GG
On the Saturday night of 20 November, 1970 a C-130 picked us up from Takhli
where we had been housed in the CIA compound since deploying from Eglin. The NKP
flight line was blacked out, even the tower people had been relieved and was
empty. The C-130 landed, without any lights on it or the runway and ramp, and
taxied to the ramp. It had already lowered the rear ramp and when it came to
almost a stop ten of us ran out, 2 pilots for each of the five Fat faces we were
taking. It then continued on, pulling up the ramp, taxied out and took off. It
had other people to deliver to other locations.
The only people out and about were the crew chiefs and us. Of course the Wing
Commander met us and followed me around like a puppy dog asking question after
question. None of which I could answer. He got rather pissed as I recall.
Picking up our flight gear we went straight to the birds, cranked up and
taxied out. No taxi, runway or aircraft lights were used and no radio either,
total silence. (The radio was not to be used till over the camp.)
Taking off at the exact second we did a 360 over the base to join up. A C-130,
Talon was to rendezvous with us there and lead us on. Timing was everything. It
wasn't there. We did two more 360's and couldn't wait any longer. We were, by
that time, about ten minutes behind schedule.
The backup plan was to navigate ourselves to Son Tay, following the planned
route and arriving at the appointed time, 0200 local Sunday, 21 November. No way
Jose. We had agreed among ourselves earlier that that was not a viable plan. We
would fly the course until we got lost, which we knew we would, and then head
straight for Hanoi. Hold just south of the IP, which was the Black River
straight west of the camp, and do our thing at the TOT. (Time Over Target) The
route was NKP, straight to Ventiane, straight north out of there and then drop
to low level and weave through the karst and valleys all the rest of the way.
Impossible at night for A-1's. A back up rendezvous with the Talon was over
Ventiane at the appointed minute but because we had made an extra 360 over NKP
waiting we were running late. We had been unable to make up all the lost time,
some of it but not all. We hit Ventiane a few minutes late, maybe five, no
Talon. We turned north and pressed on.
After Ventiane passed behind there were no lights, anywhere, ink black. And then
our worst nightmare loomed up. A cloud bank. Being lead I wasn't worried about
being hit but the rest of the flight exploded like a covey of quail, everyone in
god only knows what direction. Pushing it up I climbed straight ahead and soon
popped out on top. Not an A-1 in sight and no hope of joining up again without
lights or radio. We were all on our own.
After a short time we noticed a speck of light far ahead. A star? After
watching it a while we were sure it was below the horizon and no Lao in his
right mind would have a light on. Had to be something else. Heading straight for
it, it took some time to catch. A fully loaded A-1 is no speed demon.
Sure enough, there was our Talon with a teeny-weeny white light on the top of
the fuselage and a dim bluish glow coming from the open ramp in the rear.
Couldn't see the bluish glow until you were only few meters from it. There were
already two A-1's there, one on each wing. We moved up and the left one moved
out and we took our place on the left wing tip. A few minutes later the other
two A-1's slowly pulled up and once we were all in place the little white light
went out, the bluish glow went out and the Talon descended into the black. From
there on it was hold on tight as it bobbed and weaved through the hills and
valleys.
The Talon driver was top notch. His power applications during climbs and
descents and gentle banking allowed our heavy A-1 to hang right in there. The
three day "moon window" we had for this operation provided good night vis. With
one exception. Several valleys we drove through were so deep that mountains,
karst, trees or whatever eclipsed the moon. When that happened it was like
diving into an inkwell. You could make out only a few feet of wing tip and that
was only because of our own exhaust flame. When turns or ups and downs occurred
at those times it was tough.
As we emerged from the back country out over the Red River Valley it was
almost like being over Iowa farm country with Omaha/Council Bluffs up ahead.
(Hanoi) Lights everywhere. Soon there after the Talon started climbing and we
knew the IP was coming up. We had a controlled altitude over the IP. The
choppers, with their Talon, were going to be under us coming in from a different
direction. They should have been slightly ahead of us but one couldn't be sure
everyone was on time. The control time was over the camp so IP times were
adjusted for the different speeds.
