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The US Special Forces had es-tablished their camp in 1964 at the
lower end of the A Shau Valley in Vietnam. It was some two miles
from Laos and was a constant problem for the North Vietnamese.
From this camp, the Green Berets could observe and impede traffic
on the Ho Chi Minh Trail on the other side of the border. They were
also astride the infiltration route toward Hue and Da Nang.
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Maj. Bernard Fisher,
top, fresh from flying interceptors Stateside, strapped on an
A-1E Spad (below) in Vietnam. |
In February 1966, the North Vietnamese Army decided to put the
camp out of business and moved a fresh regiment down the trail to
join the 325th NVA Division, which was already operating in the
vicinity of Hue.
The Special Forces camp was in a remote corner of the Central Highlands
and extraordinarily reliant on airpower.
Material to build the camp had been flown in by Air Force C-123s.
Everything, including food and ammunition, came by air. The valley
lay beyond the range of US artillery, so its only real defense was
air support.
The camp consisted of some barracks buildings, a triangular fort,
and an airstrip made of pierced steel planking. The fort had a mortar
bunker at each corner. The walls consisted of steel plate and sandbags.
The airstrip was east of the camp, just outside the barbed wire
perimeter.
The A Shau Valley was six miles long and one mile wide. Hills rose
up on both sides, ascending 1,500 feet above the valley floor. The
valley was called the tube by the pilots who had to
fly there.
Mountain peaks in that part of the highlands reached an elevation
of 7,000 feet. The ocean was only 30 miles to the east, and the
mountain valleys were often hidden by clouds and low-lying fog.
The North Vietnamese were counting on such cloud cover to limit
air support.
The NVA Attacks
On March 5, two NVA defectors walked into the camp at A Shau and
warned that an attack was coming on March 11 or 12. They said the
325th Division was about seven kilometers east of the valley. US
aircraft promptly struck that location.
On March 7, Air Force C-123s brought in reinforcements, increasing
the strength of the camp to 17 Green Berets and 368 South Vietnamese
irregulars and Chinese Nung mercenaries.
The attack came sooner than expected. About 2 a.m. on March 9,
enemy bombardment began, emanating from the surrounding hills. Mortars,
artillery, and rocket-propelled grenades pounded the camp, killing
two Americans and wounding 30. The barrage set the buildings and
the supply dump afire.
The artillery barrage stopped at dawn. Some 2,000 NVA regulars
were situated to take the fort unless air support drove them away.
Until the clouds liftedthey were hanging as low as 200 feet
in placesair strikes were not feasible.
The NVA force prepared to rush the fort, but visibility was improving.
At 11:20 a.m., with the cloud ceiling at 400 feet, an Air Force
AC-47 gunship got through the clouds and flew up the valley at treetop
level, strafing the attackers.
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At right, Fisher
is shown with his friend, Maj. Dafford Jump Myers.
A daring, no-hope rescue of Myers led to Fishers receiving
the Medal of Honor. |
On the gunships second pass, it was hit hard by ground fire.
The right engine was torn from its mounts. Seconds later, the other
engine was knocked out, too. The bullet-riddled AC-47 crash-landed
on a mountain slope, five miles farther up the valley.
With the gunship gone, two A-1Es from Pleiku were diverted from
other targets and sent to the aid of the fort at A Shau.
Fisher and the Spads
Leading the A-1E flight was Air Force Maj. Bernard F. Fisher, a
39-year-old fighter pilot from Kuna, Idaho. Fisher had flown jet
aircraft in Air Defense Command before coming to Vietnam, and, when
he buckled into the propeller-driven A-1E, he still wore his helmet
with the silhouette of an F-104 painted on the side.
There werent many jets in Vietnam in the early part of the
war, so Fisher had volunteered to fly the A-1E, which was in use
both by the South Vietnamese Air Force and by US Air Commandos.
Fisher was initially sent to Bien Hoa, where he trained South Vietnamese
pilots to fly combat in the A-1E. He then transferred to the 1st
Air Commando Squadron at Pleiku.
Fisher, a devout Mormon, did not drink, smoke, or use strong language,
but, as a later description of him said, he was held in high esteem
in a squadron of men who did all three. He had been in the Air Force
for 15 years.
The single-engine A-1E Skyraidercalled the Spad
in Vietnamwas undeniably an old airplane, but it was well-suited
to a number of missions. It was adapted from the Douglas AD-5 dive
fighter-bomber that the Navy had flown in World War II and Korea.
