Special Operations.Com
STUDIES AND OBSERVATIONS
GROUP’S
WALKING ON THE WILD
SIDE
By the late SGM ALFRED "AL"
FRIEND, Retired, edit by Robert L. Noe
(See "And We Were Once Brave
and Foolish" this site)
From 1957 when the first Special Forces
teams in Vietnam began training the nucleus of the
Vietnamese Special Forces and Airborne Ranger units,
the Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (MACV) had
strongly resisted any proposal that the SF be used
in their basic mission of operating in the enemy's
rear areas. This was due to a number of reasons; principally
the caveat imposed that US Forces not engage in combat
and they not go into Laos, Cambodia or North Vietnam.
Secondly, President Kennedy's blessing on Special
Forces at Fort Bragg infuriated the higher commands
who had been trying to squash SF for years. SF was
the anti-gods who would not play the game according
to the rules of war. Additionally, in defiance to
Army regulations, when SF went into the field, they
defied orders that the officially-damned regulations
that the Green Beret would not be worn. As soon as
they jumped into an operational area during maneuvers,
SF violated the official regulations against "the
wearing of the green" and gleefully turned many
maneuvers into chaos. In an early 501s maneuver Louisiana,
the SF turned road signs around, sending convoys of
equipment, rations and fuel heading off into completely
different directions than intended. Units preparing
for an assault were visited at night, preceding their
assault, and received a briefing by a "Lt. Col"
who brought XVIII Airborne Corps' revision to their
original attack plan, sending their regiment in another
direction, in which they attacked one of their own
units.
The confusion caused the Commanding General of XVIII
Airborne Corps to stop the operations. All SF personnel
were sent back to Fort Bragg and the maneuvers resumed.
However, upon return to Fort Bragg, the Commanding
General wrote a new regulation which made the wearing
of the beret a Courts Martial offense. For Kennedy
to make the Beret official rankled many a General’s
heart. But Kennedy knew what he was doing. Impressed
by reports of SF and its' exploits, but most importantly
their dedication, improvisation and joi de
vivre, made him feel these were the soldiers he
wanted in Vietnam.
The other reason was that the Army did not have another
unit capable of handling the myriad of operational
concepts foisted upon it by the US and Vietnamese
governments. In the early years SF teams were assigned
the Village Defense, Mountain Scouts, Border Surveillance,
Civilian irregular Defense Groups (CIDG), Catholic
Youth, Ranger, and other programs which were the brainchildren
of whichever "expert’s" star was in political
ascendancy at the time. Some of these programs were
demanded by the US Government and abhorred by the
Vietnamese, while others - such as the Catholic Youth
Program and the Regular Forces-Provisional Forces
(Ruffpuffs) were pet (and non-productive) projects
dreamed up by President Diem and his military
and political advisers. American participation and
funds were diverted to these programs to secure Vietnamese
cooperation in other efforts.
Neither Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG)
nor MACV had the expertise or inclination to conduct
these programs and SF became the dumping ground for
every "ash and trash" concept that came
along. With some notable exceptions, most MAAG units
in the field preferred to conduct their training and
advisory roles from the relative comfort of their
well-appointed compounds in cities and towns. Few
had any desire to endure the primitive living conditions,
or share the dangers of isolation and combat with
their troops as SF did. Consequently, when a new concept
was to be tried, MACV requested more SF teams.
SF's first commitments in Vietnam were conducted
and supported under the aegis of the Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA), with little or no control by MACV and
MAAG. This situation created a deep sense of resentment
towards SF on the part of many senior MACV officers,
which did not dissipate when command responsibility
passed from the CIA to the military in 1963. (In one
particular instance, the CIA paid the SF Teams $16
a day in per diem, since the SF were responsible for
providing their own rations. After they had assumed
control, the military tried to make SF troopers pay
this money back to MACV, but the CIA refused to provide
any records and after a year the effort died.)
Proposals from the SF Headquarters in Nha Trang,
north of Saigon for operations in the enemy's
rear areas, particularly in Cambodia and Laos, where
the Ho Chi Minh Trail provided a steady stream
of troops and supplies into South Vietnam were trashed
as soon as the strategists in MACV read the titles.
Besides, since MACV now controlled the SF, they had
some operational concepts on their own to try out.
As a result, the North Vietnamese Army (NVA) and
their southern cousins the Viet Cong (VC) operated
with impunity in the sparsely-settled countryside.
