John Stryker ‘Tilt’ Meyer and John Peters ran top secret
missions on separate reconnaissance teams assigned to MACV-SOG in 1968
operating out of FOB 1 in Phu Bai, South Vietnam: Meyer on Recon Team Idaho,
Peters on Recon Team Rhode Island.
They teamed up to write On The Ground: The Secret War in Vietnam.
Born Jan. 19, 1946, John Stryker Meyer entered the Army Dec. 1, 1966. He completed basic training at Ft. Dix, N.J., advanced infantry training at Ft. Gordon, Ga., jump school at Ft. Benning, Ga., and graduated from the Special Forces Qualification Course in Dec. 1967. He arrived at FOB 1 Phu Bai in May 1968, where he joined Spike Team Idaho, which transferred to Command & Control North, CCN in Da Nang, January 1969. He remained on ST Idaho to the end of his tour of duty in late April, returned to the U.S. and was assigned to E Company in the 10th Special Forces Group at Ft. Devens, Mass. until October 1969, when he rejoined RT Idaho at CCN. That tour of duty ended suddenly in April 1970. He returned to the states, completed his college education at Trenton State College, where he was editor of The Signal school newspaper for two years, worked at the Trenton Times for 10 years, eight years at the San Diego Union and 15 years at the North County Times in Oceanside, California. Meyer, his wife Anna, and daughter Alaina live in Oceanside.
Contact John Stryker Meyer at: John@sogchronicles.com
Born
October 10, 1943, John E. Peters graduated with a degree in philosophy from
Saint Mary’s College of California in 1966. He also spent a year of study
at the University of Paris before volunteering for the Army in 1967. He
underwent Basic Training at Fort Dix, where he was name Outstanding Trainee of
the Cycle. He then completed advanced infantry training at Fort Dix
before going on to earn distinction as an Honor Graduate from jump school at
Ft. Benning. Following Special Forces training at Ft. Bragg, he
volunteered for duty in Vietnam where he joined MACV-SOG and was assigned to
FOB 1 in Phu Bai. After several months of running missions with RT Rhode
Island, he was selected to be a member of the first class to attend the SOG
Reconnaissance Team Leader School. Following the closure of FOB 1 he was
sent to CCC at Kontum, where he continued to run missions with a variety of
teams. Following his release from the Army, he went on to become the
Owner’s Representative and Port Captain in Damman, Saudia Arabia for the
American steamship company Pacific Far East Lines. For fifteen years he
helped manage the U.S. Air Force’s aerial port at Ramstein, Germany, where he
was the first civilian to hold the position of Squadron Operation
Officer. A Life Member of the Special Operations Association, he now
lives on a small farm in Dresden, Tennessee with his wife Marlow, their four
Belted Galloway steers, and a crazy Maine Coon cat named Calzini.