The musings of a politically incorrect dinosaur from a forgotten age where civility was the rule rather than the exception.
Webster
The Constitution was made to guard the people against the dangers of good intentions." --American Statesman Daniel Webster (1782-1852)
Wednesday, August 26, 2020
South Korean Soldiers in Vietnam during the War
I remember My Dad talking about the South Koreans in Vietnam, some background, My Dad spent 2 tours in Vietnam, he was "El-CID" his first tour with the 25 Infantry Division and a CID agent attached as a corp asset his second tour. In 1968 he told me more than once while he was over there that the Koreans were very effective and deadly and took no shit from Charlie and was feared for their combat effectiveness, he commented that the Capital division was particularly effective for its size. He told me about driving up there to trade beer and Rations with the Korean CID agents in II Corp in 1972, he commented that their rations were "spicy" that's how he developed his taste for Kimche and other delicacies that he passed on to me :). They were virulently anti communist and had no compunction about going bayonet to bayonet with the VC and the NVA. I also dug into it that in the beginning that they were very effective in the beginning of the war but toward the end of the war, they were not so effective and switched from offensive to defensive operation and some atrocities were tied to their participation and blamed on the Koreans, he did tell me and that there were a difference, if an American patrol or convoy got shot at and people were killed or wounded near a village we wouldn't do nothing about it by our rules of engagement, with the Koreans, it was different, if their people were wounded or killed near a village , the Koreans would go and wipe out the village, people, pigs, water buffaloes, everything for harboring the VC or the NVA. They operated by different rules then we did and for that reason were feared. They also shipped all the expended artillery brass back to Korea where it was reused by their industry apparently. They were Staunch allies as friends and brutal mother fuckers as enemies.
On the night of February 13-14, 1967, the 11th Company of the 2nd
South Korean Marine Brigade was occupying a position near the village of
Trah Bin Dong in Quang Ngai province, South Vietnam. Its oval-shaped
base was dotted by bunkers and trenches; the lines of thick barbed wire
to the front were laced claymore mines. In front of the tough South
Korean marines lay a line of hills from which the communists attacked
Highway 19 and coastal Highway 1. Rather than go into the hills after
the communists, the South Korean marines set a trap—with themselves as
bait.
The communists regularly harassed the South Koreans but did not
attack them directly until that night. Two Vietcong regiments, the 1st
and 21st, came out of the hills under cover of heavy mortar fire and hit
the base from all directions. The South Koreans delivered devastating
return fire from their bunkers with machine guns and mortar rounds
dropped at point-blank range. As the communists closed, the outnumbered
South Koreans fought hand to hand, refusing to surrender their
positions. Some marines dismantled their heavy machine guns rather than
let them fall into enemy hands. One wounded man refused to be taken
alive and pulled the pins on a pair of grenades as the communists
entered his bunker.
Led by their commanding officer, Captain Chung Kyong Gin, the South
Korean marines eventually pulled back and allowed several hundred
Vietcong to break into the camp. Chung sent two squads to plug the gap.
He then ordered the rest of the marines to fix bayonets and close with
the now trapped enemy, killing more than 100 inside the camp. By 0730
hours, the marines had cleared their base and chased the communists back
into the jungle. American Marine Douglas A-4 Skyhawks punished them as
they withdrew.
In all, 254 communists were killed in the assault compared to 15
South Koreans deaths. For his outstanding leadership, Chung was awarded
South Korea’s highest honor. In the aftermath of the fight, word of the
11th Company’s deeds spread throughout South Vietnam. Even South
Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu stopped by for a visit. The entire
company was promoted one rank. Later, the Koreans received a
Presidential Unit Citation for their actions at Trah Bin Dong.
In 1964, as the communist effort in Vietnam grew more intense, the
South Vietnamese government made a formal request to the Republic of
Korea for military assistance. Actually, the ROK government had offered
to send help as early as 1954 but was turned down. The first Korean
units arrived in Vietnam in February 1965 in a brigade group called Dove
Force. These included engineers, a MASH unit, military police, a navy
LST, liaison staff, and other support personnel. Dove Force was deployed
to the Bien Hoa region of South Vietnam, where it engaged in
counterinsurgency activities. Engineering units built schools, roads and
bridges. Medical teams treated over 30,000 South Vietnamese civilians.
As the communist presence in South Vietnam grew and the situation in
the countryside worsened, the United States sought to spread the burden
to other allied nations. Accordingly, the administration of President
Lyndon B. Johnson asked the South Korean government if it would be
willing to contribute a combat division. After meeting with President
Johnson in June 1965, Korean President Park Chung Hee agreed to his
request. There was considerable negotiation and haggling between
American and South Korean authorities over several issues. The South
Koreans insisted that their troops answer only to their own officers.
The two sides eventually agreed that South Korean officers would exert
tactical control over their units but would subordinate themselves to
the senior American officer in a combat zone. South Korean units would
also ultimately answer to General William Westmoreland, overall
commander of U.S. forces in Vietnam.
