Tuesday, July 1, 2025

 ĐƠN VỊ THIỆT HẠI NẶNG VÌ LỌT Ổ PHỤC KÍCH Ở PHÚ TÚC KHIẾN 4 CỐ VẤN MỸ TỬ TRẬN







         

BCH CỦA CỐ VẤN MỸ CỦA SĐ 7 TẠI MỸ THO. 

NDTV VỚI TRUNG LIÊN BAR BẢO VỆ KONTUM 
TRONG NĂM 1972 VỚI DÂY ĐẠN 40 VIÊN 
Đại liên 30, với dây đạn 250 viên đạn 7.62 ly.

Cố vấn Mỹ và lính MIKE Force dùng đại liên
 30 bắn vào Tam giác Sắt tháng 11/1964. 


LỜI NÓI ĐẦU: Trong bài Người Chết Dưới Chân Chúa trong quyển Dấu Binh Lửa của Phan nhật Nam, tác giả kể lại TĐ 7 Dù  đã đi tiếp viện cho một đơn vị bạn ở Kiến Hòa vào cuối tháng 8/1964. Vào mạng tìm hiểu, tôi biết ngày 20/8, 1 đơn vị của sđ 7 và BĐQ, trong khi tái chiếm đồn Phú Túc trong tỉnh Kiến Hòa, đã lọt vào ổ phục kích. Chỉ trong hơn 1 giờ, 2 đơn vị bị thiệt hại nặng và 4 cố vấn của họ đều tử trận. Sau đây là phần chuyển ngữ.

... 

"Cuộc đấu tranh quân sự-chính trị tiếp tục trong tháng 8/1964. Chương trình bình định tiến triển chậm chạp. Con số những ấp đã xây lên tới 155, các toán quân y dân sự vụ đã trị 20 ngàn dân thường, và sư đoàn (sđ) 7 bộ binh đã hoàn tất 18 chương trình dân sự vụ. Trên nền tảng này (backdrop), chiến tranh vẫn tiếp tục. Vào ngày 10/8, ĐT Huỳnh văn Tồn, TL của sđ 7, đã phản ứng trước tin một đại đội (đ.đ.) Quân Giải phóng Nhân Dân hay VC được phát hiện ở 15 km tây của Mỹ Tho bằng cách gửi 4 TĐ (1 Dù, 1 bộ binh, và 2 BĐQ) và một chi đoàn M-113, yểm trợ bởi một pháo đội 105 ly. Quân Dù và bộ binh tùng thiết tiến về phía nam từ QL-4 trong khi BĐQ tấn công từ đông sang tây từ 1 vị trí 5 km từ phía nam. Mọi đơn vị (đv) đều chạm địch, và không quân đã giết 42 địch. Quân nổi dậy di tản khoảng 70 thương binh. Quân ta có 16 chết và 41 bị thương.

Mười ngày sau đó, quân cách mạng đã giăng bẫy. Ngày 20/8/1964, chúng đã tràn ngập đồn Phú Túc, 10 km tây bắc của Bến Tre, tỉnh lỵ của Kiến Hòa. Chúng giết 7, làm bị thương 15, và bắt đi số còn lại trong số 36 lính canh giữ đồn. 

Kế đó chúng đốt đồn này và tấn công 1 ấp gần đó. Những tấn công này nhằm xui khiến (goad) quân Nam VN gửi viện binh. Quân chính phủ (CP) mắc bẫy, khi gửi vài TĐ, trong lúc địch né tránh. Chúng đã chờ quân CP xuất phát tới Phú Túc dọc theo 1 đường đầy cây cối, bằng cách tấn công đoàn quân khi họ sơ hở (is down). Bị lọt ổ phục kích là 360 lính của TĐ 41 BĐQ và 3/12 của sư đoàn 7 bộ binh. Trận chiến kéo dài hơn 1 giờ với TĐ 514 VC liên tục tấn công họ bằng lưởi lê, kèm theo tiếng kèn thúc quân.

