Operation Allen Brook
4 May 68 - 24 August 68
By the beginning of
May 1968, both the Marines at Da Nang and the Communist forces
in Quang Nam were in the midst of preparations to launch offense
operations against one another. While during April the enemy in
Quang Nam had largely confined its activities to guerrilla
activities, the increased number of reconnaissance Stingray
sightings indicated that Communist regulars were re-infiltrating
their old positions. The Marine command was especially concerned
about the Go Noi Island sector, about 25 kilometers South of Da
Nang, outlined by the confluence of the Ky Lam, Ba Ren, and
Chiem Son Rivers.
In the Go Noi, the 3rd Battalion,
7th Marines in April had conducted Operation Jasper Square in
the Western sector with relative limited contact. Never-the
less, the Communists had controlled the area for years with the
continued existence of both a Communist political and military
command infrastructure there, local populace maintained a strong
Viet Cong orientation, thus making the island a relatively "safe
haven" for both NVA and VC military units. III MAF knew Go Noi
was home to 3 local Viet Cong units, R-20 Battalion, V-25
Battalion, and T-3 Sapper Battalion, as well as Group 44, the
headquarters for the enemy's operations in Quang Nam Province.
It also suspected that elements of the 2nd NVA Division were
trying to reconnect in the sector.
In early May, Maj. Gen. Don J.
Robertson, the 1st Marine Division Commander, ordered the 7th
Marines into the Go Noi to forestall the NVA from staging a new
offense. On 4 May at 0500, Lieutenant Colonel Charles E.
Mueller's 2d Battalion, 7th Marines launched a two-Company " No
Name Operation" into the Go Noi. Crossing Liberty Bridge at
0500, Companies E. and G, supported by a platoon of tanks,
attacked eastwards toward the main north-south railroad tracks.
On the first day of the operation, the Marines evacuated some
220 civilians, mostly old men, women, and children, out of the
Go Noi to the district capital of Dai Loc.
In the first phase of the operation,
which soon became Operation Allen Brook, the battalion
encountered light although persistent resistance from enemy
local forces and guerrilla units. For the next few days, the 2d
Battalion attacked to the east towards the main north-south
railroad tracks experiencing increasing but still relatively
scattered opposition to their advance. Although the terrain was
flat with relatively clear fields of fire, the local units were
familiar with the locale and took full advantage of the
advantages offered by the fortified Hamlet's that dotted the Go
Noi. Surrounded and interlaced by defense hedges, these Hamlet's
were connected one to another by a series of trenches and
tunnels which provided "excellent cover and concealment" for
their defenders.
While Company A, 1st Battalion, 7th
Marines relieved Company G on 7 May, Colonel Reverdy M. Hall,
the 7th Marines Commander, also reinforced the 2d Battalion on
the same day with Company K from the 3rd Battalion. Through 8
May, the Marine companies accounted for some 88 enemy troops
killed at a cost of nine Marines killed and 57 wounded. On the
9th, about 1820, the sweep forces just west of the railroad
tracks came under heavy small arms and machine gun fire as well
as a mortar salvo outside the Hamlet of Xuan Dai (2). Taking
casualties of one dead and 11 wounded, the infantry pulled back
and called for artillery support and air strikes. After the last
air mission, the Marine companies clambered over the tracks
which fronted the Hamlet on the west and pushed into Xuan Dai
(2). Thirty minutes after the initial action, the Marines
secured the Hamlet. As a result of this action, the Marine
Battalion reported 80 enemy killed. A Stingray patrol about 1900
observed some 200 enemy troops moving to the southwest of Xuan
Dai (2) and called in both artillery and another air strike
which resulted in a secondary explosion.
For the next four days, the Marines
again met only sporadic resistance and encountered no regular
NVA units. In fact, up through the 13th, the indications were
that the enemy troops that the Marines had engaged to that point
except for the fight for Xuan Dai (2) were from the usual VC
units known to be in the Go Noi. Even the enemy forces in Xuan
Dai (2) did not appear to be an NVA tactical unit. According to
recovered documents and to a prisoner captured in the flight,
the enemy in Xuan Dai (2) were from the 155th Battalion, 2nd NVA
Regiment. Marine intelligence officers believed the 155th to be
a temporary infiltration group rather than a regular NVA
Battalion.
