| Operation Double Eagle | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part ofVietnam War | |||||||
Company F, 2/4 Marines pass an LVT-5 | |||||||
| |||||||
| Belligerents | |||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||
| Units involved | |||||||
2nd Battalion, 3rd Marines 2nd Battalion, 4th Marines 2nd Battalion, 9th Marines 3rd Battalion, 11th Marines 3rd Battalion, 12th Marines 1st Force Reconnaissance Company Company B, 3rd Reconnaissance Battalion | |||||||
| Casualties and losses | |||||||
| US body count 312 killed 19 captured 18 weapons recovered | |||||||
Operation Double Eagle was aUS Marine Corps andArmy of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) operation that took place in southernQuảng Ngãi Province, lasting from 28 January to 17 February 1966, during theVietnam War. The operation was mounted in conjunction withOperation Masher in northernBình Định Province. The operation was inconclusive as thePeople's Army of Vietnam (PAVN) and theVietcong (VC) had largely slipped away.




On 7 December 1965COMUSMACV GeneralWilliam Westmoreland instructedIII Marine Amphibious Force (III MAF) andI Field Force, Vietnam to prepare plans for operations in theI Corps/II Corps border area to commence in late January. On 6 January III MAF commander LGLewis W. Walt instructed BGJonas M. Platt to reestablishTask Force Delta and commence planning the operation in coordination with ARVN2nd Division commander GeneralHoàng Xuân Lãm.[1]: 19–21
It was believed that the PAVN 18th and 95th Regiments and the VC 2nd Regiment were operating in Quảng Ngai Province, but that their base areas were located further south in the coastal areas of Bình Định Province. The Marines and ARVN would attempt to engage the PAVN/VC while the1st Cavalry Division in the complementary Operation Masher would attack the base areas.[1]: 21–2
The Marines' operation plan would consist of 3 phases: first Marine reconnaissance units and an artillery battery would be landed atBa Tơ Special Forces Camp and a company from2nd Battalion, 4th Marines with units from the ARVN 2nd Division would reconnoiter the landing beach (named Red Beach) (14°50′10″N108°59′42″E / 14.836°N 108.995°E /14.836; 108.995) 3.5 miles (5.6 km) northeast ofĐức Phổ. On 27 January another company from 2/4 Marines and a company from the ARVN 4th Regiment would secure Hill 163 (14°49′19″N108°59′49″E / 14.822°N 108.997°E /14.822; 108.997) south of Red Beach. On 28 JanuaryBattalion Landing Teams (BLTs)3rd Battalion, 1st Marines and 2/4 Marines would make an amphibious landing on Red Beach and secure the area. Two days later followingB-52 strikes further inland, the Marines would move by helicopter to cut off any PAVN/VC attempting to retreat west. Meanwhile, the ARVN 2nd Division would operate to the south along the Quảng Ngai/Bình Định provincial border blocking any retreat in that direction.[1]: 22–4
On 10 January 2 platoons from1st Force Reconnaissance Company and 4 105 mm howitzers of Battery H,3rd Battalion, 12th Marines were landed by helicopter at Ba Tơ Special Forces Camp and the reconnaissance Marines began patrols from the base. On the afternoon of 21 January a 14-man patrol was attacked by PAVN/VC at the base of Hill 829 (14°47′56″N108°41′28″E / 14.799°N 108.691°E /14.799; 108.691) 4 km northwest of Ba Tơ with the artillery forward observer going missing. The next day the Marines were again attacked by PAVN/VC and scattered into bush where they were later rescued by helicopters covered by helicopter gunships, losing another Marine missing.[1]: 24
On 13 January the company from 2/4 Marines and the ARVN Reconnaissance Company, 2nd Division completed their reconnaissance of Red Beach.[1]: 24
On 24 January the 1st Cavalry Division began Operation Masher.[1]: 24
On 26 JanuaryHMM-261 helicopters landed Company E, 2/4 Marines at the ARVN Nui Dau base 8 miles (13 km) south of Red Beach and after midnight on 27 January Company E and the ARVN 2nd Company, 3rd Battalion began a night march to Hill 163 arriving at 13:00 on 27 January.[1]: 25
D-Day 28 January was rainy with low clouds however the landings proceeded smoothly with BLT 3/1 Marines on Red Beach by 07:00. The landing was supported by naval gunfire support fromUSS Oklahoma City andUSS Barry and air support fromMarine Aircraft Group 11 andMarine Aircraft Group 12, however opposition was minimal. BLT 2/4 Marines and Battery H3rd Battalion, 11th Marines landed by midday but worsening weather in the afternoon delayed further amphibious landings and buildup of forces ashore.[1]: 25–7