Then the Talon transmitted the code word. First of anything we heard on the
radio all night. I can't remember the word but it was to be picked up by a high
orbiting EC-135 over northern Laos and relayed back to wherever. It meant we had
crossed the IP. (We were two seconds off. The best anyone had done during
practice was ten minutes. Of course we didn't have Talons for the practice.) The
Talon then accelerated out and up like a shot and disappeared in the night. The
heading to the camp was 091 and trying to reset our DG by a jiggly whiskey
compass was an effort in futility. You remember the high tech, latest hardware
we had on board. Good thing all the towns, cities and roads were lit up. With
the target study we had done it was like being in your own back yard.
Next number 5 pealed off to the right. He was backup in case anyone was shot
down and was to orbit a large hill just south of course until called in. As it
turned out the hill was an Army artillery practice range and it wasn't long
before they started taking a few rounds. They moved off to somewhere else,
probably closer to the camp, don't know where. Just another example of the
brilliant Intel we had.
Then 3 & 4 pealed off to the left to hold just short of the camp till called in.
The plan was to call them in when we had expended 50% of our ordnance. Then they
would do the same with us, each time expending 50% of what you had left. That
way, if someone went down, there would always be aircraft in the air that had
some ordnance left for support.
Then 2 dropped back so we could set up a two aircraft Daisy Chain around the
camp. It was like a precision ballet, a computer simulation would not have
been better timed. Just as I rolled into a bank along side the camp two flares
popped right over it, having been released from one of the Talons. At the same
time Banana (HH-3 with Blue Boy assault team aboard.) crashed landed inside the
camp compound and the first Apple (CH-53) opened up with mini-guns on the watch
towers and the guard quarters. The towers either blew apart or caught fire as
did the guard quarters. We didn't want the big fire consuming the two story
quarters, attracts attention, but it was too late.
At that time we had nothing to do except to make sure no one approached the
camp. No one did. We could see the sparkles from a Fire Fight Simulator dropped
by one of the Talons on the other side of town as a distraction and soon a large
explosion and fire where another Talon dumped napalm on an infantry base armory
a few klicks to the South.
Then the shit hit the fan. Gear Box (The Command and Control team.) started
yelling about losing Axle. Axle was Col. (Bull) Simons personal call sign.
"We've lost Axle" he kept yelling. "God damn, Simons has been killed, we're all
in deep shit."
At this point I'd like to say that I think the Universe will collapse in upon
itself in the Big Crunch before the Army and Air Force will ever be able to talk
to each other on a radio and have each other understand what's going on. He
wasn't lost like being dead in AF jargon, they just didn't know where he was,
couldn't find him. Then the radio erupted with chatter from everywhere. The
second Apple carrying half the assault force and Bull Simons, had landed the
troops in the wrong place. There heading had been one degree off coming in from
the IP. (Whether pilot or equipment error I don't know.) Placing them several
hundred meters south of the camp. When the time ran out they saw a building that
didn't quite look like the guard quarters but it was the only building around,
so landed. That's where the infamous "Fire Fight at The School" took place. We
called it a school because it looked like a school, regardless of what it really
was. You couldn't just keep referring to it as the white building south of the
camp. There were lots of buildings south of the camp. Everything had to have a
name.
That way everyone knows what you're talking about. The liberal media, though,
had a small Field Day with that name. I remember some time later a female TV
reporter asking Col. Simons if he had killed anyone at The School. He said
something to the effect "I was approached by a big fella, I had a tracer as
every third round in my M-16 and saw three go through his middle." The reporter
didn't have a follow up question.
The troops in the wrong place were screaming, Gear Box was screaming and all
the Apples were screaming. The FM and VHF radios were almost impossible to read
let alone get anything in of your own. (The UHF was kept for AF use to call the
MIG Cap or Weasels if needed or to talk among ourselves.) The Apple that had
dumped the guys in the wrong place was the closest so did a 180 and went in to
pick them up. All the others took off and headed for the School as well just in
case. No one has figured out yet why there wasn't a midair.
The troops at the school were in a fierce fire fight the whole time they were
on the ground. Right after they landed people came pouring out of the building.
Most were too large in stature for Vietnamese. The guess was Chinese or Russian
but no one had time to check. The estimated kill was between one and two hundred
and again, no one had time to count.
