Tullo and the Giant
For pilots shot down over North Vietnam, the way home was jolly and green.
- By Robert Hanson
- Air & Space magazine, July 1997
The interior of a Sikorsky HH-3E Jolly Green Giant, possibly at Ta Son Nhut AFB, circa 1966-67.
Richard Keller, National Air and Space Museum (SI Photo 2001-1887)
Frank Tullo has never forgotten his first day as a captain. He was 25 years old and flying from Korat Royal Thai Air Base, one of two F-105 bases in Thailand. News of his promotion had come through late the evening before, and he had sewn a pair of shiny new captain's bars on his flightsuit. He was wearing those bars when North Vietnamese gunners on the outskirts of Hanoi shot him down.
I heard Tullo's story a few years ago when he was an airline captain and I was negotiating the sale of radios to his airline. I flew 122 missions in F-4E Phantom IIs, also out of Korat but at a later time in the war. Many of my friends had been shot down over there, and a lot were never heard from again. Most fighter crews were not optimistic about their chances for rescue.
Pilots of the F-105 Thunderchief, or "Thud," in particular, suffered a high loss rate. There was a standing joke among the often chain-smoking Thud crews that the definition of an optimistic Thud driver was one who thought he would die of lung cancer. In fact, the Air Force commissioned a study that showed that during a typical 100-mission tour, an F-105 pilot should expect to get shot down twice and picked up once. At about the time that Tullo got his captain's bars, air rescue planners decided to try to improve the pilots' chances.
On July 27, 1965, Tullo was flying as Dogwood Two in a flight led by his good friend Major Bill Hosmer, a former Thunderbird and the best pilot Tullo had ever flown with. Dogwood was to be the cleanup flight--the last of 24 F-105s, six flights of four, from Korat to hit surface-to-air missile (SAM) sites in North Vietnam. Their job, as cleanup, would be to take out any sites not destroyed by the earlier flights.
The SAM had introduced a new aspect to the war only days before, when an F-4 Phantom II became the first to fall to these new weapons. The missiles were fired from within a no-fly zone near Hanoi, previously immune from attack as dictated by rules of engagement. Tullo's flight would be part of the first attack within the no-fly zone and the first major strike on the SAM sites since the Phantom had been downed.
To destroy the missile sites and take out their command and control centers, each Thud was loaded with two pods of 2.75-inch rockets. (They were also equipped with an internal 20-millimeter Gatling cannon.) Along with the rockets, the Thuds carried 450-gallon auxiliary fuel tanks under their wings. Tullo's aircraft, which was scheduled to be flown to Okinawa for maintenance, also carried a 600-gallon tank on its centerline. He'd have to jettison the tank once airborne to stay with the flight.
This was part of a maximum effort involving at least 48 F-105s--24 from Korat and 24 from Takhli--and another 50 or so supporting aircraft. At this early stage of the war--the buildup of U.S. fighters in Thailand and South Vietnam had begun only six months before--tactics and weapons for dealing with SAMs had not been developed. The projected learning curve for the months ahead was nearly vertical.
It was mid-afternoon when Tullo's flight came over the hills from the south to clean up leftover targets. Dogwood flight had been listening to the action on the assigned attack frequency since an in-flight refueling midway en route. From the sound of things, some friendly aircraft were down. As the flight cleared the last ridge at treetop level before arriving at the target area, Hosmer, who was Dogwood lead, exclaimed, "Jesus!"
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Comments (1)
Perhaps this won't add anything to the Jolly Green story, however,some key items are missing. I was On sceen commander for this mission flying an HC-54 Crown. We coordinated the mission, including Mig Cap, Sandies A1-Es who helped search for the downed pilots and provided tremendous fire power when enemy resistance occurred. We also had two HH-43F Pedros on the same mission. Unfortunately they never made recoveries as none of the other downed pilots in the area made contact nor were visually sighted. The enemy defenses in that area,approximately 25 miles south of Hanoi, were horrendous as reflected by the many losses that day. For slow movers it was really hairy. After Tullo was recovered, Jolly Green and Pedros who were low on fuel plus Jollie's engine problems and our Crown headed toward Lima Site 36 through uncharted enemy territory, darkness, and mountains. The chopper jocks were a little "antsy" for good reason. I was relatively confident we were on the right heading to 36 as our trusty navigator thought so also. A Good old Air America H-34 heard us on Guard channel and provided us a steer to Site 36. He advised us that our buddies at the Site had 55 gallon drums set up and would ignite when we reached the area. They did so and the Pedros made 360 degree approaches from directly overhead in case they flamed out on the approaches, they could autorotate 360 degrees to the the Site. Those firery drums were like God had lowered a piece of heaven for their deliverence. I don't recall if George and his bird made a 360 degree approach. It was an exciting mission. Our regret was that Frank did not have his best friends to celebrate with!
Posted by Robert R. Reeves, Lt Col, USAF, Ret on May 1,2009 | 09:53 PM