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Project Mule Train, which used C-123 aircraft, like the one above,
to provide tactical airlift support for ground troops in South Vietnam,
began in December 1961.
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The most satisfying flying jobs aren't always glamorous.
Sometimes, a routine or even lowly task, offering no
glory, turns out to be highly rewarding. Such was the
case with Project Mule Train, a Vietnam-era operation
that began on Dec. 11, 1961, and technically ended
on Dec. 8, 1962.
The operative words here are "technically ended." Even
though Mule Train officially came to a close after
only one year, its innovative spirit influenced Vietnam
War air cargo operations for the rest of the war. The
name "Mule Train," now virtually forgotten,
was always mentioned with respect.
USAF's Mule Train detachment was a C-123 airlift unit
sent to provide tactical airlift support for South
Vietnam's hard-pressed ground troops. Its primary purpose
was to give the ground forces an assault capability
via airdrop or insertion. Yet the unit also saw a great
need for logistic support entailing daily delivery
of supplies to remote sites in Vietnam.
While hauling troops into battle or supplies to the
troops, the Mule Train crews often had to go into harm's
way, operate independently with little air traffic
control and under marginal weather conditions, flying
in and out of small fields located in steep mountainous
areas. And they did all this with an aircraft that
was thought to be washed up. In reality, it proved
to be perfect for the task.
"If ever an aircraft was in its element, it was
the C-123B in SEA [Southeast Asia]," said Carl
Wyrick, who as a captain flew the aircraft in Vietnam. "It
was slow, ugly, leaked, and was hot when it was hot
and cold when it was cold, but it was fun to fly-just
like a big Super Cub."
The C-123, though never a candidate for best-looking-aircraft
honors, was a solid performer, capable of carrying
60 fully armed troops, or up to 16,000 pounds of cargo.
It could carry a variety of equipment, including jeeps,
small artillery pieces, and ground support equipment.
It had a hydraulically operated rear ramp, and the
floor was both strongly built and well-fitted with
strong tie-down points.
In pre-Vietnam days, Pope AFB, N.C., was home to five
squadrons of C-123Bs. The aircraft had been declared
obsolete and was slated to enter retirement in 1961.
Kennedy's Decision
However, on Nov. 13, 1961, President Kennedy approved
a recommendation by retired Army Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor,
who was serving as military representative to the President
and was recalled to active duty in 1962 to serve as
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Walt W.
Rostow, a top national security advisor, to increase
the mobility of South Vietnam's hard-pressed military.
The White House authorized the Air Force to deploy
one of Pope's C-123 squadrons and 40 Army H-21 helicopters
to assist South Vietnam's forces.
On Dec. 6, the Defense Department ordered the 346th
Troop Carrier Squadron (Assault) to the Far East for
120 days TDY "to participate in a classified training
mission" in the official jargon of the day. The
346th was generally considered to be the best squadron
in the wing and was manned by young pilots with an
average 1,800 hours flying time-of which 1,500 were
in the C-123. Crews were augmented with loadmasters
(normally assigned to the Aerial Port Squadron) and
additional ground personnel so that it could function
as a unit upon arrival in Vietnam. (A second Mule Train
squadron, the 777th TCS (A), arrived in South Vietnam
on June 15, 1962. Eventually, both squadrons were placed
under the 315th Air Commando Wing.)
On Dec. 11, Lt. Col. Floyd K. Shofner led the first
eight aircraft from Pope. A second contingent took
off on Jan. 2, 1962, led this time by the unit operations
officer, Maj. Wayne J. Witherington. The aircraft had
to be specially modified in order to traverse the vast
Pacific region.
Upon arrival at Clark AB in the Philippines, the first
crew spent two weeks recuperating from the long flight;
later crews were often shipped out to Vietnam the same
day. Two instructor pilots, Wyrick and Al Brezinsky,
were pulled off to check out CIA's Air America pilots
in the C-123. Later, Air America offered jobs to both,
but they declined.
Original plans called for aircrews to be assigned
temporary duty for four-month tours. Soon, however,
experienced crews had become so valuable that tours
were lengthened to 179 days. Soon, the Air Force was
giving permanent assignments for units, with individual
tours extending for a year or more.

The targets for the airdrops were sometimes small. One of them was described
as being no bigger than a soccer field, allowing for only two bundles
to be dropped per pass. (Photo by Al Brezinsky)
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The First Group Arrives
Most sources fix Jan. 2, 1962, as the date that the
initial group of aircraft arrived at Tan Son Nhut AB
in South Vietnam. The unit had been preceded on Dec.
28 by a team of officers from the 315th Air Division,
led by Col. Lopez J. Mantoux. On Jan. 2, the unit became
the airlift branch of the Vietnamese Air Force/2nd
Advanced Echelon joint operations center, with responsibility
for managing C-123 mission activity.
