Ed Rasimus
Author of When Thunder Rolled: An F-105 Pilot over North Vietnam
About the Author
Image credit: U.S. Air Force photo (nationalmuseum.af.mil)
Works by Ed Rasimus
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- male
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- fighter pilot
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When LBJ and his Whiz Kids marked targets at the Pentagon, it was Ed Rasimus and his brothers-in-arms who applied the graduated pressure of Operation Rolling Thunder. Flying F-105 from bases in Thailand, Lt. Rasimus went up against MiGs, SAMs, and layers of flak, screaming in across the deck to blast targets with tons of bombs before racing back to safety.
As an author, Rasimus has a cold, almost clinical voice in describing his missions, his fear, and the courage it took to fly a mission show more into North Vietnam. There's a distance to this memoir, whether it's describing the desperate radio calls coordinating the rescue of a downed pilot, or after hours hijinks at the Officer's Club. For what it's worth, he's a precise and competent writer, giving a clear view of his slice of the air war. Two moments make this book a classic: one an extended riff on the difference between pilots who fly fighters and fighter pilots. And a quote which I want to reproduce in full.
Let there be no doubt about it, running along the treetops at 540 knots in a flight of four F-105s loaded with high explosive ordinance may be the most exciting thing a man can do with his pants on. You've got the most impressive piece of machinery on the planet strapped to your ass, and it responds to your every wish. The throttle controls the beast's heartbeat, and the slightest movement of the stick directs your flight path. You're the Lord of Evil perched on your rocket-powered throne, coming to deliver justice. It's exhilarating and thrilling, frightening and almost orgasmic. But it isn't necessarily tactically sound.
Hot. Damn!
There's also a lot of good meat here on the air war, and the fractal fuckedupness that was Vietnam. From the grand mission of sending 50+ plane flights with MiGcaps and Wild Weasels and everything to hit a few suspected buried oil drums, or the rules of engagement that protected targets like SAM sites under construction. A policy that no pilot would be forced to fly a second tour until everyone had flown one, meant that Rasimus's hot, mean, and crazy fighting Lieutenants were replaced by Majors who'd last flown transports, or worse a desk at the Pentagon. Because Thailand was not a combat zone, pilots didn't get official R&R, which meant Rasimus was trapped in a Catch-22 limbo with no way to get back to base while in Japan, and had to play diplomatic courier to get a seat back to the war.
So far, I think I prefer Trotti's Phantom over Vietnam, but I'm excited to read Rasimus' second book. show less
As an author, Rasimus has a cold, almost clinical voice in describing his missions, his fear, and the courage it took to fly a mission show more into North Vietnam. There's a distance to this memoir, whether it's describing the desperate radio calls coordinating the rescue of a downed pilot, or after hours hijinks at the Officer's Club. For what it's worth, he's a precise and competent writer, giving a clear view of his slice of the air war. Two moments make this book a classic: one an extended riff on the difference between pilots who fly fighters and fighter pilots. And a quote which I want to reproduce in full.
Let there be no doubt about it, running along the treetops at 540 knots in a flight of four F-105s loaded with high explosive ordinance may be the most exciting thing a man can do with his pants on. You've got the most impressive piece of machinery on the planet strapped to your ass, and it responds to your every wish. The throttle controls the beast's heartbeat, and the slightest movement of the stick directs your flight path. You're the Lord of Evil perched on your rocket-powered throne, coming to deliver justice. It's exhilarating and thrilling, frightening and almost orgasmic. But it isn't necessarily tactically sound.
Hot. Damn!
There's also a lot of good meat here on the air war, and the fractal fuckedupness that was Vietnam. From the grand mission of sending 50+ plane flights with MiGcaps and Wild Weasels and everything to hit a few suspected buried oil drums, or the rules of engagement that protected targets like SAM sites under construction. A policy that no pilot would be forced to fly a second tour until everyone had flown one, meant that Rasimus's hot, mean, and crazy fighting Lieutenants were replaced by Majors who'd last flown transports, or worse a desk at the Pentagon. Because Thailand was not a combat zone, pilots didn't get official R&R, which meant Rasimus was trapped in a Catch-22 limbo with no way to get back to base while in Japan, and had to play diplomatic courier to get a seat back to the war.
So far, I think I prefer Trotti's Phantom over Vietnam, but I'm excited to read Rasimus' second book. show less
What raises this book above the rank and file of the average remembrance of the air war in Vietnam is how forthrightly Rasimus deals with recalling the doubt and fear he suffered when going into combat, having gone into the Air Force from an obsession with flying rather than from any special desire to be a fighting man or out of patriotic drive. This is at least until Rasimus was socialized into the difference between fighter pilots and the pilots who just flew fighters. Apart from that show more you're also given great effective detail of just what the life was like, further informed by a critical mindset that was already dubious about the conduct of the war even back in the day. show less
Palace Cobra follows Rasimum's second tour in Vietnam as an F-4 during the Linebacker campaigns. In the years since When Thunder Rolled, Rasimus had been an instructor pilot and personnel officer, and he wanted to get back to flying fighters while there were still fighters to fly, even if that meant facing flak and SAMs again, and wrecking his marriage in the process.
By 1972 the war had become thoroughly routinized. Bureaucratic absurdities proliferated in the air bases, which were much the show more same as they had been in 1966. Rasimus slotted right in, becoming a hunter-killer pilot who specialized in going after SAM sites with cluster bombs.
In Palace Cobra, Rasimus opens up a little, speculating about how the war was fought, the ability of airpower to force a decision, and the culture of fighter pilots in Thailand in the 1970s. It's amazing how much more gregarious and personable the war becomes when there's another person sitting in the same cockpit as you, making the same desperate prayers about flak.
Having read them back to back, I recommend both of Rasimus's books. They're similar, of course, but just difference enough it's worth reading both. show less
By 1972 the war had become thoroughly routinized. Bureaucratic absurdities proliferated in the air bases, which were much the show more same as they had been in 1966. Rasimus slotted right in, becoming a hunter-killer pilot who specialized in going after SAM sites with cluster bombs.
In Palace Cobra, Rasimus opens up a little, speculating about how the war was fought, the ability of airpower to force a decision, and the culture of fighter pilots in Thailand in the 1970s. It's amazing how much more gregarious and personable the war becomes when there's another person sitting in the same cockpit as you, making the same desperate prayers about flak.
Having read them back to back, I recommend both of Rasimus's books. They're similar, of course, but just difference enough it's worth reading both. show less
I thought that the author's "When Thunder Rolled" was one of the best Vietnam tour-of-duty memoirs I had read and this follow up where Rasimus relates his late-war service in 1971-1972 is a worthy successor. This is particularly when Rasimus considers how the war had changed his service (usually not for the better), as operations deteriorated into rote process and a virtual way of life (the USAF in Thailand) had become pathology.
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