Có 4 người Mỹ dự trận này:

Thiếu úy James Coyle dù bị thương nặng, vẫn tiếp tục chiến đấu. Đại úy Bryan Stone dùng trung liên BAR, xem hình, bắn tứ hướng, trong lúc VC vây quanh ông. Thiếu úy William Ragin, nhặt 1 súng máy từ 1 xác chết và bắn ở cự ly gần trước 60 địch quân tiến về ông. Giây phút trước đó, ông tưởng chúng là quân bạn khi chúng mặc quân phục CP. Yểm trợ bởi trung sĩ nhất Tom Ward, Stone, Coyle, và Ragin đã bảo vệ việc rút lui của những lính Nam VN sống sót. Khi trận đánh đã tan, có 85 lính Nam VN tử trận, 60 bị thương, và mất 122 sún, và 91 mất tích. Tất cả 4 người Mỹ đều chết. Tướng Westmoreland dự tang lễ của họ, và Lục quân Mỹ truy tặng Anh dũng Bội tinh cho họ.

Trước thất bại chua cay này, trong đêm đó, các gunship Mỹ đã tấn công quân nổi dậy rút khỏi khu vực bằng thuyền trong khi viện quân đưa thêm vào trận địa. Quân đồng minh đã ko chạm địch vào ngày 21/8, nhưng đêm 21-22/8, các gunship xuất kích để tìm ghe thuyền địch. Vào sáng ngày 22/8, bảy TĐ, hai chi đoàn M-113, và giang thuyền đã bao vậy địch ở quận Hàm Long Kiến hòa. Dù lúc đầu ko chạm địch, nhưng ĐT Tồn đã dùng tàu chuyển quân và trực thăng Mỹ để tấn công kẻ thù đang lẩn trốn (elusive). Trong trận đánh sau đó (ensue), pháo của sư đoàn 7 bắn 3.22 viên, và không quân VN bay 10 phi xuất. Khi dứt tiếng súng, có 98 VC chết, 43 tên bị bắt và 37 súng bị tịch thu. Dân cho biết VC đã chôn 200 xác và mang đi 300 thương binh. Quân CP có 17 chết và 45 bị thương. Tuy nhiên, cố vấn trưởng của quân đoàn (QĐ) 4, ĐT Sammie Homan nghĩ rằng các TL của VN đang trở nên cẩn thận về cuộc phục kích ngày 20/8 tại Phú Túc và những cuộc phục kích gần đây. 

Để phục hồi lòng tin của họ, ông cam kết sẽ dùng trực thăng Mỹ để hộ tống mọi chuyển quân trong tương lai. 

Một ví dụ về lời hứa này đã xảy ra ngày 5/9/1964, khi năm trực thăng gunship UH-1B thuộc đại đội 120 Không vận đã yểm trợ một hành quân của sđ 7 ở Định Tường. Quân nổi dậy núp trong công sự đã bắn vào 3 chiếc gunship, khiến 1 chiếc phải về căn cứ. Các gunship đã bắn trả giết 60 tên và làm bị thương khoảng 40 tên. 34 tên khác đã đầu hàng. 

Trước đó, lúc 0100 ngày 20/7/1964, VC đã tung một tấn công lớn bằng cách tập hợp 3 TĐ--261, 263, và 514--với 1 đại đội (đ.đ.) súng không giựt (SKZ), đại liên, cối, và đặc công cho mỗi TĐ, để tấn công quận lỵ Cái Bè ở phía tây tỉnh Định Tường. 

Khoảng 300 lính, thuộc BCH của trung đoàn và lực lượng diện địa bảo vệ quận lỵ. Quân nổi dậy đã xâm nhập thị trấn và gây nhiều thiệt hại, đặc biệt trại gia binh của ĐPQ. Chúng giết 12 người lính và 40 thân nhân của họ. 40 người lính và 40 dân thường bị thương. Quân nổi dậy rút lui lúc 0500. Quân chính phủ (CP), trả đũa với 5 TĐ yểm trợ bởi thiết giáp để cầm chân địch tại bờ sông Cửu  Long, 5 km tây của Cái Bè. 

