December 31, 2001:
President Bush signed the Bill to bestow the Medal of
Honor on Rocky
Versace. He is officially going to receive the
Medal of Honor.
Name: Humberto Roque "Rocky" Versace
Rank/Branch: O3/US Army Special Forces
Unit: Detachment A-23, 5th Special Forces Group
(Intelligence Advisor, MAAG at Camau)
Date of Birth: 02 July 1937 (Honolulu HI)
Home City of Record: Norfolk VA
Loss Date: 29 October 1963
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 092626N 1050917E (WR170435)
Status (in 1973): Killed In Captivity
Category: 1
Acft/Vehicle/Ground: Ground
Other Personnel in Incident: James N. Rowe (escaped 1968);
Daniel L. Pitzer
(released 1967); At Hiep Hoa: Claude D. McClure; George
E. Smith (released
1965); Issac Camacho (escaped 1965); Kenneth M. Roraback
(missing).
Source: Compiled by HOMECOMING II from one or more of
the following: raw
data from U.S. Government agency sources, correspondence
with POW/MIA
families, published sources, interviews. Updated by the
P.O.W. NETWORK May
1997
REMARKS: POSS EXECUTED 650926 - PRG DIC LIST
SYNOPSIS: The U.S. Army Special Forces, Vietnam (Provisional)
was formed at
Saigon in 1962 to advise and assist the South Vietnamese
government in the
organization, training, equipping and employment of the
Civilian Irregular
Defense Group (CIDG) forces. Total personnel strength
in 1963 was 674, all but
98 of whom were TDY from 1st Special Forces Group on
Okinawa and 5th and 7th
Special Forces Groups at Ft. Bragg. USSF Provisonal was
given complete charge
of the CIDG program, formerly handled by the CIA, on
July 1, 1963.
The USSF Provisional/CIDG network consisted of fortified,
strategically located
camps, each one with an airstrip. The area development
programs soon evolved
into combat operations, and by the end of October 1963,
the network also had
responsibility for border surveillance. Two of the Provisional/CIDG
camps were
at Hiep Hoa (Detachment A-21) and Tan Phu (Detachment
A-23), Republic of
Vietnam. Their isolated locations, in the midst of known
heavy enemy presence,
made the camps vulnerable to attack.
On October 29, 1963, Capt. "Rocky" Versace, 1Lt. "Nick"
Rowe, and Sgt. Daniel
Pitzer were accompanying a CIDG company on an operation
along a canal. The team
left the camp at Tan Phu for the village of Le Coeur
to roust a small enemy
unit that was establishing a command post there. When
they reached the village,
they found the enemy gone, and pursued them, falling
into an ambush at about
1000 hours. The fighting continued until 1800 hours,
when reinforcements were
sent in to relieve the company. During the fight, Versace,
Pitzer and Rowe were
all captured. The three captives were photographed together
in a staged setting
in the U Minh forest in their early days of captivity.
The camp at Hiep Hoa was located in the Plain of Reeds
between Saigon and the
Cambodian border. In late October 1963, several Viet
Cong surrendered at the
camp, claiming they wished to defect. Nearly a month
later, on November 24,
Hiep Hoa was overrun by an estimated 400-500 Viet Cong
just after midnight.
Viet Cong sympathizers in the camp had killed the guards
and manned a machine
gun position at the beginning of the attack. The Viet
Cong climbed the camp
walls and shouted in Vietnamese, "Don't shoot! All we
want is the Americans and
the weapons!" Lt. John Colbe, the executive officer,
evaded capture. Capt. Doug
Horne, the Detachment commander, had left earlier with
a 36 man Special
Forces/CIDG force. The Viet Cong captured four of the
Americans there. It was
the first Special Forces camp to be overrun in the Vietnam
War.
Those captured at Hiep Hoa were SFC Issac "Ike" Camacho,
SFC Kenneth M.
Roraback (the radio operator), Sgt. George E. "Smitty"
Smith and SP5 Claude D.
McClure. Their early days of captivity were spent in
the Plain of Reeds,
southwest of Hiep Hoa, and they were later held in the
U Minh forest.
"Ike" Camacho continually looked for a way to escape.
In July 1965, he was
successful. His and Smith's chains had been removed for
use on two new American
prisoners, and in the cover of a violent night storm,
Camacho escaped and made
his way to the village of Minh Thanh. He was the first
American serviceman to
escape from the Viet Cong in the Second Indochina War.
McClure and Smith were
released from Cambodia in November 1965.
Rocky Versace had been torn between the Army and the
priesthood. When he won an
appointment to West Point, he decided God wanted him
to be a soldier. He was to
enter Maryknoll (an order of Missionaries), as a candidate
for the priesthood,
when he left Vietnam. It was evident from the beginning
that Versace, who spoke
fluent French and Vietnamese, was going to be a problem
for the Viet Cong.
Although Versace was known to love the Vietnamese people,
he could not accept
the Viet Cong philosophy of revolution, and spent long
hours assailing their
viewpoints. His captors eventually isolated him to attempt
to break him.
Rowe and Pitzer saw Rocky at interludes during their
first months of captivity,
and saw that he had not broken. Indeed, although he became
very thin, he still
attempted to escape. By January 1965, Versace's steel-grey
hair had turned
completely white. He was an inspiration to them both.
Rowe wrote:
..The Alien force, applied with hate,
could not break him, failed to bend him;
Though solitary imprisonment gave him no friends,
he drew upon his inner self to create a force so strong
that those who sought to destroy his will, met an army
his to command..
On Sunday, September 26, 1965, "Liberation Radio" announced
the execution of
Rocky Versace and Kenneth Roraback in retaliation for
the deaths of 3
terrorists in Da Nang. A later news article stated that
the executions were
faked, but the Army did not reopen an investigaton. In
the late 1970's
information regarding this "execution" became classified,
and is no longer part
of public record.
