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541 st and 88 th TRANSPORTATION 197071 CENTRAL HIGHLANDS DURING THE DRAWDOWN By Cpt. Richard Roney 1 of 28 The 2 nd platoon of the 88 th Transportation Co. had a sign on its billet that read, “WE HAVE DONE SO MUCH FOR SO LONG WITH SO LITTLE THAT NOW THEY THINK WE CAN DO ANYTHING WITH NOTHING”. That was life for the units in Viet Nam during the drawdown. This is a tribute to the men that served in the 541 st Transportation Company and the 88 th Transportation Company during the drawdown. I transferred to Viet Nam from Germany where I was the Commanding Officer (CO) of the 76 th Transportation Co. that was part of the 53 rd Transportation Battalion. The 76 th ’s main responsibility was transporting nuclear weapons throughout Germany. I arrived in Pleiku in late February 1970 and assumed command of the 541 st Trans. Co. (light truck) and remained the CO until approximately August 1970. In late June 1970 at An Khe I assumed command of the 88 th Trans. Co. (medium truck), a Trailer Terminal and Maintenance Platoon, and a Signal Squad responsible for logistic communication for QL19 from the An Kke Pass to Pleiku. In late January of 1971 the 88 th moved to Cha Rang and I left Viet Nam and the army in late February 1971.

541st&and&88 &TRANSPORTATION&1970771 ......541st&and&88th&TRANSPORTATION&1970771! CENTRALHIGHLANDSDURING!THE!DRAWDOWN ! ByCpt.RichardRoney!!! 5!of!28! The!Pleikuand!Kontum!Provinces!were!seeing!the!full!impact

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Page 1: 541st&and&88 &TRANSPORTATION&1970771 ......541st&and&88th&TRANSPORTATION&1970771! CENTRALHIGHLANDSDURING!THE!DRAWDOWN ! ByCpt.RichardRoney!!! 5!of!28! The!Pleikuand!Kontum!Provinces!were!seeing!the!full!impact

541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  1  of  28  

The  2nd  platoon  of  the  88th  Transportation  Co.  had  a  sign  on  its  billet  that  read,  “WE  HAVE  DONE  SO  MUCH  FOR  SO  LONG  WITH  SO  LITTLE  -­‐  THAT  NOW  THEY  THINK  WE  CAN  DO  ANYTHING  WITH  NOTHING”.  That  was  life  for  the  units  in  Viet  Nam  during  the  drawdown.  This  is  a  tribute  to  the  men  that  served  in  the  541st  Transportation  Company  and  the  88th  Transportation  Company  during  the  drawdown.      I  transferred  to  Viet  Nam  from  Germany  where  I  was  the  Commanding  Officer  (CO)  of  the  76th  Transportation  Co.  that  was  part  of  the  53rd  Transportation  Battalion.  The  76th’s  main  responsibility  was  transporting  nuclear  weapons  throughout  Germany.  I  arrived  in  Pleiku  in  late  February  1970  and  assumed  command  of  the  541st  Trans.  Co.  (light  truck)  and  remained  the  CO  until  approximately  August  1970.  In  late  June  1970  at  An  Khe  I  assumed  command  of  the  88th  Trans.  Co.  (medium  truck),  a  Trailer  Terminal  and  Maintenance  Platoon,  and  a  Signal  Squad  responsible  for  logistic  communication  for  QL-­‐19  from  the  An  Kke  Pass  to  Pleiku.  In  late  January  of  1971  the  88th  moved  to  Cha    Rang  and  I  left  Viet  Nam  and  the  army  in  late  February  1971.  

Page 2: 541st&and&88 &TRANSPORTATION&1970771 ......541st&and&88th&TRANSPORTATION&1970771! CENTRALHIGHLANDSDURING!THE!DRAWDOWN ! ByCpt.RichardRoney!!! 5!of!28! The!Pleikuand!Kontum!Provinces!were!seeing!the!full!impact

541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  2  of  28  

   QL-­‐19  from  Qui  Nhon  to  Pleiku  was  paved  with  road  security  at  risk  points  along  the  road  but  mostly  between  the  An  Khe  Pass  and  the  top  of  the  Mang  Yang  Pass.      QL-­‐14  north  of  Pleiku  was  paved  to  Dak  To  and  Rte.  512  West  to  Ben  Het  was  also  paved.  As  I  recall,  road  security  began  around  Kontum  and  continued  into  Ben  Het.  Road  security  consisted  of  a  tank  and  APC  or  2  APCs  every  kilometer.  QL-­‐19  west  of  Pleiku  was  not  paved  and  did  not  have  road  security.  QL  14  south  of  Pleiku  was  not  paved  and  did  not  have  road  security.      The  541st  primary  mission  was  resupply  support  for  the  Artillery  Fire  Bases  and  Special  Forces  camps  along  the  Cambodian  and  Laotian  border  in  Kontum  and  Pleiku  Provences  from  the  Ia  Drang  Valley  area  in  the  south  to  the  Ben  Het  Special  Forces  Camp  and  Artillery  Firebase  in  the  north,  support  for  the  Mike  Forces  (the  Special  Force  assault/mobile  infantry  regiment),  and  local  resupply  in  Pleiku.  They  also  ran  occasional  resupply  to  Ban  Me  Thuot  and  Cheo  Reo  in  Darlac  Province.    

