FNG
My travel time between Flight School and my new assignment seemed
pretty
short. After a bit over a week with my family in Texas, I flew to
L.A.
and met my classmate "Atlas" Dixon for a sightseeing
trip in California.
We saw the coast, Yosemite, L.A. and San Francisco. My last trip
to San
Francisco had been as an Army Dependent, enroute from Okinawa.
Although
it had only been four years, it seemed like forever.
A particularly memorial tour in Frisco was to Haight-Asbury, a
run down
district of the town that the hippies had made into their
neighborhood.
Dixon, myself and a few other of our classmates who we had met
later in
town got into uniform and had our pictures made standing under
the
street sign proclaiming the Capitol of Hippiedom. The flower
children
were somewhat taken aback by these young warriors invading their
territory, knowing that we were probably off to do the devil's
work,
raping women and killing babies in a foreign land. In their
peace
loving manner, they yelled at us, calling us every bad thing that
they
could conjure, flipping us off, with one of them even pulling a
knife on
us. One of his less drugged-out friends pulled him away before
any of us
got into some trouble, but let it be said that in our current
mindset,
we were not about to take a threat of that sort lightly.
We, having
been recently proclaimed Warrant Officers, were almost gentlemen
by Act
of Congress, so after some taunting of our own, left the Love
Generation
to do whatever it was that they wanted to do. We had more
pressing
business just ahead.
Prior to shipping, or rather flying, out, we stayed in BOQs in
Oakland.
There we waited for our specific shipping orders to Nam. The day
came
all too soon, and several of us proceeded to get roaring drunk at
the O
Club. Getting on the Continental 707 was little more than a
foggy
memory for me, and I was fast asleep before we became airborne.
My best
recollection of the flight is when the pilot announced that we
had lost
an engine and were returning to Travis AFB. I then groggily
noticed
that there was nothing but ocean below us. Great! We are going to
crash
before I can get a chance to get killed in Vietnam! But we
returned,
changed planes, and my chance to lose my life in a war zone was
revitalized.
We refueled in Hawaii, and then made the remainder of the hop to
Tan Son
Nhut Air Base in Saigon. As we made our long final approach
into TSN, I
had a window seat on the starboard side of the aircraft. Looking
west, I
could see that there was a war in progress below us. Our
plane was
landing just before dawn, and several flares were visible from my
window, floating lazily in the sky, creating an eery, reddish
light. I
couldn't make out anything specific, but the strange light from
the
flares was reminiscent of the "rocket's red glare, the bombs
bursting in
air," and it was plain that we weren't in Kansas anymore. In
fact, we
were about to enter another world, far removed from what
heretofore we
had known.
Even in the early morning, stepping off the plane at Tan Son Nhut
was
like walking into a sauna. It was late August, and the heat was
oppressive, even to someone who had recently been stationed in
southern
Alabama. Maybe this wasn't going to be a lot of fun.
We were quickly
escorted to waiting buses. Although they looked similar to the
Army
buses that I had ridden for years, these had barred windows, so
that the
VC couldn't throw grenades into our transportation to Long Binh,
where
the replacement center was located. On the way to Long Binh, our
buses
were escorted by MPs in jeeps with machine guns front and rear,
and the
Spec 4 in the front of the bus was armed as well. In my
infinite
wisdom, I caught on that the road between Saigon and Long Binh,
although
heavily travelled by US and ARVN (Army of Vietnam) troops, was
not
secure.
Our trip to Long Binh was short and uneventful. Officers and
Warrants
were given billets in wooden buildings known by everyone as
hooches. The
"enlisted swine" had large tents for their short term
barracks. We were
processed in, and given a couple of options as to where we might
be
assigned. I chose the 25th Infantry Division, for no reason
in
particular. In a day or so, I was on an airplane enroute to the
Division
basecamp in Cu Chi.
The flight was short. Cu Chi was located about 30 miles
northwest of
Saigon, so the flight from Long Binh took only a few minutes.