TĐ 8 Dù đã tái chiếm Cái Bè và tiếp tục tiến qua vườn mía và ruộng mía cho tới 1545 khi địch tấn công 2 đ.đ. của TĐ này. Đ.đ. đi đầu đã tiến thêm 90 m tới khi hỏa lực mạnh của địch chận đứng họ. Đ.đ. khác đã nao núng (falter) khi đ.đ. trưởng và âm thoại viên (ATV) tử thương. Gunship bắn 130 rocket vào 45 mét trước phòng tuyến bạn. Cuối cùng TĐ Dù rút lui lúc 1900.

Trong khi đó, lúc 1600, quân nổi dậy núp trong hầm hố dọc theo 1 rặng cây, đã cầm chân 1 đ.đ. của tđ 6 dù. Sau 1 vài trì hoãn, vị TĐ trưởng, theo lời khuyên của cố vấn, đã áp dụng chiến thuật gọng kềm (doubble envelope hay pincer), nhưng gọng kềm chỉ tác dụng vào mặt trước địch, thay vì hông địch. Lúc 1830, TĐ tấn công trực diện, hỗ trợ bởi 2 máy bay Mohawk và vài gunship. Bất hạnh thay, gunship bắn lầm TĐ 6 Dù, làm suy yếu (unnerve) TĐ này, khiến họ phải lập chu vi phòng thủ qua đêm. Sau khi trực thăng từ chối tản thương, một trực thăng đã tới tản thương 12 thương binh. Cố vấn trưởng của lữ đoàn Dù, đại tá (ĐT) John Hayes, bày tỏ thất vọng về sự nhút nhát (lack of aggressive) của TĐ Dù này. 13 lính Dù tử trận và 52 bị thương bị thương, và 1 người Mỹ thương. Địch chết 62 và 12 bị thương. Một cố vấn phỏng đoán có thể cả trăm thương vong của đối phương. Quân khu 2 của CS cho rằng trận Cái Bè khiến Nam VN sợ những tấn công vào các quận lỵ khác. 

Hậu quả, bộ TL Mỹ tại VN hay MACV nhận xét rằng "QLVNCH phải chia quân để tăng cường cho các đồn bót, và tinh thần binh sĩ thờ ơ (apathetic) hơn trước. 

Chuyển ngữ từ quyển: Advice and Support: The Middle Years, January 1964-June 1965 từ trang 327 đến 330.



 “There was only one MIKE Force battalion activated as it was, by COMUS MACV [Commander U.S. MACV] letter order,” said retired Brigadier General Stringham. “The order was sent from 5th Group that directed C-3 to form one reaction force battalion.”19 Time was critical. A-302 was given less than two weeks to train the new unit. Filling the ranks with new recruits, issuing equipment, and training had to be accomplished by 22 June 1965. After that date, the battalion was to be on call to respond to emergencies in the hotly disputed III CTZ


LTC Miguel “Mike” de la Peña

LTC Miguel “Mike” de la Peña

“The unit was named the MIKE Force. This came from LTC Miguel ‘Mike’ de la Peña. ‘Mike’ was his code name,” said Stringham.20 The MIKE Force was composed of three 150-man companies. With 348 Company as the nucleus, A-302 recruited Nungs to fill the ranks of the other companies. Nungs were also hired to form the reconnaissance platoon.21 There were no Vietnamese CIDG or Special Forces in the first MIKE Force. The strong family ties among the Nungs made the recruitment easy and virtually eliminated the security problems.


