Eagle Biography
Hugh L. Mills, Jr.
As one of the US Army's most decorated pilots in the Vietnam conflict, Hugh Mills flew
over 2,000 combat hours and was instrumental in developing many of the Army's standard air
cavalry aero scout tactics. After enlisting in the Army in 1967 as a paratrooper, he was
selected for officer training later that year. After commanding a reconnaissance platoon,
Mills attended flight training and received the silver wings of an Army aviator in 1968.
In Vietnam, he commanded the Aero Scouts Platoon, the Outcasts of D Troop. Major General
A.E. Milloy described Lt Mills as "the most courageous small unit leader in the division
with the highest kill ratio of any combat unit in the Big Red One."
He was the first Army
pilot to use the XM-8 40-mm grenade launcher subsystem in combat. He was credited by the
Army Safety Center with developing a pilot technique to correct the OH-6 Cayuse "Hughes
Tail Spin," which had killed numerous aviators. After a tour in Germany, Mills attended
the instructor pilot's course for the AH-1G Cobra gunship in 1971 and deployed to
Vietnam again, this time as commander of an aero weapons platoon, operating along the DMZ.
Assigned to a then-top secret component and mission, Mills led air cavalry raids into
Laos, Cambodia, and North Vietnam. Participating in the rescue of over 100 covert
operations teams, he himself survived a 2 day escape and evasion in Laos, rescuing his
wounded co-pilot.
In February 1972, he once again commanded the Outcasts Aero Scouts. They
operated in the U Minh Forest area and along the Saigon River into Cambodia. He applied
revolutionary formation techniques to overcome the North Vietnamese ground-to-air Strella
missile threat. In 1975, he commanded the Army's first night-attack helicopter unit,
deploying it to Europe as the basis for the Army's first combat aviation battalion
equipped with the AH-1S Cobra anti-tank helicopter. In 1978, he served as a
member of the task force, which was to become the Army's only Special Operations aviator
regiment--the then-top secret 160th. Finally, he served as the senior Army representative
to the FAA for the Central and Great Lakes Regions.
He retired in 1993 after 26 years as a
combat aviator. His honors include: three Silver Stars; the Legion of Merit; six
Distinguished Flying Crosses; three Bronze Stars; three Purple Hearts; three Meritorious
Service Medals; two Air Medals for combat hours and six Air Medals for personal valor; six
Army Commendation Medals for valor; and the National Defense Service Medal. The Government
of Vietnam awarded him the Cross of Gallantry with Silver Star and Palm, the Vietnamese
Honor Medal First Class, and the Civic Action Honor Medal First Class.
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| Honored as an Eagle In: |
| 1995
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During 1969, Highway QL13 was the lifeline through which supplies flowed to
elements of the 1st Division and 11th Air Cavalry Regiment. The enemy had
decimated several convoys before the "Hunter-Killer" teams of "Darkhorse "
assumed protection of the "Thunder Runs." Hugh Mills commanded these hunters
and sniffed out ambush groups before they could strike. Shot down three times,
Mills killed 28 men on one flight during a counter-ambush. At the conclusion
of operations, friendly convoys ran twice daily--unmolested.
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