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| Ethiopian Korean War Veterans Stories Excerpts from the Book: PORK CHOP HILL The American Fighting Man in Action in Korea, Spring, 1953 by S.L. A. Marshall, The Battery Press, Nashville. Araya Amsalu and Abebe Kebede A project of Addis Ababa University Aluni Network Kagnew Shaleka Ready to goInto the Alligator’s Jaws (Page 201-211) THEY WENT SINGLE FILE, WITH THE COLUMN OF TWENTY- one men strung out over approximately 65 yards of trail space. This was their normal way of going when operating conditions, by their standards, seemed reasonably good. When fog, rain or dark cut the horizon to nothing, with consequent risk that the column might split through some follower taking the wrong path at a trail fork, it was their custom to lock hands from front to rear. Then, in the manner of a daisy chain, they would advance into enemy country. This practice, which western troops would be disposed to scorn as being beneath dignity, they accepted gladly as an extra safeguard against danger. When close to the enemy, they linked themselves with wire to signal what came. Americans thought the night of 28 April formidably dark. There was no thickening of the atmosphere at ground level, but a heavy cloud wrack had blacked out the stars. Still, as the Ethiopian column began dogtrotting downtrail, 2nd Lieut. Wongele Costa could see as far as the back of the fourth man. That seemed adequate for the mission and he saw no reason to contract the column or restrict its movement. The ridges which bound the Yokkokchon Valley are exceptionally rugged and deeply eroded. From Second Company’s home on the big ridge to the patrol’s rendezvous at the extreme end of the forked, low-lying ridge called the Alligator’s jaws the distance was 2,000 yards air line. But the trail cut obliquely across country, dipping into three draws and rising steeply over as many sprangling ridge fingers. The actual walk to the object approximately doubled the air distance. It is a matter of record that at 2028 hours, Wongele Costa reported by radio that he had arrived at the appointed ground on the tip of the Alligator’s jaws and his men had already set up their weapons and were ready to fight. He also said, “These are the first words said by anyone since the start.” The advance had been without incident and is noteworthy only because of its express-like speed. We had witnessed the patrol depart the company lines at exactly 2,000. In less than a halfhour, in dark and over formidably rough country, they had progressed as far as average infantry can go in sixty minutes. They had come to a position which, so far as terrain features were concerned, was almost identical with the ground which brought disaster to a patrol from Charley Company, 17th Regiment, several days later. Where they had decided to rig their intended deadfall, the upper end of the Alligator’s jaws tapered down to the valley floor. An irrigation ditch looped around this extreme fingerlike projection of the ridge. Atop the finger, approximately 125 yards from the ditch, and rising not more than 30 feet above the valley floor, was a last knob, shaped like a camel’s hump, with space enough to seat at least half the patrol. Here were the same simple terrain features which the Charley patrol tried to exploit toward rigging a secure ambush. The knob obviously should be manned since it dominated the trails around the base of the hill along which the Chinese patrols were likely to move after midnight. But a ditch is a dilemma in night operations. Used defensively for cover, it is quite satisfactory, provided one finds the right spot and the enemy does not. Otherwise, the consequence may be a dreadful enfilade. There is no final answer to any of the most acute problems in minor tactics. Time and luck are the chief handmaidens of sound decision. Take the situation of an infantry company defending a strategically important bridge. No rule in the book helps the commander to determine the moment when it is better to destroy the bridge than seek to save it. As for a ditch in night fighting, it may be either a lifesaver or a deathtrap. | Kagnew Shaleka RelaxingIn deciding to base on the ditch at the Alligator’s jaws and use its walls to the fullest, Lieut. Wongele Costa took on the same setting that flummoxed the Charley patrol, then organized his ground according to an exactly opposite pattern. His assault group was put on the high ground. Ten men were put on the knob, nine armed with M1s one with a carbine. All carried four grenades apiece. Other than arms, they carried one radio, a sound power phone, one red flare to signal for the arranged fires, one green flare to request help from the main line and one amber star cluster to message that they were returning. Each flare was handled by a different man: he would not fire it except on order from the patrol leader. It was an extra precaution taken by the Ethiopians while on patrol but not observed by our own troops. They considered themselves too weak in radio technicians and therefore put greater reliance on old-fashioned signals. Cpl. Raffi Degene was left in charge of the assault group. They sought rock cover and did not dig in. Wongele Costa then led the support party to the ditch, a dirt-banked structure raised a foot or so above the flat confronting it. The ditch turned sharply at the point where he established the force. There were but seven men to be deployed. The weapons available to hold the ditch were three M1s two BARs, two carbines and forty hand grenades. He split his force in two wings, so that three men faced north on the right of the turn and four men faced west to left of it. In so doing, his thinking was that the two flanks would be mutually