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Thursday, July 3, 2025

                 









Dù quân đồng minh đã những tiến bộ trong việc bình định vùng này trong năm 1967, vài đv VC, đáng kể nhất là TĐ 840 chánh quy TĐ 482 quân địa phương, vẫn còn ẩn nấp gần tỉnh lỵ Phan Thiết. Những đv này và sáu đại đội (đ.đ.) quân địa phương tạo ra 1 đe dọa thường xuyên ko chỉ cho Phan Thiết, mà còn những tiền đồn nhỏ của nam VN rải rác khắp nông thôn. Bắt đầu 2 tháng cuối của 1967, một trong những mục tiêu chánh của tướng Westmoreland đối với bờ biển đông nam là phải mở và cải thiện QL-1 từ Xuân lộc tới Phan rang, do đó sẽ phục hồi những đường giao thông giữa QĐ-3 và QĐ-2. Lực lượng đặc nhiệm hay Task Force Byrd là trung tâm của nhiệm vụ này. Bảo vệ bởi TĐ 2/7 thiết giáp Mỹ, các công binh Mỹ sẽ phục hồi hay cải thiện những đoạn hư hỏng trên QL-1 băng ngang tỉnh Bình thuận. Các lính công binh này cũng giúp công binh VN lập những tiền đồn cấp trung đội ở từng đoạn dọc theo QL này mà hiện nay được canh giữ bởi lính diện địa. Họ cũng xây những CCHL cấp đại đội gần QL-1 để cho lính của trung đoàn 44 canh giữ thay vì để họ đóng gần Phan thiết. Phòng tuyến gồm các tiền đồn này sẽ giúp tỉnh trưởng có một lưới bảo vệ từ xa cho các khu vực của Phan Thiết đang có chương trình Bình định Nông thôn hoạt động. Kế hoạch này sẽ khiến các đv CS đóng trong những núi non phía tây ko thể dễ dàng vượt qua QL-1.
Địch quân đã phá phòng tuyến mới vào ngày 8/11/1967 khi TĐ 840 và 450 địa phương tấn công Đồn Mara, 1 đồn nhỏ trên QL-1  khoảng 15 km đông bắc của Phan Thiết. Đồn có BCH và 1 đ.đ. của TĐ 3/44 của sđ 23, và vài lính công binh đang làm việc ở đây. Cố vấn của đồn đã gọi không quân. TL của Task Force Byrd, trung tá Joseph Griffin Jr. đã nhanh chóng gửi ba trực thăng UH-1 thuộc Tổ Săn Đêm. Chiếc đầu chở lính BB trang bị kính nhìn đêm và đạn đánh dấu hay tracer của súng m16. Nó sẽ bay thấp, trong khi chiếc thứ 2 thả hỏa châu ở cao độ. Đi phía sau là 1 trực thăng trang bị rocket. Một AC-47 cũng tham chiến để giúp lính nam vn cầm cự tới sáng khi đó sẽ có 1 đ.đ. của tđ 2/7 thiết kỵ truy đuổi họ. Kết quả: quân phòng thủ có 28 chết và 35 bị thương, phản ảnh ác liệt của chiến trường. Phe VC có 42 chết. Dù có trận đánh nhưng 2 ngày sau, công binh đã hoàn tất việc xây đồn, giúp cho quân đồng minh có 1 căn cứ mạnh mẻ để bảo vệ khúc đường này của ql. 




 Although the allies had made strides in pacifying this area during 1967, 

several Viet Cong units, most notably the 840th Main Force Battalion and 

the 482d Local Force Battalion, still lurked near the capital. These units and 

six local force companies posed a continuous threat not only to Phan Thiet, 

but also to the many small South Vietnamese outposts scattered through

out the countryside.39

 Heading into the final two months of 1967, one of General Westmoreland’s 

main goals on the southeastern coast was to open and improve Highway 1 from 

Xuan Loc to Phan Rang, thereby restoring the ground line of communica

tions between III Corps and II Corps. Task Force Byrd was a centerpiece in 

that mission. Protected by the soldiers of the 2d Battalion, 7th Cavalry, U.S. 

