|
David Mitchell
Here's a story from my first tour - before my Christmas trip home and back.
There was a "program" known as "Chu Hoi" (or Chieu Hoi) - meaning "Open Arms", which encouraged Viet Cong or North Vietnamese to surrender. It offered safe refuge, food, and sometimes a bit of cash or jobs. It was sort of successful - meaning it worked sometimes - but other times - they recanted and returned to their former afiliation.
The way we encountereed it was usually out in the field - when a single soldier or two would suddenly stand up in the open and raise thier AK-47 high over their head with both hands up, holding their weapon.
Mt buddy Joe and I co-wrote this episode of his experience for one of my chapters.
Sometime about March 19th (1969), Joe was working that day out of Chi Lang (“chee lang” - a place we worked often up the Mekong River near Cambodia) to support a Special Ops team. Upon landing, they hot refueled and departed with the first team consisting of the usual two OH-6a “Scouts”, two AH-1G “Cobra” gunships, and a UH-I (Huey) Command and Control (C&C) flown by Capt. Conley. Joe’s “wing man” was 1st. Lt. Jim who was even newer than Joe. Joe’s observer that day was Spec-5 Carter from Pampa, Texas.
They were looking for enemy personnel and materials being moved into the “AO” (Area of Operations - the area of that day's search). The Scouts were low level above the grass and reeds along a major canal at about 30 knots airspeed or less. Fresh trails were evident. They knew that people were close.
The AO had been declared as “free fire” - shoot on-site - (an infrequent, but occasional condition in certain locations with very frequent, recent, and intense enemy activity, but not close to civilian areas). However, C&C had radioed that they wanted a prisoner if possible.
They found a submerged sampan (long narrow boat) and started to hover low and slow to part the grass and reeds with their rotor wash to find the owners. They quickly found one and he quickly "Chu Hoi”-ed – (surrendered - stood up in the open with weapon raised over his head with both arms). Joe’s Observer covered him with his CAR-15 as they slowly circled the guy, advising C&C that they had a prisoner.
This is where things got hairy as out of the corner of his eye, Joe sighted three Viet Cong, armed with AK-47's who jumped up and proceeded to hose their ship down. Joe immediately yanked full power (more than full) to get quickly away from the automatic weapon fire.
He vividly remembers 1st Lt. Jim passing on his right side to return mini-gun fire on them. Joe’s ship ended up some distance from the VC where they finally went down. Both himself and his observer were wounded - the Observer far worse than Joe. 1st Lt. Jim then picked them up and transported them to Binh Tuey Field EVAC hospital near Can Tho.
As a result, Specialist Carter, his Observer, lost a leg and Joe was hit with shrapnel in one leg. The larger piece of shrapnel was removed in surgery, but smaller pieces continued to work their way to the surface over time. Joe convalesced for 19 days at a medical facility at Cam Ranh Bay - where he also got to enjoy the world-famous beach.
After recovering, he returned to our unit where he continued to fly the Scout mission for several more months, including a second “shootdown”. Then followed some months flying in the C&C ship until his D.E.R.O.S. date (“Depart En Route Over Seas”) – the end of his tour of duty.
TBC
|