Located in
the Army's III Corps, the terrain was pretty flat. We flew
over
villages, numerous waterways, jungle, and much land that had been
pock
marked with bomb craters. The letdown to Cu Chi was to
runway 18, a
hastily built runway made of PSP, which the military used for all
sorts
of construction. PSP was an OD colored (of course) steel which
could be
linked together quickly to make bridges, roads, buildings, or
just about
anything else that needed to be built efficiently and without a
lot of
engineering technology. I would see a lot of PSP in the
next year.
The transport, an Army Caribou, made a combat approach, a full
flaps/high angle of attack landing that put us in harm's way from
enemy
fire for the shortest amount of time possible. As I had
learned in
flight school, our "dead man's zone" was from 500 to
1,000 feet above
the ground. There, we were very susceptible to small arms fire.
The
Caribou pilot had evidently been to the same class, because he
did not
tarry in those altitudes.
We touched down at my new home. The odor of burning human
waste was
permeating the air, a strange smell that once noted by your
olfactory
organ is cataloged and never forgotten. Few military
installations in
Vietnam had sewage systems (I heard of some, but never had the
pleasure), and when downwind of a base like Cu Chi, the smell of
burning
shit was evident for miles. Junior enlisted personnel were
assigned the
"shit detail", which was pulling out the large
collection drums in the
latrines, dousing their contents with JP4 aircraft fuel or
diesel, and
lighting the match. Many black smoke plumes from the
burning crap were
visible daily in every basecamp in Vietnam. At Cu Chi and
most other
places that I was, urinating was officially into "piss
tubes", which
were usually casings from some type of armament that had been dug
into
the ground. When that location was full, it was moved a few feet.
Unofficially, troops pissed pretty much where the urge took them.
My time at the 25th Replacement was short. I was assigned
to D Troop,
3rd Squadron, 4th Cavalry Regiment. The basis of the
assignment was
that there were openings in the 25th Aviation Company or D Troop.
When I
asked the Spec 4 clerk what the units did, he said that the 25th
Aviation Co. mainly flew slicks, and the Cav mainly flew guns.
This, I
suspect, was about the total knowledge that he had of the two
units. I
chose the Cav with the hope that I might get to fly guns.
As the saying
goes, don't wish too hard, you might just get what you ask for.
D Troop sent a jeep to pick me up, and I reported to the
CO. Since the
CO was out, I actually reported to the XO, a major whose name has
been
erased by time. He was one mean looking, all business,
soldier, who had
a shaved head and a large handlebar mustache. He welcomed
me to the
unit, and gave me a brief explanation of what Delta Troop was
about. D
Troop's call sign was Centaur, and I had just become one.
Armored Cavalry was and is the eyes of an infantry division. D
Troop was
the air arm of the squadron, which consisted of a Headquarters
Troop and
three ground troops. Alpha, Baker and Charlie Troops were armed
with
tanks, armored personnel carriers and mounted infantry. It
was the
Cav's mission to scout for the Division, often to be the front of
any
Division movements, and also to be escorts for convoys moving
from Cu
Chi to other camps such as Tay Ninh or Dau Tieng, both of which
were the
25th's "sub basecamps", jumping off places to War Zone
C and the Iron
Triangle, names which were of no meaning to a new Warrant
Officer, but
which would become very significant in months to come.
The XO explained that the Centaurs consisted of a platoon of aero-scouts, which
included the OH-23 Raven light scout recon helicopters and the UH-1B/C heavy
scout gunships;
"aero-rifles", infantry whose mission was generally
small scouting
assignments or small scale Search and Destroy, the Slicks, which
were
pilots and crew of D model Hueys who did a variety of missions,
including lifting the aero-rifles into landing zones and
resupplying
them, flare missions, med evacs, C and C (command and control),
and
general "ash and trash", which was an all inclusive
term for lots of non
combat flights. The Gun Sections contained two different
types of
gunships, the heavy scouts and the "frogs" and the
"hogs". The heavy scouts
were B and C model Hueys, armed with either 4 M60 machineguns and
14
rockets(the XM16 system) or minieguns and 14 rockets(XM21).
