Operation Brochet Explained

Conflict:Operation Brochet
Partof:the First Indochina War
Date:August - October 1953
Place:near Nam Dinh, Red River Delta, French Indochina
Result:Viet Minh victory
Combatant1: French Union
Combatant2: Viet Minh
Strength1:~9,000 - 15,300
Strength2:~10,000
Casualties1:96 casualties
Casualties2:10 dead

Operation Brochet took place during the French Indochina War, between August and October 1953. A combined arms operation, Brochet involved 18 battalions of the French Expeditionary and Vietnamese National Armies fighting against the 42nd and 50th Viet Minh Regiments, fighting in the southern reaches of the Red River Delta near Tonkin in North Vietnam.[1] The 1st and 2nd Parachute Battalions of the French Foreign Legion (BEP),[2] [1] and the 1st and 3rd Colonial Parachute Battalions (BPC) took part,[3] as did forces of the Vietnamese National Army.[4] Their objective was to sweep the Delta and remove Viet Minh influence.[4]

Brochet enjoyed only limited success.[1] By October 11, 1 BEP had lost 96 men against only 10 confirmed Viet Minh war dead,[2] and despite French efforts between 5,000 and 7,000 of the Delta villages remained under Viet Minh control.[4]

References

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Printed

Notes and References

  1. Windrow, p. 195.
  2. Windrow, p. 245.
  3. Windrow, p. 249.
  4. Windrow and Chappell, p. 39.