Chapter 9
The Struggle for
Hue-The Battle Begins
The Two Faces
of Hue-The NVA Attack-Redeployment at Phu Bai and Marines Go to Hue
The Two Faces of
Hue
As the former imperial capital, Hue was
for most Vietnamese the cultural center of the country. With an equal disdain
for both northerners and southerners, the religious and intellectual elite of
the city held themselves aloof from active participation in the war. Instead
they advocated local autonomy and traditional Vietnamese social values that led
to a distrust of the central Saigon government and its American allies as well
as Communism. In both the 1963 Buddhist uprising and the 1966 'Struggle
Movement,' the monks from the Hue pagodas and students and professors at Hue
University provided the informal leadership against the successive Saigon
regimes.
Despite the city's reputation for
dissidence, the Communists failed to take advantage of the Hue protest
movements. Both the South Vietnamese Army and Viet Cong troops for the most part
refrained from any show of force in the immediate vicinity or in the city
itself. With a sort of unspoken truce in effect, Hue afforded both sides a
certain respite from the war.* With a wartime population of about 140,000
persons, Hue retained much of its prewar ambience. Divided by the Huong or
Perfume River, the city emitted a sense of both its colonial and imperial pasts.
It was, in effect, two cities.
North of the river, the
three-square-mile Citadel with its ramparts and high towers gave the appearance
of a medieval walled town. Built by the Emperor Gia Linh in the early nineteenth
century, it contained the former imperial palace with its large gilt and
dragon-decorated throne room. Within the Citadel walls lay formal gardens and
parks, private residences, market places, pagodas, and moats filled with lotus
flowers. Buddhist bells and gongs as well as the chant of prayers resounded
through its streets.
South of the river lay the modem city.
Delineated by the Perfume River and the Phu Cam Canal into a rough triangle,
southern Hue was about half the size of the Citadel. The university, the
stadium, government administrative buildings, the hospital, the provincial
prison, and various radio stations were all in the new city. Attractive
Vietnamese schoolgirls dressed in the traditional AO Dai bicycled or walked
along stately Le Loi Boulevard, paralleling the riverfront. The Cercle-Sportif
with its veranda overlooking the Perfume River evoked memories of the former
French colonial administration.
In January 1968 as the Tet season
approached, however, a certain uneasiness lay over the city. The cancellation of
the Tet truce and the enemy attacks on Da Nang and elsewhere in southern I Corps
dampened the usual festive mood of the holiday season. On 30 January, Brigadier
General Ngo Quang Truong, the commanding general of the 1st ARVN Division,
canceled all leaves and ordered his units on full alert. Most of the troops,
however, already on leave, were unable to rejoin their units. Moreover, the only
South Vietnamese forces in the city itself were the division staff, the division
Headquarters Company, the Reconnaissance Company, a few support units, and
Truong's personal guard, the elite 'Black Panther' Company. The division
headquarters was in the walled Mang Ca military compound, self-contained in the
northeast corner of the Citadel. General Truong positioned the Black Panthers on
the Tay Loc airfield in the Citadel, about a mile southwest of the division
compound. In the southern city, the U.S. maintained a MACV compound in a former
hotel which served as a billet and headquarters for the U.S. advisory staff to
the 1st ARVN Division.1 The NVA Attack
Although allied intelligence reported
elements of two NVA regiments, the 4th and the 6th, in Thua Thien Province,
there was little evidence of enemy activity in the Hue sector. Indeed, the 1st
ARVN Division dismissed any conjecture that the enemy had either 'the intent' or
'capability' to launch a division-size attack against the city. U.S. order of
battle records listed the 6th NVA headquarters with its 804th Battalion in the
jungle-canopied Base Area 114, about 20 to 25 kilometers west of Hue. One
battalion, the 806th, was supposed to be in the 'Street Without Joy' area in
*Peter Braestrup, then the Saigon
Bureau Chief for the Washington Post, observed that this informal truce only
applied to Hue. Peter Braestrup, Comments on draft, n.d. IJan95] (Vietnam
Comment File).