October 1968. Fu by South Vietnam. Inside a wire fence at a base called forward operating base 1. There was a rule about food. It wasn’t written in any army manual. No general in Saigon knew it existed. But the men who followed it lived, and many of the men who didn’t follow it came home in bags, if they came home at all.
This is the story of the MV SOG diet rule. The rule that made American soldiers smell like the enemy. And by the end of this video, you’ll know exactly what these men ate, what they gave up, and why a trained tracker dog could find any American in the jungle except them. First, you need to understand how bad things were.
The men at Fubai belonged to a secret unit called Mac SOG. The letter stood for military assistance command Vietnam studies and observations group. The name was boring on purpose. It sounded like a group of men who counted supplies and wrote reports. They did not count supplies. They crossed the border into Laos and Cambodia, places American soldiers were not supposed to be.
And they spied on the enemy’s biggest secret. That secret was the Ho Chi Min Trail, a hidden highway of dirt roads and footpaths that carried North Vietnamese soldiers, trucks, rice, and bullets south to the war. The trail was guarded by somewhere between 25 and 40,000 North Vietnamese troops. Against that army, SOG sent recon teams of 8 to 12 men.
Two or three Americans and the rest local fighters, most of them Montineyard tribesmen from the mountains, small, tough men who had lived in these jungles all their lives. Now, here is the number that should stop you cold. In 1968, the casualty rate for SOG recon men passed 100%. a figure confirmed after the war when the unit’s records were finally opened.
Think about what that means. It means that on average, every single man on recon duty was wounded at least once. Many were wounded more than once. Dozens were killed and more than 50 SOG men remain missing to this day. Some teams flew into Laos and simply vanished. No radio call, no bodies, nothing. The jungle swallowed them.
And the only proof they’d ever existed was an empty bunk back at base. And the worst part was this. The teams that died were not making mistakes. Their camouflage was perfect. They painted every inch of their skin green and black. Their noise discipline was perfect. They taped down every buckle and every strap so nothing rattled.
They moved the right way, slow and careful, a few steps at a time, stopping to listen. They did everything the United States Army had ever taught them about staying hidden. And the enemy found them anyway. Sometimes it took a day. Sometimes it took hours. Some teams were in a gunfight before they’d moved 500 m from their landing zone. 500 m.
That’s about five football fields. Men were stepping off a helicopter, walking 5 minutes into the trees, and dying. How? The landing zones were clean. The team saw no one. They heard no one. But somewhere out in that green darkness, North Vietnamese trackers were already turning toward them. Many of those trackers worked with dogs.
And once a dog had them, the team’s mission was over. The only question left was whether the helicopters could pull them out before the ENVA closed the ring. Back in Saigon, the staff officers had answers. The officers said the teams were being spotted by trail watchers near the landing zones. Bad luck, they said.
Bad landing zones. So, the planners picked better landing zones. They added more gunships. They changed the insertion times. The teams kept dying. The men writing reports in air conditioned offices were sure the problem was tactics. They never once asked a different question. They never asked what an American soldier smelled like.
To understand who finally asked that question, you need to meet a man named Jerry Shrivever. Shrivever ran his war far to the south with a SOG command called CC’s at Banme Thuat hunting the enemy across the Cambodian border. But the problem he solved was the same one killing teams at Fubai and everywhere else. Sergeant First Class Jerry Shrivever was not what you picture when you hear the words Green Beret. He was quiet.
He was a loner at the base. He barely spoke to other Americans. He didn’t drink at the club. He didn’t play cards. He didn’t write many letters home. Other soldiers found him strange and some found him unsettling. He kept loaded weapons all around him, slept with a gun, and seemed fully at ease only when he was preparing to go back across the border.
But watch where Shrivever spent his time. He did not live the American life on that base. He lived with his Montana. He ate with them, squatting in the dirt, sharing rice from a common pot. He learned from them. He trusted his life to them and they trusted theirs to him. And that trust was tested in the worst places on earth.
