Some of the pilots who flew the Thud
Transcription
Some of the pilots who flew the Thud
The F-105 Thud, a legend flown by legends file:///Users/edmarek/Documents/Talking%20Proud/HistoryTh... The F-105 Thud, a legend flown by legends Go! August 30, 2005 Some of the pilots who flew the Thud During the course of our research, it became obvious that the Rolling Thunder target area in northeastern North Vietnam was a mighty dangerous area. It is also obvious that our pilots were flying an airplane not designed for the job for which they were tasked. So, as is almost always the case, you are left with the pilots and their crew chiefs and mechanics, the men and women who have to get the job done no matter what the challenges We can't introduce you to all of them, but we want to introduce you to some so you can get a feel for what kind of people they were, and what kind of missions they flew. There is no priority to the way we present these guys; the order simply reflects the order in which we found out about them. Let's start with Major Cliff Cushman, 469th TFS, Korat. He was shot down in roughly the same area (Kep, North Vietnam) as was Captain Leetun, and he was shot down about a week after Leetun was lost. The date was September 27, 1966 . We honor service and sacrifice. Please click the "Donate" button and contribute $20 or more to help keep this station alive. Thanks. Table of Contents Introduction Cushman was number two in a flight of three F-105s targeted at a railroad bridge near the Kep Air Base. Cushman's callsign was “Devil 2." He followed Devil Lead into the target, dropped his load, and, after pulling off the target was hit by enemy anti-aircraft artillery (AAA). He reported losing stability, augmentation and aircraft power. Devil Lead saw Cushman's afterburner light, a simultaneous torch of flames right aft, and then Devil 2 broke apart. Cushman did manage to eject, and there was a beeper, but radio contact could not be made with him following ejection. 1 of 16 F-105 Thunderchief, the airplane The F-105's targets, Rolling Thunder in northeastern North Vietnam Some of the pilots who flew the Thud Concluding comments 7/27/10 4:33 PM The F-105 Thud, a legend flown by legends file:///Users/edmarek/Documents/Talking%20Proud/HistoryTh... Medals of Honor This photograph is of the limestone karst topography and rice fields in nearby China, the same as encountered in northeast North Vietnam by our pilots. Photo credit: provided by www.downtheroad.org The Ongoing Global Bicycle Adventure The area in which he ejected, populated by rough karsts, was too dangerous for a search and rescue (SAR). Years later, an investigation team learned from local villagers that a USAF pilot had ejected into this area, had very bad head wounds, probably from hitting the limestone of the karsts, died and was buried, but the burial site had reportedly washed away. To our knowledge, Cushman has never been found. Skeptics doubt the story, worrying that he met his fate at the hands of enemy forces. You might know the name Cliff Cushman. He was a world-class hurdler, captain of the Kansas Track & Field Team, a two-time All-American at Kansas (Class of 1961) out of Grand Forks, North Dakota, a native of Iowa, and a 1960 Rome Olympics Silver Medalist in the 400-meter hurdles, beaten by the famous Glenn Davis. Dave Clark, his roommate at those Olympics, a pole vaulter, described him as a gentle guy, quiet, introverted, a "perfect gentleman." Clark could not understand why Cushman did not try to get out of Vietnam. He probably did not know that Cushman was in Air Force ROTC and fell in love with jets then. Nonetheless, Clark would comment, "He hardly seemed like a warrior." Clark, knowing Cushman's competitiveness on the track and field, should have known better. He would later come to learn about the magic. On May 1, 2004, Clark wrote this: 2 of 16 On Mar. 10 1967, then Captain Merlyn H. Dethlefsen, Greenville, Iowa and 354th TFS was flying an F-105F as No. 3 in a four-plane formation on a mission against the Thai Nguyen Steel Mill, 50 miles north of Hanoi. The task for the F-105s was to knock out surface-to-air (SAM) and antiaircraft gun sites before the bombing forces arrived. When the four F-105s made their low-altitude attack run, the flight leader was shot down and No. 2 was damaged so heavily that he had to head homeward. Although standard tactics called for only one attack pass on such a heavily defended area, or two at the most, Lt. Col. Dethlefsen decided not to leave the area, but to continue his attacks. However, a MiG appeared and he had to fly through heavy antiaircraft fire to escape from the MiG; in doing so, his F-105 was also hit