The South Korean government sought several other concessions,
including combat pay for their soldiers (at American expense), military
equipment for South Korean reserve units, and a guarantee of American
force levels in Korea. American authorities agreed to the terms, and on
August 19, 1965, the South Korean assembly authorized the deployment of
combat troops to Vietnam. The deployment began that autumn and included
the Capital (Tiger) Division and the 2nd Marine Brigade, the Blue
Dragons. By the end of the year, more than 18,000 South Korean troops
were in country.
In 1966, the South Vietnamese government requested more troops from
the Republic of Korea. After further negotiations, the 9th (White Horse)
Division was deployed to Vietnam as well, bringing the total strength
of South Korean forces in Vietnam to nearly 45,000 men. On the
recommendation of General Westmoreland, Chae Myung Shin, the commander
of the Capital Division, formed a corps headquarters under his command
out of Nha Trang. General Lew Byong Hion (later the South Korean
ambassador to the United States) took command of the Capital Division.
South Korean divisions were organized along similar lines as the
Americans. They featured three regiments, four artillery battalions, an
engineering battalion, and several supporting units such as MPs,
signals, and reconnaissance. The first South Korean combat formation in
Vietnam, the Capital (Tiger) Division, was formed in 1948 and saw
extensive action during the Korean War. The Capital Division survived
the initial North Korean onslaught, fought on the Pusan Perimeter, and
later participated in General Douglas MacArthur’s celebrated
counterattack.
Upon the insistence of Korean President Park Chun Hee, soldiers
deploying to Vietnam would be volunteers. Both he and the military
wanted to demonstrate to the Americans and the world, through the army,
that South Korea had come of age and was no longer wholly dependent on
the Americans for its defense. The very best of the army were plucked
from their units and assigned to the Capital Division. Enlisted
personnel were given special incentives to volunteer, including higher
pay and credit for three years of military service. President Park
personally selected senior officers.
Korean soldiers were highly motivated. Because of their own struggle
with Stalinist North Korea, they hated communists. They were also tough.
Each man was trained in the art of tae kwon do, with 30 minutes’
practice forming an integral part of morning physical training. They
were also subjected to harsh discipline. Two soldiers who raped a
Vietnamese woman were executed before their company.
The South Korean soldier was also feared by the Vietcong. Time magazine
reported in 1966, “Captured Vietcong orders now stipulate that contact
with the Koreans is to be avoided at all costs—unless a Vietcong victory
is 100 percent certain.”
Koreans
in the 2nd Marine Brigade, the Blue Dragons, practice Tae Kwon Do
during a morning exercise near Qui Nohn, South Vietnam, in April 1966.
The South Koreans felt better able to conduct counterinsurgency
operations than the Americans. Despite the language barrier, Korean
soldiers were dealing with people they considered fellow Asians whose
culture they understood better. They shared Buddhism and similar dietary
habits; both consumed rice prodigiously. Korean soldiers did their best
to interact with the local population. They attended Buddhist religious
services, ran medical clinics, and repaired damage inflicted on
people’s homes. Even so, a 1968 evaluation conducted by the Americans
criticized some aspects of the South Koreans’ pacification efforts,
saying they were too focused on pursuing the Vietcong at the expense of
building civil organizations.
South Korean troops did not always conduct themselves correctly. As
in any war, civilians in South Vietnam suffered grievously. In one
notorious incident, South Korean troops searching the village of Tho Lam
murdered 46 civilians after a booby trap killed four of their comrades.
South Korean documents indicate that as many as 8,000 Vietnamese
civilians were killed by their troops from 1965 through 1973. In an
interview given in 2000, General Chae admitted that his men killed
civilians but blamed it on what he called “battlefield rage” and “the
uncertainties of war.”
The first year of operations for the South Koreans was a huge
success. The Capital Division established government sovereignty over
large swaths of the province, opening up Highway 19 and Highway 1 north
to Phu Cat Mountain. In the field, they killed more than 3,000 Vietcong
and captured nearly 600 in return for 290 South Koreans killed. In
conjunction with the American 1st Cavalry Division and ARVN (Army,
Republic of Vietnam) forces, the Capital Division gradually pushed NVA
(North Vietnamese Army) forces off the mountain, securing it by the end
of the year. The U.S. Army called the attack “extraordinarily thorough
and effective.”
To the south, the Blue Dragon Brigade moved from its initial area
around Cam Ranh Bay down the coast to Tuy Hoa in Phu Yen Province, a
rice-producing region of about 70,000 people. Tuy Hoa had been
infiltrated by elements of the North Vietnamese 95th Regiment, which
relied on the farmers for food and shelter. The Blue Dragons worked for
several weeks with the 1st Brigade of the American 101st Airborne
Division. In Operation Van Buren, the American paratroopers and South
Korean marines spent a month clearing Tuy Hoa of communist infiltrators.
