The True HORRORS of Being a Door Gunner in Vietnam

A 19-year-old climbs into the right cabin door of a UH1H Huey at first light.

The canvas seat beneath him is stiff with dried blood.

The blood of the door gunner he’s replacing.

He straps a 23lb ceramic plate across his chest.

It will stop a rifle round to the torso.

It will not protect his arms, his legs, his neck, his face, or the unarmored floor beneath his feet.

He buckles in.

The rotor starts to turn.

Between 1965 and 1973, 2,74 American helicopter crew members, not pilots, crew members, were killed in Vietnam, more than the pilots themselves.

Their average age was 20.

They were not trapped in the jungle for weeks.

They flew home to hot showers and mess every night, and every morning they climbed back into the same helicopter and did it again.

The United States Army built its Vietnam War strategy around a single idea.

Put infantry on the ground faster than the enemy can react.

Air mobile doctrine born from the 11th air assault division perfected by the first cavalry division meant UH1 Hueies descending into landing zones hacked from triple canopy jungle on minutes notice.

Eight to 10 slicks in a package.

Two or three gunships riding overhead.

From the moment a Huey dropped below 1500 feet on final approach, it became the slowest, most predictable target in the sky.

Somebody had to suppress the tree line during the deadliest seconds of the flight.

Short final touchdown, liftoff.

That somebody sat in the right cabin door behind a 23lb M60 machine gun.

The NVA figured out the geometry fast.

Let the first lift land unopposed.

Open up on the second when the helicopters were stationary or just lifting off.

Rotors clawing for altitude.

Doors wide open.

Mortars pre-registered on clearared LZ’s from previous operations.

And the door gunner’s own weapon was useless when it mattered most.

He could not return fire into the landing zone itself because friendly infantry was directly in his field.

Suppression meant firing blind into a treeine while rounds came up through the unarmored floor beneath his boots.

Specialist 4 Ron Fleming flew through it during the Ted offensive of 1968.

40hour combat cycles, 8 to 10 combat assaults per day.

At 21 years old, Fleming told himself he was bulletproof.

Dying wasn’t on the agenda.

The agenda was land, take fire, suppress, load wounded, fly, land again for 40 hours straight.

The men who climbed into that door were not specialists.

They were teenagers who volunteered, sometimes straight out of the infantry, sometimes out of a maintenance hanger.

The army gave them a two-week course and a ceramic plate.

There was no standard recruitment pipeline.

Three pathways led to the right cabin door.

Volunteer out of the bush.

Private first class longhorn 77 of the first aviation battalion, first infantry division was offered a two-week door gunner course that guaranteed him a trip to Vietnam.

Being a 20-year-old idiot, I jumped for the chance.

Or take the aviation maintenance track through Fort Rucker, then Door Gunner School, then crew chief school, or get pulled from whatever MOS the Army had you in because a helicopter needed a body on the gun.

Typical rank E3 to E5.

Typical age 18 to 22.

The door gunner was almost always the most junior man aboard.

His weapon was the M60D on the M23 armament subsystem, 7.62x 51mm, 550 to 650 rounds per minute, mounted on a pintle post with mechanical cam stops that prevented him from shooting his own rotor blades or tail boom.

No optical sight.

A ring and bead was all he got.

Aiming method.

Walk tracer rounds onto the muzzle flashes in the treeine and hope you were hitting something you could not see.

The authorized ammunition box held 550 rounds.

Every line aircraft in Vietnam was field modified to carry 2,000.

At cyclic rate, that 2,000 round can was empty in 3 to four minutes.

And then there was the chicken plate.

Monolithic aluminum oxide ceramic over ballistic nylon.

17 to 25 lbs strapped across the chest and back.

Tested to defeat 30 caliber armor-piercing at 100 yards.

Pilots sat in armored seats and wore a front plate only.

Door gunners got front and back plates because they had no armored seat.

The ceramic protected the torso.

It did not protect arms, legs, neck, face, or groin.

And the floor of early UH1s was unarmored sheet aluminum.

Rounds came up through the deck.

Gunners stowed a spare chicken plate under the seat and hoped on June 5th, 1966, a captain in the 114th Aviation Company would crash land his Huey with his door gunner trapped in the wreckage.

And what he did next would not be officially recognized for almost 60 years.

That story is coming.

But first, you need to understand what a door gunner’s day actually looked like.

It looked like LZ X-ray Valley, November 14th, 1965.

Major Bruce P.Randle Crannle call sign ancient serpent 6 commanding a company 229th assault helicopter battalion first cavalry division.

A 16 ship lift carrying Lieutenant Colonel Hal Moore’s first battalion 7th cavalry into a clearing in the Eadrang.

The first four lifts went in clean.

By the fifth the NVA had ranged the clearing with mortars and heavy machine guns.

Three soldiers were killed onRandle’s ship before they could dismount.

The door gunners on that aircraft fired suppressive bursts into a treeine they could not see through while bleeding infantrymen fell across the cargo deck behind them.

Medevac pilots refused to land.