One reason was the excellent camouflage discipline
of the NVA and the fact that most of their movement
was at night. While bombing raids on the trail caused
some delays, the absence of ground action against
their main supply route permitted the NVA to move
staggering amounts of men and material into South
Vietnam to prepare for an extended war. The NVA established
power bases in South Vietnam from the rugged mountains
of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) a strip of land extending
from the Yellow Sea to the borders of Laos, established
to divide North and South Vietnam and Central Highlands
in the north to the jungles, rice paddies and flat
expanses of the Mekong Delta in the South.
In the South, in addition to using the natural camouflage
of the jungles, the VC dug and lived in miles of sophisticated
caves and tunnels. MACV intelligence analysts were
certain that these bases existed, but the enemy's
strict camouflage and security discipline made the
bases almost impossible to locate by air reconnaissance.
Since friendly ground reconnaissance was non-existent,
the analysts could only speculate on their locations.
What MACV failed to realize was what the cost in American
lives would be when they were assaulted; the AIoui-Ashau
region and the Ia Drang valley for example.
From the beginning of American involvement in Vietnam,
our military forces were seriously impaired by a flood
of political restrictions emanating from Washington;
ostensibly intended to minimize American involvement
in the conflict. But in war, as in sex, you can't
be "minimally involved," you’re in it to
the finish. The rules of engagement vacillated from
not firing at the enemy, even if he was firing at
you, to "only returning fire if the enemy was
specifically firing at you;" (hard to determine
if a whole bunch was shooting in your direction) to
finally - as if in exasperation - "Go get 'em."
In the early 1980's, a 5-kilometer buffer zone was
established along the Laotian and Cambodian borders,
intended to prevent American participation from spilling
over into these countries; a short-sighted anomaly,
since the bulk of aggression was pouring into South
Vietnam over these same borders.
The only American troops which might be in position
to violate this caveat were the SF camps aligned along
these borders. They also suffered the most from the
enemy' utilization of the zone to Marshall their troops
to attack the SF camps. Small wonder the battered
teams began to feel the buffer zone was MACV's revenge
and that a courts martial for violating the zone was
preferable to filling the insides of body bags. Instead
of stopping at the zone, they began to follow enemy
troops across and attacking them in their bivouac
areas. The SF were careful to insure that the map
coordinates given higher headquarters for any troop
movements or operations were well out of the zone.
A little judicious lying, perhaps, but the A-Teams
in the field had little or no support in the event
they were attacked. Pre-emptive strikes on enemy buildups
were vital to preventing them from massing its troops
for the 3 to1 advantage they required before attacking
one of our camps. The smoking ruins of camps which
failed to maintain aggressive close-in and long-range
patrolling programs in their areas became grim examples
to other teams. One laconic SF troop remarked that
fighting by the rules from MACV was like "bringing
a knife to a gun fight."
The North Vietnamese, on the other hand, had no illusions
about why they were in the fight. They were in it
to win, at whatever the price they paid or
the length of time it required. They subscribed to
no international boundaries; theorizing that all of
Indo-China would eventually be theirs. South Vietnam
was only the first step. They seized whatever portions
of Laos and Cambodia that were required for the Ho
Chi Minh Trail and blithely denied (to a world
that knew better) that they were there. The NVA knew
exactly what rules and limitations were laid on the
SF teams and often sent village chiefs in to MAAG
headquarters to complain about SF border violations
and the depredations they were wreaking in these areas.
The NVA was smart enough to take these complaints
to MAAG, since they knew they would receive little
sympathy from the SF Commanders.
MACV finally dropped the 5K border zone - not in
an official pronouncement, but simply let it die,
due to the fact that the enemy were the only ones
that wanted it observed, and nobody in the headquarters
particularly wanted to go out and live with the SF
teams to insure the regulation was obeyed.
In 1963-64, the increase in NVA manpower and material
pouring into South Vietnam along the Trail could no
longer be ignored and the previously-trashed plans
were pulled out and dusted off. Two special units
were activated to take advantage of SF's unconventional
warfare capabilities: DELTA and MACSOG. Project DELTA,
under command of 5th Special Forces group in Nha
Trang, was responsible for Long Range Reconnaissance
Patrol (LRRP or "Lurp" as it was commonly
referred to) within the borders of South Vietnam.
DELTA pioneered the LRRP effort in the country; developing
effective techniques for reconnaissance (recon) and
in later training teams for other units in-country.
Studies and Observation Group. (SOG) as the other
group was designated, was directly under operational
control of MACV. Although manning requirements remained
the responsibility of the SF. SOG's responsibility
was broad-based, including North Vietnam, Laos, Burma,
Cambodia and certain other areas where US interests
were involved. The Group was tightly compartmented
and many of its operations remain classified today.
