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Assisting Caddy 03by Scott Powell, Colonel, USAF, Retired I was in the 34th Tactical Fighter Squadron at Korat
Royal Thai Air Base, Thailand, in 1972. We were the "Men in Black." I was
a very junior Captain then, but had come directly from a previous assignment at
DaNang Air Base, South Vietnam. All USAF squadrons in Southeast Asia seemed to
be manned by junior officers. There was usually only one or two
patch wearers per base, plus a handful of second tour fighter types, plus a
handful of heavy drivers and (old . . . it seemed at the time) Lt. Cols who had
avoided a combat tour to that point. Eighty percent were
Lieutenants it seemed. Leadership of the 35th was strong. So it was the
469th, by the way. I remain loyal to my leadership in the 34th, but some have
said it was a cut below the others. Future Lt. General Chuck Cunningham was one
of my Ops Officers, then. He was a top notch combat leader and USAF leader.
Anyway, I freely admitted while engaged in all this, that the performance of the
35th turned out to be a cut above the other squadrons. On a per-combat-day
basis, they got more positive results than the other two squadrons. Strike EscortAs Linebacker I quickly came to be organized, Korat
Air Base assumed the "strike escort" role, whereby our flights of F-4Es
configured with missiles instead of bombs escorted strike flights. The
purpose of strike escorts was to ward off MiG attacks and protect the F-4
bombers going to and from the target area and generally help sound the alarm for
threats of all kinds. So, typically, three or more flights of four F-4s of
bombers and the same number of strike escorts would travel to and from the
target of the day. There were some exceptions, but that role is what most of
the missions up North were for the F-4 squadrons based at Korat. The Long DelayOn that day, the mission briefer at Korat made a very
specific point for me to wait until the preceding flight had taken off before
doing so with my four ship flight. The ground choreography on that day was as
precise and dramatic as any of the other Linebacker launches. We were toward
the back of the parade to the runway. There was a relatively inexperienced Lt.
Col. leading the flight ahead of me. The Korat arming area was large enough for
two flights to arm, with spares. My flight was in position on time, next to the
other flight. We armed up and were ready, but the flight ahead of me had a
problem and was delayed for a long time. As more and more time passed it become
apparent that making our tanker rendezvous at the designated time was going to
be very difficult or impossible. The order for me to take off after the
preceding flight was so public and so clear that I did not request permission to
take off ahead of the preceding flight. Radio equipped supervisors were all
over the place, but none of them told me to take off before the other flight. I
followed orders, an old and important military tradition. We waited for the
flight ahead of us to depart. Caddy 3 Goes DownJuly 20, 2007, was the day Caddy 3 (Joe Lee Burns in
the front and Mike Nelson in the back) got shot down. See "A
Ridge Too Far," for Joe Lee Burns' first person account of getting shot
down. Most of us egressed north
of the ridge after the mission as planned, but my memory is that Joe Lee egressed
south of the ridge, where he could see (and be seen) by the major line of
communication east from Hanoi and its defenses. Joe would remember better, but
I think it was a 57mm shell that put a big hole in his aircraft. I remember
hearing the emergency beeper on guard frequency after Joe and Mike ejected and
some of the radio traffic as it became clear that somebody got hit and went
down. Caddy 3 managed to make it feet wet just off the mouth of the Red River
in the vicinity of Haiphong. They were among the Karst islands. The rest
of us were overflying them in the water on the way out of North Vietnam, but we
worried about making it to our post-strike tankers to refuel. Having probably never strafed over water before, our
land-lubber USAF F-4 pilots both said that they almost killed themselves with
the overwater strafe. It was hard to judge altitude and distance over water
without any good references. As it turned out, it was fortuitous that my second
element was too late to the tanker and not able to ingress into North Vietnam
because they were waiting at the egress point in case they were needed. On that
day, Joe Lee Burns and Mike Nelson needed their help. |
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