Tonkin Gulf Yacht Club Patch
Declassified in 2005, the Gulf of Tonkin incident lives on in infamy. The official story was - to be blunt, crap. The truth is that the United States Navy was NOT attacked on August 4th 1964. The lie was perpetuated to the public, and for years - the US official story was that the United States invaded Vietnam in defence.
To pay homage to such an insane story and part of history, we've reproduced a wartime design seen on the rear of a Navy deck jacket worn by a serviceman in the Gulf during the Vietnam War.
This patch is 3" tall and 2" wide. It has a velcro backing, so you can attach it to your velcro tabs or patch panels with ease!
Declassified in 2005, the Gulf of Tonkin incident lives on in infamy. The official story was - to be blunt, crap. The truth is that the United States Navy was NOT attacked on August 4th 1964. The lie was perpetuated to the public, and for years - the US official story was that the United States invaded Vietnam in defence.
To pay homage to such an insane story and part of history, we've reproduced a wartime design seen on the rear of a Navy deck jacket worn by a serviceman in the Gulf during the Vietnam War.
This patch is 3" tall and 2" wide. It has a velcro backing, so you can attach it to your velcro tabs or patch panels with ease!
Declassified in 2005, the Gulf of Tonkin incident lives on in infamy. The official story was - to be blunt, crap. The truth is that the United States Navy was NOT attacked on August 4th 1964. The lie was perpetuated to the public, and for years - the US official story was that the United States invaded Vietnam in defence.
To pay homage to such an insane story and part of history, we've reproduced a wartime design seen on the rear of a Navy deck jacket worn by a serviceman in the Gulf during the Vietnam War.
This patch is 3" tall and 2" wide. It has a velcro backing, so you can attach it to your velcro tabs or patch panels with ease!