Ike was a very prolific letter writer; so I had a
running account of the war, at least from his viewpoint. As was his wont, he didn’t spare me any of
the gory details; so it was almost like I was there, too. The only problem was that the mail was
erratic at best and it took from six to eight days to get a letter from
him. No one I knew had television in
those days; so the only news I ever got was from him or through the
newspapers. He belonged to Love Flight
(he was to become Flight Leader in June when he had flown 44 missions
[sorties]) and would tell of his dealings with the other three men in the
flight, some of whom he literally trusted with his life and others who were
loose cannons. I suppose the closest he
ever came to being killed was one time when his flight was landing after a
mission. The pilot who landed right behind him, having forgotten to turn off
his guns (the trigger of which was built into the stick), let off a round of
shots that tore up the rear of Ike’s plane.
One shot hit about one inch from the fuel tank. I still have a little
bag with scraps of metal from that incident. I wish I had kept his
letters. But, moving around as much as
we did and having to lighten the load as much as possible, I finally disposed
of them, thinking, “I have him back; why do I need to keep these letters?” Bad judgment on my part, as they literally
recorded history.
F-80 Shooting Stars and F-84 Thunderjets were used
in Korea; but the F-51-D Mustang was flown from Ike’s base. It was a recip and
therefore could do a lot of jobs that the jets, precisely because of
their greater speed, could not. But
the Mustang was already obsolete when Ike got there; and they had to
cannibalize their own planes to get parts when one would have mechanical
difficulties. I think Ike must have been exaggerating when he told me that they
lost more planes from engine failure than from the enemy. The writer of an article in the base
newspaper, The Truckbuster, dated 17 March 1952 stated that the 12th
Squadron had lost fewer pilots than had any other in the Group and had flown
almost 2,000 sorties more than any other squadron. At that time the Foxy Few had flown over 10,000 sorties and
supposedly had the lowest accident record.
Although I was naturally not happy for him to be in combat and prayed
daily for his safety, I didn’t worry unduly because I knew he was in God’s
hands, that he was a good safe pilot, and that if anyone could handle an
emergency, Ike Hamilton could. In fact, the more emergencies I heard about, the
greater my confidence in his flying ability grew. He respected his plane and never let down his guard or got
cocky. He would quote whoever had said,
“That bird doesn’t know you are the hottest pilot in the world; so each time
you go up, you have to prove it to it all over again.” Some other wise person had said, “There are
old pilots, and there are bold pilots; but there are no old, bold pilots;” and
he knew that to be true. So while he
pushed his bird and himself to the limit, he was never reckless.
The Mustangs flew many different kinds of
missions. Some were Interdiction
missions: they bombed strategic bridges, power plants, hydro-electric plants,
depots, factories, railroads, supplies, supply vehicles, ammunition dumps,
warehouses, bunkers, artillery positions, troop installations, and the like. In
late 1951, after the Communist troops had been run out of South Korea back up
above the 38th Parallel, the U.N. forces put on an all-out push
involving B-29 Superfortress bombings.
F-80 Shooting Stars and F-84 Thunderjets, and possibly some other types
of UN Fighter-Bombers were involved in the wave of follow-up after the
bombings. One newspaper article called it “the greatest allied air blow of the
Korean war.” They bombarded Pyongyang
for days and days and destroyed the supply stations and bases from which the
Communists were trying their best to take over South Korea. The Mustangs contributed a lot to getting
things there a little better under control.
The pointed front ends of the Foxy Few’s Mustangs were painted to look
like sharks’ teeth. I’m sure that the
menacing sneer on those sharks’ faces put even more fear into the enemy when
they saw them coming at them.
Others were ResCap missions...when a plane would get
shot down in enemy territory, a helicopter would be sent in to rescue the pilot
if he had been able to eject; and the Mustangs would fly cover for the chopper
to fend off enemy planes to keep them from shooting down the helicopter, as
well. I think ResCap missions were
among Ike’s “favorites” if that’s the right word to use, although sometimes he
had to tangle with Russian MIG-15s to keep them away.
Ike got over there right in the big middle of that
operation and immediately was involved in it, flying his first combat sortie on
11 March 1952. There was usually heavy
anti-aircraft fire to greet them in this type of mission; so they would fly as
close to the ground as possible and at maximum speed so as to get in and out as
quickly as they could before their presence was detected by the enemy. I suppose that, after all, those cacti in
the Arizona desert had served a useful purpose in helping to train the
pilots. To say that it was very
dangerous would be a ludicrous understatement.
As Ike used to put it, “It isn’t
conducive to longevity.”
In late March, the stress of combat, the Gs pulled,
the austere living conditions, or something...probably all of the
above...caused his bad back to act up more than it usually did. He must have reported in on sick call one
too many times, as they sent him to the Orthopedic Section of the USAF Hospital
in Nagoya, Japan, to have his problem diagnosed. Although Lt. Anshutz, the Aviation Medical Examiner, had
suggested that Ike just be evaluated as an outpatient,