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While other Americans went to the messaul for steak and cold milk, Shrivever sat with small brown skinned men and ate what they ate. And the others shook their heads and said he’d gone native. They meant it as an insult. They were watching the answer and calling it a sickness.
Because here’s what the men in the field were starting to notice. Mission after bloody mission. The dogs didn’t find everyone. The trackers didn’t point at everyone. When teams were compromised, the enemy seemed to home in on the Americans. The Montaires moving through the same jungle on the same trails, breathing the same air, didn’t draw the dogs the same way.
It was as if the Americans were carrying something the tribesmen were not. Something no one could see. Some men blamed luck. Some blamed the landing zones like Saigon did. But the one zeros, the senior men who led recon teams on the ground, men like Shrivever, started putting the pieces together. They weren’t generals.
They were sergeants. Their classroom was the jungle. And the lessons cost blood. Now ask what a dog actually follows. Not footprints, not broken branches. A dog follows smell. A dog’s nose is thousands of times stronger than a man’s. And a veteran human tracker, a man raised in that jungle, develops a nose of his own.
Now, think about what an American soldier in 1968 actually smelled like. He ate meat, cheese, chocolate, and canned sea rations every day. He drank coffee by the court. He smoked American cigarettes, camels, and lucky strikes. He washed with army soap, brushed his teeth with sweet minty toothpaste, maybe slapped on after shave before a night at the club.
Every one of those things came out of his body, out of his pores, out of his sweat and his breath hour after hour. He was a walking cloud of scent in the middle of an American base. Nobody noticed because everybody smelled the same way. But out there across the fence under the triple canopy jungle of Laos, that cloud did not belong.
The jungle smelled of rot, rain, wood smoke, and fish sauce. An American cut through it like a flare in the dark. He could paint his face, tape his gear, and never speak a word. And it didn’t matter. To a dog, and to a tracker who knew the land, that man might as well have been ringing a bell. The Montaniards never rang it.
They smelled like the jungle because they were of the jungle. They smelled like the enemy because the enemy ate what they ate. That was the insight. That was the moment the war changed for these men. You couldn’t just look like the jungle. You couldn’t just sound like the jungle. You had to smell like it.
And smell wasn’t something you could put on like paint. It was something you had to become. and becoming it started with the food on your plate days before the helicopter ever left the ground. So what was the rule? It started 3 to 5 days before a mission. The moment a recon team got a warning order, the moment they knew they were going across the fence, the American food stopped.
No more steak at the club, no more eggs and bacon, no more chocolate bars, no more canned sea rations, no more cold milk. From that day until the helicopters brought them home, the Americans on the team ate what the Montaniards ate. They ate what the enemy ate. The main meal was rice.
Plain pre-cooked rice packed in small bags called Ps, short for indigenous rations. With the rice came dried fish, sometimes dried shrimp, sometimes a handful of peanuts. And over all of it went a dark, strong smelling liquid called newok mam. A fish sauce made from salted fish left to ferment in barrels.
To a new American soldier, Newok Mam smelled like something gone bad. To the men of Southeast Asia, it was the taste of home. And within days, it became the smell of the men who ate it. But the rule didn’t stop at food. Soap was banned. Toothpaste was banned. deodorant, after shave, shampoo, all of it banned. A recon man preparing for a mission didn’t wash with anything but plain water.
He didn’t brush his teeth with anything sweet or minty. If he had to smoke, and many of these men smoked to steady their nerves, he gave up his camels and rolled harsh local tobacco instead. The same leaf the North Vietnamese smoked on the trail. Here’s why it worked in simple terms. What you eat changes you.
Within a few days, the food in your stomach starts coming out through your skin. Your sweat changes. Your breath changes. The oil on your skin changes. A man who eats rice and fish sauce for 5 days sweats rice and fish sauce. A man who eats beef stew and chocolate sweats beef stew and chocolate.
The dogs on the Hochi Min Trail had spent their whole working lives around men who ate rice and fish. That smell was the background of their world. It was wallpaper. It was nothing. But beef, coffee, mint, and ivory soap, that was new. That was foreign. That was prey. The rule had a second gift, and the men loved this part.
