The Ballad of the Green Berets

The Ballad of the Green Berets

NHL Quiz: 13 players have scored more than 600 goals. How

many can you name? Answer below.

Staff Sergeant Barry Sadler

In honor of the tremendous job U.S. Special Forces are doing

over in Afghanistan, I thought I”d reprise a little piece I did

almost 3 years ago in this space, the story of Staff Sergeant Barry

Sadler and his hit single, “The Ballad of the Green Berets.”

Born in 1940, Sadler became a member of the Special Ops,

earning his Green Beret and serving mainly as a medic in

Vietnam. It was while he was recuperating from a leg wound

that he began writing the song that would make him famous.

Sadler had been inspired by a hit book by Robin Moore titled

“The Green Berets.” Moore actually wrote most of the lyrics,

with Sadler handling the music. And then in the spring of 1966,

the “Ballad of the Green Berets” rocketed up the billboard pop

chart, hitting #1 on March 5 and staying at the top for five weeks.

[The LP of the same title also went to #1.]

Sadler then largely disappeared until December 1978, when he

was involved in a shooting in Nashville that left a local

songwriter, Lee Bellamy, dead. The incident evidently occurred

over a woman, but Sadler was not charged. Then in 1981, he

was involved in another shooting (this time non-fatal) and in

justifying his plea of innocence he explained, “I”m a Green

Beret. If I”d shot him, he”d be dead.”

Unfortunately, in 1988 Sadler was shot in the head during a

robbery attempt while he was entering a cab in Guatemala. What

he was doing there is a mystery. Sadler said he was training

Contras, a story others have disputed. Anyway, he suffered some

brain damage and died a year later of heart failure in Tennessee.

Aside from his big moment in the music biz, Sadler also was a

highly successful author, penning some 22 novels based on a

mercenary figure. A large portion of his earnings went to a trust

fund he established for Vietnamese orphans.

And now I have an idea for those of you in sales, in particular.

Get your marketing or sales desk together and sing the following

as you start each week. I guarantee it will put you in such a great

frame of mind you”re bound to set all kinds of records.

The Ballad of the Green Berets

Fighting soldiers from the sky

Fearless men who jump and die

Men who mean just what they say

The brave men of the Green Beret

Chorus:

Silver wings upon their chest

These are men, America”s best

One hundred men will test today

But only three win the Green Beret

Trained to live off nature”s land

Trained in combat, hand-to-hand

Men who fight by night and day

Courage peak from the Green Berets

Chorus:

Silver wings upon their chest

These are men, America”s best

One hundred men will test today

But only three win the Green Beret

Back at home a young wife waits

Her Green Beret has met his fate

He has died for those oppressed

Leaving her his last request

“Put silver wings on my son”s chest

Make him one of America”s best

He”ll be a man they”ll test one day

Have him win the Green Beret”

Black Hawk Down

For those of you who might be going to see the flick “Black

Hawk Down” (which doesn”t have wide distribution until

Jan. 18), perhaps some of the following will help in fully

understanding the movie, though one hopes it”s explained pretty

well before the action starts.

Somalia Timeline

–January 1991: Dictator Siad Barre is forced out of Mogadishu.

General Aidid and his Somali National Movement (SNM) then

battle with other clans for power, which leads to famine and

lawlessness throughout much of the country. An estimated

300,000 die of starvation during the year of civil war that

followed Barre”s ouster.

–March 1992: The warlords sign a ceasefire agreement, which

includes provisions for a UN monitoring mission so

humanitarian assistance can be distributed.

–July 1992: 50 unarmed UN military observers are deployed to

Mogadishu to monitor the ceasefire. On August 15, UNOSOM I

begins (the UN Operation in Somalia for humanitarian relief).

But the mission gets quickly bogged down as relief supplies are

looted, food convoys hijacked and aid workers assaulted. The

UN appeals for military force.

–December 1992: With only weeks left in his term, President

George Bush proposes that US combat troops lead an

international UN force to secure the environment for relief

operations. On December 9, the first of 25,000 US troops land in

Somalia. Bush assures the American people the forces are there

to help starving Somalis and that they are supposed to be home

before Bill Clinton”s inaugural. The US-led United Task Force

is dubbed “Operation Restore Hope” (UNITAF).