Hoping to find the suspected NVA
regular units from the 2nd NVA Division believed to have
returned to the Go Noi, the Marine command decided to reorient
Allen Brook from east to west. On 13 May, General Robertson
reinforced the 2d Battalion with Company I, 3rd Battalion, 27th
Marines. While the other three companies attached to the 2d
Battalion reversed their direction, Marine helicopters lifted
Company I, 27th Marines into a landing zone in the Que Son
Mountains to the South overlooking Go Noi Island. The following
day Company I moved down to blocking positions near the Ba Ren
River were it was joined by the other Marine companies now
advancing to the west. On the 15th, at 1400, the 2d Battalion
with all four Marine Companies and the attached tanks arrived
back at Liberty Bridge. In their reverse march, the Marines had
encountered the same "harassing small arms and mortar fires and
fluid guerrilla tactics" that had characterized the operation
for the most part up to that time.
Operation Allen Brook appeared to be
at an end. At least that was what the Marines wanted the enemy
to believe. At 1800, on the 15th, Marine helicopters helilifted
Company E and the command group of the 2d Battalion, 7th Marines
out of the operational area. The Commander of the 3rd Battalion,
7th Marines, Lieutenant Colonel Roger H. Barnard, then assumed
command of the remaining forces and Allen Brook. To continue the
"tactical deception," Lieutenant Colonel Barnard ordered the
units still in Allen Brook to cross Liberty Bridge as if the
Marines were closing out the operation. Then shortly after
midnight on the 16th, the command group of the 3rd Battalion
together with Companies A 1st Battalion and G of the 2d
Battalion, 7th Marines, together with Company I, 3rd Battalion,
27th Marines, recrossed the Thu Bon River and "moved in single
file undercover of darkness for security." Ironically, the 3rd
Battalion had none of its own organic companies in the operation
as it reached its line of departure about 2,500 meters northeast
of Liberty Bridge, just north of the objective area, a few hours
prior to dawn. According to Barnard, Colonel Hall, who had
monitored the radio traffic, "was beside himself with the
success" of the plan to re-enter the Go Noi.
Lieutenant Colonel Barnard
remembered that his objective " was a suspected NVA
installation.... we had reason to believe they did not know we
were there...." According to the Battalion Commander he was to
attack to the South with the mission " to search for, fix, and
destroy the enemy." As the Marines advanced with two companies
online and one in reserve, they were "hoping to execute a major
surprise." In fact, both sides were to surprise one another.
About 0900 on the morning of the 16th, 3rd Battalion encountered
an NVA Battalion in the Hamlet of Phu Dong (2) about 4,000
meters west of Xuan Dai (2), the scene of the latest heaviest
fighting. According to Barnard, " we hit a Hornet's nest." Two
of his companies came under deadly machine gun fire and the
Battalion Commander described the situation " like being in the
butts at the rifle range." The Marine Battalion tried to flank
the enemy position, but as Barnard recalled, "we needed more
resources then we had for the situation." He recalled that even
maximum supporting artillery and mortar fire failed to break the
NVA defenses. Finally, extensive close air support, including
over 50 air strikes, "carried the day." By early evening, the
Marine infantry which had fought continuously throughout the day
in the oppressive heat finally forced the NVA out of their
trenches and bunkers. Afraid of encirclement, the enemy withdrew
leaving more than 130 dead at the Hamlet. Marine losses were
also heavy: 25 dead and 38 wounded. One Marine, 2nd Lieutenant
Paul F. Cobb, a platoon leader with Company A, and one Navy
Hospital Corpsman, Robert M. Casey with Company G, were both
awarded the Navy Cross posthumously for their actions in the
fight for Phu Dong (2).
Despite Marine losses, Colonel Hall,
the 7th Marines Commander, believed that his plan had been a
success. Barnard's unit had uncovered the North Vietnamese units
in the Go Noi and hit them before they were able to mass their
forces. Lieutenant Colonel Barnard later wrote, "when all enemy
resistance ceased and the dust had settled it was clear we
had... achieved a significant victory." The suspected NVA
installation was an "NVA Regimental Headquarters, with attendant
security and a major staging area for supplies..." The Battalion
Commander remembered that the enemy supplies were so extensive,
that they could not evacuate them to the rear. Marine
helicopters, however, took out the casualties and the Battalion
"received water and ammo re-supply." Col. Hall directed Barnard
to continue his southward advance the next morning.
