By: John ?Tilt? Stryker Meyers
Target: E-4.
Command and Control: MACV-SOG.
Area of Operations: Laos.
Codename: Prairie Fire
Mission: Primary--General recon.
Secondary--Find major NVA
POW underground complex where U.S. POWs are held.
Complex located near major
intersection of Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos.
Alternate--Cancel mission if
opportunity to capture live NVA soldier arises.
Target Team: Spike Team (ST) Idaho.
Date: 6 October 1968
Launch site: Phu Bai, FOB #1, South Vietnam
Insertion Aircraft: Vietnamese-piloted Sikorsky
H-34 helicopters. Kingbees.
Lead Ship: 10-U.S. team leader, 11-U.S. assistant
team leader and 01-Vietnamese team leader.
Second Ship: 12-3rd American, 02-team interpreter
and 03-point man, Vietnamese team.
Third Ship: Backup.
Assets
on site: two A1E skyraiders, one 0-2 covey, two UH-1B Huey gunships and
Phantom F-4s on call.
However, for several days
prior to 6 October 1968, the weather had been cloudy and uncertain, which
prevented any Forward Operating Base (FOB)-1 teams in Phu Bai from launching
into Laos AO. FOB-1 sat along Highway 1, north of Phu Bai airport, on the
north side of an ARVN training compound, just south of the tiny village of Phu
Luong, about 10 miles south of Hue.
When there were no teams on
the ground, the brass in Saigon got nervous. Hence, in the mornings the first
thing the team leaders did was to check the mountains west of Phu Bai. If
they were clear, the brass would try to get a team or a Hatchet Force inserted
in Prairie Fire.
On Saturday, 5 October 1968,
the weather had broken enough for ST Idaho One Zero (U.S. team leader) Staff
Sergeant Donald W "Don" Wolken to fly over a VR (visual reconnaissance) over
the target area. Wile Wolken was flying, Sau (the Vietnamese team leader) and
I inspected the team.
Sunday morning, the weather
was crystal clear, nary a cloud in the sky. Wolken and Sau quickly inspected
the team: each American carried a minimum of 25 magazines for their CAR-15s,
the Vietnamese carried 20 magazines. Wolken and I both carried sawed-off
M-79s, 21 HE rounds and one tear gas round. Wolken also carried a .22-caliber
semiautomatic pistol with a suppressor. I carried the PRC-25 radio and a
bunch of hand grenades, while Robinson and the Vietnamese carried several
claymore mines and extra batteries for the PRC-25. Sau and all Americans
carried URC-10 emergency radio also.
Shortly before we left, the
team posed for a photograph, over the strong protests of Sau and our
interpreter Hiep. They said we'd jinx the mission.
A few minutes later, we were
on the H-34s flying west on the hour-plus flight to Laos. Those long flights
to the target area were peaceful and memorable because we were flying high,
where the air was cooler, looking at the dark, lush greens of the jungle.
From 4,000 feet, South Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia were beautiful. During
these flights, I often thought about my grandfather's farm in Belle Mead, New
Jersey.
As the H-34s churned westward,
my vision always seemed better, aided by the adrenaline that was flowing,
anticipating the unknown. Once over Laos, the doorgunners test-fired their
.30-caliber machine guns.
Then, the Kingbees went into a
dying swan spiral, spinning madly toward the earth. The G-force pushed my
stomach upward into my chest. At the last second, the pilot flared out and
hovered a few feet off the ground. The right wheel of the Kingbee touched the
bomb crater that was our LZ. While we were descending, Wolken sat in the
door, looking at the LZ itself. I squatted behind him, with my hand on his
left shoulder, watching the perimeter of the LZ for any enemy movement.
Now the blood was pounding
through our veins.