The original small team of volunteers for SOG came
from Fort Bragg, but the beleaguered Special Warfare
Center was struggling just to provide qualified SF
personnel to the 5th Group needs, so in mid-1964 a
call went out to the 1st SF Group on Okinawa for selected
volunteers for the Group.
The 1st was already heavily committed to supporting
its operational commitments in other Southeast Asian
countries - as well as providing teams for Vietnam
- so the call for selected volunteers E-7 and above
raised the hackles of every SF commander on the island.
Each company had commitments projected for a year
in advance and the casualties suffered in Vietnam,
coupled with dwindling resources at Fort Bragg to
fill their needs, had seriously cut into the units'
slim pool of experienced team members. Replacements
were coming in from the States - both commissioned
and enlisted - were no longer the seasoned veterans
they had come to expect.
The ever-accelerating war in Vietnam was taking a
heavy toll on SF personnel; more and more teams being
demanded for ever-increasing requirements there while
the Group still had to maintain their other-country
requirements. The Old Guard of Special Forces were
returning to Vietnam on their third, fourth and fifth
tours and with each trip their numbers grew less;
partially as a result of combat losses and partially
as a result of burnout.
Finally the SF Headquarters sent a recruiting team
to Phan Rang, which was the replacement depot
for the 101st Airborne and began recruiting for new
team members. They mostly wanted to take in paratroopers,
since they were usually in pretty good shape, had
advanced training and probably guts since they had
enough to jump out of airplanes. A relatively short
training program was needed to acquaint these new
troops with SF life and sort out the specialties needed
to fill teams.
But the new volunteers would not be fully indoctrinated
into SF life in their brief training, where the veterans
had been plying their trade for years. The recruits
had only a few weeks to assimilate themselves into
this new way of life. To the credit of most of them,
they adapted well and the survivors of their tour
in Vietnam formed the nucleus of the Special Forces
of the future, having earned their berets with blood.
Most of the experienced SF were getting a little long
in the tooth anyway and SF was able to test the new
men in the field, where it would be observed under
fire whether they had the tenacity and feeling for
Special Forces life.
Special Forces soldiers are a breed apart. Already
triple volunteers for the Army, airborne and Special
Forces, missions such as Vietnam were looked upon
as just another part of the job. I have never served
with a more dedicated group of men. The men in various
units which compromised SOG personified this dedication
to the Nth degree.
During the latter stages of the Vietnam War, SOG
found that they had gone to the well too often and
were running out of qualified volunteers. Many of
the veteran troops had made three-to five tours to
Vietnam and were burning out. SOG operations were
demanding, both physically and mentally. The steady
increase of NVA forces demanded more and more missions
and many of the qualified SF troops were burning out.
They then began to accept volunteers from non-SF units
to be trained and fill the gaps. To their credit,
most of the non-SF assimilated well into this new
environment and performed well. SOG was a multi-service
unit, including members from other branches of the
service, including Seals and the Air Force.
A total of seven Congressional Medals of Honor were
awarded to this relatively small unit, a tribute to
the kind of man who served with SOG.
* * * * *
Each year, when I attend the Special Operations Association
Convention in Las Vegas, I am vividly reminded of
the passing of the years. Sometimes the visual changes
(especially beards) make some of my old comrades unrecognizable,
but when identification is finally established the
memories wash over me and it seems like only weeks
since we last saw each other.
The ranks of the old timers grows thinner each year.
Some, caught up in the day-to-day struggle to survive
can no longer afford to make the trip (no one ever
got rich on a military retirement) while others, due
to distance and infirmities, attend only in spirit.
We have many services represented; Army, Navy, Seabees,
Air Force, mixing with Aussies, Montangards and Seals
and Marine Force Recon and a select few Marine Avaitors,
all of which contributed to SOG and Special Operations.
Occasionally the Grim Reaper moves through our ranks
and they are remembered - and grieved for.
Our ranks are thinned and we are now but a patriarchs
of a unit born in doubt and controversy, but forged
steel-tough in the fires of adversity and combat.
We basked in the warm glow of thundering successes
and commiserated with each other after crushing defeats;
but each event strengthened our bonds and provided
blue prints for the future.
In a speech to the Massachusetts Legislature in 1961,
President Kennedy made this challenge:
"... and when at some future date the high court
of history sits in judgement of each of us, recording
whether in our brief span of service we fulfilled
our responsibilities to the state, our success or
failures in whatever office we held will be by the
answers to four questions: First, were we truly men
of courage.... Second, were we truly men of judgment.
Third, were we truly men of integrity.... And finally
were we truly men of dedication."
We leave history to be the judge of whether we fulfilled
these qualifications. The job we did and the results
speak for themselves, but we know in our hearts that
we gave it our best shot.