Battle of Lang Vei
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Battle of Lang Vei | |||||||
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Part of Second Indochina War/Vietnam War | |||||||
PT-76 Victory Monument |
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Combatants | |||||||
North Vietnam | United States | ||||||
Commanders | |||||||
Unknown | Capt. Frank C. Willoughby | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
400 12 PT-76 |
500 | ||||||
Casualties | |||||||
Estimated 200 KIA, 7 tanks destroyed |
US: 4 KIA, 16 WIA, 9 MIA/POW ARVN: 5 KIA, 3 WIA CIDG 165 KIA, 30 WIA |
Vietnam War |
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Ap Bac - Binh Gia – Buon Ma Thuot - Chenla I - Chenla II - Dong Xoai- Barrell Roll - Steel Tiger - Tiger Hound - Commando Hunt - Ho Chi Minh - Ia Drang – Lang Vei – Long Tan – Lima Site 85 – Ong Thanh- Hills 881 & 861 – Dak To – Khe Sanh - FSB Mary Ann - 1st Tet – 1st Saigon – 2nd Tet – Hamburger Hill – Ripcord – Cambodia – Operation Tailwind - Eastertide – Phuoc Long – Xuan Loc – Secret War - 2nd Saigon |
Lang Vei was an American Special Forces camp, located approximately 7 kilometers west of the Khe Sanh Combat Base in the northwestern corner of South Vietnam, near its borders with North Vietnam and Laos. Constructed in 1967 for special operations along and across the Laotian border, the camp was overwhelmed by North Vietnamese forces on February 7, 1968.
Lang Vei was positioned some nine kilometers west of Khe Sanh village on Route Coloniale 9. Known to Americans as Highway 9, this major roadway stretched through Quang Tri Province from Dong Ha on the coast west to Lao Bao, passing through places such as Cam Lo as well as Khe Sanh.
[edit] The Battle of Lang Vei
The North Vietnamese Army (known to Americans as the NVA, but more properly the VPA or Vietnam People's Army) launched an attack on the U.S. Marine combat base at Khe Sanh on January 21, 1968. On February 6th, they attacked the nearby Lang Vei camp. The camp's 500 defenders included American Green Berets and indigenous troops.
The camp was subjected to an unusually intense mortar and artillery barrage beginning about 6:00 p.m. on the 6th, and the defenders immediately responded with counter fire from the camp and supporting fire from the Khe Sanh Combat Base.
The VPA ground attack began before 1:00 a.m. in the predawn darkness of February 7th, supported by some twelve Russian PT-76 reconnaissance tanks. The first two to reach the protective wire around the camp perimeter were taken under fire and knocked out, but additional tanks maneuvered around the destroyed vehicles to overrun the defenders of the southern sector.
The camp’s defenders had been warned of a possible armored attack by earlier intelligence reports and were equipped with LAWS rockets. These, together with the camp’s 106-mm. and 57-mm. recoilless rifles, destroyed another 5 tanks but were not able to stop the remainder. The defenders made a fighting retreat from the perimeter but were soon surrounded in pockets of resistance. Meanwhile the VPA forces ranged through the camp, using their tanks and explosive charges to destroy fortifications within the camp and attack the tactical operations center and other combat positions.
When day broke the defenders in the operations center called in air strikes against the North Vietnamese and requested the Marines at Khe Sanh to implement their contingency plan to reinforce the Special Forces camp. Fearing that the Lang Vei attack was part of a larger VPA scheme the Marines chose not to reinforce the camp. At noon General William Westmoreland decided to evacuate the surviving defenders and a reaction force was dispatched with tactical air support.
The extraction took place that afternoon and by nightfall the camp had been evacuated. The seriously wounded were evacuated by helicopter while the reaction force escorted the remaining survivors and many refugees in a foot march that reached the Khe Sanh base on the morning of February 8th. Almost half of the defenders had been killed or were missing in action, but the attackers stopped at Lang Vei without attacking Khe Sanh.
[edit] Results
The battle ended with a North Vietnamese victory. Although they succeeded in overrunning the camp they sustained heavy casualties, including most of their Russian tanks (7 confirmed with 2 more possible). Due to the heavy losses, VPA General Vo Nguyen Giap abandoned his plan to use the tanks in a larger assault on Khe Sanh.
US and allied forces casualties:
US Special Forces - 4 killed, 16 wounded, 9 MIA/POW
ARVN Special Forces (LLDB) - 5 killed, 3 wounded, MIA/POW unknown
Civilian Irregular Defense Groups (CIDG): 165 killed, 30 wounded, MIA/POW unknown
MIKE Force - 34 killed, 32 wounded, MIA/POW unknown
North Vietnamese casualties:
VPA: Estimated 200 killed, unknown wounded, 7 confirmed PT-76 tanks destroyed
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Today a PT-76 tank rests on the site of the Lang Vei battle as a war monument commemorating the VPA victory.