ROWE, JAMES NICHOLAS "NICK"
Deceased

Name: James Nicholas "Nick" Rowe
Rank/Branch: O2/US Army Special Forces
Unit: Detachment A-23, 5th Special Forces Group
Date of Birth:
Home City of Record: McAllen TX (res. Potomac MD in 1973)
Loss Date: 29 October 1963
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 092626N 1050917E (WR170435)
Status (in 1973): Escaped POW
Category:
Acft/Vehicle/Ground: Ground

Other Personnel in Incident: Humberto R. Versace (missing); 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: 681231 ESCAPED

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.


----------------------------
NICK ROWE: U.S. KNEW INDEPENDENTLY OF THREAT TO HIS LIFE
INTELLIGENCE WAS NEVER PASSED ON

Special to the U.S. Veteran
by James Neilson

In the Fall prior to Col. Nick Rowe having been gunned down on April 21, 1989
by members of the communist New Peoples' Army (NPA) in the Philippines, the
U.S. State Department's Intelligence and Research Bureau had assimilated
reliable information on the Communist Party's intensified efforts to ferret
out and execute "deep penetration agents" working for the CIA inside the
Philippines' communist organization, U.S. Veteran News and Report has learned.

The seriousness of this threat contrasted significantly with the State
Department's having ignored Rowe's own warnings that the NPA, the Philippine
equivalent of the Vietcong, was planning major terrorist acts against U.S.
military advisors.

A highly decorated Green Beret and Vietnam veteran who survived five years of
captivity in a Viet Cong prison camp, Rowe was chief of the army division of
the Joint U.S. Military Advisory Group (JUSMAG) providing counter-insurgency
training for the Philippine military. In this capacity, he worked closely with
the CIA, and was involved in its nearly decade-old program to penetrate the
NPA and its parent communist party in conjunction with Philippine's own
intelligence organizations.

Rowe was killed instantly by one of a volley of bullets that were fired from
an M-16 and a .45-caliber pistol from the hooded NPA occupants of a small
white car that had pulled alongside Rowe's unarmored chauffeur-driven
limousine in the Manila suburb of Quezon City.

By the time Rowe was killed, however, the State Department had known for
months about the Philippine Communist Party's efforts to identify CIA-backed
agents which had been infiltrated into the party's ranks since the early
1980's. The State Department also knew that "a number" of these agents had
already been captured, interrogated and executed. For almost a year prior to
Rowe's assassination by the NPA, the State Department had been monitoring the
communist's counter- intelligence efforts, and knew that the CIA's assets in
the party were in jeopardy as a result.

By February, 1989, Rowe had developed his own intelligence information which
indicated that the communist were planning a major terrorist act. As a result
of the intelligence and his analysis of the situation in the Philippines, Rowe
wrote Washington warning that a high-profile figure was about to be hit and
that he, himself, was No.2 or No.3 on the terrorist list.

The State Department ignored Rowe's letter and apparently never warned him
about the seriousness of the threat. Intelligence sources say Rowe was a
"classic expendable;" that he was not warned because he likely would have
tried to safely get out any agents he personally knew of inside the NPA or
communist party.

"Undoubtedly there were some who didn't want to loose those assets," an
intelligence source said.

One reason such assets may have been deemed important enough not to alert Rowe
to the threat was that the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) was receiving
information on possible growing Cuban involvement with the NPA.

Six months before Rowe's murder, the DIA had learned that Cuban advisors
appeared to be assisting the NPA in the South-Central Luzon province, one of
the two provinces where the NPA was focusing on ferreting out CIA agents
within its ranks.

Neither the DIA or the State Department would comment on any of the
intelligence it has collected on the NPA or Communist Party. Although Rowe was
a visible military official and certainly a target for the communist
terrorists, some intelligence sources believe his assassination resulted from
his having been fingered as a possible control officer or trainer of agents
inside the NPA or Communist Party who had been identified and interrogated.

Evidence suggests that Rowe's Vietnam experience was not coincidental to his
selection as a target. In June of 1989, from an NPA stronghold in the hills of
Sorsogon, a province in Southern Luzon's Bicol region, senior cadre Celso
Minguez told the Far Eastern Economic Review magazine that the communist
underground wished to send "a message to the American people" by killing a
Vietnam veteran.

"We want to let them know that their government is making the Philippines
another Vietnam," Minguez, a founder of the communist insurgency in Bicol and
participant in the abortive 1986 peace talks with President Corazon Aquino's
government told the REVIEW.

In May 1989, U.S. Veteran News and Report reported that according to a source
who had served under Rowe, the Vietnamese communist also wanted Rowe dead and
very likely collaborated with the Philippine insurgents to achieve that goal.

The source who wished to remain anonymous said that prior to Rowe being
assigned to the Philippines in 1987, at one point in Greece while Rowe was on
assignment, Delta Force, the U.S. anti-terrorist organization, moved in,
secured the area and relocated Rowe. They had received reports that Vietnamese
communist agents were planning an action against Rowe.

"He was a target when he went over there because of his dealings with the
North Vietnamese and his time as a prisoner," Robert Mountel, a retired
Special Forces colonel and former commander of the 5th Special Forces Group,
subsequently explained, confirming what the other source had said. "They had
him on their list."

Despite the clear danger especially posed to Rowe and other intelligence
operatives, Rowe was not given a heavily armored car to travel in. One reason
for this, U.S. Veteran News and Report has learned, is that budget cuts for
the Defense Attache System (DAS) for 1989 had resulted in a 72 percent cut in
the DAS's vehicle armoring program, causing the program to be canceled
entirely last year (except for a skeleton infrastructure maintained to handle
basic functions). This had a direct impact on the DAS's ability to provide
adequate security to U.S. personnel abroad, according to a well-placed
intelligence source.

---------------
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.



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