“Charlie’s Around Here Somewhere”
22 MAY 1966
“CHARLIE’s AROUND HERE SOMEWHERE”
The Rung Sat is a 400-square mile mangrove swamp between Saigon and the Vietnamese coastline. Four major rivers course through the otherwise impassable area, including the Long Tau shipping channel leading to Saigon. The swamp was home to no one before the Vietnam war. However, refugees took up residence during the 1960s on house boats or stilted huts. The Viet Cong also frequented the area earning it the reputation as the “forest of assassins.” Here they set shore-detonated mines and ambushed shipping traffic with recoilless rifles and rocket launchers. So much activity plagued the area that the US Army launched Operation “Lexington” between 21 May and 9 June 1966. In conjunction, our Navy launched Operation “Jackstay” to stop enemy riverine activity.
On the sinuous Song Dinh Ba River, LT Alex Balian watched the shore closely this day from PCF-41 as dusk approached. The “old man” of the crew, BM2 Raleigh Godley, with his forty-ish years of experience, steadied the helm. Above the pilothouse EN3 Charles Barham scanned the shore with binoculars beside twin .50 caliber machine guns. It was a hot and muggy evening.
Using a common nickname for the VC, the LT warned, “Charlie’s around here somewhere,” just as a 57mm recoilless rifle round struck the fast patrol craft and the world exploded for RM2 Robert L. Keim. The Radioman staggered to the pilothouse from the edge of the gunboat to which he had been blown. The instrument panel and BM2 Godley at the wheel were gone. Out of control, PCF gathered speed as Godley may have shoved the throttle forward in a dying effort to save PCF-41. Balian reached the aft steering station as SN Ralph Powers and GMG3 Glenn Greene readied the 81mm mortar. Then the patrol boat suddenly lurched and ran fast aground beneath the overhanging jungle canopy. As everyone regained their feet Balian called, “We can hold them off until one of the other boats comes up here.” But there was no help coming. The thick jungle and sharp turns of the river shielded the sound of the attack from others.
When the Viet Cong reached PCF-41 the crew was ready. Bullets and shells whizzed, and after emptying the ammo locker, Balian ordered everyone into the water. The remaining crew piled into a life raft; the tide and current were in their favor. Crocodiles, snakes, and voices of enemy guerrillas now kept their attention as they drifted. To avoid detection the men slid into the water, holding onto the raft and enduring the stinging of jellyfish. When they heard an engine in the distance Balian lifted his rifle into the air. The radar shadow was sighted by a nearby PCF and the crew was rescued.
Watch for more “Today in Naval History” 27 MAY 25
CAPT James Bloom, Ret.
Calaunan, Jun. “A Navy Jury Friday Convicted Capt. Alexander Balian.” UPI Archives, 24 February 1989. AT: https://www.upi.com/Archives/1989/02/24/A-Navy-jury-Friday-convicted-Capt-Alexander-Balian-of/9782604299600/, retrieved 3 May 2025.
Schreadley, Richard L. From the Rivers to the Sea: The U.S. Navy in Vietnam. Annapolis, MD: USNI Press, 1992, pp. 279.
“22 May 1966 Sinking of PCF-41.” Swiftboats website. AT: http://swiftboats.net/stories/pcf41.htm. Retrieved 15 April 2014.
ADDITIONAL NOTES: LT Balian was awarded the Silver Star for his actions in combating the VC and in saving his crew. He remained in the Navy, eventually rising to the rank of CAPT. However, his career was dealt a fatal blow when he was convicted of dereliction of duty at a court martial in February 1989. In command of USS DUBUQUE (LPD-8) in June of the previous year, en route to the Persian Gulf, Balian had failed to rescue Vietnamese refugees adrift in the South China Sea in an unseaworthy boat. Twenty-eight refugees had already died prior to DUBUQUE’s encounter, and though Balian passed a week’s worth of food and water to the refugees, 30 more succumbed before the boat drifted 300 additional miles to the Philippines. The 52 refugees who survived did so by resorting to cannibalism.
Godley’s body was ultimately recovered. He is remembered today on the wall of the Vietnam Memorial on the Mall in Washington, DC.

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