DROPPED FROM A
HELICOPTER
by: Hank Ortega
(© Copyright, 1998)
I
am currently a Physician Assistant practicing Emergency Medicine in West
Texas. I was a combat medic, and the senior aidman for "C"
company and Tiger Force Recon, 1/327 Inf., 101st Airborne Division,
Working out of Camp Eagle 2/68 to 2/69.
We
were working out of Veghel Firebase, traveling up into some steep country,
to the west toward A Shau. After we had stumbled on a deep and narrow
river canyon , we discovered some old thatched huts along the canyon edge.
Captain Westbrook had just rotated out after a honorable tour in the
field, and an Artillery Captain with a month left had come out to punch
his field command ticket. I cite this so that others who were there and
read this can verify the time frame. Several of the troops were screwing
around by throwing grenades into the obviously abandoned huts, playing
"combat". This was really out of character for them, and a
reflection of the attitude of the new CO. Just as the platoon sergeant got
on the horn to tell their squad leader to stop screwing around two of the
guys caught a few fragments of shrapnel in their backs from a
"friendly" grenade.
The wounds were superficial and I elected to leave them in place until I
could cut them out that night when we set up, as we had found more huts,
and several bunkers full of ammo (This is another story). There was little
damage and there certainly would be no problem to let the removal wait.
After we had moved down canyon their platoon sergeant and the CO came to
me, saying that the guys wanted to be medevac'ed. The CO's justification
was that the small wounds were rubbing on the men's packs irritating them.
The CO said that we could call in a bird to the next ridgeline across the
river, and get them out of the field. I could see that the CO was
determined to do this, over the objections of myself and his Lieutenants
and that I had little to say about it so I acquiesced, saying " It's
your call".
We moved up to the ridge line where the scout team had found two huge bomb
craters on either side of the ridge, leaving the jungle cleared, and only
a huge tree snag standing at the down slope end of the clearing. Some 3
feet thick at the top, and about 30 to 50 feet tall, it was the stub of
one of the forest giants that towered to triple canopy in the rainforest
that we moved about in. The ridge line dropped off steeply to either side
and on the side we came up, dropped about 250 feet into the narrow gorge
described before.
(Photo: Richard Coyne)
We pulled up to the site, and settled into a perimeter with the 3d platoon
CP at the center. Lt Toberman, RTO's Wiley and Fluery and myself, along
with the two men to be evac'd, Coyne and Hezekiah Shirley made up the CP
element for the dust off. The company CP was nearby on the perimeter. We
had had no enemy contact for 4 to 5 days so far, so there was an air of
complacency from the Captain. Toberman and the other LT's felt
differently. The men dug in and got ready to receive the medevac to our
LZ. Soon we heard, rather than saw the thumping of the Huey's blades
pulling the slick up slope from the lower river canyon to the south east.
Eventually the Dust off slick hove to overhead and lowered the jungle
penetrator. Wiley had told the pilot over the radio about the large tree
that obstructed a full landing so the pilot hovered some 80 feet above us,
out of reach except by cable, but low enough that the rotor wash beat at
us on the ground under the bird. I let the hook hit the ground to degauss
the static charge, then folded down the leaves that the troops would sit
on. I directed the two men to sit one on the other's lap, facing each
other, then wrapped them up with the single strap that passed under each
man's arms. Stepping back a half step I looked up at the crew chief
standing half out of the rig, his right foot on the skid, and signaled him
to begin "up hoist". As the cable and helicopter took up the
load, I held the guy's shoulders, then waists, then feet as they passed
upward. Reaching high above me I finally let go of one of the trooper's
feet and lowered my hands.
At just that moment, with the crew chief looking down, guiding the cable
with one hand, one soldier on the hook looking down at me and the other
looking up at the bird, a cloud of green tracers flew through the canopy
and crew area of the Huey. Another cloud flew past the two suspended men,
who began to jerk at the cable and mouth screams of fear and pain. One of
the suspended men had had the toes on one foot shot off. Above me the
helicopter bobbled once or twice and another cloud of tracers passed
through. Rounds pitted the ground around me as I stood half crouched,
wondering what was going to happen in the next second or two. I thought
the bird was going to fall right on top of us. Over the noise of the
helicopter I could just barely hear the perimeter open up on the side that
was receiving fire, and could see both RTO's shouting into their radios.
