Walter Kurtz was a career officer in the United States Army; he was a third-generation
West Point graduate who had risen through the ranks and was seen to be destined for a top post within
the Pentagon. A dossier read by the narrator, Captain
Willard, implies that Kurtz saw action in the
Korean War after receiving a
master's degree in
history from
Harvard University. He later graduated from the
US Army Airborne School. In 1964, the
Joint Chiefs of Staff sent Kurtz to
Vietnam to compile a report on the failings of the current military policies. His overtly critical report, dated March 3, 1964, was not what was expected and was immediately restricted for the Joint Chiefs and President
Lyndon B. Johnson only. On May 11, August 28, and September 23, 1964, 38-year-old Kurtz applied for
Special Forces, which was denied out of hand because his age was too advanced for Special Forces training. Kurtz continued with his ambition and even threatened to quit the armed forces, when finally his wish was granted and he was allowed to take the airborne course. Kurtz graduated in a class where he was nearly twice the age of the other trainees and was accepted into the Special Forces Training, and eventually into the
5th Special Forces Group. Kurtz returned to Vietnam in 1966 with the
Green Berets and was part of the
hearts and minds campaign, which also included
fortifying hamlets. On his next tour, Kurtz was assigned to
Project GAMMA, in which he was to raise an army of
Montagnards in and around the Vietnamese–Cambodian border to strike at the
Viet Cong (VC) and
North Vietnamese Army (NVA). Kurtz located his army, including their wives and children, at a remote abandoned Cambodian temple which Kurtz's team fortified. From their base, Kurtz led attacks on the local VC and the regular NVA in the region. Kurtz employed barbaric methods not only to defeat his enemy but also to send fear. At first
Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (MACV) did not object to Kurtz's tactics, especially as they proved successful. This soon changed when Kurtz allowed photographs of his atrocities to be released to the world. In late 1967, after Kurtz failed to respond to MACV's repeated orders to return to
Da Nang and resign his command after he ordered the
summary execution of four South Vietnamese intelligence agents whom he suspected of being double agents for the Viet Cong, the MACV sent a Green Beret Captain named Richard Colby to bring Kurtz back from Cambodia. Instead Colby gave up everything and joined Kurtz's force. With Colby's failure, MACV then selected Captain Benjamin L. Willard, a
paratrooper and
Army intelligence officer, to journey up the Nung river and kill Kurtz. Willard succeeded in his mission only because Kurtz, himself broken mentally by the savage war he had waged, wanted Willard to kill him and release him from his own suffering. Kurtz also murdered Jay "Chef" Hicks by severing his head. Before Willard killed him, Kurtz asked Willard to find Kurtz's wife and son, and explain truthfully to them what he had done in the war. == Personality ==