Sgt. Pitzer was released from Cambodia November 11, 1967.
1Lt. Nick Rowe was scheduled to be executed in late December
1968. His captors
had had enough of him - his refusal to accept the communist
ideology and his
continued escape attempts. While away from the camp in
the U Minh forest, Rowe
took advantage of a sudden flight of American helicopters,
struck down his
guards, and ran into a clearing where the helicopters
noticed him and rescued
him, still clad in black prisoner pajamas. He had been
promoted to Major during
his five years of captivity.
Rowe remained in the Army, and shared his survival techniques
in Special Forces
classes. In 1987, Lt.Col. Rowe was assigned to the Philippines,
where he
assisted in training anti-communists. On April 21, 1989,
a machine gun sniper
attacked Rowe in his car, killing him instantly.
Of the seven U.S. Army Special Forces personnel captured
at Hiep Hoa and Tan
Phu, the fates of only Versace and Roraback remain unknown.
The execution was
never fully documented; it is not known with certainty
that these two men died.
Although the Vietnamese claim credit for their deaths,
they did not return
their remains. From the accounts of those who knew them,
if these men were not
executed, they are still fighting for their country.
The book "Pacific Stars and Stripes, VIETNAM Front Pages"
published in 1986
states:
Five Star Edition
Vol. 19, No. 304
Friday, Nov. 1, 1963
3 Aides Seized in Vietnam Battle
Saigon (AP) Communist guerrilas smashed a Republic of
Vietnam task force
after disrupting its radio communication Tuesday, and
probably captured all
three U.S. Army advisers with the 120-man Saigon outfit.
The three Americans listed as missing and believed captured
were two
officers and an enlisted medic. Stragglers returning
from the rout said both
officers had been wounded early in the fight -- one in
the head and one the
other in the leg.
The Army identified the three as Capt. Hubert R. Versace,
Baltimore; 1st Lt.
James M. Rowe, McAllen Tx; and Sgt. Daniel L. Pitzer,
Spring Lake, N.C.
A second government force of about 200 men operating
only a few thousand
yards from the main fight, learned of the disaster too
late to help. U.S.
authorities said the communist radio jammers had knowcked
out both the main
channel and the alternate channel on all local military
radios.
Five Star Edition
Vol 21, No. 270
Tuesday, Sept. 28, 1965
Report 2 Advisers Executed
Saigon (UPI) -- The viet Cong executed two captive servicemen
Sunday
morning, the clandestine Liberation Radio said late Sunday
night.
The communist radio identified the two Americans as Capt.
Albert Rusk Joseph
and Sgt. Kenneth Morabeth (as received phonetically).
American authorities in Saigon were comparing the names
with a list of
missing American servicemen to determine if any such
individuals were,
indeed, communist captives. The reported executions came
less than three
days after the Vietnamese government's execution of three
convicted Viet
Cong terrorists in Da Nang.
In revenge for the last previous execution of a Viet
Cong by the governemnt.
the communists announced that they had executed Sgt.
Harold Bennett, of
Arkansas, on June 24.
-------------------
In 1999 efforts were underway to nominate Rocky Versace
for the Medal of
Honor.
------------------------
Sarasota Herald-Tribune
Tuesday, July 13, 1999
B SECTION
Ceremony honors a fallen soldier, and a mother remembers
her son Rocky
Versace died at the hands of Viet Cong captors in 1965.
Nancy Pasternack STAFF WRITER
En route to his new duty station in Vietnam,
Rocky Versace stopped to see
his brother, Steve, in Hawaii and challenged him to a
game of one-on-one
basketball. Four and a half hours later, Rocky finally
accomplished the feat
that had evaded him through childhood.
"I told him he'd never beat me. But he wouldn't
let me go until he'd won."
Steve said. "That was Rock."
Rocky Versace died at the hands of Viet
Cong captors in 1965. He was
honored Monday with a Special Forces patch and unit membership
certificate.
His 81-year-old mother, Tere Rios Versace, accepted the
awards on her son's
behalf at Sarasota's Bayou assisted-living facility,
where she lives.
Attending the ceremony were Medal of Honor recipient
Franklin D. Miller, a
Vietnam veteran who lives in St. Petersburg Beach, and
retired Army Lt.
Gen. Howard Crowell of Sarasota County.
Crowell roomed with Versace when they were serving
in Camau, Vietnam. Then
a captain, Crowell was one of many soldiers who searched
for Versace by
helicopter after he was captured.
Versace is credited with helping save the lives
of two other captives
through his steadfast refusal to submit to demands for
information from Viet
Cong interrogators. He was kept in isolation for much
of his two-year
captivity, shackled in a tiny bamboo cage, according
to Medal of Honor
recommendations recently submitted on his behalf.
Nick Rowe, who escaped three years after Versace's
death, later paid
tribute to Versace in "Five Years to Freedom," a book
about his experience
as a prisoner of war.
The last time Rowe heard Versace's voice, according
to an anecdote from
the book, Versace was singing 'God Bless America,' one
of many things he did
to boost the morale of other captives.
"The bottom line," said Maj. Gen. Kenneth R. Bowra,
who presented Mrs.
Versace with the awards, "is that the VC could not break
his will. You can
do no more than he did."
Bowra heads the John F. Kennedy Special Warfare
Center at Fort Bragg, NC,
headquarters of the Special Forces, also known as the
Green Berets.
Versace received language training after being
commissioned as an officer
from the US Military Academy at Westpoint, and "could
tell them (his
captors) to go to hell in Vietnamese, French, and English,"
his brother
Steve said.
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