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Art Jacobs
We went out and came to a hover, lowered the cable and again they opened up. The bullets, you know, came through. One hit my side, one hit me in the arm. Engine failure is pretty imminent. So if we stay there to try to get the wounded, the risk is that the aircraft will crash on the friendly troops.
Interviewer 1
That was Art Jacobs, retired Army helicopter pilot, talking about the moment his chopper was shot down over Vietnam as his team was attempting to rescue fellow soldiers.
Jon Bickley
Jacobs served in both Korea and Vietnam, where he repeatedly volunteered to be on the front lines to serve his country in its campaign to push back against communist aggression.
Interviewer 1
For this Memorial Day episode, we sit down in studio with Jacobs to discuss what he experienced during his lengthy service for the country and what he's doing now to continue to support his brothers in arms.
Jon Bickley
I'm Daily Wire executive editor Jon Bickley with Georgia Howe. This is a special Memorial Day edition of MORNING wire. Joining us now in studio is Art Jacobs, an Army helicopter pilot pilot who flew rescue missions during some of the fiercest fighting of the Vietnam War. Arthur, thank you so much for joining us.
Art Jacobs
My pleasure.
Jon Bickley
So you had experience, obviously, as a helicopter pilot, medevac in particular, in Vietnam maybe? Let's start there. So how did you get there? How long was your service during that campaign?
Art Jacobs
Well, I spent seven years in the Army. My first year was in Korea, and then I applied for flight school, got accepted, and as it got toward the end of flight school. They asked for volunteers to fly air rescue. I thought in all of that chaos and all of that controversy, even that that would be, you know, something constructive, you know, something good to do. The Vietnam War wasn't going on when I volunteered. My mother and father were heading toward a divorce. There was no real money or encouragement. I was the oldest of four. All the dads on our street were World War II. Their younger brothers were, you know, our uncles who were served in Korea. I believe what John Kennedy had said, we're going to fight communism, we're going to fight aggression. There was the Cuban Missile crisis, the Berlin Wall. We just felt like it was our turn. Plus, without the money or college, I wanted to do my duty, serve and use the GI Bill to go to school afterward. And then after I was in IS when Vietnam wound up and I applied for flight school. I didn't have a college degree, but the army was interesting. It was a real meritocracy. If you had some initiative and you did well on the test scores, you could get commissioned and create a career. We launched as quickly as possible because we knew that somebody was wounded and hoping someone would come. So that's what. That's what drove us really, was to get there and get the wounded back to some medical facility as quickly as possible.
Jon Bickley
The Korean War, a lot of people kind of forget it or gloss over or jump over it and get right into Vietnam. What did you find were some of the differences between those two conflicts firsthand?
Art Jacobs
Well, I will always believe. I mean, we were well intentioned. I mean, this. There was a fledgling democracy. Yes, they were inept and corrupt to some extent, but I'll always believe we could have created another South Korea. The goal was admirable, but the strategy and the tactics were flawed. Read a book by Barbara Tuckman. She won a Pulitzer Prize for nonfiction. She wrote 1914 about the origins of World War I. And she said, we made one fundamental mistake in Vietnam. This time we were the redcoats. And as you know, as George Santillane said that those who don't understand their history are condemned to repeat it. We had command of the air, we had command of the sea. If we'd have forced them to fight conventionally, we could have cordoned off the Ho Chi Minh Trail and starve the 20 to 30,000 Viet Cong that were in the South. The South Vietnamese could have handled them and we could have done conventional battle against the North.
Jon Bickley
While you were serving in it, did you feel were the criticisms mounting at that time in the Ranks or did you guys. Were you just focused on your mission
Art Jacobs
for that day in 1968, morale was still high, you know, even after the Tet Offensive. I mean, the enemy dedicated some 80,000 troops to the Tet Offensive and lost half of them. I mean, it was a military disaster for them. But there's always more than one level politically at home. What was being broadcast, you know, insurgents that were on the embassy grounds is as if we had, you know, somehow lost.
Jon Bickley
Yeah, I think that the political side of it is largely what's focused on, of course, the. The very human side. You guys were evacuating wounded soldiers, comrades in arms. You say that drove you. How many missions did you go on?
Art Jacobs
I lost count. I mean, one of my regrets was not keeping a journal each day. The number of missions, the number of wounded, what we saw, we were just working so hard. Sure. You know, flying all of the time. You'd come back and just want to rest and recuperate.
Interviewer 1
You said there were broadcasts that were pretty negative and it brought down morale, obviously, at home. Did that kind of trickle in through the grapevine of, I mean, enlisted men? How did that affect you guys over in Asia?
