U.S. MARINES IN
VIETNAM
THE LANDING AND
THE BUILDUP
1965
by
Jack Shulimson
and Major Charles M. Johnson,
USMC
HISTORY AND MUSEUMS DIVISION
HEADQUARTERS, U.S. MARINE CORPS
WASHINGTON, D.C.
library of Congress Card No. 78-600120
PCN 190 003076 00
For sale by the Superintendent of Documents,
U.S. Government Printing Office Washington, D.C.20402 (Paper Cover)
Foreword
This is the second volume in a series of nine chronological
histories being prepared by the Marine Corps History and Museums Division to
cover the entire span of Marine Corps involvement in the Vietnam War. This
volume details the Marine activities during 1965, the year the war escalated and
major American combat units were committed to the conflict. The narrative traces
the landing of the nearly 5,000-man 9th Marine Expeditionary Brigade and its
transformation into the in Marine Amphibious Force, which by the end of the year
contained over 38,000 Marines.
During this period, the Marines established three enclaves
in South Vietnam's northernmost corps area, I Corps, and their mission expanded
from defense of the Da Nang Airbase to a balanced strategy involving base
defense, offensive operations, and pacification. This volume continues to treat
the activities of Marine advisors to the South Vietnamese armed forces but in
less detail than its predecessor volume, U. S. Marines in Vietnam, 1954-1964;
The Advisory and Combat Assistance Era.
The co-author, Mr. Jack Shulimson, is the senior civilian
historian on the Vietnam project. He has been with the division since 1964 and
has worked on Vietnam studies since 1965. Mr. Shulimson has a MA in history from
the University of Michigan and is a PhD candidate in American Studies at the
University of Maryland.
Major (now Lieutenant Colonel) Charles M. Johnson was with
the History and Museums Division from September 1972 until September 1973. He
has a BA in history from the University of Minnesota and was commissioned in the
Marine Corps upon graduation in 1959. Lieutenant Colonel Johnson served two
tours in Vietnam, first as Commanding Officer, Battery L, 4th Battalion, llth
Marines from May 1966 until May 1967 and then from December 1970 until August
1971 as public information officer in the Public Information Office, U. S.
Military Assistance Command, Vietnam in Saigon. He is now Commanding Officer,
Headquarters and Service Battalion, 1st Force Service Support Group at Camp
Pendleton, California.
E. H. SIMMONS
Brigadier General, U. S. Marine Corps (Ret.) Director of
Marine Corps History and Museums
Reviewed and Approved: 15 June 1978
Preface
U. S. Marines in Vietnam, 1965 is largely based on
previously classified studies prepared by the History and Museums Division in
the 1960s and early 1970s. These are: Lieutenant Colonel John J. Cahill and Jack
Shulimson, "History of U. S. Marine Corps Operations in Vietnam, January-June
1965"; Jack Shulimson, "U. S. Marine Corps Operations in the Republic of
Vietnam, July-December 1965"; and Jack Shulimson, "U. S. Marines in Vietnam,
Introduction,'' and "U.S. Marines in Vietnam, May-December 1965,'' Parts 1 and 2
of a then projected eight-part, single-volume history, entitled ' 'Marines in
Vietnam, 1954-Mayl968."
In 1972, Major Johnson was given the task of combining these
four separate histories into one coherent narrative. Upon Major Johnson's
departure from the division the following year, Mr. Shulimson continued with the
revision, incorporating new research material as it became available. In
addition to the four studies listed above, the authors have consulted the
official records of the U. S. Marine Corps, records of other Services when
appropriate, the Oral History Collection of the History and Museums Division,
comment files of the History and Museum Division, and pertinent published
primary and secondary works. Although none of the information in this history is
classified, some of the documentation on which it is based still has a
classified designation. Comment drafts of the manuscript were reviewed by over
110 persons, most of whom were directly associated with the events and many of
their remarks have been incorporated into the narrative. A list of all those
asked to comment is included in the appendices. All ranks used in the body of
the text are those ranks held by the individual in 1965.
The production of this volume has been a cooperative effort
on the part of several members of the History and Museums Division. The
manuscript was prepared under the editoral direction of Mr. Henry I. Shaw, Jr.,
Chief Historian of the History and Museums Division. Lieutenant Colonel Lane
Rogers completed the final editing and also wrote the reconnaissance section of
Chapter 11. Mr. Benis M. Frank prepared the index. Mr. Paul D. Johnston, head of
the Publications Production Section, skillfully shepherded the manuscript
through the various production stages. Special thanks go to Mrs. Mary Lewis, who
helped type the first comment draft, and Miss Catherine A. Stoll, Corporal
Denise F. Alexander, and Lance Corporal Paul W. Gibson of the Production
Section, who worked unstintingly on both comment editions and the final version.
