Close calls - Part 2 of 2
Heroes Remember
Transcript
Another time I got a bit, a bit close to action is, once again,
I was on patrol and responding to whatever, then we got a call
from, another UN, UNMO, who was coming back from the Hisbala
side, he was trying to get back into the Israeli side and he was
coming in on the road with a bit of a low ground as a bridge.
And he was being fired upon by the South Lebanese Army from a
tank, was firing machine gun fire at him. He said, "Somebody's
gotta come here to get me out of this mess." So I was not too
far away, so I drove down there and got in and I noticed where
he was and I noticed there was two tanks firing at him. So I
went to one of the tank, got on the turret and bang until the
door, the turret, the (inaudible) put his head out. I said,
"Stop your shooting," in French actually because these guys were
Lebanese, so I figured, "Might as well use their language." And
I said, "It's my friend out there trying to get back across." He
said, "No, it isn't we got a report that a jeep was stolen and,"
which happened quite often, actually, we did get jeeps and
vehicles stolen. Didn't happen to me personally, but it
happened to some other people. So anyway I said, "No, no, this,
I know this guy. I know his voice. I know exactly who he is."
So we discussed about five minutes or so. I said, "Tell you
I'll do. I'm gonna walk over there myself right now, I'll open
the gate, I'll go check him out first, I'll open the gate and
I'll walk him through. As long as you don't shoot at me, I'll
go there and do it." And he said, "If you're wrong, we're gonna
shoot. We're gonna kill these guys." I said, "I'm not wrong."
Anyway, I went out there. It was this guy, he was from Ireland,
actually, an Irish guy that, one of my close comrades in there.
So I knew his, his accent. I knew exactly who he was so, so,
and I could recognize his face from a distance as well, very
easy to recognize. So anyway I got him across and he owed me a
few drinks that night, I tell you, which was good to know.
Yeah, and, we'd been in a lot of hot spots.
Another occasion where I thought I did pretty good in that I
saved, I'm sure I saved a lot of people's life. I was out with
a, a captain of the French Foreign Legion, attached to the
French component of UNSO and our job was to get on top of this
hill which overlooked two different villages in South Lebanon,
and to take a position of observation, to basically observe
whatever could be happening. Somehow the UN had been switching
information that the Israelis were going to do a, what we called
a cleaning operation. Basically to take over the villages and
take all the males away for interrogation. So our job was to
go in there and simply observe, nothing else but that.
So we got in position about oh, six o'clock in the morning, what
have you. And of course since, you know, the chap was French,
we brought a few bottles of wine with us and couple of
baguettes, a bit of pâté and we decided, "Now we'll make a bit
of a party out of it and make it look like we're enjoying
ourselves." Which we did to a certain point until this
undercover unit came by with two white Mercedes and started
shooting at us. Now they weren't shooting at us to kill us,
they were shooting around us to scare us away. So anyway, I
finished my glass of wine and I said to this other chap I said,
"You want to go there talk to them or should I go talk to them?"
He said, "Well, you're in charge." I said,
"Okay, my job I guess."
So out I went and I remember taking my pipe out of my pocket.
Light up my pipe as I'm going through the field, bullets flying
by about twenty feet away from me. Now they weren't trying to
hit me because I know they would have hit me. They was trying
to scare the hell out of me. So I got to there and I started
giving them shit, you know, and I, I went on the aggressive
position right off the bat. "What are you guys doing here?
What are you shooting at me for?" And then they went on
explaining they couldn't, they couldn't recognize the jeep. I
said, "You guys gotta be either colour blind or you're stupid.
Jeep is white, totally white, UN on it, there's a big blue flag.
You can't miss that. You gotta be colour blind. You gotta be
something." And I said, "Anyway, your bluff doesn't work with
us. We're here, we're gonna stay here all day long." And then
we got discussing so anyway, we agreed to move the jeep a
hundred feet, closer to the road. So that took about an hour of
discussion, what have you. So we finally moved the jeep and we
stayed there. These guys disappeared and nobody else showed up.
So the operation, the cleaning operation obviously was
cancelled for that day and we never heard about any other
operation against these two villages after that so. So that
worked out. So I figured maybe probably saved
a couple of people's life there that day.
Description
Mr. Grossinger describes some ‘close calls’ he experienced during his experiences in Lebanon.
Red Grossinger
Red Grossinger was born in 1940 and lived most his life in Quebec. As eldest of 13 children, he felt a responsibility to find a job and help support the family. In 1957 he joined the local militia to help the family income. He then joined the Regular Forces in 1959 and completed tours in Egypt, Syria, Lebanon and Cyprus where he had some very close calls.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 05:41
- Person Interviewed:
- Red Grossinger
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Canadian Armed Forces
- Location/Theatre:
- Lebanon
- Branch:
- Army
- Units/Ship:
- 12th Armed Regiment
- Rank:
- Major
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