After an uneventful night, in which
the Battalion had moved twice, it started out at dawn from a
line of departure, just north of the Hamlet Le Bac (2).
Advancing southward, the Battalion was again in a column of
companies, with Company I, 27th Marines in the lead, and
Companies A and G of the 7th Marines, and the Battalion command
group, following in trace. Lieutenant Colonel Barnhard
remembered, "we were in open country, without a defined
objective." If Company I made contact, Barnard planned to use
Company A as a maneuver unit and Company G. in reserve.
As events turned out, the Marine
Battalion ran into even stronger resistance then the previous
day. That morning, as Company I came upon a dry river bed with a
densely wooded tree line on the northern bank bordering the
Hamlet of Le Nam (1) just above route 537, the North Vietnamese
sprung an ambush from elaborate defenses " of significant
width." Strong enemy resistance and the terrain combined to
prevent Lieutenant Colonel Barnard's initial efforts to come to
the assistance of his embattled Company. Upon hearing of the
contact and the extent of the enemy defenses, he immediately
ordered Company A to attempt to flank the enemy from the west.
While the ground was flat, it was covered with tall grass which
impeded the flanking movement. In the meantime, as the reports
from Company I "were not good," Bernard ordered Company G to
join the embattled unit. Enemy resistance, however, proved too
strong and prevented Company G from advancing. A frustrated
Battalion Commander called for artillery and air support. He
remembered that his command group with Company A struggled
through the tall grass, he had his artillery and air officers
"calling mission after mission...." The situation for Company I
was already desperate when Colonel Hall, the 7th Marines
Commander, radioed Barnard that the 3rd Battalion, 27th Marines
would make a helicopter assault to the South in order to relieve
the pressure on his Battalion.
Lieutenant Colonel Tullis J. Woodham,
Jr., the commanding office or of the 3rd Battalion, 27th
Marines, remembered that his unit had been on alert for Allen
Brook and was to relieve 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines. In fact the
27th Marines, under Colonel Adolph G. Schwenk, Jr., was
scheduled to take responsibility for the operation from the 7th
Marines later that day. Early on the morning of the 17th,
Lieutenant Colonel Woodham had received orders to truck his
Battalion down to Liberty Bridge and then cross the Bridge on
foot to make the planned relief. At this point, he had only two
of his companies with him, Companies K and I. His Company M was
the Danang Air Base security company and Company I, of course,
was attached to Barnard's Battalion. Upon learning of the
predicament of his Company I, Woodham conferred with Schwenk and
agreed-upon the helicopter assault. For the time being,
Woodham's Battalion would be under the operational control of
the 7th Marines.
After some unexpected delays in the
arrival of the aircraft and in coordination with the air
preparation of the landing zone, about 1500 on the 17th, Marine
helicopters finally brought the Battalion into An Tam (1) about
1,000 meters southeast of Le Nam. Even as the Battalion landed,
it came under mortar and long-range weapons fire. Despite the
enemy fire, the two Marine companies immediately attacked
northward to link up with the 3rd battalion, 7th Marines. With
extensive air and artillery support, Company K, 27th Marines
broke through the enemy's defenses in Le Nam (1), and finally
linked up with Company I about 1930 that evening. According to
the Lieutenant Colonel Woodham, as darkness approached, the
North Vietnamese resistance ceased and they began to withdraw
from the battle area.
The heavy fighting for Le Nam (1)
had resulted in 39 Marines dead and 105 wounded as opposed to 81
North Vietnamese dead. Company I especially had suffered
grievous losses. Of the total Marine casualties in the battle,
Company I had sustained 15 killed and 50 wounded. Among the dead
were Captain Thomas H. Ralph and two of his platoon leaders. The
casualties of the Company may have been even higher if it had
not been for the heroics of Private First Class Robert C. Burke.
A machine gunner with the company, he quickly took his weapon
"and launched a series of one-man assaults" against the enemy
emplacements. Providing covering fire, he permitted other
members of Company I to come up and remove the wounded from
exposed positions. He continued to advance upon the enemy and to
suppress enemy fire until he fell mortally wounded. He was
awarded the Medal of Honor posthumously.
