HOWARD'S HILL
Small Unit Action In Vietnam Summer
1966
History and Museums Division
Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps
Washington, D.C.
Captain Francis J. West, Jr., USMCR
Preface: The author was on another patrol the night of the
Howard fight. He met with the men of Charlie Company, who relieved
Howard's platoon, immediately upon their return and taped their
comments and reactions. Then he went to the hospital at Chulai
and interviewed Howard and his men, talking later with the pilots,
the Special Forces officers, and Howard's company and battalion
commanders. The pictures--the only ones taken on the hill during
the fight--were provided by First Lieutenant Philip Freed, who
was the Forward Air Controller with Charlie Company.
The Marine Corps has a tested tradition: it will never leave
alone on the field of combat one of its fighting men. It will
go to fantastic lengths and commit to battle scores of men to
aid and protect a few. This is the story of a few such Marines,
of the battle they fought, and the help they received from all
the services, not just the Marine Corps.
Some 20 miles inland to the west of the Marine base at Chulai
runs a range of steep mountains and twisting valleys. In that
bandits' lair, the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese could train
and plan for attacks against the heavily populated seacoast
hamlets, massing only when it was time to attack. In early June
of 1966, the intelligence reports reaching III MAF headquarters
indicated that a mixed force of Viet Cong and North Vietnamese
was gathering by the thousands in those mountains. But the enemy
leaders were not packing their troops into a few large, vulnerable
assembly points; they kept their units widely dispersed, moving
mainly in squads and platoons.
To frustrate that scheme and keep the enemy off balance, the
Marines launched Operation KANSAS, an imaginative concept in
strategy. Rather than send full infantry battalions to beat
the bushes in search of small enemy bands, Lieutenant General
Lewis W. Walt detailed the reconnaissance battalion of the 1st
Marine Division to scout the mountains. The reconnaissance Marines
would move in small teams of 8 to 20 men. If they located a
large enemy concentration, Marine infantry would be flown in.
If, as was expected, they saw only numerous small groups of
Viet Cong and North Vietnamese, they were to smash them by calling
in air and artillery strikes.
Lieutenant Colonel Arthur J. Sullivan had set high training
standards for his battalion. Every man had received individual
schooling in forward observer techniques and reconnaissance
patrol procedures. He was confident his men could perform the
mission successfully, despite the obvious hazards. "The
Vietnam war," he said, "has given the small-unit leader--the
corporal, the sergeant, the lieutenant--a chance to be independent.
The senior officers just can't be out there looking over their
shoulders. You have to have confidence in your junior officers
and NCOs."
One such NCO was Staff Sergeant Jimmie Earl Howard, acting
commander of the 1st Platoon, Charlie Company, 1st Reconnaissance
Battalion. A tall, well-built man in his mid-thirties, Howard
had been a star football player and later a coach at the San
Diego Recruit Depot. Leadership came naturally to him. "Howard
was a very personable fellow," his company commander, Captain
Tim Geraghty said. "The men liked him. They liked to work
for him." In Korea he had been wounded three times and
awarded the Silver Star for bravery. In Vietnam he would receive
a fourth Purple Heart and be recommended for the Medal of Honor.
As dusk fell on the evening of 13 June 1966, a flight of helicopters
settled on the slope of Hill 488, 25 miles west of Chulai. Howard
and his 17 men jumped out and climbed the steep incline to the
top. The hill, called Nui Vu, rose to a peak of nearly 1,500
feet and dominated the terrain for miles.
Three narrow strips of level ground ran along the top for several
hundred yards before falling abruptly away. Seen from the air,
they roughly resembled the three blades on an airplane propeller.
Howard chose the blade which pointed north for his command post
and placed observation teams on the other two blades. It was
an ideal vantage point.
The enemy knew it also. Their foxholes dotted the ground, each
with a small shelter scooped out two feet under the surface.
Howard permitted his men use of these one-man caves during the
day to avoid the hot sun and enemy detection. There was no other
cover or concealment to be found. There were no trees, only
knee-high grass and small scrub growth.
In the surrounding valleys and villages, there were many enemy.
For the next two days, Howard was constantly calling for fire
missions, as members of the platoon saw small enemy groups almost
every hour. Not all the requests for air and artillery strikes
were honored. Sullivan was concerned lest the
platoon's position, so salient and bare, be spotted by a suspicious
enemy. Most of the firing at targets located by the platoon
was done only when there was an observation plane circling in
the vicinity to decoy the enemy. After two days Sullivan and
his executive officer, Major Allan Harris, became alarmed at
the risk involved in leaving the platoon stationary any longer.
