Video of VNAF Chinook’s Pilot who jumped out of ditched helicopter after saving his family

Video of VNAF Chinook's Pilot who jumped out of ditched helicopter after saving his family

The following U.S. Navy video, called “The Lucky Few”, tells the nearly forgotten story of the incredible CH-47A Chinook mission flown by Maj Ba Van Nguyen to save his family

  • Daring escape story from the 1975 Fall of Saigon
  • Vietnamese pilot loaded family onto the helicopter and tailed U.S. choppers
  • But his Chinook was too big to land on the USS Kirk
  • Instead, he threw wife and three children to servicemen below
  • He then banked his own helicopter into the sea and jumped out
  • The chopper exploded, but he was able to swim away and make it to safety

In April 1975 South Vietnam was in the process of being overrun by the North Vietnamese. Many South Vietnamese
desperately tried to escape the country before the takeover by North Vietnam. Several South Vietnamese aviators
took it upon themselves to escape in countless helicopters and planes.

Related Article: Video of an unbelievable helicopter landing on ship deck in rough seas

Here is a story of one of A heroic Vietnamese helicopter pilot Maj Ba Van Nguyen who saved his family and cheated death by hurling his wife children onto a fleeing U.S. warship during the Fall of Saigon, then leaping into the sea as the aircraft plunged into the waters behind him.

 

Details of Incident

On Apr. 29, 1975, at around 10:30 am, Maj Ba Van Nguyen, of Vietnamese Air Force  237th Helicopter Squadron, landed his CH-47A Chinook helicopter in front of his parents’ home in Saigon.

Nguyen quickly gathered his family onboard the helicopter. He originally planned on flying to a remote island to get away from the heavy fighting in the city.

On his way out to sea, Nguyen could hear English communication chatter on his radio. It was then that he knew in the distance there could be a U.S. Navy ship to perhaps help everyone on the Chinook. As soon as he picked up the visual of a ship, he began to head towards it slowly and cautiously.

Unlike the smaller Huey helicopter that was able to land on many ships, the Chinook was too big to perform such a landing.

The aircraft was much too large for USS Kirk’s flight deck, so the pilot hovered low over the fantail and unloaded his precious cargo of men, women, children, and infants – and his aircrew – into the waiting arms of Kirk crewmen below.

Then, flying his behemoth helicopter all alone, the pilot moved a short distance off Kirk’s starboard quarter,
hovering within inches of the sea.

He slowly rolled the Chinook on its right side, escaping the spectacular crash unharmed by diving out the left door in mid-roll. Both main rotors disintegrated on impact, and shattered shards of the blades flew across Kirk, splashing into the sea well to port. The crew of the Kirk’s motor whaleboat were standing by and rescued the pilot in short order. All crewmen and family members were reunited unharmed on the USS Kirk that day.”

There was only one CH-47 that came to the USS Kirk FF-1087 in 1975. Your father hovered the helo over the fantail of the Kirk and his passengers jumped out to the arms of the Kirk crew. He then came to the right of Kirk, rolled the helo to the right and jumped out on the left side. Your father was a very brave man and he accomplished a remarkable and professional job to save his passengers and his family. There could hardly have been a more masterful bit of flying, or a braver pilot that day,” said Captain Paul H. Jacobs, then USS Kirk (FF-1087) Commanding Officer, to Nguyen’s sons.

Roughly 24 hours later, Nguyen and his family transitioned from the USS Kirk to a few others
ships heading towards the U.S. … heading toward freedom.Ba Van Nguyen passed away at the age of 73 on Jun. 17, 2013,

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