Why should I go to The Plain of Jars in Laos?
Here is the answer:
First, a little background.....
My father was a saver. He saved every piece of paperwork he received
in his 24 years of service in the USAF.
I have spent many, many hours reading, organizing, filing and putting everything
into chronological order. He never talked about what he was doing in Thailand. But I found a map and started researching. And reading. And asking questions. Searching Google and Wiki. I finally figured out what in the hell he was doing over there.
7 June 1966 – Appointed Deputy Staff Office
Top Secret Control officer in Osan, Korea.
15 June 1966 - Notified via Special Order of reassignment to
flying duties in C-47 aircraft.
8 August 1966 – Transferred from Osan, Korea to Udorn, Thailand. Top Secret.
I have spent hundreds of hours on the web searching and have
bought and read numerous books on the secret war in Laos.
If you spend time searching Google or Wiki for these key words: “Dogpatch”, “Moonbeam”,
“Alley Cat”, “Airborne Command and Control”, "RC-47D”, "Operation Steel Tiger", “Operation Barrel Roll”, "Operation Half Moon", "Cricket", “Vang Pao”, "Long Tieng", “CIA
Laos 1966”, “Butterflys", "Ravens” - you will get an idea of what was going on
over Laos in 1966.
For example, this is an excerpt from Wiki about Operation Barrel Roll :
"Barrel Roll was one of the most closely held secrets and one of
the most unknown components of the American military commitment in
Southeast Asia. Due to the ostensible neutrality of Laos, guaranteed by the Geneva Conference of 1954
and 1962, both the U.S. and North Vietnam strove to maintain the
secrecy of their operations and only slowly escalated military actions
there. As much as both parties would have liked to have publicized their
enemy's own alleged violation of the accords, both had more to gain by
keeping their own roles quiet."
I have searched many blogs and user groups and asked many
questions. I received the following
response from a Yahoo user group about some of my questions:
>>Fishbike53, read the
following information word for word all the way to the end. You will find some
interesting info about C-47's in 1966.
Ø > SYNOPSIS: On
July 19, 1966, an RC47D aircraft departed Udorn Airfield in
> > Thailand en route to Sam Neua, Laos. The crew aboard the aircraft
> > included Capt. Robert E. Hoskinson, pilot; Maj. Galileo F. Bossio,
1Lt.
> > Vincent A. Chiarello, Capt. Bernard Conklin, 1Lt. Robert J. Di
Tommaso,
> > SSgt. James S. Hall, TSgt. John M. Mamiya and TSgt. Herbert E. Smith,
> > crewmen. The aircraft was an unarmed RC47D Command and Control
airship
> > (Dogpatch 2).
> >
> > When the aircraft was 10-20 miles south of Sam Neua, it was attacked
by
> > enemy fighters. Radio contact was lost and the families were
initially
> > told there was no further word of the plane or crew - that they had
all
> > been lost on an operational mission in North Vietnam.
> >
> > It was later learned, however, that at least one, possibly two
> > parachutes were observed in the air from persons on the ground, and
the
> > loss had occurred not in North Vietnam, but at 201200N 1041700E,
which
> > is in Laos.
> >
> > Primary objective of the C-47 in Laos at that point in the war was
> > visual reconnaissance. American forces worked closely with CAS (CIA)
> > primarily to weaken the communist supply link to South Vietnam via
the
> > "Ho Chi Minh Trail". This particular plane, however, was
working in
> > support of the CIA's secret indigenous army which was attempting to
> > prevent a communist takeover in Laos.
> >
> > The crewmembers on these missions were normally highly trained in
> > electronic surveillance techniques as well as versed in codes and
> > languages. Accordingly, and as "there was no war in Laos",
certain
> > details of the mission, such as the precise location of loss, were
> > originally distorted. Later reports indicate that some of the crew
> > survived the attack on July 29, 1966. According to a March, 1974 list
> > published by the National League of Families of POW/MIAs, Bossio
> > survived the incident and was missing in Laos. One 1971 report states
> > that as many as 5 of the crew were captured. Chiarello and Di Tommaso
>
> were identified as survivors by Capt. Adair of Project Dogpatch. U.S.
> > Air Force records still reflect the loss as having occurred in North
> > Vietnam.
> > Related information (edited for grammar) below provided by Keith
> > Rohring:
> >
> > This RC-47D was 'bristling' with electronics - the mission was
> > essentially to fly near the Ho Chi Minh Trail at precise dates and times
> > to pick up Hmong tribes people's broadcasts of who was on the trail,
> > when, where, and how many. . .
> >
> > Some team members of the SOG team were land based, operating along the
> > Trail, in Cambodia etc, leaving these gizmo-radios for the Hmong to use
> > to transmit, with a calendar of when they were to send. . . The
> > 'observer' status was unofficial, as there were folks who were traveling
> > onboard mission flights to become acclimatized to what was going on -
> > Chiarello and Cooperman were in an intelligence outfit - working at the
> > end of the Udorn runway in a shack at the time.
> >
> > That's where they were when the coin flip occurred. . . There are 8
> > names on Panel 09 around line 85 that were onboard that flight -
> > Chiarello was the odd man - the others were assigned to "chairs" as
> > crew, navigators, listeners, and charters of traffic. Of course,
> > everyone on these flights got their 'flight pay' - if qualified) -
> > combat pay and tax exemption - normally, C-47 crews based in Thailand
> > would make trips into South Vietnam to get their tax exemption - if
> > based and flying in Thailand alone; there was none of the above, just
> > regular flight pay.
So on July 19,1966, a C-47 flown by Capt. Hoskinson was performing Command
and Control activity out of Udorn, Thailand, and was shot down over Sam
Neua, Laos. On June 15, a month before Capt. Hoskinson's plane was shot down, my father was
notified that he was being sent to Udorn to do the same mission. On August 10 , 21 days after Hoskinson was shot down, my father was in Udorn and getting into
a C47 and headed over the Plain of Jars in Laos to perform a similar mission.
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| Maj. Johnson |
This is why I am headed to the Plain of
Jars. To travel overland some what he flew
over.
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