As the Kingbee wheel again
touched the lip of the bomb crater, Wolken jumped out and promptly disappeared
in the elephant grass. I followed. When I landed on the crater, I started
slipping down the outside lip. The angle alongside the hill was much steeper
than I had realized and the ground was muddy and slippery. I started rolling
down the hill, the same way Wolker had. Robinson and the Vietnamese
successfully landed on the crater's lip and laughed at Wolken and me. It took
us several minutes to rejoin the team.
I radioed Sergeant First Class
Robert "Spider" Parks, who was flying overhead in the 0-2 Covey, and told him
that we were OK. Spider said he'd stand by for 10 more minutes before
releasing the assets. Ten minutes later I broke squelch three times for the
final team OK.
As we moved away from the LZ,
Phouc was walking point, with Sau behind him. Wolken was third in line. I
was behind him, Robinson was behind me while Hiep brought up the rear. We
took a break as Phouc, Sau and Wolken applied mud to their bee stings.
About half an hour later,
Phouc signaled that he heard a lot of activity in front of him. Within
seconds we all heard the noise. At first, we thought it was an NVA regiment charging toward us. I got behind a log and pulled a pin from an M26
frag grenade, only to realize that we were being overrun by a chattering group
of monkeys.
After being overrun, we went
into the standard move-10 minutes, wait-10 minutes pace, on the principle that
in the jungle you can learn more from hearing than seeing. Then around noon,
we heard the first shot fired by an enemy tracker. By 1400 hours they sounded
like they had located our trail. By dusk, the trackers had moved through the
thick jungle quicker than we had and were closing in on us. We kept moving
until last light, then we finally set up our RON (Rest [Remain] Over Night)
site. As I moved out to place a claymore mine on our eastern perimeter, the
tracker startled us b(ut) firing one last round, which sounded like he was less
than 10 meters from our southern perimeter.
Because the trackers were so
close, we didn't eat until midnight, after I radioed a team OK to the airborne
command center that flew over Southeast Asia 24 hours a day. Sau and Hiep
went right to sleep. Between 2000 hours and 0200 hours the next morning, I
listened to the tracker skirt our team, ending his travel in front of my
claymore mine.
I wasn;t sure if he had
located it or not, so I detonated it and woke up the team and half the jungle
with the explosive roar. For the rest of the night, there was no more
movement around our perimeter.
At first light, we moved on.
When Spider flew over, I gave him a quick sitrep (situation report). Through
the morning, we heard no more tracker shots or any obvious enemy movement.
The only thing that concerned me was the fact that Sau's eyes began to get
bigger as the day progressed. By that time, he had been running missions for
five years. He could smell the NVA. During one break, he said,
"Beaucoup VC,
beaucoup VC." That scared me, because I hadn't heard or seen anything to
corroborate Sau's intuition.
At noontime, I gave Spider a
team OK, but told him Sau was nervous. Spider reminded me to trust Sau's
instincts and said he'd return at 1600 hours.
By now, Sau and Hiep had
swapped places, with Sau in the rear and me in the number five slot next to
him. Around 1300 hours, I heard Sau hiss like a snake. Across a ravine, on
the hill we had just descended, were two NVA soldiers, armed with AK-47s and
smiles.
Smiles!!
What kind of game was this?!
They didn't raise their weapons or make any hostile moves. They just smiled
at us.
Because they were no more than 45 yards away, I pulled out my sawed-off M79, indicating to Sau I'd like to permanently wipe the smiles off those smirking faces. Sau said, "no, beaucoup VC, di, di! (go, go)."
I told Wolken what happened
and immediately we headed by high ground. Within an hour, we were atop a
knoll big enough to hold ST Idaho. Wolken told me to get the PRC-25 and get
Spider back over us ASAP.
By now, Sau's eyes were bigger
than saucers. I put the long antenna on the PRC-25 and made several calls on
the primary, secondary and alternate frequencies, to no avail. I turned on
the emergency beeper on the URC-10. That distress signal was on a channel
which was supposed to be monitored at all times by all aircraft flying over
the Prairie Fire AO.
