In 1969, The NVA Surrounded A 6-Man LRRP Team. It Was A Fatal Mistake.

On the 11th of May, 1969, approximately 30 North Vietnamese soldiers surrounded a six-man American reconnaissance team northeast of Quan Loi base camp. Rain drove off the helicopter gunships. The radio signal was failing. No reinforcements were coming. By morning, the team leader had walked artillery to within 25 m of his own men, set a dawn ambush, and crawled alone to two enemy positions to destroy them with grenades. All six Americans walked out.
Those men were long-range reconnaissance patrol operators, the teams that reported a kill ratio of 400 enemy for every American lost across roughly 23,000 patrols in Vietnam. The NVA’s standard response to a compromised team was to surround and overwhelm it before air support arrived. On this night, the weather did half the work. It was not enough.
60 to 70% of South Vietnam was wilderness, triple canopy jungle, mountainous border zones, the Ho Chi Minh Trail threading through the Central Highlands like a root system no one could dig out. Battalion-size sweeps crashed through it, and the NVA heard them coming from miles away. They monitored the radios, counted the helicopters, chose when to fight.
The war’s central frustration was an enemy who was everywhere and visible nowhere. The war demanded eyes in the places big units could not reach, trail junctions deep in enemy country, base camp perimeters along the Cambodian border, ridgelines where no American had set foot in months. It demanded men willing to go in teams of six and trust that someone would come get them when things went wrong. Sometimes no one came.
On the 1st of June, 1967, Sergeant Steve Bonert’s four-man team from the 2nd Brigade LRRP, 4th Infantry Division, inserted into the Ia Drang Valley near Highway 19 for a B-52 bomb damage assessment. The enemy was already there. The team was compromised within minutes. Movement tightening through the undergrowth on every side.
Bonert radioed for extraction. The battalion commander, miles away, declared the area cold. Denied. For 5 hours, four Americans lay motionless, listening to the NVA build fighting positions around them. When a relief column finally pushed through, it was ambushed en route. Specialist 4 Dan Harmon, an Aleutic soldier from Woody Island, Alaska, took AK-47 fire dragging the wounded Bonert to cover.
Harmon died on that trail. Bonert bled out 12 days later. That was 1967, and those men were running improvised doctrine. By February 1969, every long-range patrol unit in Vietnam had been redesignated under a single regiment, the 75th Infantry Ranger. The teams were still six men. The jungle was the same, but the doctrine had hardened into something the NVA had not accounted for.
In December 1965, the 101st Airborne formed the first LRRP platoon in Vietnam. By mid-66, Westmoreland had authorized long-range patrol elements across every division in country. On the 1st of February 1969, all units were reflagged as lettered companies of the 75th Infantry Regiment Ranger.
13 companies, each tethered to a parent division. A team was six men. Team leader, assistant team leader, radio man, the NVA’s priority target, point man, slack man, rear security. Small enough to vanish, large enough to kill. They carried CAR-15s and sawed-off 12-gauge shotguns loaded with double-aught buck. At 15 m in triple canopy, a shotgun ended arguments a rifle could not.
Every team packed M18A1 Claymore mines, 700 steel balls aimed outward along the perimeter. In a compromised position, the claymore spoke first. And every man knew the AN/PRC-25 radio was the lifeline to artillery, gunships, and extraction. Without it, a surrounded team was already dead. Insertion was by Huey slick, false touchdowns across three or four clearings, so the enemy never knew which held the team.
On the ground, six men formed a wagon wheel perimeter and lay dog, motionless, listening. A 1969 analysis in the US Naval Institute proceedings found that a soldier’s survival odds were twice as great on a six-man strike team as in a battalion, and each man inflicted roughly six times the enemy casualties. The math was counterintuitive.
It was also real. On the 22nd of February, 1969, Specialist 4 Robert Law and five teammates from Company I, 75th Rangers, First Infantry Division, set a claymore kill zone over a streambed trail in Tinh Phuoc Tan Province. Three Viet Cong appeared. The team dropped two with rifle fire and detonated a claymore onto the third, a machine gunner, at contact distance.
In the firefight that followed, team leader Danny Wiggins called danger close artillery. Then an enemy grenade landed among the team. Law threw himself on top of it. Five men walked out because one did not. He received the Medal of Honor. Company I had now buried a Medal of Honor recipient. Three months later, another I Company team leader would face the same arithmetic.
Six men, enemy on every side, no way out but through. That night, the equation came out different. On the evening of the 11th of May, 1969, Sergeant Orman Crabtree’s six-man team from Company I, 75th Rangers, First Infantry Division, was operating northeast of Quan Loi Base Camp in Binh Long Province when they countered approximately 30 enemy soldiers moving through the trees.
