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The amphibious element of Operation Beau Charger met no opposition while the heliborne assault dropped into a hot LZ. Only one platoon was landed and it remained isolated until rescued several hours later. Beau Charger continued until 26 May with minimal contact<ref name="Telfer2526">Telfer, p. 25-26</ref>.
The amphibious element of Operation Beau Charger met no opposition while the heliborne assault dropped into a hot LZ. Only one platoon was landed and it remained isolated until rescued several hours later. Beau Charger continued until 26 May with minimal contact<ref name="Telfer2526">Telfer, p. 25-26</ref>.


In Operation Hickory the [[2nd Battalion, 26th Marines]] and 2/9 Marines advanced north from Con Thien to press any NVA against a blocking force from the 3rd Battalion, 4th Marines on the Ben Hai River. At 10:00 2/26 Marines made contact with 2 NVA Battalions in bunkers and trenches. The 2/9 Marines joined 2/26 and fought a running battle until nightfall. 5 Marines were KIA and 142 were wounded, while 31 NVA were killed<ref name="Telfer26">Telfer, p. 26</ref>.
In Operation Hickory the [[2nd Battalion, 26th Marines]] and 2/9 Marines advanced north from Con Thien on the morning of 18 May to press any NVA against a blocking force from the 3rd Battalion, 4th Marines on the Ben Hai River. At 10:00 2/26 Marines made contact with 2 NVA Battalions in bunkers and trenches. The 2/9 Marines joined 2/26 and fought a running battle until nightfall. 5 Marines were KIA and 142 were wounded, while 31 NVA were killed. That night 75 radar-controlled airstrikes were called in on the bunker complex. At 07:00 on 19 May after 2 hours of artillery preparation (in which short rounds killed 3 Marines), the 2/26 proceeded to attack the bunker complex, overrunning it by 10:30 killing 34 NVA<ref name="Telfer26">Telfer, p. 26</ref>. At 13:30 2/9 Marines met heavy automatic weapons and mortar fire and an [[M-48]] moved up to silence the NVA positions with canister fire. 2 M-48s were later knocked out by RPG-7 fire and 2/9 Marines suffered 7 KIA and 12 wounded<ref name="Telfer27">Telfer, p. 27</ref>.


On July 2, Companies A and B from 1/9 launched [[Operation Buffalo]], a sweep of the area north of Con Thien. As the infantrymen moved along Route 561 in an area called the Marketplace, the NVA attacked inflicting severe casualties on Company B. Operation Buffalo concludes on July 14 at a cost of 159 Marines KIA and 345 WIA. The NVA suffered 1290 KIA.
On July 2, Companies A and B from 1/9 launched [[Operation Buffalo]], a sweep of the area north of Con Thien. As the infantrymen moved along Route 561 in an area called the Marketplace, the NVA attacked inflicting severe casualties on Company B. Operation Buffalo concludes on July 14 at a cost of 159 Marines KIA and 345 WIA. The NVA suffered 1290 KIA.

Revision as of 14:21, 3 March 2010

Con Thien Battles
Part of the Vietnam War
DateFebruary 1967 - February 1968
Standort
Result U.S. victory
Belligerents
Vereinigte Staaten North Vietnam
Commanders and leaders
Lew Walt
Lowell E. English
Nguyen Van
Strength
1200 Unknown
Casualties and losses
1400 killed, 9300 wounded 9600 killed, 160 captured

Con Thien (meaning the "Hill of Angels"), was a United States Marine Corps combat base located near the Vietnamese Demilitarized Zone about 3km from North Vietnam. It was the site of fierce fighting from February 1967 through February 1968.