and seriously damaged. Instead of heading for home, he elected to carry-on and even after the steel mill had been bombed and the bombing force had withdrawn, he, along with his wingman, stayed in the target area looking for SAM sites. After evading a second MiG and then having his F-105 hit once again by flak, the he spotted two SAM sites and attacked, destroying 7/27/10 4:33 PM The F-105 Thud, a legend flown by legends file:///Users/edmarek/Documents/Talking%20Proud/HistoryTh... "Attempting to qualify for the '64 Olympics, Cushman fell at the trials in Los Angeles. On the flight home, responding to sympathies, he wrote newspapers in Grand Forks, Iowa and Kansas. He told everyone not to pity him. 'You watched me hit the fifth hurdle, fall and lie on the track in an inglorious heap of skinned elbows, bruised hips, torn knees and injured pride. ... In a split second, all the many years of training, pain, sweat and blisters and agony of running were simply and irrevocably wiped out. But I tried!' He cited Romans 5:3-5, about the link between suffering and endurance and character and hope. And then he dared young people. Dared them to cut their hair, clean up their language, honor their parents, go to church, help someone less fortunate, get in shape, read a book. 'I dare you to look up at the stars, not down in the mud,' he wrote, 'and set your sights on one of them that, up to now, you thought was unattainable.'" You can hear the fire in Cushman's belly in those words. Cushman is listed as number 6 of the 50 greatest sports figures of North Dakota in the 20th century, behind the likes of Roger Maris (New York Yankees), Phil Jackson (NBA player and coach), and Lute Olson (Arizona NCAA basketball coach). Then there's Ed Rasimus's book, When Thunder Rolled. The first line in Chapter 1 is: “How'd I get myself into this?” He goes on to write: “It's May 1966, and I'm riding an airline into San Francisco, on my way to the ol' 'date with destiny.' Flying had been a dream since I was in the seventh grade in Chicago. If I had thought about it a little more, I would have figured out that a guy can get himself dead or even worse doing this kind of thing. Now it was getting serious. Here I was on the downhill slide into the Vietnam air war as a fully qualified F-105 pilot. Clearly an example of knowing exactly what you want until you get it and then finding out it ain't so good. Now the thought continually running through my mind is how do I break the chain. How do I get out of this? 3 of 16 them both. Only then did he head his battered F-105 for friendly territory. For his valor in combat above and beyond the call of duty, Dethlefsen received the Medal of Honor, the third USAF member to receive the award during the South East Asian (SEA) conflict. On April 19, 1967, then Major Leo Thorsness, Walnut Grove, Minnesota and 357th TFS flew an F-105 aircraft on a surface-to-air missile suppression mission over North Vietnam. Lt. Col. Thorsness and his wingman attacked and silenced a surface-to-air missile site with air-to-ground missiles, and then destroyed a second surface-to-air missile site with bombs. In the attack on the second missile site, Lt. Col. Thorsness' wingman was shot down by intensive antiaircraft fire, and the 2 crewmembers abandoned their aircraft. Lt. Col. Thorsness circled the descending parachutes to keep the crewmembers in sight and relay their position to the Search and Rescue Center. During this maneuver, a MiG-17 was sighted in the area. Lt. Col. Thorsness immediately initiated an attack and destroyed the MiG. Because his aircraft was low on fuel, he was forced to depart the area in search of a tanker. Upon 7/27/10 4:33 PM The F-105 Thud, a legend flown by legends file:///Users/edmarek/Documents/Talking%20Proud/HistoryTh... “Why the 105? It must have been an occurrence in my formative years … Or maybe it was that July afternoon … cruising down Route 66 just west of Holbrook, on my way to start Air Force pilot training at Williams AFB outside of Phoenix. Windows open on the '63 Impala, all my worldly possessions in the trunk and the back seat, and me wondering absently about the new world I am about to enter. Then, with a blink of a shadow over the car and a nearly mind-numbing roar, two Thunderchiefs not more than a hundred feet above me blasting down straddling the highway. That's it. That's for me. I've gotta fly the 105. Life couldn't be better than that.” Ned Colburn, and EB-66 Electronic Warfare Officer (EWO), tells about Major “Buns” Frasier, an F-105 pilot in the 333rd TFS at Takhli RTAFB. Buns was 6' 3” tall, 250 lbs, and “had to be lubricated and inserted into the cockpit of the F-105 with a giant