Sergeant
First Class Jerry Michael Shriver
U.S.
Army Special Forces
Name: Jerry
Michael "Mad Dog" Shriver
Rank/Branch:
E7/US Army Special Forces
Unit: CCS
- MACV-SOG, 5th Special Forces
Date of Birth:
24 September 1941 (De Funiak Springs FL)
Home City
of Record: Sacramento CA
Date of Loss:
24 April 1969
Country of
Loss: Cambodia (some older records say Laos)
Loss Coordinates:
165048N 1063158E (XT441913)
Status (in
1973): Missing In Action Category: 4
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground:
Ground Other Personnel in Incident: (none missing)
REMARKS:
SYNOPSIS: SFC Jerry M. "Mad Dog" Shriver
was a legendary Green Beret. He was an exploitation
platoon leader with Command and Control South, MACV-SOG
(Military Assistance Command, Vietnam Studies and
Observation Group). MACV-SOG was a joint service high
command unconventional warfare task force engaged
in highly classified operations throughout Southeast
Asia. The 5th Special Forces channeled personnel into
MACV-SOG (although
it was not a Special Forces group) through Special
Operations Augmentation (SOA), which provided their
"cover" while under secret orders to MACV-SOG.
The teams performed deep penetration missions of strategic
reconnaissance and interdiction which were called,depending
on the time frame, "Shining Brass" or "Prairie
Fire" missions.
On the morning of April 24, 1969, Shriver's hatchet
platoon was air assaulted into Cambodia by four helicopters.
Upon departing the helicopter, the team had begun
moving toward its initial target point when it came
under heavy volumes of enemy fire from several machine
gun bunkers and entrenched enemy positions estimated
to be at least a company-sized element.
Shriver was last seen by the company commander, Capt.
Paul D. Cahill, as Shriver was moving against the
machine gun bunkers and entering a tree line on the
southwest edge of the LZ with a trusted Montagnard
striker.
Capt. Cahill and Sgt. Ernest C. Jamison, the platoon
medical aidman, took cover in a bomb crater. Cahill
continued radio contact with Shriver for four hours
until his transmission was broken and Shriver was
not
heard from again. It was known that Shriver had been
wounded 3 or 4 times. An enemy soldier was later seen
picking up a weapon which appeared to be the same
type carried by Shriver.
Jamison left the crater to retrieve one of the wounded
Montagnards who had fallen in the charge. The medic
reached the soldier, but was almost torn apart by
concentrated machine gun fire. At that moment Cahill
was
wounded in the right eye, which resulted in his total
blindness for the next 30 minutes. The platoon radioman,
Y-Sum Nie, desperately radioed for immediate extraction.
Maj. Benjamin T. Kapp, Jr. was in the command helicopter
and could see the platoon pinned down across the
broken ground and rims of bomb craters. North Vietnamese
machine guns were firing into the bodies in front
of
their positions and covering the open ground with
grazing fire. The assistant platoon leader,
1Lt. Gregory M. Harrigan, reported within minutes
that half the platoon was killed or wounded.
Harrigan himself was killed 45 minutes later.
Helicopter gunships and A1E aircraft bombed and rocketed
the NVA defenses. The heavy ground fire
peppered the aircraft in return, wounding one door
gunner during low-level strafing. Several attempts
to
lift out survivors had to be aborted. Ten airstrikes
and 1,500 rockets had been placed in the area in attempts
to make a safe extraction possible. 1Lt. Walter L.
Marcantel, the third in command, called for napalm
only ten
yards from his frontline, and both he and his nine
remaining commandos were burned by splashing napalm.
After seven hours of contact, three helicopters dashed
in and pulled out 15 wounded troops.
As the aircraft lifted off, several crewmen saw movement
in a bomb crater. A fourth helicopter set down,
and Lt. Daniel Hall twice raced over to the bomb crater.
On the first trip he recovered the badly wounded
radio operator, and on the second trip he dragged
Harrigan's body back to the helicopter. The aircraft
was
being buffeted by shellfire and took off immediately
afterwards. No further MACV-SOG insertions were made
into the NVA stronghold. Jamison was declared dead
and Shriver Missing in Action.
On June 12, 1970, a search and recovery element from
a graves registration unit recovered human remains
that were later identified as Sgt. Jamison, but no
trace was found of Shriver.
For every insertion like Shriver's that were detected
and stopped, dozens of other commando teams safely
slipped past NVA lines to strike a wide range of targets
and collect vital information. The number of MACV-SOG
missions conducted with Special Forces reconnaissance
teams into Laos and Cambodia was 452 in 1969. It was
the
most sustained American campaign of raiding, sabotage
and intelligence-gathering waged on foreign soil in
U.S.
military history. MACV-SOG's teams earned a global
reputation as one of the most combat effective
deep-penetration forces ever raised.