“Nepotism was the name of the game,” said Stringham. “Most of the older Nungs were ex-French Foreign Legion [French Colonial Army] guys and they would vouch for the younger ones. It was kind of a ‘self-vetting process,’ but we didn’t have a lot of time.”22 New recruits were given a cursory physical by the A-302 team medics to check for diseases and fitness. The troops were issued one set of tiger-stripe fatigues and M-2 carbines. Each company weapons platoon had three M-1919A1 .30 caliber machine guns and three 60 mm mortars.23 For communications, they were issued PRC-25 radios. The equipment for the MIKE Force came from the 5th SFG logistics base at Nha Trang. Being on the MIKE Force was economically advantageous for the troops. MIKE Force Nungs were paid considerably more than their CIDG counterparts. Each man received 6600 piastres ($55.00) per month as opposed to the 1500 p ($12.00) that was the CIDG monthly wage.24


A U.S. Air Force B-52D Stratofortress dropping 500 pound bombs over Vietnam. The first MIKE Force mission was to conduct a bomb damage assessment following a B-52 strike.

A U.S. Air Force B-52D Stratofortress dropping 500 pound bombs over Vietnam. The first MIKE Force mission was to conduct a bomb damage assessment following a B-52 strike.

“I was the battalion commander,” said Stringham. “Two NCOs [non-commissioned officers] worked with each company. The guys lived with their companies.”25 A-302 focused on marksmanship and infantry small-unit tactics to get the MIKE Force operational. That test came on 22 June 1965.


“The first mission was to take three 6-man teams by helicopter into an area between Highway 13 and the Michelin Rubber Plantation to do a [bomb damage] assessment after a B-52 strike,” recalls Stringham. “The B-52s came out of Guam, but due to a mid-air collision during refueling, they missed the target. All they did was knock down enough stuff to make it hard to move through. We got inserted, ran around a while and got picked up. Not a great beginning for the MIKE Force.”26 The real combat evaluation came a month later.


On 19 July 1965, orders came from the C detachment to prepare a MIKE Force company to aid the SF team at the CIDG camp at Bu Ghia Map under attack by two VC battalions. The Mike Force mission was to evacuate the SF team and their CIDG strikers. 348 Company, the new 4th Nung company and the recon platoon were trucked to Tan Son Nhut Airbase to load two C-123 aircraft for the flight that night to Bu Ghia Map near the Cambodian border.27


The bunker on the northwest corner of the camp at Bu Dop prior to the battle. Strong defensive bunkers were located on all four corners of the camp perimeter. The VC destroyed this bunker with recoilless rifle fire.

The bunker on the northwest corner of the camp at Bu Dop prior to the battle. Strong defensive bunkers were located on all four corners of the camp perimeter. The VC destroyed this bunker with recoilless rifle fire.

The ruins of the Special Forces team billets at Bu Dop after the battle. Little was left of the camp after the heavy Viet Cong assault.

The ruins of the Special Forces team billets at Bu Dop after the battle. Little was left of the camp after the heavy Viet Cong assault.

Aerial view of the CIDG camp at Bu Dop. The Viet Cong attacked the north and west sides of the camp. The SF billets were in the center of the camp.

Aerial view of the CIDG camp at Bu Dop. The Viet Cong attacked the north and west sides of the camp. The SF billets were in the center of the camp.

“We went in very light, no rucksacks or food. We landed and it was very dark,” said Stringham. “ I ran off the plane and straight into a ditch. When we got into the camp, I put my people on the perimeter, and got theirs [the camp occupants] off the wall, since they were likely compromised. There was half an A detachment and a handful of strikers there.”28 There was little contact the rest of the night. The arrival of the MIKE Force had prompted the VC to switch their main attack to the nearby Bu Dop camp. In the early morning the C Team ordered Bu Ghia Map abandoned and the MIKE Force to move to reinforce Bu Dop.


