Operation El Paso and Operation El Paso II were operations conducted by 3rd Brigade, 1st Infantry Division in Bình Long Province, lasting from 19 May to 13 July 1966.
Prelude[]
In April 1966 prisoner interrogations revealed that the Viet Cong 271st and 273rd Regiments of the 9th Division were moving into War zone C. In early May a captured Viet Cong notebook revealed plans for a major offensive near Lộc Ninh. A CIDG patrol also killed a Viet Cong officer 5 kilometres southeast of Lộc Ninh and retrieved documents showing that 3 regiments from the 9th Division and the People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN) 101st Regiment planned attacks near Lộc Ninh by 10 May. The attack did not materialize but on 17 May Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) forces tangled with Viet Cong from the 271st and 273rd Regiments west of An Lộc. BG William E. DePuy instructed Col Brodbeck's 3rd Brigade to counter the coming offensive.[1]
Operation[]
El Paso[]
From 19–20 May the 3rd Brigade's three infantry battalions moved to Lộc Ninh and began area searches. By 24 May the searches had failed to locate the Viet Cong and BG DePuy ordered the 3rd Brigade to withdraw from the area.[1]:312
El Paso II[]
In late May, US intelligence learned that the Viet Cong had postponed their Bình Long offensive and now planned to cut Highway 13 and attack An Lộc, Chơn Thành and Lộc Ninh. MG Jonathan O. Seaman ordered BG DePuy to counter this new offensive and Operation El Paso II was launched on 2 June. The 3rd Brigade already in the operational area would be reinforced by the 1st Squadron, 4th Cavalry Regiment (1/4th Cavalry), the 2nd Battalion, 18th Infantry Regiment (2/18th Infantry) and the 2nd Battalion, 28th Infantry Regiment.[1]:312
On 8 June Troop A 1/4th Cavalry comprising 9 M48 tanks and 32 other armored vehicles left Phu Loi Base Camp to move to An Lộc. That afternoon near the village of Tau O the lead M48 was disabled by a mine as part of an ambush by 2 battalions of the 272nd Regiment. The remaining vehicles formed a perimeter and fought off the Viet Cong attack for several hours before reinforcements from the ARVN 5th Division arrived and the Viet Cong withdrew. Searches of the area found 105 Viet Cong bodies and it was estimated that a further 200-250 dead had been removed, US losses were 14 killed and ARVN losses were 19 killed.[1]:312–3
On 9 June the operation was expanded by the addition of Col Sidney Berry's 1st Brigade, 1st Infantry Division which was tasked with searching for the Viet Cong from Highway 13 west to Minh Thanh.[1]:313
On 11 June Company A 2/28th Infantry patrolling northwest of Lộc Ninh with a CIDG platoon was engaged by the Viet Cong 1st Battalion, 273rd Regiment located on two adjacent hills, Hill 150 and Hill 175. As the battle developed Company C 2/28th Infantry was deployed as reinforcements and following air and artillery strikes assaults were launched on the hills. At 14:30 Company C and the battalion's reconnaissance platoon assaulted Hill 177 from the south and west but were pushed back by a Viet Cong counterattack. The reconnaissance platoon took position in a trench which was covered by a Viet Cong machine gun and lost 19 killed. Despite this by 16:15 the Viet Cong were forced from the hill and withdrew northwest harassed by air and artillery strikes. On Hill 150 Company A made 2 assaults both of which were repulsed, Company B then joined the fight and by 16:30 had forced the Viet Cong from the hill where they were ambushed by a waiting CIDG Company. US losses were 33 killed, while Viet Cong losses were 98 by body count and subsequent intelligence indicated that half of the 1st Battalion had been killed.[1]:314
On 30 June Troops B and C 1/4th Cavalry and Company C 2/18th Infantry left An Lộc to escort engineers to repair a bridge at Cam Le and carry out reconnaissance along Highway 13 north of the bridge. At 09:40 as Troop B proceeded north of the intersection of Highway 13 and Highway 17, they drove into an L-shaped ambush by the 271st Regiment. Within 30 minutes all of Troop B's M48s had been disabled. Air strikes and gunships were directed to support the beleaguered unit and Troop C rushed to the scene allowing Troop B to withdraw south and then west to set up blocking positions. By midday the Viet Cong began to withdraw to the west, fighting their way past reinforcements arriving at the battlefield. The 1st Brigade was ordered to pursue the Viet Cong and deployed west towards the Cambodian border. In order to cover the 271st Regiment's withdrawal, the Viet Cong commander Senior Col. Hoàng Cầm ordered the 273rd Regiment to attack Company A 2/18th Infantry which was in a night defensive position near the border. At sunset on 1 July the position was assaulted by a Viet Cong platoon, Company C 2/18th Infantry moved to reinforce Company A and the Viet Cong withdrew by 20:00. At 05:45 on 2 July the Viet Cong attacked the position again with mortar fire and several ground assaults, bad weather delayed US airstrikes but they eventually forced the Viet Cong to withdraw by 09:00. US losses were 13 killed, while Viet Cong losses were 98 killed and an estimated further 110-152 bodies removed.[1]:316–8
Aftermath[]
Operation El Paso II officially concluded on 13 July. Operation El Paso III was then launched by the 1st Brigade in the same area and continued until 3 September with negligible results. Total US casualties were 125 killed, while Viet Cong losses were 825 killed, with a further 1249 estimated killed.[1]:324[2]
References[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Carland, John (2000). Combat Operations: Stemming the Tide, May 1965 to October 1966. Government Printing Office. p. 309. ISBN 9781782663430.
- ↑ "Vietnam Archive Operations Database". The Vietnam Center and Archive, Texas Tech University. https://www.vietnam.ttu.edu/resources/operations/operations.txt. Retrieved 21 March 2017.
This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Army Center of Military History.
The original article can be found at Operation El Paso and the edit history here.