In the annals of war, no braver men have taken to the field of battle than the pilots who flew the iconic Huey helicopters during the Vietnam War. I saw their unwavering resolve time and again as they flew through withering gunfire to carry us safely away from the gates of eternity and bring us home. Bob Ford’s account of his year in the command seat of his ship of salvation is a priceless contribution to the literary canon of that war.
—David A. Maurer
Special Forces Veteran
Author of The Dying Place
Serving as a crew chief in Hue was a life-changing experience. It was an opportunity to serve with the best of the best, the cream of the crop. The pilots and crews were fearless. The bonds grew so strong that today when we meet, we still feel the connection. The Hue experience and these dedicated men will always be in my heart.
—Heidi (Bud) Atanian
Crew Chief
Hue Detachment 282 Assault
When Lt. Ford joined the company, he rapidly became an aircraft commander. He soon commanded a detachment located in Hue, sixty-one miles from our company. During the Tet Offensive in January 1968, Bob and his crew flew hundreds of missions in support of US and ARVN troops. On all of these missions, they were under enemy fire. Bob exemplified the best qualities of an army aviator. He never let me down. I am proud of him.
—Lt. Col. Chuck Ward, Retired
Commanding Officer 282 Assault
I thought the book was exciting from start to finish. I feel I learned a lot about the Vietnam War and what the American soldiers, as well as the Australians and the South Vietnamese, went through. My favorite part in the first of the book was when Bob flew between two hills and got shot at. It was exciting, and I wanted to read more to find out what else would happen. The pictures were cool and helped me understand the story even more.
—Alek Winter
Age 12
Okeene, Oklahoma
© 2015 Bob Ford
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.
Black Cat 2-1
The True Story of a Vietnam Helicopter Pilot and His Crew
Brown Books Publishing Group
16250 Knoll Trail Drive, Suite 205
Dallas, Texas 75248
www.BrownBooks.com
(972) 381-0009
A New Era in Publishing™
eISBN 978-1-61254-244-7
LCCN 2014952699
Printed in the United States
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
For more information or to contact the author, please go to www.BlackCat2-1.com
To my kids, Amy, Allison, and Tyler, and their kids, Emma, Cate, Tess, Nathan, and Taylor. You’re the best, and I’m proud of all of you. Also to Sherri and Geraldine for their many hours of work helping me tell this story. And to that dependable machine of flight, the UH-1 Huey.
In the Vietnam War, 2,197 helicopter pilots and 2,717 crewmembers were killed. This is the story of one pilot who made it home and the valiant men he served with who risked their lives for the troops on the ground.
Many good things came out of the Vietnam War. This memoir of personal experiences is one of them.
—Contents—
Prologue
1 GOING IN HOT
2 EARNING MY WINGS
3 GAINS AND LOSSES
4 MARINE RECON
5 AC ORDERS
6 FOX 4
7 DAILY CHALLENGES
8 VICTOR ZULU 1-4
9 A ZIPPO AND GOING FEET WET
10 CREW, LOCALS, AND A DUSTUP
11 VIP MISSIONS
12 CHRISTMAS WITH BOB AND RAQUEL
13 NEW YEAR—ANOTHER DAY
14 21 JAN 68
15 72-HOUR DAY
16 BATTLE OF HUE
17 R&R
18 FIRST WEEK BACK
19 ARTICLE 15
20 BATTALION STAFF
21 NVA POWS
22 EASTER CEASE-FIRE
23 THE NUNG
24 LAST 40 DAYS
Epilogue
Glossary
Appendix
About the Author
Photos
—Prologue—
0900, 11 NOV 90
Okeene, Oklahoma
I received a call from a local third grade teacher, Sandy Boeckman, who wanted me to speak to her class on Veterans Day. I had never spoken in public about Vietnam, and she could probably sense the hesitation in my voice, so she added, “Bob, these kids need to hear from a veteran.” After that comment, there was no way I could refuse her.
I put on my green dress uniform. I hadn’t worn it for twenty-four years, but it still fit. I also took along my flight helmet, a box of C-rations, dog tags, and some eight-by-ten photos that I put up on the chalkboard with magnets. I talked for about five minutes about the significance of Veterans Day and then asked for questions. The kids hesitated.
“There is no such thing as a dumb question in the army,” I added. After that, all hands went up.
“OK, one at a time,” I said. “I’ll answer every question.”
The first question was about a picture of the Huey helicopter I had flown in combat.