shoe horn. Once installed, Buns was literally an integral part of the aircraft and flew it as such.” You can see the budding artist here painting an F-105 on a wall at Takhli during one of the bombing pauses declared by the suits. Colburn goes on to describe a scene at the Officers Club, the wing commander seated alongside “the most beautiful, delectable, round-eye (American female) in an ultra short skirt that only a male in the jungle of Thailand could dream about,” and the chaplain, a former fighter pilot, drinking with a congressman (the round-eye's escort) and smashing their glasses against the teakwood paneling.” being advised that 2 helicopters were orbiting over the downed crew's position and that there were hostile MiGs in the area posing a serious threat to the helicopters, Lt. Col. Thorsness, despite his low fuel condition, decided to return alone through a hostile environment of surface-to-air missile and antiaircraft defenses to the downed crew's position. As he approached the area, he spotted 4 MiG-17 aircraft and immediately initiated an attack on the MiGs, damaging one and driving the others away from the rescue scene. When it became apparent that an aircraft in the area was critically low on fuel and the crew would have to abandon the aircraft unless they could reach a tanker, Lt. Col. Thorsness, although critically short on fuel himself, helped to avert further possible loss of life and a friendly aircraft by recovering at a forward operating base, thus allowing the aircraft in emergency fuel condition to refuel safely. Lt. Col. Thorsness' extraordinary heroism, self-sacrifice, and personal bravery involving conspicuous risk of life were in the highest traditions of the military service, and have reflected great credit upon himself and the U.S. Air Force. Air Force Cross There were some press people with the congressman, and one, from Time magazine, stood next to Buns at the urinal, asking about what it's like to fly the F-105 in combat over North Vietnam. The long and short of it went something like this, with Buns answering a question posed by the reporter: “All we F-105 pilots fight over who gets to fly on Sunday missions where we go to Hanoi, fire our machine 4 of 16 7/27/10 4:33 PM The F-105 Thud, a legend flown by legends file:///Users/edmarek/Documents/Talking%20Proud/HistoryTh... guns to ring the church bell, and when all the little kids come out of the houses to go to Sunday school, we drop napalm on them.” Shocked, the reporter responded, “Major Frasier, you are putting me on in the most absurd fashion, trying to make me look like an idiot!” Buns replied: “You don't need any help making yourself look like an idiot, you Rufus Doofus Dunderhead! All I'm doing is illustrating how your article in Time Magazine will read regardless of what I tell you as the real facts of the matter - so Buzz Off Buster!” End of interview. You gotta love Buns! Ray Merritt was assigned to the 67th TFS of the 18th TFW from Kadena, and rotated in and out of Korat. He flew F-105 missions over North Vietnam between February and September 1965, and was shot down over North Vietnam in September. He was captured and held prisoner in and around North Vietnam until our POWs were released in February 1973. He was interviewed by Dr. Richard Verrone as part of the Vietnam Oral History Project at Texas Tech University. Merritt flew the F-84 for the USAF in combat in Korea, and the F-105 in Vietnam. While in Okinawa, Merritt's job with his nuclear F-105 was “to keep China in bay. We had aircraft on alert same as Strategic Air Command (SAC), to attack targets, if ordered, on the mainland…Southeast Asia was a blip down there where you'd hear about it and didn't seem to be that much going on that we knew of.” Before he knew it, family all settled in at Kadena, Merritt's squadron was ordered to Korat. What stands out in his descriptions of participating in the first Air Force bombing missions into North Vietnam and in the Rolling Thunder operations were the restrictions placed on our pilots, restrictions he scoffed at with noticeable contempt. We'll provide a string of excerpts to give you the feel: “Of course, we had all this stuff laid out on our map where the DMZ was, where we could fly, where we couldn't fly. It was very, very tight control on what you could or could not do if and when we went into North Vietnam … Now also at this time, we were cautioned against saying that we were using Thai airbases. That was still something going on between the US 5 of 16 By our count, thirty-nine F-105 fliers received the Air Force Cross, the second highest award for valor in combat. To our knowledge, only one man has received three Air