Bull Simons and the rest of the assault force made it back to the camp without
a casualty. The whole incident only lasted a few minutes but it put the entire
ground operation off schedule. The two parameter teams, Red Wine and Green Leaf,
headed out to do their thing but Blue Boy, the assault team inside the prison
compound, had already searched most of the prison. As soon as Simons got on the
radio he asked Blue Boy for a status report. The answer was "No Packages so far,
still searching". (A Package was the code word for a prisoner.) Simons then told
us to take out the foot bridge to the Citadel.
We called a group of building surrounded by a small moat the Citadel. It was a
few hundred meters southeast of the Camp and had a small foot bridge over the
moat on the camp side. Intel told us it was a military cadet training facility
and probably had a small armory for small arms. We didn't want anyone coming
across that bridge armed and get within rifle range of the camp.
Jerry and I put two WP bombs on it and when 2 came in saw the bridge was wiped
out and dropped short to get anyone that might have already come across. In the
process taking out a few blocks of a housing area between the camp and the
citadel. WP does a real number on wooden structures, the fire storm was not
small.
About this time the sequence of events gets all jumbled up. I have no idea what
happened first, second and so forth. About the time Simons and the troops got
back to the camp the first SAM took off. You cannot miss a SAM launch at night.
It's like a mini Shuttle launch, lights up an area for miles in all directions.
The first few were called "SAM, SAM, DIVE, DIVE" but that soon became silly.
There were so many launches that you couldn't call them. There seemed to be
about four launch sites within a few miles of the camp on the West side of
Hanoi. The rest were further east and we didn't think they were a threat to us.
Most of the SAM's went high, after the MIG cap, Weasels and the Navy's two
hundred plane faint coming in from the East. The idea was to make them think
there was a major raid on Hanoi and not bother with a few planes on the West
side. It worked, NSA told us later that the Air Defense Commander screamed "Fire
at Will", shut down the net and went off the air.
We were at our briefed 3 thousand feet until the SAM's started coming our way.
Intel told us we wouldn't have any trouble with SAM's at that altitude. A lot
some pencil pushing puke knows. We all hit the deck and kept an eye on the
launch sites close to us and sure enough, someone decided to try for the guys to
the West, us. The site closest to us, just a few miles to the Northeast launched
one that never got to the horizon. I watched it rise and almost immediately it
leveled off. Then the thing stopped moving on the windscreen.
You know what that means, collision course. We dove into the Red River and
turned west. Jerry was flying and I was turned around keeping an eye on the damn
thing as it charged at us over my right shoulder. I kept bumping the stick
forward saying "Lower, Lower." Jerry kept bumping the stick back saying "We're
going to hit the water." When the rocket plume on the thing seemed as big as the
A-1 I yelled break left. We went up and over the river bank, about fifty feet,
and leveled off at phone poll height going straight south.
We never saw the thing again. It either hadn’t had time to arm or buried
itself in the water/mud so deep that the flash of detonation was masked. That's
another thing you can't miss at night. The detonation of a SAM. It's a
lightening bright flash, quite large. They were going off over us constantly and
when you got used to them you didn't even bother to look up. For about a thirty
minute period there were no less then three SAM's airborne at any one time and
other times so many you couldn't count them. I've never heard an estimate of the
number fired that night but it has to be in the hundreds. All the SAM misses
would self detonate, either at a pre set altitude or motor burn out, I don't
know which.
Like I said, you wouldn't look up at a SAM detonation because they were so
numerous unless something was different. Then there was something different. The
flash was yellowish instead of bright white. Looking up there was a large fire
ball with flaming debris falling from it. "Damn, someone got nailed." Then
suddenly there was a flaming dash across the sky heading southwest, then another
and another. Three dashes were all I saw, couldn't spend any more time looking
up.
Later we learned that a SAM had detonated close to a Weasel and filled his
bird with holes. Fuel was streaming out and his AB was igniting it in dashes
across the sky. Since he was losing all his fuel anyway he left it in AB till he
ran out. He got to the southern PDJ before bailing out.
About this time Blue Boy calls Axle and says "Search complete, negative
packages." Silence, then Simons asks for a repeat. "Search complete, negative
packages, repeat negative packages." More silence. I don't know what anyone else
was thinking then but for me it was setup, ambush. But hell, we'd already been
there twenty minutes and they'd have sprung it by then. So then it turned to
"What the hell are we doing here?" And "How the hell are we going to get our
asses out of here intact?" Simons must have been thinking the same thing. He
called for the parameter teams to pull back and the Apples to come in for
pickup. Then he told us to take out the Big Bridge.