At daylight on 20 July, the C-123s began to arrive to evacuate the CIDG, the MIKE Force and their SF advisors. Stringham’s team placed explosive charges throughout the camp, on a five-minute delay. After the MIKE Force was flown out to Song Be, CPT Stringham and two NCOs, SSG William Parnell and SSG Elliot Wilson, were to detonate the charges.29 A helicopter picked up the three Americans, just before the explosives went off. Bu Dop had been hit hard the previous night. Two SF advisors and twenty CIDG strikers had been killed.30


USASF Organization

USASF Organization

Arriving at Bu Dop in the afternoon of 20 July, Stringham positioned his MIKE Force personnel on the south side of the camp perimeter and relocated the CIDG defenders onto the north side. The assumption of the A-302 members was that a good percentage of the CIDG strikers were turncoats and would give the VC access to the camp. The enemy did attack the camp again that night, but could not penetrate the defenses. In the morning, CPT Stringham, now in command at Bu Dop, sent a reconnaissance platoon under SSGs Parnell and Collins out to find the enemy. Since Bu Dop was very close to the Cambodian border, locating the enemy escape route to safety across the border was not difficult. But there were still problems inside the camp.


The team discovered that the claymore mines emplaced on the perimeter defenses had been reversed during the night aiming them into the camp. Based on this, the SF soldiers began to thoroughly interrogate the civilians and CIDG personnel in the camp. Not surprisingly, there was a mass exodus from Bu Dop. With the MIKE Force to strengthen the defenses and the Communist sympathizers driven off, the threat of further attack was minimal.31 This established the pattern for the employing the MIKE Force that was used at Dong Xoai.32


The Nungs, whose loyalty to the Americans was unquestioned, became a major force multiplier. By November 1965, CPT Stringham and most of the members of A-302 involved in the formation of the original MIKE Force had completed their tours and rotated back to the United States. Their legacy, the III CTZ MIKE Force composed of Nungs, was the genesis of one of the most successful Special Forces initiatives in the Vietnam War.


Drawing on the combat experience and loyalty of the Nungs, the original MIKE Force was a reliable, well-trained hard-hitting combat unit that could be rapidly moved to reinforce or relieve CIDG camps when they were attacked by overwhelming enemy forces. The Special Forces C Teams in the other Corps Tactical Zones were soon directed by 5th SFG Headquarters to establish MIKE Force battalions.33 These MIKE Force elements caused a major shift in CIDG operations from defense to offense against the VC and NVA. Mobile Strike Groups and other variations of the original MIKE Force model quickly proliferated enabling Special Forces and their CIDG strikers to aggressively seek out and destroy the enemy.


The purpose of this article was to show how several successful VC attacks against the III CTZ CIDG camps prompted the organization of the first MIKE Force. The loyal, high-quality Nungs of the 348th Company became the nucleus of the MIKE Force. LTC Miguel “Mike” de la Peña, whose nickname became associated with the original MIKE Force battalion, saw his moniker attached to reaction forces countrywide. As the Vietnam War evolved, the term “MIKE Force” came to be applied to a variety of units at different times and places. Future articles will examine the varied and complex history of these units that were labeled MIKE Forces.


The author would like to thank BG (ret) Joseph Stringham, LTC (ret) Miguel de la Peña, the other former MIKE Force members who reviewed the article, and especially Roy Jacobson for their invaluable assistance.

  The Tien Giang Tactical Area

 During the first half of 1964, the autonomous Tien Giang Tactical Area south of Saigon 

had been one of the most contentious places in South Vietnam. The summer mon

soons brought no relief, as the number of enemy incidents in the third quarter of 1964 

increased by 52 percent over the previous quarter. As was the case with other divi

sions, the 7th Division, which controlled the area, tried to achieve a balance between 

pacification and offensive operations, but the need to react to enemy initiatives often 

disrupted this effort.40

 Using the Cushman concept as a model (see Chapter 6), by July, the division had its 

own pacification cadre trained by division and province personnel. One American and 

six Vietnamese MEDCAP teams actively treated the rural sick. Division senior adviser 

Col. Edward Markey credited the division’s educational efforts in getting tactical units 

to be more sympathetic to the population. By July, the division had completed 106 of 

the 405 New Life hamlets planned for 1964.