Force Crosses, Colonel James H. Kasler. During the Korean War, Lt. Kasler flew the F-86 and shot down six enemy MiGs to become one of the USAF's few jet aces, and received the Silver Star and three Distinguished Flying Crosses (DFC). On June 29, 1966, serving as operations officer of the 354th TFS at Takhli RTAFB, Major Kasler's actions earned him his first Air Force Cross while flying as F-105 mission commander of a perfec5t strike on the heavily defended Hanoi petroleum storage complex. Five weeks later, on his 91st mission, he led a formation evaluating low-level delivery against a high priority target. His wingman was hit and ejected, Major. Kasler located the downed pilot, flew cover at low altitude until his fuel was almost exhausted, refueled with a tanker, and returned to direct rescue operations. Flying at low altitude trying to precisely locate his wingman, Kasler's F-105 was struck by ground fire, he ejected, was captured, and served over six years as a POW. Kasler received his third Air 7/27/10 4:33 PM The F-105 Thud, a legend flown by legends file:///Users/edmarek/Documents/Talking%20Proud/HistoryTh... government and the Thai government monarchy saying, 'We don't want the world to know you're using our airbases to bomb North Vietnam.' So, that was, 'Where'd you come from?' 'Well, I don't know' …You don't piddily bomb, use multi-million dollar airplanes and weapons systems to bomb trucks on a trail. It's basically what we were limited to … Unless the White House said, 'Go,' you would have a target that again, restricted areas, restricted locations, restricted ordnance, as to where you could and couldn't bomb. Stupid way to run a war … You were forbidden to attack a surface to air missile (SAM) site unless it launched a missile on an American airplane. You could watch it being built, you could see it being built. You could not attack them. If it launched a missile finally and became operational, the missile site, the SAM site, then it could be targeted, but by now its ringed with many layers of automatic weapons, camouflage, much more difficult target to find and destroy … You couldn't go within so many miles of the DMZ. You couldn't go I think 20 miles, maybe 10 a distance from the Chinese border. You had a 30-mile circle around Hanoi; you couldn't fly inside of or drop bomb expend ordnance inside of. Same thing with Haiphong, the harbor where all the ships were coming into; you could not attack. You could not destroy their capability to conduct war. “I think we all said, 'What the hell, why are we doing this? If you're not out to win, why fight it?” Merritt was shot down on September 16, 1965, in the morning, and was captured almost immediately by armed peasants. He was imprisoned for 7.5 years. Merritt, a retired USAF colonel and now 76, commented recently to Rick Rogers of The San Diego Union-Tribune, on his tour of duty in a Vietnamese prison: Force Cross for his almost inconceivable resistance to abuse by the North Vietnamese, the most notable being the infamous rope torture. In June and July 1968 he refused to meet with visiting delegations sympathetic to the North Vietnamese cause and appear before TV and news cameras. Writing "Valor in three wars" published in the November 1986 edition of Air Force Magazine, John L. frisbee said this about Colonel Kasler: "It took a particular kind of valor to withstand torture, deprivation, solitude, and psychological incursions month after month, year after year, with no end in sight. It also demanded a belief in something more important than one's own life. The bravest suffered the most. Tradition--the memory of great things done together in the past--also inspired and will continue to inspire airmen in combat and in resistance to barbarism if we again face an uncivilized foe. Kasler, through his heroism in the air and his unshakable determination never to yield to attacks on body and mind, is one of those in whom the Air Force tradition of valor resides." "In one way, (being a POW) was a positive. You know that you can survive. You can dig down deep to find whatever is necessary to keep going, whether it is military training or schooling or your God ... We knew that even if we were shot down, our job was not done. We knew that if we could tie up the enemy's assets that they would have to deal with us instead of shooting at our planes." Despite his obvious frustration and contempt for decisions made by the suits in Washington, Merritt and his colleagues were still fighting while roped up in horrendous North Vietnamese prisons. 