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The Story of Team 1-5
(This story also appears in the back section of I Served)
Patrols # 195 and 196. Operation Toan Thang II.
Story
submitted
by
Les
Ervin,
with
additional
information
from
Dave
DeShazo,
Henry
Bonvillain,
and
Bill
Houser.
Edited by Don and Annette Hall.
Team
1-5
and
2-2
were
inserted
late
in
the
evening
on
12
August
1968,
near
the
Vam
Co
Dong
River
in
Cu
Chi.
Teams
2-2
and
1-5
had
worked
in
tandem
before
so
the
teams
worked
well
together.
What
happened
to
teams
1-5 and 2-2 is chronicled in this story:
On
12
August
1968
at
1435
hours,
recon
team
1-5
was
inserted
with
five
men.
Sergeant
Richard
Diers,
their
regular
team
leader,
was
on
R&R,
so
Spec-4
Hendrickson
was
substituting
for
him
on
this
mission.
He
reported
a
secure
insertion and they laid dog. Two hours later, they moved to their POI (point of interest).
At
1626
hours,
team
2-2
was
inserted.
Team
members
were
team
leader
Sergeant
E-5
Dave
L.
DeShazo,
assistant
team
leader
Spec-4
Henry
Reed
Bonvillain
(the
old
man
in
the
team
at
twenty-seven
years
of
age),
rear
security
Spec-
4 Les W. Ervin, point man Spec-4 Steve J. Miles, and on the M-60 machine gun, Spec-4 Mack J. Henderson.
Both teams were situated close to one another and their mission was to monitor the river.
At
1646
hours,
Spec-4
Hendrickson,
team
1-5’s
team
leader,
announced
over
the
radio,
“Contact!”
Moments
later,
radio contact was lost.
Team
1-5
had
moved
into
a
bunker
complex
near
the
LZ
where
an
estimated
thirty-five
to
forty
heavily
armed
NVA,
dug
in
and
waiting,
had
met
the
team
with
heavy
volume
fire
from
AK-47s,
light
machine
guns,
and
SKSs.
Team
leader
Hendrickson, the RTO, and the point man had been killed immediately.
One
man
from
team
1-5
was
finally
heard
on
the
radio.
He
reported
that
only
he
and
one
other
man
were
still
alive.
He
had
fought
forward
to
the
dead
RTO
to
retrieve
the
radio.
He
was
a
new
man
in
the
company
and
had
received
very
little
training
prior
to
being
put
out
in
the
field.
As
a
result,
in
the
heat
of
battle,
he
couldn’t
remember
what
team
he
was
on
or
where
they
were.
This
young
man
fought
courageously
and
desperately
to
save
what
was
left
of
the
team,
relaying over the radio what information he could.
Team
2-2,
just
half
a
klick
away
from
team
1-5,
was
situated
in
a
large
artillery
crater
that
had
taken
out
part
of
a
dike.
The
crater,
deep
enough
and
big
enough
to
hold
the
entire
team,
separated
them
from
a
river
that
was
about
25
to
30
meters
across.
Team
member
Steve
Miles
had
spied
a
docking
area
across
the
river
from
the
team.
They
relayed
their
find
to
TOC
and
requested
Aloft
to
fly
over
and
give
them
exact
coordinates
in
case
they
needed
to
call
in
air
or
artillery
support.
Shortly
thereafter,
they
relayed
that
they
heard
team
1-5’s
firefight
and
requested
to
go
to
the
team’s
aid.
LTC
Joseph
Zummo
denied
their
request
and
ordered
team
2-2
to
remain
in
place.
Team
leader
Dave
DeShazo
had
already
ordered
his
men
to
pull
in
their
claymores
and
prepare
to
move
out.
Sergeant
DeShazo
ordered
his
team
to
redeploy
their
claymores
and
trip
flares,
and,
reluctantly,
they
stayed
where
they
were.
They
all
sat
in
stunned
silence
listening
to
the
murderous
firefight
five
hundred
meters
away
with
a
sense
of
hopelessness
and
sorrow
for
their
brothers
from
the first platoon.
While
team
2-2
stayed
in
place
in
their
artillery
crater,
W.O.
Gary
Lucas,
piloting
one
of
the
support
Cobra
gunships,
arrived
and
opened
fire
with
his
rockets
and
mini-guns
on
the
enemy
near
team
1-5,
driving
the
VC
and
NVA
from
their
bunker
systems.
