Escape to U Taphao
In the final days of the Vietnam war, chaos and heroism converged in the effort to evacuate U.S.-supplied aircraft.
- By Ralph Wetterhahn
- Air & Space magazine, January 1997
Henry Le remembers everything about his last morning in Vietnam. Then a 22-year-old second lieutenant in the South Vietnamese Air Force, he had landed at Tan Son Nhut Air Base outside Saigon the day before, too low on fuel to make it back to his home base at Can Tho. At 4 a.m. on April 29, he was awakened by the concussion of rocket explosions. "I was in a bunk on the second floor of the barracks," he recalls. "I sat up and for a few moments tried to understand where I was."
Today Le is a lieutenant commander in the U.S. Naval Reserve, having flown S-3 Vikings on active duty patrolling for submarines in Subic Bay and A-6 Intruders in the Persian Gulf. On that morning 21 years ago, he was a newly trained A-37 pilot with only a handful of combat sorties behind him. The Cessna A-37 Dragonfly was a small but capable attack bomber equipped with a 7.62-mm gun and able to carry as many as six 500-pound bombs under its wings. Le and his fellow A-37 pilots had been supporting ground troops and trying, mostly unsuccessfully, to slow the Northern assault that by then had tanks and artillery moving in a solid column down Highway 1 toward the capital. But not until the rockets began raining down on the suburbs of Saigon that morning did he know the war was lost.
Most of the Americans involved in the conflict remember seeing the end coming long before Saigon fell. One of them, Air Force Brigadier General Harry "Heinie" Aderholt, commanded the U.S. military’s assistance and advisory operations in Thailand (MACTHAI). Aderholt had begun his career in southeast Asia in 1960—as the senior air officer in covert operations in Laos—and spent most of the next 15 years there. He trained Laotian Hmong guerrilla units for incursions into Tibet and is today a leader of a volunteer organization that helps settle Hmong refugees in the United States. In the war stories he tells, Aderholt is a rascal who made general, and he still has a rascal’s glint in his eye. He does not suppress his distaste for past U.S. policy in southeast Asia, and recommends one history of that period with this endorsement: "It’ll show you what bastards we are. How we always desert our allies."
Aderholt was chief advisor to the Royal Air Force in Thailand before going to the MACTHAI in 1973. By 1974 he had already begun to worry about Vietnam’s neighbors—Thailand, Laos, Cambodia—all of the small, poor countries vulnerable to what would soon be an enormous air power. For as the United States drew down its forces in South Vietnam, it pumped up that country’s arsenal. By the end of March 1973, in accordance with the agreement signed that January in Paris, only 50 U.S. military officers and 159 Marine guards remained in the country. But the Republic of Vietnam Air Force had grown to the fourth largest in the world, from 482 aircraft in 1969 to 2,276 in 1973. Aderholt saw that the ultimate benefactors of this military aid would be the North Vietnamese, and he wanted to reclaim as many airplanes as he could for the United States and its allies.
Aderholt was particularly concerned about 150 Northrop F-5 Freedom Fighters, 40 of which were E and F models that had just come off the production line, and 78 A-37s. The F-5s were Mach-1.6 fighter-interceptors that, with the capacity to carry 6,200 pounds of rockets, bombs, or missiles, doubled as attack aircraft; they especially would pose a significant threat to Thailand, a country with a far smaller, far less modern air force. In the beginning of 1975, Aderholt sought permission from the U.S. Embassy in Saigon to begin bringing aircraft out of Vietnam. He had no authority himself to remove assets that had been loaned under the Military Assistance Program. After U.S. forces withdrew from Vietnam in 1973, military decisions there were made by the state department.
"I presented a plan to [Graham A. Martin, U.S. ambassador to Vietnam] for the evacuation of all U.S. supplied aircraft" in the early months of 1975, Aderholt says. "But the plan was scrapped. Martin said he would entertain Ôno defeatist attitude.’ "
On March 10, 1975, General Van Tien Dung, North Vietnamese commander in the South, attacked Ban Me Thuot, a strategic city in the central highlands of South Vietnam, beginning the last offensive of the war. Seven weeks later his victorious army marched through the gates of Saigon’s presidential palace. In the interim, 933 VNAF aircraft fell undamaged into enemy hands. But not Henry Le’s A-37.
When the second salvo of rockets lit up the night, Le leapt from his cot, jumped into his flightsuit, and rode on his motorcycle to the main gate of the air base. "I grabbed a packet of documents including flight training certificates—all important for starting over in a new country," he says.
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Comments (6)
"Start, taxi, and run up were accomplished and the thrill of sitting behind the single 3350 [Pratt & Whitney engine] came rushing back," wrote Drummond
Except that the R-3350 series engines werre built by Wright Aeronautical (aka Curtiss-Wright) - NOT Pratt & Whitney.
Posted by Dave Marion on September 2,2009 | 12:21 AM
One of the four A-1's (A1-H 139665) written about in this story has been restored to flying condition and as of Sept. 2009 is airworthy and based at the Tennessee Museum of Aviation.
Posted by Neal Melton on October 12,2009 | 05:20 PM
I was an air rescue crew chief at Utapao RTAFB when the aircraft came in and took a number of pictures that used to be posted on the VNAF WEB site. I hope the site is still around as it was down for a period of time. Minor correction to the story of the F-5s. All of the F-5 except two were towed to the port using quicky produced tow bars. Our unit had the only aircraft tug that was small enough to pass under the pitot tubes and I was asked to drive the tug with a security escort.
Posted by Dave Quigley on April 8,2010 | 11:27 PM
I thank the US government especially the USAF personnel in
the Vietnam war. And thanks for helping us to fight the
Viet communists and a special thanks for the Americans who gave their lives for freedom in Vietnam
my country. My name is:Thuyet-Davis-Nguyen former C-130
pilot and I hope that one beautiful day there will no more ""bad"
guys walking around in the streets of Vietnam, especially in my city, Saigon.
Posted by DAVIS-NGUYEN FORMER VNAF-C130 on July 30,2010 | 07:53 PM
I still vividly recall the full flightline at U Tapao looking outside of the aircraft cockpit as my father flew one of the C-130As out of Saigon after an overnight stop at Cong Son. I was only four and a half, but getting to sit in the cockpit in packed C-130 because there was no room left in the aircraft made a big impression on me, an image that I will never forget. I remember the C-141 that took us to Guam, the short stay in Guam, then onto Eglin AFB where our sponsors picked us up to take us to our new home. I will always be grateful to the personnel of the U.S. Air Force for training my father to fly, to provide South Vietnam with the aircraft that saved our lives, and for the care and transport to the U.S. that allowed us to start new lives.
Posted by Stephen Viet Pham on November 28,2010 | 02:33 AM
For 37 years, I have tried numerous times searching for information on that chaotic morning of 29 April 1975 with the hope that someone at the scence may take some pictures. I was one of the three pilots cramped into a one-seat F-5E landed on the U-Tapao air base, on the wrong run way off course. My flight was the only one with 3 pilots in a single seat that landed safely.
I would be grateful for anybody with photos relating to my last flight, I hope to write a "story of my life" for my children, these pictures would be precious.
Posted by Cuong P. To on August 3,2012 | 02:47 PM