Donald Nichols (spy)

Donald Nichols
Born (1923-02-18)18 February 1923
Hackensack, New Jersey, U.S.
Died 2 June 1992(1992-06-02) (aged 69)
Tuscaloosa, Alabama, U.S.
Allegiance  United States
Service/branch  United States Air Force
Rank Major
Commands held 6004th Air Intelligence Service Squadron
Battles/wars World War II
Korean War
Awards Distinguished Service Cross
Silver Star

Donald Nichols (18 February 1923 – 2 June 1992) was a United States Air Force officer who worked in military intelligence. He founded and commanded the U.S. Air Force's first active military intelligence unit, the 6004th Air Intelligence Service Squadron (6004th AISS), which he founded in 1950 during the Korean War. Although he began his military career in the motor pool, he eventually sparked the infiltration of espionage teams behind communist lines, as well as personally gathering the first data on the communist MiG-15 fighter. A trusted and reliable intelligence officer who had predicted the start date of the Korean War, he enjoyed 24-hour access to South Korean President Syngman Rhee and his own commanding officer, U.S. Air Force General Earle Partridge. Under his leadership, the 6004th AISS served as the principal source of intelligence for Far East Air Force during the fighting.

Nichols retired from the military in 1962. After his death in 1992, reports of his exploits were declassified. He was inducted into the Air Commando Hall of Fame in 1995.

Early life and service

Nichols was born on 18 February 1923[1] to Walter Isaac and Myra Stewart Nichols at 105 Main Street, Hackensack, New Jersey. He was the youngest of four sons.[1] Nichols only completed elementary school before joining the military. He grew up poor in a welfare family, and occasionally had to resort to theft of neighbors' farm equipment to survive.[2]

Nichols served in Burma and China early in his military career.[3] He was a sergeant assigned to the motor pool before being detailed to Sub-detachment K, 607th Counter Intelligence Corps in South Korea in 1946. As a master sergeant, he rose to command the unit. He spoke Korean fluently. Nichols was burly in build, casual in dress, often out of uniform, and seldom displayed his rank. He was noted for his gruffness. He formed an extensive net of 600 plus civilian spies throughout Korea, and established a relationship with South Korean President Syngman Rhee that allowed 24-hour access. In time, Rhee entrusted Nichols with South Korean airmen and coast guardsmen under his command. In return, there was an assassination attempt on him by communists in 1948. Nichols survived; the would-be assassins did not.[2][4][5]

In 1948, Nichols moved beyond the passivity of counter-intelligence and "invented" the concept of positive intelligence. He began active collection of military intelligence; for the next two years, he briefed General Earle Partridge on possible North Korean communist actions.[6]

In 1950, Nichols once again survived an assassination attempt while the assailants did not. In May 1950, Nichols enticed a communist pilot into defecting to the south, along with his IL-10 strike aircraft. As this was the first airplane of its kind to fall into American hands, Nichols disassembled it for removal to the U.S. In the meantime, he was warned of an impending attack by the North Koreans. Sergeant Nichols predicted the beginning date of the Korean War within a three-day span of its actual occurrence in his last report on the subject and was dead on, but his forecast was ignored.[7][8]

Korean War service

As the war began

After the North Koreans invaded at 0400 hours on 25 June 1950, Nichols telephoned the news to General Douglas MacArthur's headquarters at 0945. Then newly promoted chief warrant officer Nichols destroyed the IL-10 and other airplanes and equipment before fleeing Seoul, clinging to the side of a small boat.[7][9]

When Nichols rejoined the battered United Nations formations, he bore a map with annotated targets of the invaders.[10] He was asked by Ambassador John J. Muccio to temporarily serve as liaison to the Republic of Korea's military heads. In July 1950, Nichols was assigned to the United States Air Force Office of Special Investigations; this assignment was designed to grant him autonomy. General Partridge wanted one of the "new" Russian T-34 tanks the North Koreans were using. Air strikes against them had been unsuccessful, and the general was seeking information to plot counter-measures against the communist armor. Nichols scrounged up a tank transporter and retrieved a stranded T-34 while under fire. Partridge awarded him a Silver Star.[11]

Partridge mentioned communist guerrillas harassing Taegu Air Force Base and interrupting UN flight operations. Nichols led a band of 20 South Korean soldiers in a night-time raid into the hills, and returned with grenade fragments in his leg. The harassment ended.[11]

Nichols established a makeshift jump school that would turn out spy teams that parachuted behind communist lines. When a planeload of trainees in his ad hoc training failed to jump, Nichols headed them back into the drop aircraft. Although he had never had parachute training, he led the queue of trainees out the aircraft door once they were over the drop zone; all his trainees followed.[12]

Although air drops served to introduce espionage teams into the interior of North Korea, their only means of exit was on foot. Nichols also turned to amphibious insertions and retrievals, using the 22nd Crash Rescue Boat Squadron, and later, scrounged Korean fishing boats. The numerous islands offshore of North Korea served as sanctuaries for guerrillas who would host his teams.[13][14]