Art Jacobs
Only later in the year, I mean, we read the military newspaper, Stars and Stripes, and they were pretty positive and, you know, pretty objective. I mean, they reported. Reported the casualties, but we didn't see what people were seeing at home the way the media was portraying the war.
Jon Bickley
Now, you were eventually wounded, as I understand it.
Art Jacobs
Yes.
Jon Bickley
Can you tell us what happened there? How were you wounded? When did that take place?
Art Jacobs
Well, the first time I was wounded was in April of 68. And ironically, it was the first day I'd been promoted to aircraft commander. And we went into a rice paddy to pick up the wounded. And at the very last moment, the guys on the ground said, go around, go around. We saw the tracers and I was shot. So we didn't get the wounded out that day. So I went to the hospital and recuperated, sent me to a convalescence center and back to duty. Then in July, the mission came in that morning. There were troops in the mountains that were surrounded. They had a number of wounded and dead, and it was a hoist mission. There was no place to land. You have to come to a hover over the tops of the trees, 100ft tall, lower cable, so you're pretty vulnerable. And we took fire immediately. My co pilot was hit, my door gunner was hit, seriously wounded, and warning lights came on. So we had to abandon the mission. We made an emergency Landing back at the base and got another helicopter. Helicopters in Vietnam were like the horses and the cavalry in the Wild West. As long as you were okay, get another one.
Jon Bickley
She just jumped in another one and exactly.
Art Jacobs
We went back out, and this time we lowered the cable and a wounded guy was coming up. And just as he got to the skids, I turned to look and to make sure he was inside the aircraft. And the enemy opened up again. In fact, they shot him. And blood sprayed up into the cockpit. Warning lights came on, and again we had to leave, make an emergency landing. They had a moratorium then. No more rescue attempts. The ground unit was either going to have to move to a safe location or they were going to have to insert other units to relieve them. About an hour and a half later, the battalion commander for the unit came over and said, gee, my boys need help. Will you go? And my commanding officer was there, and he said, no, you don't have to. You know, you've seen enough. But. But to me, those poor guys were in pretty bad shape. And I said, it only makes sense for me to go. I know exactly what the top of that tree looks like. No one else should go. So we went out and came to a hover, lowered the cable, and again they opened up. The bullets, you know, came through. One hit my side, one hit me in the arm. And warning lights came on. And one of the warning lights was pretty serious. It's called engine chip detector. Means that engine failure is pretty imminent. So if we stay there to try to get the wounded, the risk is that the aircraft will crash on the friendly troops. I didn't want to do that, but the problem is that if you leave and the engine quits, you're probably going to land, you know, where the bad guys are. So I didn't want to crash on any friendly people. So we left. Twenty seconds later, the engine quit and, you know, down we went. Took us a while, but we got rescued. This time my wounds were a little bit more serious, so I was evacuated to a hospital in Japan, in Yokohama, where I spent a month, but then back to Vietnam to finish my tour. If you weren't wounded seriously, you'd be sent to a convalescent center in Vietnam. A little bit more seriously than that, it might be the Philippines or Japan. More seriously than that, all the way back to Hawaii. And if it was even more serious than that, you went back to the States and you weren't coming back. Yeah.
Interviewer 1
So you said you had 20 seconds until the engine failed. What happened? Where were you and how, how high were you in the air when that happened? Can you just explain what happens when your engine fails over the jungle?
Art Jacobs
Yeah, well, we were trying to climb out. We, we might have been 500 to 700ft above the, the jungle. When a helicopter engine quits, you go into what's called autorotation. The, the engine RPM needle goes to zero, but the rotor will maintain itself through the momentum. Plus, when you start to descend, it's like windmills. And you've stored up enough energy and there's an airspeed that's called minimum rate of descent. And it'll be the slowest descent. Not that it's slow, but it's the slowest one at that airspeed. And then there's another one where it's maximum rate of glide. So between those two airspeeds, you're making judgments as to where you might put the aircraft or how far you can go. And there was no place to land, so we just tried doing minimum rate of descent and make it as soft a crash as possible. But there's enough energy in the blades to increase the pitch at the last moment, which will take a big bite of air and slow you down. And then you just sort of waffle into the ground. But fortunately, we weren't high. Nobody was really injured in the crash. We just came down through the edge of the trees. Right.
Jon Bickley
Amazing. Did you have to hold off the
Art Jacobs
enemy on the ground momentarily? You know, they, they wrote up that, that citation, but I, I think the guys in the rear like to add a little drama. We, you know, we, we just did our duty. Yeah.