Page 3: 541st&and&88 &TRANSPORTATION&1970771 ......541st&and&88th&TRANSPORTATION&1970771! CENTRALHIGHLANDSDURING!THE!DRAWDOWN ! ByCpt.RichardRoney!!! 5!of!28! The!Pleikuand!Kontum!Provinces!were!seeing!the!full!impact

541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  3  of  28  

 Both  the  541st  and  the  88th  had  ½  inch  armor  plating  in  the  vehicle  doors  and  most  if  not  all  of  the  gun  trucks  had  2  walls  of  armor  plating  separated  by  approximately  1-­‐½  inches.  The  ½  inch  armor  stopped  AK-­‐47  rounds  at  close  range  whereas  ⅜  inch  armor  did  not.  The  double  walled  armor  plating  on  the  gun  trucks  could  stop  anti-­‐tank  rockets.  The  gun  trucks  main  weapon  was  one  or  two  50  cal  machine  guns  (MG)  (Royal  Flush  had  a  mini-­‐gun  as  the  primary  weapon)  and  secondary  weapons  of  2  each  M60  MG.  The  541st  carried  LAW  anti-­‐tank  rockets  and  also  grenades  to  use  against  back  side  attacks  during  ambushes.      

 

Page 4: 541st&and&88 &TRANSPORTATION&1970771 ......541st&and&88th&TRANSPORTATION&1970771! CENTRALHIGHLANDSDURING!THE!DRAWDOWN ! ByCpt.RichardRoney!!! 5!of!28! The!Pleikuand!Kontum!Provinces!were!seeing!the!full!impact

541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  4  of  28  

The  maintenance  platoons  did  a  wonderful  job  of  welding  and  rewelding  the  support  columns  in  the  trucks  which  were  trashed  by  the  weight  of  the  ½  inch  armor  plating  and  maintaining  the  vehicles  with  the  additional  weight  of  the  armored  plating  and  at  least  3  layers  of  sand  bags  on  the  floor  boards  and  in  the  beds  of  the  gun  trucks.  The  maintenance  platoon  deserves  all  of  our  respect  for  keeping  the  vehicles  running  and  up-­‐armored.      The  Pleiku  and  Kontum  Provinces  were  significantly  different  from  the  coastal  plain,  and  much  of  III  and  IV  Corp  areas.  There  were  two  towns  in  this  area;  Pleiku  and  Kontum.  Both  towns  had  very  distinct  boundaries  with  South  Vietnamese  populations  and  there  was  nothing  in  between.  Most  of  the  population  in  these  Provinces  was  Montagnards  and  they  lived  in  well-­‐defined  villages.  The  Montagnards  made  up  the  fighting  force  for  the  Special  Force  units  and  were  pro-­‐American.  Most  of  this  area  was  not  inhabited  and  much  of  the  border  region  was  mountainous  and  covered  with  triple  canopy  jungle.  The  NVA  had  major  base  camps  across  the  border  in  Laos  and  northern  Cambodia.  This  made  it  a  perfect  location  to  infiltrate  major  NVA  units  and  this  is  why  so  many  of  the  major  battles  in  Viet  Nam  were  fought  in  this  region.  The  other  area  that  shared  these  characteristics  was  the  Northern  Highlands  in  I  Corp.        

Page 5: 541st&and&88 &TRANSPORTATION&1970771 ......541st&and&88th&TRANSPORTATION&1970771! CENTRALHIGHLANDSDURING!THE!DRAWDOWN ! ByCpt.RichardRoney!!! 5!of!28! The!Pleikuand!Kontum!Provinces!were!seeing!the!full!impact

541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  5  of  28  

     The  Pleiku  and  Kontum  Provinces  were  seeing  the  full  impact  of  the  draw  down  in  1970.  By  the  third  week  of  March  the  4th  Division  with  supporting  armor  units  were  relocated  from  the  border  areas  to  An  Khe  with  operational  responsibility  for  the  area  between  the  top  of  the  An  Khe  Pass  to  the  top  of  the  Mang  Yang  Pass.  The  Pleiku  and  Kontum  Provinces  were  defended  by  Special  Forces  Camps  and  Artillery  Firebases  along  the  border,  SOG  units,  a  regiment  of  ARVN  Rangers,  a  regiment  of  Mike  Forces,  and  an  ARVN  division  (I  think  it  was  the  5th  ARVN  Division).  This  area  had  seen  some  of  the  most  brutal  combat  with  the  NVA  since  1965  and  was  the  area  of  operation  of  French  Mobil  100  which  was  all  but  wiped  out  in  1954.          

Page 6: 541st&and&88 &TRANSPORTATION&1970771 ......541st&and&88th&TRANSPORTATION&1970771! CENTRALHIGHLANDSDURING!THE!DRAWDOWN ! ByCpt.RichardRoney!!! 5!of!28! The!Pleikuand!Kontum!Provinces!were!seeing!the!full!impact

541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  6  of  28  

     

     NVA  SPRING  OFFENSIVE      At  midnight  of  March  31,  1970  while  walking  up  to  my  billet  I  heard  a  barrage  of  122mm  Katyusha  rockets  overhead  and  then  the  rockets  started  impacting  in  the  southern  part  of  our  compound  (Camp  Wilson)  and  the  Northern  part  of  the  MP  and  MACV  compound.  Thus  began  the  NVA’s  major  offensive  in  the  spring  of  1970.  A  week  earlier  I  had  heard  that  the  NVA’s  325th  or  353rd  Division  had  crossed  the  border  and  entered  our  area  of  operation.  I  think  this  Division  was  operating  in  the  Dak  To  area  and  have  since  read  that  elements  of  the  NVA’s  304th  Division  was  attacking  the  Special  Forces  Camps  that  were  located  on  a  