Ground crews immediately began working on the airplanes,
knowing they were going to sleep under mosquito netting
in tents and eat at a field kitchen. There was no billeting
for the officers, who happily went downtown to a still
generally quiet Saigon, where their $16 per diem would
pay for decent quarters at local places such as the
Majestic Hotel.
Later, when some crews were transferred to equally
primitive conditions at Da Nang, the officers also
had to live under canvas on base and dine at the DOOM-Da
Nang Officers' Open Mess-a three-barrel dip-and-wash
facility.
Mule Train's C-123s commenced operations on Jan. 3.
Initial plans called for six airplanes to fly four
hours per day for the foreseeable future. The detachment's
task was not easy. While there were three major radar
sites--at Da Nang, Tan Son Nhut, and Pleiku--command
and control was casual in the extreme. There were no
first-rate instrument approach systems, no navigation
aids, and no true communications facilities. Communications
depended primarily on the shaky Vietnamese telephone
system.
Perhaps a dozen of the major local airfields had low-frequency
radio beacons, but these were considered too unreliable
for instrument approaches. Consequently almost 100
percent of the flying was done under "Mark One
Eyeball" Visual Flight Rules-often when the actual
weather was below VFR minimums.
Mule Train crews soon adopted new operational techniques.
Climbs and descents would be made in a spiral through
a break in the overcast-the infamous "sucker hole"-and
cruise would be just on top of the generally low-lying
cloud layer.
All landing approaches had to be visual, but landings
were sometimes made under highly marginal conditions.
Whenever possible, flights were made at 2,500 feet
along the coastline, away from heavy clouds and the
ever-present Viet Cong marksmen.
All of the initial Mule Train missions were dedicated
to carrying cargo. One-hundred-kilo sacks of rice were
a major item, and at least one pilot over-grossed his
aircraft by figuring them in at 100 pounds. The most
typical commodities were live ducks, chickens, pigs,
and cows, packed in locally made pens of wood and,
when necessary, parachuted into the outlying camps.
Mule Train aircraft also transported many Vietnamese
natives. On more than one occasion, a Mule Train crew
would smell smoke in the aircraft and find a traveler
cooking food in the aircraft's cargo compartment.
There was no pretense that this was a South Vietnamese
cargo operation, nor was there any training of Vietnamese
for the task. Vietnamese were employed as "kickers" to
move the cargo out the rear on re-supply drops.
The Mule Train detachment, in its first month of operations,
put in 548 hours of flying. In the next month, the
daily flight hour total was bumped from four to seven,
and the flying hour total would grow steadily for the
next year.

Camps out in the jungle didn't always have refrigeration, so sometimes
supplies transported by the C-123s included "on the hoof rations"-pigs,
ducks, and chickens in baskets and crates. (Photo by Al Brezinsky)
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Young Commanders
In Mule Train, the Air Force placed great confidence
in young aircraft commanders, many of them first lieutenants.
They were given authority to conduct operations with
little oversight. In fact, many former Strategic Air
Command crew members assigned to C-123 duty were awed
at first by the freedom from having to call the command
post when a decision had to be made.
Flying hours continued to grow, thanks to the dedication
of the ground crews, who worked all night, in all weather,
to get the aircraft ready. Flight mechanics were also
invaluable, flying a mission, interpreting the problems,
and then working with the ground crew to solve them.
Fortunately, the C-123 was a relatively simple and
rugged aircraft. Its systems could take the heat and
humidity better than more sophisticated aircraft. Tough
landing gear and glider-strong fuselage could take
the rough landings on short airfields, where stopping
depended upon a slow approach, touching down on the
edge of the airstrip, then full reverse and a steady,
heavy foot on the anti-skid brakes.
Soon, the Mule Train route structure became linked
to the hard-surface runways at Da Nang, Tan Son Nhut,
Nha Trang, Bien Hoa, Pleiku, Ban Me Thuot, Hue, Da
Lat, Soc Trang, Qui Nhon, and Vung Tau. Virtually every
Mule Train sortie began or ended at one of these airfields,
but intermediate stops could be anywhere.
Two C-123 aircraft were maintained at Da Nang to support
northern outposts. Dropping supplies was handicapped
by the lack of air-drop equipment, and for a time reliance
was placed on 4-by-8 plywood sheets and leftover French
parachutes. On one occasion, pilot Roger D. Haneline,
then a captain, was dropping equipment when the plywood
sheet twisted sideways on the interior aircraft ramp
after the chute had deployed. The open chute kept dragging
the C-123 down, and Haneline had to go to full takeoff
power just to stay out of the treetops. He could not
turn for fear of stalling, and the airplane was heading
straight into "Indian Country"-Laos. At the
last minute the loadmaster managed to cut the shrouds
and the struggling C-123 could gain some altitude.
