Saber Article Index
2018 jul-aug
I have been trying to get Daily Staff
Journals DA 1594s to document which MEDEVAC pilots and crews made any
particular pickups. Thus far the best information is coming from the
requesting battalion DA 1594 e.g. 2-7 Cavalry. The HHC 15th MED DA 1594s
I have seen do not document MEDEVAC missions specific to those requested
in brigade. I have asked a lot of Veterans, but no one has been able to
say if they know of that being documented on any DA 1594. I was told that
the request for a MEDEVAC, chain of command, would be from the lowest
level: platoon, to company, to battalion, to brigade. As fast as a radio
can transmit.
Researching for activity in the 1st Cav, 1st
Brigade specific to the 15 Aug 69 NVA offensive, I was told by the
National Archives that a DA 1594 for A Co 15th MED does not exist. If the
mission to the MEDEVAC crew stationed at A Co in 1st Brigade did not come
from them-and I have no way of knowing if A Co documented it as there is
no existing DA 1594 for them. Then it had to come from Brigade. I got a
sample copy of the 1st Cav 1st Brigade DA 1594 for 16 Aug 69 and it
pretty much reflects what is on the 2-7 Cavalry DA 1594 about MEDEVAC
requests. Although the 1st Brigade DA 1594 mentions all activity in the
brigade AO for all battalions. I have seen on various 2-7 Cavalry DA
1594s-of the many more of those I have-the actual mention of the MEDEVAC
AC’s call sign, so that is helpful. It isn’t always called out.
I have been reading all the DA 1594s for 2-7
Cav just to follow and plot on the maps I have of the daily movement of C
2-7 Cav which is specific to my own experience. Anyone can do the same
for their experience if they obtain these same tools. Now that I see
occasionally the MEDEVAC AC call sign is called out I know which crew
flew any particular mission. This seems to be the only way to know until
someone tells me different, but no one has. I asked MEDEVAC pilot and
15th MED webmaster Ron Huether how they got the missions and he said they
came from brigade. I couldn’t discern if brigade meant the 15th MED
company at brigade, or even if they were a middleman. If they documented on
a DA 1594, nothing was preserved.
I spoke to 1st Cav Association Executive
Director Dara Wydler on the phone asking her about the Daily Staff
Journal DA 1594 because she was a First Sergeant in an aviation unit
during her Army career, and she told me the first thing she looked at
when she went on duty every day was the DA 1594. She said that told her
everything about what had happened and what she needed to know. She said
it was filled out by the CQ, not necessarily typed, and she didn’t know if
any of those were preserved to the National Archives like the ones I am
obtaining. The fact that the Daily Staff Journals DA 1594s from Vietnam I
have been preserved to the National Archives and are available is
incredible.
Ironically, for a combat field unit, all the
2-7 Cav Daily Staff Journals (I have a full year) all typed, in military
fashion. I can’t imagine anyone trying to decipher handwritten important
documents like that in personal handwriting, which at worst could be like
the notorious “doctor’s handwriting” style. When 2-7 Cav battalion
headquarters was in its worst situation, like when FSB Jay was heavily
attacked on 29 Mar 70 I have no DA 1594. The next day 30 Mar 70 all the
entries are sparse and eerily say, “All elements report negative
SITREP”-but still typed. I asked Ron Huether if the MEDEVAC 9-Line
request information was saved and he said 9-Lines were written on scraps
of paper, in ink on the palm of your hand, or given over the radio and
written on the windscreen in wax pen. There was no record of them kept.
Because no documentation of which MEDEVAC AC pilot and crew performed
which mission and because I only occasionally see a pilot call sign
documented on any DA 1594 I have viewed I asked Ron if a MEDEVAC pilot
call sign list could be made so I or anyone could ID the pilot who picked
up for them, if the call sign was known. Ron said that one was started by
MEDEVAC pilot Rich Leonard, whom I flew with at least one harrowing
time, and I was given the web address:
https://15thmedbnassociation.org/historical-documents/pilots-callsigns.aspx
.
I asked if those call signs were retired and
I was told they were recycled. I then asked about putting dates on when
those pilots had those call signs, and I supplied some to him that I
knew. Ron got to work, took some of my offerings, his own knowledge, and
some from earlier years I got from Larry Hatch. Larry flew in ‘66-’67
before everyone was designated with the MEDEVAC prefix and was MEDEVAC
call sign Mercy 11. Now, anyone like myself can look up which MEDEVAC
pilot and crew picked up for them if they see a call sign called out on
their battalion’s Daily Staff Journal.
Four 11 Bravos showed up at the Reunion to
thank the 15th MED for everything they did in for them in Vietnam. Rob
Doll, Anthony Manetta, and Stuart Olson of 2-8 Cav were in a platoon that
ran into an NVA headquarters and got mauled. Pilot Ron (Baby Huey)
Huether and CE Jim Ferguson worked that mission and were at the Reunion
to meet those grunts and talk about how they remembered that mission. A
short article about that mission may be read at “Snipers in Box Canyon”
on the Web site, which I included in an earlier Saber column.
