By John "Tilt" Stryker
Meyer, One Zero of Spike Team Idaho
As
the first flare ignited over the camp, Sergeant Patrick N “Pat” Watkins,
Jr., made out an NVA soldier standing in the door of the BOQ.
“He was wearing a breech-cloth and bandana,” recalls Watkins, and
was holding an AK-47. The NVA
didn’t see Watkins, who crawled backwards down the hall.
Passing
one room, Watkins saw a young officer dead in his bed, impaled by a jagged
piece of two-by-four that a satchel charge blew through his chest, literally
nailing him to the bed.
Crawling
outside, Watkins saw NVA at the TOC (Tactical Operations Center) pouring heavy
gunfire into the Special Forces troops trying to awake and counterattack.
As he headed toward another BOA, an NVA sapper spotted him and “for
some reason...he threw a satchel charge at me instead of shooting me with his
AK.”
Watkins
rolled out of harm’s way as the sand absorbed much of the blast.
When the NVA saw Watkins still alive, “he threw a grenade at me;
again, I was amazed that he simply didn’t shoot me.
He must have been high on drugs or something, that’s the only thing
which explains it.”
Several
survivors of the attack felt many of the NVA soldiers were drugged to enhanced
their fearlessness.
OJT Pistol Practice
After the grenade exploded, Watkins
pulled his .45. “Hell, I had
never hit anything with a pistol before.
I remember the instructors telling us to shoot low, so I aimed, fired
several rounds and finally lucked out and hit him.
Talk about miracle hits!”
Still
another NVA threw a grenade at Watkins. This
time, Watkins was so close to the sapper that he rushed the NVA, knocking him
down and taking his ak-47 before sending him to the big rice paddy in the sky.
“After
awhile, it all started to run together in my mind.
I remember a radio operator named Hoffman, who stood up to go to help
one of our guys who was crying for help.
He only made a few steps before he was hit.
At one point, we had a guy hit real bad who was screaming for help.
But, the NVA were using him for bait.
Anyone who went to help him was shot or shot at pronto.”
SF
medic Sergeant First Class Robert Robert L. “Bob” Scully, “was hit real
bad, there was gray matter lying around...we had to get him to the dispensary
ASAP.” But the dispensary was
on the south side of camp, and the NVA controlled the TOC which lay in
between. A medic named Henderson
gave Scully an I.V. “I had to
put my hand over his mouth to keep him quite, because there were so many
NVA,” he recalls. Later,
Henderson carried Scully to the dispensary.
“I’ll
tell you one thing, the SF medics were their usual outstanding selves.
One medic got a DSC for driving around camp, picking up the wounded and
getting them back tot he dispensary under heavy constant fire,” Watkins
said.
This
tragic story of the most Green Berets killed on a single day during the
Vietnam War has remained shrouded in secrecy for 25 years until this exclusive
SOF report.
Seventeen
U.S. SPECIAL Forces Soldiers were killed 23 August 1968 in the top
secret Command and Control North (CCN) outpost in Da Nang when three North
Vietnamese Army (NVA) sapper companies executed a well-planned night attack,
featuring a daring infiltration into the camp.
Top
Secret CCN
The
veil of secrecy has remained over this strike for two reasons: It occurred
inside the top secret CCN compound, and there were embarrassing breaches in
security, without which the attack would not have been so deadly.
During a lengthy guerrilla war, even the best of troops and their
commanders can become lax, an error the NVA dramatically exploited at CCN.
Only
the outstanding heroics of individual Green Berets and some of the indigenous
troops assigned to the Recon Company prevented the casualties from exceeding
17.
CCN
was under the auspices of the Military Assistance Command Vietnam--Studies and
Observation Group (MACV-SOG), which oversaw classified missions run by
multiple-service, unconventional warfare troops throughout Southwest Asia,
including Laos, Cambodia and North Vietnam.
In
Green Berets at War, former Special Forces Captain Shelby L. Stanton notes
those special operations also extended into Burma and “Yunan, Kwangsi,
Kwangtung and Hainan Dao Island in China.”
