Operation Crazy Horse

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Operation Crazy Horse (16 May to 5 June 1966), named after Lakota warrior Crazy Horse, was a search and destroy mission during the Vietnam War conducted by military forces of the United States, South Vietnam, and the Republic of South Korea in two valleys in Binh Dinh province of South Vietnam. The U.S. estimated that 507 communist Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army soldiers were killed during the operation. The Americans had 83 soldiers killed. 14 Koreans and 8 South Vietnamese soldiers were killed.

Location of Binh Dinh province in South Vietnam.
File:Operaton crazy horse.png
A map of the Vinh Thanh valley and Operation Crazy Horse in Binh Dinh province, May 1966

The objective of the operation was to destroy the 2nd Viet Cong regiment (approximately 2,000 men) believed to be in the area and thereby prevent a communist attack on the Vinh Thanh Civilian Irregular Defense Group camp. The U.S. forces had the continuing objective of protecting Highway 19 and the base camp of the 1st Cavalry Division (Airborne) at An Khe from harassment by the Viet Cong.

Background

In September 1965, the 1st Cavalry Division (Airborne), newly arrived in South Vietnam, carved out Camp Radcliff, its base, near the town of An Khe to ensure that Highway 19 which reached from the coast of South Vietnam to the Central Highlands city of Pleiku remained under the control of allied forces. Almost immediately the 1st Cavalry began mounting operations against communist forces in the Vinh Thanh valley, 10 miles (16 km) northwest of An Khe. Vinh Thanh Valley was small, approximately 12 miles (19 km) long and less than 3 miles (4.8 km) wide but heavily populated and dominated by the Viet Cong.[1]

10 miles (16 km) east of Vinh Thanh Valley was the Suoi Ca Valley. The two valleys were separated by a chain of heavily-forested mountains rising as much as 2,600 feet (790 m) over the river valleys. The soldiers dubbed Suoi Ca Valley "Happy Valley" (not to be confused with another American-named "Happy Valley" near the city of Danang). A trail crossing the mountains between the two valleys was named the "Oregon Trail." The U.S. estimated that a regiment of main force Viet Cong guerrillas controlled Suoi Ca Valley.

In late 1965, sweeps through the two valleys by the 1st Cavalry failed to find large numbers of Viet Cong. They were believed to have fled the valleys, but to have returned after the 1st Cavalry withdrew to its base.[2]

In early May 1966, Montagnard irregulars and U.S. Special Forces soldiers in the Vinh Thanh valley reported clashes and increased activity by the Viet Cong in the area and a possible major attack on 19 May, the birthday of North Vietnamese leader Ho Chi Minh. 1st Cavalry commander General John Norton ordered Operation Crazy Horse to preempt the attack and attempt to destroy the Viet Cong regiment believed to be in the area. Norton was prepared to dedicate up to five battalions of 1st Cavalry troopers to the task.[3]

File:Troops Boarding Helicopter During Operation Crazy Horse.jpg
American soldiers board helicopters at An Khe during Operation Crazy Horse.

The operation

Phase One. The Americans began Operation Crazy Horse with heavy harassing artillery fire designed to disrupt a possible attack on the CIDG camp and to prepare for a helicopter landing. The initial helicopter landing was at Landing Zone Hereford on a ridge overlooking the Vinh Thanh valley and Special Forces camp three miles (5 km) distant.

Shortly after landing on May 16, two American companies became engaged with a Viet Cong battalion on a ridge near the landing zone. Because of bad weather, little air support was available to the Americans who were surrounded. After an all-night fight at close quarters, the Viet Cong withdrew leaving behind 38 bodies and having killed 28 Americans.[4] Persuaded that they had located the Viet Cong regiment, the American sent in two battalions on May 17 to find and pursue the communists. One battalion landed at the CIDG camp in the Vinh Thinh valley; the other touched down at Landing Zone Horse, in the mountains east of the Vinh Thanh Valley. The strategy was that the Americans would trap the Viet Cong between the two battalions, but, after initial firefights, the Americans searched eastward for several days mostly without success.[5]

File:Operation Crazy Horse Vietnam.jpg
American soldiers fan out from Landing Zone Hereford.