supporting along the ditch, if either got hit. The chance of enfilade had been reduced. The approaches to the hill were covered from two directions. He did not calculate, however, that the group on the low ground was more likely to figure in an initial interception than the men on the heights. No trail led directly to the ditch position, though several paths skirted it and merged where the ditch rounded the finger end just north of the assault position. Hence as Wongele Costa envisaged the main possibilities of his ambush, the Chinese might start climbing the Alligator’s jaws, become routed by the assault group, and in flight to their own country, be taken by flanking fire from the support. That was why he put both BARs in the ditch. He had been ordered to take prisoners if possible. Because of the low visibility, he saw little chance of doing it unless the enemy virtually stumbled over his men. One BAR man, Cpl. Tiggu Waldetekle, was left in direct charge of the support. Taking along his runner and the two aid men, the leader then moved upslope to a point halfway between assault and support. He was connected with both groups by phone and with higher levels by phone and radio. His preparations complete, he waited. Until exactly 0300, the hill was absolutely quiet. Wongele Costa had just looked at his watch. His men had been on position six hours and 32 minutes. During that time, the only sounds he had heard were his own voice making the hourly report by radio to the company: “Everything negative.” But he knew that the men were awake and watchful. Cpls. Degene and Waldetekle had seen to that. At fifteen-minute intervals, The patrol was split, half of it deploying into a ditch, the other half holding the high ground. each junior leader made his rounds, crawling from man to man. Ile pressed the man’s hand. The man pressed twice in response. It was their way of assuring an alerted unity. | Kagnew Shaleka with allied Commerades Both corporals had just crawled to his position and completed their hand check. Wongele Costa had called the company and his two assistants were already back with their men. As Waldetekle slid back into his position with the support group, he saw the men on the left, pointing vigorously out into the enveloping darkness with their rifles. It was the signal that they detected enemy movement. He moved to them. Then he could sec a figure in clear silhouette standing not more than 20 yards beyond the ditch. Waldetekle backtracked along the ditch, then crawled again to Wongele Costa, saying nothing, but pointing with his rifle as his men had done. The lieutenant sent Private Tilahullninguse crawling uphill to give the same signal to Degene and his men. The whole alert had been carried out soundlessly. All weapons were now pointed in the direction where the one Chinese had been seen. Then, for a few seconds, Wongele Costa waited, confident that his own presence and preparations had not been detected. Waldetekle crawled to him again, gesturing still more vigorously with the rifle. It was the sign that he had seen several other Chinese moving along the same axis. To Wongele Costa’s left, a shallow gully ran unevenly toward the ditch. Using hand signals, lie told Tilahullningusc to unpin a grenade, crawl down the gully and bomb into the enemy group. It was done as directed. Wongele Costa was still certain that the Chinese were unalerted and wholly within his field of fire. But he was bent on capturing prisoners and he figured-wrongly, as developments were to prove-that one grenade would hardly more than momentarily upset them and enable the support group to bag them before they could recoil. Tilahullni nguse was 15 yards uphill from the nearest Chinese when he loosed his throw. As the grenade exploded, by its light, Wongele Costa could see about twenty of the enemy. More than that, they were deployed, lying flat and with weapons pointed straight toward his support line, which so far hadn’t fired a shot. As the scene went dark again, the enemy opened fire against the ditch with grenades, rifles and submachine guns. Not more than five seconds elapsed between the explosion and the answering volley. Before Wongele Costa had time to shout an order, the left wing of the support group had joined the fight full blast, three rifles and the BAR. In this way began a duel almost without parallel in modern war. The opposing lines were just a little less than 15 yards apart. (The distance was tape measured on the following day.) At that range, as the shooting began, the odds were four riflemen against twenty. Only Waldetekle’s left wing was free to trade fire with the enemy. His right flank weapons were interdicted from fire by the turn in the ditch. From its position on the knob, the assault group could not bring weapons to bear on the Chinese without risking that the volley would slaughter the four Ethiopians who were fighting. These things, Wongele Costa weighed within the first few seconds while watching the fire flash. He made his decision. There was just time to call the assault group on the sound power phone and say, “Don’t move! Don’t fire! Now send a man down to the right flank of the support and give them that same message.” Then he turned to Tilahullninguse and his two aid men and said, “Follow me!” On hands and knees, lie moved down the gully which cut through Waldetekle’s position, stopping every few feet to fire his carbine. The three men behind him did the same. Their entry into the ditch was timed precisely to save the position, though the re-enforcement did no more than plug the gaps cut into ranks. The ditch, which was running about one foot of water, was deep enough to provide full body cover for the line of riflemen. But to fire, a man had to come