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1965 Qui Nhơn hotel bombing

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Viet Cong bombing in Vietnam (1965)
1965 Qui Nhơn hotel bombing
Part of theVietnam War
Rescue workers at the site of the bombing
LocationQui Nhơn,South Vietnam
Date10 February 1965
Attack type
Bombing
Deaths23 U.S. Army
2Viet Cong
7 civilians
PerpetratorsViet Cong
1959–1963:Guerrilla phase

1964–1965: Viet Cong offensive andAmerican intervention

1966 campaign

1967 campaign

1968–1969:Tet Offensive and aftermath

1969–1971:Vietnamization

1972:Easter Offensive

1973–1974: Post-Paris Peace Accords

1975:Spring offensive


Air operations

Naval operations

Lists of allied operations

TheViet Cuong Hotel inQui Nhơn was bombed by theViet Cong on the evening of 10 February 1965, during theVietnam War. Viet Cong (VC) operatives detonated explosive charges causing the entire building to collapse. The operation killed 23 U.S. servicemen, seven Vietnamese civilians, and two of the VC attackers.[1]

Background

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The four-storey Khách Sạn Viet Cuong or Viet Cuong Hotel ("Strength of Vietnam") was used as a U.S. Army enlisted men's billet in the city of Qui Nhơn. Many of the 60 men billeted there came from the 140th Transportation Detachment (Cargo Helicopter Field Maintenance) who provided maintenance support for the 117th Assault Helicopter Company based atQui Nhơn Airfield.

Following the VCAttack on Camp Holloway on 6–7 February 1965, the U.S. and South Vietnamese launchedOperation Flaming Dart, a series of retaliatory airstrikes againstNorth Vietnam. In retaliation for the Flaming Dart attacks the VC immediately planned to hit another U.S. target.[2]

Explosion

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At 20:05 the VC began their assault on the hotel, while two VC were killed by machine-gun fire by a U.S. sentry on the hotel roof; VC killed the South Vietnamese guards posted outside the building and placed satchel charges at the main door. A 100-pound plastic charge was detonated next to the staircase which provided the main structural support for the building. The explosion caused the entire hotel to pancake to the ground. 21 members of the 140th Transportation Detachment were killed as were two other soldiers and seven Vietnamese civilians.[2]

Aftermath

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Following this attack PresidentJohnson orderedOperation Flaming Dart II.[3] All U.S. dependents in South Vietnam were returned to the U.S.[4]

References

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toQui Nhon hotel bombing.

Public Domain This article incorporatespublic domain material from websites or documents of theUnited States Army Center of Military History.

  1. ^"Bomb Hits G.I. Barracks".New York Times. 11 February 1965. Retrieved25 October 2017.
  2. ^abTucker, Spencer (2011).The Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War: A Political, Social, and Military History, 2nd Edition. ABC-CLIO. p. 372.ISBN 9781851099610.
  3. ^Tilford, Earl (1993).Crosswinds: The Air Force's setup in Vietnam. Second Texas A&M University Press. p. 68.ISBN 9781603441261.
  4. ^Borch, Frederic (2001).Judge Advocates in Combat. Government Printing Office. p. 10.ISBN 9780160876615.

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