PVT Walt Jackson (now Maj. US, Ret) fired a LAW rocket across the steep
valley hitting right into where the green tracers were coming from. The
helicopter engines changed pitch, and as I looked up I could see the
crewman punching the button on the side of the winch that would send a arc
of electricity to cut the cable. Repeatedly the crewman struck the button
in the few seconds that the chopper remained above us, trying to cut the
two soldiers loose, to fall a few short feet back to where I stood. I
could tell this wasn't going to work, so was hoping that the bird would
slip away and use the ridge to cover them, while completing the haul up.
Instead, the bird began to tip away from the fire coming at them, and fell
away down slope, rapidly going below my own actual altitude. The maneuver
caused the two troops suspended below to swing like a huge pendulum,
rapidly gaining speed. With in a few seconds, these men went from about 30
feet above me, to over 300 feet above the ground, and rapidly accelerated
as the helicopter swung them along and behind it.
Suddenly the cable cutter must have worked because the cable parted from
up high near the bird. I could see this because as it peeled away, the
helicopter turned almost all the way on it's left side. The two men flew
with frightening speed toward the top of the canopy of forest below us.
One of the men shrieked in fear as he watched the forest coming at them,
The other looked back and stretched out his hand to me, screaming
"Doc!" Suddenly they were gone, the chopper was way down slope
and hearing returned. I could hear Wiley and Fluery yelling into their
radios, one at the helicopter to come back, the other to artillery to
provide support. Most chilling however, was the noise that I could hear as
the two men, trailing cable, entered the canopy and fell precipitously to
the ground breaking limbs and branches and the huge thud that came up from
the jungle below when they struck.
I pitched myself off the crater lip and ran headlong into the darkening
forest as others made their way down from the east side of the perimeter.
I met Doc Fritz Persijn at the bottom, and we found Coyne and Shirley,
battered, broken and semiconscious, lying tangled in each others arms and
wrapped in vines and the full length of the cable. Both men had multiple
fractures, and I think it was Coyne who had one of his thumbs nearly
ripped off. We disentangled the men, and rendered care, splinting and
immobilizing and stringing IV's. The squad that followed Fritz and I down
quickly made litters out of ponchos and long saplings, and we carried the
men back up slope to the landing zone. During this time, the two engineers
that traveled with us had collected up all the C-4 available including
half the claymores, to set a charge on the large snag that had prevented a
full landing, in the hopes that we could get another bird to land there.
As I approached Lt Toberman's position, I could hear what was transpiring
on the radio. It was clear that the original bird was not coming back.
They had suffered injury to their crew and damage to their craft and had
to make their own way home wounded, and limping. The voice from the
aircraft sounded as though it was a struggle to keep it flying RTO Wiley
had talked to a supply slick who had just fueled and shut down for the day
and was willing to come up if we could clear the snag. He had said he
needed to pick up some "guns". Under heavy fire the engineers
wired the tree snag, including a kicker charge near the top to knock the
tree down. Infantrymen flailed furiously at the tree's huge base with
jungle machetes in a futile effort to cut the it down. All the while our
own perimeter slugged it out with the unseen source of green tracers from
the facing hill some 500 yards away. The LT's had reorganized and
redistributed the men to make the perimeter heavy on the side facing the
enemy fire, and maneuvered some men up slope to rain fire down on the
enemy position. The artillery FO Lt Christian and his RTO Meyer, called in
heavy fire from 105's and 155's at the supporting firebases in the area.
Our final enemy was time, the men being badly injured and going in and out
of consciousness. We struggled to maintain blood pressures and deal with
presumptive head injuries. On top of it all, it was getting dark.
