The Team House - Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol (LRRP) in Vietnam | Gary Linderer (throwback ep)
Episode Date: May 21, 2026Gary Linderer is the publisher of Behind the Lines, a magazine that specializes in US military special operations. He served in Vietnam with the LRPs of the 101st Airborne Division, earning two Silver... Stars, the Bronze Star with V device (for valor), the Army Commendation Medal with V device, and two Purple Hearts.Gary's books :https://www.amazon.com/stores/Gary-A.-Linderer/author/B001KHOOIG?ref=ap_rdr&shoppingPortalEnabled=true&ccs_id=5aa1b86d-83f3-4258-adc1-41fa9c021663Support the show here:https://www.patreon.com/c/TheTeamHouseGrab Jack's new thriller "The Most Dangerous Man" here:https://a.co/d/05NN09wy00:00 — Start / Vietnam LRP veteran Gary Linderer joins The Team House01:05 — Growing up with a WWII pilot father and trying to become a military aviator03:46 — Arriving in Vietnam and volunteering for the 101st Airborne LRPs08:46 — What LRPs did: long-range recon, helicopter insertions, and working far beyond friendly lines12:41 — First patrol: immediate contact with a suspected Chinese communist fighter20:31 — Life inside the LRP company: small teams, stand-downs, and constant readiness23:37 — The Nui Ke mission: rocket belt patrols, mortars, and air support29:42 — Night insertion back into Nui Ke and escaping under heavy .51-caliber fire36:04 — November 20th heavy-team mission against the 2nd NVA Regiment43:30 — Claymore ambush, killing an NVA major, and recovering the map case49:53 — Enemy explosive wipes out the team and the fight to keep everyone alive55:27 — Medevac under fire and the reaction force rescue01:08:45 — Returning from the hospital as one of the “old guys” in the unit01:12:14 — Search-and-rescue mission for downed helicopters near Firebase Tomahawk01:26:36 — LRP weapons: M16s, CAR-15s, Swedish Ks, shotguns, and ammo loadouts01:29:59 — Coming home from Vietnam, getting married, and carrying the war back with him01:35:50 — LRPs becoming Rangers and fighting to preserve the LRP legacy01:38:22 — Writing the books: letters home, reunions, and documenting the LRP experience01:48:03 — Silver Star, Ranger legacy, helicopter pilots, books, and final thoughtsBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-team-house--5960890/support.
Transcript
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Hey everyone, welcome to episode 224 of the Team House. I'm Jack Murphy here with Dave Park.
Our guest on tonight's show is Gary Lindwer. Gary served in the Lerps, a long-range reconnaissance patrol, which became Ranger companies later on in the Vietnam conflict.
He's the author of a number of different books. We have a few of his here, the Phantom Warrior series, amongst others.
We're really excited to have Gary on the show. We've had a few of his teammates on before, Larry Chambers and Ken Miller.
So this is, I feel like a long time coming, Gary.
So thank you so much for joining us tonight.
Good to be here.
So Gary, look, man, I mean, it's an honor and a pleasure.
And I'm going to pitch you the question.
I pitch all of our guests.
Tell us about your origin story, about how you grew up,
what your upbringing was like and what sort of propelled you towards military service.
I was the oldest of eight kids.
My father was a World War II B-17 pilot, and growing up, couldn't get him to tell a lot of stories about his missions in World War II, but I aspired to be a pilot myself.
When I graduated from high school, I had a primary appointment to the Air Force Academy.
And in May of my senior year, when I went to take my physical, they found out I had a brain concussion and a
football game my senior year in high school and they informed me at the end of May that I was
going to have to wait a year to attend the Air Force Academy. Back then, if you waited a year,
you would be drafted. So I ended up applying at the last minutes of Missouri University. I attended
Missouri University for two years. I was in Air Force ROTC. And at the end of two years,
I ran out of money.
My parents couldn't afford to pay for my junior year.
So fearing that I would be drafted, I went ahead and enlisted.
I tried to enlist in the Air Force Aviation Program.
At the time, you had to have a college degree.
Same thing with the Marine Corps and the Navy.
So I went to the Army and is the last resort.
And they told me, well, you could be a helicopter pilot,
but you can't go to OCS for six months in 1967,
unless you had a college degree, even the Army wouldn't send you to OCS.
This was in the fall of 67.
So I enlisted for airborne infantry, and I was told by my recruiter that they would probably remove the requirement to have a college degree while I was in training, and I could reapply.
So I went through basic training and AIT, and I went to jump school, and during jump school,
I reapplied, the Army took the requirement away.
I reapplied for OCS.
My orders came down for OCS the day after my orders came down for Vietnam.
So I was engaged at the time to my high school sweetheart, and I came home on a 30-day leave.
And I tried to find out if I could delay going to Vietnam and go to OCS.
They said there's no way Vietnam orders supersedes everything else.
So I came home and my fiancé found that I was going to Nam and she wanted to get married before I left.
And I said, no, we went together for five years through high school and college.
I said, let's wait until I get back.
So anyway, I went to Vietnam.
There were five guys in my group that went over from my jump class.
Only five guys I knew on the aircraft.
We landed in all five of us had orders for the $100.
First Airborne Division.
So during P training, preliminary training, preparatory training that the 100 first offered,
the week-long training course, they had different people come by and speak to us about joining
these different organizations, volunteer organization.
And they had a dog handler come by, and he talked to the whole group.
There was 200 of us in the group, and he gave this pitch about being a dog handler
and going to Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia
for the training for two weeks.
And none of the five guys I had served with
volunteered for this, so I passed up on it.
And I like dogs.
Excuse me, I grew up with dogs.
So I almost went that route.
The next guy that came was a real stud.
He was a lurp.
He had tiger fatigues on and a red scarf around his neck.
starched tiger fatigue really looked like a stud.
And he gave us a talk about what Lerps did,
and that we were the elites of the army,
and, you know,
we operated behind enemy lines and six-man teams
and really made it sound exciting.
And all four of the guys I went over there with raised their hand to volunteer.
And I had not wanting to be left out.
I did the same thing.
They flew us up north to Fubai.
And there was a Jeep waiting for us.
that took us to the company reunion or the company unit.
And the first sergeant came out and said,
gentlemen, come in here.
I'm going to tell you what you're going to be doing.
Well, he didn't make it sound so glorious.
We went in and he explained that life expectancy of Lerbps was,
I'm sure he exaggerated because we hadn't lost that many people.
But he made it sound very much akin to being a second lieutenant in a line unit.
didn't sound too inviting to it.
I remember writing my first letter home to my fiancé
and telling her I really screwed up.
So anyway,
they assigned each one of us to a team as a replacement
and that entire team trained with us daily for two weeks.
And they told us any one man on that team could blackball us.
And if they did, we'd go to an infantry company immediately.
No question.
ass. I grew up doing a lot of hunting and fishing and I was pretty pretty comfortable in the woods.
I was an explorer scout, the Boy Scout, so I could already read a contour map. And I think I did
pretty good working out with my team. And at the end of my two weeks, I was accepted as part of the
team. Not long after I got there, we had a new company commander that came to the unit.
and he had come to us from a line company
and he wasn't very popular.
He immediately made us have,
we stood two formations a day.
We ran in the morning seven miles.
We had to wear our uniforms, our fatigues,
jungle fatigues with the sleeves rolled down,
even on work details.
And nobody liked this guy.
After about two weeks,
he stepped on a tow popper mind going into his tent one night.
And they almost did,
disbanded our company because of it.
That's crazy, Gary.
I was still new to the whirps.
That's crazy how the Viet Cong slip through your wire.
That's what we thought.
Yeah.
Especially in a work unit.
One should have been able to come in and do that.
Yeah.
Trying to take out your leadership.
They had a hard time finding somebody that would volunteer to be company commander after that.
They sent a black major over and he refused to stay in the company area at night.
He would come over and hold a morning formation.
and go back up to division headquarters for the rest of the day,
and we'd see him the next morning again.
Well, I guess it was almost three weeks later,
Captain Ken Eklund volunteered to take our company.
Captain Eklund had been with First Brigade,
with an infantry company with the 327,
and he had an excellent record.
He didn't lose a man in a year over there in 1965, West Pointer.
He became our company commander,
and he was an outstanding company commander.
I didn't really go out on my first mission.
I got there in early June of 68.
By the time I trained and we went through this rigmarole
with the captain that stepped on the tow popper.
It was August before I actually went out on the patrol.
Gary, for folks out there who don't know or don't understand,
can you explain what your unit did, what a warp was and what your mission was?
When I was there, primarily we were reconnaissance, long-range patrol.
We would pull missions that lasted anywhere from three to seven days.
Most of the missions were 20 to 40 kilometers away from the base camp.
So we were out quite a ways past where the infantry companies were working,
as opposed to battalion reconnaissance units that worked in much closer.
normally we inserted by helicopter there were a few missions where we did a walk in or were dropped off on a highway by truck but normally we were we were taken in by helicopter and we either we hovered just above the ground and jumped out or we repelled in or we we had there's a couple of missions we actually went in by rope ladder the insertions were normally
at first light or last light.
And we would hit the ground,
usually in a small clearing,
run into the jungle, and immediately
set up a tight perimeter
and we lay dog up to an hour
just listening.
Normally, if the enemy had a trail watcher
or we were close to a base camp,
they would come to see what the helicopter was all about.
We had a choice of continuing the mission
or if we were compromised.
The helicopters were standing off
a few miles away, they would come back in and try to pull us out.
When we pull the mission, it was usually in an area, we called it an area of operations, an AO,
that was anywhere from four to seven clicks, a thousand meter clicks in diameter, or in dimensions.
The clicks might be in a square, they may be oblong, it depended on the terrain.
Before mission, the team leader and the assistant team leader would do an overflight and try to locate landing zone, potential landing zones or extraction zones, where the streams were for water purposes, and where possibly the enemy might be hiding.
So when we went on a patrol, usually our patrol route was predetermined.
We based it on contour maps and what we saw on the overflight.
So when we went in on a patrol, we weren't locked into that patrol route,
but we would try to follow it as closely as possible.
A team consistent of a team leader, an assistant team leader, two scouts, and two radio operators,
a senior and a junior radio operator.
The senior radio operator, his communication was with either a radio relay team or the company talk,
Tactical Operations Center.
The junior radio operator,
his was sit on an artillery base
where our artillery support came from.
We had a lot of communication problems.
Our missions were usually back in the mountains.
And where we were, the mountains were very similar
to eastern Tennessee.
Very rugged, very steep.
A lot of double canopy.
Water in most of the valleys,
but that's where the enemy usually was too,
around the water.
So we had to be careful
trying to resupply water on missions.
So that's pretty well what we did.
We didn't cover a lot of ground.
We moved short distances very silently, did a lot of listening.
We tried not to run trails.
We would try to parallel a trail far enough off that we could see somebody coming up or down
where we wouldn't make a lot of noise.
Gary, I mean, where to even begin?
