Stephen Jonathan Geist was born in Piladelphia, PA on the 12th of
April, 1946. His interests while growing up included the Boy Scounts,
swimming, Speology and the Civil Air Patrol. All of his activities indicated
a desire to be part of a well functioning team. Personal glory was not his
goal, but rather the joy of a group of men, highly motivated to excellence
and dedicated to an interest which molded them into oneness. Later, this
desire manifested itself in Stev's intention to become part of the U.S. Army
Special Forces. The proudest day of Steve's life was when he was awarded his
Green Beret.
After training, Stephen volunteered for Vietnam. He served as a demolition
and small arms expert on "A" team supported by a Provincial Unit of ARVN.
After six months of heavy combat, Geist was pulled back to a supporting
field unit of the Special Forces.
There, SSG Geist was assigned as a Heavy Weapons Specialist, Detachment
A-332, 5th Special Forces Group (Airborne), III Corps, War Zone C, Republic
of Vietnam. As a member of this 12 man team, SSG Geist was responsible for
the training of indiginous SVN troops in the operation of heavy weapons -
machine guns, mortars, recoilless rifles, infantry tactics and training, and
camp defenses. He also accompanied troops on combat patrols.
His letters home to his family did not brag on 100 ways to kill, but rather
the thousands of ways he learned to preserve life and aid others from his
training. He spoke of the privilege to be associated with men who shared his
dedication and belief that freedom cannot merely be wished for, it must be
earned from work. He never spoke in apathy of the Vietnamese, but rather the
courage of these people to be mutilated and die for their right to
self-determination ... free from fear or coercion.
On 25 September 1967, SSG Geist was the observer aboard an O1D aircraft of
the 74th Aviation Company piloted by Lt. Lynn R. Huddleston on a visual
reconnaissance mission north of Minh Thanh, Binh Long Province, 4 miles from
the Cambodian border.
A radio call was received by Detachment A-332 at 0930 hours from Lt.
Huddleston. No coordinates were given. Again at 1030 hours, a call from Lt.
Huddleston was monitored by Hon Quan Radar, and Huddleston gave his position
as the vicinity of grid coordinates XT633739, or a few miles from the border
of Cambodia just north of Minh Thanh. This was the last radio communication
with the personnel aboard the O1D. The plane never reached its destination.
Search and rescue was initiated at 1310 hours, but was terminated 3 days
later without any sightings of either the aircraft or its crew. No trace has
ever been found.
The strategic location of the Special Forces Detachment A-332 camp at My
Thach was a thorn in the side of the VC and NVA. The Minh Thanh A Team camp
was located off Route 14 in Binh Long Province about 22 miles south of the
Cambodian border and 35 miles east of Tay Ninh (near by is Nui Ba Dinh
mountain).
This area was heavily occupied by both local VC battalions and NVA troops,
who, at the time were entrenched in the heavily fortified strongholds north
of the Iron Triangle and close to the Fishhook area of Cambodia and South
Vietnam. This area was the site of Operation Junction City 1, Febraury to
May 1967. Additionally, at this same period of time, many enemy troops were
pushing down the Ho Chi Minh Trail, infiltrating and preparing for the Tet
Offensive of 1968. It is highly likely that SSG Geist and Lt. Huddleston
overflew a concentration of enemy positions that the enemy did not want
identified.