It mounted four 20 mm machine guns and carried an assortment of
bombs and rockets. Cruising speed was 240 mph, but it had exceptional
endurance and could stay airborne for six to eight hours. It could
fly for long periods of time at low altitude, making it ideal for
counterinsurgency and close air support.
There was also an A-1H, Sandy, a single-seat version
of the airplane, which flew escort for search and rescue missions.
The A-1E Spads had two seats, side by side. There was enough space
to fit 10 persons in the aft part of the cabin, which was called
the blue room because of the color tint on the canopy.
Silver Star Mission
Diverted to A Shau after the gunship crashed on March 9, Fisher
and his wingman, Bruce Wallace, found the mountains blanketed by
clouds. Upon arrival, Fisher began probing to find the canyon in
which the camp lay.
On his third attempt, he emerged from the overcast and barely missed
colliding with a helicopter that had just come from A Shau with
wounded aboard. The helicopter pilot directed Fisher toward a saddle
in the mountains, where he found an opening in the clouds about
five miles northwest of the camp. He and Wallace went through the
hole and flew down the valley at very low level. The enemy AAA was
intense.
A C-130 airborne command post told Fisher to destroy the AC-47
before the NVA captured the three 7.62 mm Gatling guns, which could
fire 6,000 rounds per minute and which were still in working order.
Fisher assigned that task to Wallacewho dropped six bombs
on the wreckage and obliterated itwhile Fisher went to the
direct assistance of the fort.
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| Adapted from the Navys
World War II-era Douglas AD-5, the unglamorous A-1E was ideal
for use in Vietnam. The Spad could carry lots of weapons, could
stay aloft for hours, and even had room for passengers. |
For the next several hours, Fisher and Wallace collected arriving
aircraft above the clouds and led them down into the valley. Fisher
guided a CH-3C helicopter that came to evacuate the badly wounded.
He also led A-1Es in a strike to break up a force that was massing
to attack the fort.
Fisher went up again to bring down two Air Force C-123s. The mountains
were tight on all sides, and forward visibility was less than half
a mile. They began taking fire seven miles north of the camp. Fisher
suppressed the ground fire as the transports air-dropped supplies
for the fort from an altitude of 50 feet.
Low on fuel, Fisher went through the clouds one more time to help
a forward air controller lead two B-57 bombers down the valley.
In all, Fisher spent about two hours under the clouds. He made an
emergency landing at Da Nang, 20 minutes away, with almost no fuel
left in his tank.
Allied aircraft flew 29 sorties in support of the fort on March
9. Of these, the Air Force flew 17, the Marine Corps 10, and the
South Vietnamese Air Force two.
Fisher would be awarded the Silver Star for his role as on-scene
commander on March 9, and Wallace would receive the Distinguished
Flying Cross. However, Fisher had not yet seen the last of the A
Shau Valley.
The Second Day
On March 10, the attack resumed at 2 a.m. The NVA shelled the camp
relentlessly, and, shortly before 4 a.m., it launched an assault
on the southern side. Before daylight, the attack broke through
the barbed wire perimeter and breached the south wall. The defenders
were pushed into the northern part of the fort, and the NVA dug
in between the airstrip and the camp.
Two C-123s and an AC-47 dropped flares throughout the night. Radar
bombing of enemy positions by Marine Corps A-4s began just after
5 a.m. Fire support was continuous from Air Force and Marine aircraft.
About 11 a.m., the defenders reported that they could hold out
for no more than another hour and that airdrops to resupply them
with ammunition should stop, since they could not retrieve the bundles.
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| Officially called the Skyraider,
the A-1 was used for low-level strikes against concealed targets
and for close air support of ground units. It was the airplane
of choice to keep the enemy at bay during rescues of downed
airmen. |
Bernie Fisher and his wingman that day, Capt. Francisco Paco
Vazquez, were en route to provide air support to Army forces near
Kontum when they got an emergency radio call to divert to A Shau.
Fishers call sign was Hobo 51, and Vazquez was
Hobo 52.
By 11:15, Hobo flight had joined numerous other aircraft that were
stacked and circling at 8,000 feet and higher above the valley.
They had not yet gone to the aid of the fort because of the danger
of running into mountain peaks hidden by the cloud cover.
One of the other A-1 flights in the stack was led by Maj. Dafford
W. Jump Myers from the 602nd Fighter Squadron at Qui
Nhon. Myers was Surf 41, and his wingman, Capt. Hubert
King, was Surf 42.