I mean, do you want to tell us about your first mission that you start?
started to get into a little bit?
My first mission, we had an E7, was the team leader.
I won't mention any names.
I was pretty impressed by him.
I thought he was very professional.
We landed in this Alpine country, not Alpine country,
Piedmont country, rolling hills, not a lot of cover,
light at the base of these tall mountains.
We landed about, I think it was about seven or eight in the morning.
And there was six of us.
I was the new guy.
The helicopter came in and was still moving when we jumped out.
I remember I hit on my toes of my feet and did a somersault immediately,
not realizing that when a helicopter is moving, you don't jump out like that.
Really, I felt like a total ass when I did my tumble and came back up on my feet.
I thought that probably kicked me off the team when we get back from this mission.
Anyway, we ran about 100 meters off the LZ into a lot.
a bamboo thicket right at the edge of the bottom of the mountains.
And there was a trail, high-speed trail going up through the bamboo.
I was walking slack for the point man who happened to be the team later at E7.
We went up that trail about 100 meters, and he announced that we were going to have a break.
And we stopped in the middle of this trail and took a 10-minute break.
This is right after we inserted.
And I found that later that he was, we were playing dog at the time, but in the middle of a trail.
About 15 feet above us, above the point man, the trail made a turn to the right, 90 degree turn.
And you couldn't see that out of it because the elephant grass and the bamboo was too hot.
So we're sitting there in the trail and all of a sudden I look up and here's a, I think he was a Chinese communist.
He was six foot tall.
came around the bend in the trail trail he had khaki fatigues on and a red bandana around his neck
and a boonie cap and he had an AK-47 slung over his shoulder and everything froze
nobody moved he stopped in midstep and stood and looked at us and we both looked at him
and the guys behind us i'm not even sure the farther down the trail i don't even know if they saw him
they were pulling security in different directions and all of a sudden the
guy grabbed for the sling on his AK 47 when he grabbed on the sling the E7 ripped him just across
the chest with his eight with his uh was that they think of the did he got a 15 okay i had an M16 and i had
i had my finger on the selector switch thank god and i flipped it to fire and on full automatic and
i ripped him again and every time we hit him he'd stagger backwards you can see the dust come off
his uniform and you can see the splotches of red coming across his chest and all of a sudden the
guy turns around and runs back around the bend in the trail and we heard him fall and we're sitting
there the e7 didn't say anything the guys below us didn't know what was going on they all stood up
and i'm still sitting on the ground you know i had fired 20 rounds out of my magazine
and all of a sudden it occurred to me you better reload and i dropped the magazine and
put another mag in and a stick came flying over the elephant grass and the bamboo and landed in the trail.
Then pretty soon a rock came over.
So the E7 figured he was a point man for an element.
And he jumped up, said everybody back to the LZ.
So we all jumped up and the E7 pulled rear security and we ran 100 meters back to the LZ.
The helicopters were still on station so they could.
came in and picked us up and took us back to the LZ.
We went through a debriefing, my first one.
And we all told what we saw.
The other four guys on the team never saw this guy.
Even when we fired, they didn't see him.
So we reported what happened.
And I wasn't going to say to you much.
I was still too new.
And the E7 said, I think this guy was a chikov.
He said he had, when we shot him, his hat came off.
And he said, he had a flat top.
His hair had been cut recently.
A guy was huge for an Oriental.
So I agreed with him because I basically felt the same thing myself.
That was my first patrol.
I wasn't on the ground, probably 30 minutes at the most.
And I remember thinking, God, I thought these people were little.
This guy was as big as I was.
Gary was the first of my 28 mission.
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Thanks so much guys
So Gary back to you
And so that was your first mission less than 30 minutes on the ground
an encounter with an unexpected encounter there, it sounds like, what was the next step for you
as you integrated into your team and get jocked up, I guess, for the next mission that's coming
your way?
Well, we normally would pull anywhere from two to four missions a month.
Coming in from a patrol, we usually get a three-day stand down between that mission and another
one, which was basically spent
either resting if it was a long patrol,
repackaging our gear,
re-arming if we fired any ammo
on the mission,
replacing the
lurp rations we took with us.
We were always ready.
Our rucksacks were always ready to go
on another patrol.
When you're first in country,
you pretty well stay with your team.
After you get a little bit of experience,
you end up doing a lot of fill admissions
where you might go out as an extra man
on another team or if somebody's
at Recondo School or
or on R&R, you fill in
on that team. I was
surprised
how well we all
did the same thing in the field.
Normally on another team
you'd think you wouldn't fit.
But after you had five or six
months under your belt, it was
amazing. You could go out with any team
and pretty well be comfortable with them.
How many LARP teams, these six-man teams, how many were in your company?
R.O&E called for two platoons with six teams in a platoon.
Normally, we ended up with about four teams in a platoon because of casualties or ETSs,
D-Ros, guys going to Recondo School, R&R, sick, wounded.
We never could run 18.
So this is a small, tight-knit 25 to 30-man unit, really?
Yeah, yeah.
We had radio relay teams, which usually consisted of three to four men that would normally go out on a fire base or actually go out as another team and relay our combo back to the rear,
especially when we were a long way out like in the Ashall Valley.
Sometimes they would send a spotter plane out at certain periods of time and we'd relay through that spotter plane.
So it just depended on where we were and what kind of combo we had anyway.
Bird dog.
I was lucky.
I didn't have a lot of hot missions probably until I was there for four or five months.
I think my next hot mission, this was in August, that first mission.
I was on a mission the 3rd of November that turned out to be very hot.
Matter of fact, four of us were decorated on that mission.
And then November 20th, I was on another very bad mission where we had four killed and
eight guys wounded on a heavy team, 12-man team, everybody got hit.
Let's start with the first one that was pretty hot in November.
The first one, Camp Eagle, our division base camp, was in a huge cemetery in Vietnam.
There were graves everywhere, big concrete graves, right off of Highway 1.
probably seven miles south southwest of the city of way from from war camp eagle was oh maybe seven miles out
the mountains started and there was a rolling Piedmont up to the mountains right along the base of the mountains
ran the song bow and the perfume river so there was a major waterway that came from the ocean
into the city of Way and came to the mountains and then ran south along the base of the mountains.
There were a couple of abandoned fire bases right at the near edge of those mountains.
One of those was called Newey Key.
There were still chopper pads up on top and bunkers.
And it was in what we called the rocket belt.
We used to catch a lot of 122 millimeter rockets from back behind Newee Key.
radar would pick them up as soon as they launched.
But the enemy kept launching them from that proximity.
So they were going to put our team out there on top of the mountain.
And we were supposed to walk off the backside and hopefully be available in that area
when the rockets were launched.
When we landed, actually we didn't land, the helicopter came in on top of Nui Key,
which was abandoned at the time.
And for some reason, our team leader said, don't sit down.
on the chopper pad. We'll jump off.
We jumped off
onto this PSP chopper pad
jumped off of that down to the ground
and we looked underneath it. There was
a 250 pound bomb
underneath the metal chopper pad.
That chopper would have sat down and would
have blown us all the hell.
I don't know what told him
to tell that pilot not to land
there, but he did.
This was about 10 o'clock in the morning
and
there was two fingers that came down
off the mountain top one ran down towards the river and the other one ran down to the south the other
two sides were very steep we started down the the one to the river and it was no vegetation it had
been cleared by the engineers when they opened up that fire base a lot of big boulders we got about
halfway down that ridge line and we started taking martyr fire and we could hear the martyrs launching
from farther down in the valley and on the other side
So they were, they were, it was a very narrow ridge and the rounds were straddling us.
They were hitting on both sides.
It seems like they couldn't put one on top.
So we're sitting there and Ray Zoshak, our team leader, he gets on the radio, the artillery radio,
and starts calling an artillery on the border position.
And after about three adjustments, he put it right on top of what those mortars were launching.
I turned around and looked and I saw four NBA.
going up that other ridge line.
And it was also pretty open.
And they were trying to get to the top of the firebase.
I hollered in Zojak and I said,
we got company and they're coming up the other ridge.
He said, take the rest of the team
and get up there ahead of them.
So four of us took off running
and Zoszak and the radio operator,
Billy Walkabout.
They stayed there and kept calling in artillery
on the mortar positions.
So we beat the enemy to the top of the firebase
and four of us scattered around it
because we didn't know where they were coming up from
and so we split up and each one of us took a different point
around that firebanks, east, west, north, and south.
About 15 minutes later,
Zoshak and Billy Walkabout came back up to the top
and we stayed out there for two or three hours
and we were, the helicopters came in, gunships.
They started taking 51 caliber fire
from a couple different levels.
location. We were still on top of the mountain. They were they couldn't get any
slicks out to pull us off because they were involved in another team being
extracted. So we were kind of stuck out there mid midday. I was sitting there on
the south side of that fire base looking down that ridge line where the enemy
had come running up and all of a sudden we had an F4 phantom come in dropping
bombs right across coming in perpendicular to that
line dropping bombs right where the vegetation started.
After he made his first pass, I saw four NBA soldiers break cover and run across the ridge
line to get to the other side of the ridge.
And I opened fire on them.
They were probably 75 yards away from me.
And I dropped two of them.
And I think I hit a third one because he looked like he fell when he got into the cover.
And I missed the fourth guy.
I hollered to the rest of the team.
I had movement out in front of me.
And we
Zodzak called it artillery
on that ridge line after that. The helicopters
pulled out.
They came and got us
probably 5.30
at the evening. We flew back
to Camp Eagle. We went through a debriefing.
Told them what we had.
And Captain Eklund
comes out. He said, I got some bad news for you guys.
He said, division called down.
They want you to go back in
where the martyrs were.
And this was
off the ridge line we had taken martyr fire from down in the ballot heavily jungle so anyway uh one of
the guys that was on the mission with us he he got kind of baked a little he got heat stroke after
laying on one of those flat rocks on that afternoon on the firebase so he was too sick to go back out
so we had a guy volunteer to take his place it was probably 830 at night pitch dark the two
helicopters came and let's send out on our chopper pad we loaves
it up. Nobody felt good about this mission.
They flew us back out. They keep in mind, we were only seven miles away from Camp Eagle,
and you can see our company area from the Newy Key Mountain.
We flew out there, and the helicopter came in this valley, the same valley we had taken
mortar far from, and there was a huge boulder, probably the size of a house with a flat top
on it. And the helicopter came in and kicked the floodlight on the spotlight on, just as it got
to the bottom of the valley.
And when he kicked it on, that boulder was right there.
So we all, he hovered over the top of the boulder,
and we all jumped out on top of this boulder.
There was probably another eight to ten foot drop to the ground.
Well, we got off the boulder.
We set up security right around the base of the boulder,
and the helicopters departed for Camp Eagle.
It was in 10 minutes after the helicopters were gone,
and we heard bamboo sticks clicking on the opposite ridge, uh, ridge,
over a distance of probably 400 yards,
probably six sets of bamboo steps.