–January 1993: Clinton takes over and, with US troops still in

Somalia, is anxious to bring them home. In March, the UN

authorizes UNOSOM II, an operation with expanded

enforcement power, with the mandate to disarm the Somali

people. The UN mission was to take over from UNITAF. The

UN is now involved in “nation building,” to restore order in

Somalia and establish a process for putting a new government in

place. By June, Clinton has reduced the US combat force to

1,200 with 3,000 support troops.

–June 5, 1993: 24 Pakistani soldiers are ambushed and

massacred during an inspection of a Somali weapons storage site.

The UN Security Council calls for the apprehension of those

responsible. General Aidid is implicated and is now sought. A

reward is offered for information leading to his arrest.

–June 12-16: US and UN troops begin attacking various targets

in Mogadishu associated with Aidid. The peacekeepers are now

at war with his forces.

–July 12: US forces attack a gathering of clan leaders, killing a

few. Four western journalists who had gone to investigate are

beaten to death by a mob.

–August 8: Four US military police are killed by a remote

detonated land mine set off by Somalis. Two weeks later, six

more US soldiers are wounded in a similar attack. Now the

American people are beginning to take notice and Task Force

Ranger is deployed.

–August 26: US Special Forces arrive – 440 elite Delta Force

and Rangers. Major General William Garrison commands the

mission to capture Aidid.

–September: The Clinton administration opens a secret initiative

to negotiate with Aidid, headed by former peanut farmer and

president, Jimmy Carter. But US military commanders in

Mogadishu are not informed of the initiative. Then, that same

month, US Defense Secretary Les Aspin denies requests from

commanders for armored reinforcements, despite support from

General Colin Powell (then chairman of the Joint Chiefs). Aspin

doesn”t want to create the appearance that the US was increasing

forces at a time when they were trying to reduce military

expenditures. In other words, he was a freakin” classic

bureaucrat. Aspin later conceded, “Had I known at the time what

knew after the events of Sunday (October 3), I would have made

a very different decision.” In December he is forced to resign.

–October 3-4: Task Force Ranger assaults the Olympic Hotel in

Mogadishu, in search for Aidid. All hell breaks loose in a

seventeen-hour battle, with 18 US soldiers losing their lives.

[Hundreds of Somali rebels are killed.] Clinton decides to cut

and run and the search for Aidid is abandoned. General Garrison

accepts responsibility for what happened. By March 1994, all

US forces are out. General Aidid dies on August 1, 1995 from

injuries received during an outbreak of fighting in Mogadishu.

[Source: PBS” “Frontline”]

The Fantasticks

The musical, that is. The Fantasticks is staging its final

performance on January 13, after 42 years and over 17,000

performances, due to dwindling sales and rising costs.

Long ago the show became the longest running musical in

history, playing at the 150-seat Sullivan Street Playhouse in

Greenwich Village, but investors never earned more than

$51,000 in a single year.

In reading a piece for Crain”s New York, I just wanted to share a

few tidbits which shed light on just how difficult it is to make

money in this business. Just one out of ten shows ever recoup

their investment and, in the case of the Fantasticks, most of the

money that was earned was from record sales and royalty-paying

productions in the U.S. and abroad.

Initially, 44 backers put in a total of $16,500, with producer Lore

Noto (now 78), selling shares for as little as $5 just to get it off

the ground. Today, weekly costs had escalated to $20,000

(including for rent, salaries, benefits and insurance).

[Overall, Broadway is really suffering, post-9/11.]

Stuff

–Oops, the StocksandNews jinx once again took hold, as the

very Butler basketball team I just praised lost to Wright State!

Geezuz, how can that happen? [I have a good friend who has

threatened to kill me if I mention the Steelers the rest of this

season.hold on.the office doorbell is ringing.]

Top 3 songs for the week of 1/2/71: #1 “My Sweet Lord”

(George Harrison) #2 “One Less Bell To Answer” (The 5th

Dimension) #3 “Knock Three Times” (Dawn)

NHL Quiz Answers: All-time goal scorers (thru Jan. 2).

Wayne Gretzky (894) Gordie Howe (801) Marcel Dionne (731)

Phil Esposito (717) Mike Gartner (708) Brett Hull (661) Mark

Messier (658) Steve Yzerman (656) Mario Lemieux (649) Bobby

Hull (610) Luc Robitaille (609) Dino Ciccarelli (608) Jari Kurri

(601).

Next Bar Chat, Monday. Snow tales…and the beaver.