Myers was an old friend. Fisher had known him back in Air Defense
Command. He had been nicknamed Jump when he was a soda
jerk in high school. Myers was a hard-bitten chain-smoker who once
made his living running a billiard parlor.
Myers suggested that there might be an opening to the west. Fisher
went to see, found a hole, and called on Myers and King to follow
him and Vazquez into the valley.
Fisher told the other A-1 flight to stay in orbit above the clouds.
There was not enough room in the valley for six airplanes to operate,
so Capt. Jon T. Luke Lucas (Hobo 27) and
Capt. Dennis B. Hague (Hobo 28) continued to circle.
Fisher, Vazquez, Myers, and King flew down the valley in trail
formation. It was too tight to go in side by side.
The cloud ceiling in the valley was at 800 feetbetter than
the previous daybut the visibility also helped the enemy gunners,
who were shooting down on the aircraft from the 1,500-foot hillsides.
Myers Down
The defenders had fallen back into a bunker at the northwest corner
of the fort. The NVA was making a ground attack, so the A-1s flew
three strafing runs, which killed between 300 and 500 of the attackers.
On the first run, Kings aircraft was hit in the cockpit canopy,
shattering the plexiglass. He had to break off and go to the nearest
base, which was Da Nang. On the second pass, Myers airplane
was hit by shells of a heavy caliber. His engine conked out and
the cockpit filled with smoke. At 400 feet, he was too low to use
a parachute.
Ive been hit and hit hard, Myers radioed.
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| An AC-47 gunship tried to help
the beleaguered Green Berets hold out against the North Vietnamese
attack on their firebase. Flying at treetop level, the Spooky
met its end. Rescue of its crew was a story unto itself. |
Youre on fire and burning clear back past your tail,
Fisher replied.
Rog, Myers said. Ill have to put her down
on the strip.
Myers cockpit was filled with smoke. He couldnt see,
so Fisher talked him down. At the same time, Fisher laid down suppressive
fire in front of Myers and gave battle instructions to the other
aircraft.
Myers was going too fast to land on the short runway, so he would
have to belly slide in. He jettisoned his bombs and retracted his
landing gear, but his attempt to release the center line fuel tank
failed. The fuel tank exploded on contact with ground.
Surf 41 skidded about 800 feet, trailing fire, then veered off
the runway on the west side and exploded. Incredibly, Myers survived.
Fisher saw him clamber out of the airplane and run to a ditch between
the airstrip and the fort, where he was screened by a clump of weeds.
Fisher called in Hague and Lucas. Hague: It was like flying
inside Yankee Stadium with the people in the bleachers firing at
you with machine guns, Hague said.
Vazquez, meanwhile, was operating with a dead radio.
The A-1s put down saturated fire, driving back the NVA troops who
were trying to get to Myers. The Green Berets later said the attack
wiped out a company of the North Vietnamese and took pressure off
the fort.
The Crashed Gunship
The first aircraft coming to the rescue of the camp on March
9 was an AC-47 gunship. It made one firing pass down the valley
at treetop level, then came around for a second pass. This
time, the anti-aircraft gunners were primed and knocked out
both of the aircrafts engines.
The pilot, Capt. Willard M. Collins, was able to crash-land
on a mountain slope five miles up the valley. The aircraft
was intact, and it slid down to the base of the slope. Among
the crew of six, the only one injured seriously was one of
the gunners, SSgt. R.E. Foster, whose legs were broken.
Moving to a better defensive position would have meant leaving
Foster behind, so Collins and the co-pilot, 1st Lt. Delbert
R. Peterson, organized a defense at the crash site. They repulsed
the first NVA attack, but Collins and Foster were killed in
the second attack. That left four people to defend a 360-degree
perimeter.
As the NVA gathered to rush them again, a rescue helicopter
approached. A .50-caliber machine gun was firing from the
undergrowth. Peterson, now in command, knew that it was likely
to shoot down the helicopter.
Armed with an M-16 carbine and a .38-caliber handgun, Peterson
charged the machine gun, which fell silent as the helicopter
dropped down to pick up the other three crewmen. Under intense
ground fire, the helicopter pulled away.
Collins and Peterson were posthumously awarded the Air Force
Cross. |
Fisher Goes In
As the A-1Es continued their strikes, Fisher called for a rescue
helicopter. Ten minutes later, the command post said the helicopter
was at least 20 minutes out. Fisher figured that this was probably
a guess. Anyway, it wouldnt be much longer before the NVA
closed in on Myers and killed him.