The MEDEVAC pilot call sign list is a work in
progress. So, if anyone has information and updates they are encouraged to
contact the webmaster Ron Huether
medevac2@15thMedBnAssociation.org.
While I was communicating with Ron about all
this he mentioned he had a bone to pick with me because I had said our 2-7
Cav battalion surgeon had earned his Combat Medical Badge when he jumped off
the Charlie Charlie bird to take over assisting us with our wounded. Ron
said he thought a CMB could only be earned by Combat Medic assigned to an
infantry unit for thirty days and under
fire.
I told him I totally agree, that’s the way I
thought it should be, but it’s not up to me. The AR I have read seems to state differently. I think the AR allows for up to a brigade,
like if any medical personnel were off on a brigade task force, or if the
unit was brigade size. One has to thoroughly read the AR and then it’s up
to interpretation, like all laws. It’s difficult to know what the Army
originally meant, and it seems to keep changing.
I was only being figurative in referring to
our battalion surgeon, but Ron had no way of knowing that. I think the AR
for the CMB would allow for an infantry battalion surgeon to earn a CMB,
but I’m not the deciding committee. I was emphasizing that our battalion
surgeon wasn’t more safely back at the LZ Battalion Aid Station but flew
out with the battalion commander in the CC helicopter and even
courageously jumped off to assist us, which if he was eligible for the CMB
according to the AR, that helped him earn it.
That particular doctor was with 2-7 Cav more
than thirty days-months in fact. He was very helpful like I describe, as
well, he once called together all the Medics in my company and told us he
was allowing us to carry antibiotics, which previously was not permitted.
That made an enormous difference treating jungle rot which was a scourge
to my platoon members, and I as well was not immune. I had members of
other platoons come to me because their Medic didn’t care. It happened.
I also personally saw that doctor working on
a mass of wounded and not giving up when most anyone else would think
they were dead. That battalion surgeon was with an infantry unit more
than thirty days, under fire at times, and I think was certainly
deserving of the CMB. Other battalion surgeons, if they are reading this,
could tell me what they know.
Ron said, “I guess I’m blind, because I could
swear there was a thirty-day time on it. I say this because we had an
awards-crazy platoon leader in MEDEVAC that set up a few foxholes on the
wire at Phuoc Vinh and had orders cut on the officers for thirty days
saying we were attached to the infantry in the Perimeter Defense Squad.
All so he could meet the requirements for the CMB. I know most of my
DUSTOFF pilot friends wear the CMB but over the years I’ve never had one
that could produce orders. I guess this all falls into the category of,
ain’t we got better things to worry about?” I would say, no, we don’t
have better things to worry about, because that is important, to me.
Combat Medics in infantry units busted their asses, as well as risked
them. I had better have gotten his quote right or he’ll have another bone
to pick with me.
I have seen too much fraud over the
years (stolen valor) even in the 1st Cavalry Division Association by
purported members, to take it lightly. I met one Veteran at a Reunion who
was wearing a CMB and I asked him whom he was with. He said that he would
never have lowered himself to be in the infantry, that some general
pinned the CMB on him once for helping with the wounded in the rear after
taking incoming. I was incensed!
A dedicated MEDEVAC Medic I knew said he
would have dearly loved to have the CMB. But, if you covet that badge so
much, you also have to covet the job of being with and helping the
infantryman every step of the way through his hell, keeping him healthy
and alive, even at the cost of your own life. So many have done that the
right way, and it’s like a family.
One Medic I knew when I was first assigned in
Vietnam in the rear by the 93rd Evac Hospital, Andy Van Duinen, followed
my lead when I 1049ed (twice and a couple of verbal) to the 1st Cav, just
so I could do my part like all the others who had no choice. Andy
transferred to the 1st Cav to fly on MEDEVAC but was initially assigned
to 1-8 Cav. He never left 1-8 Cav until DEROS because he said he liked
the grunts so much. And they probably liked him. That’s what the CMB
means.
In the last column I mentioned the combat
units coping with the restraints of the Vietnam War when the enemy had
sanctuary and could come and go and not be legally pursued past the
border. Then came the Cambodian Incursion. I have also over the years
mentioned the out of print Government Printing Office book: Dust Off:
Army Aeromedical Evacuation in Vietnam by Peter Dorland (Author), James
Nanney (Author) which can be downloaded for free as a PDF <https://history.army.mil/html/books/090/90-28-1/CMH_Pub_90-28-1.pdf>.
Just run that title on Google.
Again, DUSTOFF was the non-combat referring
call sign the first Army aeromedical evacuation units of the 44th Medical
Brigade chose from a list. You can read about it in the book. There is a
whole section on the Air Ambulance Platoon of the 1st Cav. which we know
differed and used the radio call sign MEDEVAC. MEDEVAC also differed
because it mounted M60 machine guns.
