Home Page : Feature Stories : Last Updated November 05, 2006 The following has been provided compliments of Smokejumpers Magazine Prisoner In Laos: A Story Of Survival-Parts I
and II Editor’s note: On September 5, 1963, five people, including Phisit Intharathat and Gene DeBruin (MSO-59), parachuted from a flaming Air America C-46 over Laos. All were captured and became prisoners. Phisit was a prisoner for three years, four months and four days. He was rescued on January 9, 1967. His story of survival is one of the most amazing and inspiring accounts of hardship and courage I have ever read. Gene is still missing. You can’t condense three years into a single article without losing the feel and detail of an event. Therefore, this story will be told over two issues. – Chuck Sheley A Straightforward Account This story is a straightforward, unembellished account. I will use the real names of all the friends who were part of my fate, in memory of the brave spirits of all these beloved people. I will take this opportunity to thank my former instructors and commanders from the Naresuan Airborne Police Camp, who taught me to endure hardship like a man and, most important, taught me how to survive in the jungle. I’d also like to thank the Air America personnel who packed the parachute and made my 80th jump a safe one, enabling me to survive and write this story. The Day Before The Omen When I arrived at the airport on September 5 at about 0530, I saw the C-46 parked in the area near the Air American restaurant. After picking up my parachute and survival kit, I went to the restaurant and told Cheney that Tran Than was not going. Cheney told me to find a replacement. Prasit Thanee was in the standby room, because his flight had been cancelled and said that he would go. All personnel were aboard the aircraft by 0655. I corrected the flight log with the names of the personnel aboard and read the warning forbidding us to fly lower than 8,000 feet as there was enemy AAA along the flight path. Cheney read this, laughed and said, “If the plane gets hit, Y.C. To will probably have difficulty reporting to Vientiane, and they will probably want numerous corroborating reports.” Y.C. To was from Hong Kong, about 40 years old and quite superstitious. He told Cheney not to talk about the flight, as that was a bad omen. Cheney did not answer him but laughed, started the engines and taxied to the runway. The Flight I stopped reflecting as we began to drop altitude and entered the Ban Hoeui San area, a valley surrounded by mountains. We completed our cargo drops and retraced our flight path to Savannakhet. There was no sign or hint of enemy AAA. The Second Drop The Shootdown It was about ten minutes before we reached the drop zone. I was lying down eating a piece of fruit. A violent explosion happened close to where I was lying near the right wing of the aircraft. We abruptly lost altitude, and I floated to the ceiling and fell back to the floor. I was certain that we had been hit by enemy AAA fire, and when I looked out the window, I saw puffs of smoke from AAA rounds as they were fired and exploded not far from our aircraft. I hurried to the cockpit and found Cheney disengaging the auto-pilot and turning the aircraft toward Savannakhet. At the same time, I noticed a large fire coming from the right engine, engulfing the whole wing and emitting a long stream of black smoke. Cheney turned off the right engine, and the fire went out for 10 to 15 seconds before starting up again, worse than before. I hurried back and put on my parachute and tried unsuccessfully to find my survival bag, now covered by the bags of rice that were scattered all over the floor. The fire had now spread to the body of the aircraft and into the cargo area through a hole in the fuselage. I returned to the cockpit and helped the pilots put on their parachutes. Cheney ordered me to abandon the aircraft. I urged the pilots to go with me, but they refused and continued to try to maintain the plane’s altitude. I put a parachute on Y.C. To and pulled him to the door. He said he’d never jumped before and that the parachute he’d checked out required him to pull the handle to release the chute. Gene DeBruin had parachute experience as a smokejumper, but the others had little or no parachute experience. I solved the problem by taking our safety straps that we used when dropping cargo and making a static line with them. I then attached one end to the handles of the parachutes. I had Y.C. jump first. I would jump last. I saw all four chutes open. My parachute was lower than the others, probably because the aircraft was rapidly losing altitude. Before we jumped, heavy flames engulfed the plane, and I was unable to see through the curtain of smoke into the cockpit. It was so hot I felt as if I were burning alive. After I jumped, the plane exploded, and I saw a giant fireball falling to earth. I Scanned The Earth While I was sitting, I felt a pain in my