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Operation Bushmaster II

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Part of the Vietnam War (1965)
Operation Bushmaster II
Part of theVietnam War

Battle of Ap Nha Mat, 5 December 1965
Date1–6 December 1965
Location11°15′47″N106°20′02″E / 11.2631°N 106.334°E /11.2631; 106.334
ResultUS declares operational success
Belligerents
United StatesViet Cong
Commanders and leaders
Col. William Brodbeckunknown
Units involved
3rd Brigade, 1st Infantry Division272nd Regiment
Strength
US estimate: 2400
Casualties and losses
44 killed
3 missing[1]
USbody count: 318 killed
27 captured
214 estimated killed and wounded
75 weapons recovered[1]: 6–7 
Map
1959–1963:Guerrilla phase

1964–1965: Viet Cong offensive andAmerican intervention

1966 campaign

1967 campaign

1968–1969:Tet Offensive and aftermath

1969–1971:Vietnamization and
fighting in Cambodia

1972:Easter Offensive

1973–1974: Post-Paris Peace Accords

1975:Spring offensive


Air operations

Naval operations

Lists of allied operations

Operation Bushmaster II (also known as theBattle of Ap Nha Mat) was a US Army operation that took place in theMichelin Rubber Plantation, lasting from 1 to 6 December 1965.

Prelude

[edit]

On the evening of 27 November 1965 theArmy of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN)7th Regiment, 5th Division operating in the Michelin Rubber Plantation was overrun by theViet Cong (VC) 271st and 273rd Regiments, killing most of the Regiment (possibly up to 500 soldiers) and its five US advisers.[2]Major generalSeaman orderedColonel William Brodbeck's3rd Brigade, 1st Infantry Division to rescue the shattered 7th Regiment. Several days later intelligence was received that the VCPhu Loi Battalion and the 272nd Regiment were operating in the area and the mission was changed to locating and engaging these units.[3]: 88  The VC forces meanwhile prepared an ambush for the incoming assault planned by US forces.[2]

Operation

[edit]

Operation Bloodhound, later renamed Operation Bushmaster II, commenced on 1 December when the2nd Battalion, 2nd Infantry Regiment (2/2nd Infantry) was landed at Landing Zone Dallas (11°06′29″N106°10′55″E / 11.108°N 106.182°E /11.108; 106.182) inside the Michelin Rubber Plantation.[4] LZ Dallas was to serve as the command post for the two Battalions involved in the operation. From 2–5 December the US Battalions searched southeast of LZ Dallas in the VC base area known as theLong Nguyen Secret Zone.[3]: 89 

At midday on 5 December, three companies from the 2/2nd Infantry assaulted a VC base complex and were met by heavy fire from the entrenched VC.[2] An American attempt to outflank the VC position was repulsed and the VC force then attempted to outflank and press the Americans who retreated into a defensive perimeter.[1]: 5  The 2/2nd Infantry commanderLCol. Shuffer called for air and artillery support and the8th Battalion, 6th Artillery Regiment and2nd Battalion, 32nd Artillery Regiment provided fire support on the southwestern perimeter, while air strikes were conducted on the east and helicopter gunships strikes on the north. The VC attempted to escape this firepower by "hugging" the American positions, but were forced back by small arms fire. The barrage continued for over four hours allowing the 2/2 Infantry to secure their position and to allow Companies A and C to move south behind a creeping barrage to overrun the VC bunkers. Eighteen aerial sorties were conducted alongside the artillery barrage, which prompted the VC to withdraw.[1]: 2 [5] By 14:30 the VC begun withdrawing, leaving behind their dead and wounded. Shuffer decided not to pursue the retreating VC fearing a further ambush and withdrew into a night perimeter.[3]: 89–92 

The 2/2nd Infantry spent the next few days policing the battlefield and destroying bunkers and Operation Bushmaster II ended on 6 December.[3]: 92 

Aftermath

[edit]

Total US casualties were 44 killed and three missing, while the US claims VC losses were 318 killed and 27 captured and 75 individual weapons were recovered.[1]: 6–7  The 272nd Regiment disappeared for the next four months presumably to recover its losses.[3]: 92 

References

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  1. ^abcde"Combat After Action Report Operation Bloodhound/Bushmaster II 29 November-5 December 1965"(PDF). 3rd Brigade, 1st Infantry Division. 30 December 1965. p. 7.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^abcwriter, Jacob Brooks | Herald staff."50 years later, local vet recalls bloody Vietnam battle".The Killeen Daily Herald. Retrieved2018-06-13.
  3. ^abcdeCarland, John (2000).Combat Operations: Stemming the Tide, May 1965 to October 1966. Government Printing Office.ISBN 9781782663430. Archived fromthe original on September 13, 2012.Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in thepublic domain.
  4. ^Kelley, Michael (2002).Where we were in Vietnam. Hellgate Press. p. 135.ISBN 978-1555716257.
  5. ^"Bushwhacked At Ap Nha Mat". Retrieved2018-06-13.

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

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