During the night of 17 May, the two
Marine Battalions, the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines and the 3rd
Battalion, 27th Marines, remained is separate positions, but in
radio contact. Lieutenant Colonel Barnard had moved to a night
position near Cu Ban (4), about 1,200 meters to the northwest of
Le Nam (1), while Lieutenant Colonel Woodham retained his
command group at AnTam (1). About 1900, Lieutenant Colonel
Barnard had turned over operational control of Company I to
Woodham and then began preparations to start out on the 18th for
Liberty Bridge. Essentially, Operation Allen Brook was over for
the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines, which would leave as planned the
next day and be replaced by the 3rd Battalion, 5th Marines.
By that time the 27th Marines, under
Colonel Schwenk, had assumed responsibility for Operation Allen
Brook which would continue in the Go Noi. On the morning of the
18th, Lieutenant Colonel Woodham began to expand his perimeter
around Le Nam. At 0930, 3rd Battalion, 27th Marines began to
take sniper fire from Le Bac (2), about 300 meters to the north.
Lieutenant Colonel Woodham immediately sent Companies K and L to
clear out what he thought were a relatively few snipers. The
"few snipers" turned out to be a formidable North Vietnamese
Force which quickly brought the Marines attacked to a halt.
Under an "exceedingly heavy" volume of fire, the lead elements
of both companies I and K remained isolated and unable to
maneuver. Woodham called for both artillery and air, but their
effectiveness was limited because of the proximity of the
Marines to the enemy. Both companies, but especially Company K,
sustained severe casualties and the intolerable heat soon became
as much a factor as the enemy bullets.
At 1500 that afternoon, Marine
helicopters brought in Company M, which had already been alerted
to replace the combat impaired Company I. As the latter Company
boarded the helicopters for the return trip to Da Nang, Woodham
thrust the newly arrived Company M into the battle for Le Bac
(2). With the reinforcements, Company K which had taken the most
casualties, was able to pull back and Lieutenant Colonel Woodham
placed it in reserve. The fighting raged on until the night when
NVA withdrew. The Marine companies pulled back to Le Nam (1) and
Woodham brought in air and artillery to the rear of the former
NVA positions. The Battalion had sustained serious casualties:
15 Marines were dead, another 35 were wounded, and 94 troops had
succumbed to the heat. In and around the abandoned enemy
position lay 20 dead North Vietnamese.
Operation Allen Brook would continue
to focus through 27 May largely on the Chu Ban, Phu Dong, and Le
Bac Village complexes. Beginning with the action of the 16th,
the 7th, and later that 27th Marines, were in a more or less of
a conventional battle against well dug in and relatively fresh
and well-trained North Vietnamese regulars. Colonel Schwenk,
27th Marines Commander, commented that while the enemy troops
did not initiate any offense actions, they fought back "
tenaciously" from concealed positions within tree-lines and in
the Hamlet's themselves. To offset the Marine advantage in
supporting arms, the NVA will allow "the point of advancing
units to pass through" and then open up on the "main body" with
both intense small arms fire and mortars. At this close range,
the Marine command can then make only limited use of artillery
and air support.
To counter this tactic, the 27th
Marines used heavy preparatory fires from both U.S. Navy gunfire
ships offshore and artillery in coordination with air strikes to
blast the enemy out of their bunkers and trenches before moving
into an area. If a Marine unit encountered heavy small arms
fire, it was either to hold its position or move back so that
the supporting arms could be employed as much as possible under
the circumstances. Colonel Schwenk remarked "that tanks with
their 90 mm guns proved most effective in these circumstances",
both high explosive rounds to breach enemy fortifications and
with canister rounds against troops in the open. Schwenk wrote
that once he committed to tanks, "the enemy would break contact
almost immediately." The tanks were also at a disadvantage,
however, in that terrain " caused... [them] to become
channelized making them highly vulnerable to RPG fire and
mines." On 24 May, two Marines from the 3rd Battalion, 27th
Marines, Corporal Richard W. Buchanan from Company M and Private
First Class Charles R. Yordy, from Company K were later awarded
the Navy Cross for their actions that day in Le Bac (1) about
800 meters northwest of Le Bac (2). The fight for Le Bac (2)
lasted until the 27th and featured some of the heaviest combat
of the campaign until a torrential rain storm ended the
fighting. Lieutenant Colonel Donald N. Rexroad, the Commander of
the 3rd Battalion, 5th Marines, remembered that his Battalion
near the end of the month overran "an apparent NVA regimental
command post."
