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00:00:00 - Family, childhood, and pre-college education

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Partial Transcript: This is Angela Noppenberger interviewing Peter Luitwieler on Saturday, February 6, 2016.

Segment Synopsis: Luitwieler talks about his family members, childhood life, and the activities he was involved in while in high school. Coming from a family of Ivy League graduates, Luitwieler applied Early Decision to Dartmouth College and was accepted in 1960.

Keywords: Winchester High School; Winchester, MA; Dartmouth College

00:05:38 - Time at Dartmouth—Academics, activities, and social life

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Partial Transcript: Well, okay. So then let’s move on to your college years.

Segment Synopsis: Luitwieler recalls his time at Dartmouth. He took many economics classes, majored in Spanish, studied abroad in Spain, and did the 2-3 program at the Amos Tuck School of Business. He was also the captain of the rugby team and the rush chairman for the “Phi Delt” (Phi Delta Alpha) fraternity.

Keywords: Dartmouth College; Hands Across the Ocean; Phi Delta Alpha; Salamanca, Spain; Tuck School of Business; Spanish

00:12:04 - Time at Dartmouth—ROTC involvement and draft exemption

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Partial Transcript: Okay, so during this time, sort of getting into the Vietnam-related part of this narrative

Segment Synopsis: Luitwieler recalls that the Vietnam War was not a prominent topic of discussion during his time at Dartmouth. He joined the Army ROTC program in his junior year but had to leave for a summer job to pay for college expenses. He was initially exempt from the draft due to an injury, but the status was later reversed. After finishing his graduate study, he worked for Gulf Oil in Pittsburgh, PA.

Keywords: 4-F; Army ROTC; Army Reserve Officers' Training Corps; Dartmouth College; Gulf Oil; Officer Candidate School; Pittsburgh, PA; ROTC; Reserve Officers' Training Corps; Selective Service System; The draft; Vietnam War

00:16:08 - Life after Dartmouth and before military service

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Partial Transcript: So can you tell me a little bit about when you were drafted?

Segment Synopsis: After graduating from Dartmouth and Tuck, Luitwieler worked for Gulf Oil in Pittsburgh, PA for a little over a year. After hearing he would soon be drafted, he proactively enlisted in the Officer Candidate School (OCS). At the time of his enlistment, Luitwieler was engaged to be married to his wife, who he met at Dartmouth.

Keywords: Dartmouth College; Gulf Oil; OCS; Pittsburgh, PA; Officer Candidate School

00:18:53 - Military training before Officer Candidate School

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Partial Transcript: Well, then, let’s get on to basic training. Where were you—where were you training at first?

Segment Synopsis: Luitwieler talks about the two eight-week sessions of basic and advanced infantry training he had to undergo before enrolling in Officer Candidate School (OCS). While he did not find the training too physically demanding, he was unaccustomed to the strict lifestyle there. He also recalls that the period was marked by an increasing awareness of the Vietnam War and emerging antiwar protests.

Keywords: Antiwar activism; Columbia, SC; Fort Jackson, SC; Military training; OCS; Vietnam War; Officer Candidate School

00:22:15 - Time at Officer Candidate School

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Partial Transcript: Okay. So, then, during your next eight weeks, you got through that, so you got through your two mandated basic training sessions

Segment Synopsis: Luitwieler recalls his time at Officer Candidate School (OCS), where he and two other Ivy League graduates were singled out for more rigorous physical training. He recalls that the program had very strict discipline regarding personal conduct, uniform standards, and living conditions. Over a Christmas break, Luitwieler got married to his wife, who later moved to Fort Benning with him.

Keywords: 93rd Infantry Company; Fort Benning, GA; OCS; Officer Candidate School; Columbus, GA

00:28:47 - Military assignments after graduating from OCS

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Partial Transcript: Okay. And so when you graduated, what happened next?

Segment Synopsis: Luitwieler talks about his assignment in Fort Holabird in Baltimore, MD after graduating from Officer Candidate School. He and his wife moved and lived together there before his deployment to Vietnam. He learned of his impending deployment to Vietnam just three weeks into intelligence school and received his orders to depart shortly after completing the course.

Keywords: Baltimore, MD; Fort Holabird, MD; OCS; US Army Intelligence School; United States Army Intelligence School; Vietnam War; Officer Candidate School

00:32:19 - Time in Vietnam—Preparing to leave and arrival

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Partial Transcript: Okay. So, then, let’s talk about Vietnam. Can you tell me about getting ready to actually leave the country and go to Vietnam and that flight there?

Segment Synopsis: Luitwieler recalls finalizing his will with his wife and getting a job assurance by Gulf Oil for his post-deployment return before leaving for Vietnam. Due to his past back injury and 4-F status, he expected that he would work in Saigon in a military intelligence unit. He landed in Saigon, Vietnam seven months before the Tet Offensive.

