Just Another
Operation
The
whoop, whoop, whoop of the chopper was loud. I looked around the slick
at the faces of the Scouts and they looked fearful but proud, some
smiled, some were lost deep in thought.
The Scouts were members of the 406th Company, one of three that made up
the ARVN Highland Scout Companies. Nearly all the Scouts were Montagnard
with the officers being Vietnamese. The Scouts were lightly armed
reconnaissance units, sent out to search for enemy units. The Scouts
were not expected to engage these enemy units, as they were usually much
larger and more heavily armed, but to move quickly and quietly and
gather information. Often though, the NVA units were eager for a fight
and more than willing to try to annihilate the Scouts.
We were nearing the LZ. “Tyler Alarm 3, Tyler Alarm 3, this is 38 Bravo
- radio check over” I said into the PRC-25 handset. “38 Bravo this is 3,
hear you loud and clear, over,” came back at me. I checked my rifle and
my gear and leaned over to check the PRC-25 radio in the pack of the
Scout next to me. The young Montagnard Scout that carried the radio
smiled and gave me a thumbs up. “No sweat trung sĩ Ski” he said in
broken English and smiled at me. Everything appeared ok and ready to go.
I was nervous, maybe scared as I looked down at the passing rain forest.
Another combat assault onto a nameless mountain because some
intelligence guy said this or that NVA (North Vietnamese Army) unit was
operating in this area and wanted us to find out for sure. Was Charlie
going to be home? Was the LZ going to get hot? My mind was racing. So
far the LZ was cold. The previous chopper had dropped its load of Scouts
with no problem.
I pulled the map that was encased in a sealed plastic sleeve from my
pants pocket and studied the map again for possible locations for
defensive artillery fire should we need it. Circles marked on the map
around the LZ showed NVA mortar ranges based on the size of mortar. I
carried a string with a loop on the end to hold a grease pencil. There
were markings on the string for the different ranges for NVA mortars.
With the string and grease pencil, I could make mortar range circles
around any position on my map.
“We are about to reach the LZ,” the door gunner mouthed to me. We
started to descend at a fast rate. The Scouts all started to get into a
ready position. The ground was closing fast but so far no fire from
below.
I slid down so I was standing on the chopper struts. I wanted to be able
to jump to the ground when the time came and make a fast exit. I didn’t
ever want to get caught inside the chopper if it was being fired upon
and I didn’t want to be responsible for blocking anyone from getting
off.
The chopper touched the ground and I ran a few feet and got ready to
direct the next incoming choppers. The Scout carrying the radio was
right behind me as usual. The Scouts on the chopper ran past us into the
line of trees to add to the growing perimeter.
Almost immediately after the chopper lifted off, another was coming in
to land. With my arm motions I aided the chopper to a landing and
another 8 Scouts raced for the perimeter.
Just as the chopper was lifting off, I heard the “duk, duk” of mortar
rounds leaving a mortar tube and immediately yelled “incoming” and
hugged the ground. The mortar rounds exploded in the LZ without harm.
The Scout with the radio pulled on my sleeve and motioned towards an old
hole in the ground. We crawled over and piled into the relative safety.
“Duk, duk, duk” again. “Incoming!!” Must be three mortar tubes I thought
as I tried get a bearing on the direction of the sound. One round landed
really close, throwing dirt and debris on the Scout and me. Another
round landed further away, the third in the trees surrounding the LZ.
I got on the radio and called for an immediate halt to the incoming
choppers and called the “red leg” call sign and told them to prepare for
a fire mission. Damn I thought to myself, no helicopter gunships for
support when we need them.
Another “duk, duk, duk” in unison and I and the young Scout and I hugged
mother earth. One round landed in the LZ the other two in the trees. I
wondered about casualties.
I grabbed the radio handset and called for fire missions on preset
target positions in the direction I thought the mortars were firing
from. In a few very “long” minutes the sound of the impacting artillery
rounds reverberated over the LZ and the surrounding rainforest. I
couldn’t see the explosions, but based on the sound they seemed to be in
the vicinity of the enemy mortars. Artillery rounds impacted on other
preset targets and soon there was only the sound of the rainforest.
After the artillery fire, there were no more incoming mortar rounds.
