I had gotten an email or a comment about a
Blogpost I did back in 2014 about the C-130 that flew with 432 people in it. I had also done a post on the last voyage of the
South Vietnamese Navy. It to this day still bothers me, because we were suppose to support them after the Paris Peace Accord but Richard Nixon who was president in 1973 who guaranteed the support was gone by 1975 due to Watergate and Gerald Ford was President. President Ford couldn't get anything through Congress that was full of antiwar democrats, the antiwar GI spitting hippies from the 1960's moved into the halls of congress in the 1970's. Gerald Ford had burned whatever little political capital he had pardoning Richard Nixon, what was the right thing to do to close that chapter of the country, but the antiwar democrats still wanted blood so they killed any aid for the South that needed to rebuild their stocks after the War. And in 1975 North Vietnam invaded South Vietnam in a conventional military invasion. I remember something when we had gone to Disney world in Orlando, we had stayed at one of the parks and there was a guy my age working there. Now Disney hires a LOT of what is called "H1B" hires or people not from the United States. They wear a nametag with their name and what country they are from. This guy had a tag that said "South Vietnam". I had asked him about that and he said "I am from the South, not the godless communist north". I was born outside Saigon not Ho cho minh city. My heart still is with the people from South Vietnam." I was surprised and amazed to see that. He was the only one like that I have seen. I didn't want to talk more for fear of reminding the guy more of what he had lost. Perhaps he would have been glad to talk about it, but I didn't want to open a wound as it were.
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By the end of April 1975, North Vietnamese forces were closing in on
Saigon. It was apparent that South Vietnam was going to fall. The US was
already evacuating people from major airports. However, the NVA was on
the outskirts of Saigon and several airports were coming under artillery
attack. With many people still stuck in Vietnam, the United States
launched Operation Frequent Wind, a massive helicopter evacuation to
air-lift as many evacuees as possible. From April 29 to April 30, over
7000 people were airlifted out of South Vietnam to the safety of
American warships offshore. The Operation was a source for many of the
most well known images of the Vietnam war.
While many are familiar with the large helicopter evacuation, the
self-imposed evacuation of tens of thousands of South Vietnamese people
is less known. Evacuating the country by aircraft and boat, South
Vietnamese civilians traveled to the American evacuation fleet. In this
article, we will look at one of these escapes as one man risked
everything to get his family out of Vietnam. It involves the carrier USS
Midway (CV-41), a Cessna O-1, and one of the most daring escapes ever.
An example of the chaos onboard the USS Midway with numerous helicopters waiting to land.
On 29 April 1975, the evacuation of South Vietnam was in full swing.
However, not everyone could get to the evacuation points. South
Vietnamese Air Force Major Buang-Ly was one of these people. He sought
to escape the country with his family and reach the US evacuation fleet.
Loading his wife and five children into a Cessna O-1 “Bird Dog”, he
took off from Con Son island south of mainland Vietnam. Taking off and
setting a course for the ocean, he came under enemy fire from the ground
several times. Luckily, Buang-Ly managed to make it out to sea without
any damage. Once he got offshore, he began a search for the US Naval
ships in the area. Through an amazing stroke of luck, he managed to
locate the US fleet offshore.
As we looked over the assembled ships, he saw the carrier USS Midway
(CV-41). Unfortunately, the Midway was in the middle of landing the
evacuation helicopters. Her flight deck was littered with helicopters
and even more were waiting to land. Buang-Ly began to circle the carrier
with his landing lights turned on. Crewmembers on board the USS Midway
soon spotted the small aircraft. Attempts to contact the aircraft
through radio communications failed. Buang-Ly continued to circle the
carrier while the crew tried to figure out how to deal with this new
situation.
An example of a helicopter ditching alongside the USS Midway. The pilot in this photo was rescued by boat.
Due to the overwhelmingly large number of helicopters, the carrier
was having many aircraft ditch alongside after dropping the passengers
off. Rescue boats would then pick up the crew and bring them back to the
ships. At first, it was hoped that that the Cessna could do the same
thing. However, as Buang-Ly made another pass over the carrier, a
spotter reported seeing around four people in the Cessna. All thoughts
of having the plane ditch were quickly abandoned as the craft was
severely overloaded. It was thought unlikely that all passengers could
be rescued from the plane quick enough if it ditched into the sea.
