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A Man is Not
Dead Until He is Forgotten
The Story of Frank N. Badolati
by Ray Davidson

Frank N. Badolati
After a trip to the
Vietnam Wall, the daughter of Goffstown, New Hampshire native, SSGT Frank Badolati wrote, It was terribly sad and lonely, but there I found a place
to cry and many people to share my tears. I don't believe I will ever see
my father in this lifetime. I was only three the last time I saw him.
Daisy Badolati of the tiny Azalea, Oregon community goes on to say, It
has been a very difficult issue for me to deal with over the years, so
much so that I made the greatest effort to accept my loss and [when the
pain was just too great I would try to] forget ever having had a father.
SSGT Badolati was a member of Detachment B-52, Project Delta, 5th Special
Forces Group. Project Delta was formed in October 1964. Their missions
included some of the most hazardous and critical actions in South Vietnam.
Augmenting the 5th Special Forces (Green Berets) was a Civilian Irregular
Defense Group (CIDG) Security Company, a group of South Vietnamese Special
Forces, a South Vietnamese Ranger Battalion and a CIDG Roadrunner
Company (Roadrunners were equipped with enemy uniforms, equipment and
weapons).
Stay Out of the An Lao Valley
Operation Masher (January 24 March 6, 1966) was the largest search and
destroy mission up to that point in the war. Project Delta was selected to
reconnoiter the Northern end of the An Lao valley.
This area of the An Lao Valley is covered with thick vegetation with a
great deal of elephant grass, three to four feet tall, and interspersed
with cultivated fields. Steep slopes bound the valley on both sides with
anti-aircraft emplacements. Intelligence indicated that there were two
Regiments of North Vietnamese in the valley supported by Viet Cong
insurgents. With such a heavy concentration of enemy forces, the former
commander of Project Delta, Maj. Art Strange, warned incoming commander,
Maj. Charles Charging Charlie Beckwith, in July of 1965 to, Stay out of
the An Lao Valley. They have sophisticated warning systems and tracking
dogs.
Operation Masher and Charging Charlie
ignored good advice. The operation required insertion of recon teams into
the valley but problems plagued the mission. Beckwith decided to not
augment the Recon teams with South Vietnamese counterparts (as was
standard procedure), ground intelligence was unconfirmed, the weather was
bad, helicopter and air ship support would be limited due to the
ant-aircraft guns, and, as stated before, the enemy controlled the valley.
The last time friendly forces were in the valley was 1958.
Beckwith choose to insert three teams comprised of American Special
Forcers troopers. Badolati was assigned to team three along with SFC
Marcus Huston (Team Leader), SSGT Billy McKeithe, MSGT Wiley Gray, SSGT
Ron Terry and SSGT Cecil Hodgson.

L to R: Wiley W. Gray; Cecil J.
Hodgson (KIA); Billy A. McKeithe;
Frank N. Badolati (KIA); Ronald T. Terry (KIA)
The mission quickly disintegrated. Team
one had to abort with one wounded. A woodcutter in the hills spotted Team
Two and they were ambushed losing four men and the other two were wounded.
Team Three made initial contact with enemy forces at around 9:30 on 28
January and again at about 12:30. During the first volley of fire that
afternoon Badolati was hit in the upper left arm, the bullet almost
severing the arm. SFC Hodgson applied a tourniquet while the team was
still under fire. The team then broke contact and moved about 600 yards,
stopping to provide medical help to Badolati. They immediately came under
fire. The team then split into two groups to evade the pursuing enemy.
Gray, Hodgson, and Terry evaded the ambush site in a different direction
from Badolati, Huston and McKeithe. The group with Badolati tried to use
the cover along the steep slopes and after dark used a streambed to hide
their trail. Finally Badolati stated that he "could not go any further"
and for them to leave him behind. Ignoring his plea, Huston and McKeithe
stopped in a concealed position two to three feet up the stream bank.
Despite constant medical attention to Badolati's mangled arm, his
condition continued to deteriorate. He died in the early morning hours of
29 January 1966.The remaining team members were forced to leave Badolati's
body hidden in the boulders and scrubs with the hope to recover it with a
Search and Rescue (SAR) team. The two survivors successfully evaded and
were recovered later by helicopter.
According to Homecoming II records, Gray, Hodgson, and Terry successfully
evaded the rest of that day and then settled into a hiding place for the
night. At first light on the 29th, the three men began moving again and
did not make contact with the enemy until 4:30 that afternoon. All three
were lying in elephant grass when they saw seven Viet Cong soldiers
standing four feet to the right and rear of them. They opened fire killing
three of the seven. Shortly thereafter, Gray heard Terry yell that he had
been hit and saw him holding his right side. Suddenly Terrys body arched
as another bullet struck him, it was obvious this second bullet killed
Terry.
Gray could not locate Hodgson and decided to move roughly 20 feet to a
more defendable position and waited in ambush for the enemy. A little
later Gray heard both enemy and Hodgsons weapons being discharged, then
silence. Gray continued to evade the enemy and was recovered the next day
by helicopter.
Charging Charlie was wounded on the fire support mission and left Project
Delta the next week. Of the seventeen that went into the An Lao Valley
seven were killed and three wounded.
In 1999 a note from a childhood friend left at the virtual wall said, I
had a crush on Frank as a young girl. He sent me pictures from Vietnam and
a lacquered box for Christmas 1965, which still sits on my dresser. I was
a freshman in high school [when Frank died]. I have never forgotten him.
the firepower was so intense you told them to go without you, and they
left you wounded propped against the tree where your blood fed the
shadows. Did you notice the silence of the birds? As you waited for the
helicopter, did you remember the way the sun used to strike the corner of
your house [in Goffstown] at first light? Did you think of the picnic
where your buddies ran around the meadow chasing a greased pig? We danced
in the clover and you held me so close I swallowed your scent. When nobody
came did you wonder what would happen to the car you and a friend painted
to match your jungle fatigues? And when the light faded, could you hear me
call your name
Frank Neil Badolatis name can be found on panel 04E, Line 105 of the
Vietnam Memorial Wall
Ray Davidson is a syndicated columnist. He can be reached at rayd45@aol.com.
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