Saber Article Index
2020 Jan-Feb
When I had gotten no information from anyone, I had asked about who
invited D 1-5 Cav Platoon Leader Joel Chase to the 15th MED Assn
Reunion, I just asked Joel himself. Joel said it was Tom Garnella,
whom Joel had been an instructor for at Ft. Benning Infantry OCS. I wondered
what Tom, as an infantry officer was doing in the 15th Medical Battalion, so
I researched his email and contacted him.
Tom Garnella got back to
me and said, “Yes, I certainly and proudly know Joel. He is one of the
five most important men in my life. Do you know the Ft. Benning and FSB
Buttons story for the two of us? “I was already to be commissioned as a
2nd LT, Infantry but when that day came, I was commissioned as a 2nd LT
Medical Service Corps. When I went to Nam, I was assigned to the 15th Med
Bn, Company B, First Air Cav, Jan 70 to Jan 71. Became a 1LT six
months at FSB Buttons and then remainder of time at HHC, Phouc Vinh. I
was a 3506 which was sort of an administrative/ logistics type of guy.
Worked alongside such fine men as: CPT Jon Lundquist, Richard Schroder,
Rich Leonard, and CPT Dean Stoller. It was Stoller who helped me ‘find’
Joel after 45 years or so.”
I emailed Tom a lot of questions. He replied,
“It’s been fifty years, just call me.” So, I called Tom and we spoke at
length. He said at the time when he graduated from OCS the Army wanted
infantry minded officers to be MSC (Medical Service Corps) Officers. Tom
said he had the qualifications the Army was looking for, both mentally
and physically, so he got that commission.
Tom said he had grown up in
the San Fernando Valley in Southern California. I remarked that I too
lived there about the same time, we both in Van Nuys, and I later in
Granada Hills. I was there from ages four to seven, and Tom was much
older. My father worked for the VA at Wadsworth and Sepulveda, then took a
Chief Physical Therapist opening at Leeds, MA, and I was there until I
joined the Army in 1968. Tom said something about moving to Montana with
his mother. After the Army Tom said that he taught school in Beverly
Hills, CA. This could be the reason he is a good communicator and
listener.
I had mentioned in past columns SGT Howard Anderson from my
platoon in C 2-7 Cav. Mainly, because he was my influence to extend for
six months after I had DEROSed to fly on MEDEVAC, because he was so
impressed with the way they had come in for us to pick up our wounded.
Howard had a unique way of looking at things and he always kept us
spirited in the platoon.
Howard told us that when he was in Infantry AIT
at Ft. Lewis, WA, being sent to Vietnam with that MOS concerned him so he
asked his sergeant how it would be. Howard said his sergeant told him he
should be OK unless he got in the 1st Cav. To probably allay him some,
his sergeant told him, “They could make you a clerk.” So, here’s Howard
with some optimism about his future. He gets to Nam at the Replacement
Center and his orders say “15th Admin,” so he thinks, ‘Yeah, they’re
going to make me a clerk!”
Well, all who were in the 1st Cav know that
the 15th Admin was the 1st Cav’s replacement center. With a critical 11B
MOS Howard found his dream of being a clerk went up with the smoke of the
battlefield.
So, here’s Howard as a lowly infantryman wanting to survive
as a clerk. And here’s Tom, who was destined to be an infantry officer
with a very questionable survival rate but ends up as a clerk.
Tom
said that he was in the emergency room at 15th MED on FSB Buttons in Song
Be when the casualties came in from FSB David in June 1970. Tom said he
saw Joel come in very badly wounded and was so affected that he had to tell
the doctor that he had to leave. It was very emotional for him.
I got a
telephone call on the morning of December 5th from Ronnie Mays who was
ecstatic because he had read my column. Ronnie said that he was at FSB
David throughout that fight. He was in C 2-19 Artillery, which were 105
mm howitzers. We talked for a good hour. I asked a lot of questions, and he
answered them all, and told me a lot.
Ronnie said he was about a hundred
yards from the aid station. He said the wounded were being brought
there and were also being shot on the way. Ronnie said his battery got
involved immediately when it started to happen. He said they were
shooting “Killer Juniors”- which were mechanically short timed fuses
for direct fire. I asked him about flechette rounds and he said they had
them, but the Killer Juniors were better.
Ronnie said that a good
friend of his, Larry Diesburg, was also very badly wounded. Larry said
on the Echo Recon site that he was on the berm. He said he was to be on
radio watch in the tactical center when the trip flare went off and he
went to the berm with a couple of guys. He says he was hit with several
pieces of shrapnel and took a bullet through his upper thigh. He crawled
over to the mortar pit and applied pressure to his wrist area where the
main artery was cut. Larry says it seemed like forever before the firing
stopped and he was carried to the triage area. Larry says he was
originally with C 2-19 Artillery, but a month earlier took an assignment
carrying the radio for the infantry. Ronnie says that would have been
for the artillery FO in the infantry unit.
Ronnie said that he saw
everything. He said that the aid station area was littered with the
wounded who had been treated by the doctor and were wrapped in the
plastic like Dr. Walker said. Ronnie told me, “I don’t know how they
did it-because the place was socked in with fog, but a MEDEVAC came in and
hovered over the aid station but was taking so much fire it had to leave.”
