With Page 20 we begin to correlate images with further events in OSS Special Operations in China, our "MMB." A previous post discussed both background and spoiler relating to MMB Chapter 2, which describes the insertion of JACKAL into its designated area of operations.
Above is the top of page 20 of this photo collection. Paul Cyr, leader of Team Jackal, is quickly recognized just below the jumper patch. Dad is among the men in the photo at top left. All the others I do not know and so fervently wish I knew and could tell you. I will just tell you what I know and identify what I guess.
If some reader somewhere on the InterTubes sees these and knows something, that reader is encouraged to comment. Meantime I just drag the primary source material up into the Cloud to transmit it all to the next generations.
Dad is fourth from left there, so I wonder who took the picture and whether it is in Hsian or the later location, Hsin-Hsiang. Fifth man looks new, and sixth man looks familar from previous photos. The first three men certainly look committed to their cause, while their momentary states of mind are clearly visible on their faces. Dad told me he "taught the Chinese how to place C4 to blow up bridges." The history books tell us that the Americans also taught the Chinese hand-to-hand combat of the style they had learned in that whole SAS-OSS school.
One of the Jackals, above, sports a captured Japanese helmet and sword-scabbard. He has a Japanese officer's sword. He also has a cigar, a battle-face, and emaciation, possibly from amoebiasis. His triumph, his victory, is sober. Is it Dad, or someone else? It is strange, so strange, that I cannot tell for sure. Could be Dad; look at his right hand, so broad. Looks like mine. But I do not think we will know for sure, this side of the River.
If you enlarge this photo and look carefully at the topmost of the three buttons on this man's cap, you will see that it is star-symbol of Nationalist China.
Route of Team Jackal is the title of this map, per the legend. Enlarge the image to see, for example, that a "Drop Area" is indicated by a triangle. Initial Drop is triangle #1 near center bottom of the image. Initial drop, on May 22 1945, was insertion of half of JACKAL to an area south of Hsin-Hsiang. Cyr, Chu, Welo, and Friele made that jump. Details of this operation make exciting reading in MMB p. 42-55.
What happened was, Welo suffered a broken leg on that jump; Friele got the radio going and called to Hsian for a trainer plane to come evacuate him; they spent a few days leveling an airstrip for that trainer plane.
Meanwhile Paul Cyr was spirited into Hsin-Hsiang for a meeting with the local Chinese General Sun, who was an officer of the Puppet Government (i.e. being used by the Japanese.) Sun was also, the Americans were assured, a double agent really working for the Nationalists and cooperating with the Americans. That adventure is detaled in MMP p. 60-65, in a long excerpt from Zarembo's team diary, that part being written by him retrospectively on the basis of reports from Cyr, Chu, Welo, and Friele.
Why is that? That is because Zarembo was, along with Jackson, Eisenberg, and Zdrojewski in a second insertion, a jump on May 30.
Why have we no photos taken by Welo? It's because all their camera
equipment was destroyed when its container crashed on that first
jump.
So I think the photos on this Page 20 of the Photobook are either: a mix of pictures taken at the field base near Hsian and at Hsin-Hsiang, perhaps with some of them taken by Zarembo; or all from Hsin-Hsiang, which is either confused or settled by the actual jump photos that begin to appear on Photobook pages 20, 21, and 22.
Above is Major Paul Cyr. Background information on him is in MMB, p. 48-49. We will be entertaining ourselves with a complete upload of his 1946 Saturday Evening Post story when we finish up with Page 20 in the next post.
We will be examing another source, in parallel with MMB, from this point. This is the team diary composed by Zdrojewski. It, too, like Zarembo's, begins with a retrospective summary of events from May 22 (insertion of first half of JACKAL) and May 30 (insertion of second half of JACKAL,) with Zdrojewski replacing the injured Welo as representative from the Field Photo section.
They soon realize that there are 400 Japanese just to the north of them, and 10,000 more approaching from the southeast.