right knee and felt that my pants were soaked below the knee. There was a tear of about two inches in my pants. I took off my pants and found the wound just above the kneecap. Yellowish flesh oozed out, and it was still bleeding. I tried to push the flesh back into the wound. I had some gauze with me and wrapped it around my knee. Then I poured tincture of iodine over the gauze. I put my pants back on and waited for help from the rescue aircraft. At about 1745, I heard the sound of an aircraft in the distance. I came out of the bush and climbed a tree. The sky was about to darken, but I could see four AT-6 aircraft flying in a line over my parachute and flying toward the plain area. A light rain began to fall, and I could hear the AAA start to fire. At the same time, the sound of 50-mm machine guns, hand-held automatic weapons and small arms fire filled the air. The aircraft quickly climbed for altitude, and I was able to see the emblem of the Laotian Rightist (friendly) Airforce on the planes as they flew away. A Platoon Of Soldiers I quickly came out of hiding and walked along the trail until I saw some light and heard a dog bark. As I moved closer, I saw four or five bamboo houses in the area. Around one house were seven or eight soldiers and two men wearing loincloths. I snuck along the tree line around the village until I found the main trail used by the villagers. I went into the jungle and traveled parallel to the trail until I ran into a small stream. The water wasn’t deep, but the current was swift. It was night and difficult to travel. I swam out and grabbed a hold of a log floating with the current in order to save time and keep from getting too tired. All I had to do was endure the cold water. I floated downstream for a considerable time, when I felt the stream getting shallower and the current starting to run faster. I couldn’t see anything ahead. The stream quickly curved to the right, and the current became even stronger. Captured They waded across the river, tied my hands behind my back and slipped the rope around my neck in a noose. All the time they pointed their guns at my head and poked my body with the barrels. I was extremely frightened and thought that they were going to shoot me. It was the first time in my life that I had been so afraid of dying. I was taken to another village, where I saw my four friends, who had also been captured. They were tied like me, with the end of the rope attached to a pole in the ground. They let us sit there all night without being interrogated. My watch and lighter were taken, but they allowed me to keep a sewing needle. I was also able to keep some parachute cord that I had tied around my waist in place of my belt. September 1963: First Prison At 1100, we were marched through the jungle until we reached a big road on which cars could drive. I found out later that this road was National Route 9, stretching from Savannakhet to the Vietnam border. After a while, we reached three ancient buildings with a brick wall around them. The insides of the buildings were covered with bullet marks, and the windows had been replaced with barbed wire. We were put into a room about five yards square. After about two days, my wound began to get infected. My whole knee was swollen, and I could barely walk. I squeezed the pus out of the wound and tried to clean it, but the wound itself was still spread wide open. I decided to sew up the wound using my sewing needle and threads from inside the parachute cord. Using my fingers to close the wound tightly, I pushed the needle through and my friends tied the thread. It hurt more than anything I had ever endured in my life, but I had to do it to survive. Four days later, the wound started getting infected again with lots of pus. I honed a bamboo sliver until it was sharp and used it to cut out the stitches and the dead skin around the knee. I then put in three new stitches. The wound got better and within three months had disappeared. We were imprisoned here for 27 days and had just two meals of rice and one cup of water a day. One at a time, we were allowed to go outside and dump our excrement dish. Our weight began to disappear, and we could notice the looseness of our clothes. October 1963: Second Prison One night we heard what sounded like a mouse squealing. Prasit Thanee picked up a stick and struck at the noise. The next morning we awoke and found a dead snake with two round lumps just below its head. Prasist cut the snake open and found two mice. We rubbed bamboo sticks together, started a fire, cooked the snake and the mice, divided them up and ate them. We stayed here for three full months. January 1964: Third Prison Every morning at 0800, the guards would come in and take the top board off and let us out, one person at a time, to empty our excrement containers. They had four guards watching the person who was emptying his bucket. We took as much time as possible to empty our buckets in order to keep