A
reactionary
force
of
thirteen
men
from
F
Company
filled
up
two
slicks
and
were
inserted
to
assist
team
1-5,
followed
by
a
reactionary
company
from
D
Troop,
3/17th
Cavalry.
Sergeant
Bill
“Teacup”
Houser,
one
of
the
men
from
F/51st
who
was
the
first
to
hit
the
ground,
found
his
best
friend,
Willie
Whitfield,
Jr.,
a
member
of
team
1-5,
dead.
At
1745
hours,
F
Company’s
reactionary
force
was
extracted
while
D
Troop,
3/17th
Cavalry,
cleaned
up
the
enemy
that
still
remained.
The
results
of
this
disastrous
mission
were
three
U.S.
killed
in
action
and
one
seriously
wounded,
who
died
the
next
day.
Only
one
man
survived
the
mission.
At
his
debriefing,
he
described
what
had
happened
to
team
1-5.
Most
of
the
men
of
F/51st
wanted
to
shake
his
hand
and
say
goodbye,
but
never
got
the
chance.
According
to
military
standard
operating
procedure,
the
one
surviving
man,
whose
name
is
unknown
because
he
was
so
new
to
the
unit,
was
transferred
to
another
unit.
The
men
never
had
a
chance
to
get
to
know
the
man,
and
wonder
to
this
day
what
became of him.
After
what
was
left
of
team
1-5
was
rescued
by
the
F
Company
reactionary
force
and
by
D
Troop,
3/17th
Cav,
team
2-
2
remained
in
the
field.
Still
mourning
the
loss
of
team
1-5,
team
2-2
continued
their
mission.
Steve
Miles,
a
strong
swimmer,
took
it
upon
himself
to
swim
across
the
river
carrying
several
pounds
of
C-4,
wiring,
and
blasting
caps.
Miles
buried
the
explosives
at
the
docking
site
across
the
river
and
swam
back
to
the
team.
He
reported
fresh
Ho
Chi
Minh
sandal tracks on the river’s bank.
Accompanied
by
Henry
Bonvillain
and
Dave
DeShazo,
Miles
went
back
out
to
reconnoiter
the
area
across
the
river.
They
observed
a
huge
enemy
bunker
system
beyond
the
landing
dock
area.
The
voices
of
Vietnamese
soldiers
inside
the
bunker
complex
sounded
like
a
hornet’s
nest
of
activity
underground.
DeShazo,
a
devout
religious
man,
knew
he
had some tough choices to make in the ensuing hours.
Later
that
night,
team
2-2
heard
laughter
and
Vietnamese
voices
across
the
river.
Flashlights
flickered
as
if
a
party
were
going
on.
The
team
heard
Vietnamese
voices
calling
back
and
forth
to
one
another
as
they
approached
from
down
the
river,
paddling
in
multiple
sampans
toward
the
docking
area.
The
Vietnamese
were
in
high
spirits
and
were
celebrating
what
they
had
done
to
the
Lurp
team
earlier
that
day.
They
thought
they
were
secure
and
were
talking
out
loud
and
yelling
to
one
another.
Meanwhile
team
2-2
was
preparing
in
the
dark.
The
team
observed
and
heard
numerous
NVA
moving
down
to
the
landing
dock
across
the
river
to
greet
their
approaching
comrades.
Their
laughter
and talking continued to echo loudly across the river.
Les
Ervin,
overwhelmed
by
everything
that
had
happened
that
day,
began
to
cry
quietly
when
the
team
heard
the
voices
and
laughter.
Les’s
thoughts
went
back
to
his
nightmare
experience
on
Hill
875
in
DakTo.
He
heard
in
his
mind
the
unforgettable
and
utterly
overwhelming
noise
of
battle,
punctuated
by
the
screams
and
wailing
of
hundreds
of
dying
and
wounded
men.
The
tremendous
din
of
modern
warfare
cannot
be
easily
described.
To
Les,
the
only
analogy
he
could
think
of
to
describe
what
he
heard
on
Hill
875
during
those
five
days
of
hell
was
to
compare
it
to
the
sound
of
a thousand roaring locomotives.
Henry
Bonvillain,
the
oldest
man
in
the
team,
was
like
a
father
to
Les.