Keywords: 4-F; Gulf Oil; Ho Chi Minh City; Long Binh; Long Bình; Saigon; Tan Son Nhut Air Base; Tet Offensive; Vietnam War

00:38:13 - Time in Vietnam—Initial roles and assignments

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Partial Transcript: So, then, where were you stationed at first, after those first few days on the base?

Segment Synopsis: Luitwieler recalls initially being stationed at the Military Intelligence Command in Saigon upon his arrival in Vietnam before being assigned to Quang Tri for the Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (MACV). There, his primary responsibility as an intelligence officer was to develop and analyze intelligence reports to cultivate agents.

Keywords: Ho Chi Minh City; MACV; Military Intelligence Command; Quang Tri; Quảng Trị; Saigon; USAID; United States Agency for International Development; Vietnamese language; Military Assistance Command, Vietnam

00:42:18 - Time in Vietnam—Involvement in the Phoenix Program

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Partial Transcript: Tell me about that change.

Segment Synopsis: Luitwieler recalls his involvement in the Phoenix Program, a strategic initiative aimed at improving intelligence operations in Vietnam. As a part of the program, he lived in a compound with Vietnamese military advisors and taught English at a local elementary school to improve his Vietnamese. His primary duty involved collaborating with intelligence agencies to develop and analyze intelligence reports, through which he got hints of the Tet Offensive.

Keywords: 1st Cavalry Division; PFC; Private First Class; Provincial Reconnaissance Unit; Quang Tri; Quảng Trị; Tet Offensive; Vietnamese language; Phoenix Program

00:47:20 - Time in Vietnam—Experience of the Tet Offensive

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Partial Transcript: So I had never been—I’d never been under fire or been shot at or anything like that

Segment Synopsis: Luitwieler recalls experiencing his first encounter with combat during the Tet Offensive, when his compound was attacked on the night of the New Year’s celebration. He talks about the timely intervention of the 1st Cavalry Division as well as his taking over of a machine gun nest to defend his position, for which he later received a Vietnamese award of valor (Vietnam Cross of Gallantry). Amidst the attack, Luitwieler recorded a message to his wife, capturing the conflict's reality.

Keywords: Military combat; Tet Offensive; Vietnam Cross of Gallantry; 1st Cavalry Division

00:51:52 - Time in Vietnam—Changes after Tet Offensive

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Partial Transcript: Yeah, no problem. Okay, so the Tet Offensive has started. Does—does the—this attack—does that sort of signal, like, a shift in day-to-day—day-to-day life—

Segment Synopsis: Luitwieler reflects on the shift in day-to-day life on his base after Tet Offensive. The Phoenix Program was strengthened, focusing on patrols into villages to identify and capture North Vietnamese and Viet Cong. Luitwieler was involved extensively in the program until his departure in 1968.

Keywords: 1st Calvary Division; Phoenix Program; Tet Offensive; Viet Cong

00:55:30 - Time in Vietnam—Breaks, friendships, and memories

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Partial Transcript: And while you were in Vietnam, did you ever get to leave? I know sometimes—sometimes soldiers would get, like, a week to see family or to travel.

Segment Synopsis: Luitwieler recalls taking a brief break from Vietnam through a rest and recuperation (R&R) trip to Honolulu, where he reunited with his wife. He also reflects on the friendships he made in Vietnam with Vietnamese, veterans, and officials, notably Major John Shalikashvili. He also recalls memories of bomb explosions and attacks, highlighting the unpredictable and perilous nature of war zones in Vietnam.

Keywords: Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; Honolulu, HI; Hue; Hué; John Shalikashvili; Quang Tri; Quảng Trị; Rest & Recuperation; Tet Offensive; U-2 Dragon Lady; Viet Cong; R&R

01:01:41 - Decision to leave Vietnam and returning to the US

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Partial Transcript: Well, so, then, let’s talk about the end of your tour. You—you did not opt for the—the second year; you just did the 365 days?

Segment Synopsis: Luitwieler recalls declining a second-year civilian position in Vietnam and opting to return to the US. Upon returning, he worked in artillery intelligence operations and security clearances at Fort Devens, Massachusetts. He later concluded his service in May 1969 and returned to work with Gulf Oil in Pittsburgh, PA.

Keywords: CIA; Central Intelligence Agency; Gulf Oil; OCS; Officer Candidate School; Pittsburgh, PA; Fort Devens, MA

01:07:52 - Life after service

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Partial Transcript: Okay. And I know you said you—you know, you wrote letters to the general, and you were in contact with some people

Segment Synopsis: Luitwieler recalls not engaging with veteran groups or related activities for 50 years after his service. However, he then began significant volunteer work, including contributing to a chapter for his Dartmouth class's book on Vietnam and being a leader in a mentor system designed to help veterans navigate the court system. Despite initially facing backlash for serving in Vietnam, he gave many talks about non-military life in Vietnam. At the end, he talks about his children.

Keywords: Class of 1964; Dartmouth College; Veterans; London, UK