
Author's Blurb
In 1966, Steve
Gower, a young gunner captain in the 101st
Field Battery, was sent to Vietnam. He would
serve in what is arguably Australia’s most
controversial war in the dangerous role of
forward observer with the 5th and 6th
battalions of the Royal Australian Regiment.
The definition of his role stated simply
that he was to provide ‘timely, accurate and
effective fire support’, his task to guide
the guns of the Australian artillery, sited
many kilometres away, in providing deadly
firepower to support the soldiers who
battled both the jungle and its shadowy
inhabitants. Gower would learn quickly that
the definition omitted to mention the terror
and nerve-jangling tension of jungle warfare
he was to experience as a forward observer.
In Rounds
Complete, Gower describes living the life of
an infantry soldier, tramping the ground and
joining his infantry mates in a variety of
operations including search and destroy,
cordon and search, heliborne and
road-protection operations and company
patrols from forward operating bases. He
describes the inevitable boredom and
monotony of the routine, contrasting this
with the heightened senses of the men as
they prepared to move forward with the
‘safety catch off’, the nervous anticipation
of what might lie ahead, the exhilaration
and, above all, the camaraderie. Gower is
positive about his time in Vietnam and,
perhaps surprisingly for one who saw action
in this contentious war, is supportive of
Australias commitment, referring to the
conflict as the last time the Army was
permitted the ‘unfettered, all-arms
prosecution of a war’.
Rounds Complete is
a frank and compelling tribute to men who
served just as nobly as their AIF
predecessors but, until recent times, were
denied their nation’s gratitude. Their fight
for understanding continues. |