head and shoulder above the embankment, and Waldetekle’s halfsquad had chosen to face it, though bullets beat like hail against the bank. A grenade sailed in, bounced off the bank and exploded as it struck just above Waldetekle’s elbow. His right arm was blown off clean just below the shoulder socket. He uttered neither cry nor groan. The others didn’t know he was hurt until with his left hand he passed the BAR to Private Yukonsi, saying, “Fire, and keep it low.” Thereafter, he continued to give orders. Yukonsi triggered the weapon for only a few seconds. Then a burp-gun burst hit him in the left arm, shredding it from wrist to shoulder. The BAR was still in working order. Yukonsi handed it to Tilahullninguse without a word, then collapsed in the ditch unconscious from loss of blood. On the extreme left of the line, Pvt. Mano Waldemarian took three bullets through his brain. But in the frenzy of the action, no one saw him fall. Wongele Costa yelled to the two aid men to take over the grenading. Then he propped against the ditch bank and let go with the carbine, firing full automatic. During the remainder of the duel, he worked as a rifleman, leaving the directing to Waldetekle. The point-blank exchange continued for another fifteen minutes. Wongele Costa-a precise mantimed it with his wrist watch. But once all five weapons were brought to bear in volume, the enemy fire ranged increasingly higher, and there were no more casualties in the ditch. A messenger from the assault group came crawling down the gully. Word of the action had been sent the battalion commander, Lieut. Col. Wolde Yohanis Shitta. He was asking, “Shall I send help?” Wongele Costa replied, “Tell him no. Tell him I can hold this field with my own men.” The messenger left and the lieutenant resumed fire.
| Eagle Eyed Kagnew Shaleka probing the enemy line Action was temporarily suspended when at last Waldetekle cried, “There’s nothing coming back.” Wongele Costa called, “Hold fire!” and then listened. It was true. Either the enemy had been wholly destroyed or its discouraged remnant had been driven off. There was not then time to look. The BAR had gone dry. The carbine was empty and the aid men had thrown their last grenades. By radio Wongele Costa called for flares over the position, as had been prearranged with the 48th Field Artillery Battalion under Lieut. Col. Joseph S. Kimmitt. Within the next minute he got four rounds. They lighted the hill and the ditch bright as day, and, in so doing, diverted attention from what had transpired in the foreground. As the lights came on, Wongele Costa glanced toward the hill at his back. Then he saw it: an entire Chinese platoon, deployed in skirmish order, was advancing up the nose of the ridge. The line of approximately fifty men was in that second still upright and marching straight toward the assault group. In the next second, the line had gone flat, thereby foiling the lights. The Chinese were still about loo yards short of the position on the knob. “VT fire on White-all you can give me.” That was the radio message from Wongele Costa to the artillery. If the proximity fuse shells came in as directed, they would just miss his own men and stonk the enemy in the “white” area. He got his barrage in exactly thirty seconds and it landed right on the button. From his post in the ditch, he could see the rounds exploding into the enemy line and he could hear the outcries of the wounded. In less than one minute the formation was broken. Some of the Chinese ran for the base of the hill. Others ran forward looking for a hole or a rock. In that interval, Wongele Costa abandoned his position on the left side of the ditch. The casualties were carried to the position on the right flank. But in the darkness, he missed one man, not knowing that Waldemarian was dead. So he called for lights again to assist the search. When the flare came on, he could see Waldemarian in the ditch. He sat there in a natural position, the rifle folded close in his arms. Wongele Costa crawled over to him, found that he was dead and so returned, carrying the body. Thereby he simply followed the tradition of his corps. Fiercely proud of the loyalty of their men, officers of the Imperial Guard are likely to say to a stranger, “Should trouble come, stay with me, I’ll be the last man to die.” But in battle, it is the officer invariably who takes the extra risk to save one of his own. There had been no letup in the VT barraging of the nose of the ridge. Costa simply had it shifted forward a short space to choke off escape. Then Corporal Degene called him to say that from the knob, he could hear the Chinese reassembling on the other side of the finger, downslope 70 or 8o yards from his position. Wongele Costa again called the artillery, “Keep the fires going on White. But give me more VT and put it on Red.” Fifty-five seconds later, the new barrage dropped on the far flank of the hill. Thereafter, for 65 minutes, the fires were continued unrelentingly against the “White” nose of the hill and the “Red” slope. The patrol merely continued to hold ground. Degene’s men neither shifted position nor fired a shot. Unassisted, the artillery broke the back of the Chinese attack. Wongele Costa and assistants had long since returned to their position between the two groups. The aid men had tourniqueted and quieted the wounded. They would have to last it with the others. At 0430 Colonel Shitta called the lieutenant to ask how things were going. Wongele Costa replied, “The only live Chinese in this valley are in our hands.” Said Shitta, “If that’s it, you might as well return.” So Wongele Costa got the patrol reassembled and on the trail. To the number of twenty-two, they had counted enemy dead in their