Name: James William Holt
Rank/Branch: E7/US Army Special Forces
Unit: Company C, Detachment A-101, 5th Special
Forces Group
Date of Birth: 19 September 1941 (Hope AR)
Home City of Record: Hot Springs AR
Loss Date: 07 February 1968
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 163602N 1064058E (XD795360)
Status (In 1973): Missing In Action
Category: 1
Acft/Vehicle/Ground: Ground
Personnel In Incident: Dennis L. Thompson;
William G. McMurry; Harvey G.
Brande; (all released 1973). Kenneth Hanna;
Daniel R. Phillips; James W. Holt;
James Moreland; Charles Lindewald; (all missing);
Eugene Ashley Jr. (killed)
REMARKS: OVERRUN AT SF CAMP
SYNOPSIS: The Lang Vei Special Forces camp in the
northwestern corner of South
Vietnam along Route 9, a mile and a half from the
Laotian border.had been
established in late December 1966 as a result of
the Special Forces Detachment
A101 having been moved out of its former Khe Sanh
location. It seemed ill fated
from the beginning.
In March 1967, one of the worst tragedies to
befall the Special Forces CIDG
program during the war occurred. U.S. Air Force
released napalm ordnance on the
nearby village which spewed exploding fire over
the camp, landing zone,
minefield and village. 135 CIDG and native
civilians were killed, and 213 were
horribly wounded, burned or disfigured.
Only two months later, on May 4, a Viet Cong
night attack on the camp wiped out
the Special Forces command group, all in one
bunker, and killed the detachment
commander and his executive officer, as well as
seriously wounding the team
sergeant. This attack was a prelude to the larger
siege of Khe Sanh, and was a
grim reminder of the dangerous neighborhood
Special Forces had moved into.
By January 1968, several North Vietnamese Army
divisions had encircled the
Marine combat base at Khe Sanh, placing the more
westerly Lang Vei Special
Forces frontier surveillance camp in imminent
danger. The camp was occupied by
Detachment A101 commanded by Capt. Frank C.
Willoughby. Willoughby was
rebuilding and reinforcing the camp at the time,
while soldiers and dependants
from the Kha tribal 33rd Laotian Volunteer
Battalion streamed into the camp
after being overrun by NVA tanks across the
border.
On the evening of January 24, the camp was
pounded by mortars in conjunction
with a heavy shelling of the Marine Khe Sanh
base, which prevented any
effective artillery support for Lang Vei. 1Lt.
Paul R. Longgrear had only
recently arrived with his Hre tribal 12th Mobile
Strike Force Company to help
shore up defensive firepower.
The influx of the Laotians caused some problems.
For example, the Lao battalion
commander refused to take orders from the
American captain, forcing the Company
C commander, LtCol. Daniel F. Schungel, to come
to Lang Vei on his first
Special Forces assignment on February 6 to
provide an officer of equal rank.
Camp strength on February 6 totalled 24 Special
Forces, 14 LLDB, 161 mobile
strike force, 282 CIDG (Bru and Vietnamese), 6
interpreters and 520 Laotian
soldiers, plus a number of civilians.
Shortly after midnight on February 7, 1968, a
combined NVA infantry-tank
assault drove into Lang Vei. Two PT-76 tanks
threatened the outer perimeter of
the camp as infantry rushed behind them. SFC
James W. Holt destroyed both tanks
with shots from his 106mm recoilless rifle. More
tanks came around the burning
hulks of the first two tanks and began to roll
over the 104th CIDG Company's
defensive positions. SSgt. Peter Tiroch, the
assistant intelligence sergeant,
ran over to Holt's position and helped load the
weapon. Holt quickly lined up a
third tank in his sights and destroyed it with a
direct hit. After a second
shot at the tank, Holt and Tiroch left the
weapons pit just before it was
demolished by return cannon fire. Tiroch watched
Holt run over to the
ammunition bunker to look for some hand-held
Light Anti-tank Weapons (LAWs). It
was the last time Holt was ever seen.
