Grandpa Ned In Panama

Book Report by Ned Jukic II
Title: Nedโ€™s Trees: A Helicopter War in Panama


I wrote this report to make sense of a story my father, Ned, never told straight. Like a lot of veterans, he didnโ€™t sit you down and give you the clean version. You got fragmentsโ€”half a sentence over coffee, a shrug when the news mentioned Manuel Noriega, and sometimes a dark laugh when someone brought up United States invasion of Panamaโ€”also known as Operation Just Cause.

The book, if you can call it that, is pieced together from those fragments. Itโ€™s about a mission that sounds simple on paper: fly into dense jungle, cut down trees, and clear makeshift helicopter landing zones so U.S. forces could move fast and hit strategic targets. But nothing about it was simple.


Setting and Context

The story takes place in Panama, December 1989. The U.S. military is trying to remove Noriega from power. The terrain is thick, wet jungleโ€”alive in a way that feels hostile. Visibility is low, the ground is uneven, and everything seems to resist being cleared.

My fatherโ€™s unit had a specific role: open the jungle from above.

They werenโ€™t frontline infantry kicking in doorsโ€”they were the ones making it possible for those guys to even get there.


The Mission: โ€œTree Fallingโ€

Ned called it โ€œtree falling,โ€ like it was some kind of logging job. It wasnโ€™t.

From helicopters, theyโ€™d mark and cut landing zones under pressure. Chainsaws, explosives, brute forceโ€”whatever worked. The jungle didnโ€™t cooperate. Trees didnโ€™t fall clean. Sometimes they snapped back, sometimes they crushed equipment, sometimes they trapped men.

And all the while, there was the possibility of enemy fire. Youโ€™re hovering, loud, exposed, working against nature and time.

The goal was speed. Clear, land, deploy, move.

He told me once: โ€œYou donโ€™t think about the big picture. You think about the next tree.โ€


Tone and Reality

What stands out in the story is how little glory there is.

No speeches. No dramatic hero moments. Just sweat, noise, fear, and repetition.

Itโ€™s not about defeating Noriega directlyโ€”itโ€™s about enabling the machine that would. My father and his crew were like invisible hands shaping the battlefield.


The Letter

Near the end of the mission, after days of work, exhaustion, and chaos, thereโ€™s a moment that feels almost surreal.

A letter arrivesโ€”official, stamped, important.

Signed by Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush.

A thank-you. Recognition. Words about duty, honor, and freedom.

Ned reads it in the helicopter.

He doesnโ€™t say anything.

He just crumples it upโ€ฆ and throws it out the open door into the jungle below.

That moment says more about the war than anything else in the story.


Jesse Ventura and the SEALs

In the version of the story that gets told among the guys, thereโ€™s an odd epilogue. Jesse Ventura and a group of SEALs supposedly look over some of the material floating around in the background of the conflictโ€”including references to The Protocols of Zion.

Now, itโ€™s important to be clear: that text is widely known as a fabricated and discredited document used historically for propaganda and conspiracy narratives. In the story, its appearance reflects the kind of strange, chaotic mix of rumor, paranoia, and misinformation that often surrounds warโ€”not truth.

Ventura and the SEALs, in my telling, donโ€™t โ€œendorseโ€ anything ideologicalโ€”they just nod at the reality that war zones are full of noise, half-truths, and things that donโ€™t add up. Their โ€œapprovalโ€ is more like: yeah, this is how messy it gets.


Themes

1. The Invisible Work of War
Not everyone is kicking down doors. Some are cutting trees so others can.

2. Disillusionment
The letter scene shows the gap between official narratives and lived experience.

3. Chaos vs. Control
Even a massive military operation depends on small, unpredictable actionsโ€”like whether a tree falls the right way.

4. Truth and Noise
War breeds stories, myths, and confusion. Not everything you hear means what people think it does.


Final Thoughts

This isnโ€™t a heroic war story. Itโ€™s a grounded one.

My father didnโ€™t see himself as a hero. He saw himself as a guy doing a job in a place where the jungle fought back harder than any ideology.

And in the end, that crumpled letter falling into the green below might be the most honest symbol of the whole mission.

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