They
generally flew lead in a light fire team (LFT), and did a lot of
low and
slow flying at treetop level, hence their "scout"
name. They also
performed a variety of other missions, most often that of direct
fire
support for ground units that were engaged in combat, or such
things as
bomb damage assessments (BDA), counter mortar assignments, convoy
cover,
or flying cover for defoliation missions and scouting missions
where the
lighter scout aircraft were utilized. The Hogs generally
flew trail
behind the heavy scouts, and carried an M5 40mm grenade launcher
in the
nose of the aircraft and rocket pods capable of carrying a total
of 48
rockets. They were the heavy fire support, with
"heavy" being a
description of both their capabilities and their gross
weight. The
gunships all carried both a crewchief and a gunner in back, each
armed
with M60 machineguns and around 1000 rounds of ammunition per
flight,
along with various grenades, including fragmentation, smoke, and
willie
peter or white phosphorous. The final combat component of D
Troop was
the Scout platoon, which at that time consisted of pilots and
crew that
flew in OH 23s, the same tiny, gutless helicopters that we had
learned
to fly in at Wolters. While we flew D models in flight
school, the
Vietnam, big time combat 23s were G models, which gave them a bit
more
power but no less vulnerability from small arms fire. It
was the
mission of the scouts to fly even lower and slower than the Huey
scouts,
looking for trouble, which they often found in abundance.
The 23s could
carry a crewchief/gunner with an M60, and there was another 60
attached
to one of the skids. Their firepower was hardly awesome in
comparison
to that of the UH-1.
When I reported to D Troop, there were openings in Heavy Scouts
and
Slicks. The XO actually gave me the choice, and I immediately
picked the
guns. Of course, if any of the current Slick drivers had
wanted to
transfer to guns, I would not have received such a choice, but
they all
apparently had better sense than to pick Heavy Scouts. So,
I was
assigned to the Gun Platoon, having no time in country, and
little more
than an orientation ride in gunships.
My quarters was a GP tent, but it did have a wooden floor.
There were 4
of us per tent, so we had a bit of our own private area,
including a cot
and space for a footlocker. My personal gear finally caught
up to me
after I had been in country about a month, so all I had for
uniforms was
what I had stuffed in my duffel that I hand carried on the plane
coming
over from the "world". But I was soon issued
jungle fatiques, jungle
boots, flight gear, and other necessities, like a 45 auto,
shoulder
holster and ammo for my arm of last resort. I had never
been any good
with a .45, and I proved my ineptitude with my new issue, but at
least
in Vietnam we had .45 tracers, so you could see how badly you
were
missing the target.
One much appreciated item of flight gear was my "titty
protector". The
protective vest was a large plate of ceramic, which weighed
several
pounds, and which the pilot strapped on to protect from frontal
shots.
I was told that the plate would stop a round from an AK47 or
similar
type of small arm, so I got very attached to it very fast. I was
also
issued a flak vest, which would not stop small arms fire but
could
protect the upper torso from shrapnel, and made a new guy feel
very
dashing when wearing it around camp, at least for a couple of
days.
After hearing from the veterans about the FNG (fucking new guy)
trying
to look like John Wayne, the flak vest was only worn while the
camp was
under attack, which didn't take very long.
I believe that I got my first taste of "incoming" the
second night that
I was with D Troop. The troop area had several bunkers that
were there
in case of a mortar attack, but I had no idea how often I would
get to
look at their sandbagged walls during my tour. A divisional
basecamp
has artillery firing outgoing rounds almost constantly. At first,
an FNG
hears the outgoing and does not know whether the crashing noise
is that
of rounds landing or leaving the tubes. When the outgoing
artillery
fires, at first it is quite unnerving. After a short time, it
becomes a
sound that gives a feeling of security. I was in my second
night of
fitful sleep in D Troop when a sound that I didn't discern as
much
different from artillery being fired got my hoochmates up and
running
for the bunker."Incoming, incoming", was being yelled
from all the
surrounding hooches. One of my hoochmates yelled, "To the
bunker, that's
INCOMING, asshole!" I hit the wood floor on a run,
making for the
bunker. The incoming mortar rounds had a crunching sound that is
hard to
describe to someone who has never heard it, but after hearing
only a
very few, I could discern between incoming and outgoing.