foreground. They were confident that with the help of the artillery, they had wounded at least as many more. Two badly shot-up prisoners had been taken. The wounded and dead were put in the van of the column. Costa helped bear Waldemarian’s body. They started uptrail and at last closed on the company lines at 0535. They still looked fresh in the full light of a lovely dawn. There is but one note needed in summary. Wongele Costa and his twenty men were having their first experience under fire. Theirs was the first patrol sent from the newly arrived Ethiopian battalion which had come to Korea boasting that it would outshine the old Kagnew Battalion, which was a shining outfit. But these men knew their ground, almost as a man knows the palm of his own hand. Following the method used by the old battalion, four afternoons successively, prior to the pay run, all members of the patrol had marched to the entrenched height on the Alligator’s jaws which overlooked the flat they had chosen to give battle. There they had spent hours studying the distances, the relation of one slope to another and the likely application of weapons, according to the probable contingencies. The start of their debriefing followed the combat by less than two hours. Wongele Costa said, “Every detail of that ground had become part of a print in my mind. It was like moving in my own house. I could see in the dark.” Kagnew Shaleka: The fatigue is too heavy, the shoe is too tightThe Incredible Patrol(Page 233-249) LIKE, HORATIUS AT THE BRIDGE OR THE SCREAMING EAGLES AT Bastogne, it was a classic fight, ending in clean triumph over seemingly impossible odds. But unlike other great tales of scar which become legend, it went unsung, though it happened almost under the noses of 163 war correspondents then in Seoul, forty minutes’ air flight from the fight. Held spellbound by the headline values of Operation Little Switch, they had neither time nor space for the reporting of epic courage. Such abberations are common in modern warfare. Homeric happenings go unreported. Sometimes the bravest meet death with their deeds known only to heaven. If another reason is needed for now unfolding the tale, there is this, that of all troops which fought in Korea, the Ethiopians stood highest in the quality of their officer-man relationships, the evenness of their performance under fire and the mastery of techniques by which they achieved near perfect unity of action in adapting themselves to new weapons during training and in using them to kill efficiently in battle. They couldn’t read maps but they never missed a trail. Out of dark Africa came these men, thin, keen eyed, agile of mind and 95 per cent illiterate. They could take over U. S. Signal Corps equipment and in combat make it work twice as well as the best-trained American troops. When they engaged, higher headquarters invariably knew exactly what they were doing. The information which they fed back by wire and radio was far greater in volume and much more accurate than anything coming from American actions. Their capacities excelled also in one diversionary aspect of the soldierly arts. There arc no better whisky drinkers under the sun. They take it neat, a full tumbler at a time, without pause or chaser, and seem abashed that Americans can’t follow suit. This unexampled skill might properly become a proper object for research by a top-level military mission. Their one lack was a good press. The Turks, the ROKs the ‘Commonwealth Division and others in the medley got due notice. But the Ethiopians stood guard along their assigned ridges in a silence unbroken by the questions of the itinerant correspondents. They were eager to welcome strangers and tell how they did it. But no one ever asked If to our side, at the end as in the beginning, they were the Unknown Battalion, to the Communists they were a still greater mystery. When the final shot was fired, one significant mark stood to their eternal credit.Of all national groups fighting in Korea, the Ethiopians alone could boast that they had never lost a prisoner or left a dead comrade on the battlefield. Every wounded man, every shattered body, had been returned to the friendly fold. That uniquely clean sheet was not an accident of numbers only. Knowing how to gamble with death, they treated it lightly as a flower. On night patrol, as lie crossed the valley and prowled toward the enemy works, the Ethiopian soldier knew that his chance of death was compounded. It was standing procedure in the battalion that if a patrol became surrounded beyond possibility of extrication, the supporting artillery would be ordered to destroy the patrol to the last man. That terrible alternative was never realized. Many times enveloped, the Ethiopian patrols always succeeded in breaking the fire ring and returning to home base. If there were dead or wounded to be carried, the officer or NCO leader was the first to volunteer. When fog threatened to diffuse a patrol, moved hand in hand, like children. Even so, though they deny it, these Africans are cat-eyed men with an especial affinity for moving and fighting in the dark. In most of the races of man, superstition unfolds with the night, tricking the imagination and stifling courage. It is not so with the Ethiopians The dark holds no extra terror. It is their element Of this in part came the marked superiority in night operations which transfixed the Chinese. It hexed them as if they were fighting, the superhuman. The Ethiopian left no tracks shed no blood and spoke always in an unknown tongue. Lack of bodily proof that he was mortal made him seem phantom like and forbiddingly unreal. That may explain why, toward the close, everything done by Ethiopians seemed so unbelievably easy, even under