But the observation post was ideal; Howard had encountered no
difficulty, and, in any case, thought he had a secure escape
route along a ridge to the east. So it was decided to leave
the platoon on Nui Vu for one more day.
However, the enemy were well aware of the platoon's presence.
(Sullivan has a theory that the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese,
long harassed, disrupted, and punished by reconnaissance units
in territory they claimed to control absolutely, had determined
to eliminate one such unit, hoping thereby
to demoralize the others. Looked at in hindsight, the ferocity
and tenacity of the attack upon Nui Vu gives credence to the
colonel's theory.) In any case, the North Vietnamese made their
preparations well and did not tip their hand. On 15 June, they
moved a fresh, well-equipped, highly trained battalion to the
base of Nui Vu. In late afternoon hundreds of the enemy started
to climb up the three blades, hoping to annihilate the dozen
and a half Marines in one surprise attack.
The Army Special Forces frustrated that plan. Sergeant 1st
Class Donald Reed and Specialist 5th Class Hardey Drande were
leading a platoon of CIDG (Civilian Irregular Defense Group)
forces on patrol near Nui Vu that same afternoon. They saw elements
of the North Vietnamese battalion moving towards the hill and
radioed the news back to their base camp at Hoi An, several
miles to the south. Howard's radio was purposely set on the
same frequency and so he was alerted at the same time. Reed
and Drande wanted to hit the enemy from the rear and disrupt
them, but had to abandon the idea when they suddenly found themselves
a very unpopular minority of two on the subject. Describing
the reactions of the Special Forces NCOs later,Howard could
not resist chuckling. "The language those sergeants used
over the radio," he said, "when they realized they
couldn't attack the PAVNs (Marine slang for soldiers of the
Peoples' Army of (North) Vietnam)., well, they sure didn't learn
it "at communications school." Even though the Special
Forces where not able to provide the ground support they wished
to, their warning alerted Howard and enabled him to develop
a precise defensive plan before the attack was launched.
Acting on the report, Howard gathered his team leaders, briefed
them on the situation, selected an assembly point, instructed
them to stay on full alert and to withdraw to the main position
at the first sign of an approaching enemy. The corporals and
lance corporals crept back to their teams and
briefed them in the growing dusk. The Marines then settled down
to watch and wait.
Lance Corporal Ricardo Binns had placed his observation team
on the slope 40 meters forward of Howard's position. Atapproximately
2200, while the four Marines were lying in a shallow depression
discussing in whispers their sergeant's solemn warnings, Binns
quite casually propped himself up on his elbows and placed his
rifle butt in his shoulder. Without saying a word, he pointed
the barrel at a bush and fired. The bush pitched backward and
fell thrashing 12 feet away.
The other Marines jumped up. Each threw a grenade, before grabbing
his rifle and scrambling up the hill. Behind them grenades burst
and automatic weapons pounded away. The battle of Nui Vu was
on.
The other outposts withdrew to the main position. The Marines
commanded a tiny rock-strewn knoll. The rocks would provide
some protection for the defenders. Placing his two radios behind
a large boulder, Howard set up a tight circular perimeter, not
over 20 meters in diameter, and selected a firing position for
each Marine.
The North Vietnamese too were setting up. They had made no
audible noises while climbing. There was no talking, no clumsy
movements. When Binns killed one of their scouts, they were
less than 50 meters from the top.
The Marines were surrounded. From all sides the enemy threw
grenades. Some bounced off the rocks; some rolled back down
the slopes; some did not explode, but some landed right on Marines
and did explode. The next day the platoon corpsman, Billee Don
Holmes, recalled: "They were within twenty feet of us.
Suddenly there were grenades all over. Then people started hollering.
It seemed everyone got hit at the same time.
Holmes crawled forward to help. A grenade exploded between
him and a wounded man. Holmes lost consciousness.
The battle was going well for the North Vietnamese. Four .50
caliber machine guns were firing in support of the assault units,
their heavy explosive projectiles arcing in from the four points
of the compass. Red tracer rounds from light machine guns streaked
toward the Marine position,
pointing the direction for reinforcements gathering in the valley.
60mm mortar shells smashed down and added rock splinters to
the metal shrapnel whining through the air.
The North Vietnamese followed up the grenade shower with a
full, well-coordinated assault, directed and controlled by shrill
whistles and the clacking of bamboo sticks. From different directions,
they rushed the position at the same time, firing automatic
weapons, throwing grenades, and screaming. Howard later said
he hadn't been sure how his troops would react. They were young
and the situation looked hopeless.
