The True HORRORS of MACV-SOG In Vietnam

On January 24th, 1964, the Pentagon activated the most classified military unit in American history.

They had no official existence.

Their missions were denied by the US government and their casualty rate was over 100%.

That means every single operator who joined this unit was guaranteed to be wounded.

Many multiple timeS.

Some never came home at all.

This is the story of MV SOG, the studies and observations grouP.

A unit so lethal they achieved a 158 to1 kill ratio.

So dangerous that enemy forces created specialized countertracking teams just to hunt them down.

And so secreT.

Their families were told they died in training accidents when they disappeared behind enemy lineS.

Before we dive into the darkness, you need to understand what these men were walking away from.

In the early 1960s, America was deeply divided over Vietnam.

While thousands of young men were being drafted and sent to fight a war they didn’t understand, a small group of volunteers were raising their hands for something far more deadly.

These weren’t your average soldierS.

M VOG recruited from the absolute beSt.

Navy Seals, Green Berets, Marine Force Recon, Air Force commandos, even CIA operativeS.

But here’s what separated them from everyone else.

They volunteered three timeS.

First for military service, then for special forces, and finally for MAC V SOG.

By the time you made it through the selection, you knew exactly what you were signing up for.

The briefing was unlike anything in conventional military service.

You’d be told your life expectancy was measured in weeks, not yearS.

that you had an 85% chance of becoming a casualty within 3 months and your odds of surviving one year were one in 4,000.

Your missions, crossber operations into Laos, Cambodia, and North Vietnam, places the US government publicly claimed no American forces were operating.

Your targets included the Hochi Min trail, enemy supply depots, and North Vietnamese command centerS.

you’d be outnumbered hundreds to one, sometimes thousands to one.

In November 1968, a six-man MCV SOG team engaged an enemy force of 30,000 soldierS.

They survived.

Most rational people heard those odds and walked away.

But the men who stayed weren’t operating on logic anymore.

They were driven by something deeper.

A belief that conventional warfare wasn’t winning the war, that someone had to go where others wouldn’t, that this was the only way to truly hurt the enemy.

The moment you crossed that threshold, everything changed.

Your identity was stripped away.

No dog tags, no patches, no ID cardS.

You carried weapons with serial numbers filed ofF.

War tiger stripe camouflage identical to South Vietnamese forceS.

Some teams even carried enemy weapons to confuse the opposition.

And if you were captured, the US government would deny you ever existed.

Missions typically ran 7 to 10 dayS.

Deep insertion by helicopter, then complete radio silence unless you were compromised.

The jungle itself was the first enemy.

Triple canopy rainforest so thick you couldn’t see the sky.

Where a wrong step could send you tumbling down a mountain.

Where every sound could mean death.

But you weren’t alone.

Mvog teams included indigenous fighters, Montineyard tribesmen from the central highlands, Nung mercenaries from the Chinese border.

These weren’t auxiliarieS.

They were full teammates who often saved American liveS.

The relationship was built on absolute truSt.

Americans called them the little people with deep respecT.

These fighters knew the jungle better than anyone and could track enemy movements by the smallest signS.

And he he he I remember him saying uh uh SOG uh other people say no.

They said highly classified unit, but I remember saw and um but anyway, he says we have this program uh in Vietnam in his special operations group and um um you need to be 11F to go.

That was your MOS and um that was hard.

You had to be a senior NCO, but we were going to let this small group of us do iT.

There’s 37 of us and uh uh but then the proviso at the end of it he says at the end of this all of you people all graduates are going to be sent directly to Vietnam to SOG and uh 85% of you will be dead in 3 monthS.

So the first thing I did is I went back and said well how many do you have to start with if every 3 months 85% die and it’s over 4,000.

So, the odds of living a year in SOG back then was one in uh 4,000, assuming, you know, he wasn’t just trying to scare uS.

But the experiences in in Vietnam and what we went through was horrendouS.

Um our odds of living was one in 4,000.

And uh it was so unique that when you come out on the other end, you’re not the same person again.

But indigenous allies weren’t the only unusual partnershipS.

MV SOG attracted a different breed of American warrior, too.

World War II and Korean War veterans volunteered to fight alongside 20-year-oldS.

Men like Larry Thorne, a Finnish war hero who’d fought the Soviets, then joined the US Army.

He became SOG’s first MIA in LaoS.

The missions themselves violated every rule of conventional warfare.

You weren’t there to hold ground.

You were there to gather intelligence, snatch prisoners, and call in air strikes on targets that officially didn’t exiSt.

Teams would plant seismic sensors along the Ho Chi Min Trail.

These devices fed data to orbiting aircraft, tracking enemy troop movements in real time.

MACV SOG provided 75% of all intelligence on enemy activity along the trail.

