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LINCLOE Pouch Set - VG Modified - USMC Embassy Security Saigon Frequent Wind

$ 21.11

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Theme: Militaria
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Modification Description: One pouch has flaps removed. This was a common field modification.
  • Condition: Used, but still intact. Some fading on the outside but US stamp is still visible. One pouch has been field modified where the retaining flaps were removed along with the snap on the remaining flap; the other pouch is in original condition.
  • Modified Item: Yes

    Description

    US military gear evolved during the Vietnam War due to the harsh jungle conditions troops found themselves fighting through.  Among the major changes were switching to nylon gear, which was stronger and lighter weight while also quicker drying and less likely to rot in the humid jungle than the older canvas gear that had been used up to that point.  The LINCLOE webbing was the second nylon system introduced in Vietnam, replacing the M1967 gear.  The pouches were sized to fit 3 of the then-new 30-round magazine.  It would later evolve into the ubiquitous ALICE load bearing system used in the 80's until the early War on Terror.  The LINCLOE pouches only arrived at the very end of the Vietnam War, long after the last combat troops left, and were used by the Marines guarding the embassy in Saigon in 1975.  You can see them in photos from Operation Frequent Wind, the evacuation of the embasssy when Saigon fell, and the Mayaguez Incident, a hostage rescue mission to recover a merchant ship's crew from the Khmer Rouge.  LINCLOE pouches were exclusively used by the USMC since the Army rejected them due to the flaps that impeded rapid magazine removal.  In practice, the flaps were sometimes removed.
    You will recieve exactly the set of two pouches shown in the pictures.  They are in very good condition for their age and were used, so there is some fading on the outside though the US stamp is still clearly visible.  One of them is in original condition with intact and fully functional flaps and snaps.  The other has been modified where 2/3 flaps have been removed and the snap on the remaining flap is missing.  This was commonly done to increase magazine removal speed.  The stamps inside the pouch lids are mostly unreadable. but they should be dated to 1973 like most other LINCLOE pouches.  This item would be perfect for a Vietnam militaria collection, or for reenactment.  You could even use them to cosplay Russell Adler from the video game Call of Duty Black Ops Cold War (see last picture; several other characters in the game use the same pouches).
    Authentic Vietnam era items like this are not going to get any more common with the Vietnam War more than 50 years behind us.  Buy now to own a piece of history!
    Please see my other listings for more awesome militaria items, including some from the same era that would go perfect with these pouches.  If you buy or win multiple items from me, please message me about combined shipping.