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thedrifter
05-12-08, 08:20 AM
Posted on Mon, May. 12, 2008
U.S. to honor members of squadron in 'secret war'

By CHRIS VAUGHN
Star-Telegram Staff Writer

Not many men in the military are eager to join a brand-new unit, where they don't know people, don't know what they'll be doing and don't have a proud unit lineage.

But the Navy assured the men it would be good for their careers.

So some men volunteered and a lot more were drafted to join Observation Squadron 67, so named because that was the year it was born.

After a while the men took to calling themselves "the Ghost Squadron" because they felt forgotten, participants in a secret war that neither the U.S. nor the North Vietnamese wanted to acknowledge was being waged next door to Vietnam.

Silenced for decades by their classified missions over Laos, the men finally in recent years began to speak publicly of their war, a decision that would ultimately lead to a rare historic correction by the Navy.

Forty years after the squadron's actions, VO-67 has been awarded the Presidential Unit Citation, the highest decoration for combat valor a unit can receive. Some of the surviving 300 members of that squadron will be on hand Wednesday in Washington, D.C., for the ceremony in front of the U.S. Navy Memorial.

"It's special after all these years," said John Forsgren, a young sailor who served in the squadron and lives in Arlington. "But it's also bittersweet. How do you get proud of something that you did 40 years ago? There's a bit of a feeling of 'Why didn't they recognize the unit 30 years ago?'"

The Presidential Unit Citation is reserved only for the most valorous combat units, and it's worth noting that far fewer of them were awarded for the Vietnam War than Medals of Honor. A unit receiving the citation is the equivalent of every man receiving a Navy Cross.

Ensign Laura Stegherr said Navy Secretary Donald Winter received "relevant, new and verified" information about the squadron's actions in Laos that warranted the decoration.

Secret mission

VO-67 wasn't really an observation squadron, though they pretended they were. Their unit patch reflected the ruse, showing an airplane sending signals to the ground. In reality, it was the opposite -- the squadron was listening to what was happening on the ground, not interfering.

"It was so secret that not many top people in the Navy knew the squadron existed or what we did," said Ed Landwehr of Fort Worth, a navigator and bombadier on Crew 4.

The idea came from Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, who was unhappy with the results of the bombing campaign in North Vietnam and wanted some other way to interdict supplies into South Vietnam. His answer was "Igloo White," the code name for his plan to create an "electronic barrier" at the Demilitarized Zone.

The Ho Chi Minh Trail was largely under triple canopy jungle, hard to detect and busiest at night. Using dropped microphones and seismographic sensors would be a way for the military to gain intelligence on what was moving down the trail, when and how much. Then they could call in airstrikes.

"We didn't find out what we would be doing until right before we deployed," said Herb Ganner of Hurst, a navigator and bombadier on Crew 1.

What the pilots and crews had to do sounds simple enough -- take off from an airfield in Thailand, fly a short distance into Laos and drop the camouflaged sensors along the trail.

The men flew only in the day, usually every other day, and could expect to be airborne no longer than a couple of hours.

But the Ho Chi Minh Trail, the lifeblood of the war for the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong, was a very hostile place for air crews, particularly slow-moving, virtually defenseless ones flying at only 500 to 1,000 feet.

"The missions were short-lived, but they were adrenaline-pumped," Ganner said.

The Navy prepared for a loss rate of upward of 60 percent to 70 percent, which the men found out about while they were in Thailand.

"They tried to reassure us that the loss rate was not necessarily those killed," Ganner said, "but that it meant the airplanes would be so damaged that they would be out of commission."

It never got that bad. But within a span of six weeks in 1968, it felt like it was. Twenty men from three crews died in January and February 1968, the time of the huge Tet Offensive.

Painful memories

After all these years, the survivors of VO-67 still wince at the memories of Jan. 11, when the first crew did not come home.

Tony Bissell of Bedford was a petty officer on another plane that day, and he can still remember the awful silence on the radio as Crew 2 did not answer any communication. Later that night, the officers' club was packed wall to wall with men getting stupid drunk. Nine men dead in a second.