And they were clacking them together,
trying to stay online.
So we're sitting there and Zolzhak radioed back to the company area
and said, they know we're here.
He said they're coming down the ridge forest now.
About five minutes later, we heard a Chinese bugle blowing.
And then we started hearing whistles, police whistles.
And they were covered a pretty long distance.
So we realized that Zojax said, well, here's the story, guys.
Here's the other thing.
The ridge line behind us, the one that we had taken mortar fire on,
there's also sticks clacking up on that ridge line to our backside.
Zolzak said, the only chance we got,
we set out three claymore mines pointing uphill in the same general area.
He said, let him get on top of us.
We'll blow these claymores.
and then we bust through them and fight our way back up to Toppanoi Key and get extracted.
So that was our plan.
We had radioed back and reported all this to the company area,
and they said, we're going to try to pull you out where we put you in.
We're thinking, my God, it's pitch black in here.
They've got gooks coming down both ridge lines on us.
Those helicopters will never survive coming up this fallout.
What happened is,
Captain Meacham, one of our pilots, he comes out and he flies up the valley probably 150 feet off the ground and starts to take it heavy 51 caliber fire from two different locations to trace small arms, tracers all over the place.
While he was doing that, WT Grant, or other pilot, he comes up the floor of the valley, probably 50 feet above the floor of the valley below the ridge lines.
and it comes up with no lights on
and we pulled a pin gun flare
or not a pin gun flare
a pin gun flare and we
shot it and stuck a
strobe light down on the M79
we had and he guided in on that signal
and hovered over the top of that rock
that we went in on
but we had a hell of a time getting back up
on top of that rock I think only two guys were able to do it
standing on the shoulders of the other guys
Well, Grant kicked out a ladder.
And the ladder was at the base of the rock, so we had to climb that ladder to get into the helicopter.
And the two guys on the rock, one of them was Zossack, the team leader.
And the other guy was me.
Well, I was the second, the last guy up the ladder, Zossack was the last one.
And while I was climbing up the ladder, Dave Bidron stepped on my fingers when he stepped back on the ladder and matched the hell out of my...
I was still six runs from the chopper.
And, I mean, he mashed my fingers good.
I finally got into chopper that one of the doorkunners got out and pulled me in.
Zojak deranged himself on the ladder and hollered for the door gunner to get out of there.
So he's riding the ladder coming out at night.
And I remember coming out of there, the 51 calibers picked up on us because we had to climb to get out of there.
I remember it looked like somebody was throwing lights through our helicopter.
I mean, the rounds were coming all around.
The helicopter never took a hit.
There was two 51 calibers.
They pulled off of Captain Meacham, started firing at our helicopter coming out of there.
We had to make a U-turn to fly back to Camp Eagle.
So it was a purr nobody got hit amazingly.
Meacham's chopper took two rounds.
Grants didn't take any.
with all the tracers coming out there you know I don't go to fourth of July shows
anymore because I've seen a better one it's like like Star Wars right with a
it was it was a bad minute times 10 it was really something to see we we
we figured there had to be a hundred weapons fired at us coming out of there and
how we got didn't get hit I have no idea that was November 3rd I was a one-day
mission what was the feeling when
missions of one day. What was the feeling when you guys get back to the fob? And I mean, that's a close call, right?
I'll tell you, I probably had six close calls in Vietnam where you just, you know, you're not going to survive it.
When you come to that conclusion, the experience I had is a peace came over me. You know, once you accepted, I'm going to die here. You know, it's almost like you're not afraid anymore.
You know, you've accepted the fact you're not going to survive them.
I've had my share of close calls of my life.
I told my wife, I just got out of the hospital three years ago with a close call.
I said, I think I got two left.
Two of the nine left.
I'm going to guard me.
I wrote myself all four times and not.
Yeah.
And then you mentioned, I think you said maybe it was later on in November that you went in with a heavy team.
November 20th,
We went out on a heavy team.
I was the assistant team leader on the second team.
The primary team, his assistant team leader,
was the overall assistant team leader of the operation.
We went out in the Run Run Valley,
which was a big valley back in the mountains
that ran into the Ashall Valley.
And intelligence had reported that the second NBA regiment
had just come into that valley.
The second was the regiment that went into way during 10 to 68.
They were very, very professional, great fighters, bad, bad reputation.
The reason we went out with a heavy team is this regiment had a reputation for hunting down warp teams.
They didn't like us.
So we went in with a 12-man team.
It was a first light mission.
we went out in two helicopters and we came into a landing zone that was all elephant grass.
The helicopter was in a ravine on top of right at the base of a wooded ridge line.
The first helicopter went in.
The guys got out in the skids and they jumped in the elephant grass.
The elephant grass was 15 feet high.
Plus it was a ravine.
And it was, the elephant grass was flat across the top.
So we thought it was a clear.
flat area.
The six guys went in and none of them landed on their feet.
I mean, they all hit hard.
We saw what happened.
So when we went in, we actually got out and we're hanging on the skins with our hands
and trying to drop, you know, give another four or five feet before we hit the ground.
My team leader, Jack Sears, he landed on a log, a teak log laid in that elephant grass
broke both these ankles.
And he didn't know it at the time.
We found that later they were broken.
So all the 12 of us were on the ground.
Several of us were pretty shaken up, me included.
Jack couldn't hardly stand, but we got him up on his feet.
We walked probably 30 feet through that elephant grass into the edge of the woods.
And immediately into the edge of the woods was a high-speed trail six feet wide.
I mean, it was big enough from carts.
No vegetation on it, pure dirt.
And it ran along the base of the ridge.
The team leader stopped the team there, and he said, Lender, he said, you and Susa go to the right up that trail and do a point recon and find a place to send up an ambush.
And he sent two more guys to the left.
Susan and I probably went 100 feet, and the trail made a bend at 90 degrees and went up the side of the ridge.
And it wasn't a very tall ridge.
It was probably maybe 80 feet high.
And right at the bend was a trail watchers bunker.
Empty.
We checked that out.
It was empty.
And it looked like it hadn't been used recently.
And it was probably 60 to 70 feet up that trail to the top of the ridge.
And it made another bend to the right and went down the top of the ridge, the trail.
So we started up that after the trail watcher bunker, we started up the ridge line.
We got about halfway to the top.
And we heard a gunshot, single shot about.
300 meters away to the east.
And Susa said, they know we're here.
And I said, yeah.
So we went back to the team leader, and they had heard the shot too.
And we told him, well, we found a trail watcher bunker.
And right at the top of the ridge, where that trail turns to the right again,
there's a knob right there on top that looks down that trail.
I said, that would be a good spot for an ambush or an observation post.
So he called the other two guys back in and we walked up the trail and we got to that knob and he said, this is a good spot.
So we all pulled it on top of it.
We sat up in a circle around that knob, which was probably only 50 feet across.
Well, no bigger than that.
And it was probably three or four foot higher than the trail itself.
On the back side of it was a bluff straight up and down, probably 80, 90, 100,000.
foot pretty steep, unclimbable. To the west was a saddle that went up to a higher ridge
on the other side of the saddle. And the saddle was probably 80 feet across. Below us was the
LZ we came in on and the trail at the edge of the woods. And to our east was the trail where
it came up the ridge. So we're sitting right on top of this knob. The trail dog legs around us.
there's a bluff on one side and a saddle on the other.
We spent the entire day there.
This was probably 10 o'clock in the morning when we got up there.
We spent the entire day there and nothing happened.
That night, there were about four or five groups of NBA came down that trail with lanterns.
No flashlights, just lanterns.
They were looking for us.
We don't blow ambushes at night.
Unless you knew what you were ambushed and you didn't do that at night.
So we let them go by.
and we reported it with silent combo with clicks on the radio.
And the next morning, sires, the guy who broke his ankles,
his feet were so swollen he couldn't get his boots on.
So we decided that we would take him back to the LZ,
which was only 150 feet from us,
and extracting him, medivac him out.
So Riley Cox, a guy we called Dozer,
and Frank Susan helped him down to the LZ,
a helicopter came and dropped the jungle penetrator and hoisted him out.
The two guys came back up to the perimeter and we heard two shots fired.
Same area we heard that one shot fire.
So we figured that they thought we all left.
So it wasn't too long after that, maybe 8.30 in the morning.
A single NVA came down the trail, whistling, making all kinds of noise.
And behind him was about 10 more, about 50 feet behind him.
he. Well, we didn't, we didn't try to snatch the one guy. We didn't kill him. And then the others came by. He was
bait. And they didn't come back. They went on down the trail, never came back. So we're sitting there
about, I think it was 11 o'clock in the morning. And the team leader said, I heard him whisper,
we got company. And we could hear people talking. And I was, my Claymore was the first one in this
ambush. And I'm laying back on my back on the side of this knob and I can see from here on
up anybody walking down the trail. I looked over and there were nine NBA at the time. I thought
they were Arvins because they were wearing green jungle fatigues and boony caps. One of them had a
tiger fatigue boonie cap on. And they were talking, making noise. They came walking down the trail
and I'm laying there thinking, this is an Arvin unit, South Vietnamese unit. What do they do at an R&A?
Well, about that time, the team would have snapped his fingers, which was assigned to blow the ambush.
I blew my Claymore, and the other five Claymore went off simultaneously.
We had a six Claymore ambush.
The final Claymore fired down the trail.
Well, there were nine of them, excuse me, ten of them, and we killed nine of the ten in the ambush.
The point man had gotten out of the kill zone, and he had an AK-47 slung over his arm,
and I had my car 15 in my right hand.
I clacker on the claymore in my left.
When I blew the claymore,
I saw him through a gap in the trees running down the trail,
and I had one hand and shot at him and shot over the top of him.
Frank Susan jumped to his feet,
and Frank opened up on him.
I saw the guy, he had a towel at his neck.
It flew off.
So I thought, I think Frank, Frank hit the guy.
And the guy was running downhill,
and he toured to where that trail watcher bunker was.
And he'd throw off the side of the trail on the left.
He disappeared.
We all ran, four of us ran out to check the bodies.
Four of them were nurses, Army, NBA nurses.
I immediately, I felt like shit because my claimort killed two of them.
The rest were guys.
One of them had a 45 automatic in a holster,
and he had a map pouch over.
his shoulder. We found out later he was the XO of the second NBA regiment. Wow.
We took the map case, stripped all the bodies. What made me feel better, all four of the nurses
had 45 caliber automatics, 1911s, in their rucksacks. So we had five pistols and two A case
we recovered. Two of the guys were not armed. And the point man who was armed got away.
we pull back up on top of the knob
and the team leader calls in a report
tell them what we got
and we're sitting there
and normally when you blow an ambush
you get the hell out of dodge
you don't stay there. Well, he decided to stay there.
He called for a reaction force or an extraction.
And he was pretty proud of himself
having to kill 9 out of 10 NBA including a major.
And we sat there for 15, 20 minutes, and they finally call us back since we can't get you extracted.