our feet out of the foot traps. It was winter, and we had only the clothes we were wearing. It was so cold that I couldn’t sleep at night, and the foot traps kept my feet so numb I couldn’t feel them. In addition to the foot traps, the guards put nooses around our necks at night and tied the end of the rope to a post outside the cell. When the guards came around to check at night, they jerked on the rope and we had to call out in response. We began to worry about the foot traps; if we remained like this, we’d be crippled for sure. Out Of The Foot Traps Throughout this time, even though our mental state was confused, there wasn’t anyone who could not control himself. No one was so dejected that he considered suicide. We still had hope that if we weren’t killed, we might receive help from Air America, the U.S. government or the Red Cross. We started thinking of escaping, but there were no opportunities, as the guards were very strict. February 1964: Fourth Prison At about 1600 on our first day, the guards led us outside the cell to a small stream, where we were allowed to bathe and wash our clothes for the first time. Before dark, the guards put us in the foot traps but also added some old-fashioned, heavy handcuffs. There were two ways of wearing them. One way was to have the hands together, as if praying. The other way was to put the wrists together with the fingers pointing out to the left and right. No matter which way they were worn, they were extremely agonizing. The first night was especially tortuous, trying to sleep in handcuffs and foot traps in the cold in wet clothing. We used the knife to whittle away the foot traps as before. They didn’t put us in the handcuffs during the day but did so only at night. Again, a rope was connected to the handcuffs and tied to a post outside the cell. The sleeping quarters of the guards were located about 30 yards away, and we were able to build a fire, although we had to work together to fan the smoke away so they would not see it. Every day when we went to empty our buckets, we tried to pick up pieces of wood and tin to bring back to the cell. We molded dirt around the tin and used it as a cooking oven. Eat Anything That Moves Planning An Escape Opening The Handcuffs Escaping The Cell The First Escape After about three or four hours, we tried to find water but couldn’t find a drop. When it started to get light, we hid and rested. We tried to sleep, but it was hard because of the many small bugs that swarmed around our faces trying to get moisture from our breath. Later we heard shouts from the soldiers who were tracking us. Their voices got close and then went away. That happened several times during the day. That night we walked west. We were very fatigued and thirsty. The sweat was pouring out, and we had no water to replace it. We were very weak. We cut down jungle banana trees with hopes of finding water in the heart—to no avail. Our travel almost came to a halt as we tried to lick dew from the leaves. On the third day, we had to catch our urine and drink it. The smell was bad; it tasted salty. We weren’t concerned about food; the lack of water was the biggest problem. On day four, all of us felt as if we had sores in our throats. We traveled a very little distance. On the fifth day, DeBruin went into convulsions. My friends were unable to bring him out of it, so I tried another method. I urinated into his mouth. It worked! He choked, got up and ran away. We had to catch and hold him until he regained his senses. Captured Again After they pulled us out of the water, they handcuffed us and put nooses around our necks. We walked about two hours to a small village. They beat us incessantly along the way. They wanted to know who led the escape. After some preliminary interrogation, they tied my legs to DeBruin’s and hoisted us up a tree with out heads hanging about six feet off the ground. Not satisfied, they had the villagers find a red ant nest and beat the nest over our bodies. The ants bit us all over, but that pain was nothing compared to the pain in my ankles. I passed out and came to about dusk. I saw DeBruin laying beside me with his eyes closed. Our three friends had already been taken away. That night they brought us one ear of boiled corn to eat. We ate it all, including the cob. The next morning we were herded along a trail until dark, at which time I knew that we were back at Lang Khang. Back At Lang Khang On August 22, 1964, a truck pulled up in front, and soldiers carried a cardboard box to our cell. They told us it contained things that were sent to us by a “neutral party.” In the box we found a Christmas card from Frank Janke, our boss at Air America. There were also canned goods, soap and cigarettes. Based on the date of the Christmas card, these things had probably been held for eight months before the package got to us. Before dawn the next day, we boarded a Russian military truck and traveled through the jungle, mountains