When sensors detected a major convoy, you’d call in arc light strikeS.

B-52 bombers that turned entire grid squares into moonscapeS.

The results were devastating.

In 1970, MV SOG achieved a 158 to1 kill ratio, the highest in US military history.

But that ratio came at a coSt.

The North Vietnamese Army wasn’t stupid.

They knew SOG teams were operating in their territory.

And they adapted.

They created specialized counter SOG unitS.

Professional trackers whose only job was hunting American recon teaMs.

These weren’t regular infantry.

They were the enemy’s version of special forceS.

And they were terrifyingly good at their job.

A trained tracker could tell if you were American by examining your feces, the different diet, the different gut bacteriA.

It left a signature.

So SOG operators ate local food, drank local water, smoked Vietnamese cigarettes, anything to mask their presence.

But even that wasn’t always enough.

Teams would be compromised and hunted for days, running through the jungle with hundreds of enemy soldiers on their trail.

The extraction helicopters that came to save them often took heavy fire.

Some teams ran so hard, so long that they had to be carried onto the helicopters, their feet destroyed, dehydrated, barely consciouS.

Nine men from Mac Vogg received the Medal of Honor.

Nine in a unit that at its peak numbered only around 2,000 AmericanS.

To put that in perspective, that’s one Medal of Honor for every 222 SOG operatorS.

The US military as a whole in Vietnam had one Medal of Honor recipient per 7,000 soldierS.

Let me tell you about one mission that shows you what these men faced.

May 2nd, 1968, Master Sergeant Roy Benavid heard that a 12man SOG team was surrounded and taking casualties in CambodiA.

Benvadez wasn’t on the mission.

He was at the forward operating base.

But when he heard that radio call, he grabbed his medical bag and jumped on an extraction helicopter.

What happened next lasted 6 hourS.

Bonav jumped from the helicopter into a firestorm.

He was immediately shot, then hit by grenade shrapnel, then bayonetted, then shot again.

Over the next 6 hours, he was wounded 37 timeS.

Gunshots, shrapnel, bayonet woundS.

He made multiple trips between wounded men and the helicopter, dragging them to safety while under continuous fire.

When the extraction helicopter finally lifted off, Benvidz was so covered in blood that the medic zipped him into a body bag.

He was presumed dead.

Then he spat in the medic’s face to show he was still alive.

That’s the caliber of warrior M. Visog produced.

Men who refused to die when any rational person would have given uP.

But heroism has a price that doesn’t show up in afteraction reportS.

The psychological toll was immense.

You’d watch teammates die in your arMs.

You’d make impossible decisions about who to save when extraction was compromised.

You’d survive when better men didn’T.

In 1968 alone, every single M.

V SOG recon man was wounded at least once.

About half were killed.

The unit maintained a 100% casualty rate for its entire existence.

And the worst part, when you came home, you couldn’t talk about iT.

Unlike World War II veterans who returned to parades, SOG operators came home to a country that despised them.

But they couldn’t even defend themselveS.

Their missions were classified.

They couldn’t tell anyone where they’d been or what they’d done.

So, they buried it, went back to normal life, carried those secrets for decadeS.

Some teammates were listed as killed in training accidentS.

Their families never knew they died in Laos or Cambodia because officially no Americans were there.

58 MV SOG operators remain missing in action in LaoS.

Their bodies never recovered.

Only one POW from Laos ever returned alive.

It took until 2001 for the US government to formally recognize MVOG’s existence and sacrifice.

President Bush awarded the unit the presidential unit citation 37 years after the unit was created.

Decades too late for many who never made it home.

But for the survivors, that recognition meant everything.

It meant they could finally tell their families the truth.

That their nightmares had been real, that their wounds had meaning.

The legacy lives on in today’s special operationS.

JSOC, Delta Force, DEVGRU.

They all study MACV SOG tacticS.

The equipment, strategies, and mindset that SOG developed became the foundation for modern special operationS.

Today, jungles where they fought are quieT.

The Hochi Min trail is a tourist destination.

The classified bases have been reclaimed by the jungle.

But the lessons remain.

M.V.SOG proved that a small number of highly trained warriors operating in complete secrecy could achieve strategic effects far beyond their numberS.

2,000 Americans, a 158:1 kill ratio.

Responsible for 75% of all intelligence on enemy operationS.

But it also proved the cost of such operations, the psychological damage, the families who never got closure, the men who came home but never really left the jungle.

The survivors carry those memories still.

They meet annually, share stories that still can’t be fully told.

Honor the teammates who didn’t make iT.

There’s an old saying in the special operations community.

Those who know don’t talk.

Those who talk don’t know.

Mackie SOG knew.

And for decades they didn’t talk.

But their actions spoke louder than words ever could.