WAR STORIES - From an Army Pilot Flying in the CIA's Secret War in Laos Buy on Amazon

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WAR STORIES - From an Army Pilot Flying in the CIA's Secret War in Laos

Book Details

Author(s)Gerald Naekel
ISBN / ASINB00GDF7I0G
ISBN-13978B00GDF7I01
MarketplaceGermany  🇩🇪

Description

eBooks do not always look like you hope they will, considering how the software has to format for so many different devices, so especially the Amazon previews often look a poorly formatted, but ultimately are mostly okay.

This is the 13th Edition and contains some updates, not only from some earlier issues, but from the feedback from a variety of readers; from our unit, other Mohawk units and from mostly USAF pilots that filled in more details of missions, call signs, and threats we all faced, mostly over Laos and North Vietnam.

There are nearly 380 action packed pages of the true accounts from flying over 500 combat missions in Laos and North & South Vietnam in a Grumman OV-1 Mohawk, the US Army's armed, single-pilot, ejection-seat aircraft that was a key player in the secret war run by the CIA in Laos.

My fight unit of two combat tours, the 20th ASTA/131st Aviation Company, was the only Mohawk unit of five in SE Asia that flew only outside of South Vietnam until the last months of the war and was flying the machine gun and rocket equipped attack versions of the Mohawk.

There are more than 25 great photos weaved through this interesting book. The book is filled with these events and is not written as a novel or narrative, but goes directly to the mission action, loses, crashes, shoot downs, missiles and MiGs faced by this truly unique Army combat unit.

From a separate base in northern Thailand we, along with Air America, flew for years in the CIA's Secret War in Northern Laos. Nightly we flew our Mohawks up against the Chinese border and working on real-time night attacks of Chinese trucks and tanks moving across the north end of the Laotian Plain of Jars. We would find the targets--and attack, night after night after night.

Unfortunately, our unit losses were staggering and shocking, even to us--losing more aircraft and men than all four of the other Mohawk units--combined.

Many of our men ended up MIA's in Laos and North Vietnam never to be seen again--even after the war. They disappeared. You get shot down in Laos, or up along the Chinese border, and you disappeared, forever.

13th Edition Updated

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