The following is from this book about
Cambodia: “From the early 1960s the North Vietnamese Army had brought
supplies and Troops into South Vietnam along the Ho Chi Minh Trail
running south through the Laotian panhandle and eastern Cambodia, and
along the trails running northeast from the Cambodian coast on the Gulf
of Thailand. In 1967 the United States began covert operations,
code-named SALEM HOUSE, against these enemy supply routes. Although
limited in size and scope each incursion team had a maximum of twelve allied
Soldiers, including three American Soldiers, and a maximum penetration of
twenty kilometers into Cambodia - some 1,400 SALEM HOUSE missions took
place from 1967 through 1970.
“In early 1970 the U.S. military leaders in
Vietnam saw the need for larger strikes against the supply routes.
Insurgents in Cambodia were stepping up their campaign against the new
anti-Communist Cambodian government of LTG Lon Nol, and Phnom Penh, the
Cambodian capital, was soon isolated. On 1 April the Viet Cong and North
Vietnamese forces began to clear a corridor ten to fifteen miles wide
along the border all the way from the Gulf of Thailand to the Fish Hook
region north-northwest of Saigon, threatening III and IV Corps Zones in
South Vietnam. Responding to these threats, the allied forces decided to
openly assist the new Cambodian government. In mid-April ARVN forces
conducted a limited cross-border raid near the Parrot’s Beak region,
south of the Fish Hook region. At the same time U.S. and ARVN staffs
started planning for a joint operation against several enemy sanctuaries
in Cambodia, especially in the Fish Hook region, and on 28 April
President Nixon approved the final plan. From early May to the end of
June elements of several large U.S. combat units in South Vietnam - the
1st Infantry Division, the 1st Cavalry Division, and the 11th Armored
Cavalry Regiment- took part in these joint strikes at suspected Viet Cong
bases over the border. USAF B-52 tactical bomb strikes and large-scale
U.S. heli-lifts and helicopter gunship strikes prepared the way for the
ground forces. DUST OFF and MEDEVAC helicopters supported both South
Vietnamese and American Soldiers in this operation. During May the 1st
Cavalry’s Air Ambulance Platoon supporting the attack flew 1,042 missions
(307 in Cambodia) and evacuated 1,600 patients (946 from Cambodia). The
dense jungle and forests along the border resulted in eighty hoist
missions for 182 patients. Although constituting only 7.6 percent of the
total missions for May, hoist missions accounted for 53 percent of the
ships hit by enemy fire that month. In May four ships were destroyed and
eleven damaged. Ten crewmen were wounded, and one killed. In June deeper
penetrations into Cambodia increased flying time for the pilots and
crews, even while the number of missions declined as the lighting tapered
off. The crews flew 682 missions (199 in Cambodia) and evacuated 1,056
patients (397 from Cambodia). They also extracted 185 patients in
ninety-one hoist missions. The 45th Medical Company and the 159th Medical
Detachment helped the Air Ambulance Platoon by backhauling many patients
to hospitals around Saigon. Because the Viet Cong had been warned of the
foray and had fled the area, casualties were far below the April
estimates. What had loomed as a severe test for the Dust-Off system
proved to be largely routine work, except for the dangerous hoist
missions over triple-canopy jungle and forest.”
Just before the unknown Cambodian Incursion
all MEDEVAC crewmen were told everyone was going to be assigned to a
helicopter, which was irregular. It wasn’t until 01 May 70 when we were
all in assembled in Quan Loi, which was the central staging area for Task
Force Shoemaker that the Air Ambulance Platoon Leader CPT Hagerty
gathered us all together on a landing pad and said, “Men, we’re going
into Cambodia!” We all cheered-and went to work.
I received the orders for two Distinguished
Flying Crosses that were awarded to MEDEVAC crewmen in Vietnam in 1969.
One was to CE SP5 Elmer J. Dahlman Jr. for returning and suppressing
enemy fire during a hot urgent medical evacuation near LZ Joe 12 May 69.
When leaving, an enemy tracer round ignited the fuel cell causing a
forced emergency landing during which SP5 Dahlman continued to suppress
enemy fire until help arrived.
The other Distinguished Flying Cross was
awarded to door gunner SP4 James M. Odum for heroism while participating
in aerial flight evidenced by actions above and beyond the call of duty
22 Jun 69. During a medical evacuation of ground forces SP4 Odum leaned
out of his seat in order to clear the aircraft and help position it over
the friendly unit’s position. Enemy fire became too intense and the
MEDEVAC had to leave the area while SP4 Odum returned fire. Making
another attempt into the area, SP4 Odum fearlessly exposed himself as he
placed suppressive fire on the hostile positions until enemy fire
completely destroyed his machine gun. No more was noted.
FIRST TEAM!
Garryowen
Mike
Bodnar
C 2\7 '69 MEDEVAC 1-7\70
SO THAT OTHERS MAY LIVE