Finally we began to hear the sound of multiple turbines and the whop of
chopper blades coming out of the gloom to the east. There below us we
could see, coming up canyon and upslope, the resupply slick, with two m-60
machine guns sticking out of the sides. Surrounding the slick, we saw what
he had meant when he said "guns". Flying in formation on each
side and ahead of the slick where three birds that were relatively new to
the war, the Cobra gunship. These modified Hueys with double engines and
very narrow bodies looked like sharks or dragonflies from hell as they
swam up to our area, blades thrumming in the heat of the early evening.
The men let out a cheer, and as the slick hove to above me, the blast of
the tree charge let loose, knocking the tree over but not all the way
down.
There was improvement but not enough room was created to let the slick
settle all the way down. The bird settled into the slot, and locked into
place with it's right skid just out of reach above me. The front Plexiglas
was immediately starred in several places as it took hit after hit. The
door gunner on the left side hosed his m-60 into the jungle against the
shower of green tracers. The artillery had let off just as the helicopters
arrived, and the gun ships began to orbit around the bomb crater. Each of
the cobras would fire either their mini guns, sounding like basso sewing
machines, or would rotate to the front position and spew from their
automatic grenade launchers. Repeatedly the enemy would spray green
tracers at us, hitting the helicopter overhead, and picking at the ground
around us. They never let up in spite of heavy return and suppressive fire
from our own forces.
Lt.
John Toberman
photo by "Zeke" Blevins
I
stood up in this hailstorm of lead and strained to reach the litter poles
of the first injured trooper over head to the crewman, standing on the
skid, leaning into his monkey strap. The skid was just out of reach. I
strained and strained. Suddenly, from in front of me, Lt Toberman, stood
up, and unfolding his full 6 ft, several inch frame he snatched the poles
out of my hands, and reached them to just touch the skid above us. RTO
Wiley, had moments before run and jumped onto the skid and with one hand
inside the chopper and one hand below, he reached down and helped the
crewman pull the litter into the helicopter. As Toberman pushed one last
time to get the poles into the bird above us, we fell back to the ground
on our backs and watched as the chopper peeled away to the east again and
took cover behind the ridge line. We watched as it swung away down slope
and down canyon then turned back toward us, to come swimming back up slope
again. Clinging to the right hand skid and leaning inside to avoid the
slip stream stood Wiley and the ship's crewman.
Again the bird settled into the slot, and again Toberman, and I lifted the
next wounded man onto the skids, and again the crewman and Wiley lifted
the wounded into the interior. Before the bird could peel away again,
Wiley snapped off a salute to the crewman ,and took a backwards dive off
the skid to land on his butt next to us on the ground about 10 feet below.
The helicopters broke off, and peeled away, the enemy stopped firing, and
the perimeter shut down as well. In the quiet that followed we looked at
each other in amazement at what had just transpired. The quiet compared to
the extreme expenditure of adrenaline just a few seconds before seemed
anticlimactic. The order was given to move out, and we dropped off the
slope to the east to rest that night in the river canyon. We followed the
slope of the hill back down to the river and set up for the night. I never
saw the two soldiers again. The next day we discovered 33 2 1/2 ton trucks
buried in the jungle, but that is another story.
Epilogue: I have learned that Richard Coyne is
alive and well in Las Vegas, NV. Reportedly, he is married to a nurse from
the hospital in Vietnam. The truth of this is unconfirmed at this date,
9/5/98. Hezekaiah Shirley is unaccounted for at this date. Hank Ortega,
Tiger Force Medic, 101 Airborne Division, Vietnam 68/69
Update
Thursday, February 03, 2000 5:42 PM
Subject: Dropped from a helicopter.
Don: Have I got an update for you! Brother Coyne, who was dropped from a
helicopter, was
browsing the web last year, and stumbled across my story about him on your
site! He contacted me, and updated me. Not only did he survive his fall,
He went back to Vietnam with the Americal
Division, for another year. He finished 20 years in the military, was a
drill sergeant and finished as a first Sergeant. He dedicated his life to
teaching the young bucks the things we didn't know, in hopes of keeping
them alive. He is retired and living in Las Vegas. How cool. Check
my web site for new material. I have photos from 3 years of tiger force.
Hank Ortega, PA/C
Tiger Force Web site,
101st Airborne Assn, and
327th web site
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