and valleys. There were 12 soldiers guarding us. We slept in the truck that night. We continued throughout the next morning until about four in the afternoon. They marched us into the mountains to the village of Ban Pha Tang. We then walked five days to our next destination. The Fifth Prison The Sixth Prison We talked about escape every day. We clearly saw that our first escape effort had derailed because of the lack of drinking water. The Laos we had seen from the airplane seemed full of rivers and streams. We knew that our next escape would be during the rainy season, when we would have plenty of drinking water. We guessed that we were being held near the Vietnamese-Laotian border. Eating Dogs Interrogation The interrogator was finished with us three Thais and started on DeBruin. He interrogated DeBruin in English with a French accent. DeBruin had to endure more pain than I did and fell out of his chair many times. The last time, he passed out. They threw water on him and continued the interrogation when he regained consciousness. In the end he was forced to write a confession just like us. We were taken back to Ban Tham. The Cruelest Prison Prisoner In Laos: A Story Of Survival-Part II Editor’s note: On September 5, 1963, five people, including Phisit Intharathat and Gene DeBruin (MSO-59), parachuted from a flaming Air America C-46 over Laos. All were captured and became prisoners. Phisit was a prisoner for three years, four months and four days. Dieter Dengler, whose story intersects with Phisit’s, recorded his memories in a book called Escape From Laos. Below, I have interspersed edited passages from his book in an effort to flesh out some of Phisit’s account, which I hope gives readers a better perspective on what transpired during those harrowing months. I hope it also gives readers a better sense of who Gene was as a person. In the October 2006 issue of Smokejumper, the four Air America personnel had made an unsuccessful escape and had been recaptured. At this point, they have been imprisoned for over two years and are soon to be joined by two U.S. military pilots.—Chuck Sheley Meeting Duane Martin Meeting Dieter Dengler At the end of April, we walked three days to a new prison. Editor’s note: The boldfaced, italicized paragraphs that follow are edited passages from Dengler’s book, Escape from Laos. About his shoot-down, Dengler writes: “Tree and plane met with a violent shudder. I came to, lying on my back about 100 feet from the crash. It was important that I put distance between myself and the aircraft. My first Pathet Lao was different than I had anticipated. He was small and had muscular calloused feet and carried a long-bladed machete. Slowly, I pulled the sleeping bag over my body for camouflage. “As I began to think about the fix I was in, I nearly panicked. Escape and survival were not unknown to me. Since boyhood in Germany, thanks to the war and its aftermath, I had learned to fend for myself. I started north using a small compass attached to my watchband. It was hot, and dehydration and mosquitoes were driving me nearly mad. “No matter which way I went, I could not get away from signs of village life. I decided to take my chances and forded a river. The water felt great, and I scooped some into my shoe, dropped in an iodine tablet and drank the yellow liquid. It was getting dark, and I was exhausted from the day and in complete despair. I fell asleep within minutes. “Daybreak came, and I moved on, coming to some deserted huts. Hunger won over caution, and I entered one and filled my pockets with what looked like potatoes and headed west. I heard the sound of a Spad and ran to an opening in the jungle and tore off my shirt and waved it frantically. Still waving my shirt, I saw two more Spads and two Jolly Green Giant helicopters heading directly toward me. At that moment, I knew I had been spotted. Spotted indeed—but by the Pathet Lao. When they saw me, I saw them. “One of them pointed in my direction, and I turned and ran at a steady pace. It was very difficult to avoid trails as I worked my way through the brush. Arriving at an intersection of several trails, I checked to make sure it was clear and started to run across the clearing. Halfway across I heard someone yelling, “Yute, Yute!” I turned my head and met the cold steel gaze of an M-1 rifle, pointed at my face.” The Eighth Prison: Ban Hoeui Het Dengler writes: “‘How long have you guys been here?’ I asked. ‘Two and a half years for the other guys, nine months for me,’ Duane [Martin] said. A guard opened their hut, and I watched the other guys come out. The fourth man appeared. He had on green trousers, worn at the knees. His beard was long and red. It was obvious that he was an American. His name was Gene DeBruin. Their clothes were old and worn, but there was something more than that. When they looked at me, I could see the years written on their faces. There was an animal look behind their slight smiles, and their sunken eyes were haunted and hungry.” The prison was a fenced area about 24 yards square, with two cells made of logs similar to our other prisons. There were three tall guard towers outside the fence, and we had a new team of guards totaling 16. We were divided into two groups, one for each cell. Dengler writes: “Gene came over and introduced himself. As Gene and I talked, the others came over and also introduced themselves. Gene asked a lot of questions that morning. ‘Hey,’ he asked, ‘Have they come out with stainless-steel razor blades yet?’ I didn’t know but was sure they had. ‘Well, I’ll be,’ he mumbled, ‘That’s what I wanted to invent when I got out of this hellhole.’” Each morning, the guards would take all of us at one time to the stream, where we would dump out our waste buckets. Every three days we were allowed to bathe and wash our clothes. They didn’t put us back into our cells immediately when we walked back, and we were allowed to stay within the perimeter of the prison until breakfast. Opposite the camp was a high mountain covered with a thick blanket of trees. We figured it would take about six hours to reach the top of the mountain, but we wondered if there was a way down the other side. The whole time we were at this prison we never saw any outside soldiers or villagers. The sounds of trucks eventually disappeared, and all that was left was the sound of aircraft 24 hours a day. We often saw aircraft drop flares and bombs, and the sound of gunfire filled the air. At times it felt like an earthquake. Dengler writes: “Gene brought me his blanket. I didn’t want it, since I was sure it was the only one he had, but he kept insisting, saying that Duane was big enough to keep the two of them warm.” We started to make escape plans. Some days the guards climbed the towers and went to sleep. Sometimes they left their weapons in the tower when they came down at mealtime; all 16 guards would eat together. We tried to be on our best behavior as we waited for the rainy season to arrive. As advance preparation, we dug and loosened the bamboo fence next to one of the guard towers. We did the same in the cell. Each day we poured drinking water and urine onto the base of the largest pole until we loosened it. We put it back into the hole and covered up all traces so the guards wouldn’t notice anything and waited until the end of July and the rainy season. Dengler writes: “Gene slid over and covered the door so the guards couldn’t see us, and we all took off our footlocks. What really surprised me was that they were able to get out of the handcuffs. One of the guards told us we’re going to be released. I looked around the table and saw troubled looks on the guys’ faces. Gene said, ‘All the Pathet Laos are lying bastards, and nothing they told us before ever came true, especially when it came from that little no-good son of a bitch.’” The Escape Plan My plan was to escape at about 1600 on July 31, while the guards were eating in the mess hall. We would divide into two groups, get out of the prison, obtain weapons from the tower and capture the guards while they were eating. We wouldn’t harm the guards but would put them in the foot traps and handcuffs and lock them in the cells. After that we could get shoes, rice and salt to take with us as we made our way to the top of the mountain. At the top of the mountain we would split into four groups and go our separate ways. We divided up as follows: Duane Martin and Dieter Dengler, Gene DeBruin and Y.C. To, Prasit Prahmsuwan and Prasit Thanee, and me (alone). Dengler writes: “Prasit thought we should be in two groups, with at least one American in each group. Y.C. wanted us all to go together. ‘It’d never work Y.C.,’ I said. ‘Hell, we can’t get along even here.’ I wanted to go with Gene and Duane, because we got along so well. Y.C. was insistent; he wanted to have an American with him.” I also recommended that each group should head west and do most of the travel in the waterways. If anyone was rescued, they could direct searchers back along the rivers and streams looking for the others. Under no circumstances should anyone go into a village; otherwise, he would be captured. It was mid-June when we agreed on the escape plan. It had begun to rain a lot, and the water in the stream was rising. One month to go. Dengler writes: “‘Listen. Do you hear it?’ Duane asked. I was drowned out by the noise of the heavy pounding of the first rain. ‘Wow, listen to it. Wait until the monsoon season hits. It’s even louder then,’ shouted Gene. ‘Come on, baby, pour, will ya?’ Gene grinned from ear to ear as the rain answered his bidding.” We offered suggestions about finding food in the jungle. Ferns that grew along the waterways were edible, as were figs that could be eaten green or ripe. The easiest animals to catch and eat would be baby green frogs and tadpoles. You would have to watch out for the baby black toads, which were poisonous. It would be hard to build a fire due to the rain. Dengler writes: “The guards brought in a mirror and wanted to shave our
