The Delta Advisor
IV
An
article about IBDA member Jim Kraft
THE DELTA ADVISOR IV
Can Tho, Vietnam
March, 1969
FAC "Eyes" of Air Support - LEADS BOMBERS TO TARGET
ALL SYSTEMS Go - Checking his overhead controls and radio
frequencies, Major James M. Kraft, Phong Dinh Province Air
Liaison Officer, completes the preflight inspection of his
Cessna 0-1 reconnaissance aircraft. (IV Corps PIO Photo)
CAN THO - The "eyes" of the powerful fighter bombers that swoop
down on Viet Cong encampments in the Delta to unleash their
destructive ordnance are the Forward Air Controllers (FAC's).
These experienced USAF pilots locate, identify and mark the air
targets from altitudes barely out of small arms fire range in
tiny, one engine 0-1 Bird Dogs.
One such USAF pilot is Major James M. Kraft from Strongsville,
Ohio. Operating from the Phong Dinh Province Tactical Air
Control Party (TACP) in Can Tho, he doubles as the Province Air
Liaison Officer (ALO) providing air support information to the
U.S. Army and ARVN officials directly concerned with combat
activities.
The Phong Dinh TACP, with seven USAF personnel, is responsible
for all the tactical air activity within the entire province.
With an $85,000 jeep transportable radio, package monitoring
four different frequencies, the small team can receive and
transmit messages up to 25 miles away.
After checking the daily mission log recently for his flight
assignment at the TACP, Kraft drove the mile and a half to the
Can Tho airfield. Not unlike many days before, he took off from
the airfield early in the afternoon in the high wing,
conventional landing gear airplane. The sky was filled with
scattered clouds and visibility was about eight miles.
Kraft banked left after take off from the airfield. He headed
due west for seven miles until he visually identified the "crows
foot", the apex of a Bassac River tributary that, at the village
of Thoi Lai, branches out into three straight canals.
The target lay two miles south of Thoi Lai, a suspected Viet
Cong concentration along the banks of the center canal. Quickly
locating the target area, the veteran pilot scanned the linear
tract with binoculars to further identify spot quarries.
Circling the pre-planned target region, Kraft checked his eight
white smoke rockets mounted on the underside of the O-1's wings.
The A-37 twin engine fighter bombers, known in Air Force circles
as "Tweety Birds", shortly arrived on the scene and the FAC,
through a prearranged radio frequency, talked them into the
precise area until visual contact was made. Kraft then gave them
the exact target identification, weather description, and
miscellaneous reconnaissance information.
The small Bird Dog, flying at a speed slower than some state
highway speed limits, controlled the entire air strike. Time and
again Kraft cut the power of his aircraft, and falling into a
nose dive, fired one of the white smoke rockets each time with
the pin point accuracy expected of a professional. Spewing thick
white smoke, the rocket marker was easily sighted by the pilots
of the bomb-laden jets.
Approaching low and fast for the napalm drops, the A-37's
matched the FACs accuracy and demolished each target marked. In
all, after eight passes, the U.S. fighter bombers destroyed
eight Viet Cong structures and damaged three others.
Constant "coaching" by the alert FAC ensured the mission's
success. With the strafing runs completed and all the
deliverable ordnance on target, Kraft circled the area surveying
the results. He then released the jets to their home base. With
the mission completed and the enemy ruins still smoldering the
FAC headed for the Can Tho airfield, ready and responsive for
another air support request.

Narrative
Supporting DFC
Awarded to:
Major James M. Kraft
Major James M. Kraft
distinguished himself by extraordinary achievement while
participating in aerial flight as a Forward AirController near
Can Tho, RVN, on 24 August 1968. On that date, while piloting an
0-1 Bird Dog, Major Kraft played a significant role in lessening
the immediate hostile threat to the major city of Can Tho. Local
intelligence sources had reported elements of the Tay Do II
Battalion not far from the city, while smaller units had
infiltrated the outlying areas. These units were known to have
sufficient artillery and heavy automatic weapons capability to
seriously threaten the city defenses and probably had been
responsible for shelling which Can Tho had undergone the
previous few nights.. all part of the so called:"Viet Cong Third
Phase Offensive".
On the evening of the 24th, Major Kraft was alerted for possible
air strikes on suspected V. C. firing positions. Upon arriving
over the target area for pre-strike surveillance and target
acquisition, he drew heavy ground fire from suspected positions.
He responded by calling for fighter aircraft and flare ship
support while remaining overhead to pinpoint the firing
positions. Once radio contact was established and the aircraft
were on station, he briefed the fighters on their target and the
flare ship on the illumination requirements; Immediately after
deployment of the flare and smoke-marking rocket, intense
automatic ground fire erupted from several quadrants. Major
Kraft quickly reassessed this new threat and, after the fighters
had successfully completed their initial pass on the first
position, he redirected the strike into the zone of heaviest
fire. Despite the intensity of the .30 & .50 caliber fire Major
Kraft repeatedly exposed himself to the fire in order to
accurately mark the target for each pass by the fighters.
Thanks to his rapid analysis of the target situation and his
pinpoint accuracy in plotting and marking the hostile positions,
with complete disregard for his personal safety, he was able to
efficiently and effectively employ the tactical fighter weapon
he was controlling. Although target coverage and darkness
prevented an accurate damage assessment, three heavy automatic
weapons positions were silenced. A later report received from
Vietnamese National Police credited the air strike with 50 V.C.
killed, 70 wounded. These results provide substantial support
for the role of tactical air power in SEA, particularly when
controlled by a professional Forward Air Controller, such as
Major Kraft. The professional competence, aerial skill and
devotion to duty displayed by Major Kraft reflect great credit
upon himself and the United States Air Force.
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