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David Mitchell
I've saved one last story before our reunion - it will take up some space.
"DAMAGE FIVE-NINE ALPHA” - My Longest Day in the Cockpit
After settling in to a regular rotation (every third day) as a new AMC (Air Mission Commander), one of my missions we we’re headed East one morning down the Mekong to Dong Tam, a short flight of maybe 20 minutes (where I had seen Bob Hope’s show a year earlier). We thought we had one assignment, but the moment we arrived it was changed to something else. There was an emergency in a different location than where we were first assigned. I was given the call sign and radio frequency of a small squad of guys who were “in deep”, whatever that meant. They were in deep elephant grass and even deeper trouble.
We topped off our fuel tanks and got our instructions as quick as possible. Then I led the first group of Guns and Scouts to an approximate location, switched one of my radios to their frequency and began calling him. “Damage-Five-Nine Alpha, Damage-Five-Nine Alpha, this is Comanche Two. Can you hear me?”
( As full time AMC, I am now assigned a new call sign and number - thus "Comanche two")
He responded immediately with a voice of desperation. He was actually crying over the radio.“Comanche, Comanche please help us. Please can you help us?” I was sort of caught off guard by the tone of his voice - it really rattled me. These guys were in a bad spot. I knew we were in the approximate location, but I called for some more detailed information to pinpoint his exact position. He asked me if I could see the two perpendicular straight canals with tree lines and the creek that connected them both to form a rough triangle. “Roger (yes), I’ve got you now buddy. Tell me what’s going on?
“Comanche, I’ve got twelve guys down here and we are caught in an ambush. We are on our faces and cannot move forward or backward.” They had only the cover of the tall elephant grass. “We were headed into that larger north-south tree line, but they let us get really close and then opened up on us. We can’t move. We are in too close. It must be a whole company (200+) and they are in both tree lines - the one in front of us and the one running along our left.”
Then I asked“Damage-Five-Nine Alpha, can’t you crawl back away from the tree line?” “Negative, negative. We are too close. We can’t even get up on our elbows to craw backward.”
He went on to explain that he had a bullet scratch down the front of his shirt that landed between his chest and the ground he laid on.
Yikes! I got the picture!
tbc
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