Either we had gotten lucky with the artillery rounds our Charlie had
decided it was time to leave us alone. I radioed for the rest of the
choppers to come in and one by one they dropped their load of Scouts.
The first chopper in carried out two Scouts wounded by the mortar attack
and soon we were all alone on the lonely mountain.
As soon as all the Scouts had landed the Scout Company Commander headed
us out of the LZ single file, like a large snake, down the mountain
towards a mountain saddle which would lead us towards our next
objective.
The vegetation on the saddle between the two mountains was for some
reason only single canopy so you could view the sounding terrain. It was
beautiful, with the clouds almost enveloping the numerous neighboring
mountains. “Beautiful morning” I thought to myself.
The sparse canopy of the mountain saddle also meant a good ambush point
with good fields of fire for the NVA so everyone was tense and alert. We
moved at a good pace considering all the “wait-a-minute” vines that
tugged at us as we struggled to move forward.
The terrain was up and down, up and down and the triple canopy
rainforest was back and visibility was very limited. From my map I knew
we were headed up towards the next objective, the mountaintop, but the
terrain was tough and I was tired. “Too much beer drinking”, I thought
as I sweated profusely while we humped our way forward. “The first day
is a bitch and it always seems to be like this,” I thought as my body
was slowly remembering the shape it needed to be in. I sweated out all
the multiple sins I had enjoyed since the last operation. “Too many damn
beers”.
Just as daylight was fading, we reached our next objective, another
mountaintop. The Scouts quickly formed a perimeter and started digging
in for the night. Nearby the Scout Company Commander was directing a
couple of the Scouts to where he wanted his foxhole dug for the night.
The other advisor and I and the Scout carrying our radio picked a spot
close by and started digging our holes. We shared the task. When the
foxholes were dug we strung our hammocks low over our foxholes and
covered our hammocks with our ponchos to form small a-frame shelters.
In the fast fading light the other advisor and I visited the company
commander where we sat down and plotted possible targets for defensive
fire. When we got back to our shelters, I called the supporting
artillery unit on the radio and give the Fire Direction Center or FDC
the numbered defensive target coordinates in case their help was needed
during the night.
The morning light was barely filtering into the foggy perimeter when the
Scouts silently started to build small fires to cook their rice. Fires
were made in the morning so the smoke would blend into the fog and not
give our position away. We ate our only hot meal of the day and when
over, the Scouts made rice balls, like snowballs, from the extra rice
they had cooked and placed the rice balls in their packs for munching on
during the day. The other advisor and I had eaten tasty LRRP (long range
recon patrol) rations.
Even before full light, we were up and ready and headed towards our next
objective, another mountain top, another day of hard humping and maybe a
party with the NVA.
The day was a day of heavy humping in rough terrain but uneventful
except for a Scout finding a fresh NVA spider hole. The spider hole made
everyone nervous. If there was one spider hole there was probably many
more that we couldn’t see, and those might not be empty.
We quickly moved from the area of the spider hole and as the sun was
descending behind a neighboring mountaintop, we made our night position.
Again we found a location close to the company commander, dug our
foxholes and made our hammock shelters and setup defensive fires with
the company commander and artillery support.
I awoke that next morning to the smell of cooking fires. It was a usual
morning, rice cooked by the Scouts, LRRP rations for us advisors and a
silent move on to our next objective. Just as we cleared our night
position, NVA mortar rounds started falling into it. Not bothering to
stop and count our blessings, we moved out of the area quickly. We
didn’t want Charlie to realize we had already departed and adjust their
fire.
As we moved on, the Scouts all seemed to be tense and fully alert. They
all carried weapons in the ready position. From previous experience,
when the Scouts got uptight like they were, it meant that they knew that
the NVA were close and they expected to make contact at any time. We
moved forward at a very careful pace, no talking, no noise and everyone
ready for whatever would happen. Around 9:00am a violent firefight
erupted towards the front of the line. I moved forward to assist if I
could.
When I got to the front of the company, the Scout who had been on point
was dead and two other Scouts were wounded. They had run into a hidden
NVA machine gun bunker probably setup in what the NVA thought was a good
avenue of approach to one of their positions or a likely route for us to
take. By the time I reached the forward position the bunker was
neutralized and a Scout medic was taking care of the wounded. The point
man didn’t have a chance. One of the wounded had a bad sucking chest
wound; the other was hit in the shoulder.