Not from one direction, from all of them. Darkness closing, a light drizzle starting, the radio signal weak, barely reaching the relay. This was the scenario every LRRP trained for and hoped never to face. Compromised, outnumbered five to one, the jungle shrinking around six men who could not run. Crabtree got on the radio and called artillery.
The first rounds landed at 50 m, close enough to feel the concussion in his teeth. Not close enough. The enemy kept moving. He adjusted. 25 m. At that distance, the margin between saving his team and killing it was a correct eight-digit grid coordinate. One transposed number and the next salvo lands on top of them. The drizzle thickened into a downpour.
Helicopter gunships tried to support. The rain drove them off. The team was alone. Six men in a perimeter smaller than a living room. High explosive shaking the ground on every side, the handset drowning in rain and static, and 30 NVA soldiers somewhere in the dark between the shells. They held through the night. At first light, Crabtree counted 10 enemy soldiers moving toward the team’s position.
He set the ambush himself. The killing blast dropped four. Six survivors opened fire. Crabtree led a flanking move, then broke from his men and crawled forward alone. He reached the enemy position and destroyed it with grenades. A machine gun bunker opened up from a second position. He crawled to that one, too.
Elbows and knees in the mud, muzzle flash 40 ft ahead of him in the gray morning light. Grenades into the aperture. The bunker went silent. All six men walked out. The same company that buried Robert Law in February brought every man home in May. Not because the mission was easier, because one team leader refused to let the dark, the rain, and 30 enemy soldiers write the ending.
Sergeant Crabtree received the Distinguished Service Cross, Headquarters, US Army Vietnam, General Orders number 4343, dated the 6th of December, 1969. He was inducted into the Ranger Hall of Fame in 1996. It was not recklessness. It was doctrine pushed to its outer edge. A surrounded LRRP team had one asset the enemy never expected.
A team leader trained to bring high explosive within 25 m of his own men and keep adjusting until the enemy broke or died. Crabtree did not call artillery to hold the NVA off. He called it to kill them. When the survivors regrouped at dawn, he ambushed them. When the ambush left the job unfinished, he crawled forward and finished it with his hands.
Crabtree’s team was not writing those numbers alone in 1969. In July, an 11-man Ranger camp from G Company, 75th Infantry, Americal Division, at Landing Zone Baldy, took a company-sized NVA sapper assault head-on. The camp’s pet dog, a mutt named Crash, alerted before the sappers hit the wire. 11 Rangers held through the night.
At dawn, 31 NVA bodies lay inside the perimeter, part of a broader fight that left approximately 43 enemy dead. The camp held. In the Central Highlands, a single team from the 4th Infantry Division occupied a hilltop on the Chu Po Ridge near Pleiku and spent 3 days directing artillery and Air Force fighter-bombers onto a large NVA concentration below.
When an estimated company stormed the position, the team fought for 3 hours. They were pulled off a hilltop that was, by then, on fire. Six men had served as a fire control node, calling the full technological weight of the American military from a piece of ground smaller than a tennis court. The NVA adapted.
By 1967, they had fielded counter-reconnaissance teams with tracking dogs stationed along the trail, callable within 24 hours of a boot print. They placed bounties on LRRP teams, $1,000 to $2,500 in a country where a laborer made 85 cents a day. Their standard response to a compromised team was the dog pile. Rush enough men to fix and overwhelm the six Americans before air power could arrive.
Post-war NVA veterans reportedly called the Rangers the deadliest American unit in the war because they kept showing up where they were not supposed to be. The Australian SAS, running identical patrols out of Phuoc Tuy province, earned an even sharper name, Ma Rung, phantoms of the jungle. But the doctrine’s failure mode was absolute.
Sergeant Craig Jorgenson’s five-man H Company team, 75th Rangers, 1st Cavalry Division, was hit on the 17th of November, 1969. Two men killed instantly, a third badly wounded. Jorgenson was told no quick reaction force was available. He and his team leader fought back-to-back over the bodies of their dead until rescue came. 500 LRRP soldiers were killed in Vietnam.
Company 1, Crabtree’s company, Laws company, buried 29 of them. In 1974, the colors of the 75th Infantry passed to the newly formed 1st and 2nd Ranger battalions, the seed of today’s 75th Ranger Regiment. Staff Sergeant Robert Pruden, the G Company team leader who shielded his men with his body at Quang Nai on the 29th of November, 1969, entered the Ranger Hall of Fame’s inaugural class.
The regiment runs the annual Pruden competition in his name. The proposition was never abstract. Six men with a radio moving through darkness could be more lethal and more survivable than a battalion, but only if every link held. The artillery had to be accurate. The radio had to carry, and the man calling the fire had to trust the math more than his fear.
25 m, that was the margin. That was always the margin.