6 of 16 7/27/10 4:33 PM The F-105 Thud, a legend flown by legends file:///Users/edmarek/Documents/Talking%20Proud/HistoryTh... Then Captain Jacksel M. Broughton next to his Korean war model P-80. Presented by Snow Leopard Productions. Colonel Jack Broughton, a Class of 1945 West Pointer, Korean War veteran, and a Thunderbird pilot (F-84G), flew the F-105 out of Takhli and was the vice wing commander, 355th TFW there. He, like Ed Rasimus and Ray Merritt, is highly critical of the “suits” in Washington who mismanaged the war. That said, he received the Air Force Cross for valor in Vietnam and took the fall at a court martial against two of his fliers who fired back at a Soviet ship in the Gulf of Tonkin that first fired at them. He took responsibility for the retaliatory attack and destroyed a tape that might have proven the two retaliated on their own. He had been recommended for a second Air Force Cross but that recommendation was withdrawn because of his actions. Robert Taylor has painted a portrait of his group of F-105s in the raid on the Thermal Power Plant at Viet Tri in March 1967. Due to a very clever set of maneuvers, the Thuds he led knocked out the AAAs defending the plant and the follow-on force destroyed it. Boughton is quoted saying this, in his typical style: 7 of 16 7/27/10 4:33 PM The F-105 Thud, a legend flown by legends file:///Users/edmarek/Documents/Talking%20Proud/HistoryTh... "Rolling Thunder," by Robert Taylor. Col. Jack Broughton leading a flight of four F-105 "Thuds" on a low level mission to silence AAA defending the Viet Tri power plant near Hanoi, March 12th. 1967. The target was destroyed. Presented by Brooks Art “I led that mission as I wanted to, ignoring all details of altitude, airspeed, and heading given to me by some administrator who knew nothing of Hanoi... it made good flying sense, We flew a smooth mission, everybody did good work... " Air Force Magazine related a story about Lt. Karl Richter entitled, “Here am I. Send me” in its December 1992 edition. Richter, a 1964 graduate of the Air Force Academy, became an F-105 pilot with the 388th TFW at Korat in 1966. Air Force Magazine describes him and his F-105 colleagues this way: “F-105 pilots who flew 'Downtown' into North Vietnam's Route Package One to attack the most heavily defended targets in the history of air warfare were judged by their contemporaries against four standards: courage, skill, aggressiveness, and eagerness for combat. Lieutenant Richter entered this deadly game with enthusiasm and disregard for his own safety. He soon became a flight leader, volunteering for the most hazardous missions. He believed his most important contribution, next to destroying enemy targets, was to pass along his growing knowledge of tactics to newly assigned pilots.” 8 of 16 7/27/10 4:33 PM The F-105 Thud, a legend flown by legends file:///Users/edmarek/Documents/Talking%20Proud/HistoryTh... Richter flew two tours, over 200 missions, and died on a rescue helicopter after ejecting over very difficult karst terrain, suffering multiple injuries after striking the rough rock formations. Memorial statue, 1Lt. Karl Richter, USAF, at the Air Park, Maxwell AFB, Alabama. Photo credit: MSgt. Otto Ubele, USAF, Karl Richter VFW Post 10217, presented by Post 10217. Richter Lounge at the Air Force Academy's Arnold Hall was named in his honor, and a 10-foot tall bronze statue of him stands at Maxwell AFB, home of the Air University. Most recently, the Air Force Academy Class of 2008 has named Richter has its Class Exemplar. The purpose of the Class Exemplar Program is to provide a clear and visible attachment to the great leaders of the past for a new generation of air leaders who will face new challenges in the future. The Class Exemplar serves as the honorary leader of the class, setting its personality and character. The Class Exemplar's model of innovative, pioneering leadership challenges cadets in each class to look forward into the Air Force they will soon be leading. The Class of 2000 was the first class to choose an Exemplar to lead them in the new millennium. Exemplar patches have been added to the cadet athletic jacket above the class year. Look at the company Richter finds himself in: 9 of 16 7/27/10 4:33 PM The F-105 Thud, a legend flown by legends file:///Users/edmarek/Documents/Talking%20Proud/HistoryTh... Class of 2000: General James H. "Jimmy" Doolittle Class of 2001: Brigadier General William "Billy" Mitchell Class of 2002: Captain Lance Peter Sijan Class of 2003: Major Richard I. Bong Class of 2004: Captain Edward V. Rickenbacker Class of 2005: General George S. Patton, Jr. Class of 2006: General Carl A. Spaatz Class of 2007: Lieutenant Colonel Gus Grissom Class of 2008: First Lieutenant Karl Richter As an aside, there is a rumor that Cadet Richter was a "triple