 T

 he division relied heavily on artillery to perform its mission. Howitzers covered 

85 percent of the Tien Giang area and helped repulse 218 of 243 attacks in July. During 

that same month, government pieces expended more than 6,000 rounds in harassment 

and interdiction fire that produced 200 known casualties. In one incident, 105-mm. 

howitzers fired fifty rounds based on information provided by a civilian, killing 

twenty-four insurgents. The enemy evacuated about seventy additional casualties 

before troops arrived.41

 U.S. Army Aviation also played a key role. The division typically ran three to 

four “Eagle flights” per week, in which U.S. helicopters ferried Vietnamese soldiers 

of platoon or company strength over the countryside in search of insurgents. The 

modus operandi was for Colonel Markey and the division G–3 to take to the air in a 

command-and-control helicopter. If they saw something suspicious, they would send 

in a helicopter bearing a squad from the division’s reconnaissance company. During a 

typical flight, they would drop five to ten squads to search multiple locations. If contact 

occurred, they could call in the rest of the company, or even the divisional reserve—

 two airborne battalions assigned to Tien Giang because of the area’s heavy fighting. 

T

 he technique was successful, but during one landing, Markey triggered a booby trap 

that injured his leg. He returned to the United States for treatment.

On 22 June, the 1st and 3d Airborne Battalions were on a search-and-destroy 

operation in support of the 7th Division near Bang Lang, Dinh Tuong Province, 

72 kilometers southwest of Saigon when they ran into the 261st and 514th PLAF 

Battalions. Enemy fire downed four U.S. Army helicopters, including one carrying the 

commander of U.S. Army Support Command, General Joseph Stilwell. The general and 

all the aviators emerged unscathed. Meanwhile, helicopter gunships lent their support 

to the fight, at one point accidently inflicting nine casualties on the South Vietnamese. 

T

 he combat below was intense, with the paratroopers charging the enemy multiple 

times. Hostile fire killed or wounded all nine platoon leaders in the 1st Battalion, but 

the unit never wavered. The enemy retreated at the end of the day. The paratroopers 

lost twenty-nine killed and eighty-nine wounded. Known enemy losses amounted to 

f

 ifty-eight killed, twenty-six fighters captured, and twenty weapons. One adviser called 

the battle a “little classic of a military operation.” The Army awarded a Bronze Star and 

two Silver Stars to three advisers who fought in the action. One of the men who earned 

the Silver Star was Capt. James J. Lindsay, a future general.43

 On 18 July, nearly one hundred U.S. helicopters ferried troops to Cao Lanh, Kien 

Phong Province, 80 kilometers south of Saigon. The massive operation did not achieve 

much, but the enemy shot down a helicopter that was evacuating wounded soldiers. 

T

 he crew of the downed aircraft fought the enemy for about ten minutes before 

more helicopters arrived to rescue them. Troops also deployed to guard the downed 

helicopter and a team of U.S. technicians. The craft flew out on its own power the 

following day.44

 At 0100 on 20 July, the revolutionaries launched a major attack of their own. 

T

 hey massed three battalions—the 261st, 263d, and 514th—and one company each of 

recoilless rifles, machine guns, mortars, and sappers to attack Cai Be district town in 

western Dinh Tuong. About 300 soldiers, drawn from a regimental headquarters and 

local territorials, defended Cai Be. The insurgents penetrated the town and inflicted 

much damage, particularly on the housing of Regional Forces families. They killed 

twelve defenders and forty dependents. Another forty defenders and forty civilians 

suffered injuries. The insurgents withdrew at 0500.45

 T

 he government responded with five battalions backed by armor to pin the enemy 

against the Mekong River, 5 kilometers west of Cai Be. Two battalions saw the most 

action. The 8th Airborne Battalion occupied Cai Be and then continued through sugar 

cane and rice paddies until 1545 when enemy fire hit two of its companies. The lead 

company advanced an additional 90 meters when heavy automatic weapons fire finally 

stopped it. The second company faltered after enemy fire killed its commander and 

radio operator. U.S. Army gunships fired 130 rockets as close as 45 meters in front of 

friendly troops to keep the enemy at bay. The battalion eventually withdrew at 1900. 