A full day of sea rations weighed more than 5 lb. The cans were heavy, and the cans were loud. A day of indigenous rations weighed about one lb. Over a 5-day mission, the switch saved a man more than 20 lb. 20 lb is not comfort in the jungle. 20 lb is life. It meant more bullets, more grenades, more water, and extra claymore mine.
The food that hid them also armed them. Nobody ordered this from the top. That’s the part worth remembering. There was no memo from Saigon, no field manual, no training film. The rule spread the way the best lessons of that war spread from sergeant to sergeant, team room to team room.
A one zero, the leader of a recon team, came home alive from a place where teams didn’t come home alive. Other one zeros asked him how he told them. They copied him. The proof was simple. The men who followed the rule kept walking back out of the jungle. Not everyone clapped. The medics worried and they had a point.
Men were skipping vitamins and dropping weight, running hard missions on rice and dried fish. And the visiting officers, the clean ones who flew in from the big bases, were sometimes flatout disgusted. They saw American soldiers who hadn’t touched soap in a week, hair greasy, uniform stained, squatting in the dirt, eating with their fingers, smelling like fish sauce and wood smoke.
To those officers, it looked like the breakdown of discipline. They had a phrase for it, going native. One of them could stand in front of a recon man, wrinkle his nose, and never understand that the smell offending him was the only reason that man was alive to offend anyone. The recon men didn’t argue much.
Arguing took energy, and the clean officers went home at night. But inside SOG, the rule found its champions where it mattered. The one zeros themselves became its guardians. And in time, the lesson was folded into the one zero school. The brutal course that trained new recon team leaders.
What had started as a trick passed between survivors became something taught on purpose. A new man didn’t get to choose. If he wanted to lead a team across the fence, he learned to eat like the enemy because his team’s lives would ride on his sweat. Picture how this looked at Shrivever’s base at Banme Thu 3 days before an insertion.
Evening light. Over at the club, new arrivals are cutting into stakes, drinking cold beer, laughing too loud the way men laugh when they’re scared and pretending not to be. And out behind the team rooms, Jerry Shrivever squats in the dust with his Montana yards. A banana leaf spread between them, eating cold rice and dried fish with his fingers.
The sharp stink of Newok Mam hanging in the warm air. Two meals 100 meters apart. One of them is dinner. The other one is armor. Shrivever knew which was which, and he chose his armor every single time. If stories like this one matter to you, take one second and subscribe because the men of SOG spent 50 years officially non-existent.
And every person who hears their story now is a small piece of the recognition they never got. Did it actually work? There came a night that answered the question. A recon team lay hidden in thick brush and denied territory just meters off a high-speed trail. The kind of hardpacked path the North Vietnamese used like a highway.
The team had been still for hours. Then they heard it. Voices, sandals on packed dirt, an Enva security element moving up the trail and with them a tracker dog. Every man stopped breathing. The Americans lay with their faces in the dirt. Close enough to hear the dog panting. Close enough to hear its nails click when it crossed a route.
One bark, one growl, one pause too long, and 12 men would be fighting for their lives a 100 miles from help. The dog reached the spot where the team had crossed the trail hours before. Their scent was on that ground. The dog’s nose passed right over it. And the dog kept walking. No alert, no bark. The voices faded up the trail.
The jungle closed its sounds back over the team and a dozen hearts started beating again. The dog had smelled them. It had to have caught them. But what it smelled was rice, fish sauce, wood smoke, and local tobacco. It smelled the trail it walked every day. It smelled its own side. The rule held. The men were invisible in the one way that mattered most.
And soon, something even stranger started happening. The Americans began to noticed that the jungle had smells of its own. Smells they’d never been able to detect before. The rule was about to give them back more than it had taken. The numbers told the story first. Before the rule, teams were being found in hours.
Some never finished day one. After the rule spread, teams began living in denied areas for 3, four, 5 days at a stretch, watching the trail, counting trucks, planting wire taps on enemy phone lines, and walking back out alive. The missions that had been suicide in 1966 and 1967 became merely terribly dangerous.