full sunlight. We watched them from Observation Point 29 through glasses on a fair afternoon in mid-May, 1953, in as mad an exploit as was ever dared by man. Under full observation from enemy country, eight Ethiopians walked 800 Yards across no-man’s land and up the slope of T-Bone Hill right into the enemy trenches. When next we looked, the eight had become ten. The patrol was dragging back two Chinese prisoners, having snatched them from the embrace of the Communist battalion. It was only then that the American artillery came awake and threw smoke behind them. They got back to our lines unscratched. So far as I know, this feat is unmatched in war. How account for it? Either the hex was working or the Communists thought the patrol was coming in to surrender. Kagnew Shaleka on the Move towards the enemy lineThis brazen piece of effrontery took place only three days after the fight of the Incredible Patrol. These were actions by men who had never previously been under fire. Ethiopia sent a fresh battalion every twelve months. Kagnew Battalion named after the war charger of King Menelik in the first war with Italy-had just sailed for Africa after little more than a year in line, with its men grousing, as soldiers ever do, because they had been held overtime. They were also piqued because the relief battalion was boasting that it was better before it had ever faced the enemy. Thereafter the war lasted just long enough for the new arrivals to supply a few items in solid proof that they might have cleaned it up, but for the papers signed in Panmunjom. My part in these things was that I was working over all patrols along our part of the front which had met and fought the Chinese. We were trying to get uniformity into our debriefing system so that all data would be equally reliable and we could see where we were making our mistakes. My work was to get to the survivors immediately and draw out of them all that had happened. It necessitated ridge hopping by helicopter through the late dark or early light so that I could interview the patrol at the point where it reentered our lines. By dawn, the front was normally quiet save for the singing of larks, thrushes, thrashers and cardinals. It was a wonderful front for bird watchers. There were fifteen men in the Incredible Patrol under the command of 27-year-old 2nd Lieut. Zeneke Asfaw. They were of the Third Company of the new Battalion Kagnew, and the First Company of that command, under Capt. Behanu Tariau, was garrisoning two outpost hillocks flanking the narrow draw via which Asfaw’s party moved toward enemy country. The plan and scene were typical of many such operations during the last two years of the Korean war. Forming the right flank of the United States 7th Infantry Division along the Eighth Army’s main resistance line, the battalion held the crest line of a great ridge which rose about 300 meters above the valley floor. Forward of the great ridge approximately 750 meters were the outpost hillocks, Yoke and Uncle, each entrenched all around its summit, and with slopes well covered by wire entanglements. Yoke was just large enough to accommodate a platoon. As with a hundred other such small hill positions forward of the Eighth Army’s main line, the twofold object in garrisoning Yoke was to parry any attack before the Chinese could reach the big trench, and, also, to lure the enemy into the open where he could be blasted by the markedly superior American artillery. It was wearing duty, for it made troops feel like the bait in a trap. So the garrisons were rotated every five days. Lieutenant Asfaw’s mission on the night of 19 May was to descend into the main valley about 800 yards to the right front of Yoke and in this disputed ground attempt to ambush a Chinese patrol and return with prisoners. This was the more or less routine object in all patrolling. He started his march at eleven o’clock, with his second in command, 21-year-old Cpl. Arage Affere, leading the column. In exactly thirty-five minutes, they reached the bottom. The actual trail distance had been one and one-half miles, partway uphill, where the route traversed two ridge fingers. But they had done most of it at a running walk. At twenty minutes before midnight, having seen nothing of the enemy, Asfaw decided to halt. The patrol had come to a concrete-walled irrigation ditch. Where Asfaw stood, the ditch did a 9o-degree turn, with the elbow pointing directly at T-Bone Hill. To the youngster came the flash inspiration that here was the tailor-made deadfall. Three trails crossed within a few yards of the bend in the ditch. He could deploy his men within the protecting walls and await the enemy. Within the next five minutes he distributed his men evenly around the angle with one Browning automatic rifle on each flank. It was done in the nick of time. There was the briefest wait. At ten minutes before midnight, Asfaw, straining to catch any movement in the darkness, saw standing in the clear, 300 yards to his front, a lone Chinese. While lie looked, approximately one platoon built up on the motionless scout and simply stood there, as if waiting a signal. It was a tempting target; though too distant for his automatic weapons to have more than a scattering effect upon the enemy force, it was still vulnerable to the American artillery fires which could be massed at his call. Asfaw switched on his radio to call Battalion. By some fluke in those first minutes as the game opened, it wouldn’t cut through. He spat in disgust at a technical failure which, seen in retrospect, was clearly a blessing in disguise. The whole pattern of this strange fight developed out of the accidental circumstance that during the next half-hour, the Chinese felt free to extend their