https://youtu.be/sVrWzn_jb84?si=BoGKfU6KCC5ys67y
The most terrifying man of the Vietnam War. Vietnam, late 1960s. Hostile North Vietnamese troops pin down a combat force composed of elite American operators from MACV-SOG. They have the numbers and the advantage. However, the Americans and their loyal indigenous Montagnards refuse to back down. Sergeant Jerry Michael Shriver, also known as Mad Dog, runs from cover to cover, attacking the enemy with his unconventional arsenal of multiple pistols, revolvers, and a deadly sawed-off shotgun. Some men are wounded and are slowly hoisted through the dense jungle canopy to a helicopter. The enemy advances, but Mad Dog does not retreat. He retaliates with all the ammunition at his disposal. His friends are lifted one by one until Mad Dog is alone. He calls for close air support several times. Enemy fire intensified to the point where Sergeant Shriver was radioed to offer assistance with a new unit of ground troops. He rejected the offers, responding, "No, no... I have them exactly where I want them: surrounded from the inside."
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