The bad weather continued into 29 January. Company E 2/4 Marines left Hill 163 and rejoined the rest of their battalion. BLT2nd Battalion, 3rd Marines was landed byHMM-362 helicopters on Nui Xuong Giong (14°49′N108°58′E / 14.81°N 108.96°E /14.81; 108.96), a hill northwest of Red Beach, in the afternoon. Also on 29 January the2nd Battalion, 9th Marines was flown intoQuảng Ngãi Airfield to exploit the results of the B-52 strikes scheduled for the next day.[1]: 27–8
On 30 January, despite efforts by III MAF to postpone the B-52 strikes due to the bad weather, the B-52s hit targets in the Song Ve Valley (14°47′59″N108°44′10″E / 14.7996°N 108.736°E /14.7996; 108.736), but the Marines were unable to immediately follow up the strikes due to bad weather. That afternoon helicopters moved BLT 2/3 Marines further inland, completing their landing by 17:30. That same afternoonMarine Aircraft Group 36 established a helicopter forward operating base called "Johnson City" 400m inland from Red Beach.[1]: 28–9
On 31 January the weather began to improve and the Marines began their westward sweep. Helicopters deployed Battery H, 3/11 Marines to BLT 2/3 Marines' position to provide fire support for the advance and that afternoon Company B, 2/4 Marines was landed on Hill 508 (14°47′56″N108°46′55″E / 14.7988°N 108.782°E /14.7988; 108.782) a further 5 miles (8.0 km) southwest of BLT 2/3 Marines and the rest of 2/4 Marines was landed 2 km further west in the Song Ve Valley itself.[1]: 29
On 1 February the 2/9 Marines command group and 2 companies were landed by helicopters 7 km northwest of 2/4 Marines and the 2 battalions began sweeping the valley. Meanwhile, BLT 2/3 Marines searched to the west of Nui Xuong Giong. The Marines encountered only small groups of PAVN/VC who engaged in hit and run tactics, the only sizable encounter being two skirmishes by 3/1 Marines north of Red Beach killing 31 PAVN/VC.[1]: 29–30
On 3 February BG Platt ordered his forces to move south in an attempt to press the PAVN/VC against the 1st Cavalry and ARVN in Bình Định Province.[1]: 30
On 11 February, after minimal results in their southern sweep, BG Platt ordered his forces to move back towards Red Beach/Johnson City.[1]: 33
On 12 February a 4-man team from Company B,3rd Reconnaissance Battalion operating 11 km northwest of Ba Tơ Camp observed a 31-man PAVN/VC force and called in artillery fire killing 10 of them, a further group of more than 80 PAVN/VC then arrived and the team requested helicopter extraction following which airstrikes were called in on the PAVN/VC.[1]: 33
The limited results of the operation indicated that the PAVN/VC were not in the operational area in force and this was confirmed by prisoner interrogations that revealed that the units had left the area several days before D-Day.[1]: 33
Operation Double Eagle concluded on 17 February, the Marines had suffered 24 dead and had abody count of 312 PAVN/VC killed and 19 captured.[1]: 34 A total of 18 individual weapons and 868 rounds of ammunition were recovered.[2]
On 19 February after receiving intelligence that the VC 1st Regiment was operating in theQuế Sơn Valley 50 miles (80 km) to the north, BG Platt launched Operation Double Eagle II. BLT 2/3 Marines, 2/9 Marines and2nd Battalion, 7th Marines were landed at landing zones in the Quế Sơn Valley while 3/1 Marines took up blocking positions west ofTam Kỳ. Over the next 10 days the Marines claimed to have killed 125 VC and captured 10 for the loss of 6 marines killed. On the early morning of 28 February, VC disguised as ARVN soldiers attempted an attack on BG Platt's command post, the VC were identified at the last minute with 2 killed and 1 captured for the loss of 1 Marine killed. Operation Double Eagle II ended on 1 March.[1]: 34–5
BG Platt regarded the operation as a success because it had inflicted severe damage to local VC forces, howeverFleet Marine Force, Pacific commander LGVictor Krulak disagreed, believing that details of the operation had been leaked to the PAVN/VC who were able to withdraw their forces intact and that Vietnamese civilians saw that the Marines "would come in, comb the area and disappear; whereupon the VC would resurface and resume control."[1]: 35–6
This article incorporatespublic domain material from websites or documents of theUnited States Marine Corps.