6004th Air Intelligence Service Squadron

By March 1951, the Air Force decided to gather Nichols' ad hoc activities into "Special Activities Unit Number One". The new unit was officially given a wide brief that charged them with gathering military intelligence. They were directed to coordinate their activities with other intelligence agencies. The unit evolved into the 6004th Air Intelligence Service Squadron either later that month or the next. The unorthodox new unit contained commandos, scholars, linguists, and saboteurs along with its more usual intelligence specialists.[15][16]

Nichols' next intelligence coup came on 17 April 1951. The Chinese communists had introduced Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-15s into the war. The United States desperately wanted one of the MiG-15s, so they could devise counter-measures against the most technologically advanced plane in communist possession. However, the MiG-15 had yet to fall into UN hands. Nichols and five technical intelligence experts flew to Chodo Island, well behind enemy lines. From there, they penetrated 80 miles into communist territory in an unarmed helicopter through enemy ground fire. The intruders landed at a MiG-15 crash site some 100 miles behind the lines and near an enemy supply depot. The intelligence team rapidly photographed the MiG-15 wreckage, and transcribed all instructions and markings. After scalping as many smaller parts as it could from the fighter, the team departed despite the chopper's battle damage to its rotor blade. They managed to struggle back to Chodo Island. Nichols was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his valor and enterprise. The award citation stated that he had retrieved "information of inestimable value".[17]

After a forced unsuccessful insertion of 15 saboteurs on 1 July 1951 by Detachment 1, Detachment 2 was founded on 25 July 1951 for just such covert operations.[18] Nichols founded Detachment 2, with an American strength of seven officers and 26 enlisted. Its brief was to infiltrate behind communist lines and personally reconnoiter for air strike targets. Given the impossibility of Caucasians remaining undetected in the Asian populace of communist rear areas, there was a minimal need for Americans in this U.S. Air Force detachment.[19][20]

Between 14 and 21 July 1951, Nichols and the 6004th actually managed to retrieve a crashed MiG-15 from behind enemy lines. The MiG-15 in question had splashed onto mud flats northwest of the North Korean capital of Pyongyang. The intelligence coup was considered so important that it was supported by a small multi-national fleet of South Korean, U.S., and British vessels under the command of British Rear Admiral A. K. Scott-Moncrieff. Despite his relatively junior rank, Nichols was credited with organizing the operation.[17][21]

In 1953, Major Nichols was once again targeted by enemy agents, but again escaped fatality, unlike the unsuccessful killers.[22] Nichols is credited by some anonymous sources in the intelligence community with originating Operation Moolah; this operation offered $50,000US to any defecting pilot for his fighter.[23] Certainly, Nichols was the first to debrief the defecting pilot, No Kum-sok, and the first to submit an intelligence report based on interrogating the defector.[2]

Postwar career

In September 1953, after the fighting ceased, Nichols' 6004th Air Intelligence Service Squadron was dubbed the "primary [military intelligence] collection agency of FEAF [Far East Air Force]". Despite the fact that the Air Force effort was as large as the CIA and Naval intelligence units in Korea, the relatively junior Nichols remained entrusted with command. However, throughout the war, agent casualties had steadily climbed as the communists increased their security measures. From the end of 1952 onwards, insertions into the north had become virtual suicide missions. Nichols was haunted by the situation: "I hate to call myself a man. I had to be the one to give the orders when I knew someone was going to be killed."[24][25]

In late 1953, Nichols was trusted with command of the newly activated 6006th Air Intelligence Service Squadron.[26] He departed Korea in 1957.[27]

Nichols retired from the Air Force in ill health in 1962. On 2 June 1992, he died in the Veterans Administration hospital in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Such files as existed covering his Korean War exploits were declassified after his death, and in 1995, Nichols was inducted into the Air Commando Hall of Fame.[3]

Notes

  1. 1 2 Nichols, p. 9.
  2. 1 2 3 Harden, unpaginated ebook.
  3. 1 2 Haas (2000), p. 91.
  4. Haas (2002), pp. 54–55, 64.
  5. Haas (2000), pp. 78–79.
  6. Haas (2000), pp. 78–80.
  7. 1 2 Haas (2002), pp. 54–55.
  8. Haas (2000), p. 80.
  9. Futrell, pp. 4–5.
  10. Futrell, p. 29.
  11. 1 2 Haas (2002), p 55.
  12. Haas (2002), p. 56.
  13. Haas (2000), pp. 87–88.
  14. Haas (2002), pp. 62–64.
  15. Haas (2002), pp. 55–56.
  16. Haas (2000), p. 84.
  17. 1 2 Haas (2000), pp. 82–83.
  18. Haas (2000), p. 85.
  19. Haas (2000), pp. 85–86.
  20. Haas (2002), pp. 58–59.
  21. Edwards, p. 224.
  22. Haas (2000), pp. 55, 64–65.
  23. Futrell, pp. 652–653.
  24. Haas (2000), pp. 86, 90, 100–101.
  25. Haas (2002), p. 62.
  26. Haas (2002), p. 65.
  27. Nichols, p. 113.

References

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