No one else said anything like this. I asked Ronnie if that wasn’t the
MEDEVAC that came in at 6 am but he said, “No! That
was in the middle of the night! I saw it!” I had to believe him the way
he said it.
Ronnie said that in the morning a bunch of guys from the
artillery went down to see the dead NVA bodies before the grunts did
their sweep of the area. That wasn’t a good idea because an NVA
straggler was hiding behind a foo gas barrel and opened on them.
Ronnie said he has been in touch with Larry Diesburg in the past after
Nam but has lost contact even though Larry posted on the Echo Recon
site. Ronnie says his message to Larry wasn’t answered. Ronnie says Larry
was from Wisconsin. Ronnie says he is from Indiana and driving down to
the 1st Cav Reunion in Louisville will not be far and plans to go. I
asked Ronnie what he did after he got out of the Army and he said that he
was a machinist. Because I had been a machinist, I knew of the Cincinnati
CNC mills with which he said he worked. Ronnie said that he had gotten
Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma due to Agent Orange which he beat with
chemotherapy, but the side effects of the chemo still bother him. Not
everyone who were treated for that with chemotherapy survived.
Ronnie
said that he got in country in Vietnam in December of 1969. He said he
was originally on LZ-FSB Ike but went to many other places after that. He
said he lost count. He said that when the Cambodian Incursion happened,
they were sent up to Loc Ninh and attached to the 11th ACR. When they
went across the border C 2-19 Artillery was flown up to where they were
at FSB North. Ronnie said, “I never saw so many tracks!”
Ronnie said
that they eventually went up to FSB David. He agreed with me and said the
rolling green hills there were beautiful. He said it reminded him of
Oklahoma, which he should know well, going through Ft. Sill in Artillery
AIT. Ronnie said that before the attack at FSB David his battery went
out on a MEDCAP and met some Montagnards, who were nice people. He
said they hated the NVA and said that on another visit their elders said
that some drunken NVA had come, took from them what the Americans had
given to them, and were bragging about how they were ordered to kill
everyone on that firebase.
I had put Joel Chase in touch with Ronnie.
I never heard from Joel about him but when I had to talk to Ronnie
again, he said Joel had contacted him. He said that Joel asked him how
they were able to shoot out and not hit any of them. Ronnie told me
they set up quadrants and would, believe it or not, yell “Look out!”
like down in front.
Ronnie told me that after the battle at FSB David
they were told to pack up, that they were leaving. Ronnie said that just
before they left his first sergeant told them to unpack, that they had to
stay overnight. This was not good news, as you can imagine.
Ronnie
said that there was another company of grunts from 1-5 Cav that stayed
with part of his battery on the then abandoned FSB. Ronnie said that there
were also NVA beyond them who all night fired recoilless rounds
(RPG-B40s) at them. They managed to kill one grunt whom Ronnie said was
in a hammock. Ronnie said that it was thanks to Puff the Magic Dragon, a
gunship that kept the NVA off them until they finally left the next
morning.
Ever since I was first contacted by Joel Chase, we have been
trying to find out who had MEDEVACed him-how he went out. Joel at one
point said that he and the E 1-5 Cav CO concurred that he went out on the
hook. Then, Joel more recently one day told me that it was MEDEVAC pilot
Henry Tuell, and Medic Dan Brady who brought him in. When I asked where
he got that information, Joel said he was told that by Terry McCarl in
the 15th MED Assn. Terry gave Joel Henry Tuell’s email address and Joel
made contact. Okie said, “Joel, fairly certain I flew this mission.
Remember a hook coming in after one of our runs to take out some walking
wounded. With a thousand hours of combat flight time in a year the
missions blur. Am impressed with some of the crew guys that remember many
of the flights. Am going to try to make the reunion in Idaho in April. We
spend February and March in Arizona riding horses so will depend on
getting back to Montana in time. Keep smiling, Hank.”
Still, that was
nothing conclusive to Joel. I asked him if he contacted Dan Brady, and as
Medic would have hands on, if Joel was on board. Joel said” Yes, I have
been in contact with Dan Brady, and he says he doesn’t recall ‘walking
wounded’ on his lift-Okie probably meant the walking wounded went out on the
hook when he saw them come in. However, he does recall one severely wounded
Troop who could have been me as I was in serious condition on a stretcher.
That was the first bird out of David and then the hook landed as I
understand it. Dr. Walker could probably clear this up if he would return
my calls left on his phone.”
Then, right after he sent that to me Joel
emailed, “Mike, you aren’t going to believe this, but I just got off the
phone with Jon Walker! He remembers my situation and indicated I was in
bad condition. We had a half hour conversation which brought tears to my
eyes because it’s kind of filled a void in my life and answered some
questions about why I am still alive today. It simply wasn’t my time to
die and Dr. Walker had a significant role in enabling me to turn 75 this
year in relatively good health. Dr. Walker confirmed that I went out on the
Huey piloted by Hank Tuell and medic Dan Brady. Case solved.”
Always
remembering our 1st Cav Troops on duty around the world; over and out.
FIRST TEAM! Garryowen
Mike
Bodnar 2\7 '69 MEDEVAC 1-7\70
SO THAT OTHERS MAY LIVE