Page 7: 541st&and&88 &TRANSPORTATION&1970771 ......541st&and&88th&TRANSPORTATION&1970771! CENTRALHIGHLANDSDURING!THE!DRAWDOWN ! ByCpt.RichardRoney!!! 5!of!28! The!Pleikuand!Kontum!Provinces!were!seeing!the!full!impact

541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  7  of  28  

line  10  kilometers  apart  north  of  Ben  Het  and  fortified  Montagnard  villages  in  this  area.      On  April  3rd,  the  541st’s  mission  was  to  run  a  major  resupply  convoy  to  the  firebase  and  Special  Forces  Camp  at  Ben  Het.  Ben  Het  had  been  the  target  of  continuous  shelling  and  an  NVA  assault  by  10+  Russian  tanks/APCs  and  infantry  units  during  March  of  1969.  The  defenders  of  Ben  Het  had  repulsed  the  attack  and  had  knocked  out  a  number  of  tanks  and  APCs.  One  of  the  earliest  photos  I  had  seen  upon  arriving  at  Pleiku  was  destroyed  Russian  tanks  on  lowboys  in  the  27th  Trans.  Battalion’s  trailer  terminal  yard.  The  firebase  at  Ben  Het  was  a  strategic  position  that  had  to  be  over  run  or  neutralized  for  the  NVA  offensive  to  succeed.  The  firebase  could  lay  down  sustained  heavy  artillery  fire  in  support  of  the  entire  region.      On  April  1st  and  2nd  I  remember  seeing  multiple  flights  with  4  Cobra  Gunships  per  flight  pass  over  Camp  Wilson  in  the  morning  on  the  way  to  the  Dak  To  and  Ben  Het  area.  There  were  also  continuous  flights  of  Phantom  and  A-­‐1  Skyraiders  all  day.  In  the  evening,  2  and  sometimes  3  Cobras  per  group  would  return  but  I  don’t  recall  seeing  flights  of  4.  The  ARVN  Rangers  had  been  deployed  west  of  Dak  To  and  were  heavily  engaged  and  the  Special  Forces  Camps  north  of  Ben  Het  were  under  siege.      I  was  sure  that  we  were  going  to  be  hit  hard  and  possibly  multiple  times  on  the  way  to  Ben  Het.  Fifty  vehicles  from  the  541st  were  loaded  with  pallets  of  105mm  and  155mm  artillery  shell,  500-­‐gallon  POL  bladders,  and  other  misc.  supplies.  The  convoy  also  included  8  each  5  ton  medium  tractor  trailers  from  either  the  64th  or  359th  Trans.  Co.  loaded  with  175mm  artillery  shells.  The  convoy  was  protected  by  all  of  our  gun  trucks  (Royal  Flush,  Deuce  Wild,  and  Kings  of  the  Road),  our  maintenance  truck  (Love  and  Peace),  and  our  gun  jeep  in  addition  to  a  

Page 8: 541st&and&88 &TRANSPORTATION&1970771 ......541st&and&88th&TRANSPORTATION&1970771! CENTRALHIGHLANDSDURING!THE!DRAWDOWN ! ByCpt.RichardRoney!!! 5!of!28! The!Pleikuand!Kontum!Provinces!were!seeing!the!full!impact

541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  8  of  28  

number  of  gun  trucks  from  the  64th/359th  Trans.  Co..  The  convoy  also  had  a  Forward  Air  Controller  (FAC)  in  a  Bird  Dog  flying  cover.  The  convoy  commander  was  Lt.  Ebert,  the  541st  XO.  Lt  Ebert  was  professional,  highly  experienced  with  almost  1  year  in  country,  calm  under  pressure,  and  decisive.  The  perfect  convoy  commander  for  what  appeared  to  be  an  extremely  hazardous  convoy.      We  pulled  out  of  Pleiku  and  had  proceeded  approximately  1  mile  north  of  Artillery  Hill  when  we  saw  extending  for  hundreds  of  meters  on  both  sides  of  the  road  ARVN  tanks  and  APCs  with  tarps  tied  to  them  as  shelters.  This  extended  for  miles.  I  was  amazed  that  they  had  brought  up  a  major  ARVN  unit  as  reinforcement  in  such  a  short  period  of  time.  As  we  passed  through  Kontum  and  proceeded  toward  Dak  To  we  saw  that  there  was  no  road  security  and  the  strong  points  in  the  city  and  at  the  bridges  had  been  abandoned.  The  ARVN  unit  we  passed  had  abandoned  the  entire  region  from  just  north  of  Pleiku  to  the  northern  extent  of  II  Corp.  It  struck  me  that  if  the  NVA  blew-­‐up  a  bridge  with  the  convoy  on  both  sides,  I  could  lose  my  entire  company    

Page 9: 541st&and&88 &TRANSPORTATION&1970771 ......541st&and&88th&TRANSPORTATION&1970771! CENTRALHIGHLANDSDURING!THE!DRAWDOWN ! ByCpt.RichardRoney!!! 5!of!28! The!Pleikuand!Kontum!Provinces!were!seeing!the!full!impact