They had been shocked and confused by the ferocity of the attack
and the screams of their own wounded.
But they reacted savagely. The first lines of enemy skirmishers
were cut down seconds after they stood up and exposed themselves.
The assault failed to gain momentum any place and the North
Vietnamese in the rearward ranks had more sense than to copy
the mistakes of the dead. Having failed in their swift charge,
they went to earth and probed the perimeter, seeking a weak
spot through which they could drive. To do this, small bands
of the enemy tried to crawl quite close to a Marine, then overwhelm
him with a burst of fire and several grenades.
But the Marines too used grenades and the American hand grenade
contains twice the blast and shrapnel effect of the Chinese
Communist stick grenade. The Marines could throw farther and
more accurately than the enemy. A Marine would listen for a
movement, gauge the direction and distance, pull the pin, and
throw. High pitched howls and excited jabberings mingled with
the blasts. The North Vietnamese pulled back to regroup.
Howard had taken the PRC-25 radio from one of his communicators,
Corporal Robert Lewis Martinez, and during the lull contacted
Captain Geraghty and Lieutenant Colonel Sullivan. With his escape
route cut off and his force facing overwhelming odds, Howard
kept his message simple. "You've gotta get us out of here,"
he said. "There are too many of them for my people."
Sullivan tried. Because of his insistence upon detailed preplanning
of extraction and fire support contingencies, he was a well-known
figure at the Direct Air Support Center of the 1st Marine Division
and when he called near midnight, he did not bandy words. He
wanted flare ships, helicopters, and
fixed wing aircraft dispatched immediately to Nui Vu.
Somehow, the response was delayed. And shortly after midnight,
the enemy forces gathered and rushed forward in strength a second
time. The Marines threw the last of their grenades and fired
their rifles semiautomatically, relying on accuracy to suppress
volume. It did and the enemy fell back, but
by that time every Marine had been wounded.
The living took the ammunition of the dead and lay under a
moonless sky, wondering about the next assault. Although he
did not tell anyone, Howard doubted they could repel a massed
charge by a determined enemy. From combat experience, he knew
too that the enemy, having been badly mauled twice, would listen
for sounds which would indicate his force had been shattered
or demoralized before surging forward again.
Already up the slopes were floating the high, singsong taunts
Marines had heard at other places in other wars. Voices which
screeched: "Marines--you die tonight!" and "Marines,
you die in an hour."
Members of the platoon wanted to return the compliments. "Sure,"
said Howard, "go ahead and yell anything you want."
And the Marines shouted back down the slopes all the curses
and invectives they could remember from their collective repetoire.
The North Vietnamese screamed back, giving Howard the opportunity
to deliver a master stroke in psychological oneupmanship.
"All right," he shouted. "Ready? Now!"And
all the Marines laughed and laughed and laughed at the enemy.
The North Vietnamese did not mount a third major attack and
at 0100 an Air Force flare ship, with the poetic call sign of
"Smoky Gold," came on station overhead. Howard talked
to the pilot through his radio and the plane dropped its first
flare. The mountainside was lit up. The Marines looked
down the slopes. Lance Corporal Ralph Glober Victor stared,
then muttered: "Oh my God, look at them." The others
weren't sure it wasn't a prayer. North Vietnamese reinforcements
filled the valley. Twenty-year-old Private First Class Joseph
Kosoglow described it vividly: "There were so many, it
was just like an ant hill ripped apart. They were all over the
place."
They shouldn't have been. Circling above the mountain were
attack jets and armed helicopters. With growing frustration,
they had talked to Howard but could not dive to the attack without
light. Now they had light.
They swarmed in. The jets first concentrated on the valley
floor and the approaches to Nui Vu, loosing rockets which hissed
down and blanketed large areas. Then those fast, dangerous helicopters--the
Hueys--scoured the slopes. At altitudes as low as 20 feet, they
skimmed the brush, firing their machine guns in long, sweeping
bursts. The Hueys pulled off to spot for the jets, and again
the planes dipped down, releasing bombs and napalm. Then the
Hueys scurried back to pick off stragglers, survey the damage,
and direct another run. One of the platoon's communicators,
Corporal Martinez, said it in two sentences: "The Hueys
were all over the place. The jets blocked the Viet Cong off."