centurion" on the punishment tour pad while at the Academy. We understand from a graduate familiar with him that he was indeed a character. Clearly he had spirit! Captain John F. Piowaty and his Thud, handle-bar mustache included. This photo almost makes one want to say, most respectfully, "Dude!" Photo provided by John Piowaty and presented by Internet Modeler. So did Lt. Col. John F. Piowaty, who flew the F-105 as a captain. He wrote the following “Reflections of a Thud driver” for the January-February 1983 edition of the Air University Review: “In looking back on my experiences as an F-105 pilot in the mid-sixties, I realize that some of my strongest recollections involve the general frustration that we Thud drivers felt concerning the restrictions under which 10 of 16 7/27/10 4:33 PM The F-105 Thud, a legend flown by legends file:///Users/edmarek/Documents/Talking%20Proud/HistoryTh... our war against the North was fought. Our rules of engagement (ROE) were defined with a rigid precision that made little sense to us at the time-and which make little more sense to me today.” He further commented: “I remember a protected building in Route Pack I, a church we were told. My wingman, one day, bragged that he got a large warehouse. 'Not a big white building with a pitched roof?' 'Yeah. Why?' 'That was a church. We weren't supposed to hit it.' Well, whatever it was, I got a helluva secondary (explosion) out of it!'” Piowaty, by the way, got credit for helping to take down a span of the infamous Dournier Bridge on the Hanoi raiload and highway in August 1967, arguably the most heavily defended target in North Vietnam. The principle northern entry into Hanoi, the bridge was approximately one mile long and was made up of two highways and a rail line. Lt. Col. Harry W. Schurr led the third strike element and received the Air Force Cross for his gallantry. Piowaty recounts his portion of the mission in Internet Modeler. It's a fascinating read, one that sends shivers up and down your spine, real good "pilot-speak." We are compelled to convey the flavor. The pilots were in the briefing room, a staff sergeant came out and broke the news: target is Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) directed, its "that big bridge heading into Hanoi, oh crap!" 11 of 16 7/27/10 4:33 PM The F-105 Thud, a legend flown by legends file:///Users/edmarek/Documents/Talking%20Proud/HistoryTh... Left to right, Bob Lindsey, Nelson MacDonald, Bob White, Mal Winter (standing). Photo provided by John Piowaty and presented by Internet Modeler. Piowaty was in Bear Flight. Lt. Col. Nelson MacDonald, the squadron commander, was Bear Lead, or Bear One; Mal Winter, Bear Two; Bob Lindsey, Bear Three; Piowaty Bear Four. Col. Bob White, a former X-15 test pilot, was force commander, and Shark Lead, or Shark One. Bear Flight took off as a team, one after the other, about 20 seconds apart. Takeoff speed about 193 knots. Following takeoff, Bear 4 had to accelerate to about 400 to catch up with the others, then throttle back to 350. An air-to-air refueling hookup completed after about 200 miles of flight, then in to the target area. Approaching the Red River near Hanoi, Bear Lead pumped them up to 520 knots, then to 540 knots, smoking down the flight path with the sky now filled with gray and black bursts of heavy-duty AAA. Bear Lead swivels his Thud belly up, hits the afterburner and rolls toward the target, followed by the other three. Each one "pickles off" his bombs and pulls off the target to head home. The join-up point was about seven miles away. Piowaty knew there was a POW camp nearby holding US airmen and decided to swing down to 4,000 feet and let his comrades in the slammer know the hometown Thuds were there and that someone cared about them. Following this, Bear 4 headed to join up with his flight, jacked his Thud up to 630 knots, and all of a sudden he and his machine are immersed in AAA fire. Just as he was to turn to join his flight, Bear 4 got hit, his Thud's tail struck pretty hard. Then Bear 3 was hit. Two out of four are flying hurt. They choose Udorn RTAFB as their emergency landing field, Bear 4's chute does not open on landing, but the arresting cable brings him to a stop. Here's Piowaty's aircraft, Thud 415, safe and sound at Udorn. 