Policy required the LZ to be green, no fire, for 5 minutes before a dust off bird would commit.

The LZ had not been green for 5 seconds.Randle flew back anyway.

Captain Ed two tall Freeman flew with him.

22 trips over 16 continuous hours.

Ammunition and water in, wounded out.

70 men carried to survival on aircraft whose cabin floors were ankled deep in blood by sundown.

The smell was JP4 jet fuel, cordite from the M60, and copper iron blood baking on aluminum in the equatorial heat.

The Hueie’s two pererev vibration shook the liquid across the cargo deck in patterns the crew chief would hose out before the next sorty.

The pilots are named in history.Randle received the Medal of Honor.

Freeman received the Medal of Honor.

The door gunners on those aircraft are unnamed in every published account.

Unnamed in we were soldiers.

That anonymity is the point.

And the hosing out that became the ritual.

Across units across years.

After a casualty load, the crew chief and door gunner cleaned the helicopter.

Blood and tissue sleuthed out of the cargo bay with a hose.

Gun checked.

Barrel swapped if the M60 had cooked.

Ammunition reloaded.

The aircraft was flying again within an hour.

Specialist 5 John Goro Masaki, UH1C crew chief, Torrance, California, Sansi, Japanese American, drafted 1967, deployed at 20 years old.

How the hell did I get into this to begin with?

I have no idea.

What do I know about helicopters?

Zero.

So they taught us.

Now June 5th, 1966, near Makqua, Captain Hugh R.

Nelson, Jr., 114th Aviation Company, Knights of the Air.

His UH1 took automatic weapons fire that destroyed the flight controls.

Nelson crash landed, regained consciousness, found the crew chief trapped in the wreckage, freed him, then climbed back into the burning helicopter to reach his door gunner, strapped into the seat, unable to move.

NVA soldiers were firing from approximately 30 ft away.

Nelson was hit multiple times as he worked the harness.

He freed the gunner, dragged him clear of the aircraft, then used his own body as a shield, covering the wounded man until additional rounds killed him.

The door gunner survived.

He popped a smoke grenade and signaled for rescue.

Three of four crew lived because an officer climbed back into a burning helicopter to unbuckle a 19-year-old from a bloodstiffened canvas seat.

Nelson’s Medal of Honor was not awarded until January 2025, nearly 60 years after he died.

His son, Trip Nelson.

I’ve read everywhere that he took between six and I believe 20 rounds.

He passed away during that time.

The war ground on.

By 1971, the statistics had collapsed.

Operation Lamb Sun 719.

60 days in the Asha Valley and across the Le Oceanian border.

108 American helicopters destroyed, 600 damaged, 55 air crewmen killed.

Roughly one in every 10 US helicopter losses across the entire war concentrated into two months.

On February 18th, UH1H tail number 6815255, Company A 101st Aviation Battalion flew an emergency extraction for a MAC SOG recon team on the west side of the Ashawa.

Warrant Officer George Berg.

Warrant Officer Gerald Woods.

Specialist for Gary Johnson, Door Gunner.

Specialist for Walter Dempsey, crew chief.

All four killed.

Their names appear on a database page.

They do not appear in any film.

The NVA adapted across the entire war.

DSHK 12.7 millimeter heavy machine guns.

The 51c cal nicknamed by NVA gunners the eater of helicopters cited in L-shaped ambushes flanking the only viable approach to a landing zone.

Let the first lift land.

Open up on the second.

By 1972, the threat had evolved to SA7 Stella heat-seeking missiles.

One down to CH53 call sign Lady Ace72 off the USS Tripoli.

Both door gunners burned to death in the wreckage.

The M60 itself failed the men who depended on it.

A worn sear caused runaway guns, the weapon continuing to fire after the trigger was released, emptying the belt in a confined cabin inches from a spinning rotor.

The barrel latch could catch on the gunner’s gear and unlatch mid-flight.

The barrel fell off the gun.

The chicken plate stopped rifle rounds to the chest.

It did not stop a 51 caliber round punching up through the unarmored floor.

Specialist 4 John Halbert, First Aviation Brigade on a night extraction where Arvin and NVA fired simultaneously at his aircraft.

All those tracers were coming at us, so we were getting shot at by everybody.

Door gunners flew from secure bases.

Vonga, Coochi, Foy, Marble Mountain.

After a 12-hour combat cycle, they walked into hot showers, mess halls, cold beer, a movie in the squadron tent.

Grunts in the bush adapted to one continuous reality.

Door gunners ricocheted between two realities every single day.

Multiple memoirs described that daily whiplash as more psychologically destabilizing than weeks of continuous contact.

Specialist for Ron Fleming, the same man who flew 40-hour cycles during TET, the same man who told himself dying was not on the agenda, was diagnosed with PTSD decades after Vietnam.

Doctors at the San Francisco VA offered him medication.

He refused.

The pills might dull the emotional connection he feels to his wartime past.

A man who would rather keep the nightmares than lose the memory.

The seat, the dried blood, the rotor turning at first light.

2,74 men sat in that seat and did not come home.

The ones who did never fully left