Two Hueys stayed over Howard's position all night; when one
helicopter had to return to home base and refuel, another would
be sent out. The Huey pilots, Captain John M. Shields and Captain
James M. Perryman, Jr., performed dual roles--they were the
Tactical Air Controllers' Airborne (TACAs) who directed the
bomb runs of the jets and they themselves strafed the enemy.
The North Vietnamese tried unsuccessfully to shoot the helicopters
down and did hit two out of the four Hueys alternating on station.
By the light of the flares, the jet pilots could see the hill
mass and distinguish prominent terrain features but could not
spot Howard's perimeter. To mark specific targets for the jets,
the TACAs directed "Smoky" to drop flares right on
the ground as signal lights and then called the jets down to
pulverize the spot. Howard identified his position by flicking
a rerfiltered flashlight on and off, and, guiding on that mark,
the Huey pilots strafed within 25 meters of the Marines.
Still on the perimeter itself the fight continued. In the shifting
light of the flares, the pilots were fearful of hitting the
Marines and had to leave some space unexposed to fire in front
of the Marines' lines. Into this space crawled the North Vietnamese.
For the Marines it was a war of hide and seek. Having run out
of grenades, they had to rely on cunning and marksmanship to
beat the attackers. Howard had passed the word to fire only
at an identified target--and then only one shot at a time. The
enemy fired all automatic weapons; the Marines replied with
single shots. The enemy hurled grenades; the Marines threw back
rocks.
It was a good tactic. A Marine would hear a noise and toss
a rock in that general direction. The North Vietnamese would
think it was a grenade falling and dive for another position.
The Marine would roll or crawl low to a spot from which he could
sight in on the position, and wait. In a few seconds, the North
Vietnamese would raise his head to see why the grenade had not
exploded. The Marine would fire one round. The range was generally
less than 30 feet.
The accuracy of this fire saved the life of Corpsman Holmes.
When he regained consciousness after a grenade had knocked him
out, he saw a North Vietnamese dragging away the dead Marine
beside him. Then another enemy reached over and grasped him
by the cartridge belt. The soldier tugged at him.
Lance Corporal Victor was lying on his stomach behind a rock.
He had been hit twice by grenades since the first flare had
gone off and could scarcely move. He saw an enemy soldier bending
over a fallen Marine. He sighted in and fired. The man fell
backward. He saw a second enemy tugging
at another Marine's body. He sighted in again and fired.
Shot between the eyes, the North Vietnamese slumped dead across
Billee Holmes' chest. He pushed the body away and crawled back
to the Marines' lines. His left arm was lanced with shrapnel,
and his face was swollen and his head ringing from the concussion
of the grenade. For the rest of the night, he crawled from position
to position, bandaging and encouraging the wounded, and between
times firing at the enemy.
Occasionally the flares would flicker out and the planes would
have to break off contact to avoid crashing. In those instances,
artillery under the control of the Special Forces and manned
by Vietnamese gun crews would fill in the gap and punish any
enemy force gathering at the base of Nui Vu.
"Stiff Balls," Howard had radioed the Special Forces
camp at Hoi An, three miles south. "If you can keep Charlie
from sending another company up here, I'll keep these guys out
of my position."
"Roger, Carnival Time." Captain Louis Maris, of the
Army Special Forces, had replied, using Howard's own peculiar
call sign. Both sides kept their parts of the bargain and the
South Vietnamese crews who manned the 105mm howitzers threw
in concentration after concentration of accurate artillery shells.
"Howard was talking on the radio. He was cool," Captain
John Blair, the Special Forces commanding officer, recalled
afterwards. "He stayed calm all the way through that night.
But," he chuckled, "he never did get our call sign
right!"
In the periods of darkness, each Marine fought alone. How some
of them died no one knows. But the relieving force hours later
found one Marine lying propped up against a rock. In front of
him lay a dead enemy soldier. The muzzles of their weapons were
touching each others' chests. Two Marine
entrenching tools were recovered near a group of mangled North
Vietnamese; both shovels were covered with blood. One Marine
was crumpled beneath a dead enemy. Beside him lay another Vietnamese.
The Marine was bandaged around the chest and head. His hand
still clasped the hilt of a knife buried in the back of the
soldier on top of him.
At 0300, a flight of H34 helicopters whirled over Nui Vu and
came in to extract the platoon. So intense was the fire they
met that they were unable to land and Howard was told he would
have to fight on until dawn. Shortly thereafter, a richochet
struck Howard in the back. His voice over the radio
faltered and died out. Those listening--the Special Forces personnel,
the pilots, the high ranking officers of the 1st Marine Division
at Chulai--all thought the end had come.