No one responded. I opened a
can of apricots and was sipping the sweet nectar when all hell broke loose.
Suddenly, the green jungle
around us erupted with deafening full-automatic blasts from NVA-held AK-47s.
Sau, Phouc, Hiep and Wolken responded instantly.
The crack of AK-47 rounds
never sounded louder or closer. All I could see from our perimeter was the
smoke, the red and orange blasts coming from the darker-than-ever green
jungle, and green AK-47 tracers, which were flying over our heads.
The thunderous fury of dozen
of men blasting away at each other on full automatic, within 10 or less feet
of each other, kills all sounds. Numbs all eardrums.
Then, just as suddenly as the
roar had begun, it stopped.
Everybody ran out of bullets,
except for me, and I emptied my magazine toward the most intense area of enemy
fire.
The only sounds audible
through hurting ears were the metallic clicks of magazines being slammed into
hot rifles and gunbolts sliding shut to resume the apocalyptic death roar.
ST Idaho won the reload race.
Nobody was faster than Sau and Phouc at getting the first magazine out and the
second one in. Within seconds we had gained fire superiority. At that
instant, at the peak of the fire-fight, those brief, tense adrenaline-pumping
seconds made all the other games in life seem like patty-cake. You miss your
man here and you die.
The majority of the enemy
firing was coming at us from the south and west parts of the small knoll.
Wolken and I chucked a couple of M26s down the side of the knoll, in between
blasts of full auto on our CAR-15s.
As soon as we gained complete
fire superiority, I turned on the URC-10 beeper and started screaming into the
PRC-25.
The small knoll saved us. The
jungle was so thick and the knoll so small, only a score of NVA could rush us
at once.
Soon they were stacking bodies
and firing at us from behind their dead comrades. A lot of NVA soldiers died
in those first few minutes of hell on earth.
For more than an hour, my
cries and screams into the radio and URC-10 beeps went unanswered as the NVA
mounted more mass attacks.
But the hill, the jungle and
our CAR-15s worked against them as they continued to pile up or drag away more
bodies. With no help around, conserving ammo while keeping Charlie back
became a top priority.
Waiting several hours for help
in the Prairie Fire AO after making contact with the NVA was not unusual. In
fact, any time a team got help in less than an hour or two, people boasted
about it as though it were a minor miracle because the AO was so far from
Vietnam.
Finally, I heard Spider on the
radio. He said an F-4 Phantom returning from a bombing run in Northern Laos
had heard the beeper and called him.
I told Spider we had a
"Prairie Fire Emergency," which diverted all airborne assets in the AO to our
target, including any F-4s that were heading north. Spider also said he had
called the Judge and the Executioner--an Americal Division gunship team that
was temporarily attached to our operation. Within minutes, Spider was over
our position. He told me to pop smoke, Spider said he saw two yellows, which
meant the NVA were monitoring our frequency.
We changed frequencies and I popped a violet smoke. A few minutes later, the first A1E Skyraider arrived on target and made a gun run on the western perimeter. He made his first napalm run on the south side and said, "Put your heads down. I'm going to make you sweat."
He brought it so close we
could feel the heat from the deadly jell. A few seconds later we smelled
burning flesh. As he dove toward us a third time, the pilot said, in a quite
Southern drawl, "It's crispy critter time."
When the NVA heard the old
World War II plane making another run, they charged us in a desperate attempt
to get close to us in order to avoid the Skyraider's deadly ordnance.
Then we blasted away and
pushed them back down the hill, and the Skyraider pushed them back toward us,
like a death dance. Right then and there I thanked the Lord for Uncle
Sam's
Air Force.
By now, each team member had
developed lanes of fire down the hill. At one point when I was talking to
Spider, I though I saw something moving in my lane of fire. All I could see
was the ass of an NVA soldier crawling up the hill. I told Spider,
"Wait one"
(second). Then the NVA stuck up his head to se where he was, and the last
thing he might have seen was a puff from my CAR-15 as his head exploded like a
coconut.