maneuver, and Asfaw, being without radio contact. had to keep telling himself that he had been sent forth to capture prisoners. In that time, the body confronting him rapidly swelled to two platoons, but still did not move. That meant that close to 100 men would be opposing his group of 15. That was fair enough. So he crawled along the ditch cautioning his men to maintain silence and retain fire until he gave the word. It was done. When at last the Chinese moved toward him, it was not in columns, but in V-shape like a flight of wild geese, with the point marching directly toward the apex of the ditch. All of this time Asfaw had been concentrating attention on the enemy directly to his front. Now as he turned his gaze toward the files at the far ends of the V, he caught what all along his eyes had missed. Five hundred yards to his left, another Chinese company, marching single file, had passed his flanks and was advancing directly on Outpost Yoke. He looked to his right. Another body of the same size had outflanked him and was marching against the ridge seating First Company. With that, he saw the problem as a whole. He was in the middle of a Communist battalion launched in a general attack. Its grand deployment was in the shape of an M and the V-shaped body advancing on his ditch was simply a sweep which tied together the two assault columns. By now they were within 200 yards of him and the column on his left was almost at the foot of Yoke. His radio was still out. To his immediate rear was an earth mound perhaps 10 feet high. Thinking that the mound might cause interdiction, he moved leftward along the ditch, whispering to his men to stand steady and testing his radio every few feet. The eight Chinese forming the point of the V were within 10 yards of the ditch when Asfaw yelled, “Tekuse!” (fire). He already had arranged it that the fire from his two flanks would cross so that both sides of the V would be taken in enfilade. The eight-man point was cut down as by a scythe. It was a rifle job. The two wings which followed at a distance of 15 yards lost another dozen men to the BARs before the surprised Chinese could recoil and go flat. At that moment Asfaw’s radio sparked and he raised a friendly answer. This was his message as entered in the journal, “The enemy came. I stopped them. Now they surround me. I want artillery on White Right.” “White Right” meant the ground to Asfaw’s left and rear. Their ranks being unable to use map coordinates, the Ethiopians achieved artillery fire control by blocking out in colors the map areas where they were likely to need help. Thus, they simply called for fire on “Blue Left” or “Red Right,” etc. In his own hour of emergency, Asfaw was ignoring the force to his front, hoping that he would still be in time to shatter the columns moving against Yoke and Uncle. No sooner had he given the direction than he saw the flattened company in his foreground start skirmishers around his left flank. He felt this was the beginning of an envelopment. Still, he did not amend his fire request. Instead, he shifted more of his men leftward in the ditch, figuring that with grazing fire he could slow the movement. As he said, “By then I had steadied and was enjoying it.” In three minutes, the American barrage fell right where Asfaw had wanted it. Illuminating shells from the 155s began to floodlight the valley. By their glare, Asfaw could see the killing rounds biting into the column, killing some Chinese, scattering others. But he could also see figures in silhouette moving against Yoke’s skyline and he guessed that the enemy had penetrated the works, which he reported on radio. So he was just a bit too late for a perfect score. The smallarms fire all about him had made imperceptible to him that the Chinese artillery had massed fires against Yoke and the big ridge almost coincidentally with the opening of his own engagement. It was a real clobber. Within the space it takes to tell it, all wires were cut and the men were forced back into their bunkers. On Yoke, 2nd Lieut. Bezabib Ayela and his 56 men had heard the first volley of Asfaw’s skirmish. But it sounded far away. The impression it made was swiftly erased when the enemy artillery deluged their own hill. Both of Ayela’s radios were hit and his field phone went dead. Ayela moved from post to post crying “Bertal” (standby), but for all the noise, he had no forewarning of what was coming. Realization came when three red flares cut the night above Yoke’s rear slope. Ayela ran that way along the trench, knowing they had been hand-fired by the enemy. At the rear parapet, he could hear voices chattering from downslope. Yoke’s rear was lighted by a searchlight beamed from the battalion ridge. Raising himself to the embankment, Ayela could see at least a squad of Chinese working up through the rocks not more than 30 yards away. Cpl. Ayelow Shivishe was with him and survived to tell about it. Within call of Ayela were thirteen riflemen and one machine gunner, covering the backslope, but all in the wrong spot to see the approach. Before Ayela could either fire or cry out, he was drawn back the way he had come by the sounds of shooting and a piercing scream right behind him. Two squads of Chinese had come up the side of Yoke, killed a BAR man, and jumped into the main trench. Ayela ran for them rifle in hand. In full stride he was blown up by a bomb-an ordinary grenade with TNT shaped around it, used by the Communists to clean out bunkers. Shivishe went flat in the trench and emptied his M1 into the enemy group. He saw three men drop. Then he knew he had been wrong in wasting time that way. The hill was leaderless though no one else knew it. Shivishe ran the other way around the trench to tell