Then Howard's voice came back strong. Fearing the drowsing
effect morphine can have, he refused to let Holmes administer
the drug to ease the pain. Unable to use his legs, he pulled
himself from hole to hole encouraging his men and directing
their fire. Wherever he went, he dragged their lifeline--the
radio.
Binns, the man whose shot had triggered the battle, was doing
likewise. Despite severe wounds, he crawled around the perimeter,
urging his men to conserve their ammunition, gathering enemy
weapons and grenades for the Marines' use, giving assistance
wherever needed.
None of the Marines kept track of the time. "I'll tell
you this," said Howard, "you know that movie--The
Longest Day? Well, compared to our night on the hill, The Longest
Day was just a twinkle in the eye." But the longest night
did pass and dawn came. Howard heralded its arrival. At 0525
he shouted, "O.K., you people, reveille goes in 35 minutes."
At exactly 0600, his voice pealed out, "Reveille, reveille."'
It was the start of another day and the perimeter had held.
On all sides of their position, the Marines saw enemy bodies
and equipment. The North Vietnamese would normally have raked
the battlefield clean but so deadly was the Marine fire that
they left unclaimed many of those who fell close to the perimeter.
The firing had slacked off. Although badly mauled themselves,
the enemy still had the Marines ringed in and did not intend
to leave. Nor did haste make them foolhardy. They knew what
the jets and the Hueys and the artillery and the Marine sharpshooting
would do to them on the bare slopes in daylight. They slipped
into holes and waited, intending to attack with more troops
the next night.
Bursts of fire from light machine guns chipped the rocks above
the Marines' heads. Firing uphill from concealed foxholes, the
enemy could cut down any Marine who raised up and silhouetted
himself against the skyline. Two of the .50 caliber machine
guns were still firing sporadically.
There came a lull in the firing. A Huey buzzed low over the
hillcrest, while another gunship hovered to one side, ready
to pounce if the enemy took the bait. No one fired. The pilot,
Major William J. Goodsell, decided to mark the position for
a medical evacuation by helicopter. His Huey fluttered slowly
down and hovered. Howard thought the maneuver too risky and
said so. But Goodsell had run the risk and come in anyway. He
dropped a smoke grenade. Still no fire. He waved to the relieved
Howard and skimmed north over the forward slope, only 10 feet
above the ground.
The noise of machine guns drowned out the sound of the helicopter's
engines. Tracers flew toward the Huey from all directions. The
helicopter rocked and veered sharply to the right and zigzagged
down the mountain. The copilot, First Lieutenant Stephen Butler,
grabbed the stick and brought the crippled helicopter under
control, crash landing in a rice paddy several miles to the
east. The pilots were picked up by their wingman. But Major
Goodsell, who had commanded Squadron VMO-6 for less than one
week, died of gunshot wounds before they reached the hospital.
The medical pickup helicopter did not hesitate. It came in.
Frantically, Howard waved it off. He was not going to see another
shot down. The pilots were dauntless but not invulnerable. The
pilot saw Howard's signal and turned off, bullets clanging off
the armor plating of the undercarriage. Howard would wait for
the infantry.
In anger, the jets and the Hueys now attacked the enemy positions
anew. Flying lower and lower, they crisscrossed the slopes,
searching for the machine gun emplacements, offering themselves
as targets, daring the enemy to shoot.
The enemy did. Another Huey was hit and crashed, its crew chief
killed. The .50 calibers exposed their position and were silenced.
Still the North Vietnamese held their ground. Perhaps the assault
company, with all its automatic weapons and fresh young troops,
had been ordered to wipe out the few Marines at any cost; perhaps
the commanding officer had been killed and his subordinates
were following dead orders; perhaps the enemy thought victory
yet possible.
But then the Marine infantry came in. They had flown out at
dawn but so intense was the enemy fire around Nui Vu, the helicopters
had to circle for 45 minutes while jets and artillery blasted
a secure landing zone. During that time, First Lieutenant Richard
E. Moser, a H34 helicopter pilot, monitored
Howard's frequency and later reported: "It was like something
you'd read in a novel. His call sign was Carnival Time and he
kept talking about these North Vietnamese down in holes in front
of him. He'd say, 'you've gotta get this guy in the crater because
he's hurting my boys.' He was really impressive. His whole concern
was for his men."