For the next few hours, Spider
and I worked numerous fast movers and A1Es, hitting the southern and eastern
perimeters hard. The Air Force dumped thousands of mini-gun rounds, 20mm
rounds, several 500-pound bombs, numerous napalm and CBU (Cluster Bomb Unit)
canisters on the dauntless NVA troops. In between gun runs, Wolken and I
would fire our M79s upward, like mortars, thorough one small opening in the
jungle canopy.
About half an hour before
dusk, Spider told us the Kingbees were on their way. And by that time, the
Judge and Executioner had refueled and reloaded and were returning with them.
Ten minutes before the
Kingbees arrived, Spider was like a master conductor, running F-4s and A1Es
around our perimeter.
The Judge and the Executioner
led the Kingbees into and L which was about 10 yards west of our perimeter.
Spider had spotted a little ridge from our knoll to a knoll covered with
elephant grass and small trees. The Kingbee could not land, but Captain Thinh
roared in, chopping the tops off several small tress, and hovered 10 feet off
the ground.
ST Idaho ran to the chopper.
That wasn't as easy as it sounded. It took us 10 minutes to cover those 10
yards.
The ground was wet and muddy.
The elephant grass between 6 and 10 feet tall and thick. Because the grass
was so thick I went first, trying to blaze a trail through it. When I fell,
Wolken ran, literally ran over me, and plowed forward. When he fell, I
returned the favor.
As we moved slowly toward the
chopper, the activity around us heightened to a frenzy. The NVA knew what the
Kingbee was doing. The NVA knew that they knew we were vulnerable. He
directed the Judge and Executioner through gun runs along the eastern
perimeter while the Kingbee hovered on the western edge.
Sau and Hiep covered our
frantic, desperate drive to the chopper. As the Kingbee hovered about 8 feet
above us, Wolken and I threw the other four members into the chopper. At some
point during that craziness, I looked up at Capt. Thinh, and he was sitting
there as cool as a Rocky Mountain breeze, keeping the aging H-34 hovering
while taking numerous hits (the next morning, the maintenance crew counted 48
holes int he ancient ship).
Finally, Wolken told me to get
in. By now, my adrenaline was roaring through my body like a berserk subway.
I grabbed Wolken by his fatigue jacket and threw the 220-pound staff sergeant
into the Kingbeee. Then I threw my rucksack and jumped up onto the ladder,
where Wolken grabbed me by the shoulder while telling the gunner to get the
hell out of there.
As Capt. Thinh lifted the
Kingbee, Hiep and Sau blasted away out of the port windows, Phouc and Robinson
blasted away out of the starboard window and Wolken and I emptied our last
magazine into the dark jungle, which had dozens, if not hundreds, of muzzle
flashes lighting up the darkness. As we ascended skyward, I fired my last M79
round and dropped my white phosphorous grenade, which looked spectacular
against the quickly fading jungle.
Seconds later, the hell and
fury and death of the LZ were behind us.
Suddenly, the cool night air
hit us, as Wolken and I watched the final fleeting moments of the sweetest
sunset we had ever seen in our lives.
We had survived. How many NVA
hadn?t survived?
Capt. Thinh flew us back to
Phu Bai. Before he returned to his base at Da Nang, I climbed up to the
pilot?s seat and thanked him for saving our lives and told him he never had to
pay for a drink in the FOB-1 club again.
Because it was late, I went to
the mess hall and got some chow for Sau, Hiep and phouc and ate with them.
Sau appeared as though nothing unusual had happened. I had never been so
close to thunderous death before. Our meal was somber. Later I went to the
club, where an Australian floor show was in progress. A lot of the guys
wanted sex. I was happy to be alive. Later, when talking to a friend, I
realized I had killed a man, perhaps more than one. The line from an old
Doors song surfaced in my mind: ?The war is over for the unknown
soldier...bullet struck the helmeted head.? Silently, I thanked the Lord for
sparing me, again.
