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Firebase Coral, May 1968. American soldiers spent 90 minutes digging foxholes for protection. Australian troops 50 meters away hung hammocks above ground. When the NVA attacked at 2:43 AM, the Americans suffered 143 casualties. The Australians? Zero. For years, US forces mocked the Australian practice of sleeping in hammocks instead of foxholes. It seemed to violate every principle of modern warfare. But in Vietnam's jungles, the Australians had discovered something the American military refused to believe: the safest place to sleep wasn't below ground—it was above it. This is the story of how Australian forces achieved 12:1 kill ratios using tactics American commanders called "suicidal." It's about hammocks versus foxholes, mobility versus protection, and why being unpredictable saved more lives than any amount of sandbags and digging. Chapters: 0:00 - Firebase Coral: The Night That Changed Everything 4:32 - Why Americans Dug Holes (And Why It Made Sense) 9:15 - The Australian Method: Hammocks in Combat Zones 14:47 - The Turning Point: When Foxholes Became Death Traps 24:18 - How the NVA Exploited American Predictability 32:56 - Australian SAS: 12:1 Kill Ratio Using "Reckless" Tactics 41:23 - The Battle of Long Tan: 108 vs 2,500 48:09 - Why the US Army Never Changed Doctrine 55:34 - The Medical Evidence: Why Australians Stayed Healthier 61:42 - Legacy: Modern Special Forces Use Hammocks Today #VietnamWar #MilitaryHistory #AustralianSAS #Tactics #VietnamVeterans #MilitaryTactics #WarStories #CombatHistory #SpecialForces #JungleWarfare