“How fast will it go?” the student asked, followed by, “Why is there a black cat on the front?”
About ten minutes later, a little girl stood up, pointed to the picture of me with seven other Hue detachment pilots, and quietly asked, “Did any of your friends get hurt?”
I looked at the photo and said, “Yes, sweetheart.” My eyes rested on those faces I knew so well, and it was as if no time had passed. Standing there in that third grade classroom, I was overcome with both grief and pride. I tried to answer her question three times but couldn’t, and I froze as unexpected tears flowed down my cheek.
Sandy walked forward, handed me some tissues, and carefully answered the little girl’s question for me. I pulled it together and did a good job the rest of the hour. The kids were courteous and attentive.
After the children left, Sandy approached me. “Bob, you must write your story,” she told me. “You really should. People want to know.”
So I did, and here it is.
–1–
GOING IN HOT
I’m in San Francisco, and I got processed in OK. Both arms are real sore from the eight shots they gave me. My stomach feels terrible from the malaria pill. I leave for Vietnam tonight at 2100 hours in a C141—no windows, seat backwards—for 18 hours. Met a lot of infantry lieutenants. All good guys. All of us admit we’re scared. We had heard there was a one in seven chance of getting killed or wounded.
25 JUL 67 Letter to Diane
As our helicopter neared the landing zone, the radio barked, “Alley Cat 3-4, this is Black Cat 6.” Alley Cat was the call sign for our gunships.
“6, this is 3-4, go.”
“Roger, Alley Cat. Start your run at LZ tango.”
“Roger, 6. Starting prep now. 3-4 out.”
Hebert, the pilot, told the gunners we were going in hot, which meant our two door gunners were to shoot their M60 machine guns continually at any enemy or suspected enemy emplacement. Adrenaline rushed through me as I heard the explosions of the 2.75-inch rockets from the gunships finding their targets in and around the landing zone. I heard the sound of the M60s in the back of our ship start firing.
The landing zone (LZ) had been prepared by the gunships, and every ship in the lift had ample room to land. I did not see any enemy muzzle flashes. The troops jumped out and were gone within seconds. I was surprised when Hebert said, “You got it,” which meant he was transferring control of the ship to me.
“I got it,” I responded, taking control. Hebert lit a cigarette.
It was my fourth day in Vietnam.
Light rain, the smell of human waste, and a mass of military activity—these had been my first impressions of the country. After a brief stop at Wake Island, we had landed at Pleiku, in the central highlands. I headed toward the Command Center to receive my first assignment. As I carried my army-issued air force duffel and L.L. Bean canvas bag, my legs felt like rubber from pure fear. Mud oozed through the airstrip’s perforated steel planking.
After storing my gear, I was told there were no openings in the First Cavalry, so I spent the rest of the day familiarizing myself with the compound. I was given the location of a bunker in case of a rocket or mortar attack. The next morning, there was still no assignment. I was beginning to feel more relaxed. My fear of death was subsiding, but it was replaced by a fear of the unknown.
As I walked by a Quonset supply hut, I saw an infantry captain who looked like a real veteran. He wore regular olive drab fatigues and carried a pair of worn jungle fatigues that were faded from his year in the field. He started to toss the old fatigues into a small pile of discarded clothing near the hut, and I asked what he was going to do with them.
“Leave them right here,” he answered.
He was about my size. I hesitated and then asked, “Do you think I could have them?”
He smiled slightly, sensing that I didn’t want to look like a new guy, before giving them to me. “They’re yours. They got me through this year.”
Before he could walk away, I asked, “What does it take to make it through a year of flying helicopters?”
“Well, I’ll tell you,” he said. “You’ll have to put personal safety aside and do everything you can for the troops on the ground. No matter what.”
He spoke with such intensity that his words were permanently etched in my mind. I could tell he had respect for pilots and that he’d depended on them to stay alive. It made me proud to be an army aviator.
I had been in the country for two days, and I was still walking and breathing. The third day, I stood before the administrative officer, awaiting my assignment.
“Lieutenant Ford, you are to report to Major Meyers for assignment with the 17th Aviation Group in Nha Trang,” he began. “They need lieutenants. If this weather subsides, we may be able to get you there today.”
I liked the idea of being needed. This assignment meant I would get into the war. I felt calm and prepared, and within fifteen minutes, I was ready to be transported to my new destination. I boarded a noisy Caribou, a medium-size, twin-engine cargo airplane, and was on my way.