He
talked
calmly
to
Les,
asking
him
if
he
was
all
right
with
the
plan.
They
were,
after
all,
on
recon,
not
on
ambush
patrol,
and
didn’t
have
to
do
what
they
were
preparing
to
do.
Les
Ervin
regained
control
of
his
emotions
and
prepared
himself
mentally
for
combat.
He
came
to
grips with the fear and said to Sergeant DeShazo, “You can count on me, Dave.”
The
anticipation
of
combat
is
the
hardest
part.
Once
engaged,
an
eerie
calm
overtakes
an
experienced
soldier,
which
quite
literally
is
the
body
preparing
to
deal
with
possible
wounds
or
death.
It
is
a
surreal
time
only
a
few
men
will
ever
know.
At 2008 hours, team 3-7, positioned north of team 2-2, reported another large boat heading toward team 2-2’s position.
At
2018
hours,
team
2-2
reported
another
sampan
passing
their
position.
DeShazo
let
the
boat
pass
and
waited
for
the
possible
landing
of
a
sampan
at
the
dock
across
from
the
team’s
position.
The
team
laid
low
and
waited,
shivering
in
the
cold
rain
that
had
begun
to
fall.
The
team
members
quietly
said
their
prayers;
moist
hands
gripped
their
weapons;
hearts
beat
hard
inside
their
chests.
They
took
their
dextroamphetamines
and
codeines
to
get
their
bodies
ready
to
deal
with
whatever
was
coming.
The
waiting
is
the
hardest,
when
each
man
performs
his
own
internal
gut-check
and
wonders if he’ll be brave or a coward. The jungle noise grew steadily louder with each passing minute.
Sergeant
Dave
DeShazo
quietly
and
calmly
went
over
the
plan
with
the
team
again.
“Throw
the
grenades
after
you’ve
counted
to
three-one-thousand.
Don’t
open
fire
until
we
absolutely
have
to.”
Everyone
knew
what
they
had
to
do.
When
it
came
to
hurling
grenades,
it
would
be
good
old
American
baseball-thawing
skills
that
would
send
the
grenades
unerringly to their targets.
At
2330
hours,
the
team
heard
more
Vietnamese
voices
across
the
river.
Team
3-7
alerted
team
2-2
that
there
were
four
large
sampans
with
four
to
five
NVA
soldiers
in
the
boats
heading
toward
the
team.
Flashlights
wielded
by
the
enemy
across
the
river
flickered
over
the
team’s
position.
The
C&C
and
Spooky
(aka
Puff
the
Magic
Dragon)
were
gearing
up
off
in
the
distance.
WO
Gary
Lucas,
in
charge
of
the
three
Cobra
gunships
that
were
preparing
to
move
out,
got his men ready with their game plan. LTC Joseph Zummo was sober this night and was getting ready to do his job.
At
0003
hours,
team
2-2
set
about
to
ambush
the
approaching
twenty
NVA
and
called
the
C&C
ship,
which
was
now
flying
high
overhead.
The
four
sampans
on
the
river
docked
and
were
greeted
with
cheers
and
laughter
by
the
NVA
onshore.
They
were
so
happy
over
their
victory
earlier
in
the
day
and
were
cheering
each
other.
As
the
sampans
docked
across
from
the
team,
flares
were
dropped
from
the
C&C
slick
over
team
2-2’s
position.
As
the
first
flare
lit
up
the
night
sky,
the
NVA
were
starkly
illuminated
in
a
weird
tableau
of
immobility
as
they
were
caught
in
their
vulnerable
positions
out
in
the
open,
at
the
landing
dock.
Hands
still
waving
to
each
other,
flashlights
flickering,
the
enemy
was
caught
in
the
unworldly
glare.
Just
as
a
deer
freezes
in
shock
the
moment
it’s
caught
in
the
glare
of
oncoming
headlights, the enemy froze, just for an instant. Before they had time to think or to act, Team 2-2 acted.
Sergeant
Dave
DeShazo
whispered
over
the
radio,
“Charlie,
2-2,
contact.”
Dropping
the
radio
handset
to
the
ground
he
stood
up
in
the
center
of
the
bomb
crater
and
fired
his
M-79
at
the
cluster
of
stunned
and
confused
NVA
in
the
four
large
sampans
and
at
the
landing
dock.
