Bookout shares stories of courage and loss during Vietnam

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Army Chief Warrant Officer 2 Steve Bookout poses with a Razorback chopper in January of 1971 at Nha Be in Vietnam. Bookout served two tours of duty during the Vietnam war, piloting helicopters for the Razorbacks gun squad and earning a Bronze Star in addition to 23 air medals. (Submitted Photo)

One peek into Army veteran Steve Bookout’s Newton home gives a glimpse into the two tours of duty he served during the Vietnam War: At his computer desk sits an armored seat, stripped from a helicopter much like the ones he used to fly.

His basement houses two helicopter doors, emblazoned with a red wild boar, the symbol of the Razorbacks gun squad, and a photo of Gen. William Westmoreland hangs on a wall, a personalized inscription scrawled at the bottom.

While each of these alone conveys plenty about Bookout’s service during the Vietnam war, none fully tell his story, which began with his high school graduation.

“I joined the Army a week after high school, and I was pretty immature,” Bookout said with a laugh.

“I was part of the 101st Airborne by the DMZ,” he said of his first tour as a helicopter pilot, which began in 1966. “They told us that if we went down they wouldn’t come after us. Our families would be told we were MIA, presumed dead. When you’ve only got 1⁄16 inch of aluminum and 1⁄4 inch plexiglass in front of you, that’s not a lot of protection.”

Before shipping out, Bookout became acquainted with warrant officer Jack Wheeler, a man whom he described as his “best friend.”

“War bonds people in ways — I don’t know how to describe it,” Bookout said. “We were closer with each other than siblings.”

“He was just one of those guys you meet and have an affinity for,” Bookout said of Wheeler. “When we finished primary helicopter school in Texas, we went to Alabama and were neighbors.”

“He used to ride me all the time,” Bookout laughed, explaining all the fun Wheeler would poke at him.

In 1969, however, an incident in Vietnam cut Bookout and Wheeler’s friendship short.

“In November of 1969, Sally (Wheeler) got ahold of me and said Jack was killed, and that bothered me quite badly,” Bookout said. “He took on a whole company of Viet Cong by himself, and this time they stood and fought and Jack went down.”

“It’s just one of those things ... why did it happen? You know, because usually things like that don’t happen,” Bookout said.

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