This Heavily Decorated Green Beret Defied Death And Returned To Active Duty More Times Than We Can Count

Photo Credits: 1. United States Army staff photo / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain / resized and filtered in Canava. 2. Nick Stubbs / US Air Force / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain / Resized and filtered in Canva.

Billy Waugh had a long and distinguished military career, marked by his exceptional service. His dedication earned him many accolades, including the Silver Star, four Bronze Stars, four Army Commendation Medals, and eight Purple Hearts. Despite an attempt to retire, Waugh returned to active duty, demonstrating his enduring commitment to military service even in his later years.

Billy Waugh enlisted too late to serve in World War II

Billy Waugh. (Photo Credit: United States Army / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain)

At 15, Billy Waugh met two US Marines who fueled his ambition to join the military. However, he quickly learned that he was too young to enlist in Texas. Unfazed, he headed to California, believing the enlistment age there was 16.

Waugh packed his belongings and hitchhiked towards Los Angeles. During the trip, he encountered a police officer in New Mexico. Lacking identification and hesitant to disclose personal details, he was taken to the station. He was released only after demonstrating he had enough money for bus fare.

Back home, Waugh shifted his focus to his education, deciding to wait until after high school to enlist. He committed himself to his studies and graduated with a perfect 4.0 GPA.

Becoming a Green Beret following the Korean War

Green Berets training South Vietnamese soldiers in marksmanship, 1964. (Photo Credit: PhotoQuest / Getty Images)

It wasn’t until 1948 that Billy Waugh finally enlisted. However, he chose to serve with the US Army, not the Marine Corps. He joined the 82nd Airborne at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, but in 1951 re-enlisted so he could join the 187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team (originally the 187th Infantry Regiment), for deployment to Korea.

Following his service in the Korean War, Waugh had heard the US Special Forces needed platoon sergeants. He earned his Green Beret in 1954 and became a member of the 10th Special Forces Group in West Germany. His first tour occurred in 1961 in South Vietnam and Laos, where he trained tribesmen in combat.

Billy Waugh survived a brutal wound to the head

American soldiers preparing to advance during the Vietnam War, 1960s. (Photo Credit: Hulton Archive / Getty Images)

In 1965, Billy Waugh began his first tour with the CIA’s Special Activities Division and sent to the frontlines in Vietnam. While there, intelligence informed his team that there were only a few hundred North Vietnamese Army (NVA) troops in the unit they were supposed to raid in Bồng Sơn, Bình Định province. Unfortunately, this estimate was severely miscalculated, as there were actually more than 4,000 troops, including Chinese regulars.

During the raid, ammunition began to run low and Waugh found himself without any more grenades. He was struck in the knee by a Soviet-made RPK and had to crawl to cover. While trying to move, he was hit in the ankle and foot, before suffering his worst injury.

During the engagement, the Green Beret was shot in the head and knocked unconscious. “I took another bullet, this time across the right side of my forehead,” he recalled in his book, Hunting the Jackal: A Special Forces and CIA Soldier’s Fifty Years on the Frontlines of the War Against Terror. “I don’t know for sure, but I believe the bullet ricocheted off the bamboo before striking me. It sliced in and out of a two-inch section of my forehead, and it immediately started to bleed like an open faucet.”

The North Vietnamese troops believed Waugh was dead, stripped him of his clothing and Rolex watch, and left him on the ground with all of the raid’s other casualties. He was later picked up by a rescue team.

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The first high-altitude low-opening (HALO) jump

Airmen from the 346th and 342nd Training Squadrons performing a high-altitude, low-opening (HALO) jump. (Photo Credit: Master Sgt. Lance S. Cheung / U.S. Air Force / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain)

After spending several months in the hospital, Billy Waugh returned to Vietnam, joining the Military Assistance Command – Vietnam Studies and Observations Group (MACV-SOG). He became a sergeant major and participated in the planning and execution of operations throughout the rest of the war.

While with MACV-SOG, Waugh participated in the first combat high-altitude low-opening (HALO) jump. He participated in several of the dangerous jumps, including the final one in Vietnam.

Billy Waugh was an “unofficial” spy for the CIA

Billy Waugh. (Photo Credit: Nick Stubbs / US Air Force / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain)

Billy Waugh retired from the Army in 1972 and became a postal worker. However, the postal service life wasn’t for him. He was rehired to train the Libyan Special Forces in 1977. This wasn’t originally a CIA operation, but instead a private operation by ex-CIA member, Edwin Wilson.

Unaware of this, Waugh flew to Libya to begin training. He’d previously arranged to provide the CIA with photos of suspicious activity occurring in the country, including of the men he was training and various surface-to-air missile (SAM) sites, thus making him an unofficial spy for the intelligence agency.

Tracked Osama bin Laden at 71 years old

US Army soldiers searching for caves of Taliban and al-Qaeda fighters. (Photo Credit: Pool Photo / Getty Images)

Billy Waugh proved to be a valuable asset for the CIA. After years of evading detection, he and his team successfully tracked down Carlos the Jackal (Ilich Ramírez Sánchez), a terrorist affiliated with the KGB and Stasi. Captured in 1994, Carlos was sentenced to three life terms in prison.

Waugh’s surveillance skills also extended to tracking Osama bin Laden after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. At 71, he joined the Northern Alliance Liaison Team, collaborating with Afghans who actively opposed the Taliban during Operation Enduring Freedom. He later revealed that he had several opportunities to eliminate bin Laden, stating, “I was within 30 meters of him. I could have killed him with a rock.”

Billy Waugh’s life following his service

Enoch Woodhouse II (R) sharing a laugh with Billy Waugh (L) at the US Army John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School, Fort Bragg, North Carolina. (Photo Credit: K. Kassens / United States Army John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School / DVIDS / Public Domain)

Billy Waugh had gotten used to the fast-paced lifestyle while serving and to this day struggles to stay away from his former life in the military. “If the mind is good and the body is able, you keep on going if you enjoy it,” he said in an interview with Macdill Air Force Base, Florida, adding that “once you get used to that [life of adventure], you’re not about to quit it. How could you want to do anything else?”

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Well into his years as a senior, Waugh still jumped out of aircraft and even listed himself as a “contractor for my present outfit.” On April 4, 2023, the famed Green Beret and CIA operative passed away at the age of 93, having lived one of the most action-packed careers of any US Army service member.

Samantha Franco: Samantha Franco is a Freelance Content Writer who received her Bachelor of Arts degree in history from the University of Guelph, and her Master of Arts degree in history from the University of Western Ontario. Her research focused on Victorian, medical, and epidemiological history with a focus on childhood diseases. Stepping away from her academic career, Samantha previously worked as a Heritage Researcher and now writes content for multiple sites covering an array of historical topics. In her spare time, Samantha enjoys reading, knitting, and hanging out with her dog, Chowder!
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