After landing in Nha Trang, I went in search of Major Meyers. A sergeant who ran the office with obvious efficiency greeted me, and then I reported as ordered and saluted the major. His desk was filled with papers, maps, and a nameplate that held a pen and pencil on each end. I chuckled to myself and thought, This must be what the terms “desk jockey” and “paper-pusher”mean.
On the wall behind Major Meyers’s desk was a large map of South Vietnam divided among four corps. The northernmost was designated as I Corps. Within each area, the army aviation companies were labeled with their designated numbers. The 282nd was the farthest north within I Corps. As I looked at the map, I noticed red Xs next to each company and wondered what they meant. There were many more Xs next to the 282nd than any other company.
The major interrupted my thoughts. “Well, Lieutenant, I have just gone over your personnel file. Do you have any idea which unit you want to join? Do you have any friends stationed in country?” He walked toward the map.
“No, sir,” I replied. “I’m the first guy in my flight class to get here.”
“Take a look at the map, Lieutenant. Is there any location where you want to go?”
I looked at the red Xs at the top of the map near the 282nd. “Sir, what are those red Xs by each company?”
“Those, Lieutenant, are known aircraft hits from hostile fire in the past seven days.”
“Do they need lieutenants, sir?”
“They always need lieutenants.”
“That’s where I want to go.”
He looked at me. “Are you sure you want to go there?”
My gut feeling was that the year would pass more quickly if I were a part of the action, so I nodded. “Yes, sir, I’ll go there.”
The major assigned me to the 282nd Assault Helicopter Company stationed at Da Nang. He informed me that there would be a C-130 flight leaving the next morning at 7:00 a.m. Then he handed me my orders and added, “It will be interesting.”
I was relieved as I left his office but still couldn’t sleep that night due to the thought of getting into the cockpit the next morning and starting my tour. Unfortunately the C-130 heading to Da Nang was grounded due to rain so heavy that it was difficult to distinguish a building only fifty feet away. By the next morning, the rain had subsided, but the C-130 scheduled to transport me was once again grounded, this time due to a maintenance problem. Within an hour, however, things began to happen quickly.
I watched as a Huey approached a landing pad close to where I was waiting. On the front of its avionics cover was a large yellow full moon with a silhouette of a black cat with red eyes. It was impressive and exactly what I thought a combat insignia should look like.
The commanding officer (CO) of the 282nd, Major Chuck Ward, was flying the Huey and had come to Nha Trang just to pick me up. He returned my salute as he greeted me. He looked rock solid. I liked him immediately and sensed he felt the same toward me. He never shut the helicopter down as I climbed into the right seat.
Major Ward called the tower, “Black Cat 6 request clearance for takeoff.” I liked the Black Cat call sign from the start.
I was surprised when Major Ward let me bring the Huey to a hover. We flew north along the coast at about two thousand feet above ground level to the Marble Mountain Air Facility located on the east side of Da Nang near the coast of the South China Sea. After three weeks without flying, it felt good to handle the controls.
As soon as we arrived at the 282nd Company headquarters, which was located on the southwestern side of the Marble Mountain active runway, I was told to fly copilot on an emergency combat assault. Combat-assault missions or CAs were one of our primary jobs. It was departing in fifteen minutes.
I had only my flight helmet from flight school, which had just been painted olive drab. Since there had not been time to receive a bulletproof chest protector or a sidearm, I asked, “Where do I get my gear?” But another pilot, who I assumed was an aircraft commander (AC), was already signaling me to climb aboard.
“Wait here,” came a voice behind me. “I’ll see what I can find.”
Without saying another word, Specialist Fourth Class Baker was gone. As he walked briskly back toward me carrying an infantry-type flak vest, I could hear the Hueys going through their startup. Once he handed me the vest, I said thanks and started to run to the aircraft. He laughed as he said, “Relax, sir. They won’t leave without us. I’m the crew chief on the ship you’re flying.” He pointed toward one aircraft and said, “That’s mine. Climb in.” I liked his calm, humorous attitude. It was the same Huey that the AC had been signaling me to board.
As we strapped into our seatbelts and harnesses, the door gunner pulled the pin holding the side of my armored seat and locked it into place. Because of the location of the locking pin, this procedure is almost impossible for a pilot to execute. I could hear the AC shout over the noise of the helicopter, which was already at flight idle, “Hey, Lieutenant, are you ready to go? Put your helmet on. Watch and listen.”
