makes for engaging and easy reading, and I love that he is not afraid to question the rigid Army system he was expected to enforce. At first, the men hate Hackworth, who shows up like any other disliked battalion CO: instituting rigid discipline and training; eliminating the comforts (such as hot food); enforcing rules which the previous CO had been lax to enforce. At one point, a bounty was even placed on Hackworth's head by his own men.

However, Hackworth was not an officer who lead from the rear. At one point early on, the Colonel flew into a hot and dangerous combat zone to help evacuate men wounded in battle. He routinely put his own life at risk in order to protect his men, and pretty soon, the soldiers understood that their new CO was something special. The bounty on his head would quickly disappear.

Hackworth's descriptions of battle are also fantastic. You get the usual battalion-level strategy and tactics, but you also get Hackworth's first-hand observations as he was often under fire with his men. The accounts of his soldiers are also included, and the narrative of each key battle unfolds with excellent vividness and anguish.

One of many excellent books on Vietnam, Hackworth delivered a fascinating and troubling look at how the war should have been fought and, often, was not as a result of higher-level military politics and posturing. Never shying away from the awful and gruesome details, this narrative is well recommended for any military reader. Four and one-half stars. ( )
  IslandDave | Nov 25, 2009 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
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England, Eilhysmain authorall editionsconfirmed
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In January 1969, one of the most promising young lieutenant colonels the US Army had ever seen touched down in Vietnam for his second tour of duty, which would turn out to be his most daring and legendary. David H. Hackworth had just completed the writing of a tactical handbook for the Pentagon, and now he had been ordered to put his counterguerilla-fighting theories into action. He was given the morale-drained 4/39th--a battalion of poorly led draftees suffering the Army's highest casualty rate and considered its worst fighting battalion. Hackworth's hard-nosed, inventive and inspired leadership quickly turned the 4/39th into Vietnam's valiant and ferocious Hardcore Recondos. Drawing on interviews with soldiers from the Hardcore Battalion conducted over the past decade by his partner and coauthor, Eilhys England, Hackworth takes readers along on their sniper missions, ambush actions, helicopter strikes and inside the quagmire of command politics. With Steel My Soldiers' Hearts, Hackworth places the brotherhood of the 4/39th into the pantheon of our nation's most heroic warriors.

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