From A Michigan Farm To Vietnam Supply Lines (Robert Tvorik)
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The Vietnam War wasn’t just fought with rifles. It was fought with fuel, paperwork, convoys, and the kind of responsibility that can follow you for years. We sit down with Robert “Bob” Tvorik, a United States Army officer who went from a tough, introverted upbringing to leading soldiers in a petroleum supply unit supporting major operations in Vietnam. His memories are vivid, practical, and unexpectedly personal.
Bob walks us through growing up in Cleveland, moving at 12 to a farm near Wademan, Michigan, and finding his footing in school after years of low confidence. That early struggle becomes part of the leadership story, especially once ROTC and college jobs push him toward a commission. When he arrives in Vietnam, he learns fast that military logistics can be a life-or-death system: hauling diesel and JP-4, flushing trailers, running convoys, and trying to follow regulations in a war zone.
Then everything turns on one incident a fuel disposal ignites, a 5,000-gallon trailer is destroyed, and Bob faces the terrifying possibility of being held financially responsible. From there we talk about what it feels like to come home to protests, how he answers the question “were you scared,” and the mentors who taught him a simple standard that still holds up: do your job the best you can. We also follow his post-service journey into staffing and banking, including the pressure and moral pain of trying not to fail the people you love.
If this conversation changes how you think about Vietnam veterans, military leadership, or what “support” really means, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.
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