Interviewer 1
How long were you out there before someone came to rescue you?
Art Jacobs
About an hour and a half. You know, so it was pretty, pretty quick.
Interviewer 1
This is a very fast moving situation all around. It sounds like.
Art Jacobs
Yes. Yeah. But, you know, we made an emergency radio call. People knew what had happened, so they were out there looking for us pretty quickly.
Jon Bickley
Were you spooked from that? Did it affect you mentally when you went back into action?
Art Jacobs
No, I mean, when I first got to Vietnam, you know, you're afraid, gee, you know, I get killed, sure. But our mission was, to me, so powerful. I mean, I had the best job in Vietnam. I was most afraid of screwing up or letting somebody down than anything else.
Jon Bickley
Amazing. To give us a sense of time. So what years were you in Vietnam?
Art Jacobs
I got there the beginning of 1968. So I served all of 1968. And then there's always a silver lining. When I was in the hospital in Japan, this major, this Green Beret Major showed up at the foot of my bed and he had a piece of paper and he said, I understand you flew rescue missions. Yes, sir. At night in the mountains, across the border, you rescued people and you've seen some action because you're here. I said, yes, sir. He says, well, you're my guy. The Special Forces are now allowed to recruit their own organic pilots. And he said, you're going back to Vietnam, but you'll get orders for the 10 Special Forces Group. So when I came back to the States and they were at Fort Devens, so I spent two years with them, which was just fantastic. But that tour was finishing. I mean, I was owned by the Special Forces Unit, but I was still Army Aviation. And so Army Aviation called up and said, it's time for you to go back to Vietnam. So the second time I flew a Cobra, I flew a gunship. Again, ironic. It was it was safer to go out and shoot people than it was to try and rescue them.
Interviewer 1
How old were you during this period of time?
Art Jacobs
21.
Jon Bickley
So is it 1971 that you.
Art Jacobs
1971 was the second tour.
Jon Bickley
Second tour.
Art Jacobs
Okay, so it's a couple of years older, you know, grown man.
Jon Bickley
Okay, so your second tour, 1971. And this. You're on the offensive. Walk us through that. What happened during that, that time and then when did you officially leave the military?
Art Jacobs
Well, the Tet events was pretty big. We had about 500,000 troops in Vietnam, but by the time I got back in 1971, it was about half that number. But Nixon had the Vietnamization program, which was the Laotian invasion, codenamed Lam Son 719, where the South Vietnamese would do all of the fighting. They would go west on Highway 9 to interdict the Ho Chi Minh Trail. But all the aviation assets would be Americans, and we would support them from the air. It was a different war in South Vietnam. There was a lot of small arms, AK 47, 50 cal. But on the Ho Chi Minh Trail, they had pretty sophisticated anti aircraft, 23 millimeter, 37 millimeter. We lost more helicopters in that eight week operation than we had in the whole previous year in South Vietnam. The South Vietnamese for the first couple of days made great progress. But as soon as the North Vietnamese counterattacked, these people were abandoning their weapons and moving back east. The target was to get to this town called Chapon, which was halfway across Route 9 toward the Mekong river in Thailand. And they flew one helicopter out there and put some South Vietnamese on the ground for about a half an hour to say that they had accomplished the objective. And then they flew back. And then the South Vietnamese were in pell mell retreat. In fact, on one of the last days, if we didn't have a target that we were going after, sometimes we would just expend our fuel for targets of opportunity. And I called back to the main base and I said, I've got 12 vehicles heading east. Do you want me to cover them? And the commander said, wait. Came back, he said this. My counterpart says we have no more vehicles. I said, I'm looking at 12 vehicles heading east on Highway 9. Do you want me to cover them? He says, no vehicles. I got a little closer and I said, I have 12 tanks coming east. He said, they're not ours. So this was an entirely different war. In that broad daylight, tanks in the open, you would have, you know, rarely have seen that in South Vietnam where it was guerrilla warfare and everybody hiding in the trees. So that was, you know, that was kind of shocking to, to see. But that was the just about the end of the Lam Son operation.
Jon Bickley
So you really could see the shift from the top down on the sort of attitude about the war.
Art Jacobs
Yes, we were not allowed to fire unless we got permission. And that took a long time. We adopted the informal policy, we'll fire it if fired upon. And if someone on the radio said, wait, I'll get permission, somehow the radio would get really crackly and we wouldn't be able to hear anymore and we would engage anyway.