By this point, the Cessna began to swoop over the carrier. This
occurred several times before Major Buang-Ly managed to drop a note onto
the flight deck. The note simply read,
“Can you move the helicopter to the other side, I can land on your
runway, I can fly for one hour more, we have enough time to move. Please
rescue me! Major Buang, wife and 5 child.”
Realizing that time was quickly running out, the crew of the Midway
sprang into action. The Captain of the USS Midway, Lawrence Chambers,
quickly ordered all arresting cables to be stowed and the helicopters on
deck to be moved out of the way. If they couldn’t be moved fast enough,
they were to be pushed over the side of the carrier. He ordered any and
all volunteers to the deck to help with moving the choppers. Midway
crewmembers of all ranks hurried to the deck and began clear the deck in
preparation for landing.
A
UH-1 of the South Vietnamese air force is pushed off the flight deck of
the USS Midway. It is estimated that up to 10 million dollars worth of
equipment was pushed overboard. I would have loved to had one of those helicopters..
Once the task was finished and the deck clear, the Cessna lined up
with the carrier. Conditions were less than ideal. The ceiling was 500
feet, visibility had been reduced to 5 miles, and it began to rain
lightly. To make matters worse, the wind picked up to 15 knots and 5
additional helicopters had already landed on the Midway. Captain
Chambers ordered those helicopters immediately pushed overboard and the
ship to speed into the wind at 25 knots. Meanwhile, the ships radio crew
began to broadcast numerous messages in both English and Vietnamese
about carrier landing hazards. The threat of downdrafts generated behind
carriers was particularly worrisome. The many crewmembers who had
helped clear the decks earlier were now crowded onto the deck
themselves. Everyone was intently watching as the Cessna began making
its landing run.
The Cessna O-1 just prior to touchdown on the flight deck of the USS
Midway. The landing was described as a textbook example of a perfect
landing.
There are numerous things that can go wrong when landing on a carrier.
However, none of those things occurred and Major Buang-Ly managed a
perfect landing on the USS Midway. The Cessna touched down, bounced once
and came to a stop alongside the Midway’s island. The crewmembers on
deck immediately broke into wild cheering and they swarmed the small
Cessna, clapping and congratulating the Major for his feat.
The Cessna following its landing. Celebrating crewmembers are already rushing towards the aircraft
Following his landing, Buang-Ly was escorted to the Bridge of the
Midway where Captain Chambers himself congratulated the Major for, “his
outstanding airmanship and his bravery in risking everything on a gamble
beyond the point of no return without knowing for certain a carrier
would be where he needed it.” Not only had Major Buang-Ly managed to fly
his family out of Vietnam, but he had somehow managed to guess where
the US fleet would be. The crew of the USS Midway were so impressed with
the exploit of Major Buang-Ly that they set up a fund to get him and
his family settled into the United States.
O-1 Birddog in Pensacola in my favorite Museum...Did I mention that you can walk up to the planes and touch them? unlike most museums?
So ends one of the greatest escapes in history. Despite the odds,
Buang-Ly and his family managed to escape Vietnam for the United States
where they are today. The O-1 aircraft he used to escape has been
preserved at the Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola, Florida. Major
Buang-Ly also holds the distinction of being the only Vietnamese pilot
to land a fixed wing aircraft aboard a United States aircraft carrier.
Swarms of crewmembers surround Major Buang-Ly and his family, congratulating them for their heroic feat.
A final note of interest in this story is that of the Midway’s
captain, Lawrence Chambers. He had only been commanding the carrier for a
few weeks prior to this incident. While he was worried that he would be
removed from command for allowing the landing to take place, he allowed
it because, “When a man has the courage to put his family in a plane
and make a daring escape like that, you have to have the heart to let
him in.”
Excellent tale of heroism.
ReplyDeleteThank you. So many people out there think that the South was wrong in the Viet Nam war. And have no understanding of what the people in the South were fighting for.
As to the exhibits in Pensacola, well, you can touch them until Murphy from New Orleans shows up again and fingers something wrong...
Hey Bean;
DeleteSure the South had problems, but the North wasn't pure either, both sides wanted to control Vietnam, they just had different ideas. I think they are "Murphy" proof...but I can't recall if he has been there or not. Remember they have to be "Squid" proof.
And the crew of the USS MIdway established a fund that paid for every one of those kids to attend college in the US. They all graduated and are successful today! Hats off to the family and the crew of the Midway!
ReplyDeleteWell done to all involved!
ReplyDeleteGerry