Casualties on both sides had been
heavy. For the entire operation through the end of May, the
Marines reported to have killed over 600 of the enemy. They
themselves sustained since the beginning of the operation 138
killed, 686 wounded including 576 serious enough to be
evacuated, and another 283 non-battle casualties that had to be
evacuated. The number of heat induced "non-battle casualties"
had soared towards the end because of the extreme high
temperatures averaging 110 degrees and the physical exertion
expended in the firefights. In many engagements, the number of
heat casualties equaled or exceeded the number of Marines killed
and wounded.
In Operation Allen Brook, the
Marines believed they had broken the back of a planned enemy
attack on Da Nang. Colonel Hall of the 7th Marines later wrote
that his 3rd Battalion's re-entry into the Go Noi under cover of
darkness in the early morning hours of 16 May foiled the designs
of the enemy which had begun to stage its forces. Hall observed
that the North Vietnamese unit engaged by his units was from the
36th Regiment, 308th NVA Division. According to a North
Vietnamese prisoner from the second Battalion of that Regiment,
his unit had departed North Vietnam in February and only arrived
in Go Noi the night of the 15th with orders to assault allied
positions north of the Thu Bon and Ky Lam Rivers. The 27th
Marines would later engage both the 2nd and 3rd Battalions of
36th during the fighting in the Chu Ban and Le Bac complexes.
The appearance of 36th Regiment in
the Go Noi was of some concern to the Marine command. III MAF
and the 1st Marine Division had expected to find elements of the
2nd NVA Division which previously had used the sector
during the Tet offense. This was the first evidence that any
unit of the 308th NVA Division had ventured so far south. There
were already indications that the North Vietnamese had built up
their regular forces in the Da Nang sector. From 16 - 25 May,
just to the east of the Marine units on the Go Noi, the 51st
ARVN regiment, reinforced by two Ranger battalions, in a series
of running battles engaged approximately two NVA battalions.
While sustaining casualties of 53 dead and a 144 wounded, the
ARVN claimed to have killed 284 of the enemy during this period.
During the last four days of May,
the 1st Marine Division rotated fresh units into the Allen Brook
area of operations. Lieutenant Colonel Frederick J. McEwan's 1st
Battalion, 26th Marines, and Lieutenant Colonel John E.
Greenwood's 1st Battalion, 27th Marines relieved Lieutenant
Colonel Woodham's 3rd Battalion, 27th Marines two days later. As
May ended, the 3rd Battalion, 5th Marines departed Go Noi Island
an became the 1st Marine Division reserve.
Thereafter, III MAF maintained at
least two battalions in Operation Allen Brook. At the beginning
of June, both the 1st Battalion, 26th Marines and the 1st
Battalion, 27th Marines were involved, still under the control
of the 27th Marines headquarters. The 1st Marine Division
expanded the area of operations to include the 27th Marines
forward command post at Liberty Bridge, as well as about 35
square kilometers of rice farming area Southwest of Go Noi
Island.
The Regiment's orders called for an
ongoing "search and clear" operation, a euphemism for the
tedious process of methodically searching an area for enemy
personnel, facilities, supplies, and equipment. When carried out
to the degree of thoroughness which provided a measure of
success, the procedure was slow and sometimes ponderous. The
extreme heat encountered during Operation Allen Brook, combined
with the terrain that included man high elephant grass, as well
as a hostile, uncooperative local population and frequent
encounters with booby traps and mines, made the "search and
clear" mission far more challenging that it's named applied.
On the morning of 1 June, a flight
of nine Lockheed C - 130 Hercules Aircraft conducted what was
accurately known as an "inferno mission", dropping more than
31,000 gallons of fuel in 55 gallon drums with igniters
attached. While the intent was to burn away a considerable
portion of the islands foliage, the mission was not as useful as
desired due to excessive dispersion of fuel and a heavy
thunderstorm that fell on the drop.