Fisher thought about going to get Myers. The runway looked short.
He called the command post and asked the length. It was 3,500 feet,
he was told. That would be long enough.
Even in the best of conditions, however, it was almost suicidal
to land an aircraft as large and slow as the A-1E while exposed
to direct enemy fire, Fisher said in his 2004 book, Beyond
the Call of Duty (co-authored by Jerry Borrowman). A helicopter
crew can fire their weapons from the side doors to hold the enemy
at bay while executing a rescue, but Id be defenseless while
sitting on the ground.
It made no logical sense, but I felt a strong impression
that I should do this. Jump was one of the familyone of the
fellows we flew withand I couldnt stand by and watch
him get murdered without at least trying to rescue him.
Im going in, Fisher radioed.
The odds of coming out again were not good. He would be landing
in a crossfire from 20 anti-aircraft gun positions that lined the
valley. The enemy also had hundreds of automatic weapons. The runway
was a major hazard. The pierced steel planking was slick, and shards
of ittorn by the mortars and bombswere sticking up and
could rip airplane tires to shreds. The runway was cratered and
littered with shell casings, pieces of Myers aircraft, barrels,
pieces of tin and metal, and other debris.
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| Myers was forced to land his
crippled ship on the strip near the Green Berets triangular
firebase. The metal-plate airfield was torn up by mortar fire
and pocked with craters. |
Fisher counted on the other A-1s to provide him fire support. He
approached the airstrip from the north, which would give him the
advantage of landing into the wind, helping him to slow down. Unfortunately,
the wind was also blowing thick smoke from fires ignited by the
bombs and napalm in his direction, obscuring his vision. When he
broke out of the smoke, he saw that he was over the runway but too
far along it to stop the airplane in the distance remaining. As
he passed by at low level, he caught a glimpse of Myers.
He powered up, holding the aircraft a few feet above the ground
to avoid ground fire, made an S-turn, and approached the runway
from the opposite direction of his first attempt.
The other three A-1s continued to strafe to cover Fisher as he
went in. Vazquez went winchester (out of ammo) on the
first pass. After three more passes, the others ran out of ammunition,
too.
Im winchester, Hague declared.
So am I, said Lucas. Lets keep making passes,
though. Maybe they dont know it.
Fisher touched down at the very end of the field, stood on the brakes,
and skidded down the runway. His brakes began fading from heat at
2,000 feet.
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| Fisher had to steer around
chunks of Myers A-1. |
The second landing attempt was successful although violent
braking and rudder action was not always successful in avoiding
debris on the battle-torn runway, Lt. Gen. Joseph H. Moore,
2nd Air Division commander, said in nominating Fisher for the Medal
of Honor. Major Fisher utilized all his flying skill to miss
mortar craters, shell casings, and pieces of the A-1E which now
littered the runway as a result of the fuel tank explosion.
Also, Fisher had been told wrong about the length of the runway.
It was 2,500 feet, not 3,500. It was too short for an A-1 under
any circumstances.
He overran the runway onto some grass and crossed a small embankment,
which slowed him down a little. As he swung the aircraft around,
he slid into a fuel storage area. His wings passed over the tops
of some 55-gallon drums, although he hit several of them with the
tail of the airplane.
Two Beady Eyes
Fisher taxied 1,800 feet back along the runway in full view of
the enemy. He saw Myers waving his arms as he passed by. It took
Fisher about 100 feet to stop. He couldnt see Myers, who was
running behind the airplane, off to the right side, with bullets
following him along. Myers later said it was the fastest dash an
old man of 46 ever made. Fisher expected Myers to climb into the
cockpit momentarily. When he didnt, Fisher figured Myers must
have been hit. He unbuckled and set the brake to go looking for
him.
As Fisher climbed out on the right side of the airplane, he saw
two little red beady eyes trying to crawl up the back of the wing.
It was Myers, his clothes burned and muddy and his eyes reddened
by smoke.
Fisher had left the engine running fairly fast, ready for a quick
getaway, and the airflow from the big four-bladed propeller was
blowing Myers back as he tried to reach the cockpit. Fisher cut
power to idle, risking a stall. As bullets continued to strike the
aircraft, he pulled Myers into the cockpit head first.
Myers first words were: You dumb son of a bitch, now
neither of us will get out of here. He drank some water from
Fishers canteen and asked for a cigarette. Fisher did not
have any.