On the southern slope of the mountain, helicopters finally
dropped Charlie Company of the 5th Marines. The relief company
climbed fast, ignoring sniper fire and wiping out small pockets
of resistance. With the very first round they fired, the Marine
60mm mortar team knocked out the enemy mortar. Sergeant Frank
Riojas, the weapons platoon commander, cut down a sniper at
500 yards with a tracer round from his M14. Marine machine gun
sections were detached from the main body and sent up the steep
fingers along the flanks of the hill to support by fire the
company's movement. The North Vietnamese were now the hunted,
as Marines scrambled around as well as up the slope, attempting
to pinch off the enemy before they could flee.
The main column climbed straight upwards. While yet a quarter
of a mile away, the point man saw recon's position on the plateau.
The boulder which served as Howard's command post was the most
prominent terrain feature on the peak. The platoon hurried forward.
They had to step over enemy bodies to enter the perimeter. Howard's
men had eight rounds of ammunition left."Get down,"
were Howard's first words of welcome. "There are snipers
right in front of us." Another recon man shouted: "Hey,
you got any cigarettes?" A cry went up along the line--not
expressions of joy--but requests for cigarettes.
It was not that Howard's Marines were not glad to see other
infantrymen; it was just that they had expected them. Staff
Sergeant Richard Sullivan, who was with the first platoon to
reach the recon Marines, said later: "One man told me he
never expected to see the sun rise. But once it did, he knew
we'd be coming."
The fight was not over. Before noon, in the hot day-light,
despite artillery and planes firing in support, four more Marines
would die.At Howard's urging, Second Lieutenant Ronald Meyer
quickly deployed his platoon along the crest. Meyer had graduated
from the Naval Academy the previous June and intended to make
the Marine Corps his career. He had spent a month with his bride
before leaving for Vietnam. In the field he wore no shiny bars,
and officers and men alike called him "Stump," because
of his short, muscular physique.
Howard had assumed he was a corporal or a sergeant and was
shouting orders to him. Respecting Howard's knowledge and performance,
Meyer obeyed. He never did mention his rank. So Staff Sergeant
Howard, waving off offers of aid, proceeded to direct the tactical
maneuvers of the relieving company, determined to wipe out the
small enemy band dug in not 20 meters downslope. Meyer hollered
for members of his platoon to pass him grenades. He would then
lob them downslope toward the snipers' holes. By peering around
the base of the boulder, Howard was able to direct his throws.
"A little more to the right on the next one, buddy. About
five yards farther. That's right. No, a little too strong."
The grenades had little effect and the snipers kept firing.
Meyer shouted he wanted air on the target. The word was passed
back for the air liaison officer to come forward. The platoon
waited.
Lance Corporal Terry Redic wanted to fire his rifle grenade
at the snipers. A tested sharpshooter, he had several kills
to his credit. In small fire fights he often disdained to duck,
prefering to suppress hostile fire by his own rapid accurate
shooting. Meyer's way seemed too slow. He raised up, knelt on
one knee, and sighted downslope looking for a target. He never
found one. The enemy shot first and killed him instantly.
Meyer swore vehemently. "Let's get that *****. You coming
with me, Sotello?" "Yes, Stump." Lance Corporal
David Sotello turned to get his rifle and some other men. Meyer
didn't wait. He started forward with a grenade in each hand.
"Keep your head down, buddy, they can shoot," yelled
Howard.
Meyer crawled for several yards, then threw a grenade at a
hole. It blasted an enemy soldier. He turned, looking upslope.
Another sniper shot him in the back. Sotello heard the shot
as he started to crawl down. So did Hospitalman 3d Class John
Markillie, the platoon corpsman. He crawled toward the fallen
lieutenant. "For God's sake, keep your head down!"
yelled Howard. Markillie reached his lieutenant. He sat up to
examine the wound. A sniper shot him in the chest.
Another corpsman, Holloday, and a squad leader, Corporal Melville,
crawled forward. They could not feel Meyer's pulse. Markillie
was still breathing. Ignoring the sniper fire, they began dragging
and pushing his body up the hill. Melville was hit in the head.
He rolled over. His helmet bounced off. He shook his head and
continued to crawl. The round had gone in one side of the helmet
and ripped out the other, just nicking the corporal above his
left ear. Melville and Holloday dragged Markillie into the perimeter.
From Chulai, the battalion commander called his company commander,
First Lieutenant Marshall "Buck" Darling. "Is
the landing zone secure, Buck?" "Well," A pause.