After this disappointment, the two
battalions of Marines began the process of physically searching
the area for signs of the enemy. The Marines trudged steadily
across the Island, from the west to the east and then back to
the west again. Short, sharp contacts resulted when enemy troops
fired from well concealed positions, causing the Marines to
return fire and to call for supporting arms. Upon overrunning
the area from which the enemy had fired, the Marines usually
found little or nothing. Occasionally, Marines detonated mines
or booby-traps (referred to as surprise firing devices in the
reporting system), often times disguised as soft drink cans, tea
bags, or even "Chieu Hoi" leaflets. At night, with the Marines
in defensive positions, the enemy would fire on listening posts
from close range, or use of mortars to harass the main
parameters. These activities caused additional casualties and
further frustration for the Marines, who could not strike back
effectively.
By 3 June, the 27th Marines had
found little evidence of the enemy, causing the 1st Marine
Division to determine that the " recent lack significant contact
indicates that enemy forces departed Allen Brook A0".
Accordingly, the Division reduced the scale of Operation Allen
Brook, ordering the 1st Battalion, 26th Marines to depart Go Noi
Island for operations elsewhere, and shrinking the Allen Brook
A0. It would now include only that portion of Go Noi Island west
of the National Railroad Track and a small area on the north
bank of the Song Thu Bon, opposite the Island.
The 27th Marines ordered the 1st
Battalion, 26th Marines to move westward along Route 537 on its
departure from the Island, continuing the "search and clear"
process along the way. Simultaneously, 1st Battalion, 27th
Marines also would move westward, on the right flank of the 1st
Battalion, 26th Marines.
By mid morning on 5 June, as Company
D and the two battalions were approaching their final
objectives, having lost 4 killed and 26 wounded to sniper fire
and mines along the way. As Company D, 26th Marines, under 1st
Lieutenant Daniel L. McGravey, neared the hamlet of Chu Ban (3),
North Vietnamese hidden in a trench line and bunkers to the
South fired on the 1st Platoon. The Marines maneuvered to one
flank, attempting to envelop the enemy, and Communist mortars
joined the action. At the same time, 500 meters to the east,
Company B, 26th Marines, under Captain James H. Champion, also
came under heavy fire and had a platoon caught in the open,
unable to maneuver.
As the Marines called for mortars,
artillery, and air support to assist in suppressing the enemy
fire, Lieutenant Colonel Greenwood, commanding the 1st
Battalion, 27th Marines, dispatched his Company C, commanded by
Captain Martin T. Farmer, to assist the beleaguered 1st
Battalion, 26th Marines. Company C hurried southward and made
contact with the northern most flank of Company B, 26th Marines,
then swung to the west and assaulted the nearby Communist
positions. Almost immediately, Captain Farmer and his second in
command were wounded by mortar fire. Attacking without "a proper
base of fire" and without near the time to "adequately
reconnoiter" enemy positions, Company C, said Lieutenant Colonel
Greenwood later, "lost momentum, faltered, and stopped."
Company D, 26th Marines was still
heavily engaged near Chu Ban (3) and now, both Company B, 26th
Marines and Company C, 27th Marines were being held down by
enemy fire 500 meters east of the hamlet. The Communists
fighting from the well covered and expertly concealed positions,
kept up heavy fire with rifles, machine guns, and mortars. The
Marines, long accustomed to the luxury of fire superiority,
found that they were unable to employ their supporting arms
effectively in such close quarters without endangering friendly
troops.
As casualties mounted, helicopters
landed under fire to evacuate the wounded. Two Sikorsky UH-34 "
Sea Horse" helicopters suffered hits in the process, but neither
were lost. In mid afternoon, with the fight still raging,
Company A, 27th Marines, accompanied by three tanks, departed
Liberty Bridge to join the fray. Supported by the tanks and
carefully using artillery and air support, the Marines attacked
and overran enemy the positions.
The Marines lost 7 killed and 55
wounded in this hard fought, but confused, action. They found 30
North Vietnamese dead. A machine gunner with Company C, 1st
battalion, 27th Marines summed up the battle from an
infantryman's perspective: "We had a bad ass fire flight... it
lasted for a while. Then we moved on."
Although the Marines had finally
made solid contact with the enemy, the plan to reduce the
Operation Allen Brook commitment to a single Battalion remained
in effect. On 6 June, the 1st Battalion, 26th Marines left the
area and elements of the 1st Engineer Battalion
arrived with the heavy equipment needed for the new task
assigned to Operation Allen Brook forces: the virtual raising of
Go Noi Island. The new mission called for the 27th Marines to
"provide support and protection for an engineer effort to
systematically eliminate all fortifications, dwellings, harbor
sites, and hedgerows roles in the A0. The first area scheduled
to be cleared was Chu Ban (3).