Frederick P. Horky recalls taking off from Da Nang
to fly to Kontum, one of the main resupply points for
the Special Forces camps. From there he flew air-drop
sorties to a camp in the mountains near the Laotian
border. The drop site was so small that Horky had to
use five passes, dropping two bundles on each pass,
to deliver the cargo. The technique was to slide down
the mountain, rotate to drop the bundles, claw up the
hill on the other side of the camp, do a 180-degree
turn, and then repeat the process, with the engines
operating at maximum except takeoff power much of the
time.
When he had delivered the cargo, Horky flew back to
Kontum for the next load, making 10 sorties that day.
During the entire period, the airlift control center
had no contact with the aircraft nor had any idea of
where they were or what mission they were flying. Control
assumed correctly that necessary jobs were being done,
satisfying the customer's needs on the spot.

Capt. Frederick Horky (left) and his C-123 crew line up at Kham Duc during
an off load. Horky says in the early days, aircrew carried an incredible
assortment of weapons-including a Thompson machine gun the loadmaster
holds here. (Photo via Frederick P. Horky)
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Pressure for More
The Mule Train logistic operation was paying dividends.
However, Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara and Air
Force Chief of Staff Gen. Curtis LeMay soon applied
pressure for the Mule Train group to become more involved
in the assault role. LeMay and other Air Force leaders
were concerned that the Army might pre-empt the assault
role if the Air Force didn't get moving.
The Mule Train crews were experienced in assault work,
but they had to improvise for conditions in Vietnam.
It was difficult to decide exactly where to drop paratroops
over the rough terrain, and much depended upon the
map-reading ability of the crew.
The die was cast on June 28, 1962, when 16 C-123s
and 12 South Vietnamese C-47s dropped paratroops under
adverse weather conditions about 35 miles north of
Saigon. The operation went off well despite a 500-foot
ceiling.
On other occasions, the C-123s would load up troops
from the South Vietnamese airborne brigade in Saigon
to fly to the relief of a village that had come under
attack. Over the village, the C-123 pilot would reduce
power, drop flaps, and spiral down to the drop altitude
and give the paratroopers a green light to jump.
At times, C-123 crews were uncomfortable with the
assault role. South Vietnamese Special Forces were
sometimes capricious about when and where they would
fight. Straight cargo operations were hazardous enough,
especially during the monsoon season when South Vietnamese
troops were socked in in the mountainous valleys. To
execute the mission, the C-123s would line up in a
proper direction, let down in the undercast, and if
they did not break out by a given altitude, would climb
back up. There were usually 800-foot ceilings in the
valleys, and most of the time they broke out.
Mule Train missions during 1962 became extremely diverse,
with the C-123s serving in roles ranging from duck
delivery to napalm bombing. In the latter role, the
Provider carried nine wooden pallets, each holding
three 55-gallon drums of napalm mixed with gasoline.
With a good kicker, the load could go out the back
ramp in less than five seconds and leave a pattern
of flame 1,200 feet long.
The ground crews and the enlisted aircrews shared
the dangers of the war with their officers, and it
was an enlisted man, A1C Howard W. Wright, who would
become the first C-123 crew member to be wounded by
VC ground fire. He was hit in the right thigh while
the aircraft was descending to Tan Son Nhut on July
10. The crews began using flak vests as interim armor
plate.
The rapid influx of aircraft and ad hoc nature of
the requests for airlift had resulted in some Army
dissatisfaction with Mule Train operations. The problem
lay in the lack of aerial port facilities and inadequate
communications. There was little that could be done
to rectify the situation.
In October 1962, there began what became known as
the Southeast Asia Airlift System. Requirements were
forecast out to 25 days, and these requirements were
matched against available resources. The 315th Troop
Carrier Group and 8th Aerial Port Squadron came into
being and set the stage for tighter control of airlift
operations. Secure field phones and a radio network
became available, and the carrying of cargo became
much more conventional, if perhaps a little less fun.
Flying became more stable and bureaucratic. The era
of the Mule Train operation was over. It left behind
a record of success and a collection of procedures
and techniques for cargo work in Southeast Asia. Many
of the men of Mule Train returned for second and third
tours, some in the C-130 that replaced the C-123. For
all of them, however, there was nothing that could
replace the spirit and success of the original Mule
Train.
Walter J. Boyne, former director of the National Air
and Space Museum in Washington, is a retired Air Force
colonel and author. He has written more than 400 articles
about aviation topics and 29 books, the most recent of
which is Beyond the Horizons: The Lockheed Story. His
most recent article for Air Force Magazine, "Red
Flag," appeared in the November 2000 issue.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rightsreserved.
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