A Detailed History of Special Forces
Special Forces in
Vietnam
Nam Dong, Lang Vei, Dak To, A
Shau, Plei Mei - these were just some of the places Special
Forces troops fought and died for during their 14-year stay in
South Vietnam. It was a stay that began in June 1956 when the
original 16 members of the 14th Special Forces Operational
Detachment entered Vietnam to train a cadre of indigenous
Vietnamese Special Forces teams. In that same year, on October
21, the first American soldier died in Vietnam - Captain Harry
G. Cramer Jr. of the 14th SFOD.
Throughout the remainder of the
1950s and early 1960s, the number of Special Forces military
advisors in Vietnam increased steadily. Their responsibility was
to train South Vietnamese soldiers in the art of
counterinsurgency and to mold various native tribes into a
credible, anti-communist threat. During the early years,
elements from the different Special Forces groups were involved
in advising the South Vietnamese. But in September 1964, the
first step was taken in making Vietnam the exclusive operational
province of 5th Group when it set up its provisional
headquarters in Nha Trang. Six months later in February, Nha
Trang became the 5th's permanent headquarters. From that point,
Vietnam was mainly the 5th's show until 1971 when it returned to
Fort Bragg.
By the time the 5th left
Southeast Asia, its soldiers had won 16 of the 17 Medals of Honor awarded to the
Special Forces in Vietnam, plus one Distinguished Service Medal,
90 Distinguished Service Crosses, 814 Silver Stars, 13,234
Bronze Stars, 235 Legions of Merit, 46 Distinguished Flying
Crosses, 232 Soldier's Medals, 4,891 Air Medals, 6,908 Army
Commendation Medals and 2,658 Purple Hearts. It was a brilliant
record, one that was built solely on blood and sacrifice.
Not to be overlooked, other
Special Forces training teams were operating in the 1960s in
Bolivia, Venezuela, Guatemala, Columbia and the Dominican
Republic. Counter-insurgency forces of the 8th Special Forces
Group conducted clandestine operations against guerrilla forces,
carrying out some 450 missions between 1965 and 1968. In 1968, Special
Forces were involved in tracking down and capturing the
notorious Cuban revolutionary, Che Guevara, in the wilds
of south-central Bolivia.
Southeast Asia, however, was to
remain the Special Forces' primary focus. Through their
unstinting labors, Special Forces troops eventually established
254 outposts throughout Vietnam, many of them defended by a
single A-team and hundreds of friendly natives.
The Special Forces earned their
reputation in places like Song Zoai and Plei Mei, where the Viet
Cong and North Vietnamese threw everything they had at them but
found out that wasn't enough. They won their Medals of Honor in places like
Nam Dong, where Captain Roger H.C. Donlon claimed the
war's first Medal of Honor for his actions on July 5, 1964, when
he led Nam Dong's successful defense against a Viet Cong attack,
despite sustaining a mortar wound to the stomach. "Pain,
the sensation of pain, can be masked by other emotions in a
situation like that," Donlon recalled. "I was fighting
mad right from the start; I also felt fear from the start ...
fear anybody would feel. It got to the point where we were
throwing the enemy's grenades back at them. Just picking them up
and throwing those grenades back before they could blow."
Back home in America, a confused
public searching for heroes in a strange and unfamiliar war
quickly latch onto the Special Forces. John Wayne made a
movie about them, Barry Sadler had a number-one hit song,
"The Ballad of the Green Beret",
and the Green Beret took its place along side the coonskincap
and cowboy hat as one of America's Mythic pieces of apparel.
But fighting in remote areas of
Vietnam - publicity to the contrary - wasn't the only mission of
the Special Forces. They were also responsible for training
thousands of Vietnam's ethnic tribesmen in the techniques of
guerrilla warfare. They took the Montagnards, the Nungs, the
Cao Dei and others and molded them into the 60,000-strong
Civil Irregular Defense Group (CIDG). CIDG troops became the
Special Forces' most valuable ally in battles fought in faraway
corners of Vietnam, out of reach of conventional back-up forces.
Other missions included civic-action projects, in which Special
Forces troops built schools, hospitals and government buildings,
provided medical care to civilians and dredged canals. This was
the flip side of the vicious battles, the part of the war
designed to win the hear and minds of a distant and different
people. But although the Special Forces drew the allegiance of
civilians almost everywhere they went, the war as a whole was
not as successful.
President Lyndon Johnson
had committed the first big
conventional units to the war in March 1965, when Marine
battalions landed at Da Nang to provide perimeter
security to the air base there. Then in June, the Army's 173rd
Airborne Brigade entered the country, followed in July by
the 1st Air Cavalry Division. From then on, a continual
stream of Army and Marine units flowed into Vietnam until they
numbered over 500,000 by 1968. But although American
conventional forces scored successes in every major battle they
fought, there was still no clear end in sight to a war many
Americans back home regarded as a quagmire.
So in 1969, after President
Richard M. Nixon took office, the United States began its
withdrawal from Vietnam, a process known as Vietnamization.
Gradually the Special Forces turned over their camps to the
South Vietnamese. On March 5, 1971, 5th Group returned to Fort
Bragg, although some Special Forces teams remained in Thailand
from where they launched secret missions into Vietnam. But by
the end of 1972, the Special Forces role in Vietnam was over.
- Next: The Son Tay Raid
A Detailed History of Special Forces
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This page is an
unofficial document and does not represent information
endorsed by the United States Government, the United
States Special Operations Command or the United States
Army Special Operations Command. However, most
information is derived from those sources and has been
checked for accuracy. For comments, questions, and
suggestions, please go to the Communications
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