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Phạm Quang Khiêm

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Khiem Pham
Khiêm in September 1970
Native name
Phạm Quang Khiêm
Nickname(s)Space Cowboy
Born (1946-12-27) December 27, 1946 (age 77)
Vĩnh Long, South Vietnam
Allegiance South Vietnam
Service / branch Republic of Vietnam Air Force
Years of service1969–1975
RankFirst Lieutenant
Unit435th Transport Squadron
Known forStealing C-130a to escape the North Vietnamese
Battles / warsVietnam War
Spouse(s)Ngoc-My Tran (m. 1972)
Children3
Other workAirline pilot

Phạm Quang Khiêm (born December 27, 1946) was the first lieutenant, and co-pilot in the South Vietnam Air Force (VNAF) during the Vietnam War. Khiêm was a cargo pilot with the 53rd Tactical Wing of the 5th Air Division stationed at Tan Son Nhut. He flew several missions into communist-occupied Pleiku to rescue VNAF personnel. On 3 April 1975, Khiêm organized a plan to steal a C-130A and gathered 53 people to rescue them from the North Vietnamese communists. Later, Khiêm became pilot for Piedmont Airlines until 2006.

Early life

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Khiêm and his family in 1960

Phạm Quang Khiêm was born on December 27, 1946, in Vĩnh Long, South Vietnam.[1] Khiêm had nine siblings and all of his brothers were in the military. Khiêm had three children: two in South Vietnam and one in the United States.

Career

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Khiêm at Lockbourne AFB

In November 1969, Khiêm went to Lackland AFB to learn English as a cadet.[2] At Randolph AFB, he earned his basic pilot training, then moved on to Keesler AFB, where he flew the T-28 Trojan. Khiêm also trained at Lockbourne AFB from October–December 1970. Eventually, he was assigned to fly pilot-in-command of C-123K aircraft before moving up to the 53rd Tactical Wing, 435th Transport Squadron as a C-130A pilot.

Hard landing in 1971

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Khiêm in front of the C-123K after the crash landing

On January 24, 1971, Khiêm nearly died almost ending his flight career before it started.[3] After a year of training in the US, Khiêm was sent to Phan-Rang AFB by the VNAF to start "In Country Training" with the USAF on a C-123K. Khiêm was assigned to fly with 1LT. Minh and their American Instructor, Cpt. John Mastronardi. Minh was the Aircraft Commander in the left seat and in the right, Khiêm. Pham switched with Captain Mastronardi to execute co-pilot duties.

They were assigned to transfer 48 M107 175 mm bullet heads from Bien-Hoa Air Base to a US FSB 113 kilometers north near the Cambodian border. They had to land in an isolated area for a safe distance from any airport facilities since they carried highly explosive material. They landed on the short dirt strip, Bù Gia Mập Air Strip (aka Djamap). The runway was 3000' on top of a 1620' hill. Co-Pilots (in this training) were not allowed to make any landing on a runway shorter than 3600'.

Despite the fact Minh was supposed to control the aircraft, Captain Mastronardi kept Khiêm in the right seat, believing he could handle the landing after previous successful landings. Khiêm, a young pilot, didn't know the difference between a short and long runway. Coming in a hostile area, they had to come in high and drop fast. They came down to 2000' at 78 knots and when the C-123K was about 20 feet in the air crossing the end of the runway, Khiêm decided to idle causing the aircraft to drop, touching down extremely hard. The left main landing gear fell into the belly, wrecking the wheel and scratching the red dirt on the runway straight into the cockpit. Khiêm and Minh were blinded. Captain Mastronardi immediately reversed the right engine, bringing the aircraft back, and stopping the plane. If Captain Mastronardi had not stopped the plane, the whole aircraft would have run off the dirt strip, dropping hundreds of yards to explode down the hill.

End of the War

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At the end of March 1975, the North Vietnamese had taken half of South Vietnam. Fleeing citizens and soldiers created chaos throughout the country. Civilians and officers hitched military aircraft to escape the North Vietnamese. At the end of March 1975, the NVA pushed towards the coast to strike Qui Nhơn, Tuy Hòa, and Nha Trang.

Pleiku

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North Vietnamese gains in the last week of March 1975

[4] In the north of South Vietnam, the only remaining government enclave was Da Nang.[5] Khiêm flew three missions into and out of Pleiku, evacuating the families of VNAF personnel. The people of Pleiku learned of the evacuation and stormed the airport forcing five C-130's en route from Saigon to turn around before their airlifts were complete. Several C-130's flew bombing missions to destroy aircraft left behind. The planes dropped 55-gallon drums of napalm on VNAF aircraft sitting abandoned on the ramps.