Jon Bickley
So you finish your seven years. You did experience, as I understand it, some PTSD from what went on in the combat arena. Tell us about that, if you're willing
Art Jacobs
to talk about it years later. I mean, I was still pumped up for a while. In a way I thought I was seven years behind my contemporaries who didn't serve in the military. But I couldn't have been more mistaken. I went back to school as a 25 year old freshman and three and a half years later I had a bachelor's degree and a master's degree. 3.7, President of the fraternity, you know, played on the football team. I was married to an army nurse at the time, and she had difficulty understanding that, I think. But I wanted to do all the things that I didn't get to do at 20. So I was pretty driven. And in the business world, I found that I could out compete, I could out discipline, I could out work, I could out hustle my contemporaries. I joined a company, got promoted four times in six years. So I was actually ahead of the game. In 1975 when I was finishing my MBA. Recruiters were coming on campus and a lot of them were the presidents and CEOs of companies. And you submit a profile in the student union and that gets reviewed, and then they would sign you up for interviews. And what I didn't fully realize that the CEOs in 1975, a lot of them were veterans, even from World War II. I mean, my resume was golden, so I was pretty high functioning. And I think it wasn't until I started going back to the reunions that it started to manifest itself. I realized that, you know, I could be pretty quick tempered, irritable and not unforgiving, but small things would irritate me. If people were talking about silly things, it would just bother the hell out of me. They had no idea what was real. I was focused on punctuality. I would get, you know, really mad when someone wasn't on time. It was not just discourteous or unprofessional, but that's, that's how you screw up a mission if, if you're not paying attention. So things like that. But I have to thank the VA because they were, they were great last couple of years going through some of their, their programs, you know, having me put things in, in perspective. I, I used to wear these decorations to remind myself that I served in my duty. And about a dozen years ago, I realized that I really wear them to remind me of my friends who did. Sorry, it's emotional. Yeah. But at the same time, it's therapeutic, I think, to talk about it.
Jon Bickley
Did you, did you feel guilt? And sometimes there's like survivor's guilt.
Art Jacobs
Oh, sure. Yeah. Like on that third mission, I, you know, I. We only got one guy out out of three missions and went out ourselves. There's, there's a balance, you know, it's a calculated risk. A dead crew can't rescue anybody. But I, I always wondered if those guys knew that we tried our hardest and we had to leave people.
Jon Bickley
Did you. Do you think some of your drive was that you feel like since you lived, you needed to maximize what your potential was and that you owed it to them or something?
Art Jacobs
Sure. I mean, after Vietnam, every day was kind of like gravy, you know, and why not see what you're capable of? Why not, you know, try your hardest, do your best, make a difference, make a contribution. I think that's what guided me. The times I got promoted. The President and the Vice President said, look, you weren't the most qualified for the position, but you were willing to move and we knew you'd run through a wall for us.
Interviewer 1
What was it like coming back? And I mean, I think of people like Jane Fonda and others that were.
Art Jacobs
And John Kerry.
Jon Bickley
Yeah, John Kerry.
Interviewer 1
So, I mean, there was a lot of discouragement.
Art Jacobs
I don't know if you'll edit this, but I call him Jane Carrey.
Interviewer 1
So what was that like coming back and facing that as a second stage betrayal?
Art Jacobs
You know, these, these people on their. Their pulpit with little ideas to what was really. I doubt if either one of them ever interviewed the boat people who, you know, left Vietnam with shirts on their backs, you know, and risked all of everything. Pirates who had seen people floating, you know, down rivers, people disappearing, people going to re education camps, people being executed. The Vietnamese that have come here for the most part, you know, they've done, you know, a wonderful job, you know, recognizing the opportunities and, and freedom that we have there.
Jon Bickley
You know, I think the, the political dismissive approach to Vietnam is this was a waste, et cetera. But for somebody that was. That put your life on the line, saw friends go down, how do you perceive it personally? Was this something of value and it really mattered to you, or does that sort of political perspective, the Jane Fonda perspective, does it influence at all how you look at it?
Art Jacobs
Well, I guess I just dismiss what they have to say. My friends and I knew what we were doing to help the Vietnamese. 97% of the people who served in Vietnam are honorably discharged. 70% say they would do it again. Even knowing the outcome. 84% were proud they served.
Jon Bickley
That's good. That's encouraging to hear.
Interviewer 1
Is there anything that you'd like to share, lessons that you've learned from your experience that you'd like to pass on to some of the younger listeners?
Art Jacobs
Well, don't go to war quickly, but if you must go to war, go quickly. Give the commanders a concrete objective and let them win.
Jon Bickley
I think we have a leadership now that listens that abides by that kind of mentality.
Art Jacobs
It is so refreshing to see the purging of the military with this DEI and woke nonsense. The Chinese don't give a crap about your pronouns. They're training to kill Americans.
