Thursday, May 15, 2008

Camp Duc Hue - The North Vietnamese Army

There were two major North Vietnamese Army units just across the Cambodian border from Camp Duc Hue, home of A325, A/5th Special Forces Group. The two units, the 271st & 272nd Regiments of the 9th NVA Division were based in Ba Thu, Cambodia. An NVA regiment had about 1500 men in it. The 9th NVA Division was often referred to as the 9th VC Division although its major troop units were NVA. The 88th NVA Regiment also belonged to the 9th division. I doubt that both regiments were ever at Ba Thu at the same time but Ba Thu was their base area. Did Camp Duc Hue keep the NVA bottled up in Cambodia? No. They moved to the north or south of the camp almost at will. Did they attack Duc Hue? Yes, but not a direct infantry assault on the camp. While I was there the most serious attack was an attack with automatic weapons fire, RPGs, and mortars. There were more than 100 mortar rounds fired within a short time, perhaps ten or fifteen minutes. Our casualties were light. The air support we were able to call in did some damage to the NVA. We found evidence of that the next morning. We joked that they were on their way back to Ba Thu and were tired of carrying all those mortar rounds so they unloaded them on us. I don't know it that was true or not but it sounded good. Much more common were mortar attacks with 82 and 120mm mortars. These were normally fired from the area of the Angel's Wing. Again, the humor was that they had a mortar school set up there, the closest point to us, and we were the final exam for their students. The rockets starting falling when I was there, mainly Katyusha 107mm plus some heavier stuff. Scarey stuff. Duc Hue a distinct terrain advantage, something that our sister camps to the north did not enjoy. It was mostly wide open around the camp. Anyone attacking the camp would be easy prey for return fire, both direct and indirect from camp, and any air assets we could bring to our defense. It would have been suicide for one of the regiments to attack. Ba Thu was not our only worry though. There were other enemy units across the border. I once watched an unknown aircraft fly along the border at several thousand feet. As he continued north from Ba Thu, twenty-three different anti-aircraft guns opened up on him, one after the other as he flew north. The largest appeared to be 37mm. An operation that I was involved with went into the armpit of the Angel's Wing and found what was estimated to be a battalion of NVA. The enemy owned the other side of the border, no doubt. We had around 500 lightly armed Civilian Irregular Defense Group (CIDG)soldiers, two 105mm tubes from an ARVN artillery unit, two 81mm and two 4.2inch mortars. We were isolated, all supplies had to be hooked in by helicopter. The stress level was high but life went on inside the camp. We had decent chow, cold beer and soda, an occasional movie, mail from home and even left camp once in awhile for reasons other than combat operations. R & R was on everyone's schedule and business in Tay Ninh, Binh Hoa or Saigon wasn't all business. Things were not all bad.

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7 comments:

Tom said...

I remember Due Hue, I was the Detachment XO from Jul 68 to Feb 69. The camp was not fortified when I was there, tin roofed huts, no sandbags, no bunkers excect for the commo bunker. Thank god the engineers came in in 69 to correct all that. Tom Rasco

Unknown said...

My dad was stationed there too.His commo bunker took 18 mortar rounds.Took two days before my dad was dug out.
Gene Gilmer

surveyor11 said...

I WAS IN DUC HUE IN 1968 , I WAS A TEAM LEADER OF A 3 MAN SURVEYING TEAM FROM THE 79TH ENGINEER GROUP IN LONG BINH . WE SPENT MOST OF OUR TOUR OUT WITH S.F. TEAMS ABOUT 10 MONTHS OUT OF 12 IN PLACES LIKE BU DOP , DUC HUE , AN KHE , SONG BE , AN LOC , ETC , ETC. WE WERE TDY AND HAD AN OPEN SET OF ORDERS TO HOP ON ANY MODE OF TRANSPORTATION GOING IN THE DIRECTION WE WERE HEADED . IT WAS GREAT DUTY THE S.F. GUY'S TREATED US AS ONE OF THEM AND TRAINED US ON ALL THE CAMP WEAPONS , I WAS IN DUC HUE WHEN IT TOOK 100+ ROUNDS OF 122 ROCKETS ALL INSIDE THE INNER BURM AND KNOW ONE WAS WOUNDED THE ONLY CASUALTY I REMEMBER WAS THE XO FELL INTO THE CONSATINA WIRE RUNNING AROUND THE INNER BURM , WE HAD BEEN DRINKING A LITTLE BEER AND JIM BEAM !!!!! LOL !!!! BUT WE WERE ALL ALWAYS READY TO DO OUR JOBS. SGT. E-5 JEFFREY A. GIBBS SEPT. 1967- SEPT. 1968 " WELCOME HOME MY BROTHER'S"

Bn E Jóhon said...

My name is Ben i had 1 year 1967-1968 in DucHue camp as a CIDG

Bn E Jóhon said...

I had some American friend in there .Tyler,DuDex,Mac,William ect....

Unknown said...

Hi was at Duc Hue twice left in 69/70? To head back to Fort Devens with the 10th Gp. I was also at Loung HOA from 67 until we closed out and transfered it over to the Rangers.

Unknown said...

I was in Duc Hue Camp A325 for 5 days surveying the airfield with a Dumpy Level in May 5, 1969 to May 9, 1969. I was TDY with D Company 31 St Eng Bn with 14 other engineers. Sgt Hill and Lt Bryant were the NCO and Company Commander.

Former Sp4 Ken Piotter HHC 31st Eng Bn