Meanwhile, at 1600, insurgent soldiers entrenched along a tree line pinned 

down a company from the 6th Airborne Battalion. After some delay, the 

battalion commander accepted his adviser’s recommendation to attempt a double 

envelopment, but the move was too shallow, and the pincers hit the enemy’s front 

rather than its flanks. At 1830, the battalion launched a frontal assault, assisted 

by two armed U.S. Army Mohawk aircraft and several gunships. Unfortunately, 

the gunships mistakenly hit the 6th Airborne, unnerving the unit, which then 

recoiled into a perimeter for the night. After Vietnamese helicopters refused to 

evacuate the casualties, a U.S. Army medevac helicopter arrived to remove twelve 

wounded soldiers. The senior adviser to the Airborne Brigade, Col. John G. 

Hayes, expressed disappointment at the lack of aggressiveness exhibited by the 

airborne battalions that day. Thirteen Vietnamese paratroopers died and fifty-two 

were wounded, as was one American. The enemy lost forty-six dead and a dozen 

f

 ighters taken prisoner. An adviser speculated that the allies had probably caused 

another hundred casualties. Military Region 2 contended that by attacking Cai 

Be it had made the South Vietnamese fearful of attacks on other district capitals. 

Consequently, observed the command, “They are forced to split up to reinforce the 

posts, and the morale of their troops is more apathetic than before.”46

 T

 he politico-military struggle continued in August. Pacification advanced 

modestly. The number of constructed hamlets rose to 155, MEDCAP teams treated 

20,000 sick civilians, and the division completed 18 civic action projects. Against 

this backdrop, the killing continued. On the tenth, Col. Huynh Van Ton reacted 

to information that a PLAF company was located 15 kilometers west of My Tho by 

sending out four battalions (one airborne, one infantry, and two ranger) and an M113 

troop supported by a platoon of 105-mm. howitzers. The armored carriers and the 

airborne and infantry battalions advanced south from Highway 4 while the rangers 

attacked from east to west from a position 5 kilometers to their south. All units made 

contact, and an airstrike helped to kill forty-two enemy combatants. The insurgents 

evacuated an estimated seventy more casualties. The South Vietnamese lost sixteen 

dead and forty-one wounded.47

 Ten days later, revolutionaries sprang a trap of their own. On 20 August, they 

overran Phu Tuc post in Kien Hoa Province, 10 kilometers northwest of Ben Tre, killing 

seven, wounding fifteen, and capturing the rest of the post’s thirty-six-man garrison. 

T

 he insurgents then burned the post and assaulted a nearby hamlet. These attacks were 

primarily a pretext for goading the South Vietnamese into sending a relief force. The 

government took the bait, sending elements of several battalions, which the insurgents 

declined to engage. Instead, they waited until government troops were departing Phu 

Tuc along a forest road, hitting the column when its guard was down. Caught in the 

ambush were 360 soldiers from the 41st Ranger Battalion and the 3d Battalion, 12th 

Infantry. The fighting lasted for more than an hour, with the 514th PLAF Battalion 

launching repeated bayonet charges heralded by bugles.

 Four Americans participated in the combat. 1st Lt. James M. Coyle was severely 

wounded but nevertheless kept fighting. Capt. Bryan C. Stone found himself firing 

a Browning automatic rifle in four directions as the enemy closed in around him. 

1st Lt. William D. H. Ragin grabbed a machine gun from a dead soldier and fired 

it point-blank at sixty advancing enemy soldiers. Moments before, he had thought 

they were friendly because they were clothed in government uniforms. Assisted by 

Sfc. Tom Ward, Stone, Coyle, and Ragin covered the retreat of the surviving South 