"...not spectacularly." Back at the base two noncommissioned
officers were listening. "I wonder what he meant by that?"
asked the junior sergeant. "What the hell do you think
it means, stupid?" replied the older sergeant. "He's
getting shot at."
Ignoring his own wounds, Corpsman Billee Holmes was busy supervising
the corpsmen from Charlie Company as they administered to the
wounded. With the fire fight still going on to the front, helicopter
evacuation was not possible from within the perimeter. The wounded
had to be taken rearward to the south slope. Holmes roved back
and forth, making sure that all his buddies were accounted for
and taken out.
The pilots had seen easier landing sites. "For the medical
evacs," Moser said, "a pilot had to come in perpendicular
to the ridge, then cock his bird around before he sat down.
We could get both main mounts down--first--the-tail--well--sometimes
we got it down. We were still taking fire."
Holmes reported that there was still one Marine, whom he had
seen die, missing. Only after repeated assurances that they
would not leave without the body were the infantry able to convince
him and Howard that it was time they too left. They helped the
Navy corpsman and the Marine sergeant to a waiting helicopter.
Howard's job was done.
Another had yet to be finished. There was a dead Marine to
be found somewhere on the field of battle. But before a search
could be conducted, the last of the enemy force had to be destroyed.
First Lieutenant Phil Freed flopped down beside Melville. Freed
was the forward air controller attached to Charlie Company that
day. He had run the last quarter mile uphill when he heard Meyer
needed air. With the rounds cracking near his head, he needed
no briefing. He contacted two F8 Crusader jets circling overhead.
"This is Cottage 14. Bring it on down on a dry run. This
has to be real tight. Charlie is dug in right on our lines."
At the controls of the jets were First Lieutenants Richard W.
Deilke and Edward H. Menzer.
"There were an awful lot of planes in the air," Menzer
said. "We didn't think we'd be used so we called DASC (Direct
Air Support Center) and asked for another mission. We got diverted
to the FAC (Forward Air Controller), Cottage 14. He told us
he had a machine gun nest right in front of him."As they
talked back and forth, Menzer thought he recognized Freed's
voice. Later he learned he had indeed; Freed had flown jets
with him in another squadron a year earlier.
Freed was lying in a pile of rocks on the military crest of
the northern finger of the hill. Since he himself had flown
the F8 Crusader, Freed could talk to the pilots in a language
they understood. Still, he was not certain they could help.
He didn't know whether they could come that close and still
not hit the Marine infantrymen. On their first run, he deliberately
called the jets in wide so he could judge the technical skills
and precision of the pilots. Rock steady. He called for them
to attack in earnest. When they heard the target was 20 meters
from the FAC, it was the pilots' turn to be worried. "As
long as you're flying parallel to the people, it's O.K.,"
Menzer said. "Because it's a good shooting bird. But even
so, I was leery at first to fire with troops that near."
Unknown to them, the two pilots were about to fly one of the
closest direct air support missions in the history of fixed-wing
aviation. They approached from the northeast with the sun behind
them, and cut across the ridgeline parallel to the friendly
lines. They strafed without room for error. The gun-sight reflector
plate in an F8 Crusader jet looks like a bullseye with the rings
marked in successive 10-mil increments. When the pilots in turn
aligned their sights while 3,000 feet away, the target lay within
the 10-mil ring and the Marine position was at the edge of the
ring. The slightest variance of the controls would rake the
Marine infantrymen with fire. In that fashion, each pilot made
four strafing passes, skimming by 10 to 20 feet above the ridge.
Freed feared they would both crash, so close did their wings
dip to the crest of the hill. The impact of the cannon shells
showered the infantrymen with dirt. They swore they could tell
the color of the pilot's eyes. In eight attacks, the jet pilots
fired 350 20mm explosive shells into an area 60 meters long
and 10 to 20 meters wide. The hillside was gouged and torn,
as if a bulldozer had churned back and forth across it.
Freed cautiously lifted his head. A round cracked by. One enemy
had survived. Somebody shouted that the shot came from the position
of the sniper who had killed Meyer. The lieutenant's body lay
several yards downslope.
The F8 Crusaders had ample fuel left. Menzer called to say
they could make dummy runs over the position if the Marines
thought it would be useful. Freed asked them to try it.