541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  9  of  28  

 NVA Offensive April 1970 and 541st and 88th Area of Operation      

         We  continued  north  to  Dak  To  and  turned  west  for  the  remaining  10  kilometers  on  Rte.  512  to  Ben  Het.  Dak  To  was  approximately  10  miles  from  the  border  and  major  elements  of  an  NVA  division  were  in  the  area  west  of  Dak  To.  We  wound  along  Rte.  512  to  Ben  Het  that  was  about  1  mile  East  of  the  Laotian  border.  The  convoy  arrived  at  Ben  Het  without  being  ambushed.  As  we  arrived  2  C-­‐130’s  flew  over  the  Special  Forces  camp.  One  of  the  C-­‐130s  flew  over  the  convoy  and  approached  

Page 10: 541st&and&88 &TRANSPORTATION&1970771 ......541st&and&88th&TRANSPORTATION&1970771! CENTRALHIGHLANDSDURING!THE!DRAWDOWN ! ByCpt.RichardRoney!!! 5!of!28! The!Pleikuand!Kontum!Provinces!were!seeing!the!full!impact

541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  10  of  28  

the  landing  strip  at  an  extremely  steep  angle.  I  remember  a  platoon  of  soldiers  from  the  firebase  running  flat  out  toward  the  landing  strip  with  a  2  ½  truck  following.      The  gun  truck  that  I  was  in  stopped  on  a  ridge  overlooking  the  firebase.  The  firebase  was  loaded  with  105mm  and  155mm  howitzers  and  with  175mm  self-­‐propelled  guns  (Long  Toms).  The  firebase  had  Dusters  to  bolster  perimeter  security.  We  went  down  to  the  firebase  to  get  a  close  look  at  the  unloading  operation.  It  was  a  thing  of  beauty.  A  traffic  manager  was  bringing  the  loaded  trucks  on  a  wide  swing  to  end  in  a  line  of  5  trucks  facing  away  from  the  firebase.  A  number  of  soldiers  from  the  firebase  were  at  the  side  of  this  line  and  on  a  signal  from  the  traffic  manager  they  ran  out  and  dropped  the  tailgates  on  the  trucks  and  then  ran  back  to  the  side.  On  signal  the  traffic  manager  pumped  his  arm  and  the  2  ½’s  floored  their  vehicles  in  reverse  until  the  traffic  manager  gave  the  signal  to  lock  them  up.  The  cargo  came  flying  out  of  the  trucks.  The  drivers  then  floored  the  vehicles  and  returned  to  the  ridge  to  line  up  for  the  return  trip.  I  suspect  that  at  least  half  of  the  convoy  was  unloaded  before  the  last  vehicle  of  the  convoy  arrived.  The  5  ton  tractors  dropped  their  trailers  and  lined  up  for  the  return.  The  convoy  departed  and  returned  to  Pleiku  without  incident.      It  occurred  to  me  later  that  the  only  reason  to  resupply  Ben  Het  from  the  air  was  if  they  were  concerned  that  our  convoy  would  not  complete  the  resupply.  Ben  Het  had  to  be  resupplied.  I  still  don’t  understand  why  we  weren’t  hit  hard  on  the  road  into  Ben  Het  and  can  only  attribute  it  to  the  NVA  being  tied  down  by  the  ARVN  Rangers.  Thank  God  we  weren’t  hit.      A  few  days  later  the  541st  picked-­‐up  4  companies  of  Mike  Forces  and  transported  them  to  Dak  To  in  support  of  the  ARVN  Rangers  who  were  locked  in  heavy  combat.  Upon  arriving  at  the  drop-­‐off  point  at  Dak  To  

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541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  11  of  28  

the  convoy  was  mortared  while  dropping  them  off.  The  Mike  Forces  formed  up  and  moved  out  at  a  run  toward  the  sound  of  the  rounds  leaving  the  tubes.  Less  than  a  week  later  the  541st  mission  was  to  transport  the  remaining  3  companies  of  Mike  Forces  to  Dak  To.  The  companies  were  in  formation  when  the  convoy  arrived  and  after  a  brief  argument  all  three  companies  threw  down  their  weapons,  ruck  sacks,  and  stripped  out  of  their  uniforms  and  headed  for  the  gate.  The  leaders  of  the  Mike  Forces  closed  the  gates  and  told  them  the  mission  was  cancelled.  I  gather  that  reports  had  gotten  back  to  this  group  about  the  meat  grinder  that  they  were  going  to  face  at  Dak  To.  Their  action  is  amazing  since  the  Mike  Forces  had  been  fighting  the  NVA  in  pitched  battles  along  the  border  since  before  1965.      The  Northern  portion  of  the  Central  Highlands  held  but  at  a  heavy  price.  The  23rd  Battalion  of  the  2nd  Ranger  Group  deployed  west  of  Dak  To  with  473  men  at  the  beginning  of  April.  After  4  days  of  combat  a  corridor  was  opened  to  the  battalion  and  44  wounded  rangers  escaped.  SSG  Littrell,  an  advisor  to  this  battalion,  received  the  Medal  of  Honor  for  his  action  during  this  battle.  I  had  met  6  Ranger  officers  that  were  advisors  to  the  ARVN  Rangers  a  few  weeks  earlier  and  heard  in  early  April  that  none  of  them  survived  the  first  few  days  of  battle.  I  hope  that  wasn’t  accurate.  One  of  the  Special  Forces  camps  north  of  Ben  Het  along  with  a  fortified  village  was  over-­‐run  but  later  retaken  with  the  help  of  2  companies  of  Mike  Forces.  I  did  not  hear  the  level  of  casualties  to  the  other  ARVN  Ranger  battalions  nor  to  the  Mike  Forces  that  we  transported  into  Dak  To.  From  what  was  reported,  the  NVA  remained  in  this  area  and  kept  the  Special  Forces  camps  under  siege  until  the  beginning  of  the  Cambodian  Invasion.      The  541st  was  part  of  the  units  directly  responsible  for  holding  the  northern  portion  of  the  Central  Highlands.  Ben  Het  would  have  been  hard  pressed  without  the  resupply  in  early  April  and  that  would  have  