Da Nang

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28 March 1975: Khiêm, a First Lieutenant, flew one of the last missions to Da Nang at 11:00 pm, the night before the installation fell to the NVA. After landing, he taxied to the ramp when an ARVN major jumped into the aircraft to get a seat. Khiêm knew that thousands of people would rush the airplane after seeing the major, Khiêm kicked him off. The aircraft commander was searching the terminal for his family. The ramp filled with refugees almost immediately. With around 20,000 pounds of cargo on board, Khiêm yelled at the loadmaster to offload the cargo first. But the crowd was too chaotic, so Khiêm told the loadmaster to do unloading and loading through the ramp in the back of the C-130. Once unloading finished, people rushed onto the aircraft. Khiêm started the engines, which scattered many of the refuges, thus allowing Khiêm to taxi out.

As the plane taxied, the Loadmaster yelled at Khiêm through the intercom saying the ramp could not be closed because people were on it. Khiêm hit the brakes jamming the refugees into the cargo hold and allowing the ramp to close. At the end of the runway, an MP (Military Police) with his family were in a truck blocking the taxiway. The MP pointed his M-16 at the cockpit as he motioned to let his family on board. Khiêm then motioned him to move the truck so he could line up on the runway. Khiêm backed up, lined up, and took off without the MP. Khiêm offloaded at Tan Son Nhut and did a headcount of 350 people. C-130's are maximized to carry 128 passengers.

[6] The mission was the turning point for Khiêm. He knew if the chaos reached Saigon, he must get his family out of Vietnam.

Nha Trang

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31 March 1975: Khiêm flew several missions during the evacuation of Nha Trang. The following day, Qui Nhơn, South Vietnam's third-largest city was captured by the North Vietnamese. The next target for the North Vietnamese was Nha Trang. Khiêm participated in that evacuation as he did in Da Nang.

Flight to freedom

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2 April 1975: Khiêm caught a ride on a C-130 "bladder bird" (a fuel delivery mission) into Phan Rang, hoping to pinpoint his younger brother, an airman there.[5] Khiêm wanted to take him to Saigon to be with the rest of their family. Khiêm could not find his brother and had to leave without him. On the way back to Saigon, Khiêm believed that if Phan Rang is lost, then communists will come to Saigon.[7] Khiêm started to devise a plan to escape South Vietnam with his family. Hearing that Singapore was looking for pilots, it was where he would go. VNAF Pilots began discussing stealing planes with their families; so Command ordered an aircraft be fueled only enough to complete the mission. This created a major problem for Khiêm. An alternate plan was to find someone to help a family escape.

Preparation

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One of Khiêm's close friends was Major Nguyen Canh Huu in the South Vietnam Air Force. He was in Khiêm's sister squadron the 437th Squadron.[8] They discussed the escape and Khiêm told him they must be the first otherwise there wouldn't be a second. Major Canh's family was in Da Lat, and he wanted to get them to Saigon before leaving. On 2 April, Da Lat was overrun by the communists and Nguyen lost contact with them. After that, he was prepared to escape. On 3 April, all the C-130s were used on bombing missions and Khiêm was number one standby for the mission planning board, but Khiêm needed to tell his family his plan to escape. Khiêm told an officer he didn't feel good and agreed to drop Khiêm to the bottom of the list. Khiêm ran home and told one of his brothers to keep his family close to home because they were all gathered in Saigon. Khiêm told his family to rush to the Long Thanh Airfield (known by the US as Bearcat Base) as soon as they heard from him. Long Thanh was originally a US Army airbase that Khiěm had landed many times in training. It was closed and deserted since the US withdrawal in 1973.

27-year-old Khiêm in at C-130A in 1974

Khiêm's house was a mile from the airport and ran home and told his family to leave. But there was a hindrance, Khiêm and Nguyen were in different squadrons, and would not usually fly together. Khiêm could not even get into the squadron area because the guards did not know him. But the airplane Khiêm was supposed to escape with had mechanical problems, and the 437th had to borrow the 435th's C-130a HCF 460, nickname "Saigon Lady", and would let Khiêm in the area. Now Khiêm had to get rid of Canh's co-pilot. The co-pilot let Khiêm fly gladly because he wanted the rest of the day off to prepare for his date.[5]

Now the biggest problem left of all: the fuel. Khiêm thought they would only have enough fuel to maybe make it to Thailand. Khiêm checked the fuel to find out the entire tank was full. The man fueling the tank took a smoke break and filled the tank all the way. This full tank of gas meant Singapore was possible.