Jon Bickley
You started off talking about the meritocracy and the return to that. Yes, I have. We've seen anecdotally, and it does seem like it's having a major effect on morale with the troops.
Art Jacobs
And it's really good, I think so, at least based upon the people I talk to and the ones that are still serving. I'm in the Army Aviation association of America. And they have a chapter up at Fort Campbell that I'm a member of. It's for anybody that's a veteran as well. And up at Fort Campbell, these are people in the 160, the guys that fly those special. And it's encouraging and wonderful to see the capabilities and the motivation that these people have, you know.
Jon Bickley
Honorable well, thank you so much for sitting down with us. Really special.
Art Jacobs
Thank you. And I apologize for my, my emotions. It's, it's still, you know, there, there are times, you know, did that really happen to me? Was that a movie I saw? And yet it could have been two weeks ago?
Jon Bickley
I can't imagine. And I do. We appreciate your heroism and just being willing to speak about it. Really appreciate it. It means a lot to us and our audience.
Art Jacobs
Oh, thank you, my honor. I'd do it again.
Interviewer 1
That was retired army helicopter pilot Art Jacobs. And this has been a special Memorial Day episode of Morning Wire.
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Date: May 25, 2026
Hosts: Jon Bickley & Georgia Howe
Guest: Art Jacobs, retired Army helicopter pilot and veteran of both Korea and Vietnam
This special Memorial Day installment dives deep into the incredible true story of Art Jacobs, an Army helicopter pilot who risked his life rescuing wounded soldiers in the Vietnam War. Jacobs shares harrowing details of his service, including being shot down, suffering injuries, and coping with the war’s aftermath. The conversation explores the realities of combat, the enduring bonds of military service, and the challenges faced by returning veterans—including reflections on personal sacrifice, political controversy, PTSD, and advice for future generations.
Quote:
"We just felt like it was our turn... I wanted to do my duty, serve, and use the GI Bill to go to school afterward."
— Art Jacobs ([02:27])
Quote:
"We made one fundamental mistake in Vietnam. This time we were the redcoats."
— Art Jacobs ([04:17])
Quote:
"It only makes sense for me to go. I know exactly what the top of that tree looks like. No one else should go...one hit my side, one hit me in the arm. Engine failure is pretty imminent."
— Art Jacobs ([08:24])
Quote:
"I had the best job in Vietnam. I was most afraid of screwing up or letting somebody down than anything else."
— Art Jacobs ([13:01])
Quote:
"We lost more helicopters in that eight week operation than we had in the whole previous year in South Vietnam."
— Art Jacobs ([15:10])
Quote:
"If someone on the radio said, wait, I'll get permission, somehow the radio would get really crackly and we wouldn't be able to hear anymore and we would engage anyway."
— Art Jacobs ([17:59])
Quote:
"I realized that I really wear [my decorations] to remind me of my friends who did."
— Art Jacobs ([20:50])
Quote:
"There's a balance, you know, it's a calculated risk. A dead crew can't rescue anybody. But I always wondered if those guys knew that we tried our hardest and we had to leave people."
— Art Jacobs ([21:13])
Quote:
"These people on their pulpit with little idea what was really [going on]... I doubt if either one of them ever interviewed the boat people..."
— Art Jacobs ([22:37])
Personal Conviction
Advice to Younger Generations
Reflections on Modern Military Culture
On wearing decorations:
"I really wear them to remind me of my friends who did. Sorry, it's emotional... But at the same time, it's therapeutic, I think, to talk about it."
— Art Jacobs ([20:50])
On why he kept returning to missions:
"It only makes sense for me to go. I know exactly what the top of that tree looks like. No one else should go."
— Art Jacobs ([08:24])
On advice for war:
"Don't go to war quickly, but if you must go to war, go quickly. Give the commanders a concrete objective and let them win."
— Art Jacobs ([24:21])
On postwar drive:
"After Vietnam, every day was kind of like gravy...Why not, you know, try your hardest, do your best, make a difference, make a contribution."
— Art Jacobs ([21:49])
Art Jacobs provides a gripping, unvarnished account of bravery under fire—both literal and figurative—on the frontlines and back at home. His story is a tribute to the sacrifices of all who serve, the complex legacy of the Vietnam War, and the enduring need for clarity, resolve, and honor in military and civic life.
Host Jon Bickley sums up:
"We appreciate your heroism and just being willing to speak about it. Really appreciate it. It means a lot to us and our audience." ([25:56])
Art Jacobs responds:
"Thank you. My honor. I'd do it again." ([26:06])