Staff Sergeant Jerry L. Jakes was responsible for preparing all maps, charts,
and cover layouts. Unless otherwise credited, photographs are from official
Marine Corps files. The authors, of course, assume sole responsibility for the
content of the text, including opinions expressed and any errors in fact.
Charles M. Johnson Jack Shulimson
Table of Contents
Page
Foreword.................................................................. iii
Preface
....................................................................v
Table of Contents
..........................................................vii
Maps......................................................................x
Introduction
............................................................... xi
PARTI ESTABLISHING THE
ENCLAVES....................................1
Chapter 1 The Call for Marines
................................................ 3
Alert and
Realert......................................................... 3
Air Retaliation and the Arrival of the HAWKS
................................4
Land the
Marines......................................................... 6
The
Landing............................................................. 9
Chapter 2 The 9th MEB in Vietnam
........................................... 16
The First
Weeks........................................................ .16
Estimate of the Situation
.................................................. 20
More Marines Arrive
.................................................... 23
An Expanded
Mission.................................................... 27
'ChuLai...............................................................
.29
Chapter 3 Formation and Development of IE
MAP............................... 36
The Birth of HI MAP
................................................... .36
The Le My
Experiment................................................... 37
Building the Chu Lai Airfield
.............................................. 39
in MAP in
Transition................................................... .42
The Seeds of
Pacification.................................................. 46
June Operations in the Three Enclaves
..................................... .48
Chapter 4 Reinforcement and Expansion
....................................... 50
The Need for Further
Reinforcements....................................... 50
The Establishment of the Qui Nhon Enclave
................................ .53
The Attack on the Airfield
............................................... .56
Expansion to the South
................................................... 58
Further Reinforcements
.................................................. 65
PARTH THE BIG BATTLES
......................................:....... .67
Chapter 5 Operation STARLITE: The First Big
Battle ........................... .69
Intelligence and Planning
................................................. 69
The Battle
............................................................. 72
The Aftermath.
......................................................... 79
Chapter 6 The Enemy Refuses to Give Battle:
September-November Operations....... 84
Operation
PIRANHA....................................................84
Much Ado About CS, Operation STOMP
.................................. .88
October-November Operations
........................................... .91
Chapter 7 The 1st VC Again: Operation HARVEST
MOON ..................... .98
The Abandonment of Hiep Due
........................................... .98
Activation of Task Force DELTA and Planning the
Operation .................. 101
The VC Strike and the Marines are Committed
.............................. 103
The Search of the Phouc Ha Valley
........................................ 106
The Fight at Ky Phu
.................................................... 108
The
Wrap-Up.......................................................... 109
PARTHI THE CONTINUING WAR
....................................... 113
Chapter 8 Defending and Expanding the Base
Areas ............................. 115
The Evolution of a
Strategy............................................... 115
Further Deployments and Realinements
.................................... 116
Refinement of Command Relations
........................................ 120
Expanding the TAORS
.................................................. 122
Attacks on the Airfields and Hill
22........................................ 125
Base Defense
.......................................................... 129
Extended
Patrolling..................................................... 131
Chapter 9
Pacification...................................................... 133
The Combined Action Program
........................................... 133
Protection of the Harvest: GOLDEN FLEECE
............................... 138
Cordon and Search: The Seeds of COUNTY FAIR and
Population Control ....... 141
Civic
Action........................................................... 142
The Ngu Hanh Son Campaign and the Frustrations
of Pacification............... 144
PART IV SUPPORTING THE TROOPS.
