New Year's Day battle of 1968 explained

Conflict:New Year's Day battle of 1968
Partof:the Vietnam War
Date:1–2 January 1968
Place:South Vietnam
Result:American victory
Combatant1: United States
Combatant2: Viet Cong
Map Type:Vietnam
Relief:1
Units1:2nd and 3rd Battalions, 22nd Infantry Regiment
Battery B, 5th Battalion, 2nd Artillery Regiment Battery A, 3rd Battalion, 13th Artillery Regiment
Battery D, 71st Artillery Regiment
Batteries A and C, 2nd Battalion, 77th Artillery Regiment
Units2:271st Regiment and 272nd Regiment, 9th Division
Casualties1:23 killed[1]
Casualties2:U.S. body count: 348 killed

The New Year's Day battle of 1968 was a military engagement during the Vietnam War in Tây Ninh province that began on the evening of 1 January 1968. It involved units assigned to the U.S. 25th Infantry Division and two regiments of the People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN). The battle was known as the Battle of Fire Support Base Burt (Battle of FSB Burt), or the Battle of Suoi Cut.[2] This is not the same location as Suối Cắt village in northern Vietnam.

Background

In late 1967, Pope Paul VI had declared 1 January 1968 a day of peace and persuaded the South Vietnamese and the Americans to observe a truce. In a released statement, the Viet Cong (VC) also agreed to observe a 36-hour ceasefire.[3] The 25th Infantry Division had been patrolling the Vietnamese-Cambodian border in Operation Yellowstone to interdict PAVN/VC coming down the Ho Chi Minh trail. The 25th Infantry Division had set up a two-battalion perimeter, the 2nd and 3rd Battalions of the 22nd Infantry Regiment, with artillery 7miles from the Cambodian border in Tay Ninh Province outside a village called Suoi Cut.[1] The fire support position, named Fire Support Base Burt, was located near the junction of Highways 244 and 246, close to Black Virgin Mountain. Troops had that day recently set up a landing zone (LZ) for supply helicopters. Once the helicopter pad had been constructed, supplies could be flown in, and on 1 January the 25th Infantry Division's Christmas mail had arrived. Soldiers spent the day opening packages from their families.[4]

Battle

On the night of 1 January, six hours before the truce was to have ended, a 2,500-man force made up of elements of the 271st and 272nd Regiments of the VC 9th Division attacked the American position.[5] The PAVN/VC attacked in three waves and were able to infiltrate the perimeter.[1] [4] The first wave was launched after a heavy mortar attack at 23:30. A little after midnight, another attack was launched and a third human wave attack around 01:00. The Americans were finally able to repel the attacks by using air and artillery support. Air support was provided by attack helicopters and AC-47 Spooky gunships. In total, 28 air sorties were launched against the PAVN. The Americans said that they counted 348 enemy soldiers killed in the action. By comparison, American forces suffered 23 killed. Last contact with enemy units occurred at 05:15 when they withdrew from the battleground. The remnants of the PAVN/VC were pursued to the south and southeast.[1] [2]

Aftermath

Thirty days later, on 31 January 1968, PAVN and VC forces launched the Tet Offensive throughout South Vietnam. When Oliver Stone returned to the U.S., he was puzzled that the New Year's attack had received no media coverage. For some time, he thought he might have imagined the events of January 1 until, at a reunion of the men of the 25th Infantry Division, other Vietnam vets who were there that night were able to confirm the battle did indeed take place.[6]

In popular media

Among the soldiers serving in the American units during the battle were future writer Larry Heinemann and future film director Oliver Stone.[7] [8] Heinemann later wrote a book about his Vietnam experiences titled Black Virgin Mountain: A Return to Vietnam,[9] and Stone would direct the dramatization of the battle in the 1986 film Platoon. The final battle scene of Platoon is a dramatization of the real battle Stone experienced. Survivors of the battle often relate how close to actual events the fighting was to what is seen on screen.[7]

Notes and References

  1. News: G.I.'s Kill 348 in Repelling Foe's Attack During Truce. The New York Times. 1. Johnson. Thomas A.. 3 January 1968. 25 February 2010.
  2. Book: Trass, Adrian. The U.S. Army Campaigns of the Vietnam War: Turning Point 1967-1968. Center of Military History. 2017. 28–30.
  3. News: Excerpt from '1968: The Year That Rocked the World'. USA Today. 5 January 2004. 25 February 2010. Kurlansky . Mark.
  4. 1968: Trauma. AARP the Magazine. Dwyer. Ed. 25 March 2008. February 23, 2010.
  5. News: Ceasefire hardly one at all. The Miami News. The Palm Beach Post. 5 .
  6. Web site: Platoon . Motion picture; Documentary Commentary. Stone . Oliver (Director). . 19 December 1986. 11 July 2012.
  7. Book: Bates, Milton J. . The wars we took to Vietnam: cultural conflict and storytelling. University of California Press. 1996. 0520204336. 106.
  8. Web site: Platoon: The story of Oliver Stone in Vietnam. gaijinass. 27 February 2010. March 3, 2010. Gaijinass. https://web.archive.org/web/20100620021713/http://gaijinass.wordpress.com/2010/02/27/platoon/. 20 June 2010. dead.
  9. Book: Heinemann, Larry. Larry Heinemann. Black Virgin Mountain: a return to Vietnam. Doubleday. 2005. 038551221X. 194. registration.