Lt. Khiêm, Major Canh, and the rest of the crew (not knowing where they were going) were prepared for takeoff. Khiêm took off without clearance and turned southeast instead of east. Khiêm told the crew on the intercom that they were redirected to Long Thanh instead of Phan Rang. They landed safely, then the Loadmaster opened the ramp unloading 20,000 lbs of dry rice. Khiêm's brother in Phan Rang made it to their parents' house in Saigon a few minutes before the escape.[9] While Khiêm's family and friends of 53 people boarded, he told the crew that he was escaping Vietnam and they could come if they wanted. The Flight Engineer got up, then sat back down and said he would come. The number one Loadmaster thought Khiêm and Canh were defecting to the North Vietnamese. He served in the VNAF for ten years and ran away as fast as he could. The other Loadmaster was on his first C-130 training ride and had no clue as to what was going on, so he just stood next to the open ramp.

Escape

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Khiêm started taxiing away, but when everyone boarded the plane with their luggage, Khiêm's two-year-old daughter was trampled and knocked out with blood everywhere.[10] Khiêm's wife, Ngoc-My, saw her thinking she was dead and passed out dropping their infant child on the ground. The infant child was left on the tarmac as Khiêm started to taxi but, luckily, Khiêm's oldest brother's wife ran out and grabbed the infant and ran back into the moving C-130A (all of them recovered after). As Khiêm started taxiing to the takeoff end of the runway, Khiêm saw the Loadmaster speaking to many ARVN soldiers who came in a jeep. As Khiêm and Canh turned to take off, the Jeep came and pointed an M-79 grenade launcher at the cockpit. Khiêm took off anyway knowing they wouldn't fire. The ramp was still open, so Khiêm ran back and told the puzzled, inexperienced Loadmaster to hold the switch until the ramp was up, then Khiêm ran to the cockpit just in time to raise the gear. The period from Khiêm landing to Khiêm and the passengers leaving was only seven minutes.

Shallow flying

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Khiêm and Canh flew at treetop level until they reached the sea, then they dropped down to the sea-level.[5] It got very humid in the back resulting in a thick fog forming. Khiêm's family and friends could not see each other because the fog was too thick. One hour later, they raised to 16,000 feet and flew straight to Singapore.

Singapore

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One of the C-130A's Khiêm flew in the VNAF

They arrived in Singapore at around 7:00 PM. Khiêm called Approach Control for instructions but could not understand them, so he changed to Tower Frequency and requested landing instructions.[11] Yet, the call was intercepted by the Singapore Air Force. Khiêm told the other end of the line that the C-130A was off course and running out of fuel.[12] So, they allowed Khiêm to land on runway 02. They all stayed put until the authorities came so they could seek political asylum.[13]

The officials had no clue what to do with them. Singapore Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew was out of the country for another two weeks. The Singapore Air Defense Command (SADC) was just renamed and reconstructed into the Republic of Singapore Air Force (RSAF) on 1 April 1975, just two days before Khiêm arrived.

Khiêm proposed for them to leave Singapore and go to Australia so Singapore wouldn't have to deal with them.[14] They agreed, but only if they would pay for gas. They only accepted U.S. Currency and all the passengers had a combined total of around $100–400. Khiêm tried to bribe them with jewelry, but they would not accept it. The group was moved in separate prison trucks to a detention center outside Singapore. Khiêm and the others were released until the Fall of Saigon.

Saipan

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After spending three weeks in jail, they were all flown to Saipan in a deluxe hotel. After a week there, they finally learned that the Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam) had fallen to the northern communists.[14]

The United States of America

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Khiêm and his family ended up at Camp Pendleton, California, where they were processed into the United States.[14]

Homecoming

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Khiêm got his entire family out, except his youngest brother in the ARVN.[5] He was stationed at Vũng Tàu. After the communists took over, he was sent to a brain-washing camp for two years. On 1 August 1992, he was reunited with Khiêm and his family through the ODP program.

Post-Vietnam career

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When Captain Mastronardi found out Khiêm was in the United States, he sent Khiêm $500 ($2,200+ today).[15] Khiêm and his family then settled in Dayton, Ohio, the birthplace of flight, and home to Wright-Patterson AFB. In the mid-1980s, Khiêm was hired by Piedmont Airlines, later merged with USAir and now US Airways, and moved to the right seat in only three years.

