Billy Waugh
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William Waugh | |
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1929 | |
Nickname | Billy, "Mustang" |
Place of birth | Bastrop, Texas |
Allegiance | United States of America |
Service/branch | United States Army |
Years of service | 1948–1972 |
Rank | Sergeant Major |
Unit | 5th Special Forces Group, United States Army Special Forces |
Battles/wars | Korean War, Vietnam War, Operation Enduring Freedom |
Awards | Silver Star, Bronze Star, Purple Heart |
Other work | Central Intelligence Agency |
SGM William "Billy" Waugh (US Army-Ret.) (born December, 1929), is a highly decorated American Special Forces soldier and Central Intelligence Agency covert operative who served in the United States military and intelligence fields for more than fifty years.
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[edit] Early life
Waugh was born in Bastrop, Texas in February, 1929. In 1945, upon meeting two local Marines who returned from the fighting in World War II, the then-15 year-old Waugh was inspired to enlist in the Marine Corps. Knowing that it was unlikely that he would be admitted in Texas because of his young age, Waugh devised a plan to hitchhike to Los Angeles, where he believed a person had to only be 16 to enlist. He got as far as Las Cruces, New Mexico before he was arrested for having no identification and refusing to give his name to a local police officer. He was later released after securing enough money for a bus ticket back to Bastrop. Now committed to serving in the military once he finished school, Waugh became an excellent student at Bastrop High, graduating in 1947 with a 4.0 grade point average.[1]
[edit] Military career
Waugh enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1948, completing basic training at Fort Ord, California in August of that year. He was accepted into the United States Army Airborne School and became airborne qualified in December 1948. In April 1951, Waugh was assigned to the 187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team (RCT) in Korea.
[edit] U.S. Army Special Forces
Shortly after the end of the Korean War, Waugh began training for the Special Forces. He earned Special Forces Tab and green beret in 1954, joining the 10th Special Forces Group (SFG) in Bad Tolz, Germany.
As U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War increased, the United States began deploying Special Forces "A-teams" (Operational Detachment Alpha, or ODA, teams) to Southeast Asia in support of counterinsurgency operations against the Viet Cong, North Vietnamese and other Communist forces. Waugh arrived in South Vietnam with his ODA in 1961, and began working alongside Civilian Irregular Defense Groups (CIDGs) there, as well as in Laos.
In 1965, while participating in a commando raid with CIDG troops on a North Vietnamese Army encampent near Bong Son, Binh Dinh province, Waugh's unit found itself engaged with much larger enemy force. While he and his men attempted to retreat from the battle, Waugh received numerous severe wounds to his head and legs. Despite his injuries, and with the assistance of his teammates, Waugh was safely evacuated from the combat zone. He spent much of 1965 and 1966 recupurating at Walter Reed Hospital in Washington, DC, eventually returning to duty with 5th SFG in 1966.
At this time Waugh joined the Vietnam Studies and Observations Group (MACV-SOG). While working for SOG, Waugh helped train Vietnamese and Cambodian forces in unconventional warfare tactics primarily directed against the North Vietnamese Army operating along the Ho Chi Minh Trail.
Waugh retired from active military duty at the rank of Sergeant Major (E-9) on February 1, 1972.
[edit] CIA career
After Waugh retired from the military, he worked for the United States Postal Service until he accepted on offer in 1977 from ex-CIA officer Edwin P. Wilson to work in Libya on a contract to train that country's special forces. This was not an Agency-endorsed assignment and Waugh might have found himself in trouble with U.S. authorities if it weren't for the fact that he was also approached by the CIA to work for the Agency while in Libya. The CIA tasked him with surveilling Libyan military installations and capabilities – this was of great interest to U.S. intelligence as Libya was receiving substantial military assistance from the Soviet Union at the time. This additional assignment quite possibly protected Waugh from prosecution after Wilson was later indicted and convicted in 1979 for illegally selling weapons to Libya.[2]
In the 1980s he was assigned to the Kwajalein Missile Range in the Marshall Islands to track Soviet small boat teams operating in the area and prevent them from stealing U.S. missile technology. Some of his more critical assignments took place in Khartoum, Sudan during the early 1990s, where he performed surveillance and intelligence gathering on terrorist leaders Carlos the Jackal and Osama bin Laden.
At the age of 71, Waugh participated in Operation Enduring Freedom as a member of the CIA team led by Gary Schroen that went into Afghanistan to work with the Northern Alliance to topple the Taliban regime and Al Qaeda. Waugh was in-country from October to December 2001. He continues to work as a "Green Badger", a covert contractor for the CIA.
[edit] Education
In 1985, Waugh was again requested by the CIA for clandestine work. Before he took the offer, he decided to further his education, earning Bachelors Degrees in Business and Police Science from Weyland Baptist University in 1987. He also earned a Masters Degree in Interdisciplinary Studies with a specialization in criminal justice administration (MSCJA) in 1988 from Texas State University (formerly Southwest Texas State), in San Marcos, TX.
[edit] Awards and decorations
- Silver Star (1 award)
- Bronze Star (2 awards)
- Purple Heart (8 awards)
[edit] External links
- Robert Young Pelton, Licenced to Kill: Hired Guns in the War on Terror (Crown, September 2006)
- Billy Waugh's website with information about his memoir Hunting the Jackal
- Waugh's biography
[edit] References
- ^ Waugh, Billy; Tim Keown (2004). Hunting the Jackal. William Morrow, xix-xxii.
- ^ Waugh. ibid., 133-154.
Categories: Articles to be expanded since January 2007 | All articles to be expanded | 1929 births | Military personnel of the Vietnam War | People from Texas | Recipients of the Silver Star medal | Recipients of the Bronze Star medal | Recipients of the Purple Heart medal | Recipients of the Special Forces tab | People of the Central Intelligence Agency | United States Army soldiers | Living people