And in SG’s world, that was progress you could measure in living men. The casualty numbers stayed awful. This was still the deadliest job in Vietnam. But the men stopped dying for one particular reason. They stopped dying because of their own smell. And the diet rule never worked alone. It was the invisible layer in a whole system of disappearing.
A SOG recon man went across the fence sterile, which meant clean of anything American. No dog tags around his neck, no rank on his collar, no unit patch on his shoulder, no letters from home in his pockets, no wallet, no photos, nothing. Most teams carried foreign weapons, Swedish K submachine guns, and captured AK-47s.
So even the sound of their gunfire and the brass they left behind told the enemy nothing. The last man in the file walking what they called the tail gunner position sprinkled fine seas tear gas powder on the ground behind the team so any dog pushing its nose into their trail got a burning surprise instead of a scent.
Layer on layer on layer. The uniform lied, the rifle lied. The trail itself lied. And underneath it all, the deepest layer, the man’s own body lied because his sweat said he was Vietnamese. Then came the discovery nobody had planned. The rule started working in reverse. Think about what these Americans had given up.
Coffee, mint toothpaste, soap, sweet food. For their whole lives, those smells had been sitting in their noses like a radio that never turns off. So close and so constant they couldn’t hear anything past it. Now days into the diet, weeks into living like their Montine yards, that radio finally went quiet.
And in the silence, the jungle spoke. Point men began to freeze in midstep, fist up, whole team dropping silently into the brush. When the one zero crawled forward and asked why with his eyes, the point man would touch his own nose. smoke, fish sauce, the sharp wreak of unwashed cotton and local tobacco drifting through the trees from somewhere ahead.
Men, the Americans were smelling the North Vietnamese before they could see them or hear them. Veterans of the unit swore by it, and SOG men like John Plaster, who ran recon across the fence himself and later wrote the unit’s history, recorded it plainly. Soldiers halted columns on scent alone. Ambushes were found before they were sprung because somebody caught a thread of wood smoke that didn’t belong or a ghost of Newok Ma’am on the wind where no friendly man should be.
Sit with how strange that is. The dog’s gift, the tracker’s gift, had crossed the trail and joined the other side. The hunted had learned to smell the hunter. The sense these men surrendered came back to them as a weapon. No machine has ever matched it. No gadget, no million-dollar device in any war has ever done what a human nose does for free once you stop drowning it in soap.
The enemy noticed Hanoi was not stupid and the trail was Hanoi’s lifeline worth any price. When the dogs began failing, when teams kept slipping through, the North Vietnamese answered the way they always answered. They spent men. They built dedicated counter recon units, whole units built for one job only, hunting SOG teams.
They salted the jungle around likely landing zones with trail watchers. Often it was just a boy or an old man with a rifle. When helicopters came near, he fired a single signal shot into the air. One shot picked up and repeated by the next watcher and the next rippling across the hills like a telegraph made of gunfire. Then came the sweeps.
Hundreds of soldiers walking online through a grid of jungle, shoulder tosh shoulder, beating the brush like men flushing birds. If they couldn’t smell the Americans anymore, they would simply touch every square meter of ground until they stepped on them. Picture lying flat under a bush, your face in the dirt, listening to a wall of footsteps coming. They can’t smell you.
They can’t track you. and they might still find you with their boots. The rule made men invisible. It couldn’t make them safe. Nothing in Laos made you safe. Here’s the proof the rule was real and not just a war story the survivors told. Other American units ran reconnaissance, too.
Conventional OARP teams, men who volunteered for work, most soldiers refused, patrolled inside South Vietnam, and most of them lived American to the bone. sea rations in their packs, coffee in their canteen cups, army soap in the morning, and the dogs kept finding them. Their compromise rates stayed high in exactly the way SOGS had been before the rule.
And trackers walked down their trails in a way that had become rare across the fence. Same jungle, same enemy, same dogs, different breakfast. The difference wasn’t courage and it wasn’t training. It was scent. And the comparison proves it as cleanly as any test ever could. And then the enemy paid the men of SOG the greatest compliment one army can pay another. They put money on their heads.