engineers rebuilt or improved damaged sections of Highway 1 throughout the 

length of Binh Thuan Province. Those engineers had also helped Vietnamese 

engineers construct platoon-size outposts at intervals along the highway that 

were now being manned by territorial soldiers. Work was also under way on 

several company-size firebases to give the South Vietnamese 44th Infantry 

Regiment the ability to station troops in forward areas near Highway 1 instead 

of holding them back near Phan Thiet. This new line of outposts allowed the 

province chief to create a forward defensive screen around the Revolutionary 

Development areas of the Phan Thiet basin, making it harder for Communist 

units based in the western mountains to cross the highway undetected.

 The enemy moved against this new defensive barrier on 8 November 1967 

when the 840th Battalion and the 450th Local Force Company attacked Fort 

Mara, a small post on Highway 1 some fifteen kilometers northeast of Phan 

Thiet. The post contained the headquarters and an infantry company from 

the South Vietnamese 3d Battalion, 44th Regiment, and some Vietnamese 

engineers who were still working on the unfinished fort. The U.S. adviser

==

at Fort Mara called for air support. The commander of Task Force Byrd, 

Lt. Col. Joseph T. Griffin Jr., quickly dispatched three UH–1 helicopters, 

which formed a Night Hunter team. The first helicopter carried infantry

men equipped with night-vision scopes and tracer rounds for their M16s. 

It flew low to the ground, while a second helicopter dropped flares from a 

higher altitude. Bringing up the rear was a third helicopter armed with aerial 

rockets. An AC–47 fixed-wing gunship joined the team over Mara . The air

craft enabled the South Vietnamese to hold on until dawn when a company 

from the 2d Battalion, 7th Cavalry, chased off the attackers. The cost that 

the defenders paid, twenty-eight killed and thirty-five wounded, reflected 

the ferocity of the battle. Viet Cong losses came to forty-two dead. Despite 

the attack, Vietnamese engineers completed Mara two days later, giving the 

allies a strong base to defend that stretch of Highway 1.40

 Two weeks later, General Chau showed his willingness to fight the 

Americans, provided it was on his terms. The battle began with a mortar 

attack on Thien Giao, a Vietnamese Army post located some twenty kilome

ters southwest of Fort Mara. Colonel Griffin dispatched a platoon of infan

try to search for the enemy gunners. When helicopters deposited the soldiers 

in a clearing near the post, the surrounding area exploded with small arms and 

machine gun fire. Having guessed correctly where the Americans would land, 

General Chau had set a trap with the 482d Battalion. The hail of fire drove 

off the helicopters, several with damage, as the U.S. platoon fought for its life. 