All of our helicopters have been taken for a battalion-sized combat assault.
So we have no aircraft available.
It was probably going on noon when this happened.
That's not true.
We blew the ambush at 9.
It was probably closer to 11 when this happened.
So we're sitting there and he said, we can't get a reaction.
action force to you because the helicopters. We have no helicopters there. We had a platoon from
the second of the 17th cab, which was our reaction force, our ready reaction force. They
were tied up. They couldn't get out to us. So anyway, the assistant team leader of the team of the
team leader that was in charge of the whole team, we saw him walk over to the team leader and
whispered his air and the two of them got that argument. I mean, the teamer kept shaking his head
and we're sitting there and he went back to his position
and Frank Susa
Frank Susa and I
who were the ranking people on the other team
we went up to him and said man we got to get the hell out of here
I said you know there's a base cap 300 meters away from us
and we just killed nine people
they're going to be coming for us
he said we're staying here till they get a reaction for us then
the team leader said this
so anyway
I guess it was
It was 1 o'clock in the afternoon.
And he tells his assistant team leader, he said,
Captain Eklund's out looking for us, trying to locate us,
go down in the saddle where the trees open up
and flash him when he comes over the top of, with a signal mirror.
Jim Venable was the ATL.
He went down and he's down there flashing his helicopter.
And we hear an AK-47 open up and he goes down.
He was hitting the neck and the arm, broke his arm.
one through his upper arm.
Frank Susa and
Riley Cox ran down and grabbed him
and drugging back up into the perimeter.
And right after they got him into the perimeter,
we about 15 NBA come charging up the hill
from where we had come in,
the original LZ online.
And we opened up on them,
drove them back, killed a couple of them.
They were probably 50, 60 yards away,
not quite a little closer than that.
And for the next two hours, they kept doing this.
They hit five, 10, 15 guys at a time from different spots.
They'd come across the saddle.
Never did try to rush us in a large bunch.
But we could tell from the gunfire, there was quite a few NBA around us at the time.
And we were, we were adjusting artillery as close as we had artillery busting,
got 50, 60 feet away from us, walking it into us.
Holy shit.
And I remember thinking, boy, we're going to push them right into us.
They're going to try to get close to us.
But they didn't.
There wasn't enough cover for them, I guess.
After the artillery, we had gunships, finally got four gunships out to us.
And we went through a total of eight cobras in the next two hours.
Wow.
They were firing rockets and hovering over the top of us doing pedal turns
and firing rockets down all around us on the ridge line.
We had, I think we burned up two sets of F-4s.
from Danang came in and fired support for us.
And while this was going on, that bluff behind us,
some NVA, somehow another, climbed up that bluff
and sent up a 40-pound shycom right along the edge of it.
There was a lot of brush right there,
but it was steep on the other side.
We had one guy back to the pulling security
leaning against this big tree.
His name was Mike Wright from Kansas City, Missouri.
And I'm sure he was watching
what was going on across the perimeter.
on him because we didn't expect anything to happen along that steep side.
That's where Mike was right there.
About 2 o'clock, 3 o'clock in the afternoon, the team leader said,
everybody pulled back to the top.
He said, I'm going to bring the artillery in closer.
And at the time, we had a cobra sit right over the top of us doing pedal turns and fire
rockets all around us down the bridge line.
I remember I turned around and looked and several of the guys had gotten.
up into a crouch and were pulling their rucks with them heading back to the top of the
knoll. We had been spread out down along rounded. I started shining backwards. My
rucksack was in front of me and I was pulling it with me because I shennyed backwards
and all of a sudden everything blew up. I remember turning my head and seeing this ball of black smoke
roll over the top of this dirt and I couldn't see anything else. Everything finally started
settling down and turned around and nobody was.
was up everybody was down and i remember thinking at the time i'm the only one left and we had a
pact in the lorbs that we wouldn't let anybody be taken alive and i was going to shoot anybody that
was still alive and didn't kill myself i made up my mind to do that and all of a sudden
riley cox across the perimeter from me he sat up any big guy and when he sat up his intestines
fell out in his lap and this part of his arm
was broken right here and hanging down like an elbow right here.
Riley had a shotgun. He was armed with a shotgun on top of it.
And he was on the other side of Frank Sousa around the perimeter for me and
Terry Clifton, my best friend, who had volunteered, traded with another guy to go out on
this patrol because he wanted to be on the team with me.
Terry, he pushed himself up off the ground and his throat was ripped out.
And when he looked up, blood just spewed out of his throat right in front of me.
And Billy Walkabout, I heard he behind me, said,
well, you hit, are you hit?
He was behind me, and he'd been hit through both hands.
When I realized there were other guys still alive,
it took me a couple of minutes to get myself back together again,
because I had made it my mind.
I don't even remember thinking.
I was going to shoot the moon.
And I saw Riley Cox over there.
He took the towel off his neck.
He pushed his guts back in his stomach and stuck that towel in her to hold his guts in.
And he pulled a bandage out of his rucksack and tied his arm back like this.
And starts pumping that shotgun, one-handed and fighting with that shotgun if he could pump.
The enemy didn't come for a while.
When they did, they weren't attacking.
and they were trying to walk up to see what had happened.
And Riley starts duke it out with that 12 gauge,
pumping it with one hand, shooting the left-handed.
And he had 40 rounds with him.
I think he already fired about 10.
With that shotgun ran out of ammo, he got Mike Rife's co-car 15
and started firing that car 15.
I don't even know how this guy, how he functioned.
The radio operator, the team leader was hitting above his ear
with a piece of shrapnel blew out the top of his head, but he was still alive.
And Terry Clifton was dead by then.
Mike Rife, the guy that was sitting by the bluff,
he got hit with a Claymore.
He wasn't 10 feet from it.
When they grabbed his arm to pull him away from the tree, he was pinned to this tree.
His arm came out of his sleeve.
It severed his arm.
its shoulder. He was killed instantly. I crawled over to the radio operator and he had a chunk of
meat as big as my fist taken out of his right above his knee. And he was on the radio reporting
what had happened after he got hit and he went into shock. You can see him going into shock.
I took the radio away from him and I got on the radio and I in the clear I didn't use any
code. I told him we're hit. Everybody's down. I said, you better get somebody out here quick or
don't bother with it. Billy Walkabout was the only guy that could walk. He got up on his feet
and he was just both his hands were hit pretty bad. They sent a medevac out and it came in.
Well, before the medevac got there, I went over to Frank Susan. I crawl over to Frank Susan.
Then Billy came over and Frank had a little hole right dead in the center of his chest.
And I thought, well, he'd been shot.
And I remember grabbing a plastic off of battery and putting it over the hole to treat it as a sucking chest one.
And there was no suction.
We rolled him over onto a poncho liner.
And he had a hole in his back about that big around.
And I could see inside his right lung and it was shredded.
The ribs were broken.
So whatever hit him just tore out his whole shoulder blade there in his skull.
We rolled him back over on a on a on a Vietnamese, North Vietnamese poncho liner we had plastic.
One of the guys had it.
And we wrapped that around him and still tried to treat it as a sucking chest one.
But we never did get suction on it.
And he was unconscious.
We got a medevac in and we decided to get Sousa out first.
was he was we thought he was hurt the worst we drug him over they dropped the jungle penetrator
and we strapped him to it they hoisted him out and the gunshot the helicopter's taking gunfire from
surrounding eric constantly and uh they came back in again started taking more fire and the
dust off started drifting and it was drifting down towards that saddle a billy walkabout
ran down there and grabbed the penetrator with his arms and ran back up to the top of the hill
dragging that penetrator with him and we got contraris out that way he did that another time
we could before we got another wounded man out uh he ran down the hill towards the enemy no weapon
grabbed that penetrator ran back up the hill one so we got three of the wounded out and uh
i told riley cox i said you're going out next riley he said no i'm not he said i'm staying here
and at the time he was he was on the car 15
Anyway, it's probably close to 5 o'clock at the evening.
And there are two pilots had been listening to this on the radio.
They broke formation, flew back to the company area and radioed ahead, have a reaction force waiting on the chopper pad.
We're going to pick them up and take them out to rescue these guys.
When they got to the company, everybody in the rear in our company was down on the chopper pad waiting to board.
23 guys got on two choppers 13 on 1 10 on the other way overloaded yeah these movies were made for
six or seven guys plus the crew uh Tony Taserro was going home the next day he already turned
in all of his gear and his weapon and was down on the chopper pad playing tag football when the
word came in Tony went up to supply and grabbed a car 15 from the armory and uh excuse me an M16
and a bandolier of ammo
and he was in shard shoes
and shorts and no shirt on.
And he got on the chopper like that.
He gets out to the, when they got out to us,
he found out that that bandolier of ammo was boxed ammo.
It wasn't in magazine.
Oh, no.
They flew out.
They had a hell of a time getting off the chopper pad
because they were overloaded.
One of the guys had his arm in a cast.
And Bill Meacham, the pilot turned and said,
son get off of the helicopter.
And the guy stuck a rifle in the back of his helmet and said,
just take off, sir.
So he comes out with his arm in a cast.
They flew those guys out to the same LZ we went in on,
which was now no cover.
The air strikes and everything.
They had blasted all the elephant grass away.
Where we had to jump 15 feet above the ground,
they landed and let these guys out.
And all 23 of them as soon as they got on the ground,
the pilot told them the direction they needed to run
because they could see us up on top of the hill coming in,
and they headed up the hill.
Up on top, where we were,
Billy Walkabout was behind me,
and I heard him hollered,
Lerps, Lerps, up here.
I turned to him, and I said,
shut the hell up.
You're going to tell him where we are,
the enemy.
All of a sudden, I realized,
they know where we are.
It went along.
Clint Goothmiller kind of running up the trail
over the dead bodies with an M-60 and sat up looking down that ridge line on the top of the
knob, then the rest of the guys poured in.
They immediately started getting the wounded guys taken care of to get them out.
They got Billy Walkabout and I went out together on a jungle penetrator, and they finally
got Riley Cox to go as the last man.
He was the last wounded man out.
They had to force him to go out.
It was dark by then.
The 23-man reaction force had to go back down to the LZ in the dark.
By the time they got to us, the first cab had come in, 35 of them,
wouldn't get off the landing zone.
Not the first cab, second of the 17th cap.
They wouldn't get off the landing zone.
They stayed down there.
And when the helicopters came into extract everybody,
they pulled them out first.
Then our 23 guys went down there.
They had no lights.
snow anything.
They had to use Zippo lighters to mark the landing zone for the helicopters.
11 of the 23 guys were wounded.
None of them bad, thank God.
But they got those guys out.
I think it was 9.30 at night they got them out.
That made me an advocate of the brotherhood.
I mean, I still love those guys for what they did that day.
My fiancé had sent me a St. Christopher medal.
I remember holding it in my hand out there,
realizing that the NBA were going to get this medal
when they find my body.
And I broke myself off.
I'm not coming back from this one.
So I probably had three or four more hairy ones after that as a ranger.