Sgt. Maj. Awilachen Moulte that he was in command. As he made the turn. the Chinese at the rear slope came over the parapet and were in the trench. But not unopposed. The machine gunner, Pvt. Kassa Misgina, had heard the noise and rushed to the breach. He cut down the first three men. Then two things happened right together: his gun jammed and an enemy grenade got him through both legs. Deep wounds, they didn’t jar his fighting rhythm. Misgina passed the gun back to a rifleman, yelling to him to get it freed. He then grabbed a box of grenades and, returning to the step where Ayela had been those few seconds, resumed the fight to block the rear portal. Reasoning that if he kept them ducking for cover they couldn’t rush, he stood on the parapet and let fly. None of this ordeal was known to Asfaw down in the valley or to the higher commands tucked away among the high ridges. But unlike every other actor in the drama, Asfaw alone could see all parts of the big picture. From his place in the ditch, he had witnessed the enemy’s grand deployment. Also, he knew that the observers on the high ground had no such advantage, and due to the interposition of the lower ridges, could catch only fragmentary glimpses of the developing action. When his eyes told him that the artillery dropped on Yoke’s forward slope had effectively shattered the reserves of the Chinese column there, his reason replied that the hills masked that fact to everyone else. Having already concluded that his task was to destroy the Chinese battalion by use of artillery, and realizing that he only was in position to regulate fires so that there would be no “overkilling,” Asfaw saw clearly that a halfway success along either flank must finally doom his patrol. Driven back, the survivors would converge within the draw which was his escape route to the rear. There they would re-enforce the company which was moving around his left flank. From that side, the ditch provided no protection. For fifteen minutes, he had watched the artillery stonk the Chinese on the lower slope of Yoke while doing nothing about the enemy column attacking First Company’s ridge. The reason was that the latter force had made slower progress and was still toiling toward the hill. During the same interval the Chinese platoons to his front had continued the crawl around his left flank and were now even with his position. He took another look at the enemy’s solid column on his own right rear: it was just 50 yards short of the main incline. At that point he gave his direction, calling for the fire to be placed where it would catch the attack head-on. It was delivered “on the nose.” The column attacking First Company began to dissolve and recoil toward him. Kagnew Shaleka on the Move towards the enemy lineIn this manner, while his withdrawal route was still open, he made his decision to fight it out on the original line. Here was a youth having his first experience under fire. But the role he had voluntarily accepted made requisite a sense of timing rarely found in a division commander. The Chinese nearest him continued to extend their outflanking maneuver; he but shifted a few more riflemen to the left to slow them with grazing fire. On Yoke, Sergeant Major Moulte’s first act after taking command was to run to Ayela’s body to make certain he was dead. Two enlisted men had been felled by the same bomb which killed the lieutenant. Moulte yelled for stretcher bearers. Then, gathering six men and passing each an armful of grenades, he swung along the trench toward the front of Yoke on the heels of the Chinese group that had entered the works after killing Ayela. It was a sneak movement, the men moving silently and in a crouch, with one scout five yards to the front. Surprise was complete. Perhaps 35 to 40 yards beyond, the scout gave an arm signal, hand out, pointing the direction for the grenade shower. The explosions came dead center amid the enemy group. Some Chinese were killed. Others scrambled for the parapet or tried to hide next the sandbag superstructure of the bunkers. Moulte saw at least six Chinese in clear silhouette as they climbed up from the trench wall. He was carrying a BAR. But he didn’t fire a shot. He said later, “I don’t know why; I just didn’t think of it.” (This same aberration occurs much too frequently among GI fighters.) Ordering others in his party to carry on and hunt down the invaders in detail, Moulte doubled back to see how things were going at the rear slope. By then, the wounded Misgina’s machine gun had become freed, and with that weapon, he was still holding the portal, supported by one BAR man. Looking downslope, Moulte counted ten dead Chinese in front of Misgina’s gun. Beyond them, he could count at least thirty of the enemy among the rocks. They became revealed momentarily as they grenaded upward. But the distance was too great and the bombs exploded among their own dead. At that point the action was taken out of Moulte’s hands for reasons requiring a brief recapitulation. Because of broken communications, Asfaw’s fight had been underway thirty minutes before Battalion knew the patrol was in serious trouble. Asfaw’s first radio message had gone to the platoon of First Company on Uncle and his call for artillery on Yoke had perforce bypassed Battalion because First Company’s radio went temperamental at the wrong moment. As relayed from Outpost Uncle, the message taken by Capt. Addis Aleu, the battalion S2, was merely a brief warning, “Main movement against Yoke . . . fire White Right.” Then the Uncle radio cut out and Battalion CP could only guess about developments. But from his hilltop on OP 29, First Company’s commander, Capt. Behanu Tariau could eyewitness the skirmishing on Yoke’s rear slope. He had received