As we proceeded to the LZ, he said over the intercom, “You never know about a new lieutenant.” His voice was serious. “Now, if you listen to what all the aircraft commanders say, you’ll be OK. Sometimes it’s hard for a lieutenant to take orders from a warrant while in the aircraft. If you want to make it as a pilot and someday an aircraft commander, you had better get started now.”
I was surprised by his bluntness but reasoned he must have had confrontations with new lieutenants in the past. He would get none from me. He was calm. He looked, acted, and flew like a real combat veteran in total control. He was typical of the aircraft commanders I was to meet. I wanted to be like them. This made the advice I received that day easy to follow.
As we flew fifteen hundred feet above the jungle, I was getting to know the crew by listening to their conversations over the intercom. The aircraft commander, W2 Harold Hebert (pronounced A-Bear), was considered an old combat veteran at the age of twenty-one. At 5’8” and about 130 pounds, he was lean and fit, and he had been in country for about nine months. I watched the instruments and took everything in as he perfectly maneuvered our ship in a seven-aircraft formation. I was getting my first taste of flying combat, and I loved it.
We were approaching the LZ when the radio burst to life. “Alley Cat 3-4, this is Black Cat 6.”
“6, this is 3-4, go.”
“Roger, Alley Cat. Start your run at LZ tango.”
“Roger, 6. Starting prep now. 3-4 out.”
Hebert told the gunners we were going in hot, and I heard the M60 machine guns in the back of our ship start firing. As we approached, I heard a series of explosions as the 2.75-inch rockets from the gunships found their targets in and around the LZ.
The LZ had been prepared by the gunships, so every ship had plenty of space to land. I watched for enemy muzzle flashes but saw none. The troops jumped out and were gone within seconds. I was surprised when Hebert said, “You got it,” which meant he was transferring control of the ship to me.
There are two identical sets of controls for the aircraft, and there can’t ever be confusion about who is flying. A pilot relinquishing control of the aircraft uses brief wording over the intercom such as, “You have the aircraft” or “You got it,” which is followed by the second pilot’s acknowledgment, “I have the aircraft” or “I got it.” The transfer takes only a second or two. Then the pilot transferring the controls raises his hands to show he is off of his controls. “I got it,” I said as I took control. Hebert lit a cigarette, and we were on our way back to pick up more troops.
Hebert let me fly the rest of the missions that day. We made two more insertions, and I felt myself improve each time. When we landed back at Marble Mountain, I felt proud and confident having passed my first test. I did not feel fear.
Nobody went out of the way to talk to me, which was typical treatment of a new guy. With the combat assault complete, I went in search of the supply sergeant. When I found him, he was chewing on the stub of a cigar, and I asked for the standard issue gear.
“Sir, before I can release any item, you are going to have to bring me requisition forms,” he said and rattled off letters and numbers. “Then I may be able to help you.”
I gave him a puzzled look while thinking, What an odd request in a war zone.
He erupted into laughter and said, “Lieutenant, I have to do this to each new guy. It breaks up the monotony. I’ll get you what you need.”
He gave me a .45-caliber Colt 1911 automatic pistol with a holster, jungle fatigues, two pairs of jungle boots, and bedding. I kept the flak vest since no chest protector was available. As I left, he said, “Good luck, sir. Keep your head down.”
After storing my gear, I decided to check out the officers’ club. Walking through the front door, I felt like I was in a World War I movie. The lighting was dim, and the place looked and smelled much as I would imagine a bar in a war zone. Inlaid on the floor by the door was a Halloween black cat arched in the middle of a full moon circle. It looked identical to the black cat on the front of our Huey. I stopped to look around. The one thing that caught my eye was a lone combat boot embedded in concrete at the end of the bar.
The first person I saw was my aircraft commander from the day’s combat assault. Hebert sat at a table just past the inlay with three other pilots. I walked toward them, but the reception I received was not the one I expected. As I approached the table, a bell clanged. Hebert stood and said something about me doing pretty good today, but then he laughed and said, “Lieutenant, you are to buy a round for everyone in the bar.”
I thought it was because I was a new guy. The other pilots started to laugh as Hebert continued, “You walked on the Black Cat, and anyone who steps on it owes a round to everyone in the club. It’s a tradition.”
As he spoke, I glanced around the room to see no less than ten officers. I did not like the idea of paying for their drinks because I never carried much money—I sent all my paycheck home with the exception of sixty bucks a month. But there was no way out of the predicament.