He sent me to the hospital,
triage me,
besides the shrapnel in the back of my leg and my calf,
sometime during the battle I'd been shot in the left leg, too.
But they think it was a.
ricochet. It was only, you can almost see the head of the bullet. They pulled it out with
tweezers. So all my wounds were leg wounds, which I attribute to the fact that I was shining
backwards up that hill when this thing went off. And all it was on top of the hill was my legs.
I spent a month in the hospital at Cameron Bay, almost got killed in a Korean riot.
Korean, if the hospital I was in, South Koreans had about, there was many,
South Korea as a camera on Bay as there were Americans, they were there for rheumatism.
They couldn't handle the weather.
So they were used to cold weather.
This hot weather made their cost rheumatism.
So none of them were wounded.
They were just there, you know, recovered in the heat down there.
Then they were going back up to their unit.
Well, there was a riot during a US show and I was on precious.
And these Koreans ended up over a can of beer.
There's like 200 Koreans and 200 Americans.
And the Koreans thought they're all black belts and they're going to take this beer from this American.
So they grabbed a six-pack of beer from this guy and the guy jumped up and went over and took it back.
Well, the Koreans didn't care for that.
And they got up and was ready to doing this stuff ready to kill some Americans.
And one of their UCOs came down and told them all to go back to their company area.
So they're all back at the company area.
And, well, let me tell you.
caused the riot they were hollering back and forth uh nobody was going across the aisle
between the two groups and all of a sudden from the back of the americans a loaded beer can
comes flying over and hits this korea between the eyes and dropsie well that really pissed
them off i'll tell you they were ready to kill after that anyway they sent them back to their
company area and about 15 minutes later we were watching this Filipino u.s.o show they were one of these
Filipino girls was playing jello submarine and we heard this roar in the background.
There come all these Koreans back and they got shovels and picks and baseball bats.
Well, there was a bunch of us in the front two rows on crutches and we all thought,
well, they're not going to bother us. All the Americans jump up and take off running.
All the ones are good. The Koreans come wading in and start beating the hell out of everybody
with tools and stuff. I crawled up on the stage.
pushed my
Korean officer
and a Korean senior
NCO
and I crawled behind the drums
on the stage
and I'm left here
thinking, well,
they were going to hit me
and I saw him
take a crush away
from a guy out in the audience
and started beating him
with his own crush.
So I was glad
I was behind the drums.
Anyway, a few minutes
later, five, six MPs
come running up
with a lieutenant
and the lieutenant's
blowing a whistle
and come running up the aisle
and he's hollered at these Koreans and he's got a couple of Korean officers with him.
And a Korean buries the pickaxe and he's turned him.
Holy shit.
Offed him.
I'm thinking, my God, they send me here to recover.
Uh, the next day I talked to my, the colonel in charge of the hospital.
I said, I'm going to go back to my company.
And he said, well, he said, you need another two weeks here. I said, put me out of profile and
send me back to my company. I want to spend Christmas up there, not here. So anyway, he
he gave me a pass and I flew back up to Fubai.
I was on profile for two more weeks and he ended up flying belly man on a on a
extraction insertion helicopter for a month until my wounds here.
And so Gary, I'm trying to recall from reading your book many years ago now that that explosive,
that went off.
I think that's maybe like what my generation would have called an improvised explosive device.
If I recall, it was made out of the bottom of a 33-gall
barrel. And was it was there there were like nuts and bolts in it that they pulled out of some of the
guys? Anything any kind of metal. It was non-directional. It had plastic explosive C4 behind it. They just
pushed it out not in the fan. You didn't know where it was going to go. And so and if I recall
correctly from our interview with Larry Chambers, this is you came back to the unit and find Larry there as a new
guy, right? No, Larry actually came to the company in all, uh, late August of 68.
Okay.
So we were there when he was out.
He was out with another 12-man team when we got hit.
Because I remember there's something in my mind.
I remember like you had come back after being wounded.
You came back to the unit and he was there as like a more junior lurp.
Well, I'll tell you what you're confused with.
When I got back to the company, I'd been there six months.
All the guys that came over with division, who were the old guys when I got there,
they came over in November of 67.
Well, they were all de-roached while I was in the hospital.
I got you.
So when I came back to the company, you know, Ken Miller was the first guy I ran into.
It was like I went to a new unit.
I didn't recognize anybody.
Okay.
A lot of new guys.
Dave, do you need to do this read?
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And while we're here, I want to give a quick shout out.
This is not a sponsor of the show or anything.
They're friends of the show that I just want to talk about real quick is Badger 6.
We've had guys involved in this charity on the show before.
Toby Hardin, Justin Sapp.
Really, what the Badger 6 is, it's a charity specifically to bring back the Afghans who worked
with the CIA and special forces in the opening days of the Afghanistan War.
And these guys are now working to help their former friends and allies immigrate to the United States.
And so they're holding a charity event.
It's going to be on September 8th at the Pauling Mountain Country Club.
I think there's going to be some shooting clays.
And then they're going to have a lunch and there'll be a talk.
You're going to get to meet some of the original folks who invaded Afghanistan,
David Tyson, Justin Sapp, Mark Neuch, Bob Pennington, another former guest on the show, Alan Mack, who is a 160th helicopter pilot.
All those guys are going to be there.
So I really hope you guys will consider going to this event, supporting this charity.
You find out more about them at badger6.org.
So again, that's going to be September 8th.
So, Gary, so then you come back to your unit after this very interesting stay, your recovery.
your recovery at the hospital.
So you said that when you got back to the unit,
it was sort of like a different cast of characters almost.
I had gone from being a middle guy to being one of the old guys.
I was an E5 at the time.
And two-thirds of the company at D-Rost while I was in the hospital.
So there wasn't a lot of experienced hands on deck when I got back to the unit.
And what was that like?
Were you now more of like a mentor and a trainer for some of the younger guys?
I was there marked to be a team leader.
Matter of fact, I had a recondo school date for November 28th.
And when I got hit, I was in the hospital when my recondo date came up.
And in the Lerbs, when you graduate from recondo school, you've got to have six months left in country or you don't get to go.
Well, when I got back to the company, I only had five months left in country, so I didn't get to go to MacBee Recondo School.
I got a team probably more because there wasn't enough qualified people in the company in late March of 69.
They gave me my own team.
I was fairly good at reading maps, as good as anybody else in the company.
I could look at a contour map, picture what that look like out in the jungle, and not look at that map again.
on the mission.
Wow.
And I,
probably because of my scout trade.
They gave me a team in March.
I think I led five patrols.
My last mission was the mission.
Chambers probably told you about the one we got hit my lightning on.
I was supposed to be the team leader.
We actually had four guys on that team that had been team leaders.
And there was a shaken bank.
Each six came into the company who was.
taking over my team, so I actually went out as his ATL to break him in.
That was April 23rd, that mission was.
And that was, I still had six weeks left in country when I got out of the hospital on that one.
And I tell you, I was, I was done.
I wouldn't, I wouldn't have gone out on another patrol after that.
I wasn't going to take an R&R because I didn't want to spend the money.
I was getting married two weeks after I got home, so I didn't want to dip into my savings.
And when I got out of the hospital, I took my R&R.
And I was AWOL two days getting back.
I made sure I didn't have 30 days left when I got back to the company.
I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was finished.
Getting married, you know, four weeks or six weeks after that, I kept thinking,
this is a bad time to get killed.
And I didn't want to do that to her, so I just didn't want to go out again.
Yeah, after that operation where the team got struck by lightning, I mean, I can imagine that that shook everybody up.
Ken was out there on that one, too, wasn't he?
No, Ken wasn't.
Oh, he wasn't.
Okay.
Unfortunately, Ken was in the other platoon.
Gotcha.
I never got to go out with, we were good friends, but I never got to go out with him.
Gotcha.
So before leaving Vietnam, any other, like, significant ones, patrols that you'd like to highlight before moving on?
Yeah, I was on a, I was on.
A patrol with Ron Mother Rucker.
Matter of fact, I was a team leader on that patrol.
There was a cobra helicopter had gone down south of Fubai.
It had been shot down in the mountains.
And Loach went out looking for it, and it didn't come back either.
So there's two helicopters missing.
Down by Fire Base Tomahawk, it's a pretty tall jungle, steep mountains,
and it was in a fog on top of it.
So we got a call with the company, and we had two teams on stand down.
The rest of them were out in the field.
And one of them was my team, and I was short, two guys on the team.
And the CEO came in and said, Sergeant Linder, he said, grab two guys,
and you're going to go out on a search and air rescue mission.
And he said, Sergeant Fadley's team is going to go out two.
He said, you're going to have to repel in.
So he said, rig for a repel.
So we did.
We packed our rucksacks.
excuse me, we didn't pack her, one guy had a rucksack with a radio.
He said, don't take your rucksack, you'll be out before dark.
So we grabbed our web gear.
No maps of the area, nothing.
One canteen of water apiece, no meals.
We go out and they fly us out in the sunny weather to Fire Base Tomahawk,
and we land on FireBase Tomahawk, and General Melvin Zeiss comes out,
and his helicopter lands on the Firebase and gives both teams
a pep talk and tells us
there's two helicopters down out there.
We got a captain and a warrant officer
and one of them, the cobra,
and the loach went out looking for him
with a lieutenant colonel, a major,
and a warrant officer at it,
and they haven't come back.
We think we know where they are.
We're going to put you guys in on top of them
to if they're wounded, get them out.
If they're dead, recover the bodies, get them out.
So anyway, off in the distance,
you could see the fog.
Farbeys Tomok was still in the sun.
It was a mountain overlooking Highway 1 out by the coast, and it wasn't in the fog at all.
So we got on our helicopters and we fly out and we fly into the fog.
And I remember thinking at the time, looking down and seeing the treetops,
it looked like broccoli sticking up out of mashed potatoes.
That's what it looked like.
The chopper pilots who were not our chopper pilots either.
They flew into this fog and they finally,
Fadley's team went in first and repelled in.
We had no idea how tall the trees were.
We could see with the tops of them.
So we didn't know if we had enough rope to hit the ground on.
Couldn't see the ground at all.
They bring my team in behind Fadley's to a different area.
We were 300 yards apart.
And I was the first one out of the helicopter,
and my car 15 was slung over my back,
and I repelled out of the helicopter.
you know, I did a fast repel.
I landed in the middle of a high-speed trail.
I turned it around.
There's a freshly poured concrete bunker behind me.
No camouflage on it.
Well, you know, my butt hole had squeezed shut.
I was soprano from that end.
My radio operator comes down behind me on the same rope and gets tangled about 15 feet
above the ground with his handset cord.
And he's stuck on the rope.
I'm trying to wave the door gutter to.
bring the helicopter down lower and he finally comes out low enough i could reach above him and cut the
rope and he fell about five six feet and hit the ground and the next guy down ran out of a rope
and fell about 10 feet down and then the other three guys came down the other rope on the other
side so we're all standing there and i'm pointing out this concrete bunker and we get off
the side of the trail and we set up and they were supposed to put us in the same place family's
team on it well there's no family's team there
And we're going through the helicopter pilot, tried to relay to Fadley's team because we couldn't pick him up on the radio.