"We didn't have to buy a single drink that night," Bissell said. "The Air Force guys were very sympathetic."

Interservice rivalry seemed to take a back seat to the men's shared missions and misery. To this day, the men of VO-67 credit the Air Force forward air controllers in Thailand for saving their hides many times because of their knowledge of the trail.

Each crew had its own identity, and rarely did they ever share with each other their specific missions. The less the men knew, the better.

"We knew how susceptible we were to getting shot down," Ganner said. "I used to carry a Geneva Convention card and my ID tags. I never took my wedding ring, my wallet, anything personal."

At least once the "Ghost Squadron" came out of hiding to participate in the acknowledged war.

In January 1968, the Marines at Khe Sanh were under siege by thousands of North Vietnamese. VO-67 was ordered on low-flying missions to drop sensors around the Marine base, so more accurate fire could be leveled.

Their citation says they "contributed to saving countless lives."

As for their careers in the Navy, the men said VO-67 failed to help them at all. In fact, most of them believed it hurt their promotion chances because no one in the Navy had heard of it.

Still, the belated recognition matters to many of them, for both reasons large and small.

"I've talked about it recently with my wife of 19 years, and she will say, 'I don't believe you,'" Forsgren said, laughing. "This is vindication."

ABOUT THE GHOST SQUADRON

The men flew the Lockheed P-2 Neptune, a 1950s-era anti-submarine patrol airplane. The squadron's planes were heavily modified for the mission, including the addition of M-60 machine guns, an armored belly and a jungle-green paint scheme.

The squadron was based at Nakhon Phanom Royal Thai Air Force Base, just across the Mekong River from Laos. Their primary mission was over the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos, but they also performed missions in South Vietnam.

Twenty men of VO-67 died in Southeast Asia in three incidents. One is still missing in action, Cmdr. Paul Milius, who earned a Navy Cross for allowing seven crewmen to bail out of their badly damaged aircraft before going down. The Navy named a destroyer for him in the 1990s.

The squadron flew combat missions for nine months and sustained a 25 percent loss rate. It was disestablished in July 1968, and the Air Force took over the mission until 1972.

Among the North Texas men who served in the unit: Tony Bissell of Bedford, John Forsgren of Arlington, Herb Ganner of Hurst, Ed Landwehr of Fort Worth, Fredrick Rerko of Dallas and Lowell Shaw of Plano.

Ellie

thedrifter
05-12-08, 08:33 AM
Vietnam 'Ghost' vets honored after years shrouded in secrecy
WFAA Dallas-Fort Worth

By DAVID McLEMORE / The Dallas Morning News
dmclemore@dallasnews.com


Inside a suburban home with a neatly trimmed yard, five members of the Ghost Squadron share secrets about a long-ago war.

For more than 30 years, members of the clandestine Naval air squadron VO-67 could not talk about their role in the Vietnam War.

Now, as they prepare to go to Washington on Wednesday to receive the presidential unit citation – the highest award for heroism given to a military unit – they find the recognition bittersweet.

"We were part of something special, and it is a time of joy that we're getting recognized at last," said Tony Bissell, 62, of Bedford.

"It is nice," agreed John Forsgren, 62, of Arlington. "But it doesn't mean as much as it would have 40 years ago. Vietnam is now ancient history. Who remembers?"

For these gray-haired men, it's fresh as yesterday.

In late 1967, the members of naval anti-submarine patrol units began receiving orders to report for a special operation.

The 300 officers and enlisted men were formed into squadron VO-67, equipped with specially modified P-2V5 Neptune patrol planes and sent to Thailand under top-secret orders. It was not lost on anyone involved that there were no submarines there.

In Thailand, they were told they could not tell anyone what they did, not even family. The unit was soon known as the "Ghost Squadron," since it didn't exist.

"We had no idea what we were getting into," said Herb Ganner, 65, of Hurst, who served as a bombardier and backup pilot. "We soon found we were part of a new type of warfare."