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541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  12  of  28  

jeopardized  the  entire  area.  The  Mike  Forces  delivered  to  Dak  To  helped  stabilize  the  area.  The  men  of  the  541st  never  let  down  a  unit  in  the  field  regardless  of  the  risk.  After  I  had  seen  them  perform  at  Ben  Het  and  had  in  an  earlier  convoy  seen  the  gun  trucks  respond  to  a  “Contact!  Contact!  Contact!”  by  flooring  the  truck  and  charging  the  ambush  site,  I  was  convinced  that  these  men  were  as  good  as  it  gets.  They  didn’t  want  to  be  there  and  were  operating  at  a  time  when  a  significant  portion  of  the  public  back  home  despised  them  for  being  in  Viet  Nam.  In  spite  of  this  they  never  let  their  friends  down  nor  the  men  they  were  supporting.  These  men  were  as  good  as  any  that  put  on  the  uniform  in  our  country’s  history.      As  a  footnote,  I  read  the  Stars  &  Stripes  account  of  the  NVA  offensive  sometime  around  mid-­‐April.  They  stated  that  a  major  enemy  offensive  had  begun  in  the  Central  Highlands  and  that  the  “valiant”  5th  ARVN  Division  was  tied  down  in  heavy  combat  between  Pleiku  and  Kontum.  That  was  the  end  of  the  write-­‐up.  I  never  read  another  Stars  &  Stripes.  To  be  fair,  I  never  saw  nor  heard  of  anyone  that  saw  a  correspondent  along  the  border  region  of  the  Central  Highlands.  This  was  probably  some  PR  move  to  build  up  the  confidence  of  the  ARVN  troops.  Stealing  valor  from  the  ARVN  Rangers  and  Mike  Forces  that  fought  and  died  in  this  battle  for  a  PR  move  is  as  low  as  it  gets.      CAMBODIAN  INVASION      The  afternoon  prior  to  the  Cambodian  invasion  a  convoy  of  approximately  40  trucks  of  the  541st  were  awaiting  a  late  afternoon  departure.  The  convoy  was  loaded  with  500-­‐gallon  JP4  bladders  and  with  ammunition.  We  stopped  by  the  Special  Forces  camp  in  Pleiku  for  additional  cargo  and  the  convoy  kicked  late  in  the  afternoon.  As  everyone  in  the  Highlands  knew,  you  did  not  run  this  type  of  mission  in  low  risk  areas.  Running  a  convoy  at  this  time  of  day  towards  the  border  

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541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  13  of  28  

and  into  an  area  that  had  been  pretty  much  abandoned  by  regular  army  units  was  a  highly  risky  mission.  One  of  my  platoon  sergeants  was  the  convoy  commander.  Our  destination  was  the  Plei  Me  Special  Forces  Camp,  which  is  located  WSW  of  Pleiku  and  was  about  10  miles  east  of  the  Cambodian  border.  This  camp  was  set  up  as  a  trip  wire  to  monitor  the  1st  NVA  Division  whose  base  camp  had  been  in  the  Chu  Pong  Massif/Ia  Drang  Valley  area  of  Cambodia  since  at  least  the  early  1960’s  and  probably  since  the  1950’s.      The  trip  to  Plei  Me  was  uneventful.  The  convoy  arrived  at  Plei  Me  at  dusk  and  off-­‐loaded  the  fuel  bladders  along  side  of  the  runway.  We  spent  the  night  in  the  Special  Forces  Camp,  which  was  a  rather  impressive  earthen  fort.  It  was  an  interesting  experience  to  see  how  the  Montagnards  lived  in  the  camps  and  how  the  camps  were  designed.          