Then we came to the determination.
They put us in a different spot.
So anyway, Fadley decides to fire his weapon.
And he fires one shot.
And I could tell he was a long way from us, even with a muffled from the fog.
And, you know, I had to answer it.
I fired back twice real fast, two quick shots.
And I told the pilot to tell him to come to me.
So family comes to me.
It took him a good 45 minutes to get to my location.
And it's like 5.30 in the evening.
So we get on line, 12 of us, and we sweep up the ridge line.
And about 6.30, we stumble into the cobra.
It had gone down through the trees and the tail boom had broken off.
And the cockpit was open.
And there was a boot and a helmet laying next to the car.
to the helicopter.
Oh, man.
No pilot, no gunner.
And it's almost dark by then.
And we swept around that helicopter two or three times,
on line trying to find those guys, couldn't find them.
And we moved about 200 yards straight across the ridge,
not up higher, not down lower.
Then we found an area where there was depression
and four big teak trees, one on each corner,
with the depression in the middle.
And we just not big enough for 12 o'clock.
So we got in this and it offered a little
little bit of protection in case we got hit during the night. And we knew there were gooks in the
area because the cobra had been shot down. There were bullet holes in it. And that bunker, you know,
I didn't have that. That wasn't a mushroom. Somebody did that. We're laying there at night.
And Fadley, who was, he was in East 6th. He decided we're going to have one guy on at the time,
security. I always posted two guys if we were at enemy territory and we knew they were around.
Anyway, finally post one guy for 45 minutes at a time.
Well, I had the 130 time, the 130, 45 minutes.
And I woke the guy next to me who was a new guy, his name was Gillette.
And he was a radio operator.
He had, he had my team's radio.
He was laying next to me, and I reached over and shook him away.
And I laid back and went to sleep.
But I think it was 10 minutes to 2.
Something woke me up, and I was laid on my back, and I looked to the right.
And I remember it looked like a shadow disappeared off this way, across the perimeter.
And I look over at Gillette, and Gillette's laying there with his, him 16, across his chest, shaking like this.
And I reached over and I whispered his ear, and I said, what's the matter?
He said, two NBA came into our perimeter, and we're looking down at the guys, and they just left.
And I said, why didn't you shoot him?
And he said, there's a sapling next to me.
I couldn't bring my weapon around.
So he had to sit there and watch this go on.
Well, I woke up everybody.
And for the rest of the night, we all stayed awake.
The next morning, we went out and started sweeping again.
And we got a radio message from the rear that said there was a line company.
Charlie Company, first of the 327, was coming out to link up with us.
They were walking in.
So there was a ridge line above us that we didn't know at the time, but that bridge line had been covered several times by U.S. troops.
There was a big trail going up the top of it, and it was pretty wide open on top.
Well, we heard these guys coming, and we couldn't get them on our radio yet, but they were above us probably 150 yards up the hillside.
And we could hear them talking, and all of a sudden, an AK-47 opened up, and we heard those guys fire.
They fired a couple of rounds.
They were hollering.
And we didn't know what was going on.
They finally got to us on our radio and said,
a trail watcher just shot our four-man lead element across the legs.
This trail watcher was in a bunker up on top.
And he let those four point element guys getting across from me
and opened up, shot every one of them in the legs.
So we're sitting there in this depression, 12 of us.
And we hear the brush breaking coming down this.
Ridgeland right at us.
I mean, dead at it.
So we got one Claymore pointed uphill.
That's all the sudden.
This NBA breaks through the cover right in front of us.
He's not 15 feet away.
He had his sandals in this hand with his with his AK-47.
And he was running with this like this.
When he saw us, he lowered that AK-47 and empty that magazine right over the top of it.
Well, I was sitting back against that.
with my car 15.
And before I can shoot him,
he fell behind a big log
that was uphill from us.
And it wasn't eight feet from us.
Well, a couple of us jumped up
and did this and shot behind that log.
I don't think we hit him.
And Dave Bedron pulled a frag out
and dropped it over the top of the log.
That killed him.
Tore up, he's AK-47 too.
So of all the places for this guy to run,
he runs dead into us,
150 yards down that hill.
We called the line dog.
He said, we got your assassin.
He said, he run dead in.
We told him what happened.
So we went up and linked up with these guys.
This was the second day of a one-day mission.
We spent the next seven days on the ground out there.
No food.
The only food we got is we could moot from the line doggies, which wasn't much.
We had plenty of water because it was raining almost all the time.
While we were out there, they put in another team,
because another loach had come in and located that other helicopter.
And it was three miles up the valley from where we were.
It was nowhere near that cobra we found.
So that was Rucker and Sires on that team.
Those guys repelled in and the three pilots were all burned to death.
And they landed on top of them, went right through their bodies.
They were fried.
They pulled the bodies out in body bags, pieces of them.
hoisted them out and then they told them that you couldn't get them out they had to walk down and link up with us
three miles away so they came down the stream that was down at the base of the ridge we went in on
well we went down to the stream of the 12 of us and 13 of the line doggies recon element were with us
so there was 12 of us and 13 of them because with that many enemy in the area they didn't want 12
guys trying to link up with these six so we got down to the bottom of the hill that
night and we're going up that creek at night following this creek up and we found a little
knoll next to the creek and we got on top of the knoll and laid there sleeping all 25 of us
and that night i don't know how many times we heard a tree crash i don't know if it's in the rain or
what but you're here's something waiting in the stream and uh we came to the conclusion later
that the NBA knew we were in there if they had enough stuff in there they didn't want us to
find it. So they followed us, but didn't break contact with us. We also figured they probably
had those pilots. So we end up linking up with the other team the third day and turned around
and come back down the stream. And this was the one, the third day, it was the seventh day of the
mission, the last day. We spent four days up on the ridge line with that line company. We get down
the, we're coming down the stream. They told us we're going to have to walk out. They can't
helicopter the infantry company up on top of the ridge the rest of them they were going to do
another sweep and they were coming out they were going to walk out too so we get down to just about
where we're down below that infantry company there are 500 meters up on this hill and they tell us that
the fog is lifting they're going to get helicopters in and pull us out so we're down there and we find
a big spot next to the stream with a lot of dead trees and stuff in it that have been defoilated
and we took our claim wars that the line companies
guys had. We were knocking down the big trees with a backglass from the clay moors and clearing
this area out so a chopper could get in. Well, we got it big enough for one chopper and naturally the
line doggies got out first and there was 18 of us still on the ground and these choppers were coming
in. One chopper would leave, fly down the valley, 10 minutes later another one would come in.
So I was on the second last chopper going out and we had just got off the ground and I heard the
door gunner on my chopper hollered.
Gooks on the LZ.
But what had happened is the last chopper had landed to pick up Rucker and Sars's team.
And Rucker had just gotten on the helicopter and turned around.
And an NBA stood up out of the grass about 15 feet behind John Sars looking at him like this.
Didn't have a weapon up.
Just looking at him.
Well, Rucker killed him.
And Sars turned around and shot another one.
So they had followed us to the LZ but weren't messing with.
So those guys got out okay, didn't take any fire.
The line company did that final sweep and found the pilot to the cobra.
He had been hiding that whole time.
Wow.
His gunner had broken his ankle on the crash.
That's why it took his boot off.
He got him out of the chopper, took his boot off, carried the guy a little ways,
and they got separated during the night because the NBA were looking for him.
Same night those two found us.
The same night, that's when they found those pilots, or we're looking for the pilots.
So we spent seven days in there with no maps, no poncho liners, colder than hell out there in that fog.
And that was the most miserable time I had in Vietnam.
I mean, it's incredible.
I'm not going to sell any books out of this.
You realize it.
Well, once you start, yeah, once you start talking about a downed helicopter and your boss is telling you it's a one-day mission, we all know from Army experience, it's not going to be a one-day mission.
They didn't tell us about the fog
And we didn't have time
Back in the Rocha
Gary, can you
For people who might not be familiar with it
Can you tell us
I'm the difference between like the M16,
the car 15,
which one you preferred and
You know, how that development happened?
I carried an M16 for, I guess, five months.
They could tell early November of 68.
That's why I got to
You couldn't get a car 15
unless somebody went home that had one.
We traded SF guys for the Car 15s,
and the ones they gave us had the boring shot out of it.
So, I mean, they were like a musket.
They weren't very accurate past 50 meters.
No bluing on them.
So you can imagine what you know how SF guys are.
Oh, yeah.
We all do.
I know.
So, I mean, they were pretty well shot up.
We had a couple of Swedish caves in the company.
I think we had four shot guns.
We had a couple of, I think we had two grease guns.
And it was up to you what you wanted to take as long as you'd get your hands on it.
There was a couple of missions I carried a Swedish K, walking point, because the Swedish
case had silencers on it.
They weren't much for range.
And we couldn't get enough magazines.
I think there was only four magazines per weapon.
So you were limited on how much ammo you could carry with a Swedish K.
Usually, if a guy took a Swedish K out with him, you carried a car 15, too.
same problem we have with the grease guns i think there was only three magazines for each grease gun
um i don't think i ever carried a grease gun i don't remember doing it i did carry a 45 pistol
with me a few times um i used to carry i was known to carry 1800 rounds of ammo i mean i
hump some ammo and i used to carry eight to 12 frags too um my first team sorry
George told me, he said, it's better to need him to have nothing to have it.
Or the habit to need not than to need him to have not.
And I took that as gospel.
Even when I go deer hunting, I'll take 50 rounds with me.
I'm pretty good shot, but you can't shoot 50 deer, but I hate to be called with no animal.
Was the Swedish K, a 762 or a 556 weapon?
It was a, it wasn't a 556.
It was 40.
It's like a 9-40.
Oh, was it 9-millimeter?
I'm trying to remember myself.
We had two Stensgun.
You look up Swedish K.
Yeah, I've got to pull it up right now.
Yeah.
All I remember is we only had four magazines for each weapon.
I'm embarrassing myself.
Yeah, it's a 45.
Oh, no, I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
No, no.
It's an M45, Swedish K, but it's 9 by 19 millimeter.
You were right.
You were right, Gary.
It's not 9 mil.
And that was the other problem we had.
It was hard to get 9-mill ammo.
there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Did you have...
45 ammo and 5.56 was easy to get.
Even AK ammo was easy to get.
And we had a few guys that carried AKs.
John Looney, who looked like an NBA,
would often wear black pajamas on patrol of walk point because he looked like
one.
He would carry an AK 47.
I didn't like him because you couldn't tell who was fired and who when one of our
guys was using it.