Standort

It was located in at 16°54′35″N 106°58′48″E / 16.90972°N 106.98000°E / 16.90972; 106.98000Invalid arguments have been passed to the {{#coordinates:}} function (MGRS 48QYD113703) and was originally established as a Special forces/CIDG camp before being taken over by the Marines in December 1966. Together with Marine bases at Gio Linh, Dong Ha and Cam Lo, Con Thien enclosed the area known to the Marines as Leatherneck Square[1]. Con Thien was intended to be used as a base for the McNamara Line to prevent NVA infiltration across the DMZ. The firebase was strategically important because it offered unfettered views for 15km east to the coast and north into North Vietnam. It was also very vulnerable because it was within range of North Vietnamese artillery north of the DMZ which was largely immune to counter-battery fire.[2]

Border Battles

On February 27, 1967, in response to Marine artillery fire into and the area north of the DMZ (Operation Highrise) NVA mortar, rocket and artillery fire hit Con Thien and Gio Linh[3]. On March 20, NVA began shelling Con Thien and Gio Linh which continued sporadically for the next two weeks[4]. 1st Battalion, 9th Marines began Operation Praire III on March 24 where they encounted an NVA battalion in a bunker complex southeast of Con Thien. After a two hour fight the NVA withdrew leaving 33 killed in action. Sergeant Walter K. Singleton was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions in the attack. 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marines (3/3) operated beside 1/9 encountering an entrenched NVA Company, killing 28 NVA including two women[5].

Map of northern Quang Tri Province showing location of Con Thien.

In mid-April Charlie Company, 11th Engineer Battalion was tasked with clearing a 200m wide strip from Con Thien to Gio Linh, a distance of 10.6km. The engineers were protected by a task force comprised of the 1st Battalion, 4th Marines, an AMTRAC (LVT-5) platoon, a platoon of M42 Dusters from the Army's 1st Battalion, 44th Artillery and some ARVN units. By April 19, despite harassment from NVA mines, small arms, recoilless rifle, mortar and artillery fire the strip was half-completed[5].

Attack on Con Thien

8 May, at 03:00 some 300 rounds of mortar and artillery fire hit the base, while NVA sappers with Bangalore torpedoes breached the perimeter wire. At 04:00 two battalions of the 812th NVA Regiment armed with flamethrowers attempted to overrun the base. At the time of the attack the base was defended by the command element and Companies A and D of 1/4 Marines and a CIDG unit. The attack fell primarily on Company D. A relief column from Company A was sent with an M42 Duster, 2 LVT-5s and 2 1/4 ton trucks. The M42 was hit by an RPG-7 and an LVT-5 and one truck were destroyed by satchel charges. By 09:00 the NVA had withdrawn leaving 197 KIA and 8 prisoners. The Marines had suffered 44 KIA and 110 wounded[6].

Remilitarizing the DMZ

After the attack May 8, recognizing that the NVA were using the DMZ as a sanctuary for attacks into I Corps, Washington lifted the prohibition on US forces entering the DMZ and MACV authorized the III Marine Amphibious Force (III MAF) to conduct combat operations into the southern half of the DMZ[7]. From May 13 - 16, 1st Battalion 9th Marines (1/9) cleared Route 561 from Cam Lo to Con Thien fighting a well-entrenched NVA force south of the base to do this. The NVA subsequently withdrew into the DMZ[7].

III MAF proceeded to plan a series of combined operations with ARVN forces that occurred from 18 to 26 May. 3rd Marines' Operation Hickory advanced to the Ben Hai River. Under Operation Lam Son 54 the 1st ARVN Division advanced parallel to 3rd Marines while the amphibious Special Landing Force Alpha secured the coastline south of the Ben Hai River under Operation Beau Charger and Special Landing Force Bravo linked up with 3rd Marines under Operation Belt Tight. Once at the Ben Hai River, the forces swept south on a broad front to Route 9[7].

From 19 until 27 May when Lam Son 54 ended the ARVN were in constant contact with the NVA. The ARVN suffered 22 KIA and 122 wounded, while the NVA suffered 342 KIA and 30 captured[8].

The amphibious element of Operation Beau Charger met no opposition while the heliborne assault dropped into a hot LZ. Only one platoon was landed and it remained isolated until rescued several hours later. Beau Charger continued until 26 May with minimal contact[9].