He
scored
a
direct
hit
on
one
of
the
sampans,
blowing
it
in
half,
sending
bodies
hurtling
into
the
water.
The
enemy
soldiers,
still
confused
and
in
shock,
were
trying
to
figure
out
what
had
just
happened.
Then
the
second
M-79
round
blew
apart
another
sampan.
This
galvanized
the
enemy
and
they
began
to
return
fire.
What
they
received
in
response
was
another
killing
blow.
Like
many
American
boys
with
throwing
arms
strengthened
by
years
of
playing
baseball,
the
Lurps
could
accurately
throw
a
grenade
a
long
distance.
To
give
the
enemy
no
time
to
react
when
the
grenades
hit,
the
team
pulled
the
pins
and
first
counted
to
three-one-thousand
before
unleashing
a
deadly
fusillade
into
and
around
the
throng
of
panic-stricken
enemy
soldiers.
The
NVA
could
do
nothing
but
watch
in
utter
confusion
as
grenades
splatted
in
the
mud
all
around
them
and
then
immediately
exploded.
Spec-4
Steve
Miles
blew
the
C4
charges
he
had
hidden
in
the
riverbank.
The
enemy
that
hadn’t
been
killed
outright
staggered
away from the blast, heading into the water, trying to get away, returning fire.
The
gunships
swooped
into
the
panicking
NVA
and
caused
eight
secondary
explosions
with
their
first
gun
runs
over
the enemy and the sampans.
Sergeant
Dave
DeShazo
ordered
the
team
to
blow
their
claymores
and
move
to
the
LZ.
After
the
claymores
blew,
an
enemy
soldier
crawled
over
the
lip
of
the
bank
on
the
team’s
side
of
the
river
and
moved
toward
Steve
Miles.
Les
Ervin
swung
around
and
shot
the
NVA
in
the
chest
full
auto.
The
last
two
rounds
from
Ervin’s
M-16
were
red
tracers,
which
alerted
the
enemy
across
the
bank
to
the
team’s
location.
It
was
too
late
for
the
hapless
NVA.
The
six-man
team
opened
up
on
the
enemy
with
everything
they
had.
Spec-4
Mack
Henderson
exhibited
his
strength,
manhandling
the
Pig (M-60), firing short, quick, deadly bursts.
His
five
teammates
opened
up
with
semi-automatic
M-16
fire
that
tore
into
the
enemy.
The
enemy
corpses
filled
the
river’s
bank
and
floated
downstream.
Gary
Lucas’s
Cobra
gunships
roared
in,
diving
in
on
the
enemy
from
all
directions.
The
distinct
burping
of
their
mini-guns
sent
a
tremendous
hail
of
death
into
the
enemy,
blowing
them
to
pieces.
The
radio
had
stopped
working
during
all
the
chaos,
but
team
was
able
to
get
it
operating
again
and
directed
the
gunships
with
trip
flares
thrown
from
their
bomb
crater.
The
Cobra
gunships
ran
in
protective
circles
around
the
team,
firing
at
the
enemy.
The
enemy
was
closing
fast
on
the
light
team
only
to
be
stopped
by
the
firepower
from
the
team
and
the
gunships.
The
gunships
soon
expended
all
their
ammo
and
fuel,
and
the
team
was
preparing
for
a
final
stand
in
the
bomb
crater
when
the
voice
of
Smoky,
the
U.S.
Air
Force
C-47
gunship
high
above
in
the
darkness,
greeted
the
team, “2-2, this is Smoky. I have 45,000 rounds for you. Where do you want it?”
Sergeant
DeShazo
pulled
his
strobe
light
out,
turned
it
on
and
stuck
it
in
the
barrel
of
the
M-79.
He
handed
the
weapon
to
Les
Ervin
and
instructed
him
to
hold
it
up
as
high
as
he
could.
With
AK-47
rounds
cracking
all
around
the
team,
Les
thrust
the
M-79
barrel
skyward
so
Spooky,
high
above,
could
fix
their
location
in
order
to
avoid
hitting
the
team
in
the
barrage
that
was
to
come.
The
enemy
was
closing
in
fast
on
the
team
in
their
position
at
the
bottom
of
the
bomb
crater. “Smoky, 2-2. Strobe is my position. How copy, over?” DeShazo spoke into the radio.
“2-2, Smoky. The strobe is the good guys, Good copy. Get your heads down, 2-2.”