Vietnamese. By the time the battle was over, the insurgents had killed 85 South 

Vietnamese soldiers, wounded 60, and captured 122 weapons, with another 91 

government soldiers missing. All four Americans died in the engagement. General 

Westmoreland attended their memorial service, and the Army posthumously 

awarded them Distinguished Service Crosses.48

 Stung by the calamity, U.S. helicopter gunships attacked insurgents exiting the area 

by boat that night as more troops rushed to the scene. Allied forces failed to contact the 

enemy on the twenty-first, and on the night of 21–22 August, gunships again took to the 

night sky looking for sampans. On the morning of the twenty-second, seven battalions, 

two armored cavalry troops, and naval forces tried to encircle the enemy in Kien Hoa’s 

Ham Long District. The first attempt failed, but Ton quickly redeployed his men by 

boats and U.S. helicopters to catch the elusive foe. In the ensuing battle, 7th Division 

artillery fired 3,222 rounds, and the Vietnamese Air Force flew 10 fighter-bomber 

sorties. When the smoke cleared, the allies had killed ninety-eight PLAF soldiers 

and captured forty-three prisoners and thirty-seven weapons. Agents reported that 

the enemy buried another 200 dead and evacuated 300 wounded. Government losses 

amounted to seventeen killed and forty-five wounded. Nevertheless, IV Corps adviser 

Col. Sammie Homan thought that commanders were becoming cautious because of 

the action on the twentieth and other recent ambuscades. To restore their confidence, 

he pledged to use U.S. Army helicopters to escort all future troop movements.49

 An example of the promised support occurred on 5 September, when five UH–1B 

gunships from the 120th Aviation Company supported a 7th Division operation in 

Dinh Tuong. The entrenched insurgents hit three of the gunships, compelling one 

to return to base. The gunships in turn killed sixty revolutionaries and wounded an 

estimated forty more. Thirty-four enemy soldiers surrendered after the onslaught.50

 September brought new men to the top echelons of the 7th Division. Brig Gen. 

Nguyen Bao Tri became division commander, and MACV appointed Col. Robert A. 

Guenthner to advise him. Guenthner had received the Silver Star and Bronze Star 

medals for bravery at Salerno and Anzio, Italy, during World War II. Before coming 

to Vietnam, he had served as an adviser to the Nationalist Chinese army. Guenthner 

continued Markey’s strong support for civic action, psychological warfare, and the 

Chieu Hoi program. He had great respect for the U.S. Operations Mission personnel 

working in the field. He also emphasized intelligence, most of which came from the 

agent networks run by district, province, and division entities. The chief problem 

with the networks was that information traveled slowly, as the agents, fearful that the 

insurgents would detect them if they used radios, preferred to send reports by courier. 

Information provided by civilians was also useful but tended to be exaggerated in 

Guenthner’s opinion.51

 As had previous commanders and advisers, Tri and Guenthner exploited the in

depth knowledge of Major Binh, who had accumulated extensive files over his seven 

years of service in the division’s G–2 section. This data sometimes allowed Binh to 

predict where the enemy might move next, and Guenthner established a joint planning 

committee to target specific enemy units based on the data.52

 Even if pattern analysis helped find enemy units, the division had little luck 

penetrating the National Liberation Front’s political apparatus. The Front employed 

strict security measures, and because torture and death awaited anyone it discovered to 

be a government agent, few were willing to attempt to penetrate enemy organizations. 

As Americans had found elsewhere, Guenthner discovered that even after the 

government had identified a clandestine Front cadre, “there is not an aggressive 

program designed to eliminate these persons.” When a suspect did fall in to the 

military’s hands, the colonel considered South Vietnamese interrogation procedures 

to be poor and accompanied by  “unnecessary shouting, shoving, hitting, and kicking 

of the captive.”53

September brought one other development in addition to the change in command. 

On 5 September, the Joint General Staff abolished the Tien Giang Tactical Area. It 

transferred the 7th Division and four of the five provinces it supervised to IV Corps 

and assigned Long An Province to III Corps. Over the summer months, the division 

and its provinces had managed to bring about 50,000 more people into the most secure 

category of government control, but the allies conceded that the majority of the area’s 

residents, nearly one million people, remained under the domination of the National 

Liberation Front.