The squadron's mission was to fly over the Ho Chi Minh Trail, a complex network of trails, roads and truck routes that fed supplies through Laos to North Vietnamese units in South Vietnam.

They flew at treetop level, low and slow, and dropped a variety of electronic sensors and listening devices along the trail. Specially equipped planes flying at higher altitudes picked up signals of North Vietnamese supply and troop movements and relayed them for bombing missions.

"The equipment is crude by today's standards but it was state of the art in 1968," Mr. Ganner said. "The Vietnamese found some of the microphone transmitters we dropped into the trees, and we could hear them talking all the way to Hanoi."

It was extremely dangerous work. The Ho Chi Minh Trail was thick with surface-to-air missiles and anti-aircraft guns. The Neptunes flew so low, North Vietnamese soldiers frequently peppered the planes with rifle and machine gun fire.

"You never knew what would happen," Ed Landwehr, of Fort Worth, said. "You'd attend a briefing with a guy and he'd walk off to his plane and you'd never see him again. And those who made it home had lots of holes in their planes."

The danger sets in


During its brief existence, VO-67 lost 20 people and three airplanes. The survivors all have tales of near-collisions. They like to tell about a time Lowell Shaw's plane drew heavy anti-aircraft fire. By intercom, the pilot asked how everyone was. Mr. Shaw replied he could now wave his hands out both sides of the plane.

Mr. Shaw, who suffered a severe stroke two years ago, cannot speak and uses a wheelchair. He nods vigorously, and then bursts into laughter when asked if the story is true.

No one thought much about the danger, if only because they were so focused on doing the job asked of them.

"On your first mission, you were concerned but too excited to be scared," Mr. Ganner said. "By the time the operation ended, we knew exactly how to do what we had to do. It was routine."

Something else was at work, Mr. Landwehr said.

"When you're in your 20s, you think you're bulletproof," he said. "It's only later, when you're older, that you realize how bad it was."

During the 1968 Tet offensive, when about 20,000 North Vietnamese forces, reinforced with tanks, encircled the Marine base at Khe Sanh, the Ghost Squadron took on a close air support mission for the beleaguered Marines.

Using the techniques honed on the Ho Chi Minh Trail, the Ghost Squadron flew lumbering patrol planes into intense enemy fire, dropping acoustic sensors around Khe Sanh. Marine artillery and aircraft used the information to identify enemy troop concentrations and to set firing missions.

Marine commanders said the roughly 1,000 Marine and allied casualties during the 77-day siege would have doubled without the intelligence provided by VO-67.

For the remaining veterans of the Ghost Squad, congratulations from a Marine at Khe Sanh on their presidential citation meant a lot.

"The approval of this high unit award was well- and hard-earned at the usual butcher's price," wrote Ken Pipes. "Congratulations to each individual. ... They are our Combat Brothers!"

'A strange time'


On July 1, 1968, the Navy ended VO-67. Squadron members were ordered to return to the states for further assignments – and told to keep silent about their actions over the past 500 days.

They scattered across the globe, finding the Navy had moved on without them.

"We were behind in our training. The time in Thailand affected our seniority. We'd spent 18 months out of the mainstream of Navy life. And we had been part of something unique and useful. It was a strange time," Mr. Ganner said.

Mr. Landwehr and Mr. Shaw made a career of the Navy. The others left after four-year enlistments, settling into civilian careers. Eventually, about a half-dozen settled in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.

Then, 30 years after the squadron's last mission along the Ho Chi Minh Trail, the Navy declassified the history of VO-67. And surviving members began tracking each other down.

In 1999, they formed the VO-67 Association and held their first reunion. There are now about 160 survivors.

About 80 members of the Ghost Squadron will attend the ceremonies in Washington.

The trip will be valuable for one thing, Mr. Landwehr said. It will let the world know what they did.

"Each year, there's fewer of us left," he said. "It's important the country know our story while we're still around."GHOST SQUADRON members talk about their mission. dallasnews.com/video

Ellie