The North Vietnamese issued bounties for SOG recon men, real rewards, and at the top of the list stood the quiet loner from CC’s. Jerry Shrivever. The reward reportedly reached $10,000, a fortune in a country where a soldier earned pennies. SOG veterans swore that Radio Hanoi’s propaganda voice, the one American troops called Hanoi Hannah, spoke his name over the air.
They called him what his own friends called him. Mad Dog. Understand what a bounty means. You don’t pay for a man you can catch. You don’t put a price on a head your dogs can find. A bounty is what you offer when your trackers have failed. It’s what you pay when your dogs walk past a man lying 10 feet away.
It’s the price of an enemy who moves through your backyard year after year while you cannot lay one hand on him. The bounty on Shrivever was Hanoi admitting in cash that the rule worked. By 1969, the practice owned the unit. From CCN in Daang to CCC in Quantum to CC’s in Banme Thuat, scent discipline was simply how recon was done.
Taught to every new man, enforced by every team leader. Hundreds of recon men lived under the rule. Thousands of crossber missions ran between 1965 and 1972. Every one of those missions rested on a foundation of rice, dried fish, and the absence of soap. Step into their world one more time. because the men themselves never got to describe it on the news.
Day four, across the fence, your uniform has been soaked and half dried so many times it feels like a second skin made of mud. Leeches keep finding the gap above your boot, fat and silent. Your mouth tastes like an old campfire. Your teeth wear fur because toothpaste doesn’t exist out here.
Breakfast was a bowl of cold rice with a splash of fish sauce, sour and sharp, eaten with dirty fingers in the gray light before dawn. A 100 ft overhead, rain rattled on the canopy like static from a dead radio. You are hungry, wet, exhausted, and invisible. And out there in the dripping green, men are searching for you with everything they have.
They cannot find you. The diet rule has done its work and you smell exactly like the enemy hunting you. But invisibility had a price tag the bounty never captured. And in April 1969, on a hillside in Cambodia, the bill came due. April 24th, 1969, the Fish Hook region of Cambodia. That morning, Jerry Shrivever climbed onto a helicopter for his last mission.
The target was a place American intelligence called Cosvin, the hidden headquarters that ran the entire communist war effort in the south. Bombers had just hammered the area. And the plan said the survivors would be too stunned to fight. The plan was wrong. The landing zone was a trap ringed with bunkers and machine guns.
And the men of the raiding force ran off their helicopters into a wall of fire. Within moments, the assault was pinned in the open. Men pressed flat in the grass while bullets cut the air inches above their backs. The radio calls grew desperate. And then Shrivever did the thing the men who knew him, would talk about for the rest of their lives.
He gathered the Montine yards near him, the same men he’d eaten with, lived with, and trusted for years, and he charged the treeine. Witnesses saw him moving toward the bunkers, weapon up, his yards beside him, disappearing into the smoke and the green. He never came out. No body was ever recovered. No grave was ever dug.
The man no dog could track. The man no tracker could follow. The man Hanoi had priced at $10,000 walked into the jungle one last time and the jungle kept him. He was 27 years old. The army listed him as missing in action. And decades later changed the words to killed in action, body not recovered. The words changed, the silence did not.
And here’s the strange hard truth about how his story was told. It wasn’t told at all. Shrivever received no parade and no headline. His war didn’t officially exist. SOG didn’t officially exist. The missions into Laos and Cambodia were denied by the government that ordered them.
So the men who fought them came home. Those who came home carrying secrets they were ordered to keep and stories no one was allowed to hear. There was no metal ceremony for the diet rule. No one ever pinned a ribbon on a man for giving up soap. The knowledge that saved hundreds of lives was never written into a manual the public could read.
It lived where it had always lived, in the heads of sergeants, passed hand to hand like a family recipe. Except this recipe was paid for in blood. But knowledge that works doesn’t die. It goes underground and it travels in the heads of the men who lived it. The survivors of SOG scattered into the rest of the American military and quietly rebuilt it from the inside.