All sounds very simple but it sure wasn't. First of all we had no hard
ordnance and couldn't take out the Big Bridge. We had no more WP bombs and that
was the only thing that would have damaged a wooden bridge. The bridge was Red
Wines objective and were supposed to blow it but because of their late start
hadn't reached it before the pull back order.
A little poop about the Big Bridge. The bridge was a few hundred meters
northeast of the camp on the road that ran in front of it. It was about a
hundred feet long, heavily constructed and could carry any vehicle up to a tank,
we were told. Red Wine was supposed to blow it and hold the road while Green
Leaf went southeast and held the road there.
During training the engineers said twelve pounds of C-4 would take out the
bridge. However, to be sure they were going to double it and use twenty-four
pounds. Col. Simons said that he wanted to be doubly sure and doubled that to
forty-eight pounds then added that two people would carry forty-eight pounds
each making it ninety-six pounds of C-4. I would have liked to see what
ninety-six pounds of C-4 did to that bridge but it wasn't to be. What made
things worse was that the out bound and pull back routes for the parameter teams
were different. Since each team out bound had to take out any possible threats
they didn't want to retrace their steps and possibly run into someone they
missed. He would have been one pissed off gomer. There was a lot of housing just
outside the camp. Intel said it was for the camp commander, married officers
and maybe some camp workers. The teams outbound went house to house making sure
no one was going to be a threat. It was a slow process so between starting out
late and an early pull back they had no chance of reaching their goal.
Since they hadn't got to the end of the outbound route there was no way they
could follow the pull back route. The radios went bananas again. "There's part
of Red Wine's team in Green Leaf's area of responsibility and part of Green
Leaf's team in Red Wines area. Do not fire without identification." This was
repeated over and over again. So much so that the teams couldn't get in to
acknowledge. They were so out of breath that they couldn't say but one word
between two or three panting breaths. It wasn't fun to listen to.
Some time during all this we had expended 50% of our ordnance and called in 3
and 4. They had done the same and called us back. We dumped the Rockeyes on
the bridge. The Rockeye is a Navy fast mover ordnance we had to certify the A-1
to carry while in training at Eglin. It's a multi-munitions thing with gobs of
little shaped charges to take out vehicles, even tanks I guess. Not very good
for bridges. We put a lot of holes in it though. After that we laid down
continuos strafe till everyone was in the Apples and on their way.
I might add we never saw any vehicles or people moving anywhere near the camp.
There
was a lot of traffic on the East west road along the Red River, about a klick
north, going in and out of Hanoi but no one turned toward the camp. Also about
this time, the SAM launches were slowing down but the MIG calls were increasing.
Roughly twenty minutes into the forty minutes this took we started picking up
MIG calls. Intel told us they had no night qualified pilots so we would have no
trouble with MIG's. Right.
There was one call of an air to air missile firing. Said it zoomed right past
his plane. I don't know who it was and never saw any myself. That was the only
call of a firing I remember hearing. But the MIG warning calls from Collage Eye
or whoever makes those things were coming regularly.
Once the Jollies were off and running we putted along above and behind them,
guessing where they were since it was dark and no one could see each other.
Everyone was to call the IP outbound. One by one we heard the calls, thank god.
Then we hear this voice "Is everybody out?" "Who are you?" "This is Apple
something or other." "Where are you?" "I'm back at the holding point waiting to
be sure everyone got out okay." "God damn jerk." We told him to get his ass
airborne and head for the IP as fast as his funny machine would take him. He
acknowledged. By this time we had nearly reached the IP ourselves. Jerry and I
looked at each other and said "We don't have a choice." With possible MIG's
around a lonely Jolly all by himself makes for a pretty good target. We turned
around, climbed to a nice MIG target altitude, three or four thousand, and went
Christmas tree.
Every light we had was turned on and we slowly drove back to Hanoi. With MIG
calls coming every few minutes I was sweating profusely. Don't know if it was
hot, I was scared or just pooped out but I was soaked. It seemed an eternity but
as the camp and the West side of Hanoi was slipping under the nose we heard the
IP call. Lights out and Split-S. We beat feet west for the IP on the deck.