.................................... 147
Chapter 10 Marine Aviation in Vietnam
...................................... 149
Deployments
.......................................................... 149
Control of Marine Aviation
.............................................. 151
Fixed-Wing Operations
.................................................. 152
Helicopter
Operations................................................... 158
Air Defense Responsibilities
.............................................. 162
Chapter 11 Fire Support and Reconnaissance
................................... 164
Artillery
Support....................................................... 164
Naval Gunfire
......................................................... 167
Other Ground Combat Support
........................................... 169
Marine
Reconnaissance.................................................. 170
1st Force Reconnaissance Company: The Early
Days.......................... 172
3d Reconnaissance Battalion, Opening Moves
............................... 174
Force and Division Reconnaissance Merged
................................. 179
Chapter 12 Logistics and Construction
........................................ 181
The Logistic Situation
................................................... 181
IE MAP Naval Responsibilities
........................................... 182
RED BALL and CRITIPAC
.............................................. 184
The Force Logistic Support Group
......................................... 185
Engineering and Construction
............................................ 186
PARTY OTHER MARINE ACTIVITIES
...................................191
Chapter 13 The SLFof the Seventh Fleet
...................................... 193
Disbandment of the SLF
................................................. 193
A New Mission
........................................................ 193
The Reestablishmentof the SLF
........................................... 194
Command and Control Changes
........................................... 194
The First DAGGER THRUST Raids
......................................197
Further Changes in the SLF
.............................................. 200
The Saigon Conference
.................................................. 201
The Second Series of DAGGER THRUST Raids
.............................202
The SLF at the End of the
Year............................................203
Chapter 14 Advisors and Other Marine
Activities............................... 204
Marine Advisors to the Vietnamese Marine
Corps............................ 204
Marine Advisors to the Rung Sat Special Zone
............................... 207
U.S. Marines of the I Corps Advisory Group
................................ 208
Marines Serving with MACV Headquarters in
Saigon ........................ 209
Company L, Marine Support Battalion
..................................... 210
Embassy
Marines....................................................... 211
Chapter 15 Conclusion
..................................................... 212
NOTES
................................................................. 213
APPENDICES
. A. Marine Task Organizations and Command List
January-December 1965 ....... 227
B. Glossary of Terms and Abbreviations
.................................... 232
C. Chronology of Significant
Events........................................ 235
D. Medal of Honor Citations, 1965
........................................ 241
E. List of Reviewers
..................................................... 245
F. Table of Organization: El MAP and Naval
Component Command as of 31 Dec 1965 .................. 246
Index....................................................................
251
Maps
Da Nang Area, Spring 1965
................................................... 8
ICorps, 1965
.............................................................. 13
Da Nang Area, July-December 1965
.......................................... .60
OperationStarlite, 18-19August 1965
........................................ .74
Operation Piranha, D-Day, 7 September 1965
................................... 86
Operation Stomp, D-Day, 5 September
1965..................................... 89
Operation Red Snapper, D-Day, 22 October
1965.................................92
Operation Black Ferret, D-Day, 3 November
1965... .............................95
Operation Blue Marlin I, D-Day, 10 November
1965 ............................ .95
Operation Blue Marlin II, D-Day, 16 November
1%5 .............................97
Operation Harvest Moon, Area of Operations,
December 1965 .................... 102
Chu Lai TAORs, December 1965
............................................ 119
Hue-Phu Bai TAOR, December 1965
......................................... 123
Da Nang TAORs and RAORs
1965...........................................171
Chu Lai TAORs and RAORs
1965-........................................... 173
Hue-Phu Bai TAORs and RAORs 1965
.......................................176
Dagger Thrust Operation
1965............................................... 199
Introduction
In 1965, the Marines were the first of the U. S. Armed
Services to deploy large ground combat units to South Vietnam. By the end of the
year, more than 38,000 Marines made up the in Marine Amphibious Force (IE MAP)
under the command of Major General Lewis W. Walt. IK MAP was part of the United
States Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (USMACV), commanded by General
William C. Westmoreland. General Westmoreland in turn was responsible to Admiral
Ulysses S. Grant Sharp, Commander in Chief, Pacific (CinCPac) in Hawaii, and
through Sharp to the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) in Washington. The American
command's mission in Vietnam was to assist the Republic of Vietnam (RVN) in its
war against the Communist insurgents, the Viet Cong, who were being provided
with leadership, reinforcements, and supplies from the north by the Democratic
Republic of Vietnam (DRVN).
Since July 1954, when the Geneva Accords ended the Communist
Viet Minh war against the French in what was then called Indochina, Vietnam
remained divided along the 17th Parallel with a Communist government in the
north and an anti-Communist regime in the south. Throughout the following
decade, Vietnamese Communists conducted a sub-rosa political war, which after
1960 became an active guerrilla war to overthrow the southern government. Long
before 1965, the United States had been involved in this embattled nation.
