U.S. Army Historical Foundation
The Siege at An Loc: How Air Resupply Helped Save the City
by LTC Len Funk, USA-Ret. After mounting massive conventional warfare assaults
near the DMZ and in the Central Highlands on 5 April 1972, Hanoi extended the
deadly arm of the Nguyen Hue, or the 1972 Easter Offensive, to South Vietnam’s
Military Region III (MR III), formerly known as III Corps. North Vietnamese Army
(NVA) forces quickly overran Loc Ninh, a tiny district town in Binh Long
Province near the Cambodian border. One week later, three NVA divisions,
supported by tanks and massive amounts of artillery, launched an all out attack
on An Loc, the capital of Binh Long Province, 60 miles north of Saigon.
The vital role that U.S. and South Vietnamese aerial bombing played in saving An
Loc is well known. However, the much less publicized, but equally vital, U.S.
Army and Air Force air resupply effort also played a major role in helping the
South Vietnamese Army (ARVN) forces and their U.S. Army advisors defending An
Loc survive a 70-day siege, a siege longer than either Vicksburg or Dien Bien
Phu.
The North Vietnamese could not have picked a better time to attack in MR III.
Since the drawdown of American troops began in 1969, the region had seen U.S.
combat units dwindle to almost nothing. Between February and April 1972 alone,
58,000 troops and advisors returned to the U.S. This was the single largest
troop reduction of the war and it came precisely when the NVA was building up
for the Easter Offensive.
Those advisors that did remain in III Corps operated within the Third Regional
Assistance Command (TRAC), headquartered at Long Binh outside of Saigon. TRAC,
the distilled remains of II Field Force and the former III Corps Advisory Group,
was commanded by the flamboyant, Pattonesque, World War II tank commander Major
General James F. “Holly” Hollingsworth. In 1966-67 Hollingsworth had served as
deputy commander of the 1st Infantry Division, whose area of operations included
Binh Long Province, so he was familiar with the territory. In mid-1971
Hollingsworth returned to Vietnam as deputy commander of the U.S. XXIV Corps. By
the end of the year he was on his way to Long Binh to command the last American
advisors in III Corps. Given his reputation as a hands-on fighter, Hollingsworth
was not only miscast for this managerial assignment, but he was under pressure
from his old World War II friend, Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (MACV)
Commander General Creighton W. Abrams to continue the troop drawdown and not
endanger American lives. Yet withdrawing advisors from the increasingly
dangerous situation in An Loc would send a signal of diminished American support
of the South Vietnamese and would certainly weaken their resolve. Hollingsworth
chose to defend An Loc but did not order his advisors to remain in the
surrounded city. He evacuated those deemed nonessential along with the senior
American advisor to select his combat advisory team. Only a handful of Americans
remained in the tactical operations center with General Hung and the 5th ARVN
Division staff.
By 1972, the advisory system in MR III, and in the rest of South Vietnam, was
primarily a skeleton team sprinkled throughout the top of the ARVN officer
corps. In combat units, advisors now interacted with their ARVN counterparts
only at corps, division, and regimental levels. In elite units, such as
airborne, rangers, and marines, advisors were still used down to the battalion
level.
At An Loc, the 5th ARVN Division had a U.S. Army senior advisor with a small
staff under him. The senior advisor was responsible for “advising” his
counterpart on troop movement and deployment, a particularly crucial job during
the drawdown because ARVN forces were spread thinly over areas previously
covered by both American and South Vietnamese troops. The advisors also gathered
intelligence from units in the field and sent it back to TRAC headquarters for
anlaysis. However, as far as the South Vietnamese were concerned, the senior
advisor was most valuable in his role as air support provider. As a result, the
senior advisor spent much of his time plotting air strikes and coordinating them
with TRAC headquarters.
When the 5th Viet Cong Division struck Loc Ninh on 5 April, the magnitude of the
artillery barrage that preceded the attack was unprecedented in MR III. Two days
later Loc Ninh fell and intelligence reports from the rubber plantations north
of An Loc noted large numbers of NVA tanks already in place.
Air Force forward air controllers (FACs) reported heavy troop and truck movement
particularly to the north of An Loc. They saw hundreds of civilians were fleeing
rubber plantations, attempting to avoid NVA conscription. B- 52 strikes were
placed wherever a troop concentration was reported. Gathering bomb damage
assessment information, however, was difficult because the South Vietnamese
would not patrol beyond An Loc’s city limits.