Since our
hooches were immediately next to the flight line/runway, our area
was a
prime target for mortar attacks, and I became all too used to
them over
the next several months. When we were getting mortared at
this time, it
was usually from 81mm stuff. Later, when mortar attacks graduated
to
122mm rocket attacks, I got a taste of what true fear was, but
the 81s
were plenty scary, particularly when they were hitting just a few
meters
from your bunker. Our bunkers would not withstand a direct
mortar hit,
but protected us from anything that did not land squarely on top
of us,
so during the attacks we would just hunker down and try and judge
how
close the mortars were landing. We all were quickly experts
at just how
close a round had landed, and after a couple of weeks and several
mortar
attacks during the middle of the night, they were already
becoming
frighteningly normal.
I was only a couple of days in my unit when I got my first ride,
which
was both a checkride to see if I could remember how to fly and an
orientation ride to begin to learn the AO (area of
operations). My
trainer and aircraft commander was Mark Schmidt, another Warrant
Officer
who had been in country about 6 months, rendering him a hardened
veteran. He let me preflight, crank and hover the Huey,
while he took
care of radio procedure. I immediately found out that a
fully loaded
gunship in the heat of Vietnam did not want to hover.
Schmidt taught me
that in order to get the helicopter in the air, I would have to
make a
running takeoff, bouncing the aircraft several times until our
airspeed
reached translational lift, where the helicopter's rotor got into
undisturbed air and began to fly. I wallowed around, trying
to make the
thing hover like we could in flight school, each time running out
of
power and having the helicopter settle to the ground. After
a while, my
PT (pilot technique) became adept enough that I actually could get
the
overloaded aircraft to do somewhat of what I wanted it to.
As we
climbed out of Cu Chi that first time, Mark showed me different
sights
which would soon be normal, but was almost overload to a new,
wide eyed
Wobbly One fresh from the world. I made a few takeoffs and
landings
under Mark's watchful eye, and then we proceeded to an area just
south
of camp named AO Earp. Earp was an area that gunships practiced
fire and
tested weapons. On my first flight, Mark flew in the left
seat, where
the sight for the M16 machineguns was located. He showed me
the basics
of how to make a gun run. Start at about 1000' (yes, the dead
man's
zone), drop the nose into a steep dive, fire on the target, and
break
out at around 300' to 500'. He flew the first couple of
runs, firing
rockets singly from the button on the cyclic, giving me an idea
of what
I should be able to hit from my right seat position. When he
fired,
using no sight, his rockets hammered the old APC that was our
target.
He then gave me the aircraft, after having me pull down my rocket
sight,
which had a small red pipper targeting where the rockets
should
impact. I tried a couple of dry runs, keeping the
helicopter in trim
with the pedals, lining up the rocket sight on the target, and
then
breaking out of the run on Mark's command. The short amount
of time
during the run could give a pilot target fixation if he was
unskilled,
making it where the aircraft might not be able to pull out of the
run in
time to avoid crashing, so Mark was teaching me to get set up and
on
target quickly. When I finally did punch off a couple of
rockets, I
came pretty close to the target. On my next pass, I actually hit
the
APC. Mark had me make another run, but this time, without
telling me,
he had the gunner and crewchief open up with their M60s and he
fired the
four M60s on the M16 system. My rockets came nowhere near
the APC this
time. The noise and vibrations, not to mention the numerous
tracers
flying by just out my door, had my accuracy off. But after
another pass
or two, I started to get a bit more of a feel for how to do this,
which
was going to be a large part of my job for the next year.