The company commander, Buck Darling, watched the jets. As they
passed, he noticed the firing stopped momentarily. The planes
would be his cover. "I'm going to get Stump. Coming, Brown?"
he asked the nearest Marine. Lance Corporal James Brown was
not a billboard Marine. His offbeat sense of humor often conflicted
with his superiors' sense of duty. His squad leader later recalled
with a grimace one fire fight when the enemy caught the squad
in a cross fire. The rounds were passing high over the Marines'
heads. While everyone else was returning fire, Brown strolled
over to a Vietnamese tombstone, propped himself against it with
one finger, crossed his legs and yelled: "You couldn't
hit me if I was buried here!" His squad leader almost did
the job for the enemy.
On the hill relieving the recon unit, however, Brown was all
business. He emptied several rifle magazines and hurled grenade
after grenade. When he ran out of grenades, he threw rocks to
keep the snipers ducking. All the while he screamed and cursed,
shouting every insult and blasphemy he could think of. Howard
had been very impressed, both with Brown's actions and with
his vocabulary.
He was not out of words when Darling asked him to go after
Meyer's body. As they crawled over the crest, Brown tugged at
his company commander's boot. "Don't sweat it, lieutenant,
they can only kill us." Darling did not reply. They reached
Meyer's body and tried to pull it back while crawling on their
stomachs. They lacked the strength.
"All right, let's carry him." said Darling. It was
Brown's turn to be speechless. He knew what had happened to
every Marine on the slope who had raised his head--and here
was his officer suggesting they stand straight up! "We'll
time our moves with the jets." When the jets passed low,
they stumbled and scrambled forward a few yards with their burden,
then flattened out as the jets pulled up. The sniper snapped
shots at them after every pass. Bullets chipped the rocks around
them. They had less than 30 feet to climb. It took over a dozen
rushes. When they rolled over the crest they were exhausted.
Only the enemy was left on the slope.
The infantry went after him. Corporal Samuel Roth led his eight
man squad around the left side of the slope. On the right, Sergeant
Riojas set a machine gun up on the crest to cover the squad.
A burst of automatic fire struck the tripod of the machine gun.
A strange duel developed. The sniper would fire at the machine
gun. His low position enabled him to aim in exactly on the gun.
The Marines would duck until he fired, then reach up and loose
a burst downhill, forcing the sniper to duck.
With the firing; the sniper could not hear the squad crashing
through the brush on his right side. Roth brought his men on
line facing toward the sniper. With fixed bayonets they began
walking forward. They could see no movement in the clumps of
grass and torn earth.
There was a lull in the firing. The sniper heard the squad,
turned and fired. Bullets whipped by the Marines. Roth's helmet
spun off. He fell. The other Marines flopped to the ground.
Roth was uninjured. The steel helmet had saved a second Marine's
life within an hour. He was not even aware that his helmet had
been shot off. "When I give the word, kneel and fire,"
he said. "Now!" The Marines rose and their rounds
kicked up dust and clumps of earth in front of them. They missed
the sniper. He had ducked into his hole.
The Marines lay back down. Roth swore. "All right--put
in fresh magazines and let's do it again." "Now!"
Just as the Marines rose, the sniper bobbed up like a duck in
a shooting gallery. A bullet knocked him backwards against the
side of his hole. Roth charged, the other Marines sprinting
behind him. He drove forward with his bayonet. A grenade with
the release pin intact rolled from the sniper's left hand. Roth
jerked the blade back. The sniper slumped forward over his machine
gun.
The hill was quiet. It was noon. Darling declared the objective
secure. In the tall grass in front of Riojas' machine gun, the
infantrymen found the body of the missing Marine. The Marines
paused to search 39 enemy dead for documents, picked up 18 automatic
weapons (most of them Chinese), climbed on board a flight of
helicopters, and flew off the plateau.
The Marines lost 10 dead. Charlie Company and the Huey Squadrons
each lost two. Of the 18 Marines in the reconnaissance platoon,
6 were killed; the other 12 were wounded. Five members of Charlie
Company were recommended for medals. Every Marine under Howard's
command received the Purple Heart. Fifteen were recommended
for the Silver Star; Binns and Holmes were nominated for the
Navy Cross; Howard was recommended for the Medal of Honor.
If the action had centered around just one man, then it could
be considered a unique incident of exceptional bravery on the
part of an exceptional man. It is that. But perhaps it is something
more. On June 14th, few would have noticed anything unique about
the 1st Reconnaissance Platoon of Charlie Company. Just in reading
the names of its dead, one has the feeling that here are the
typical and the average, who, well-trained and well-led, rose
above normal expectations to perform an exemplary feat of arms:
John Adams, Ignatius Carlisi, Thomas Glawe, James McKinney,
Alcadio Mascarenas, Jerrald Thompson.
Semper Fi