So Gary, talk to us.
about coming home from Vietnam. I mean, you had quite an eventful tour coming back. Two weeks
later, you're getting married. Yeah. What was it like coming back from NAM and getting discharged
from the Army and coming back to civilian life? When I, when I eat at or de-roast, I had a, you know,
I told you I got shot in the leg on November 20th. They, when they pack that wound,
they removed the packing too fast and it formed an abscess.
And when I got back from R&R in May of 69,
my left leg, my thigh swelled up,
a big red spot on the side of my leg that stuck out about two inches.
But when I was clearing non, clearing records,
that thing was so painful.
When I got down to Benoit to clear Vietnam,
I went to a hospital there at night
to see the emergency room.
And I met him and he said, Jesus Christ.
He said, you can't go home like that.
And he said, I got to lance that.
When he lanced it, a plug shot out of my leg.
Oh, man.
About the size of my finger, it was hard pus, looked like ivory,
and hit the ceiling and fell down on the journey.
Oh, shit.
And he said, man, that thing's under pressure.
He said, you can't go home like that.
I said, man, I'm getting married in two weeks.
I said, I got to go home.
I talked to him into wrapping it.
And he said, as soon as you give him,
back to the state you go say doctor he said you got a bad infection i got to they flew us to japan
and then flew me to fort dicks new jersey of all places i flew all the way across canada
and my next next duty station was at fort brag north carolina with the 82nd but i was on a permanent
profile i couldn't jump anymore and i thought why in the hell they're sending me to an airborne unit
and i'm on the leg now like when i got to fort dix i went to get travel pain to buy
ticket to go home. The ticket was 36 bucks. A lot of money nowadays, but 36 bucks back then to
fly to St. Louis from Philadelphia. They wouldn't give me travel pay because my next duty station
at Fort Bragg was only 250, less than 250 miles from Fort Dix, and they won't give you
travel pay until you get to your next duty station unless it's over 250 miles. So here I am with
$9 on me in Fort Dix, and I went to the Red Cross and told them my story. And,
I said, well, not much we can do about it.
So I had to call home and have my dad wire the money to Western Union in Philadelphia,
take my nine bucks to pay for a cab to go down and get the wire and go back to,
walk back to the four Dix to buy an airline ticket to come home.
So I was in the States two days before I got to leave to come home.
Wow.
Two days of my leave.
So I had to call my fiance and tell her what happened,
and I had the feeling she didn't believe me,
but we're still married.
So I flew home,
and at some reason I thought it was cool to be the last guy off the plane.
And I could see them all out there at the airport setting and waiting for me.
So I waited until everybody got off the plane,
and I waited a little bit longer,
and I could see the look of dread on their fans.
And I come walking off the plane,
I don't think she ever forgave me for that.
My parents, her parents,
and she were there at Lambert Airport in St. Louis, waiting for me.
I got home, called a bunch of my buddies.
I had one of them say,
you weren't numb?
I thought, where in the hell is he been?
I sent that 45, I took off that NVA major home in nine pieces.
The only part that didn't make it was the box or the magazine.
Magazine didn't make it.
Rest of it made it.
So I stopped by to get that weapon from him.
And he told me, he said, I never got a magazine.
You sent a magazine?
I said, I sent a magazine with ammo in it.
He said, I never made it.
So I salvaged that from my, and I sent an NBA rucksack home and an NBA flag in the signal mirror that was in my pocket when I got hit my lightning.
It shattered would have wrapped me around that tree.
So those are my souvenirs from Vietnam.
We got married two weeks later.
my hair was still too short.
They made us get a haircut the day before we left now.
Everybody.
I mean, they buzzed us too.
So I wasn't happy with that.
But I didn't run into a lot of,
the only negatives I had when we got off the plane at 1130 at night in Philadelphia,
there were about 200 hippies lined up on the other side of the cyclone fence
with signs hollered at us.
And the MPs wouldn't let us out of them.
I mean, boy, everybody was that plane wanting to go after those people.
Peace creeps.
That's the only negatives I had.
Nobody spit on me.
Nobody really acted like they gave a damn, but...
Yeah.
I wasn't put down for it.
What year did you leave Vietnam?
I left June 2nd, 1969.
So you were in the...
You were still in Lerps because you were still in Lerps right as they transitioned to Rager.
Yeah, I was there.
We went to bed one night Lerbs and woke up the next day.
There were orders on our outdoor bulletin board saying you are now Rangers.
Do you know how that happened, why that happened?
I don't know if you have visibility on that, but how did that come about?
I think they wanted the heraldry of the LRPS were all different units,
58th, MF3, 51st, 52nd.
They wanted to give us a common bond.
So somebody came up with a brilliant idea that all of a sudden we were Rangers.
And our mission didn't change.
I remember getting in an argument with a bunch of young Rangers at Third Bat in 92.
We were trying to get the LERS accepted into the 75th Rangers Association,
which my company started that.
Right.
It was 101st Rangers that started that association in 1986.
These guys said, Lurps weren't Rangers.
I said, what the hell do you think we were in Vietnam?
He said, well, you guys were Rangers.
I said, I went to bed one night of Lurp and woke up the next day on the Rangers.
And I said, these guys did the same thing we did.
I said, if you accept us, you should accept them.
Yeah.
And we formed a long-range reconnaissance association in 2015,
which now has a thousand members.
There are no more LERS.
So it's an organization that unless they recreate LERS is going to die out someday.
They will one day.
They always come back.
Oh, yeah.
I agree.
Drones don't do well in the jungle.
Yes, sir.
Anyway, the day we formed that association, the president of the 75th Rangers Association called us and wanted us to bring that organization into the 75th.
And the guys voted at the meeting.
There was a one vote in favor of them.
A lot of the guys that were worse were Rangers.
Gary, the worst and works have been accepted into the Ranger Regiment Association, though, haven't they?
No.
They haven't, really.
No, we turned it down.
They tried to accept.
They tried to bring our association.
into it.
I'm sorry to hear that.
We rejected it.
The only reason they did that is because, you know, their organizations are losing
people too.
The Vietnam vets are dying out and they saw a chance to pick up a bunch of new members.
And, you know, I belong to both organizations.
But I'll tell you, we host the annual Lerf Association reunion right here in Branson every
year.
And it's, we booked three solid hotels with a park between two of them and our event.
is in that park for seven days.
So it's a good event.
So as time goes on, I don't know if you tried to put the war behind you or if it was
something that was always with you, but eventually you and your teammates kind of became,
I don't know what's the term I want to use, like spokesman of a sense for the Vietnam
experience and certainly the Lerp experience and all these memoirs that you published.
Can you talk to us a little bit about how maybe your personal impressions changed or
what led you into publishing and what?
writing.
In 1986, my unit was the first company from Vietnam, any kind of company, that organized
a company reunion, 1986.
I was contacted by our company clerk two years before that.
He asked me if I would help locate some of the guys that served in the unit.
Well, you know, when you come home from the war, you promise to stay in touch.
There were no internet back then.
Right.
Right.
So we had to find people.
by telephone. And I fortunately had a company roster with the original homes where everybody was from.
I told this guy I'd help him. We spent two years and we put the first reunion together in
1986 at Fort Campbell, Kentucky. We had 186 guys show up. Wow. Plus 24 from other
units that heard about this. They also can't. From that reunion, we decided to farm the 75th Ranger
Association. So Bob Gilbert the next year put that together and we formed that association.
Matter of fact, I think the first three presidents were from my unit.
I had not thought much about NOM. I hadn't talked to a lot of people about it. I stayed
in touch with John Sears and a couple of the guys from my units were in my wedding,
matter of fact. And I stayed in touch with probably five or six guys. When we had that
first reunion, I remember telling my wife, I said, I don't think I'm going to go. I said,
hell, I put on weight. It's been 20 years. I said, they won't recognize me. I won't
recognize them. I remember their names. And she said, I saved all the letters you wrote me.
She said, they're in a shoebox. Once you read through the letters and it'll refresh your memory.
So the night before the reunion, I sat there and read through 243 letters. Wow.
You come to find out I had described every mission I was on and not in great detail, but it was like a diary day by day.
And I told who was on the teams with me and basically what happened, didn't give details.
And I remember thinking when I was nothing.
My God, I said, when I get back from this reunion, I'm going to sit down and write this out so my sons can read what I did when I was in a war.
So this was back before I had a computer.
I could type, but I didn't have a computer.
Didn't have a typewriter.
So I bought four legal-sized yellow tablets,
and I hand-wrote out my first two books.
Wrote out as one book in six months' time.
And I'm sitting there, and Ken Miller,
who had already come out with Tiger the Lurp Dog,
he called me and he said,
how's that diary coming?
I said, I'm done with it.
He says, why don't you send it to me?
I said, Jesus Christ, kid, it's on full tablets.
And he said, well, send it to me.
And so I went down and burned copies of all those pages.
And I sent him the copies.
And he wrote back and he said, this is pretty good.
He said, I'm going to send this to a publisher friend of mine, Jim Morris.
He was at Berkeley Book.
We've had him on the show too.
Yeah, Jim?
Yep.
Well, anyway, I don't hear from Jim.
And Ken calls him.
He said, Jim's leaving Berkeley.
He said he doesn't want to be a publisher anymore.
But I thought, well, that figures.
He said, I got another guy.
and send it to Owen Lock at Ivy Books, Random House.
And I said, okay.
He said, I was going to send him a couple chapters.
He said, matter of fact, he said, want you type up a couple of chapters and send him those
chapters.
So I went down and bought a typewriter, used typewriter.
And I typed out that November 20th mission and the November 3rd mission, the two in
Newie Key and the 12-man heavy team.
And I sent him to Owen Lockheck.
He said, it'll take him six months to read it.
He said, just tell him that the book's done.
Here's two sample chapters.
He said, you'll probably hear from him in six months or you won't.
So I send those two chapters to Owen Locke, and that was on a Thursday.
Next Tuesday, I get a phone call, and he says, Gary, he said, this is Owen Lock.
I said, who?
He said, Owen Lock.
I said, so?
He said, Owen Lock, Ivy Books.
I said, you're bullshit me.
I said, who is this?
I said, Miller, is this you?
I said, damn it, this is Owen Lock.
He said, I'll buy your books and the rest.
I mean, I had nothing else typed up.
The book was still handwritten.
So I sent him my original tablets.
And he called me back, I guess it was three weeks after that.
He said, well, I got some good news and some bad news.
He said, what you want first?
I said, I want the bad news.
He said, you got too much here for a book.
So I knew it.
And he said, we'll make two books out of it.
And he said, could you type it up and send me the rest of it?
I said, yeah, I can do that.
So I typed the rest of it and said it to him.
And they brought the first two books out nine months apart, which upset me because it was the first half of my story until I got wounded, then the second half of the story.
And I had, I had 5,000 letters of people called me, six months out, within six months, that first book coming out, wanted to know where the hell of the rest of the story was.
And then a short time later, I get a call from Owen.
He says, Military Book Club wants to combine your books and bring it out the hardcover,
which is the way I originally wrote it.
So they sold the rights to Military Book Club for Black and Raised and Painted Faces,
which was those first two books.
