The Battle of Bong Son: Operation Masher/White Wing, 1966

The Battle of Bong Son: Operation Masher/White Wing, 1966
Author: by Kenneth P. White (Author)
Publisher: Casemate
Publication Date: 2024-02-29
Language: English
Print Length: 288 pages
ISBN-10: 1636244017
ISBN-13: 9781636244013


Book Description
The first full account of this significant battle, based on first-hand accounts and historical documents.

Operation Masher/White Wing targeted the regiments of the North Vietnamese Army Sao Vang Division operating in the Bong Son area in northeast Binh Dinh Province in central South Vietnam. The operation started on January 24, 1966, immediately after the Vietnamese New Year (Tet) and ended six weeks later. It was led by newly promoted Colonel Harold G. Moore, who as a lieutenant colonel commanded the 1st Battalion, 7th Cavalry in the battle of Landing Zone X-Ray in the Ia Drang Valley two months earlier.

In 41 days of sustained fighting, the 1st Cav battled each of the three regiments of the Sao Vang Division, resulting in enemy losses of more than 3,000 KIA. This came at the cost of 199 Americans killed on the battlefield and 46 more who died in the crash of a U.S. Air Force C-123 aircraft en route to the battlefield, making it one of the deadliest battles of the entire Vietnam War.

Operation Masher/White Wing was a success. The 1st Cav demonstrated that it had the firepower, mobility, and leadership to find the enemy and deliver a severe blow to it in terms of personnel and equipment losses and in forced evacuation from formerly “secure” base areas, seemingly proving the value of the search-and-destroy strategy.

However within a few weeks, intelligence reports indicated that North Vietnamese soldiers were returning to the Bong Son area in small groups. By late April, the Sao Vang Division was back in the area in force. Operation Masher/White Wing proved to be the start of a very long and deadly struggle between the 1st Cav and North Vietnamese for control of Binh Dinh Province—multiple search & destroy operations eventually resulted in more than 9,000 enemy KIA and 2,358 enemy detained, with friendly losses of more than 1,200 KIA, 5,775 WIA, and 27 MIA. While Masher/White Wing demonstrated that search & destroy operations were very effective at the tactical level but without a high-level strategy to stop the unabated flow of fresh Communist troops and supplies into South Vietnam, it wasn’t clear just how they contributed to overall victory. At the start of 1968, General Westmoreland ordered the 1st Cav to terminate its operations in the Bong Son area, bringing the battle to a close.


Table of contents

Prologue

1. Preparing for Battle
2. Tragedy Strikes
3. Attack
4. Breakout from the Cemetery
5. A Pincer Action
6. Closing-out Phase I
7. Into the An Lao Valley
8. The Eagle’s Claw
9. Yelling Like Madmen
10. Death in a Narrow Place
11. The Iron Triangle
12. No Rest for the Weary
13. The Go Chai Mountains
14. Black Horse
15. Conclusion

Appendix I: Book of Honor
Appendix II: Memorandum Requesting Name Change
Appendix III: Citations and Award
Bibliography
Historical Documents
Glossary


About the Author

Kenneth P. White served 18 months in Vietnam as an infantryman in the 1st Cavalry Division’s Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol unit. He was a member of a six-man recon team that supported the brigades of the division in the Bong Son area by searching out and locating enemy troop encampments, reporting enemy movements, and directing fire power at targets of opportunity. He lives in Fairfax, Virginia, and is active in the 1st Cavalry Division Association as a contributor to the association’s SABER newspaper.

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