The clearing project presented many
challenges especially since Go Noi Island was thoroughly
infested with well constructed enemy field fortifications. The
typical Go Noi bunker, based on a deep hole, had overhead
protection constructed from rails and ties from the nearby
National Railroad. Some actually included concrete. Covered with
earth and camouflaged effectively, these positions were
invisible from the air and only barely apparent from the ground.
In some areas, farmers had worked away the ground surrounding
the bamboo groves for so long that the groves appeared to be
raised on flat mounds of hard earth. The Communists burrowed
under these groves to construct hidden bunkers with firing slits
at ground level. In addition to the fortifications built by the
NVA and VC for their own use, the hamlet contained bunkers built
by the local populace for family protection. These bunkers, also
built with materials salvaged from the National Railroad,
featured sloped roofs which deflected bombs and artillery
projectiles. So strong were these bunkers that some were
undamaged by 2,000 lb. bombs donating 50 feet away.
As the engineers went about the
business of destroying bunkers and filling in trench lines
Lieutenant Colonel Greenwood provided them security and
continued a program of aggressive patrolling with his four
companies. Contact with the enemy remained sporadic. As before
the battle at Chu Ban, the enemy contented themselves with
occasional sniping, attacks on listening posts, harassing mortar
fire on Company night positions, and an ever increasing number
of mines and booby-traps. Marines continued to fall prey to the
heat as well as to enemy action, for the daily temperature
averaged 100 degrees, with humidity greater than 80 percent. In
the still, thick air, heat casualties sometimes ran as high as
10 percent, causing commanders to limit troop activity to the
early morning and late afternoon. While moving, the Marines did
not carry excess equipment, sometimes even leaving behind even
their flak jackets. To further exacerbate the Marine problems
with the intense heat, the enemy contaminated the water wells in
the area with oil and dead animal carcasses and the local river
water was seemingly impervious to the attempts to purify it with
halazone tablets.
The Battalion continued the "search
and clear" routine (while the engineers gave a whole new meaning
to the clearing aspects of the mission) without significant
contact until 15 June. At 0330 that morning, behind a curtain of
B-40 rockets and heavy automatic weapons fire, Communist troops
fell upon Company B's night position near the National Railroad.
The Marines returned fire with all organic weapons, from rifles
to anti-tank rockets, and called for artillery fire support. In
the face of Company B's tenacious defense, the North Vietnamese
broke off their attack and attempted to flee, but Company B
Marines pursued the broken enemy into the night, ending the
engagement decisively. The next day, the Marines tallied 21 dead
North Vietnamese, all victims of the abortive attack. Company B
suffered only three wounded.
The 1st Marine Division ordered the
area of operations extended to permit the Allen Brook forces to
venture east of the National Railroad in pursuit of the enemy.
Early on 19 June, and ad hoc force composed of elements of
Company's B and D (under the command of the executive officer of
Company B) ran into a North Vietnamese force near the hamlet of
Bac Dong Ban. One Marine platoon immediately went to ground in
the face of overwhelming enemy fire. As the Marines called for
air and artillery, another ad hoc Company (also composed of
elements of companies B and D) moved to the rescue under the
command of Company B's commanding officer, First Lieutenant
Richard M. Wozar.
The North Vietnamese were thoroughly
dug in, occupying a line of trenches and bunkers with their
backs to the Song Ky Lam. For nine hours, the battle raged with
neither side able to gain the upper hand. Finally, at 1800, the
Battalion command group, with Company A and a platoon from
Company C arrived an attacked from the West. Swinging northward,
the reinforcements assaulted the enemy positions while Company B
and D provided a base fire. By 1900, the Marines overwhelmed the
enemy suffering 6 dead, 19 wounded, and 12 heat casualties. By
noon the next day, the Marines found 17 North Vietnamese dead.
The fight at Bac Dong Ban was the
1st Battalion's last major battle in Operation Allen Brook.
After completing a sweep of the eastern portion of Go Noi
Island, they departed the area on 23 June and in their place,
the 2nd Battalion, 27th Marines assumed responsibility for
Operation Allen Brook. That night the North Vietnamese welcomed
the fresh Battalion to Go Noi Island with 60 rounds of mortar
fire on Companies E, F and H.