Colonel Griffin quickly dispatched the remainder of his battalion to relieve 

the stranded platoon. The North Vietnamese greeted the incoming helicopters 

with a hail of machine gun bullets and rocket-propelled grenades. The helicop

ters pressed through the storm and deposited their passengers, though many 

aircraft suffered damage and two were forced to crash-land. After several 

hours of combat, the soldiers from the 2d Battalion, 7th Cavalry, managed 

to rescue the trapped platoon and to drive off the 482d Battalion. The cost to 

the Americans had been high, eleven dead and thirty-six wounded, while the 

enemy lost an estimated twenty-one killed.41

 The 2d Battalion suspended Operation Byrd on 1 December in order 

to join the 1st Brigade, 101st Airborne Division, in a new operation code

named KlaMath Falls along the border between Binh Thuan and Lam 

Dong Provinces. Three battalions of the South Vietnamese 44th Regiment 

and the South Vietnamese 11th Ranger Battalion joined in the effort to 

locate and destroy the headquarters of Military Region 6 and any main force 

units that were operating in the area. Of particular concern was the 186th 

Local Force Battalion, which had mauled several Regional Forces companies 

and elements of the South Vietnamese 44th Regiment on 12 November, kill

ing at least sixty-five government soldiers and damaging or destroying two 

105-mm. artillery pieces. A secondary goal of the operation was to improve 

security on Highway 1 so traffic could move freely between Phan Thiet and 

Nha Trang.42 

Over the six weeks that followed, the allies located and destroyed many 

supply caches and bunker complexes along the border between Lam Dong 

and Binh Thuan Provinces, some large enough to serve a battalion, but the 

Viet Cong made only fleeting appearances. Intelligence gathered during 

KlaMath Falls suggested that the main enemy units in the area had with

drawn to safer locations just prior to the start of the operation, suggesting 

that the Viet Cong had advance warning of some kind. The ninety-five 

man headquarters of Military Region 6, for example, had split into several 

groups and fled in different directions. In the end, the Americans could 

claim no more than 156 Communists killed over the six-week period. Of 

those, nearly half fell to just one of the five participating U.S. infantry 

battalions, the 2d Battalion, 7th Cavalry, probably due to its greater famil

iarity with the area.43 

As for the operation’s second objective, the reopening of Highway 1, a 

South Vietnamese convoy successfully drove from Nha Trang to Phan Thiet 

and back between 18 and 21 December. Though some parts of Highway 1 

emained dangerous at night, commercial traffic began to flow in increasing 

volume between Phan Thiet and Phan Rang during the day, opening new mar

kets for the people who lived on the southeastern coast and providing oppor

tunity for greater prosperity.44 

===

Route 20 lnterdicted in Lam Dong Province 4 Early on 12 November, an enemy force of un- known size blew up a bridge on strategic Route 20, some 25 miles east of Bao Loc, the capital of Lam Dong Province. A South Vietnamese reaction force, sent to the scene, was ambushed along the highway near the bridge site. At the same time, another enemy force attacked South Vietnamese military com- pounds at nearby Di Linh. Both of these engagements continued on 13 November and South Vietnamese and American reinforce- ments have been moved into the area. Incomplete casualty reports list 65 South Vietnamese soldiers killed, 25 wounded,and 25 missing. Two enemy soldiers have been killed thus far. Traffic between Bao Lac and Da Lat in neighboring Tuyen Duc Province has been temporarily suspended. I —l TOP RET 13 November 1967 A 3501 350 - (2) 395 D-\/ -°°$ X2) 3.5 3-5<° \//6 Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 C03029764 Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 003029704 4. \-y\J,l-I\.Il.\..l-l.l. _\ ‘ 6. ‘ The recent increase in Communist military activity directed at South Vietnamese forces in this area of southern II Corps is consistent with the avowed enemy objective of destroying security forces and degrading government authority. Since last May, South Vietnamese forces have secured Route 20, denying the Viet Cong some one to two million piasters a day in tax booty. Current enemy action also draws friendly forces from southwestern Lam Dong Province, where most enemy tax collection points were located, thus allowing an opportunity for renewed collection in that area.

 Route 20 lnterdicted in Lam Dong Province 4 Early on 12 November, an enemy force of un- known size blew up a bridge on strategic Route 20, some 25 miles east of Bao Loc, the capital of Lam Dong Province. A South Vietnamese reaction force, sent to the scene, was ambushed along the highway near the bridge site. At the same time, another enemy force attacked South Vietnamese military com- pounds at nearby Di Linh. Both of these engagements continued on 13 November and South Vietnamese and American reinforce- ments have been moved into the area. Incomplete casualty reports list 65 South Vietnamese soldiers killed, 25 wounded,and 25 missing. Two enemy soldiers have been killed thus far. Traffic between Bao Lac and Da Lat in neighboring Tuyen Duc Province has been temporarily suspended. I —l TOP RET 13 November 1967 A 3501 350 - (2) 395 D-\/ -°°$ X2) 3.5 3-5<° \//6 Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 C03029764 Approved for Release: 2019/03/29 003029704 4. \-y\J,l-I\.Il.\..l-l.l. _\ ‘ 6. ‘ The recent increase in Communist military activity directed at South Vietnamese forces in this area of southern II Corps is consistent with the avowed enemy objective of destroying security forces and degrading government authority. Since last May, South Vietnamese forces have secured Route 20, denying the Viet Cong some one to two million piasters a day in tax booty. Current enemy action also draws friendly forces from southwestern Lam Dong Province, where most enemy tax collection points were located, thus allowing an opportunity for renewed collection in that area.