Last Stand at Landing Zone Hereford. On 21 March, the situation at Landing Zone Hereford had been quiet for several days. Over the protests of the company commander, an under strength weapons platoon of 20 soldiers was left alone at the landing zone while one company of the 1st Cavalry returned to An Khe and another departed the landing zone by foot on a search and destroy mission. Less than an hour after the platoon was left alone, the Viet Cong attacked with mortars followed by an infantry assault. Within the few minutes until reinforcements could arrive, 15 American soldiers and a journalist, Sam Castan, were killed. The Viet Cong retired uncontested from the area.[6]

Phase Two. On May 24, in the wake of the Viet Cong attack at Landing Zone Hereford, General Norton changed strategies, called off search and destroy missions temporarily as he no longer wanted his soldiers "to go banging around in the enemy's backyard," and attempted instead to encircle the area where the Viet Cong were believed to be, cut off their escape routes, and called in artillery and airstrikes while Americans, South Korean, and South Vietnamese military units attempted to ambush Viet Cong units presumed to be fleeing the area. The peak allied strength devoted to Operation Crazy Horse was four American, one Vietnamese, one South Korean, and one CIDG (Montagnard with Special Forces advisers) battalions. One of the few significant clashes came on May 26 at Landing Zone Monkey where an American company was briefly under siege and a helicopter was shot down. By the end of May, it was apparent that most of the Viet Cong had escaped. Operation Crazy Horse was officially terminated on 5 June.[7]

Assessment

Despite the failure by the Americans to engage the Viet Cong in large battles of attrition, the U.S. declared Operation Crazy Horse a success. The U.S. estimated that 507 communist soldiers had been killed at a loss of 83 Americans, 14 South Koreans, 8 South Vietnamese, and an unrecorded number of Montagnards. The operation also revealed, however, a limitation of airmobile warfare in heavily forested mountains. With only a few feasible places where helicopters could land, communist soldiers could anticipate likely landing sites and prepare to contest the landing or ambush the Americans as they fanned out from the landing zone.[8]

Three months later the 1st Cavalry was back in Binh Dinh again with Operation Thayer to attempt once again to eliminate North Vietnamese and Viet Cong influence in the province.

References

  1. "Publication, 1st Cavalry Division Association - Interim Report of Operations, First Cavalry Division, July 1965 to December 1966", ca. 1967, Folder 01, Box 01, Richard P. Carmody Collection, The Vietnam Center and Archive, Texas Tech University. Accessed 17 Apr. 2015. <http://www.vietnam.ttu.edu/virtualarchive/items.php?item=22030101001>accessed 16 Apr 2015
  2. "Publication, 1st Cavalry Division Association - Interim Report of Operations, First Cavalry Division, July 1965 to December 1966", ca. 1967, Folder 01, Box 01, Richard P. Carmody Collection, The Vietnam Center and Archive, Texas Tech University. Accessed 17 Apr. 2015. <http://www.vietnam.ttu.edu/virtualarchive/items.php?item=22030101001>accessed 16 Apr 2015
  3. Garland, John M. (2000) Combat Operations: Stemming the Tide, May 1965 to October 1966 United States Army in Vietnam, Center of Military History, United States Army, Washington, D.C. pp 219-220
  4. Tolson, Gen.John F. (1999), Airmobility 1961-1971 Department of the Army, Washington, D.C., pp. 98-99
  5. Garland, pp. 220-225
  6. Christy, Michael (2012),"Last Stand at Landing Zone Hereford", Vietnam, http://www.historynet.com/last-stand-at-lz-hereford.htm, accessed 1 May 2015
  7. Garland, pp 226-228
  8. Garland, pp. 227-228