 

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541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  14  of  28  

 Cobras  at  Plei  Me  SF  Camp  morning  of  Invasion    

 Cobras  gunship  circling  Plei  Me  while  other  Cobras  are  refueling  

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541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  15  of  28  

 Shortly  after  dawn  the  Cobra  ground  crew  helicoptered  in  and  we  off-­‐loaded  the  refueling  pumps.  At  this  time  there  were  already  6  to  8  Cobra  gunships  on  the  ground  to  refuel  and  another  6  to  8  hovering  overhead.  After  off-­‐loading  the  remaining  cargo  the  convoy  headed  back  to  Pleiku.  We  passed  convoys  of  ARVN  units  deploying  west  in  support  of  the  Cambodian  Invasion.  A  short  time  later  3  to  4  C130’s  flew  over  the  Chu  Pong  Massif  and  dropped  10,000-­‐pound  fuel  air  bombs  with  parachutes  attached.  These  bombs  made  instant  landing  zones  and  clearings  for  firebases.  The  bombs  are  known  today  as  Daisy  Cutters  and  this  was  probably  the  first  time  they  were  used  in  combat.      The  elements  of  the  4th  Division  helicoptered  in  for  one  last  battle  with  the  NVA  in  the  border  area.  As  was  the  case  every  time  the  US  met  the  NVA  in  a  major  battle,  the  fighting  was  bitter  and  the  NVA  fought  and  died  and  only  gave  ground  when  forced  out.  The  541st  along  with  other  companies  of  the  8th  Group  convoyed  supplies  to  the  Plei  Me  or  Duc  Co.  Special  Forces  camps  to  resupply  the  4th  Division.  After  less  than  2  weeks  the  4th  Division  withdrew  from  Cambodia  and  returned  to  An  Khe.      The  4th  Division  had  spent  most  of  their  time  in  Viet  Nam  fighting  along  the  border  in  the  Central  Highlands.  They  stayed  in  this  area  whereas  other  units  such  as  the  1st  Air  Cav.,  173  Airborne  Brigade,  101st  Airborne,  and  other  units  were  withdrawn  and  were  initially  sent  to  less  intense  areas  after  a  period  of  significant  battles.  The  4th  Div.  has  a  proud  history  and  their  battles  in  the  Central  Highlands  is  part  of  that  heritage.    

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541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  16  of  28  

 After  the  lack  of  reporting  on  the  An  Khe/Ben  Het  battle  it  is  not  surprising  that  the  Cambodian  Invasion  in  the  Central  Highlands  was  not  reported.  To  this  day  you  will  be  hard  pressed  to  find  any  reference  to  it.  This  doesn’t  diminish  what  the  541st  and  other  companies  in  the  8th  Trans.  Group  did  in  support  of  the  Cambodian  Invasion.    Montagnard village and ARVN units deploying  

     

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541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  17  of  28  

     Cheo  Reo      The  541st  occasionally  ran  resupply  convoys  to  Ban  Me  Thuot  and  Cheo  Reo  in  Darlac  Province.  These  are  interesting  because  they  are  so  different  from  other  convoys.  Sometime  in  June  we  left  Pleiku  with  about  40  trucks  and  all  of  our  gun  trucks,  maintenance  truck,  and  gun  jeep.  A  FAC  in  a  Bird  Dog  flew  cover  for  us.  QL-­‐14  south  of  Pleiku  is  not  paved  and  it  was  extremely  dusty.  There  were  no  combat  units  along  the  route;  we  were  on  our  own.      As  was  the  case  when  running  on  an  unpaved  road  all  of  the  vehicles  ran  in  the  tracks  of  the  vehicle  in  front  of  them.  About  10  miles  south  of  Pleiku  the  vehicle  behind  the  gun  truck  I  was  in  hit  an  anti-­‐tank  mine  and  flipped  over  on  its  side.  The  FAC  did  a  wing  over  and  flew  almost  

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541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  18  of  28  

directly  over  us  at  a  few  hundred  feet  and  fired  a  WP  rocket  at  the  most  likely  location  for  an  ambush.  The  driver  of  the  truck  was  injured  but  not  critically.  The  sand  bags  on  the  floor  of  his  vehicle  probably  saved  him.  We  left  the  maintenance  vehicle  with  him  until  the  medevac  arrived  and  radioed  battalion  to  send  out  a  wrecker  to  retrieve  the  truck.  We  slowed  the  convoy  until  the  maintenance  truck  rejoined  the  convoy.      We  proceeded  south  on  Ql-­‐14  and  then  SE  on  another  road  into  Cheo  Reo.  Two  things  struck  me  about  this  mission.  First,  I  don’t  recall  any  other  vehicles  on  the  road.  Second,  we  drove  through  a  mountain  pass  that  looked  like  the  ambush  site  that  you  had  seen  in  every  movie  growing  up.  The  road  in  the  pass  snaked  back  and  forth  through  huge  boulders  that  were  right  up  to  the  edge  of  the  road.  The  boulders  towered  over  the  road  and  the  vehicles.      We  arrived  at  Cheo  Reo  without  further  incidents.  We  delivered  the  cargo  and  spent  the  night  there  and  then  headed  back  the  next  day.  The  security  of  missions  in  Darlac  Province  relied  on  their  random  and  infrequent  scheduling  and  that  NVA  would  not  bother  to  set  an  ambush  and  wait  for  a  convoy.  That  works  on  the  trip  to  the  destination  but  they  know  you  are  returning  the  next  day.  Luck  was  with  us  and  we  returned  safely  to  Pleiku.      541st  to  An  Khe      Some  time  during  June  the  541st  was  broken  up.  One  of  the  platoons  was  sent  to  the  Mekong  Delta,  one  was  reassigned  to  the  64th  Trans.  Co.  that  remained  in  Pleiku,  and  the  remaining  line  platoon,  HQ,  and  maintenance  platoons  were  moved  to  An  Khe.  The  platoon  sent  to  the  Mekong  Delta  was  reunited  with  the  company  in  January  of  1971.  One  of  the  drivers  told  me  that  when  someone  in  the  Delta  saw  the  gun  