The majority of the personnel running the missions were Green Berets
who were funneled through the 5th Special Forces Group in Nha
Trang--the command headquarters for all conventional Green Beret assignments
such as A comps along the border, to the top-secret Phoenix project.
As men arrived at CCN they signed formal agreements not to write or
speak of these top secret operations for 20 years.
By
August 1968, there were five Forward Operating Bases (FOBs): FOB 1 in Phu Bai,
between Hue and Da Nang; FOB 2 in Kontum; FOB 4 in Da Nang; FOB 5 in Ban Me
Thuot; and FOB 6 in Ho Ngoc Tao, north of Saigon.
FOB 3 in Khe Sahn was being shut down at that time and was no longer
operational.
In
1968 six-man or eight-man Spike Teams and Hatchet Force (company-sized
elements of Green Berets and indigenous mercenaries) were launching from the
FOBs or their respective launch sites on classified missions, missions that
varied from area and point reconnaissance to POW snatches, wiretapping,
installation of trail sensors, destruction of NVA fuel lines and attempts to
locate American POW camps.
Arch
Enemies
By
that year, the NVA knew well of MACV-SOG troops.
In Laos alone, intelligence estimates were of 40,000 NVA and Pathet Lao
soldiers and attached personnel who worked the Ho Chi Minh Trail complex.
Part of their job was to attack the MACV-SOG teams.
As
far back as 1966--when mass media in the United States were still reporting it
as a civil war--the NVA massed a battalion attack against the final Special
Forces A camp in the A Shau Valley, thus clearing the most significant supply
and troop infiltration route into I Corp, in the northern sector of South
Vietnam. Without that route, the
NVA could not have launched the massive Tet Offensive in 1968.
Because
of the strategic importance of the A Shau Valley, MACV-SOG placed a premium on
targets run in that AO. For Spike
Teams assigned to those missions out of FOB 1, they were the most difficult
and risky of targets: The NVA controlled the area, there was no friendly
artillery support, and the triple-canopy jungle covered steep, mountainous
terrain which soared above 5,000 feet in rain forests often cloaked with
clouds, thus curtailing or precluding the use of air power.
The
menace of the A shau Valley targets was dramatized in May 1968, when an entire
Spike Team disappeared and another team was devastated by heavy NVA firepower
while searching for the first team.
Whenever
the NVA tangled with a MACV-SOG team, they suffered heavy casualties.
Thus, the NVA knew the MACV-SOG teams and C&C teams knew and
respected the abilities of the NVA. Clearly,
the NVA wanted to hurt these elite teams--and hitting them at home would be
hitting them where it hurt.
Unbeknownst
to SF personnel at FOB 4, shortly after Tet in 1968, the NVA built a sand
table of FOB 4 in the Marble Mountain caves to organize the 23 August attack.
Marble Mountain was on the south side of FOB 4.
Highway 1 bordered the western perimeter; an NVA POW camp was situated
to the north of FOB 4/CCN, while the China Sea lapped lazily onto the white
sandy beaches of the compound’s eastern front.
The Enemy Next Door
Marble
Mountain was honeycombed with caves and trails.
South along the China Sea, the beaches were flat.
Abruptly, the two rugged peaks of Marble Mountain jutted up, and
cradled between them was a pagoda, complete with monks who protested whenever
U.S. troops got too close to their holy temple--but apparently didn’t seem
to mind having NVA or Viet Cong cadre around.
In
support of the conclusion that the NVA had infiltrated agents inside the camp
is the fact that the NVA launched this attack when the number of soldiers
within FOB 4 had swelled well beyond normal: There was an enlisted promotion
board held the previous day; all of the FOB commanders, executive officers and
their respective S-3 and S-2 officers held their monthly meetings earlier in
the day; that, in addition to the fact the population had grown when the CCN
headquarters was recently moved from downtown Da Nang to FOB 4, thus making it
FOB 4/CCN.
“By
the time the NVA sappers hit the camp, there had to be at least twice, maybe
three times as many Special Forces troops in the camp as were normally
assigned there,” recalls Watkins, who was in his second tour with MACV-SOG,
at that time out of FOB 1, and had appeared before the promotion earlier in
the day.
