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"Air Story" out of Vietnam By Lawrence E. Pence - Colonel, USAF
(Ret)
For most servicemen who served in Vietnam , the Freedom Bird was that civil
airliner which took them back to the land of the big PX at the end of their
tour. Mine was a bit different sort of Freedom Bird.
In mid-1967, as a junior Air Force Captain, I was detailed to 7th AF Hq in
Saigon as an Air Technical Intelligence Liaison Officer, short name: ATLO (the
"I" gets left out, as people look strangely at anyone who calls
himself an ATILO, thinking he is somehow related to Atilla the Hun). My job was
to provide 7AF and the air war the best technical intelligence support that the
Foreign Technology Division of AF Systems Command (my parent organization) could
provide, in whatever area or discipline needed. Also I was to collect such
technical intelligence as became available. This was a tall order for a young
Captain, and this assignment provided much excitement, including the Tet
Offensive.
At that time, Operation Rolling Thunder was underway, the bombing of military
targets in North Vietnam . The weather in NVN was often lousy, making it
difficult to find and accurately strike the assigned targets, so a radar control
system was set up to direct the strike force to their targets.
This system was installed in a remote, sheer-sided karst mountain just inside
Laos on the northern Laos/NVN border. The site could be accessed only by
helicopter or a tortuous trail winding up the near-vertical mountainside, so it
was judged to be easily defensible.
The mountaintop was relatively flat and about 30 acres in size. On it was a tiny
Hmong village called Phu Pha Ti, a small garrison of Thai and Meo mercenaries
for defense, a helicopter pad and ops shack for the CIA-owned Air America
Airline, and the radar site, which was manned by "sheep-dipped" US Air
Force enlisted men in civilian clothes. Both the US and NVN paid lip service to
the fiction that Laos was a neutral country, and no foreign military were
stationed there, when in reality we had a couple of hundred people spread over
several sites, and NVN had thousands on the Ho Chi Minh trail in eastern Laos.
This particular site was called Lima (L for Laos ) Site 85. The fighter-bomber
crews called it Channel 97 (the radar frequency), and all aircrews called it
North Station, since it was the furthest north facility in "friendly"
territory. Anywhere north of North Station was bad guy land.
The Channel 97 radar system was an old SAC precision bomb scoring radar which
could locate an aircraft to within a few meters at a hundred miles. In this
application, the strike force would fly out from Lima Site 85 a given distance
on a given radial, and the site operators would tell the strike leader precisely
when to release his bomb load. It was surprisingly accurate, and allowed the
strikes to be run at night or in bad weather.
Th is capability was badly hurting the North Vietnamese war effort, so they
decided to take out Lima Site 85. Because of the difficulty of mounting a ground
assault on Lima Site 85, and its remote location, an air strike was planned.
Believe it or not, the NVNAF chose biplanes as their "strike bombers!"
This has to be the only combat use of biplanes since the 1930's. The aircraft
used were Antonov designed AN-2 general purpose 'workhorse" biplanes with a
single 1000hp radial piston engine and about one ton payload. Actually, once you
get past the obvious "Snoopy and the Red Baron" image, the AN-2 was
not a bad choice for this mission. Its biggest disadvantage is, like all
biplanes, it is slow. The Russians use the An-2 for a multitude of things, such
as medevac, parachute training, flying school bus, crop dusting, and so on.
An AN-2 just recently flew over the North Pole. In fact, if you measure success
of an aircraft design by the criteria of number produced and length of time in
series production, you could say that the AN-2 is the most successful aircraft
design in the history of aviation!
The NVNAF fitted out their AN-2 "attack bombers with a 12 shot 57mm folding
fin aerial rocket pod under each lower wing, and 20 250mm mortar rounds with
aerial bomb fuses set in vertical tubes let into the floor of the aircraft cargo
bay. These were dropped through holes cut in the cargo bay floor. Simple hinged
bomb-bay doors closed these holes in flight.
The pilot could salvo his bomb load by opening these doors. This was a pretty
good munitions load to take out a soft, undefended target like a radar site.
Altogether, the mission was well planned and equipped and should have been
successful, but Murphy's Law prevailed.
A three plane strike force was mounted, with two attack air-craft and one
standing off as command and radio relay. They knew the radar site was on the
mountaintop, but they did not have good intelligence as to its precise location,
It was well camouflaged, and could not be seen ;readily from the air. They also
did not realize that we had "anti-aircraft artillery" and "air
defense interceptor" forces at the site. Neither did we realize this.
The AN-2 strike force rolled in on the target, mistook the Air America ops shack
for the radar site, and proceeded to ventilate it. The aforementioned
"anti-aircraft artillery" force - one little Thai mercenary about five
feet tall and all balls- heard the commotion, ran out on the helicopter pad,
stood in the path of the attacking aircraft spraying rockets and bombs
everywhere, and emptied a 27-round clip from his AK-47 into the AN-2, which then
crashed and burned.
At this juncture, the second attack aircraft broke off and turned north towards
home.
The "air defense interceptor" force was an unarmed Air America Huey
helicopter which was by happenstance on the pad at the time, the pilot and
flight mechanic having a Coke in the ops shack. When holes started appearing in
the roof, they ran to their Huey and got airborne, not quite believing t he
sight of two biplanes fleeing north. Then the Huey pilot, no slouch in the balls
department either, realized that his Huey was faster than the biplanes! So he
did the only thing a real pilot could do -attack!
The Huey overtook the AN-2's a few miles inside North Vietnam , unknown to the
AN-2's as their rearward visibility is nil. The Huey flew over the rearmost AN-2
and the helicopter's down-wash stalled out the upper wing of the AN-2.
Suddenly the hapless AN-2 pilot found himself sinking like a stone! So he pulled
the yoke back in his lap and further reduced his forward speed. Mean-while, the
Huey flight mechanic, not to be outdone in the macho contest, crawled out on the
Huey's skid and, one-handed, emptied his AK-47 into the cockpit area of the
AN-2, killing or wounding the pilot and copilot. At this point, the AN-2 went
into a flat spin and crashed into a mountainside, but did not burn.
It should come as no surprise that the Air America pilot and flight mechanic
found themselves in a heap of trouble with the State Department REMF's in
Vientiane . (REMF is an acronym. The first three words are Rear, Echelon, and
Mother.) In spite of the striped-pants cookie-pushers' discomfort at (horrors!)
an inter-national incident (or perhaps, partly because of it) these guys were
heroes to everybody in the theatre who didn't wear puce panties and talk with a
lisp. They accomplished a couple of firsts: (1) The first and only combat
shootdown of a biplane by a helicopter, and (2) The first known CIA air-to-air
victory.
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