I was shaken up by the death of the Scout that had been on point; I had
shared a meal with him, his wife and their small child just a couple of
weeks ago.
There was no open area for a dustoff chopper to land in the area so the
company moved back down the mountain to a small but suitable spot we had
passed earlier in the day. The dustoff was called and arrived at the LZ
location about the same time some of the Scouts had finished checking
the area for a possible ambush. The LZ had a number of stumps so the
chopper couldn’t fully land but hovered as we lifted the one dead and
two wounded Scouts up to the chopper crew. As the chopper lifted and
flew away, we very carefully continued our ascent of the mountain,
taking a different route to avoid a possible ambush. Things were
different now; The NVA knew we were here and we knew a fight was waiting
for us ahead in the Green.
We continued towards our next objective, everyone now fully alert and
ready. My nerves were solid but agitated and I was in a type of excited
anticipation mixed with fear. We moved forward making our own trail, the
rainforest mainly triple canopy but at times double canopy. Visibility
in any direction was limited to just a few feet most of the time.
Occasionally we would come across a used trail, a trail that had been
used frequently. There were no villages anywhere close so the trail
users had to be the NVA. To follow one of these trails would certainly
have meant an ambush so we continued to our objective making our own
trail.
Around 2:00pm the column stopped and the Scouts in front and behind me
moved off the trail and formed a type of perimeter. I quietly moved
forward to see what was happening. As I got forward I found out the
point man had detected an NVA position to our front. The Montagnard
soldier on point had noticed that the NVA had disrupted the vegetation
to possibly improve their fields of fire. Because of his keen eye, he
had discovered several NVA fighting positions but the NVA did not seem
to know we were so close to their positions. I and the other advisor
conferred with the Scout Company Commander on what to do. We very
quietly agreed that since we did not know the size of the NVA force we
should move away and call in artillery on the NVA position. Hardly
without a sound, we did exactly that, and when we were a safe distance
from the target, I called for artillery strikes on the area of the NVA
positions, undoubtedly causing an unknown number of NVA casualties.
We moved quickly and quietly from the area towards our objective. Around
4:00pm our luck ran out. The front of our column surprised a group of
NVA soldiers preparing a defensive position. I moved forward as the
Scouts put out a tremendous volume at the unsuspecting NVA, killing or
wounding all of them, but the fight was not over. Within minutes, the
forward platoon including me was taken under heavy fire buy an NVA force
of unknown size. The volume of fire from the NVA who had moved in on our
left flank was so horrific there must have been a large number of them.
I called for artillery support and directed fire as close as I could to
our position. The NVA had learned that if they got up close to the
American or ARVN unit they were fighting, artillery fire against them
was ineffective as the Americans or ARVNs didn’t want artillery fire to
fall on their own positions. The foliage was so thick in the area it was
hard to see in any direction. The NVA bullets flying overhead were
causing it to rain leaves down on the Scouts. The NVA were so close that
a grenade slugfest was also going on.
As our fight continued, the rest of the company made a flanking maneuver
on the NVA, eventually forcing them to withdraw. In all, the firefight
was intense but short, probably lasting only 20 minutes, but the costs
were high. The Scouts had 2 dead and 4 wounded. We found 3 NVA dead and
numerous blood trails where the NVA dragged away their wounded and dead.
To our knowledge there was no acceptable place for an LZ in the area so
we were forced to take our dead and wounded with us as we moved forward
and away from the scene of the firefight.
Knowing we needed to get the wounded medevaced, I got on the radio and
tried to contact the Forward Air Controller that was flying in our area.
Before long I connected with “Elliot 10”, told him the situation and
what we needed and gave him our position in code. Within minutes he
radioed back and in code gave us coordinates for what looked like an
acceptable LZ. He also said he would handle contacting Dustoff and
coordinate our arrival and Dustoff’s arrival at the LZ and provide air
support in case it was needed. Since the rainforest was so thick, the
FAC couldn’t see us as we moved towards the LZ so I needed to
periodically radio him with our coordinates.
As we were nearing the LZ, the ARVN commander in Kontum decided that
because of the Scouts casualties, three KIA and eight WIA, so far in the
operation, that it was time to extract the Scout Company. He ordered the
Scout Company Commander to make a night position at or near the LZ and
prepare for the company to be lifted out in the morning.