“If it’s tradition, then I’m ready to pay up,” I said. Beers were thirty-five cents, and mixed drinks were fifty.
Hebert explained that the boot belonged to our commanding officer, Major Ward, who had instructed it would be the duty of the newest company officer to keep the boot and the bell shining.
Buying a round for everyone wasn’t so bad, but the thought of having to keep that boot polished, as well as the bell above the bar, ate at me. This was a war zone. I saw no sense in such silliness, but I kept my feelings to myself. I had no choice but to follow tradition, so I rounded up my Kiwi and Brasso polish and took care of them.
As I headed back to my sleeping quarters, which we called our “hootch,” I saw three warrant officers who had been in the officers’ club walking into a hootch. Hebert called for me to join them. As I walked in, Hebert said, “Hey, Lieutenant, I’d like to introduce you to Lennis Lee.” A tall, thin man standing next to Hebert extended his hand and greeted me. He spoke with a down-to-earth North Carolina drawl.
Hebert continued, “This is Tom Woehl, the company standardization instructor pilot, or SIP. And here is the old man of the bunch. This is Easley.”
At thirty-five, Gene Easley was old for a first-tour warrant. He was the only one in the room with the gunship platoon. Lanky and slow talking, I found him to be one of the most likable pilots in the company. He could play the guitar and sing quite well with his baritone voice, and he made up lyrics to familiar tunes.
The next day before I could start flying right seat as a copilot, or what we called the peter pilot, I was required to pass a check flight. The peter pilot nickname comes from the military flight logbook. There are two places to record flight time. The first is labeled “AC” for aircraft commander and the second “PP” for primary pilot or copilot. Even though I had already flown on a combat assault, it was standard operating procedure for any new pilot to complete and pass a check ride. My check ride came with Woehl, who put me through everything I had learned at Fort Wolters and Fort Rucker, as well as combat procedures. He was outstanding and as professional as any of the instructor pilots (IP) from flight school. He managed to make me feel comfortable, and the one-hour check ride went well.
I saw the crew chief who had rustled up the flak jacket for me to use on the previous day’s combat assault. He told me about a detachment sixty-two miles north of Da Nang stationed at the old imperial capital city, Hue. I was impressed by what he told me about the reputation of the pilots and crews stationed there. I discovered they were highly regarded because so much was demanded of them. The crew chief said only three ships were responsible for serving the entire northern part of the I Corps. Their area of operation (AO) was from Hue to the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) that separated North and South Vietnam and west to Laos. The detachment was comprised of eight pilots—four ACs and four peter pilots. From his description, I gathered these guys were in the air much more than those in Da Nang. They lived in a compound of about two hundred men and were removed from company and battalion officers, which was appealing to me.
I wanted to go to Hue, but when I next reported to Major Ward, he told me he needed me as a section leader with the second platoon. After Major Ward gave me the assignment, he asked, “Do you have any questions?”
I decided to ask if there was a section leader position at Hue.
“The lieutenant up there will DEROS in two months,” he said. This meant Date Eligible Return from Overseas or going home. “I don’t know if you will be ready by then. It takes at least five months to make aircraft commander, which is what you must be to command that detachment. We’ll see.”
“Sir,” I said, “I would like to have a chance for it.”
Major Ward looked right at me before he spoke. “Lieutenant, if you are that determined to try for it, I’ll hold off assigning anyone to replace Lieutenant Morris.”
Thanking him for the opportunity, I knew I had my work cut out for me. I wondered if I’d spoken prematurely but felt proud to make the commitment.
I began to focus on getting my combat act together. I studied maps and Signal Operation Instructions, called SOIs. These small, stapled-together sheets of paper contained codes for radio frequencies currently being used. SOIs changed every three to four weeks or any time they were suspected to have been compromised by the enemy.
I asked the experienced pilots how to pronounce the names of locations on the maps. I practiced proper combat radio procedures. A pilot must plan what he is going to say before keying the transmit trigger. It is a must in combat for an aircraft commander to be brief and correct.
Everything was going pretty well, but I still had the problem of that boot and bell. Polishing these things seemed like such a waste of time. It was embarrassing. Luckily, in ten days, a new officer came to the company and those two chores became permanent history to me.
I flew every chance I got. With Hebert’s, Lee’s, and Woehl’s instructive leadership examples, I started my quest for AC orders with the hope of assuming the Hue detachment command. It was going to take a lot of flying to make aircraft commander in only six weeks.