The Green Berets and Aircrews inside the high-security Tac Ops Center at Eglin AFB.

Thursday Sept 10th, 1970

…exactly 50 years ago today.

In addition to the “buildings” that we constructed for the Mockup, there were roads made that simulated the area surrounding the POW camp. Earthmoving equipment was brought in which completed a “road by the Son Tay compound and a canal/river” on September 10th. This was recorded in the Log.

Below, you can read a page of that Log kept in the Joint Chiefs of Staff’s top secret TOC (Tactical Operations Center) building at Aux Field #3, recording the events of each day.

The official name of the Log is “Record of Events (Log), US Army Element, JCTG (JCS)”

Translation: Record of Events (Log), US Army Element of the Joint Contingency Task Group (Joint Chiefs of Staff).

The Son Tay Raid was the first mission directly controlled by the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The reason: there was no organization in the US military that could manage all the Army, Air Force, Navy, and Marine Corps assets involved in the Son Tay Raid.

[Today, we have the USSOCOM, the US Special Operations Command, for this very purpose. USSOCOM’s commanders teach the Son Tay Raid as a textbook example of excellence.]

Read Sgt Terry Buckler’s full story in Who Will Go.

Click Here:  The book.