beards. Gene was first. [One guard] scraped his beard off with a little
knife. Occasionally, Gene cried out and little red rivulets trickled down
his face. Gene now looked like somebody else. His face was still sunken
and white, but he looked much younger.” The Escape Dengler writes: “The escape plan had to be changed at the last minute because of Y.C.’s illness. He could barely move his legs. Prasit said that taking him along with them would be suicide. No one said anything, but I knew Prasit was right. Finally Gene spoke up in anger: ‘Y.C., you’re going with me! Don’t listen to that damned Prasit. Prasit, you go to hell!’ “‘No,’ Y.C. said quietly. ‘Thanks but no thanks. He’s right. You’ll never make it out with me along.’ “‘The hell! We’ll make it. Anyway your legs might get better.’ “‘By tomorrow? You don’t believe that,’ Y.C. told Gene. “Then Y.C. very calmly said, ‘Gene, if you mean it, we’ll go together.’ As Y.C. spoke, he watched Gene’s eyes for a rebuff. Gene said, ‘You bet!’” On the morning of July 28, Y.C. was better and said he was ready. Dengler writes: “The three Thais were better adapted to survive in the jungle than we were. Prasit had been a paratrooper in Malaysia, and he really knew the jungle well. With the added burden of Y.C., we three Americans were now at a real disadvantage. I waited until the three of us were alone to bring up the topic again. “‘Gene, we just can’t do it,’ I told him. He remained silent. “‘Leave him be, Dieter,’ Duane said. “‘Nah, he’s right,’ Gene said, ‘So we don’t go with the two of you.’ “‘Don’t be a fool. We want you with us,’ I said. “‘And I want Y.C.’ Gene’s determination was unwavering. Though the darkness hid his face from me, I could tell that he was worried but also dead set on his plan. “‘Listen, you guys,’ he said, ‘Y.C. and I will go together, and after we make it over one ridge, we’ll lie in wait for air contact. If you guys make it out before us, be sure someone looks for us.’ For a while all three of us remained silent.” After breakfast, we immediately began the escape plan. We rested and
prepared ourselves mentally and at the appointed time heard the okay from
Gene DeBruin. Dengler, Martin, Prasit and I got out first. Dengler climbed
the tower and passed an M-1 rifle down to me, taking one for himself.
Martin climbed up and grabbed a Chinese-made rifle with a bayonet. Prasit
opened the cell for the others. The Plan Backfires Dengler writes: “Duane and I kept running. We heard the sound of someone coming to our left and ducked into the bush and froze. The familiar red head appeared, and there were Gene and Y.C. We started to move off together, but Y.C. held us back. Then Duane ran on ahead, while I stopped and took hold of Gene’s hand. “‘Go on, go on,’ he said. ‘See you in the States.’ I looked into Gene’s face and got all choked up. I tried to say something, but the words wouldn’t come. I pumped his hand, began running, then stopped and waved at him and Y.C.” Now What? The first night I did not want to make any sounds constructing a raft, so I decided to grab a clump of bamboo and float downstream. The water was very cold, but I had to endure it. The advantage of floating was that I could travel fast without leaving any tracks. I could also save my strength. The big disadvantage was that the streams went by villages. I had to be very aware of crowing roosters and barking dogs, because that meant the presence of a village. The soldiers always kept a fire going when they camped near a stream. I floated until about 0400, when I heard the squawk of a chicken. Then I climbed onto the bank and into the dense bush and fell asleep. I woke up about noon. Trouble On The Fourth Night I started walking again the next morning, looking for vegetables and grass to eat. There was plenty of water, and pools filled with tadpoles. I ate tadpoles every day. I would scoop them up in my hands and let them swim down my throat. They were easy to find, easy to eat and were not poisonous. Salt became very important as the body loses it through perspiration. If the body doesn’t get salt, one becomes very weak and begins to shake. Traveling In A Circle Dengler writes: “I pushed the brush aside and looked across the creek. Several abandoned huts sat in a clearing, and something about them rang a bell in the back of my memory. I knew we had been here two days before. Heartsickness and despair overcame me, and I wanted to hide the truth from Duane.” I fell asleep. When I woke up I was covered with leeches and spent considerable time pulling them off. They left sores that continued to bleed, and my body was completely red. Regardless, I started walking and came to another stream. I found a large log and waited until night before floating downstream. As before, I got out of the water when I heard a chicken. I rested during the days and traveled at night. Sometimes there was a village, and I would travel around it in the jungle rather than try to float by it. I traveled like that for three weeks. Dengler writes: “Duane’s malaria grew steadily worse. ‘Go on, leave me alone. I want to die by myself,’ Duane rasped. ‘Dieter, I’m going down to the village to get some food.’ “‘That’s a sure way to get killed,’ I told him. “‘I’m going Dieter.’ “The trail turned left and suddenly a little boy was standing a few feet away. Seconds later, somebody yelled ‘Americali,’ and a villager appeared before us clutching a long machete over his head. I was on my knees, and Duane was also kneeling—holding his prayer-folded hands toward the man. The villager slashed at Duane’s leg, the blade disappearing just below the groin. The next blow buried the blade deep into Duane’s neck, and he fell forward. “The villager was swinging the machete at me, and I ducked and ran back down the trail and hid in the brush as five villagers ran past me on the trail.” I figured that I had put considerable distance between me and the
prison camp. My strength was gone, and all that was left was skin hanging
on bones. The rifle and knife were a burden to carry, and I had run out of
salt tablets. There were more villages, so it was harder to travel by
water. I also felt that I could no longer take the hours in the cold water
anymore. Many times I got so cold and cramped that I thought I would
drown. I also heard gunfire at times and thought that I had gotten close
to Laotian Rightist territory. If I had a map and compass, I would surely
have completed my escape, but now I didn’t know where I was. What was
certain was that I was a long way away from the Ban Hoeui Het prison camp!
Day 22 Of The Escape Dengler writes: “I waited all day, but not a single plane flew over. I wondered if it was a Sunday or national holiday and if all the pilots were off work. I decided I would not take another step and would just lie in the jungle and die of starvation. The next morning I was no longer resigned to death.” The malaria hit me every day. My body was in terrible shape, full of scratches and sores. My feet were swollen to the point where I could hardly walk. The rifle and knife were so heavy I almost threw them away. My pants were now a mere loincloth. In short, I was a walking corpse. Dengler writes: “They were all armed and were Viet Cong, not villagers. I could tell they were excellent trackers, because they were following my path exactly—even though it had been days since I had been there. I had lost my fear, and it was strange and interesting to watch my trackers track me. “On day 23, a slip sent me tumbling into the shallow river, and I
cracked my head against a boulder. In a bowl-shaped depression, I saw a
coiled, brilliantly colored snake. Not caring if it was poisonous or not,
I snatched the snake and, as it coiled around my arm, stretched it out. I
took the head in one hand and the tail in the other and bit it in half.
The long brown liver hung from the body, and I began to eat it and kept
eating it until half the snake was gone. “The noise I heard was a plane, and I realized that it was a Spad. I jumped from one boulder to another signaling the plane. A second Spad was now circling. First I could hear them, and then I saw two helicopters. A shot echoed down the canyon, and I knew it was a race between the choppers and the Viet Cong. “The tree-penetrator slowly descended, and I again heard shots echo in the canyon. I was woozy and distant and finally pulled down one of the penetrator’s three arms and sat across it. I held on with a death grip, and when I opened my eyes, a huge man was towering over me in the doorway of the helicopter. I grabbed his leg and hugged it, refusing to let go, afraid that he might go away.” Day 26 Of The Escape: Soldiers Day 27 Of The Escape: Jets Day 28 Of The Escape: More Jets Day 29 Of The Escape: Close To Death Day 32 Of The Escape: I Couldn’t Get Up Captured Again The Kind Old Man The next day, as the soldiers were preparing me to travel, I prostrated myself at the feet of the old man in thanks. He rubbed my head and gave me this advice, “Don’t complain, don’t try to escape. Just endure, and you won’t die.” Yet Another Prison All of the prisoners were Laotians, and two of them were Laotian Rightist officers who had been captured when their unit had been overrun in Savannakhet. They had been here a year and were allowed to work outside. When they found out that I was a Thai, they were very nice to me. They would sneak me leafy vegetables or fruit and medicinal vines for my malaria. The vines also helped keep away the fleas and ticks. At the beginning of the fourth month, a Laotian Rightist battalion commander was put into my cell. He had been beaten severely and just laid there moaning. When the guards unlocked the foot traps the next morning, he was dead. My feelings were hardened, and I prepared myself to die. I told myself that I would not die in prison. I