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541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  19  of  28  

truck  and  the  condition  of  the  vehicle  and  the  ½  inch  armor  plating  in  the  door,  he  was  asked  if  he  thought  he  was  John  Wayne.  NO!  John  Wayne  was  an  actor  portraying  men  like  them.      This  was  a  sad  fate  for  a  first  class  company  that  deserved  much  better.  These  men  were  as  good  as  it  gets  and  continuously  went  above  and  beyond.  I  turned  over  command  of  the  541st  about  a  month  and  a  half  after  arriving  in  An  Khe.      88th  Transportation  Company      On  or  about  the  end  of  June  1970  at  An  Khe  I  assumed  command  of  the  88th  Trans.  Co.,  a  Trailer  Terminal  operation,  and  a  Signal  Squad  responsible  for  the  communication  link  along  QL-­‐19.  The  88th’s  senior  NCO  was  First  Sergeant  Watkins.  This  command  along  with  the  541st  Trans.  Co.  was  detached  from  the  battalion  HQ  that  was  located  in  the  same  base  camp  as  the  8th  Trans.  Group.  The  battalion  commander  was  Lt  Col  Daniels.  I  was  comfortable  with  having  a  command  operating  independent  of  the  battalion  as  that  was  the  situation  with  the  76th  Trans.  Co.  I  commanded  in  Germany.    

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541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  20  of  28  

 Trailer Transfer and Maintenance Yard at An Khe  

     The  88th  Trans.  Co.  was  a  medium  truck  (5  ton  tractor/trailer)  company  with  line  haul  responsibilities  for  POL  and  general  cargo  along  QL-­‐19  from  Qui  Nhon  to  Pleiku.  This  company  shared  the  same  “long  hard  ride”  and  ambush  experiences  that  have  been  recounted  extensively.  As  I  was  the  only  officer  in  this  command  for  an  extended  period  of  time  I  pretty  much  stayed  in  An  Khe.  I  missed  riding  with  the  convoys  but  was  confident  in  the  professionalism  of  the  men  in  the  trucks  and  gun  trucks  as  well  as  the  convoy  commanders.  At  least  once  a  month  I  would  travel  to  battalion  HQ  for  meetings  and  on  rare  occasions  I  went  to  Pleiku  

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541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  21  of  28  

.  

   

Page 22: 541st&and&88 &TRANSPORTATION&1970771 ......541st&and&88th&TRANSPORTATION&1970771! CENTRALHIGHLANDSDURING!THE!DRAWDOWN ! ByCpt.RichardRoney!!! 5!of!28! The!Pleikuand!Kontum!Provinces!were!seeing!the!full!impact

541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  22  of  28  

 Communication base on mountain in 4th Div. Base Camp. This area was fortified against attack with bunkers, concertina, Claymores, etc  

   I  thought  that  the  88th  was  relatively  secure  in  An  Khe  as  long  as  the  4th  Division  was  there  and  that  the  convoys  would  only  be  hit  with  harassing  ambushes  until  the  NVA  had  time  to  regroup  after  the  Cambodian  Invasion.  Two  men  in  the  88th  died  on  convoys  during  this  time;  one  a  gunner  in  a  gun  truck  and  the  other  a  driver.  Other  men  were  wounded  and  medevac’d.  As  was  standard  in  Viet  Nam  we  didn’t  hear  any  more  about  them  once  they  were  transferred  to  a  hospital.  If  they  stayed  local  we  would  visit  them  in  the  hospital.              The  Korean  White  Horse  Division  was  responsible  for  the  area  from  Qui  Nhon  to  the  top  of  the  An  Khe  Pass.  These  troops  were  first  class  and  I  was  confident  that  if  convoys  were  hit  that  they  would  be  there  in  support.  I  was  convinced  that  after  a  lull  we  were  going  to  be  hit  hard  

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541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  23  of  28  

as  the  NVA  moved  to  fill  the  vacuum  as  the  US  combat  divisions  withdrew.  The  battle  for  Dak  To  severely  weakened  the  only  units  along  the  border  that  were  willing  to  fight.  The  Special  Forces  were  turning  the  border  camps  over  to  the  ARVN  and  the  Special  Forces  would  be  substantially  out  of  country  by  December  1970.  The  Mike  Forces  had  been  turned  over  to  mercenaries  that  I  suspect  were  being  run  by  the  CIA.  The  SOG  units  remained.          

       

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541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  24  of  28  

                 The  base  camp  at  An  Khe  was  the  target  of  sapper  attacks  for  most  of  the  time  that  I  was  there.  For  most  of  the  time  the  sappers  were  after  the  Hueys.  Toward  the  end  of  1970  the  4th  Division  was  rotating  back  to  the  States.  This  left  a  huge  gap  in  the  base  camp  that  had  a  26  mile  perimeter.  The  base  camp  became  a  ghost  town  and  now  the  sapper  attacks  were  aimed  at  the  individual  company  billets.  We  had  a  perimeter  around  the  company  that  was  manned  at  night.  We  were  not  hit  but  other  companies  had  their  billets  blown  up  by  sapper  attacks  during  this  period.      

