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MY POW/MIA's SGT Larry W Maysey COL Gregory I Barras SGT James D Locker SSGT Elmer L Holden CMS Charles D King MAJ Carl B Mitchell OTHER IN TRIBUTE PAGES The Recovery of JG 23 The Search for JG 26 A Visit To The Wall From The Other Side Still The Noblest Calling The Bravest of the Brave The Fiery Loss of Strobe 01 The Prison Camp Raid at Son Tay A Man is Not Dead Until He is Forgotten |
A Man is Not Dead Until He is Forgotten By Ray Davidson, syndicated columnist. He can be reached at ray.davidson@usmc.mil. On March 2, 1965, 104 US and 19 South Vietnamese aircraft struck a small military supply depot and a minor naval base in Quang Khe North Vietnam, a meager beginning to a controversial campaign known as "Operation Rolling Thunder". A little less that fourteen months later LtCol William Earl Cooper's F105D aircraft would be cut in half by a SA-2 surface to air missile on a Rolling Thunder mission north of Hanoi.
Rolling Thunder was controversial because it placed, as W. Hays Parks stated in Rolling Thunder and the Law of War, "unprecedented restrictions on U.S. strike forces ostensibly to protect the civilian population of North Vietnam." Rolling Thunder was conceived as an interdiction campaign to convince the Democratic Republic of Vietnam that they could not win the war. Realizing that Vietnam was more a consumer nation vice a manufacturing nation, the Joint Chiefs of Staff developed a list of 94 key fixed targets to disrupt lines of communication, sever all rail and highways links to China/Russia, destroy and mine harbors and ports, destroy supply and ammunition dumps and lastly target all industrial sites outside of populated areas. President Johnson and then secretary of Defense McNamara not only rejected the "94 list" and its accession of targets but also supplanted a "limited interdiction campaign that passed through six separate phases and seven bombing halts prior to its conclusion on 31 October 1968". Thus creating not a truly military campaign but a politico-military quagmire. Parks said of Rolling Thunder, "Rolling Thunder was not a military campaign in the classical sense but a not-so-clearly defined program of 'signals' evolving from a politico-military strategy in which the political, including psychological, factors were not only predominant but oftentimes exclusive". Lyndon B. Johnson had entrusted the conduct of the war to the militarily incompetent Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara. At the same time, Johnson and McNamara retained and controlled Rolling Thunder target selection through a Tuesday Morning Breakfast "Club" in the family quarters of the White House where a target list was reviewed and "marked-up". This micro management led Johnson to boast "the Air Force couldn't bomb an outhouse in Vietnam without his say so". Such incompetence led to "geographic prohibitions, target denial, and stringent strike restrictions and rules of engagement." This was the political reality of Operation Rolling Thunder on that overcast Sunday, April 24, 1966, when LtCol. Cooper and his strike force left Korat Air Base, Thailand. The aircraft that Cooper and his flight flew that morning was the Republic F-105D "Thunderchief" a supersonic tactical fighter-bomber that could carry 12,000 pounds of ordnance. The plane, nicknamed the "Thud", had already proven its battle worthiness. In addition to its bomb payload the single seat fighter could be mounted with air-to-air and air-to-surface missiles as well a 6,000 round per minute Vulcan cannon.
On this day Coopers plane had a load of six 750-pound bombs. The strike team's target was the Bac Giang Bridge, a highway-railroad bridge located 35 miles northeast of Hanoi. It was a vital link between North Vietnam and China. Cooper and his pilots knew the bridge would be well defended with Surface to Air missiles and anti-aircraft artillery (AAA) emplacements. In fact, two planes and pilots had been lost the day before, this and the fact that the skies were overcast above the bridge with a low flight ceiling made for a dangerous mission. Cooper's flight that day was called Oak, while the second flight of "Thuds" was code named Pecan. Cooper flew as Oak 1, Warren Moon was Oak 2, Jimmy Jones was Oak 3, and Dick Dutton was Oak 4. A member of the flight recalls the mission,
Bia Giang had cost the Air Force four pilots in two days. The pilot of Oak Four that day would be shot down on a later mission and spend over six years as a POW.
It was April, 1966. The Secretary of Defense had said we would lose 576 airplanes in Southeast Asia by the end of the next fiscal year (July 1967). He missed it by three. We would lose 111 F-105s in 1966 alone. The Bac Giang Bridge was destroyed by F-105`s on May 5, 1966. The bridge would be repaired many times over. The bridge would be destroyed many times over before the war ended. Many more planes and pilots were lost at the Bac Giang Bridge" Bob Krone shared a trailer at Korat with Cooper and became Squadron Commander after Coopers death. In talking about Cooper, Bob had this to say: "I was Ops [Operations Officer] and Cooper was Commander, 469th... USAF policy was that we never flew combat at the same time. On 24 April 66, afternoon, I was in Ops and got the word that both Cooper and Driscoll had been shot down. Major Jimmy Jones was number three in Coopers 4-ship flight. When Jimmy landed I climbed up the ladder to his cockpit. He had tears in his eyes and said, 'That Stubborn old man.'" Cooper did not believe in taking evasive action. His first combat was in bombers [WWII], straight and level to the target. He also did not use the electronic missile alert system that had been put in our planes early in 1966. The flight members picked up the SAM radar homing on their gear... Jimmy Jones called Coop with the fact they were being painted [targeted]. Coop did not respond or react. Then the missile firing radar came up on the gear. Jones called a 'Break to the flight,'the three members of the flight broke to the left and right, Coop kept straight and level and the missile hit him directly. In closing Krone said, "Bill Cooper died performing what he believed to be a fighter pilot's highest duty. One evening in the trailer we shared for housing at Korat, he made this statement to me: 'Only this is real... all else is bullshit'." Postscript
Author's Note
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