The
team
members
heard
the
Vietnamese
screaming
and
shouting
orders
to
get
the
team
on
the
other
side
of
the
river.
The
NVA
were
moving
in
and
the
Lurps
were
getting
low
on
ammo.
Ervin
and
the
team
members
could
hear
the
NVA
running
toward
them,
AK-47s
blazing.
The
team
cut
loose
with
their
final
burst,
screaming
back
at
the
North
Vietnamese
regulars,
“This
is
for
team
1-5,
mother
fuckers!”
The
team
dropped
down
flat
into
the
crater
and
covered
their
heads
just
as
the
barrage
from
Spooky’s
mini-guns
spewed
thousands
of
rounds
all
around
the
beleaguered
team, slaughtering the enemy.
When
the
battle
was
over
and
the
gunships
had
returned
home,
LTC
Zummo,
high
above
in
the
C&C
ship,
instructed
Spooky
to
drop
flares
to
illuminate
the
site.
He
contacted
the
team
and
instructed
them
to
search
the
riverbank
and
canal
area
for
wounded
and
not
leave
anyone
alive.
He
said
he
wanted
a
body
count.
The
five
men
crawled
out
of
the
muddy
bomb
crater
and
searched
among
the
bodies
on
the
battlefield.
Zummo
wanted
his
body
count
and
his
ranting
insistence
for
exact
statistics
continued
over
the
radio.
The
team
counted
twelve
dead
enemy
on
their
side
of
the
river.
Four
wounded
enemy
were
found
and
immediately
killed.
The
team
started
to
take
fire
from
somewhere
across
the
canal, so Sergeant DeShazo forced everyone back into the bomb crater.
Zummo
called
from
the
C&C
ship
asking
again
for
body
count.
DeShazo
responded
over
the
radio
that
it
wasn’t
safe
exposing
his
men
for
the
sake
of
an
actual
body
count.
Zummo
insisted
that
the
team
get
a
body
count
and
collect
any
weapons
and
documents
they
could
find.
DeShazo
angrily
replied
to
Zummo,
“If
you
want
a
body
count
or
any
fucking
thing
else,
you
can
get
your
fucking
chickenshit
ass
down
here
and
do
it
yourself!
We’re
almost
out
of
ammo
and
if
we
don’t get picked up NOW we may be overrun at any time. There are bunkers, tunnels, and gooks everywhere!”
Zummo
finally
acquiesced
and
ordered
the
slicks
to
pick
up
the
team.
“2-2,
this
is
control.
Mark
position
while
en
route
to LZ, guns will cover your movement. Slicks inbound ‘hot’ in 05 mikes. How copy, over?”
DeShazo responded, “Control, this is 2-2 team. Marked with strobe light. Good copy, out.”
At
0120
hours,
team
2-2
crawled
out
of
the
muddy
bomb
crater.
Les
Ervin
blew
his
remaining
claymore.
He
climbed
up
the
slippery
side
of
the
bomb
crater,
but
slipped
and
fell
backward,
landing
headfirst
in
the
muddy
water.
Spent
ammo
cartridges
bobbed
all
around
him
as
Henry
Bonvillain
pulled
him
out,
laughing,
telling
Les
he
had
done
all
right.
The
team
ran
the
50
meters
to
the
waiting
slick,
which
was
racing
toward
the
LZ
with
guns
blazing.
The
slick
flared,
touched
town
and
the
team
leapt
aboard.
The
slick
was
airborne
again
in
seconds
and
took
them
home.
None
of
them
could
believe
they
had
made
it
out
alive.
Only
one
of
them
had
been
wounded—
Dave
DeShazo
with
a
piece
of
shrapnel in his right leg.
The
men
returned
to
the
company
area
and
were
greeted
by
the
whole
company
of
jubilant
men.
The
men
had
all
been
monitoring
the
radios,
listening
to
everything
that
had
been
happened
to
team
2-2.
They
helped
the
team
carry
their equipment and what was left of their ammo, and congratulated them for doing such a great job.
At
first
light
the
following
morning,
D
Troop,
3/17th
Cavalry
made
a
combat
assault
into
the
site
of
team
2-2’s
battle.
They
found
three
wounded
enemy,
whom
they
took
prisoner,
and
counted
forty
dead
VC/NVA.
LTC
Zummo
had
his
body count and team 1-5 was avenged.