We returned
to Cu Chi, got another ship that was equipped with minies, and
repeated
the lesson. Again, I flew the right seat, and soon found
that the
minieguns , with a normal rate of fire of 2400 rounds a minute of
7.62mm
each, were awesome in their noise and firepower. Instead of
hearing
individual rounds going off, the minie sounded like an extended
growl or
roar. The tracers were spaced in the belts every fifth
round, but still
looked like a solid blanket of bullets racing towards their
unfortunate
target. Even after a year's tour, the sound, look and feel
of a gunship
firing both minies, rockets, and crew firing both M60s was almost
surreal in its overwhelming destruction capabilities. The
first time or
two was an adrenaline rush which was hard to describe.
In my first few days in country, I was also qualified in the M5
"chunker" and the large load of rockets it carried,
even though I was
assigned to fly heavy scouts. A gunship pilot needed to be
familiar with
all the weapons in the arsenal. When the chunker went off,
the whole
aircraft shook violently as the rounds left the tube. I was
shown a
salvo of the rockets, where all 48 rockets lit at once. It
felt like
the helicopter was almost backing up when we salvoed, and the
sparks,
noise, and smoke from 48 rockets lighting up from a position only
a few
feet behind our seats was impressive, to say the least.
When they
impacted, they obliterated the area with shrapnel from the 10
pound high
explosive warheads that they carried. It was hard to fathom
how anyone
or anything could survive such an awesome display of
destruction. The
fact was, anybody caught in the open when such terror was raining
down
on them was almost always killed.
I began to learn about gunship tactics. Instead of flying the
tight
formations that the Slick pilots did for a living, guns flew
"tactical
trail", with the second or trail ship flying well behind the
lead so
that if lead got shot at, the trail would have time to react and
fire
upon the enemy. Trail usually flew well above the lead
ship, as well,
and off to one side so that their line of receiving fire would be
somewhat different. When the heavy scout was down low and
slow, trying
to find targets of opportunity or draw fire, the trail ship would
fly
higher so that accurate fire could be brought against enemy
positions.
Schmidt taught me how to perform a "snap shot", at
first one of the
scariest maneuvers that I had been through in a helicopter.
Flying
trail, Mark would say, "Lead just received fire from that
stream
intersection," which just happened to be almost underneath
our
aircraft. He pulled back violently on the cyclic, kicking
our nose into
the sky, while dumping the collective to gain rotor rpm. Then, he
rolled
the nose over into a steep (and I do mean steep) dive. It
felt as if we
were diving directly into the ground, and I swear that you could
feel
the tail of the aircraft trying to come over the top. Since Hueys
don't
fly very well upside down, this is a feeling that is very
disconcerting
and certainly a maneuver that we never tried in flight
school. As soon
as he had the helicopter screaming for the ground and the target
directly below us, he punched off a couple of rockets, which
nailed the
stream intersection, and then he broke the run with a violent
turn,
pulling the aircraft out of its dive. The first few times
that I sat
through this, I wondered if I shouldn't be flying slicks, after
all. It
took me a lot of practice to be able to perform this to Mark's
satisfaction, but I finally got it down to where he didn't fear
our
immediate death when I was at the controls.
After about a week of orientation to how to drive a gunship, and
a
couple of day flights to become oriented to the AO, I was deemed
worthy
to fly my first night mission as Peter Pilot. This was to
be a convoy
cover mission, with a convoy heading northwest on Highway One
from Cu
Chi to Tay Ninh. After being in country a few months, I
would have
questioned the wisdom of a night convoy, but at this point in my
tour, I
was basically ignorant of the truism that Charlie owned the
Night. It
didn't take long into this first mission to see that night convoy
cover
missions would be full of excitement. The convoy was led by a
tank, then
a couple of APCs, with the supply trucks sandwiched between other
tanks
and APCs as rear cover. Only a couple of clicks out of Cu Chi,
Charlie
hit a lead and rear APC with RPG rocket launchers. Suddenly, the
ground
below us became alive with tracer fire going in opposite
directions. A
flare ship above us started popping flares, and we saw dozens of
figures
running away from the highway towards a nearby village. Their
main
tactical mistake was in being in the open, and we immediately
rolled in
on them, with Mark yelling at me to fire the minies, as he,
flying the
aircraft from the right seat, started to fire rockets into the VC
troops. Although basically unskilled in the operation of
the minie
guns, I put the sight on a group of fleeing VC, and let fly.