In Operation Hickory the 2nd Battalion, 26th Marines and 2/9 Marines advanced north from Con Thien on the morning of 18 May to press any NVA against a blocking force from the 3rd Battalion, 4th Marines on the Ben Hai River. At 10:00 2/26 Marines made contact with 2 NVA Battalions in bunkers and trenches. The 2/9 Marines joined 2/26 and fought a running battle until nightfall. 5 Marines were KIA and 142 were wounded, while 31 NVA were killed. That night 75 radar-controlled airstrikes were called in on the bunker complex. At 07:00 on 19 May after 2 hours of artillery preparation (in which short rounds killed 3 Marines), the 2/26 proceeded to attack the bunker complex, overrunning it by 10:30 killing 34 NVA[10]. At 13:30 2/9 Marines met heavy automatic weapons and mortar fire and an M-48 moved up to silence the NVA positions with canister fire. 2 M-48s were later knocked out by RPG-7 fire and 2/9 Marines suffered 7 KIA and 12 wounded[11].

On July 2, Companies A and B from 1/9 launched Operation Buffalo, a sweep of the area north of Con Thien. As the infantrymen moved along Route 561 in an area called the Marketplace, the NVA attacked inflicting severe casualties on Company B. Operation Buffalo concludes on July 14 at a cost of 159 Marines KIA and 345 WIA. The NVA suffered 1290 KIA.

Siege

In September 1967 the North Vietnamese Army started their major shelling. 152 millimeter howitzers, 120 millimeter and 82 millimeter mortars and 122 millimeter rockets hit the base daily.[12] During the climax of the attack (September 19 - 27, 1967) over three thousand rounds of artillery pounded the fire base. On September 25, a reported 1200 rounds pounded the hill sides of the 158m mound of red dirt[12].

On October 14, 1967 21 Marines from 2nd Battalion 4th Marines were killed defending the C-2 Bridge on the overland supply route from Combat Base C-2 to Con Thien.

The Marine Corps rotated battalions in and out of Con Thien every thirty days[12]. The constant shelling and the threat of an NVA assault took a psychological toll on the Marines, the base was nicknamed "Our Turn in the Barrel" and "the Meat Grinder", while the DMZ was said to stand for "Dead Marine Zone."

More than 1400 Marines were killed and nearly 9300 wounded in the fighting in and around Con Thien. NVA losses were put at nearly 9600 killed in action and over 160 prisoners of war.

The Battle in the media

Con Thien was in the news during the time it was under attack. TIME featured the story on the cover of its 6 October 1967, issue which was instrumental in bringing the reality of Vietnam combat to American readers.[13].David Douglas Duncan's photos of the Marines at Con Thien were featured in the 27 October 1967 issue of Life Magazine and in his book "War Without Heroes"[14].

Notes

  1. ^ Shulimson, Jack (1997). U.S. Marines in Vietnam: 1968 The Defining Year (Marine Corps Vietnam Operational Historical Series). Marine Corps Association. ISBN 0-16-049125-8. {{cite book}}: Text "p. 18" ignored (help)
  2. ^ Kelley (2002), p.5-116.
  3. ^ Telfer, Gary (1984). U.S. Marines in Vietnam: Fighting the North Vietnamese 1967 (Marine Corps Vietnam Operational Historical Series). Marine Corps Association. {{cite book}}: Text "p. 10" ignored (help)
  4. ^ Telfer, p. 17
  5. ^ a b Telfer, p. 18
  6. ^ Telfer, p. 21
  7. ^ a b c Telfer, p. 23
  8. ^ Telfer, p. 25
  9. ^ Telfer, p. 25-26
  10. ^ Telfer, p. 26
  11. ^ Telfer, p. 27
  12. ^ a b c Jack T. Hartzel, Con Thien http://www.vietvet.org/jhconthn.htm
  13. ^ Time Magazine, 06/10/67
  14. ^ http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/exhibitions/web/ddd/gallery/war/vietnam.html David Douglas Duncan Vietnam photos

References

Bibliography
  • Coan, James P. (2004). Con Thien - Hill of Angels. Tuscaloosa, Alabama: The University of Alabama Press. ISBN 0-81731-414-8. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • Kelley, Michael (2002). Where We Were in Vietnam - A Comprehensive Guide to the Firebases, Military Installations and Naval Vessels of the Vietnam War, 1945-1975. Central Point, Oregon: Hellgate Press. ISBN 1-55571-625-3. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)