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541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  25  of  28  

 Billets destroyed by sapper attack, lower slopes of mountain inside Base Camp in background. Sappers attacked from the mountain inside the Base Camp    

     

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541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  26  of  28  

The  other  unique  aspect  about  the  88th  Trans.  Co.  at  An  Khe  was  the  rapid  response  to  ambushes  along  QL-­‐19  from  the  An  Khe  Pass  to  the  Mang  Yang  Pass.  If  a  gun  truck  (Pandemonium,  Satisfaction,  or  ?)  was  not  committed  or  if  they  had  returned  from  their  convoy  then  they  were  on-­‐call  to  respond  to  any  ambush.  The  image  of  these  men  responding  to  an  ambush  is  reminiscent  of  the  pilots  of  the  RAF  scrambling  to  meet  the  Nazi  planes  in  the  Battle  of  Britain.  One  minute  total  calm  and  the  next  men  were  running  and  grabbing  flak  jackets  and  steel  pots  as  they  scrambled  into  the  gun  trucks  and  floored  it  to  support  the  ambushed  convoy.  If  you  were  out  there  in  an  ambush  you  knew  that  the  88th  was  all  in.      Sometime  in  the  last  few  months  of  1970  the  NVA  had  moved  down  to  An  Khe  and  after  mortaring  our  convoy  they  ambushed  a  mechanized  company  from  the  4th  Division  that  was  sent  out  to  clear  the  area.  This  was  the  beginning  of  a  battle  that  lasted  for  about  a  week  during  which  QL-­‐19  at  the  An  Khe  Pass  was  closed.  A  relatively  short  time  after  this  the  4th  Division  left  for  home.  Some  time  in  January  of  1971  the  88th  moved  down  to  Cha  Rang  and  occupied  the  billets  vacated  by  the  523rd  Trans.  Co.  that  had  relocated  to  I  Corp  in  support  of  the  ARVN’s  invasion  of  Laos  (Lam  Son  719).      Prior  to  leaving  Viet  Nam  in  late  February  1971  I  had  an  opportunity  to  spend  a  few  days  in  Pleiku.  I  was  glad  for  the  opportunity  to  see  Pleiku  one  last  time  before  leaving.  The  day  I  was  leaving  there  was  radio  traffic  of  a  major  ambush  in  the  An  Khe  Pass  and  the  gun  trucks  were  pulling  out  of  the  base  camp  to  support  the  ambushed  convoy.  This  was  the  ambush  during  which  Medal  of  Honor  recipient  Larry  Dahl  was  killed.  By  that  evening  I  was  in  Cam  Ran  Bay  and  the  next  morning  I  was  on  a  flight  to  the  US.  I  was  out  of  the  army  the  following  day  and  put  Viet  Nam  out  of  my  mind  for  the  next  35  years  and  have  only  recently  pulled  back  some  of  the  memories.  

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541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  27  of  28  

   My  underlying  conviction  in  every  company  I  commanded  in  Germany  and  Viet  Nam  was  that  the  company  was  what  it  did  on  the  road.  If  you  weren’t  on  the  road,  your  only  reason  to  exist  was  to  support  the  men  that  were  on  the  road.  This  was  my  approach  also  in  interactions  with  the  battalion  HQ  and  staff.  The  maintenance  platoons,  trailer  transfer  and  maintenance  platoon,  signal  squad,  and  the  HQ  platoon  did  an  outstanding  job  of  supporting  our  mission.  The  major  risk,  however,  was  borne  by  the  men  in  the  line  platoons,  gun  truck  crews,  and  crews  of  the  maintenance  vehicles  in  the  convoys.  

 The  1970  and  71  period  was  a  period  of  increasing  isolation.  Much  of  the  public  and  most  of  the  media/movies  were  against  the  soldiers  that  fought  in  Viet  Nam.  I  remain  convinced  that  much  of  this  was  from  the  “men”  that  would  have  been  subject  to  the  draft  if  they  weren’t  hiding  in  colleges  (This  was  the  genesis  of  the  “Me  Generation”  which  accurately  described  them).  They  hid  behind  the  men  from  families  that  

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541st  and  88th  TRANSPORTATION  1970-­‐71  CENTRAL  HIGHLANDS  DURING  THE  DRAWDOWN  

By  Cpt.  Richard  Roney    

  28  of  28  

could  not  afford  college.  The  drawdown  also  resulted  in  a  growing  sense  of  isolation  as  the  politicians  and  some  of  the  military  leadership  was  more  concerned  with  their  advancement  than  with  the  soldiers  in  the  field.  Winning  was  no  longer  even  a  consideration.  The  reality  of  isolation  struck  home  as  the  combat  units  departed.  Equally  as  difficult  was  the  period  after  Viet  Nam  in  the  corrosive  atmosphere  that  existed.  We  all  were  scarred  from  that  experience.  I  am  glad  that  I  had  the  great  privilege  of  commanding  units  with  the  brave  men  that  were  in  Viet  Nam.  In  our  generation’s  time  of  great  conflict  when  men  were  called  upon  to  stand  and  be  counted  ….  you  answered  the  call.  It  was  all  the  more  difficult  because  of  what  was  happening  around  you.  You  never  let  down  your  fellow  soldiers  in  the  field  and  you  were  always  there  for  each  other.  You  are  the  best  of  our  generation  and  you  are  as  good  as  any  that  came  before  or  have  stood  up  since.  I  am  proud  to  have  served  with  you.          Cpt.  Roney          Note:  Thank  you  to  my  daughter  MK  Roney  for  developing  the  map,  editing,  and  technical  support  with  the  pictures.