On 7 April, the NVA overran the Quan Loi airstrip located a mile and a half east
of An Loc. The highway, Route 13, was cut, blocking the main road in and out of
town. The city was surrounded by communist troops and isolated from the outside
by road. Only helicopters and aircraft with pilots willing to risk flying
through the enemy anti-aircraft batteries encircling the city could keep An Loc
supplied with food and ammunition. The population of An Loc consisted of 15,000
persons, half military and the other half civilian. The resupply objective was
200 tons per day, including 140 tons of ammunition, 36 tons of rice and other
rations, and 20 tons of water.
Early in the morning of 11 April, the ARVN 1st Airborne Brigade left neighboring
Binh Duong Province by truck for Chon Thanh, the southernmost district in Binh
Long Province. It was to dismount just north of Chon Thanh and continue the
remaining twelve miles north toward An Loc on foot. Their mission was to sweep
the area clean of the enemy patrols that might threaten the vital Route 13
supply line from Saigon. This elite ARVN unit never got close to its objective.
Nine miles south of An Loc, the ARVN troopers met a blocking force made up of a
regiment from the 7th NVA Division. During the same period, 10-11 April, the 1st
and 2nd battalions, 8th ARVN Regiment, as well as the regimental combat
reconnaissance company, were flown into An Loc by the U.S. Army’s 1st Brigade,
1st Cavalry Division, the last remaining element of the famous airmobile
division still in South Vietnam. During the next six days, under a canopy of
B-52 strikes, the ARVN frantically continued reinforcing An Loc. Between 7-12
April, the Vietnamese Air Force’s (VNAF) 237th Helicopter Squadron, flying U.S.
Army CH-47 Chinooks, completed 42 sorties, though limited to a single landing
zone. Each sortie brought in approximately 3.5 tons. Some of the Chinooks were
hit as they hovered for the few seconds it took to dump their cargo, but none
were shot down by NVA fire. Then, on 12 April, an enemy mortar scored a direct
hit on an ARVN Chinook. A few hours later, after another massive Soviet-style
artillery barrage, the 7th Viet Cong Division, with T-54 tanks and trucks,
launched the initial assault on the An Loc perimeter.
After the first assault, not only were the NVA able to occupy the northern half
of the city, but they were able to move an anti-aircraft regiment immediately
outside the An Loc defensive perimeter. All CH-47 deliveries were halted, and
only fixed wing cargo planes attempted the dangerous flight into An Loc, where
the drop zone (DZ) had shrunk to an area 1,000 yards by 750 yards. Thus, the
ARVN began airdropping supplies. VNAF crews and transports, primarily C-123’s,
made their first drops on 12 April. All drops were made during daylight and all
were troubled by the enemy fire and small drop zones. Planes could only approach
An Loc from the south, flying along Route 13. They usually flew in
three-aircraft formations at 700 feet. Other airplanes released their loads from
5,000 feet or higher to avoid anti-aircraft fire. The crews used makeshift
sighting devices or simply guessed where to drop their cargo. Lacking delayed
parachute-opening devices, drops were usually off target and landed outside the
defensive perimeter. After 27 C-123 and C-119 drops in the first three days of
the siege (12-14 April), only 34 tons of the 135 tons dropped was recovered. Six
transports took ground fire and on 15 April, a C-123 was shot down, killing all
aboard, including the squadron commander. (Insert: Major
Hoa, then the executive officer, took command and led subsequent air drops.)
Four days later a second C-123 was shot down.
On 14 April, Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (MACV), decided to deploy the
first USAF C-130s to An Loc. Two of the four-engine aircraft, using the
Computerized Aerial Drop System (CARP), made their first run at dawn the
following day. They circled the city until a FAC signaled to commence the
dangerous run. Initially, no instruments were needed; pilots simply followed
Route 13 from the south. As they approached the DZ, a 219 square-yard soccer
field in the southern part of An Loc, the computer took over, releasing the
supplies at a pre-arranged point. The first airplane roared over the target. As
enemy guns opened fire, pallets of food and ammo crashed to the earth and the
aircraft climbed up from the 600 foot drop altitude with only slight damage to
the rudder.
After talking with the FAC on site, the second crew decided to surprise the
enemy with an approach from a different direction. When the C-130 was thirty
seconds from the release point, a wall of machine fun fire met the nose of the
aircraft. The pilot struggled to control the shuddering transport under the
impact of dozens of bullets. Rounds smashed the circuit panel in the flight
deck, killing the flight engineer and wounding the navigator and co-pilot. The
situation in the cargo hold was even worse. Incendiary rounds ignited some of
the pallets of 155mm howitzer and 81mm mortar ammunition. The crippled C-130,
flying on 2 engines, limped back to Tan Son Nhut Airbase north of Saigon. U.S.
advisors at An Loc later reported that none of the 26 tons of supplies dropped
by the two transports were recovered.