12 of 16 7/27/10 4:33 PM The F-105 Thud, a legend flown by legends file:///Users/edmarek/Documents/Talking%20Proud/HistoryTh... F-105 tail number 415 after her mission to attack the "Big Bridge," the Dournier Bridge in Hanoi. Photo provided by John Piowaty and presented by Internet Modeler. On arrival at the Udorn Officers Club with brewski opened, Piowaty learns his 3,000 pound bomb hit the bridge and it was down. Mission accomplished, 55th mission over the North flown, 45 more to go to get into the "100 Club." These photos are of Larry Guarino. We want you to meet him. On the left, you see him courtesy of Thud Ridge Web as a major flying with the 44th TFS at Korat in June 1965, shortly before he was shot down, on his 50th mission over North Vietnam. At the time he was only the 11th American to be captured and he spent nearly eight years in captivity. The middle photo is apparently a photo of him shortly after capture, presented by SOFTVision. We recommend you visit this site to read about him. He was a thorn in the side of the enemy, even while a prisoner. His captors kept telling him they knew he took off from Korat. After all, that's what it said on his 13 of 16 7/27/10 4:33 PM The F-105 Thud, a legend flown by legends file:///Users/edmarek/Documents/Talking%20Proud/HistoryTh... parachute pack and flight suit. He insisted he took off from Da Nang and that his aircraft "crapped out." He also told his captors that the B-52 strikes they were enduring were retaliation for his own shootdown and capture, even though B-52 strikes against Hanoi had not yet begun. His captors pretended they were MiG pilots, trying to impress him, so Larry talked to them in fighter jock slang, lots of acronyms. Of course his captors were not pilots and had no clue about what he was talking, but they could not admit it for fear of losing face. The photo on the far right is Larry in 2001 at the age of 79. He retired a full colonel in 1975. Oh yes, and one more photo. That's young Larry and his bride, Evelyn. This is off the cover of a book, Saved by Love, written by Larry's wife, Evelyn. Evelyn tells the family’s side of the POW story. Of this book, Senator John McCain, himself a former POW, says the following: "Evy Guarino’s graceful account of enduring her husband Larry’s loss to the prison camps of Hanoi, and of ultimately being reunited to lead a glorious new life together, reminds us of the ability of patriotism and faith to overcome even the most severe tests of human will. Set in war and peace, their story, though tinged with suffering, rejoices in love and timeless truths. A wonderful tribute to the sacrifice of all POW/MIA families and the power of the human spirit.” From where we sit, and we know Guarino went through hell while a prisoner, the North Vietnamese, the USAF, and the Thud didn't change the guy much over the years --- at 79 he was still a good looking dude. One final note. Captain Kevin J. Cheney was an F-4E Phantom navigator and Weapons Systems Officer (WSO) stationed at Korat in 1970. He flew over there for two tours, and, at the time of capture, had logged 400 missions over Southeast Asia. His pilot was Major Paul K. Robinson. Like so many Thuds before them, they and their F-4E were shot down on July 1, 1972 while over Kep Airfield, but now by two SAMs that littered the countryside thanks to previous rules of engagement. They ejected just north of Hanoi and were captured immediately. Cheney was sent to the Hanoi Hilton, 14 of 16 7/27/10 4:33 PM The F-105 Thud, a legend flown by legends file:///Users/edmarek/Documents/Talking%20Proud/HistoryTh... and became acquainted with Larry Guarino. Cheney has written this about that: "My most memorable moments while in captivity came when I found and became acquainted with Col. Lawrence Guarino who had been captured in 1965. His oldest son and I had shared an apartment while in college, during which time I met Col. Guarino's wife and three other sons. The information that Col. Guarino and I were able to exchange while in prison was a big aid to both of us. I was very fortunate to have been put in the same camp with him." We could go on forever highlighting these brave F-105 pilots, but we need to slow it down. Just two more photos: Major Bill Vangilder of the 469th TFS at Korat RTAFB presents case of beer to crew chief following completion of 100th Mission on 14 July 1967. Old Vangilder sure looks like he put in a day's work for you and me. And please take special note of the crewchief --- you got it, a two-striper and a damn good one at that! Presented by Thud Ridge Web 15 of 16 7/27/10 4:33 PM The F-105 Thud, a legend flown by legends file:///Users/edmarek/Documents/Talking%20Proud/HistoryTh... Lieutenant Dave Waldrop of the 34th TFS at Korat RTAFB gets the traditional end-of-tour hose. Waldrop is credited with one MiG kill for sure, some argue two. Presented by Thud Ridge Web We've covered a lot of ground. We want to conclude with some closing comments to sum all this up. Concluding comments 16 of 16 7/27/10 4:33 PM
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