The
spirit earlier that fateful day was “typical of any promotion board
gathering,” Watkins said. “There was a lot of drinking, a lot of partying
and general hell-raising” by the Special Forces troops.
With any promotion board, the drinking was usually heavy because many
soldiers hadn’t seen each other for extended periods of time, and at these
gatherings, they tended to make up for the months apart during one day’s
heavy drinking.
Inside Without A
Shot
As
America’s elite partied into the night, NVA sappers quietly prepared for
their attack. One company dressed
in white loincloths, with white headbands and a piece of white material
attached to their AK's. The last
company wore red.
The
NVA troops began infiltrating through the thin wire in the southeast corner of
the camp. For months, locals who
worked at FOB 4 returned home through the wire.
On that night, the NVA marched right into camp, heavily armed and
carrying satchel charges.
Sometime
after 0100 “all hell broke loose,” said former Green Beret Sergeant Ronald
D. “Red” Podlaski. “At
first, I though we were taking incoming.”
What many thought were incoming rounds were satchel charges exploding
throughout the compound.
One
company attacked the American recon huts which sat in three north-south rows,
on the eastern side of the camp. Another
company of NVA nit the TOC, destroying it and damaging the commo center.
Other sappers hit the officers’ quarters and transient barracks at
the northwestern quadrant.
Podlaski
was a team leader in recon company at FOB 4/CCN.
The NVA sappers with satchel charges went up to the front door and
threw charges into each plywood hut, which housed two to six GI's.
A
medic who was staying with Podlaski that night later recounted: “We were
lucky. The front door on our
hootch had an extra-strong spring on it, so that the door was hard to
open...When the sappers came to our hootch, they pulled open the door and
threw the satchel charge. But the
spring was so strong, the door closed so quickly that the charges bounced off
the door and blew up the front steps.”
There
was so much confusion and pandemonium the medic and Podlaski didn’t realize
what had happened outside. “Hell,
when we ran outside we didn’t realize the steps had been blown away so we
fell ass over head,” Podlaski recalls.
As
Podlaski and the medic fell, an NVA sapper opened fire on full automatic,
shooting high: “He fired where he though we were going to be running.
If we hadn’t fallen, he probably would have gotten us...Running recon
in CCN we had plenty of close calls in the field,” said Podlaski, who ran
more than a dozen targets in Laos and Cambodia during his tour with MACV-SOG,
“but I remember hitting he sand and disbelieving that the closest call of
all for 'em was right there in camp, in CCN, when that sapper opened up on us.
Unbelievable!”
A
South Vietnamese CCN recon team member killed the sapper, as the indigenous
troops rallied from their quarters.
Watkins
was asleep in the BOQ along the northern quadrant of the camp because the
transient billets were packed with people who had gone before the promotion
board earlier in the day.
Like
Podlaski, Watkins and several of the officers “were awakened by the
explosions,” Watkins said. : thought we were taking incoming at first.
Then, I realized we weren’t taking incoming and simultaneously, I
regretted having given my Swedish K [to a friend] that night.
“All
I had was my old Colt .45, which was in my flight survival vest...the NVA had
knocked the air conditioners out of the wall and pushed several satchel
charges into the building through the holes...”
As
Watkins crawled down the hallway, several explosions ripped through the
building. He rubbed his eyes in
disbelief as he saw two officers looking out a nearby window.
“I told the officers to get down on the floor or they weren’t long
for this world.”
By
then men in the camp began to put up flares, lighting the
camp-turned-battlefield.
At
some point, an AC-130 Spectre gunship with fore miniguns and two 20mm cannons
arrived over CCN.
“Specter
did a hell of a job,” Watkins said. “They dropped flares and caught some
NVA, in the wire, plus they were able to hit a couple of pockets of NVA in the
camp.”
Good Morning,
Vietnam
At
first light, Lieutenant Colonel Roy Bahr lead a relief force from FOB 1 down
the coast of the China Sea into FOB 4, clearing all NVA sappers who had
escaped along the beach from the camp after Spectre arrived.