Over 33 days, 54 Americans and 45 South Koreans were killed, in
exchange for 679 communists. Together, they secured the harvest of
30,000 metric tons of rice. At the conclusion of the operation, the
American paratroopers left and the South Koreans took sole
responsibility for the area.
Like the Capital Division and the Blue Dragon Brigade, the 9th (White
Horse) Division saw its share of combat in South Vietnam. The 9th
Division gained its nickname in 1952 after its successful action against
communist forces at the Battle of White Horse Mountain. In 1966, the
White Horse Division was deployed to the Ninh Hoa region, Dar Lac
Province, where Highway 1 met Highway 21. In addition to maintaining a
presence in the province and opening up Highways 1 and 19, the White
Horse Division contributed its 29th Regiment to the defense of the Ninh
Hoa airbase and the 30th Regiment to the defense of Cam Ranh Bay. The
28th Regiment was deployed to Tua Hoa.
The White Horse Division was busy in 1967. In addition to its normal
counterinsurgency activities, the division participated in several
offensive operations, including Operation Oh Jac Kyu, a surprise attack
against the 95th NVA Regiment in Phu Yen Province. The operation spoiled
a planned communist offensive. Later that year, the White Horse and
Capital Divisions conducted operation Hong Kill Dong, also in Phu Yen
Province, and fought dozens of actions against the communists. In one
engagement on July 27, the South Koreans killed 32 Vietcong. Two days
later, the South Koreans killed another 18. In three weeks’ time, South
Korean forces swept the province and killed more than 400 NVA and
Vietcong. The White Horse Division had similar success the next year in
Operation Baek Ma 9. In one notable battle fought on October 25 (the
anniversary of the division’s founding), the White Horse soldiers killed
more than 200 Vietcong without a single loss to themselves.
About that time, General Westmoreland asked the South Korean Army to
contribute a battalion to the U.S. Army’s Operation Lincoln, an effort
to seal off the Cambodian border. After some haggling, in which Chae got
the United States to agree to send new radio sets and supplies, Chae
detached the 3rd Battalion (Tiger Regiment) for the task.
In June, the 3rd Battalion left its base along the coast and took up
positions along the Cambodian border. Two companies were arrayed across
the front, with a third held in reserve. Each company built a
well-fortified base featuring interlocking fields of fire, inner and
outer trenches. The bases were stocked with three days’ worth of
ammunition. The 3rd Battalion operated there for the rest of July,
conducting hundreds of reconnaissance missions and ambushes.
In early August 1967, the 9th Company was occupying a position a few
miles from the border, where it had also been reinforced by an American
armored platoon (1st Platoon, 1st Company, 69th Armored Regiment). The
recon elements encountered signs of Vietcong movement in the area,
including footprints. The next day, they found four dead Vietcong,
killed by a booby trap set by the South Koreans. The 9th Company stayed
on alert that night with its 2nd Platoon manning the trenches. After
midnight, soldiers reported sounds of movement in the jungle. Not long
afterward, a mine exploded. The 2nd Platoon’s leader reported the signs
of movement, but the company commander was skeptical that these
represented a major Vietcong attack and took no action.
A
soldier in the Korean 9th (White Horse) Division encounters a
frightened Vietnamese woman and her children on patrol north of Bon Son
in 1966.
Just before 0100 hours, the wood line came alive with small arms and
machine-gun fire. The base was also subjected to a heavy mortar barrage,
which wounded two platoon leaders and hit the command post, wounding
Captain Kang. The old company commander, Captain Lee, who was still with
the 9th, took command. After directing artillery fire against several
suspected enemy concentrations, Lee ran from the CP, joined his men in
the trenches, and ordered them to fight to the death. The Vietcong
emerged from the woods and attempted to envelop the base, with the main
blow falling on 3rd Platoon in the base’s southern sector.
As the Vietcong closed, South Korean soldiers tossed grenades and
fixed bayonets. American tanks lashed away at the enemy, pouring fire
into their ranks as they moved across no-man’s-land. The combined fire
turned back the communists. The Vietcong tried again minutes later, but
met a similar fate. At 0400 hours, they shifted their axis of attack
against 2nd Platoon, which was facing west northwest and managed to
advance as far as the barbed-wire perimeter. By dawn, the enemy was in
full retreat, pursued by the 10th and 11th Companies. Lee and his men
counted 184 communist bodies and several prisoners.
While the Vietnam War is often remembered as a purely American
effort, U.S. forces were not alone. They were accompanied by units from
allied nations such as Australia, New Zealand and, most importantly,
South Korea. Throughout the Vietnam War, South Korean troops were an
integral part of the American effort in South Vietnam, conducting
pacification and counterinsurgency operations and fighting countless
pitched battles against Vietcong and NVA troops. South Korean units were
as tough and professional as any in the United States Army or Marines,
and came to be justly feared by the communists. More than 300,000 Korean
troops passed through Vietnam at some point, and more than 5,000 were
killed.
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I had to change the comment format on this blog due to spammers, I will open it back up again in a bit.