Minies were
loaded "4 and 1" tracers, that is, every fifth round
was a tracer
round. The effect, however, is that the sky is filled with
red lights
racing towards the target, and knowing that for every round you
see
there are four more is truly awe inspiring. The roar of the
minies was
punctuated by the rat a tat tat of the gunner and crewchief's M60
machineguns, interspersed with the "Whoosh" of rockets
being fired from
a few feet behind your head; all in all, a display of power and
destruction which is tremendous.
The enemy, of course, did not take this type of challenge
lightly. As
we rolled in and initiated fire on the retreating VC, they
returned it,
and for the first time in my life I saw and heard automatic
weapons fire
pointed at me. Their tracers were green, while ours were
red, and as
their fire passed our aircraft, distinct pops could be heard,
even with
all the noise that we were causing. During these gun runs,
it didn't
occur to me that I should be frightened. I was
concentrating too hard
on doing my job to be scared. That, I was to learn, would
come later,
after I had time to contemplate what we had just been through.
Our fire was effective. Mark's rocket fire was hitting
pockets of VC,
and my spraying of the countryside with the minies had an effect,
as we
saw after a couple of passes and the enemy resistance
stopped. The
ground element made a S and D (search and destroy) sweep through
the
village, and as they did we circled at a low altitude, admiring
our work
by the light of the flareship. I was amazed to see not only
human
bodies, but dead cattle, pigs, and other livestock that had been
in the
way of the VC retreat. The only thing moving in the light
of the flares
was our troops, some walking, some in APCs. We stayed on
station for
some time, and then returned for fuel and rearming. When we
returned, we
were told by the ground troops that they had a Body Count of
52. This,
I was to learn, was very high for our short encounter. The
US had lost
2 KIA and two tanks had been destroyed. Several US soldiers
had been
wounded in the firefight, and were helicoptered back to Cu Chi by
"Dustoff", the medevac bird.
Our aircraft had not been hit, nor had our wingman. Mr. Charles
was no
doubt opting for the type of markmanship common when automatic
weapons
are employed in a fight, that of "spray and
pray". As my experience in
Vietnam progressed, I would see many instances of the spray and
pray
philosophy put to use, from both sides. I would also see VC
and NVA
taking unbelievably precise aim at their attackers, and
maintaining fire
discipline that made my job much more dangerous and difficult,
but on
this night, my first firefight, I was luckier than that.
That first firefight was in many ways typical of firefights to
come.
Often, a brief glimpse of the enemy was all we got, but we did
get to
view a lot of fire coming in our direction. Since we owned the
air, we
did not have to worry about any bogies, and only had to
concentrate on
the ground forces. The actual fighting was fairly short,
and highly
intense. Our bodies had to be near overload status on
adrenaline. Fear
came later, because during the conflict we were just too busy to
think
about anything but the job at hand. And the sounds were as
overpowering
as anything that can be imagined. The actual sounds of the
weapons
would be quite enough in and of themselves, but we also were
yelling at
each other on out intercom, listening to the FM radios of the
ground
troops, as they, too were involved in some intense fighting, and
then we
further were talking and listening to our wingman, the flareship,
and
quite often the C and C (command and control) aircraft, who while
well
out of harm's way usually, still had to be "part" of
the action via
"directing" his troop. I can imagine nothing more
intense than a big
firefight. I was at the beginning of a year of
intensity that a year
before I could only guess at, and still would have been way off
the
mark.
Pat Eastes
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