They sold 20,000 copies in six months and applied for another 20,000,
and Random House wouldn't give it to it because they were competing with the paperback.
So anyway, I think a year went by and I thought, well, you know, I told my story.
My company needs to have its story told.
My company lost 76 guys in Vietnam by far more than any other Rup Ranger company.
The first cab, I think, lost 42.
They were there a year longer and we still lost, we were in a bad area.
So I talked to Miller and Ray Martinez and we decided.
that Ray would write the First Brigade 101st Lerp story, the original LRARPS.
Ken would write F58 and I would write the L75th part of. So we did that. I had a bunch of guys from
other units calling me and saying, how come none of our guys are writing books? I said, got me.
And he said, I thought to myself, by God, I'm going to write a story from every Lerp Ranger
unit that fought in Vietnam and I'm going to do two books or three books, whatever it takes.
So I'm going to recognize all of those companies with one story each.
And that was the Phantom Warrior series.
And I've had publishers call me, O'Lock call me Chris Evans from,
he was with Stackpole books at the time, wanted me to write more books.
And I said, I'm done.
You know, I did what I wanted to do.
I did what I wanted to accomplish.
I'd rather help other guys get their stories told because nobody can tell a story like you can.
You know, if you're experienced it, somebody else can't write your story.
Yeah, yeah.
So I've ended up helping a lot of guys get through books published.
I think you said you were involved in something like 86 different books.
42.
42.
Well, okay, I doubled it, but that's 42 is still a lot.
Almost.
It was.
And I've helped some seals.
I have one guy that was a school teacher who got drafted when he was 26, married with a kid.
Holy shit.
He got drafted out of his teaching.
He wrote Classroom to Claymore's.
I helped him get a book published.
I have several seals, quite a few lurchs.
John Burford, I helped him get his book published.
He'd be another good one to interview.
And you said you're involved in another book that hasn't been published it with Ray Martinez.
Yeah, Ray actually wrote it.
I did the editing on it.
It's David Dolby.
He won a Medal of Honor in the Iodran.
And the first Cav got wiped out there.
Mm-hmm.
We got a Medal of Honor and pull four more combat tours in Vietnam after his Medal of Honor.
Wow.
Incredible, Gary.
That's really unusual, too, especially during Vietnam, because I know that, like, once you won a Medal of Honor, the military was very reluctant to let you go back.
Let me change. President Johnson turned him down.
When he was presented the medal, he told President Johnson, he said, President Johnson said, what can I do for him?
He said, send me back to NOM.
He said, I can't do that.
A year later, he was back at NOM with a Lurper unit.
Wow.
So, I mean, I don't know how he did it, but he did it.
Yeah.
The man loved to kill NBA.
Yeah.
Gary, these books have had, like, such a big influence, not just on me.
You know, I read these when I was, like, in high school, then they influenced me to join the army and to go to the Ranger Regiment.
And so many, I think, of my peer group were in the same.
boat. You know, they read these books as young
men and like, whoa, that's what I
want to do. You know, I've been
I think that's why I got inducted in the Ranger
Hall of Fame. It was more of the
books than anything else. There's guys
with more decorations than me that have
done more for the regiment than I have.
But I think that's why
I was, you know, you did
such an incredible story of telling
your story, telling the Lerp
story and telling the stories of your teammates,
you know, and I don't think
maybe you don't want to say it, Gary, but
Correct me, if I'm wrong, you were awarded the Silver Star for that November 20th operation.
I was actually putting for a DSC.
But they already gave two other guys were putting for Medal of Honors and got kicked down to DSCs.
I was given an impact Silver Star.
And after it was putting for DSC, they left it as a Silver Star.
Incredible, Gary.
And so do we have questions for Gary?
Let me check real quick.
I don't I don't I don't I didn't see anything we'll check real quick
yeah I get for telling all those war stories now people are enthralled like nobody
nobody asked questions because they're just enthralled um out of curiosity you know
you guys became rangers and then rangers you know went on you were the 75th infantry
which the 70th regimen came out of have you been following the rangers like what is your
or it's quite a legacy that they have, right?
Because we talk about World War II and then the Lerp units in Vietnam.
And then they formed into more of a direct action unit.
What, you know, do you have any opinions about that?
Or what do you, how do you think the legacy has followed?
Well, I'm proud to be considered a ranger, but I'm not a ranger.
You know, in my heart, I'm still a lerk.
They called us rangers, but we didn't.
pull a Ranger mission. Some of our missions might have turned into a Ranger mission, but our mission
was primarily reconnaissance. We weren't out there to kill people. Usually when we did, it was
self-defense. We were almost always outnumbered. You know, you'll never find a lurp that 11
chopper pilot buy a drink. I mean, that's no joke. They saved our butt so many times.
Bill Meacham and W.T. Grant both wrote books that I got published for them. They were courageous pilots.
Their motto was, if we put you in, we'll get you out, and they meant it. And we knew that,
but we probably wouldn't have gone out on those missions.
I'm sorry, go ahead, Gary.
That's all right.
I was just going to ask you if you could tell people the titles of your books that you authored.
I wrote my first book was
Eyes of the Eagle
The second half of my first tour was Eyes Behind the Lions
You can't get them new
But you can buy a usual once in a while
The combined book is Black Berets and Painted Faces
Six Island Men's The Series
I wrote book three
Ray Martinez wrote book one, Ken Miller wrote book two
And Phantom Warriors book one and two
were my final two books.
And you also ran a magazine for a period of time.
My brother, who was an Army journalist, he spent his entire three years in Hawaii,
wrote for the Stars and Stripes and some other newspapers in the military.
He talked to me after my books came.
Matter of fact, I hired him to write my first book.
And my wife read the first 30 pages and she says, you need to fire him.
She said, you write, you tell your story better than he does.
So I fired him.
I still ended up giving him half the front of the front end check for it, though, since I hired him.
But I fired him and he came back to me after the books came out and he said, we had to do a newspaper.
So we sat down and we put together a 36-page black and white newspaper, which was the first issue.
and I got Craig Jorgensen and Mike Martin and several guys that had been published before to write articles for it.
And I did the David Dolby interview, the only time he's ever been interviewed.
And that came out in black and white, and I took a bunch of copies down to Ford Benning.
And we ended up, we published it for six years, took it to a green and white in black newspaper for the next four issues.
Then we took it to a black and white magazine.
Then we took it to a full color magazine.
It ended up with 35,000 subscribers, which isn't a lot.
We didn't make any money, but we broke even on it.
And I made a lot of the guys that wrote for us became authors.
A lot of them got published.
Wild man.
That's fantastic.
Yeah.
So KM, thank you very much.
Great stories.
Great stream.
Did Mr. Gary ever served with TV actor Nicholas Worth?
he had said he was recondo in an interview.
No, there was no Nick Worth in my unit.
That doesn't mean he was not recondo.
He could have gone to recondo school.
There were some battalion reconnaissance units that sent guys to recondo school.
And a lot of the battalion recon units call themselves Lerps.
We call them slurpees, short-long-wain control.
But they didn't do what we did.
But they usually operated in a platoon size or double squad-sized element.
and they stayed out longer.
Not too far from an infantry company.
A lot of them refer to themselves as LERPS.
Second of the 502nd with the 101st, that battalion,
their recon elements, they were called recondos.
You've heard of Tiger Force?
Yep.
Tiger Force, Hawk Recon, Recondos, those were all battalion reconnaissance ships.
Paul Janick, thank you.
Thank you, Team House, for bringing us badass dudes like Mr. Lundner.
Well, we appreciate Gary for for spending a Friday night.
Yes.
This has been an amazing interview, Gary.
And thank you so much for sharing your time.
We have one more that just came in.
Jim Scott, thank you so much.
Thanks for your service, Gary.
Did you know a Silver Star recipient named Kinzer?
And if so, can you relate any experience you had with him?
I can relate.
Yeah, I knew a Kinzer.
I don't think he was in my country.
I knew a Kinzer.
Who was he with?
it said he was a Silver Star recipient
and then Jim said I can relay it to him
but he didn't say what unit he was with
if it was Pat Kensery
was in the first brigade of the 1001st LARPS
Yes
One more question
Oh what was the other question
Oh okay DJ Sneep
Thank you
How did LRP and LERS units
differ from MacB Sog?
Okay
MacB Sog would cross the border
into Laos, Cambodia, North Vietnam.
We stayed in Vietnam,
South Vietnam.
That was the main difference.
They worked with the indigenous troops.
We didn't very often.
Sometimes we took a Kit Carson out with us.
The experience we had taken out three Arvin soldiers
and three Americans didn't work out well
because of the language barrier.
Gary, is there anything else that you want to tell people upcoming,
whether it's like a Ranger Association event
or anything else that you want people to know about?
Well, you know, if you're a ranger,
join the Ranger Association, go to the rendezvous.
The Brotherhood is still strong.
If you're a Lerp, go to the Long Range Reconnaissance Association,
join it, come to our rally every summer, every June in Branson.
The Brotherhood is just as strong there.
And Jim said it was Pat Kinzer that he was talking about.
Yeah, I knew Pat Kinzer.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah. Cool. So, yeah, Gary again, man, it's been amazing to hear your stories. And I'm so glad that we could finally do this. It's just great.
Well, I'm sorry it took so long. Not at all, man. It's worth it. And, oh, and I was supposed to mention Larry Chambers wanted me to mention that he felt he's the most handsome of the three of you. You and Kent. My hair's still brown.
I had to throw that one out there for Larry.
I'll give him that.
He's been married three times.
I've been married once.
Gary,
thank you, man.
I really hope that guys will continue to go out and read these books.
I mean, they really are just an amazing historical.
You can read these, too.
My novels, yeah, thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you, Gary.
And I'll send you, I'll send you some copies of my book.
And there's, like we were talking a little bit before the show, happy for any introductions to other Lerps.
We love to have you guys on the show.
We can talk later about that.
Send me a mailing address.
I'll send you one of these because you can't get these anymore.
I want it.
I want one with your Herbie Hancock on it, Gary.
That's Chambers.
Is it?
That's me.
The handsome one and the smart one.
The stud.
The warrior.
Sure. And for everyone watching, next Friday, we'll be back. We're going to be...
I was asking if are the books are sale in the UK.
Are your books available in the UK? Do you know that, Gary?
Yeah.
Yeah, they're out there.
Australia, too.
And Australia. So next Friday, we're going to have Alana Berry on the show.
She is a former CIA case officer, served overseas during the Iraq War.
Now novelist wrote a terrific novel.
I just read recently.
I believe it's called the peacock and the sparrow.
I hope I'm not reversing that.
Maybe it's the sparrow and the peacock.
The peacock and the sparrow.
Terrific, terrific novel.
We'll be here with her next Friday.
Gary, again, thank you so much for taking the time to do this.
Nice to meet you, David.
You guys take care.
Have a nice night.
Thank you.
We'll see everyone next Friday.