The 2nd Battalion, tasked to
continue the land clearing operations on Go Noi Island, intent
on carrying out a program of "total destruction." The policy
included elimination of natural assembly areas, concealing
foliage, tree lines, bamboo groves, hedgerows, trenchlines,
fighting holes, caves, bunkers, tunnels, building structures,
and any natural or man-made feature providing cover. Material
which could be used to build bunkers, such as concrete blocks,
beams, posts, pillars, and tree trunks, would be destroyed by
crushing or burning. In the words of the Battalion Commander
Lieutenant Colonel Albert W. Keller "we were to level that
island."
This 2nd Battalion experienced only
light enemy contact throughout its stay at Go Noi Island. The
enemy appeared only in small groups, usually fleeing when
sighted by the Marines. Because of the sporadic nature of enemy
contact, much of the Battalion's effort centered on land
clearing, in one 18 - day period, the engineers completely
leveled the largest forested area on Go Noi Island. Lieutenant
Colonel Keller later remarked that "by the time we destroyed and
leveled that whole area... It looked almost like a parking lot
for a major ballpark in the United States." As part of its land
clearing effort, the Battalion arranged two air delivered
herbicide missions which "were found to be quite effective."
On 16 July, the 2nd Battalion, 27th
Marines departed Go Noi Island, having reported killing 144
enemy at a cost of 4 Marines dead and 147 wounded.
Simultaneously, the 3rd battalion, 27th Marines moved into the
area and assumed responsibility for Operation Allen Brook. The
character of the operation remained on changed as the companies
of the 3rd battalion alternated between patrolling and providing
security for the engineers who were methodically scraping the
Island clean. The Communists continued to avoid significant
engagement, but they did muster the temerity to fire on the
aircraft which sprayed the Island with herbicides on 18 July and
21 July. Meanwhile, the Marines continued to fire on small
groups of enemy or on Vietnamese voices heard in the night, then
search the areas later to find an occasional body or bloody
trail.
Although it appeared that the NVA
Battalions once thought to be based on Go Noi Island were gone,
intelligence sources indicated that the Communists would soon
try to reoccupy the area. At the request of the 1st Marine
Division, Battalion Landing Team (BLT) 2/7 (Seventh Fleet
Special Landing Force "B") launched Operation Swift Play on 23
July 1968, only 17 hours after having embarked on board
amphibious shipping at the close of Operation Eager Yankee in
Thua Thien Province.
Designed to complement Operation
Allen Brook, Operation Swift Play was a surprise thrust into the
Da The Mountain area, 6 km south to Go Noi Island. After landing
by helicopter, BLT 2/7 swept north toward the Song Chiem Son and
the Allen Brook area of operations. During the week long sweep,
the Marines of BLT 2/7 uncovered numerous enemy caches and basic
areas, including what appeared to be a training center, complete
with lecture Hall, carefully hidden in the steep, forested
mountains. On 31 July, BLT 2/7 crossed the Chiem Son to Go Noi
Island and relieved the 3rd Battalion, 27th Marines of
responsibility for Operation Allen Brook. Three days later, the
27th Marines ended its participation in the operation
altogether, passing control it to the BLT 2/7 Marines, which had
previously exchanged its area of operations near Phu Bai with
the 26th Marines.
Land clearing operations continued
until the Communists launched their long-awaited "third
offensive" on 23 August. With the enemy activity on Go Noi
Island only minimal, the First Marine Division terminated
Operation Allen Brook so that the forces could be employed to
battle the enemy forces threatening Da Nang. Company E remained
behind temporarily to escort the engineers to Liberty Bridge
while the remainder of BLT 2/7 departed by helicopter. On 24
August, as Company E and the engineer convoy of trucks and earth
moving equipment headed westward the enemy harassed them with
sporadic sniper fire until they cleared Go Noi Island.
Operation Allen Brook lasted three
and one-half months and resulted in 917 enemy killed. An
additional 11 were captured, and two rallied to the Government
of Vietnam. The III MAF units which sought to bring Go Noi
Island under government control lost 170 Marines and 2 sailors
killed in action and a further 1,124 wounded. Even more fell to
heat, disease, snake bite, accidents, and a host of other
hazards.
Source:
U.S. Marines In VietNam
The Defining Year1968
Shulimson, Blasiol,
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