A U. S. Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG) existed in
Vietnam as early as 1950 and continued to function after the signing of the
Geneva Accords. At the end of 1954 the United States agreed to support the South
Vietnamese Armed Forces in conjunction with the French. After the last French
military advisors departed Vietnam in 1957, the entire advisory effort came
under American auspices.
In the first year of his administration, 1961, President
John P. Kennedy sent a high-level mission, headed by former U.S. Army Chief of
Staff General Maxwell D. Taylor, to determine what the United States could do to
prevent a Communist takeover in South Vietnam. Acting on General Taylor's
recommendations, President Kennedy directed the
implementation of a series of military and political
measures to strengthen the South Vietnamese regime. These actions included the
provision of substantial amounts of military equipment, as well as sending U.S.
military advisors and support units to Vietnam.
With the growing U.S. commitment in South Vietnam as a
result of the Communist insurgency, on 8 February 1962 the United States
established the United States Military Assistance Command, Vietnam under Army
General Paul D. Harkins. By the end of the year, more than 12,000 U.S. military
personnel, including technicians, advisors, pilots, and supply and
administrative personnel, were in Vietnam. Among this number were 18 Marine
advisors to the South Vietnamese Marine Corps and a Marine helicopter task
group, code named SHUFLY, consisting of a helicopter squadron and support
elements.
Despite this infusion of American assistance, an open
dispute between the South Vietnamese government and the Buddhist hierarchy tore
apart the delicate fabric of the South Vietnamese political structure. Faced
with increasingly violent and dramatic Buddhist demonstrations against his rule,
Ngo Dinh Diem, the controversial President of the RVN, attempted to crush the
Buddhist movement in August 1963 by arresting its leaders. The crisis eventually
resulted in a successful military coup against Diem's government in November and
his death.
Following the coup, there was a drastic realignment of the
South Vietnamese civil and military apparatus. More than 31 high-ranking
military officers were dismissed for having actively supported the Diem regime.
On 6 January 1964, the provisional government appointed a three-man military
junta consisting of Major General Duong Van "Big" Minh,* as Chief of Staff,
Major General Tran Van
"Ironically General Minh was to be the last President of
South Vietnam. He ordered the surrender of South Vietnam to the Communist forces
on 30 April 1975, two days after assuming the Presidency when the South
Vietnamese cause was already lost.
Don, and Major General Le Van Kim, to run the government and
the armed forces. Twenty-three days later, a new personality, Major General
Nguyen Khanh, assumed the leadership from the junta. He became the chairman of
the Revolutionary Military Council while General Minh remained as the nominal
chief of state. In August, Khanh, having encountered Buddhist opposition,
promised liberalization of his regime. On 26 September, the Vietnamese
Revolutionary Council elected Phan Khac Sun as Chief of State, and the former
mayor of Saigon, Tran Van Huong, as Premier. Real power, however, continued to
lie with the military, which on 20 December dissolved the Civilian High National
Council, although Suu and Huong remained in their respective positions.
With this political instability and growing enemy strength,
the U.S. increased its military support to the South Vietnamese regime. By the
end of 1964, the United States Military Assistance Command, now commanded by
General Westmoreland, had grown to over 20,000 men.
The Marine contingents in Vietnam showed a corresponding
increase in 1964. Of the over 800 Marines in Vietnam, the bulk were in South
Vietnam's I Corps Tactical Zone (ICTZ) consisting of the five northern
provinces. Sixty Marine advisors were attached to the Army of the Republic of
Vietnam (ARVN) units in ICTZ. The SHUFLY unit, reinforced by a Marine rifle
company for airfield security, was at the Da Nang Airbase just south of the city
of Da Nang in Quang Nam Province. The remaining Marines served as advisors to
the Vietnamese Marine Corps (20 Marines served in this capacity), as members of
the Marine guard detachment at the U.S. Embassy in Saigon, and with the MACV
staff in Saigon.
In May 1964, a Marine radio detachment supported by a
reinforced Marine infantry platoon deployed to Tiger Tooth Mountain, north of
Khe Sanh in northwestern South Vietnam. This composite force, designated
Advisory Team One, later redeployed to Dong Bach Ma, a 3,500-foot mountain 25
miles west-northwest of Da Nang. Advisory Team One returned to Da Nang in
September 1964 and then was disbanded. During its short existence, Advisory Team
One became the first Marine ground
unit to conduct independent operations in South Vietnam.*
During 1964, the U. S. government examined the possibility
of sending U.S. combat troops to South Vietnam for the defense of critical U.S.
installations within the country. At that time General Taylor, then the U. S.