LtCol. Schungel, 1Lt. Longgrear, SSgt. Arthur
Brooks, Sgt. Nikolas Fragos, SP4
William G. McMurry, Jr., and LLDB Lt. Quy
desperately tried to stop the tanks
with LAWs and grenades. They even climbed on the
plated engine decks, trying to
pry open hatches to blast out the crews. NVA
infantrymen followed the vehicles
closely, dusting their sides with automatic rifle
fire. One tank was stopped by
five direct hits, and the crew killed as they
tried to abandon the vehicle. 1Lt.
Miles R. Wilkins, the detachment executive
officer, left the mortar pit with
several LAWs and fought a running engagement with
one tank beside the team
house without much success.
Along the outer perimeters, the mobile strike
force outpost was receiving fire.
Both Kenneth Hanna, a heavy weapons specialist,
and Charles W. Lindewald, 12th
Mobile Strike Force platoon leader, were wounded.
Hanna, wounded in the scalp,
left shoulder and arm tried to administer first
aid to Lindewald. The two were
last seen just before their position was overrun.
Harvey Brande spoke with them
by radio and Hanna indicated that Lindewald was
then dead, and that he himself
was badly wounded. Daniel R. Phillips, a
demolitions specialist, was wounded in
the face and was last seen trying to evade North
Vietnamese armor by going
through the northern perimeter wire.
.
NVA sappers armed with satchel charges, tear gas
grenades and flamethrowers
fought through the 101st, 102nd and 103rd CIDG
perimeter trenches and captured
both ends of the compound by 2:30 a.m.
Spearheaded by tanks, they stormed the
inner compound. LtCol. Schungel and his
tank-killer personnel moved back to the
command bunker for more LAWs. They were pinned
behind a row of dirt and rock
filled drums by a tank that had just destroyed
one of the mortar pits. A LAW
was fired against the tank with no effect. The
cannon swung around and blasted
the barrels in front of the bunker entrance. The
explosion temporarily blinded
McMurry and mangled his hands, pitched a heavy
drum on top of Lt. Wilkins and
knocked Schungel flat. Lt. Quy managed to escape
to another section of the
camp, but the approach of yet another tank
prevented Schungel and Wilkins from
following. At some point during this period,
McMurry, a radioman, disappeared.
The tank, which was shooting at the camp
observation post, was destroyed with a
LAW. Schungel helped Wilkins over to the team
house, where he left both doors
ajar and watched for approaching NVA soldiers.
Wilkins was incapacitated and
weaponless, and Schungel had only two grenades
and two magazines of ammunition
left. He used one magazine to kill a closely
huddled five-man sapper squad
coming toward the building. He fed his last
magazine into his rifle as the team
house was rocked with explosions and bullets. The
two limped over to the
dispensary, which was occupied by NVA soldiers,
and hid underneath it, behind a
wall of sandbags.
At some point, Brande, Thompson and at least one
Vietnamese interpreter were
captured by the North Vietnamese. Thompson was
uninjured, but Brande had taken
shrapnel in his leg. Brande and Thompson were
held separately for a week, then
rejoined in Laos. Joined with them was McMurry,
who had also been captured
from the camp. The three were moved up the Ho Chi
Minh trail to North Vietnam
and held until 1973. The U.S. did not immediately
realize they had been
captured, and carried them in Missing in Action
status thoughout the rest of
the war, although Brande's photo was positively
identified by a defector in
April 1969 as being a Prisoner of War. A
Vietnamese interpreter captured from
the camp told Brande later that he had seen both
Lindewald and Hanna, and that
they both were dead.
Several personnel, including Capt. Willoughby,
SP4 James L. Moreland, the medic
for the mobile strike force, and Lt. Quan, the
LLDB camp commander, were
trapped in the underground level of the command
bunker. Lt. Longgrear had also
retreated to the command bunker. Satchel charges,
thermite grenades and gas
grenades were shoved down the bunker air vents,
and breathing was very
difficult. Some soldiers had gas masks, but
others had only handkerchiefs or
gauze from their first aid packets.
