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)

This prompted Bookout to seek a second tour of duty as the Vietnam War drew closer to an end.

“In May of 1970 I went back and I asked to be on a gun team,” he said. “In fact, I went back to Vietnam a second time to avenge his death.”

This second tour brought with it the opportunity for Bookout to work with Gen. Westmoreland, who, at the time, served as the Army’s chief of staff — although Bookout didn’t quite realize it at first.

“We’d flown to pick up (VIPs), but they didn’t say who,” Bookout explained. “This white-haired, four-star general climbs on board, and all they said was, ‘fly west.’ I was letting the co-pilot fly, and I looked in back and saw his wings and that he was watching all the instruments.”

“I asked, ‘do you want to fly this thing?’ and he said ‘yeah!’ like a little kid,” Bookout laughed. “So he put the helmet on, climbed in front and we took off for Saigon.”

It took a few more flights of this nature for Bookout realize that he was letting Gen. Westmoreland — who ranks at a security code just below the U.S. vice president — do something he was expressly not supposed to engage in.

“(After the third flight), this captain comes up and shakes the (expletive) out of me, and I had no idea what was going on,” Bookout said.

“The General was not supposed to fly, period — he was forbidden by the president,” Bookout said he later learned. “But when Westmoreland got out of that helicopter, he stuck his finger at the captain and he said, ‘you leave him be.”

According to Bookout, the Razorbacks, who were created specifically to protect the Saigon area of operations, were notorious for showing no mercy.

“All of our helicopters were shot down, some multiple times,” he said. “Nobody messed with us. I came home one night with 541 holes in my helicopter and it still brought us home.” It was encounters like these that earned Bookout a Bronze Star and 23 air medals during his five years of active duty.

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