Michael Clinton Mc Cain
Staff Sergeant
DET A-244 (DAK TO), B CO, 5TH SF GROUP, USARV Army of the United States Birmingham, Alabama September 17, 1941 to May 09, 1968 MICHAEL C McCAIN is on the Wall at Panel 57E, Line 29 |
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SSG E-6 Michael McCain, killed in action near Det A-244 Ben Het, 9 May 1968. This is an account of the events as I understood them. I was operating the camp radio that night and part of the following morning. I am Jack Williams (Sgt E-5 John T. Williams, RA 14892864). In early may I was transferred from A-242 Dak Pek to A-244 Ben Het as an 05B4S radioman. The team had just finished relocating from Dak To to Ben Het, though some equipment remained to be moved and the many of the bunkers, including the TOC, remained uncompleted. One week after my arrival on the team, SSG McCain and the new XO, Lt. Leopold, were on a mission with a company of about 80 Montagnards west of Ben Het, looking for signs of tanks and heavy infantry closing in on the Ben Het camp. We were continuing to lay the first anti-tank minefields in Vietnam as a response to the events at Long Vei and the report of tanks across the border. On May 8, McCain's Montagnard company made significant contact, and then took up positions atop a prominent hill. I think this hill mass was 4 clicks southwest of the camp, south of Highway 512. In the early morning of 9 May, when the area was blanketed with fog, the company was assaulted by North Vietnamese regulars. Montagnard survivors later reported that after fighting off the first assault, many of the CIDG scattered. Both Lt. Leopold and SSG McCain were wounded, the Lt. in the legs and McCain in the jaw. McCain reportedly (from Montagnard testimony) was trying to carry the LT but finally took up a position in a bomb crater with 2-3 Montagnards who stuck. He attempted to call for air support but his wounded jaw prevented him speaking on the radio. He then attempted to send information for air support by keying his radio in Morse code. I heard that Montagnard sources reported that he twice personally repelled follow-up attacks by the NVA, killing many. His position was finally overrun and he was killed, possibly by a grenade. LT Leopold was reported captured by the Montagnards, and I always assumed he died. Much to my surprise, a few years ago I discovered his account of capture, imprisonment and subsequent escape. SSG McCain had many friends in one of the gunship companies at Dak To. Some were reportedly very desperate to fly to his rescue, but they were forbidden to lift off because of heavy fog over the Dak To airstrip. This prohibition was supposedly inexplicably continued even after the fog had lifted entirely in the Ben Het area. The gunships subsequently arrived after SSG McCain's position was overrun. Third hand sources reported that McCain's gunship friends were much affected and a confrontation of sorts with the commander who prevented them from flying ensued. Whether they could have altered events even if they arrived in a more timely fashion is problematical.
From a Det A-244 teammate, |
A Note from The Virtual WallCaptain Stephen R. Leopold, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, who was with Staff Sergeant McCain, was captured. Although kept in a POW compound in Cambodia for 18 months, CPT Leopold eventually was moved to Hanoi and was released on 05 March 1973. He later became a member of the Wisconsin legislature.
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