Getting away from the river valley and into the dark country side we climbed
to a safe altitude to clear the mountains en-route to Udorn. Then started to
take care of some pilot stuff. We had used up the left stub tank getting there
and most of the right. We were on internal over the target and used the
centerline while holding. Time to clean up the fuel mess. The right stub ran out
almost right away, just a couple minutes were left in it. Time to jettison.
That's when the longest two seconds of my life occurred.
I hit the button but instead of falling away it pitched up, slammed back
against the leading edge making it into a vee shape and came bouncing along the
leading edge of the wing toward the fuselage. I can see it to this day, making
four bounces and then falling away under the wing. It all happened in one or two
seconds, didn't even have time to say "Ohshit." I sometimes wonder what would
have happened to the right horizontal stabilizer if it had decided to pass up
and over the wing instead of under. I don't dwell on it though, too scary.
The five Jollies, three carrying the assault force and two empty because of
no prisoners, were all together having had to hit a tanker in order to make it
back. The A-1's were spread out who knew where but still in radio contact. As we
crossed the PDJ we picked up the beeper of the downed Weasels and soon made
voice contact. They were both all right. #1 was cool but #2 was a little
panicky. Not because he was being threatened but because he was all alone, in
the dark, in the woods, in Laos. I didn't blame him one bit.
Then we made contact with four Sandy's launched out of NKP in answer to the
Weasels May Day. They didn't know who we were because of the call signs. Took a
hell of a while to convince them that Peach and Apple really meant Sandy and
Jolly.
The call sign battle had been long and arduous but in the end we lost. I'll
never forgive the Air Force for either picking them or allowing them to be
forced on us. At least the Army had call signs that if not macho were at least
neutral. Blue Boy, Red Wine, Green leaf, Gear Box and Axle. What did the whimpy
Air Force come up with? A-1's Peach, Jollies Apple, the HH-3 that crash landed
in the compound Banana, Talons Cherry and the C-130 tanker Lime. A damn fruit
salad. It was embarrassing, down right humiliating. I'll never forgive those
pencil pushing Air Force pukes for that.
Anyway, it was decided that the two empty Jollies would hang around with the
four Sandy's and make a first light pick up. From what I understand it was
uncontested and pretty much a piece of cake.
Landing at Udorn we were all rushed to debriefing, a building right on the
flight line. As I walked in I was met by a group of Intel people with wide grins
across their faces and seemed higher then kites. I thought they were lunatics.
They asked "How many prisoners?" I said "None, the camp was empty." The grins
disappeared and their faces turned pale. "What?" I repeated it and thought they
were going to pass out. What had happened was after leaving the target area
the Army did a head count and got it all screwed up. For a while they thought
someone might have been left behind. For several minutes over the radio we could
hear the chatter between the Jollies. "I've got thirty-three, I've got
thirty-five, I've got thirty-two, I've got thirty-one." Seemed to go on forever.
Finally they got it right and no one was left behind. The high orbiting EC-135
must have been relaying all that back to Udorn and it was interpreted by the
Intel people as a prisoner count. They all though we had rescued thirty some
prisoners.
Once that got squared away debriefing fell apart. People running every which
way. I don't remember ever being debriefed and don't think anyone ever was. What
preparations had been made to receive prisoners I don't know but they had to be
considerable and now were all down the tubes. It was almost a state of panic.
Col. Simons, Jerry Rhine, Dick Meadows and maybe others were whisked off to
meet with Gen. Leroy Manor at Monkey Mountain, Da Nang. The rest of us were left
in the lurch and forgotten about. The sun was coming up by then and we all
wandered out onto the ramp. Sat down on the cement cross legged, indian style,
in circles of about ten. Us in our reeking sweat soaked flight suits and the
grunts with their blackened faces, guns, grenades and what-have-you hanging off
them. They were bleeding from every square inch of exposed skin from dozens of
cuts, scrapes and bruises. We all just sat mumbling to each other. No stories
were being told. We had all just done it, seen it or heard it and knew what had
happened.
Then someone came out and handed a bottle to each of the circles. Everyone
took a sip and passed it around and around and around, till it was empty. All of
us still just mumbling to ourselves and each other. I can't attest to what was
going on at the other circles but there wasn't a dry eye at ours. A tear running
down every cheek. A gallant effort with nothing to show. To hell and back for
naught.
John USAF, Ret.