Some became instructors who never explained where their lessons came from. When the army stood up Delta Force in the late 1970s, SOG veterans were in the room and the hard one habits of the trail walked in with them. Men like John Plaster, who survived 3 years of recon across the fence, spent the rest of their lives writing the unit back into existence, book by book, name by name, because the army would not do it for them.
Today, scent discipline isn’t a strange trick whispered between survivors. It is doctrine. American snipers learn that smell betrays a hidden man as surely as movement. Reconnaissance students learn that tobacco, cologne, and sweet food have no place near an observation post. Modern special operations forces talk about something called signature reduction.
A careful word for a simple idea. Everything about you sends a signal. Your heat sends one, your phone sends one, your footprints send one, and your body sends one. Built from everything you put into it. Shrink every signal until you disappear. That entire way of thinking, taught now with thermal cameras and electronic sensors and careful science began in the mud of Southeast Asia with a bag of rice and a bottle of fish sauce.
The men of SOG were doing signature reduction before the term existed. They just called it staying alive. Official recognition finally came, but it came the way it always seems to come for secret soldiers. Late in April 2001, 32 years after Shrivever vanished into the treeine, the United States awarded Mac Sag the Presidential Unit Citation, one of the highest honors a military unit can receive.
The citation praised their extraordinary heroism across years of secret war. It was a proud day and a bitter one. Many of the men being honored were already in their graves. Some had died across the fence with no marker. Others had come home and grown old and passed away waiting for their country to admit they existed. The recognition was real.
It was also a letter delivered 30 years after the address had changed. So, what do we take from all of this? From the rice and the fish sauce and the quiet man who charged the bunkers. Start with the simplest lesson. The answer was humility. Every other army in history has tried to win by adding things, more armor, more firepower, more technology.
The men of SOG survived by subtracting. They gave up their food, their comfort, their cleanliness. the small daily tastes of home that every soldier clings to. They gave up steak for cold rice. They gave up coffee for nothing. They gave up the simple animal pleasure of being clean.
And the hardest part is what that meant underneath. To survive among the enemy, they had to stop being separate from the enemy. They had to eat his food, smoke his tobacco, sweat his sweat. The last wall between an American soldier and the men hunting him was sent. And they tore that wall down with their own hands, meal by meal.
There’s something in that choice that goes beyond tactics. Most of us guard the little things that tell us who we are, the food we grew up on, the smell of our own homes. These men learned that identity can be a weight, and in the worst places on Earth, it can be a death sentence. So they set it down.
Not forever, just long enough to live. And the ones who set it down most completely, men like Shrivever, sometimes sat down so much that the people around them no longer recognized what was left. His own side called him mad dog and kept their distance. The Montaniards, who shared his food and his fate, simply called him brother.
The deepest camouflage is not worn. It is lived. It’s chosen at a wooden table three days before a mission. When a man pushes away the steak and reaches for the rice, it’s renewed every morning. He doesn’t touch the soap. Every night he rolls bitter local tobacco instead of opening the red and white pack in his foot locker.
No factory can make it. No supply sergeant can issue it. It is built out of small sacrifices stacked one on top of another until a man becomes invisible to everything except the people who share the pot with him and that is the only audience he gets. Hold a final picture in your mind. A clearing in Laos, full dark rain coming.
An American soldier and a Montineyard tribesman sit shouldertosh shoulder over a shared pot of rice, eating with their fingers, saying nothing. Somewhere out in the night, there are dogs and trackers and thousands of men who would trade anything to find them. The dogs smell nothing. The trackers find nothing.
The two men by the pot smell exactly alike, and tomorrow they will live or die together, and they are content. The men of MV saga erased themselves so completely that the dogs could not find them, the trackers could not follow them, and in the end, their own country could not see them either. For 30 years, they were ghosts twice over, hidden from the enemy by choice and hidden from history by order.
The least we can do now that the files are open and the story can finally be told, is the one thing no one did for them then, remember them.