Ambassador to South Vietnam, warned Washington against overstressing static
security and observed that aggressive field operations by the Vietnamese Armed
Forces were the best means for restoring law, order, and public safety in the
Republic of Vietnam.'
In August 1964, tensions between North Vietnam and the
United States reached a new high when North Vietnamese torpedo boats attacked
two U.S. destroyers, the Turner Joy (DD 951) and Maddox (DD 731), in the Gulf of
Tonkin. On 4 August, the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff recommended retaliatory air
strikes against several North Vietnamese patrol boat bases and fuel storage
areas. The President approved the recommendation and on 5 August Seventh Fleet
carrier aircraft carried out bombing missions against selected targets in North
Vietnam. On 7 August, the U.S. Congress passed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution in
which it approved and supported "the determination of the President, as
Commander-in-Chief, to take all necessary measures to repel any armed attack
against the forces of the United States and to prevent further aggression.''
The possible involvement of American forces.was of special
concern to the Marine Corps. In the summer of 1964, the most combat ready
American troops in the Far East were those of the 3d Marine Division (3d MarDiv)
on Okinawa, commanded by Major General William R. Collins, and the 1st Marine
Aircraft Wing (1st MAW) at Iwakuni, Japan, and Okinawa, under the command of
Major General Paul J. Fontana. These two Marine units were task-organized under
several provisional headquarters to support the various contingency plans for
Southeast Asia. The largest of the provisional commands was the in Marine
Expeditionary Force (HI MEF) consisting of the entire 3d Division and the 1st
MAW. Components
*See LtGen Victor H. Krulak Ret), comments on draft MS, dtd
2Aug77 (Vietnam Comment File) and Captain Robert H. Whitlow, U. S. Marines in
Vietnam; The Advisory and Combat Assistance Era, 19)4-1964 (Washington, D. C.:
History and Museums Division, HQMC, 1977), pp. 138-41.
of the division and wing could also be combined
provisionally into a Marine expeditionary brigade (MEB), essentially composed of
a regimental landing team (RLT) and a Marine aircraft group (MAG). Both the air
and ground components could be quickly loaded on board Navy amphibious shipping
for deployment to South Vietnam or anywhere in the Pacific.
Following the attack against the U.S. destroyers in the Gulf
of Tonkin, the U.S. Pacific Command activated the 9th Marine Expeditionary
Brigade (9th MEB). The MEB, under the command of the assistant division
commander of the 3d Marine Division, Brigadier General Raymond G. Davis, a
holder of the Medal of Honor, consisted of the 9th Marines regimental
headquarters and three battalion landing teams (BLTs). On 6 August, the 6,000
Marines of the MEB embarked on board Seventh Fleet amphibious shipping. A
composite Marine aircraft group (MAG), with headquarters and fixed wing
squadrons in Japan and helicopter squadrons on Okinawa, was alerted to support
the MEB, but was not embarked. Although the brigade did not land in Vietnam at
this time, the August crisis resulted in the transformation of the 9th MEB from
a paper organization into an effective force in readiness, capable of landing
whereever needed on extremely short notice.
When the Gulf of Tonkin crisis faded, the am-
phibious task force carrying the MEB relaxed. Of the three
BLTs making up the brigade, one returned to Okinawa, another to the Philippines,
and a third remained afloat as part of the Special Landing Force (SLF) of the
Seventh Fleet. While General Davis returned to Okinawa, he maintained a skeleton
headquarters at Subic Bay on board the U.S. task force command ship, Mount
McKinley (AGC 7). Brigadier General John P. Coursey relieved General Davis as
brigade commander on 16 October 1964.
As 1965 began the Viet Cong had entered a new phase of their
insurgency against the South Vietnamese government. The Communists departed from
their usual hit and run guerrilla tactics and engaged the armed forces of the
Republic of Vietnam (RVNAF) near the village of Binh Gia, 40 miles east of
Saigon, in a pitched battle which lasted from 28 December 1964 until 1 January
1965. During the struggle for Binh Gia, two regiments from the 9th VC Division
ambushed and virtually destroyed two battalions of South Vietnamese troops,
including the 4th Battalion, Vietnamese Marine Corps (VNMC), and inflicted heavy
casualties on relieving armored and mechanized forces. According to General
Westmoreland, Binh Gia marked the start of the final Communist offensive, "it
meant the beginning of an intensive military challenge which the Vietnamese
government could not meet with its own resources."2