My
Adopted POW/MIA

Name:
Randolph Jefferson Ard
Rank/Branch:
W1/US Army
Unit:
Headquarters & Headquarters Company, 1st Battalion 5th Infantry
Division
(Mechanized)
Date
of Birth: 16 June 1951 (Pensacola FL)
Home
City of Record: West Pensacola, FL.
Date
of Loss: 07 March 1971
Loss
Coordinates: 163700N 1063250E (XD653388)
Status
(in 1973) Missing in Action
Category:
2
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground:
OH58A
Refno:
1719
Other
personnel in incident include: Phil Bodenhorn, Jerry Castillo (rescued),
SheldonJ. Burnett (missing) and Mike Castro (fate unknown.)
Source:
Compiled by Homecoming II Project 01 September 1990 from one or more of
the following; raw data from U.S. Government agency sources, correspondence
with POW/MIA families, published sources, interviews. Updated
by the P.O.W. NETWORK.
Remarks:
Survived to call MAYDAY.
Synopsis
LAM
SON 719 was a large offensive operation against NVA communication lines
in Laos in the region adjacent to the two northern
provinces
of South Vietnam. The operation was a raid in which ARVN troops would
drive west from Khe Sanh on Route 9, cut the Ho Chi Minh Trail, seize Tchpone,
some 25 miles away, and then return to Vietnam. The ARVN would provide
and command the ground forces, while the U.S. Army and Air Force would
furnish aviation airlift and supporting firepower. The 101st Airborne
Division (Airmobile) commanded all U.S. Army aviation units in direct support
of the operation.
Most
of the first part of the operation, begun on 30 January 1971, was called
Operation DEWEY CANYON II, and was conducted by U.S. ground forces in Vietnam.
The ARVN met their halfway point on 11 February and moved into position
for the attach across the Laotian border.
On
8 February, the ARVN began pushing along Route 9 into Laos. The NVA
reacted fiercely, committing some 36,000 troops to the area. The
ARVN held its positions supported by U.S. airstrikes and resupply runs
by Army helicopters.
President
Nguyen Van Thieu ordered a helicopter assault on Tchepone, and the abandoned
village was seized 6 March. Two weeks of hard combat were necessary
for the ARVN task force to fight its way back to Vietnam.
Randy
Ard had been in Vietnam only a few weeks when an emergency call came in
for him to fly the squadron commander to a platoon command post to work
his way down to his Third Platoon, which was in ambush in the northwest
segment of South Vietnam. He flew his Kiowa Scout chopper from the
5th Mech and picked up LtCol., Sheldon Burnett, the squadron commander;
Capt., Phil Bodenhorn, Alpha Company commander; and SP4 Mike Castro, Third
Platoon RTO.
Ard
mistakenly flew past the command post and west into Laos. Seeing
yellow marking smoke, he took the chopper down lower. It was too
late to pull up when they heard the sound of an RPD machine gun and AK-47's.
They had been tricked into a North Vietnamese ambush.
The
helicopter went down fast, and smashed into the brush, coming down on its
side (or upside down, depending on the version of the account). Ard
and Burnett were trapped in the wreckage, but alive. Ard got on the
radio and began mayday calls. Bodenhorn and Castillo, who had been
in the rear seat, got out of the aircraft. Bodenhorn managed to free
Ard, but he had two broken legs and possibly a broken hip. Burnett
was completely pinned within the wreckage and injured, but alive.
Bodenhorn and Castillo positioned themselves on opposite side of the aircraft
and expended all the color smoke grenades they had, marking their position
for rescue.
(Note:
Mike Castro's name appears in one account of this incident, but his fate
is not given. He does not appear in a second account from the U.S.
Army Casualty Board).
Bodenhorn
and Castillo soon heard North Vietnamese approaching, and killed these
Vietnamese. The two listened for nearly an hour as others advanced
towards their position from two directions, and 155 artillery rounds impacted
very near them. They couldn't understand why they were not being
rescued, unless it was because the enemy was so close to them. A
helicopter flew over, but took heavy fire and left. They decided
to leave Ard and Burnett and escape themselves. They told Ard, who
nodded wordlessly. Burnett was drifting in and out of consciousness.
Both men were alive.
Bodenhorn
and Castillo worked their way to 80 yards away when a UHIC came in on a
single run, firing flechette rockets which seemed to explode right on the
downed chopper. Later, they watched an F4 roll in for a one-bomb
strike over the crash site. Ard and Burnett were surely dead.
Bodenhorn
and Castillo were rescued by ARVN troops an hour later. Ard and Burnett
were classified as Missing In Action. The story was released to reporters
at Khe Sanh three days later. The army spokesman accurately described
the ambush, but told the press that Burnett had been in radio contact with
the ambushed platoon, and that he and Ard had appeared dead to the two
escaping officers. The names of the survivors were not released.
General
Sutherland stated "... the decision was not made to employ the Air Cavalry
and the Hoc Bao to attempt to retrieve either LtCol., Burnett alive or
his body. ...Burnett had no mission nor units in Laos. He had
no reason or authority to take his helicopter over the Laotian border."
After
11 days of heavy resistance, the 11th ARVN Airborne Battalion fought their
way into the area where the helicopter had crashed. The searched
wreckage and the surrounding area for several days, but found no sign of
the two missing men or any of their belongings or anything to indicate
that either man was buried in the area.
In
1989, a large part of this loss incident was still classified.
There
can be no question that Randy Ard and Sheldon Burnett were abandoned by
the country they served. Losses in LAM SON 719 were heavy.
The ARVN suffered some 9,000 casualties, almost 50% of their force.
U.S. forces incurred some 1,462 casualties. Aviation units lost 168
helicopters; another 618 were damaged. Fifty-five aircrewmen were killed
in action, 178 were wounded and 34 were missing in action. There
were 19,360 known enemy casualties for the operation lasting until 6 April
1971.
Nearly
600 Americans were lost in Laos during the war in Vietnam. although
the Pathet Lao stated on several occasions they held "tens of tens" of
American prisoners, Laos was not included in the agreements ending American
involvement in the war, and the U.S. has not negotiated for the freedom
of these men since that day. Consequently, not one American held
in Laos has ever been released.
These
Americans, too, were abandoned.

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