Another hard landing

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On January 30, 1991, Khiêm was flying a Boeing 737 from Raleigh, North Carolina to Washington National Airport.[15] Khiêm was approaching the runway but the plane taking off that runway aborted forcing Khiêm to land on runway 33 (a shorter runway). Khiêm realigned to runway 33 and prepared for landing. Runway 33 was even shorter because of the Potomac River on one end and The Pentagon on the other. Khiêm held a steady speed and tried to touch down on the runway at 500 feet instead of 1000 feet. Khiêm dropped 5 knots slamming the nose and wheels on the runway with 87 passengers on board.

Saigon Lady

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Saigon Lady, a C-130A, at the National Warplane Museum

On April 19, 1985, Khiêm and his family visited Selfridge ANGB to see the plane that brought his family freedom after ten years.[16]

Saigon Lady was transferred to the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum on January 30, 1989,[17][18] where it has been for over 28 years until it was transferred to the National Warplane Museum in 2019 for restoration and preparation for public display.[19]

Saigon Lady in Washington, D.C.

References

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  1. ^ "PQK Text Message". Khiem Pham Birthplace. 23 September 2020. Archived from the original on 18 April 2023. Retrieved 23 September 2020.
  2. ^ "VNAF: Escape". T-28 Trojan Foundation. Archived from the original on 2020-02-03. Retrieved 2020-04-06.
  3. ^ "VNAF "amazing story"". vnafmamn.com. Archived from the original on 2020-01-10. Retrieved 2020-04-06.
  4. ^ Snepp, Frank (1977). Decent Interval. New York, United States: Random House. pp. 234. ISBN 0-394-40743-1.
  5. ^ a b c d e Drendel, Lou (1984). Air War over Southeast Asia. 1115 Crowley Dr., Carrollton, TX: squadron/signal. p. 65. ISBN 0-89747-148-2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  6. ^ "Lockheed C-130a 45 lm Hercules". Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. 15 March 2016. Archived from the original on 14 April 2020. Retrieved 7 April 2020. That flight and the panic that Lt. Khiem saw in Da Nang caused him to consider that if this was likely to happen in Saigon, he would steal a C-130 and get his own family out.
  7. ^ Payne, Mack (25 August 2018). "1257 – South Vietnamese pilot borrowed a C-130". Vietnam Veteran News. Retrieved 26 August 2020.[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ Huynh, Ngoc (30 April 2020). "Wings and a prayer - Vietnamese pilot's escape before the fall of Saigon". New York Upstate. Archived from the original on 29 October 2020. Retrieved 23 August 2020.
  9. ^ "Vietnamese Native Reunited With Plane He Flew To Freedom". AP. 23 April 1985. Archived from the original on 17 January 2021. Retrieved 23 August 2020.
  10. ^ "Phillip Pham's Father "Borrows" Military Plane, Saves Family". We Love Dexter. 2 September 2019. Archived from the original on 2 December 2020. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  11. ^ Ng, Vanessa (2019). "How Vietnam War Refugees Fled to Singapore Using a Stolen C-130 Plane". The Kopi. Archived from the original on 13 May 2020. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  12. ^ "4 in Saigon Seize C-130 And Fly 52 to Singapore". The New York Times. 1975-04-05. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 2022-04-07. Retrieved 2022-04-15.
  13. ^ Ketty Nguyen Family Papers (AR.2017.002). Austin History Center, Austin Public Library, Texas.
  14. ^ a b c Klegg, Kassandra (March 3, 2015). "Mr. Pham Shares Experience of Escaping Communist Invasion of South Viet Nam". Raider Release. Archived from the original on 7 April 2020. Retrieved 8 April 2020.
  15. ^ a b Pham, Khiem (6 June 2015). "HARD LANDING". FLIPHTML5. Archived from the original on 13 August 2023. Retrieved 23 September 2020.
  16. ^ Moore, Jim (24 October 2019). "Museum Plans Vietnam Memorial Restored C–130 'SAIGON LADY' To Be Centerpiece". AOPA. Archived from the original on 5 November 2019. Retrieved 23 August 2020.
  17. ^ "C-130A Vietnam Veterans Memorial Planned for National Warplane Museum". Warbird News. 17 October 2019. Archived from the original on 19 September 2020. Retrieved 23 August 2020.
  18. ^ Willis, Jasmine (5 October 2017). "Vietnam War plane saved lives". Genesee County Express. Archived from the original on 8 November 2017. Retrieved 23 August 2020.
  19. ^ "C-130A "Saigon Lady"". National Warplane Museum. Archived from the original on 17 August 2020. Retrieved 23 August 2020.