The NVA announced they were going to blow up the
bunker, and the LLDB personnel
walked up the stairs to surrender, and were
summarily executed. At dawn, two
large charges were put down the vent shaft and
detonated, partially demolishing
the north wall and creating a large hole through
which grenades were pitched.
The bunker defenders used upturned furniture and
debris to shield themselves.
Willoughby was badly wounded by grenade fragments
and passed out at 8:30 a.m.
Moreland had been wounded and became delirious
after receiving a head injury in
the final bunker explosion. Incredibly, the
battle was still going on in other
parts of the camp.
Aircraft had been strafing the ravines and roads
since 1:00 a.m. Throughout the
battle, the Laotians refused to participate,
saying they would attack at first
light. Sfc. Eugene Ashley, Jr., the intelligence
sergeant, led two assistant
medical specialists, Sgt. Richard H. Allen and
SP4 Joel Johnson as they
mustered 60 of the Laotian soldiers and
counterattacked into Lang Vei. The
Laotians bolted when a NVA machine gun crew
opened fire on them, forcing the
three Americans to withdraw.
Team Sfc. William T. Craig and SSgt. Tiroch had
chased tanks throughout the
night with everything from M-79 grenade launchers
to a .50 caliber machine gun.
After it had become apparent that the camp had
been overrun, they escaped
outside the wire and took temporary refuge in a
creek bed. After daylight, they
saw Ashley's counterattack force and joined him.
The Special Forces sergeants
persuaded more defenders fleeing down Route 9 to
assist them and tried second,
third and fourth assaults. Between each assault,
Ashley directed airstrikes on
the NVA defensive line, while the other Special
Forces soldiers gathered tribal
warriors for yet another attempt. On the fifth
counterattack, Ashley was
mortally wounded only thirty yards from the
command bunker.
Capt. Willoughby had regained consciousness in
the bunker about 10:00 a.m. and
established radio contact with the
counterattacking Americans. The continual
American airstrikes had forced the North
Vietnamese to begin withdrawing from
the camp. Col. Schungel and Lt. Wilkins emerged
from under the dispensary after
it was vacated by the North Vietnamese and
hobbled out of the camp.
The personnel in the bunker also left in response
to orders to immediately
evacuate the camp. They carried Sgt. John D.
Early, who had been badly wounded
by shrapnel while manning the tower, but were
forced to leave SP4 Moreland
inside the bunker. 1Lt. Thomas D. Todd, an
engineer officer in charge of
upgrading Lang Vei's airstrip, held out in the
medical bunker throughout the
battle. That afternoon, he was the last American
to pass through the ruined
command bunker. He saw Moreland, who appeared to
be dead, covered with debris.
Maj. George Quamo gathered a few dozen Special
Forces commando volunteers from
the MACV-SOG base at Khe Sanh (FOB #3) and led a
heroic reinforcing mission
into Lang Vei. His arrival enabled the Lang Vei
defenders to evacuate the area,
many by Marine helicopters in the late afternoon.
Sgt. Richard H. Allen - Survivor
Sfc Eugene Ashley, Jr. - Awarded the
Congressional Medal of Honor for Lang Vei
Harvey Gordon Brande - Captured - released POW in
1973
SSgt. Arthur Brooks - Survivor
Sfc. William T. Craig - Survivor
Sgt. John D. Early - Survivor
Sgt. Nikolas Fragos - Survivor
Kenneth Hanna - Missing In Action
James William Holt - Missing In Action
SP4 Joel Johnson - Survivor
Charles Wesley Lindewald, Jr. - Missing In Action
1Lt. Paul R. Longgrear - Survivor
SP4 William G. McMurry - Captured - released POW
in 1973
James Leslie Moreland - Missing In Action
Daniel Raymond Phillips - Missing In Action
Maj. George Quamo - Killed in Action April 14,
1968
Lt. Quy - Survivor
LtCol. Daniel F. Schungel - appointed deputy
commander of the 5th Special Forces
Dennis L. Thompson - Captured - released POW in
1973
SSgt. Peter Tiroch - Survivor
1Lt. Thomas D. Todd - Survivor
1Lt. Miles R. Wilkins - Survivor
Capt. Frank C. Willoughby - Survivor