We arrived at the LZ just after the area had been worked over by fast
movers and artillery called in by the FAC giving us the great support.
The Scouts moved out and formed a defensive perimeter around the LZ and
I coordinated with the approaching Dustoff chopper. On his order, I
threw out a smoke grenade to mark the position of the LZ. He radioed
back he saw red smoke and I affirmed that red was correct. The Dustoff
chopper landed and took away four KIA and seven WIA. One of the wounded
Scouts had died during the move from the firefight to the LZ. I radioed
the FAC and thanked him for his excellent support and he said he or a
replacement would be in the area if we needed help during the night.
The Scout Company Commander decided to make a night position on one side
of the LZ. The Scouts prepared defensive positions and settled in for
the night. Making a night position so close to the LZ made me nervous
and I knew it made the Scouts nervous. Because of the activity earlier
with the Dustoff flying in and out, the NVA had to know exactly where we
were. I dug my foxhole extra deep after I setup defensive fire
coordinates with the artillery FDC.
The night started out quiet and peaceful. I dosed for a while but a bad
dream woke me. I lay in my hammock and listened to the night. Just as I
was about to fall asleep again, small arms fire opened up across the LZ.
I flipped from my hammock into my foxhole and tried to figure out what
was happening. Since it appeared that all firing was going out with
minimal or no fire coming inside the perimeter, I ran over to the LZ
side of the perimeter to see what was happening. The Scouts said that a
NVA force of unknown size had moved out onto the LZ and they took them
under fire. Possibly the NVA were trying to pinpoint our exact location
or had been trying to find anything salvageable on the LZ. I moved back
to my night position and tried to sleep.
Again, small arms fire broke the silence. This time our perimeter was
receiving heavy fire. The side of the perimeter opposite the LZ was
being attacked. I radioed the artillery FDC and requested fire on the
likely approach points for the side of the perimeter that was being
attacked. As the artillery rounds landed, I adjusted the artillery fire
closer to our perimeter and to the left and right, saturating the area
of the attack with artillery fire. The FAC came on the radio and asked
if there was anything he could do. I told him that I thought we were
being probed and if it got worse I would radio him.
After the defensive artillery fire the NVA seemed to disappear back into
the rainforest. The attack seemed over for now, but within minutes, the
NVA hit the north side of the perimeter, near the edge of the LZ. I
again called for artillery defensive fire and the attack ended. Again
the night became quiet but all the Scouts were 100 percent alert and
prepared.
A couple of hours passed and then I heard the distinctive “duk, duk” of
mortar rounds leaving mortar tubs and then the sound of the explosions
of mortar rounds within our perimeter. This time the mortar rounds
seemed to be coming from different locations. I called the FAC on the
radio and asked him to try to pinpoint the location of the mortars from
their flashes when they fired. I radioed the FDC and called for
artillery fire on points around the perimeter. The NVA mortars fired
again and again with their deadly rounds landing in our perimeter. The
FAC radioed and said he had pinpointed a firing position and called for
artillery fire on that position, neutralizing that NVA mortar. None of
the NVA mortars fired again but everyone prepared for a big attack.
Thankfully the following hours passed without incident and the sky was
beginning to brighten from the dawn. As usual the mountains were
shrouded with fog. The Scouts had received no casualties from the NVA
probes but had suffered 3 slightly wounded from the mortar attack. These
wounded did not need a Dustoff to come for them but instead would wait
for the big extraction later.
The perimeter was becoming active with the Scouts following their usual
morning routine of making fires and cooking their rice like nothing had
happened during the night. I made a small C-4 fire and heated water in a
canteen cup for a hot LRRP ration meal. Soon the dawn turned into day.
I received a radio call that the extraction choppers would arrive
shortly. Soon the call came to throw smoke. I threw a yellow smoke
grenade, which was confirmed by the incoming chopper pilot. Soon
choppers were landing, and then taking off with loads of Scouts.
Helicopter gunships were circling the LZ, occasionally firing rockets
into areas around the LZ or raking the same areas with machine gun fire,
keeping Charlie from attacking our shrinking position. Soon it was just
7 Scouts and myself and then finally it was our turn. We were headed
home.
© Charles Schwiderski

Awarded 15 October 2007
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