As Fisher pulled Myers aboard, Lucaswho had taken a severe
hit in his hydraulic systemled Hague and Vazquez in a dry
pass over the camp. The three Spads went hurtling by at low level.
It was enough to hold the NVA back momentarily.
Turning his aircraft around, Major Fisher saw that he had
less than two-thirds of an already too short airstrip ahead of him,
Moore said in the Medal of Honor write-up. Calling on all
his skill, he applied power and worked his way through wreckage
and debris, gaining enough speed to lift off at the overrun. Flying
just above the ground at insufficient airspeed to climb, he gradually
built up speed, still under intense hostile fire, and began a climb
into the 800-foot overcast above the valley.
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| As Fishers Spad idled,
he pulled Myers into the cockpit head first. Myers berated Fisher
for a foolhardy rescue attempt that neither of them would likely
survive. The rescue A-1 is now at the Air Force Museum in Dayton,
Ohio. (Photo via Martin Winter) |
According to one report, the defenders in the fort cheered as Fishers
A-1 roared down the strip and rose into the air.
Fisher and Myers flew to Pleiku, where the medics met them at the
flight line. Myers was not badly hurt, although he was singed and
covered in soot and smelled awful, according to Fisher.
Fishers airplane had 19 holes in it. There were 23 in Vazquezs.
Fate of the Fort
The Special Forces camp in the A Shau Valley fell to the NVA late
that afternoon. Air strikes suppressed the attack long enough for
rescue helicopters to pick up survivors.
The Green Berets took 100 percent casualties: five killed, 12 wounded.
Only 172 of the South Vietnamese irregulars and Chinese mercenaries
were evacuated, although many of the others turned up later.
I only wish we could have done more to help them, Fisher
said.
The NVA paid a heavy price for its victory. It lost 500 troops
to air strikes and another 300 to ground fire.
In all, 201 air strikes were flown in support of the fort on March
10. Of these, 103 were by the Marine Corps, 67 by the Air Force,
19 by the Navy, and 12 by the South Vietnamese Air Force. Including
Myers A-1E and the gunship, six Air Force, Navy, and Marine
Corps aircraft were shot down in the effort.
As 7th Air Force Historian Kenneth Sams said in his report, without
airpower, there would have been no survivors. One of the Special
Forces defenders, Capt. Tennis Carter, said, Without the air
support you provided, we wouldnt have lasted one day.
It was two years before allied forces retook the valley. The NVA
established its own camp at A Shau, ringed the valley with anti-aircraft
batteries and used it as a staging area and a supply dump. In January
1968, the Tet attacks on the northern provinces were launched from
A Shau.
Medal of Honor
Myers wanted to buy Fisher a years worth of whiskey, but
Fisher didnt even drink coffee. Instead, Myers gave him a
Nikon camera engraved, A Shau, March 10, 1966.
Fisher was awarded the Medal of Honor, the first airman in the
Vietnam War to receive it. It was presented by President Johnson
at the White House, Jan. 19, 1967. His wife, Realla, and their five
sons were present for the ceremony.
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| From left to right: A-1 pilots
Myers, Fisher, Capts. Jon Lucas, Dennis Hague (looking at paper),
and Francisco Vazquez, who helped buy the Green Berets time
to escape A Shau, relax after the battle. All survived the war. |
Myers and Lucas were awarded the Silver Star. Hague and Vazquez
received the Distinguished Flying Cross.
The aircraft Fisher flew in the A Shau Valley later crashed and
burned at Pleiku as it was returning from a mission. However, it
was recovered and restored. In 1967, it was flown by none other
than Jump Myers from California to the Air Force Museum in Dayton,
Ohio, where it can be seen today.
Bernie Fisher stayed in the Air Force, retiring as a colonel in
1974. Myers died in 1992, but Fisher kept in touch with the others.
At a presentation in the Pentagon honoring Fisher in 1999, the attendees
included Paco Vazquez, Denny Hague, and Luke Lucas, as well as Gene
Deatrick, who was commander of the 1st Air Commando Squadron at
Pleiku.
Interest in the mission continues. Fisher is called upon often
to tell the story. Over the years, he has made about 500 speeches.
After retirement, he went back to Idaho and became a farmer, raising
seed corn, sugar beets, wheat, and alfalfa. He still lives on the
farm, but rents most of it out to another farmer.
John T. Correll was editor in chief of Air Force Magazine for 18 years and is now a contributing editor. His most recent article, “The Vietnam Almanac,” appeared in the September issue.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rights reserved.
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