Also
at first light, SF troops tracked two NVA soldiers to an outside latrine at
the northeast corner of the compound. Accounts
of this are mixed: One officer said the NVA killed themselves with a frag
grenade; a second account said the SF troops opened fire on the latrine,
venting pent-up anger over the carnage wrought by the daring NVA night attack.
Staff
Sergeant Robert J. “Spider” Parks returned to FOB 4/CCN shortly after first
light. “It was a sight I’ll
never forget,” Parks reminisced recently.
The road into camp ran from the highway along the northern edge of the
perimeter, with turn-offs for the helicopter pad, headquarters, and at the
eastern end of the road, for the NCO club, mess hall and Recon Company.
As
Parks walked down that road “it looked like a hazy movie scene.
There was a haze hanging over the camp--you could still smell the cordite
from all the weapons fire. People
were running around, some of them still dazed by the night’s tragic events...
“There
were still some sappers around in the camp and snipers firing down from Marble
Mountain. The NVA fired on the
ambulances leaving camp as well as the one pulling in.
People in the camp got organized and linked up with the relief force
Colonel Bahr brought in from Phu Bai.”
Parks
pulled out his camera and took pictures of the dead enemy, including the NVA
soldier Watkins killed with his .45. Some
are included here.
Later
that day, Watkins and several SF and indigenous recon troops went to Marble
Mountain and found the sand table the NVA had used to rehearsed their attack on
FOB 4/CCN.
The Enemy Within
There
were several facts about the attack which were confirmed by Watkins and numerous
survivors interviewed shortly after the FOB 4/CCN massacre:
*
“It was obvious they had worked months on the attack...the NVA had good
intelligence from inside the camp which helped them pick that night for the
attack,” Watkins said.
*
Prior to the attack, warning about security problems along the southeast
perimeter, where locals walked through the barbed wire, were ignored.
Additionally, the local security force appeared to cooperate with the NVA
instead of defending the camp. NVA weapons and satchel charges had been cached inside
FOB 4/CCN.
*
The attack could have been worse: Some NVA troops carried maps which the local
Viet Cong had drawn upside down. Thus,
they ignored the indigenous recon billets at the southeastern
corner of the compound, instead hitting the BOQ at the northern side of
the compound. “That was a major
mistake, because the recon indig reacted quickly and severely hurt the NVA that
night. In ‘68, the indig at FOB 4
were outstanding and they stood tall that night,” Watkins said.
*
“We were very fortunate in another aspect,” said Bahr, “because after our
commanders meeting, many of us flew back to our FOBs.
Thus, when we heard about the attack, I was able to put together the
reaction force. We flew down in
Kingbees (Vietnamese-piloted H-34s) before first light...otherwise the losses
could have been much more crippling.”
*
Many SF troops reacted slowly because there was too much boozing the previous
night.
*
The total of 17 SF troops killed at FOB 4/CCN “was the heaviest USASF loss in
a single incident in SF history,” according to Green Beret magazine.
Plus, “In the subsequent three days, eight more USASF were killed, six
at Duc Lap”--Special Forces A Camp (A-239).
According
to Green Beret, those killed at FOB 4/CCN were; Ssgt. Talmadge H. Alphin
Jr. *Pfc. William H. Bric III *Sgt. 1st Class Tadeusz M. Kepczyk
*Sgt. 1st Class Donald R. Kerns *Sgt James T. Kickliter *Master Sgt.
Charles R. Norris *Sgt Maj. Richard E. Pegram Jr. *1st Lt. Paul D. Potter
*Master Sgt Rolf E. Rickmers *Spec. 4 Anthonly J. Santana * Master Sgt. Gilvert
A. Secor * Sgt. James W. Smith *Sgt. Robert J. Uyessaka *Ssgt. Howard S. Varni *
Sgt. 1st Class Harold R. Voorheis * Sgt. 1st Class Albert
M. Walter * Sgt. 1st Class Donald W. Welch.