the relayed message that the patrol had engaged; it came to him from Uncle during the period when First Company could no longer raise Battalion. Then for fifteen minutes-the critical period when Moulte was rallying his men to repel boarders-his own radio cut out. His anxieties mounted because of his helplessness. By the searchlight’s glare he could see Chinese massing againstYoke’s back door but he was in touch with no one. When quite suddenly his radio cut through again, he told and Lieut. William W. DeWitt, his artillery forward observer, to hit Yoke directly with VT (proximity fuse) fire and illuminating shell. The order was passed upward to Lieut. Col. Joseph S. Kimmitt: “Fire Flash Yoke Three.” Five minutes later Yoke was under a fierce rain of hot steel. The effect of the fire was to drive Moulte’s men back to their bunkers for protection while transfixing the Chinese in the open. There was thirty minutes of this. Then Tariau asked for a curtain barrage on both sides of Yoke to box in the enemy survivors. He pondered extending the barrage to across the forward slope, then rejected the idea, apprehensive that Asfaw’s men might be falling back on Yoke. On that score, he might have spared himself worry. Asfaw was still sitting steady in the ditch and enjoying it. By now the Chinese who had been to his front had completed the half-circle and were spread across his rear. Their skirmish line, a lean 100 yards from him, had already been joined by the first stragglers retreating from the fires on Yoke, Uncle and First Company’s hill. His big moment was at hand, when having nailed his flag to the mast, he would now win or lose it all. To Uncle, he gave the message, relayed from there to Captain Tariau and from him to the artillery, “Fire Blue Right!” If his guess was right and the fire was accurate, Blue Right would crush the Chinese to his rear and fall just short of his own position. There was a suspense of two minutes. Then the barrage dropped dead on target, braying the enemy line from end to end. He kept the artillery on Blue Right for ten minutes; when it lifted, there was no more fire from his foreground or immediate rear. But it had been, and still remained, the closest kind of thing. At the moment when Asfaw asked for Blue Right, his own patrol was wholly out of ammunition, save for the cartridges in the magazines of three M1s The fragments of the two main enemy columns continued to drift back toward him. He knew that the patrol’s survival from that point on would pivot on the radio and the accuracy of his call to the artillery. At last fortune rode wholly with him. The fight continued on these terms for the next two hours, with no firing from the patrol. There were times when the Chinese, rebounding from the two outposts, then regrouping, got within 50 yards of the ditch. Blue Right never failed him. There were als0 times when he asked and got barrage fire on all four sides of his patrol, thereby to close the enemy escape routes leading to T-Bone Hill. By four o’clock in the morning the battlefield was at last quiet and Asfaw could see no sign of a live enemy. The patrol arose and stretched, satisfied that it had done a good night’s work. Asfaw radioed the message, “Enemy destroyed. My men are still unhurt. We have spent our last bullet.” Being now unarmed, the patrol expected a recall. What came back proved with finality that Ethiopians prefer to fight the hard way. This was Captain Aleu’s message to Asfaw: “Since you have won and are unhurt and the enemy is finished, you are given the further mission of screening the battlefield, examining bodies for documents and seeking to capture any enemy wounded.” That task, which entailed another four to five miles of marching, preoccupied the patrol for the next two hours. The light was already full and the bird chorus was in full song when I met them as they re-entered the main line. Asfaw went briefly into the statistics of the fight. On the ground within 150 yards of the ditch he had counted 73 dead Chinese. On the slopes of Yoke and within the trenches were 37 more enemy bodies. There were other bodies among the paddies forward of Uncle, still not counted. But assuming the usual battle ratio of four men wounded for every one mortally hit, the score said that he had effectively eliminated one Chinese battalion. As a feat of arms by a small body of men, it was matchless. No other entry in the book of war more clearly attests that miracles are made when a leader whose coolness of head is balanced by his reckless daring becomes attended by a few steady men. Victory came not because of the artillery but because Asfaw believed in it, willed it, then planned it. But as the story unfolded, its significance transcended the importance of this one small field. On a vastly reduced scale, we had witnessed the prevue of great battle in the future, as it must be staged, and as its risks, decisions and movements must become regulated, if the field army is to endure against, and with the use of, atomic weapons. What we heard fired the imagination. Asfaw’s patrol became a combat team riding armored into enemy country, too small and elusive to be a profitable atomic target, large enough to block and compel the enemy to extend his deployment. So doing, it would perforce make use of the most advantageous earth cover possible. Then, having developed the situation, from the vortex of action, it would call on the big lighting to strike all around. At no point would its force be any better than its nerve and its command of communications. Done by an Ethiopian second lieutenant, it is a case study for generals pondering the possibilities of the war of tomorrow. ——————-//——————— |
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