Combat Story (Ep 8): Hubert Yoshida Marine Corps Officer | Vietnam Veteran | Operation Utah

About This Episode
Join our weekly Combat Check-In Newsletter (www.combatstory.com/newsletter) to get a short email from Ryan for people who love and support our veterans, service members, and their families. It has info on a significant event in military and/or intel history, a funny military joke, an update on a current event I'm following, something I'm doing that week in my life, a book I'm reading, a look at an upcoming interview, a reflection on a past episode and more
Hubert Yoshida is a Vietnam Veteran who served as a U.S. Marine Corps Platoon Commander from 1965-1966 near Chu Lai in the central part of Vietnam with 2nd Battalion, 7th Marines.
He and his platoon fought in the bloody Operation Utah, a significant battle from March 4-7, 1966, which saw over 700 KIA between the North and South Vietnamese forces and Marines. Hubert has a fascinating story that begins as a child in a Japanese prison camp in the U.S., to leading Marines on the front lines, and then transitioning to an exceptionally successful career in senior executive roles in the private sector.
Today, he’s writing a book about Operation Utah to tell the story of the hundreds of Marines who fought there and is looking for anyone who may have served in that battle.
Operation Utah
Chapters
- 0:00Intro.
- 2:20Growing up in a prison camp for US citizens of Japanese ancestry.
- 7:17Family history in both the Japanese and US military.
- 8:41Had to enlist to serve in Vietnam to then earn a commission.
- 9:15Gets put in a data processing unit.
- 10:56Parents were disappointed he joined the Marine Corps after a degree in physics and math from Berkely and not going to grad school.
- 15:17First sighting in Vietnam was an Army Sergeant in underwear drinking a beer on the beach.
- 18:06Gets permission from the CO to go on a mission to a nearby village in first contact.
- 18:34The unit is ambushed on their first mission.
- 33:17Lead up to Operation Utah. Intel on the 21st NVA Regiment moving into Chu Lai.
- 36:17Initial flights into the battle were shot down, including an A-4 Skyhawk and H-34 by fifty caliber machine guns.
- 39:26Call from Battalion Commander to support another company to close a gap in the flank and recover a separated platoon.
- 41:14A suicide mission.
- 49:57Guilt in leaving the dead behind to make sure the wounded were carried out.
- 50:55Secures perimeter one of his men gets killed they call in air strikes.
- 58:23Recognizing the importance of the battle in your life and something you think about almost every night.
- 58:59The story of believing he lost a radio man haunts him to this day and only later found out the radio man lived through the event.
- 1:05:41Returning home from Vietnam and assigned to Camp Pendleton.
- 1:06:19Having to notify a young widow of her husband’s passing in Vietnam.
- 1:07:52Leaves the Marine Corps after the death notification and joins IBM.
- 1:08:45Returning to Vietnam in 2016 to revisit his steps.
- 1:15:34Never provided direction to children in terms of joining the military.
- 1:17:45Would have done it again.
- 1:18:21Really proud to have been in the Marine Corps.
- 1:20:33Carrying a pocket bible through the deployment (one in English, one in Korean).