SPIKE TEAMS, HATCHET FORCES, AND SLAM COMPANIES:
Mention of the U.S. Army's
Special Forces in Vietnam usually conjures up images of A-Teams in remote
outposts training and fighting with the Meo and Montagnard tribesman. After
all, the Green Berets' primary mission before Vietnam was the support of
guerrilla and partisan forces behind enemy lines. But as American's ground
war in Vietnam expanded, so too did the role of Special Forces.
A major departure from their
pre-war mission was strategic ground reconnaissance. These missions were
conducted under the guise of the Studies and Observations Group (SOG), a
subordinate command of Military Assistance Command (Vietnam). Ground Studies
Group (SOG 35), one of eight operational commands within SOG, was charged with
ground operations and had responsibility for cross-border missions. Operating
from Forward Operating Bases (FOBs) located at Phu Bai (FOB-1), Kontum
(FOB-2), Khe Sanh (FOB-3), Da Nang (FOB-4), Ban Me Thout (FOB-5), and Ho Ngoc
Tao (FOB-6), Green Berets detached from 5th Special Forces ventured
into the border areas of Cambodia and Laos and often beyond.
Frequently, intelligence
provided by the recon teams (known as Spike Teams, usually consisting of two
to three SF troops and nine indigenous personnel) was exploited by SOG as
well. Battalions consisting of four SLAM (Search-Locate-Annihilate-Monitor)
companies operated from the same four FOBs as the Spike Teams.
Spike Teams were tasked with
linear, point, area and route reconnaissance; road, trail and river watch;
route mining, interdiction and ambushes; capture of prisoners; bomb damage
assessments; the direction of air and artillery strikes on targets of
opportunity; crash site inspection; allied prisoner recovery and limited
ground combat, SLAM companies were made up of Hatchet (later Hornet) Force
platoons. These platoons were tailored to specific missions which included
rapid engagement of recon-produced targets, reconnaissance-in-force, route
interdiction, ambushes and raids, security of temporary patrol bases,
short-term area denial, cache destruction and allied prisoner recovery.
After reorganization in
November 1967, SOG 35 operations included Command and Control South (CCS),
headquartered in Ban Me Thout, Command and Control Central (CCC) located at
Kontum, and Command and Control North (CCN) in Da Nang. The border areas in
which the teams operated were divided into three ?projects?: DANIEL BOONE
(further divided into three smaller zones), which ran from the southern border
of Vietnam on the Gulf of Siam to the tri-border region; PRAIRIE FIRE, which
ran from the DANIEL BOONE area to just north of the border with North Vietnam,
and NICKEL STEEL, which ran astride the western half of the DMZ. CCS operated
in PRAIRIE FIRE and the Alpha zone of DANIEL BOONE, and CCN operated in the
PRAIRIE FIRE and NICKEL STEEL areas.
If you aren?t confused yet,
stand by. It should be noted that all three of the ?projects? were assigned
different names during different periods of the war. PRAIRIE FIRE was
originally known as SHINING BRASS , and after April 1971 was
changed to PHU DUNG. DANIEL BOONE was renamed SALEM HOUSE and later changed to
THOT NOT. NICKEL STEEL was originally DOUBLE CROSS.
From September 1966 until April
1971, Special Forces personnel assigned to SOG conducted more than 1,500
missions into Laos and Cambodia, providing tactical and strategic intelligence
for those directing the war from Saigon and Washington. In the spring of 1971,
Congress passed the Cooper-Church Amendment, which prohibited Special Forces
from conducting missions across the border, and although the missions continued
for some time after that, Vietnamization and the withdrawal of U.S. forces
eventually brought the operations to a halt. The sustained unconventional
warfare activities of SOG 35 represented not only a broadening of Special
Forces? pre-war role, but at the same time it was the Army?s most successful
deep-penetration campaign.
--G. B. Crouse