would take a gun away from a guard, even though I would be shot in the process. All I wanted was a chance to shoot some of them as well. Digging Out I found out that most of the soldiers had moved north and that most of the villagers had fled into the jungle, because they feared the aircraft. For the whole year that I had been at this prison, aircraft had come to drop bombs and strafe every day, several times a day. This also resulted in beatings from the Laotian soldiers, as they would take their anger out on me. During a nighttime air attack, I would crawl out through the hole that I had dug and travel west to an area where there were both Laotian Leftist (Communist) and Rightist forces fighting. Rescue It was just starting to get light, and we could look out over the wide plain and see the Communist forces following us. Just then, four Phantom Jets showed up and opened fire on our pursuers and then left. When the jets left, four T-28s showed up and continued to strafe and bomb. Our rescue group was led by a non-commissioned officer named Sergeant Tae. He said that he was the leader of a Cobra team of Laotian Rightists from Savannakhet. The sergeant had orders to attack the prison and rescue the prisoners. In all, there were 53 of us prisoners. I was the only foreigner (Thai) in the group. The others were villagers and Laotian Rightist soldiers, including the two Laotian Rightist officers who had befriended me. Twenty two people asked to go off on their own, as they had families in the area. Sergeant Tae gave me a pair of sandals and some rice crisps and then ordered the remaining 31 of us to move out. He ran us part of the time and walked us part of the time. He sent out point men and set rear guards in a professional manner. His team knew the routes well. I learned later that two members of his team were from this area. We continued to travel until almost 1700 hours, when Sergeant Tae sent out another radio message, and helicopters approached and passed over us. After about 15 more minutes of travel, we arrived at a wide, rocky field and saw two helicopters and a platoon of Laotian Rightist soldiers. The pilot was an American and asked, “Who works for Air America?” I introduced myself, and he shook my hand. He said his name was Jerry McEntee, and he was an Air America pilot from Udorn. I accompanied the soldiers who attacked the prison onto the first helicopter and took off at about 1730. There were 14 people total, including the two pilots and mechanic. The mechanic, who was Filipino, walked over to me and gave me a cigarette. I smoked, wondering if this was a dream. Was I really saved and not dreaming? Twenty minutes later, the copilot told me that the remaining soldiers and prisoners had been overrun by the pursuing forces. I just cried and let the tears flow. They Were Shocked When They Saw Me After Phisit Intharathat’s rescue in 1967, he returned to work at Air America, where he was the assistant manager of Security Operations until 1974. With the U.S. withdrawal and the fall of Indochina in 1975, Air America shut down operations. After that, Phisit worked for a Thai company in Bangkok and is currently retired in Bangkok. After returning to the United States, Dieter Dengler was sent to the
U.S. Navy Hospital in San Diego for recovery. The doctors said he was so
malnourished that he was close to death when he was rescued and would
probably have lasted only one more day. He weighed only 90 pounds, down
from his normal 160. He also had malaria, worms, fungus and many other
infections. After his release from the Navy in 1968, he went to work with
TWA as a flight engineer. He retired to Sausalito, California, and died in
February 2001 of ALS (commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s disease). Dengler
wrote about his captivity and flight in the book Escape from Laos, which
was published in 1979 by Presidio Press. A movie version of Dengler's
life, Little Dieter Needs to Fly, was made by German filmmaker Werner
Herzog and screened at the Mill Valley Film Festival in 1997. The movie
later appeared on Cinemax and was nominated for an Emmy in 1999. According to the Arlington National Cemetery website, nearly 600 Americans, including Duane Martin and Gene DeBruin, remain imprisoned, missing or otherwise unaccounted for in Laos. Although the U.S. maintains that only a handful of these men were POW status, over 100 were known to have survived their loss incident. The Pathet Lao stated during the war that they held “tens of tens” of American prisoners but added that they would be released only from Laos, meaning that the U.S. must negotiate directly with the Pathet Lao. Because the Pathet Lao was not part of the agreements that ended American involvement in Southeast Asia, no negotiations have ever been conducted with Pathet Lao for the prisoners it held. Y.C. To, Prasit Prahmsuwan and Prasit Thanee are still missing. |
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