On 15 April, two more C-130s headed for An Loc. To counter enemy interception,
communication crews used five different frequencies instead of one. The CARP
system was abandoned because it required strict attention from the crew, which
was preoccupied flying the airplane through the hostile fire. Instead they
manually dropped the cargo load. Although the two aircraft were hit, they
successfully dropped fifteen tons of ammunition and supplies within the area
controlled by the ARVN.
On 18 April, NVA anti-aircraft fire nearly downed another C-130. With the right
wing burning, one engine out, and another on fire, the crew ditched the cargo
and managed to crash land near Lai Khe.
The situation on the ground at An Loc was grave. On 13 and 15 April, twenty-four
NVA tanks led major ground assaults into the city. Allied weapons stopped the
enemy armor, but communist forces held the northern half of the city. Despite
total allied air superiority, the enemy continued to pound the remainder of the
city with an average of 1,000 artillery rounds per day. In addition to the heavy
shelling, the defenders of An Loc faced other serious problems. Significant
amounts of the air-dropped supplies landed within enemy lines. As a result of
the shelling and the misdirected supplies, the defenders’ morale declined
considerably.
Although aerial supply efforts were going nowhere, new developments inside An
Loc took some pressure off the Air Force. Originally, U.S. Army ground advisors
estimated that it would take 200 tons a day to sustain the garrison. The highest
priority was small arms ammunition and 105mm howitzer rounds. The NVA quickly
eliminated the need for the howitzer rounds by destroying all the ARVN artillery
in the first few weeks of the siege. Water requirements also eased when a series
of brackish wells were found inside the perimeter. U.S. Army advisors now felt
they could survive on 65 tons per day.
The Air Force then tried night drops. On 24 April seven C-130s headed for An Loc
with lights out. All made it in safely and dropped their loads, but accuracy was
marginal, and at night, stray pallets were more difficult to recover. On 25
April eleven C-130s tried another night mission. The first four aircraft that
rolled over the target were met by heavy anti-aircraft fire. One C-130 took
several hits, quickly lost altitude, and crashed two miles south of the DZ,
killing all onboard. All subsequent missions that night were called off, and ten
additional missions were cancelled the following night due to inclement weather.
Two drops were made on the 27th and most of the cargo was recovered. Both
aircraft, however, suffered damage from enemy ground fire.
For the next seven days Air Force C-130s made only night drops. Out of
thirty-seven missions, U.S. advisors “recovered” thirty-five tons, “possibly
recovered” ninety-six tons, and “probably lost” 350 tons. They also reported
that enemy barrages over the DZ continued to increase in volume and intensity.
Over fifty percent of the C-130s making night drops were hit by enemy fire. With
many aircraft damaged and the loss of a third C-130 with its crew on 4 May, the
Air Force decided to end standard level drops. Thus far, three C- 130s had been
lost and thirty-eight had been hit by enemy fire over An Loc.
The disappointing results of the night drops were not a reflection on the
ingenuity of the participants. Several expedients were devised to aid in
spotting the soccer field DZ. One relied on aerial flares for illumination, but
unfortunately, this method silhouetted the aircraft for the NVA gunners. ARVN
troops also used portable runway lights and blazing cans of gasoline to mark the
DZ.
Termination of the night drops coincided with the desperate conditions on the
ground within An Loc. Food and ammunitions stocks were critically low, and
medical and sanitation conditions were rapidly deteriorating.
On 29 April the NVA fired the first SA-7, a shoulder-fired surface-to-air
missile, at U.S. aircraft in Quang Tri Province near the DMZ. With the
possibility of SA-7s near An Loc, the return of low-level resupply operations
was unthinkable.
C-130 crews met this challenge with the first “high velocity” drop at An Loc on
8 May. One thousand pound bundles were rigged to 15-foot slotted parachutes.
These chutes were designed to stabilize descent at roughly one hundred feet per
second, approximately four times the normal impact velocity. There was no low
opening function, which eliminated the need for a delay mechanism. Accuracy
remained high because of the high-speed descent.
On 3 May the Air Force resumed High Altitude, Low Opening (HALO) drops at An Loc
with fair results. The following day, using a modified HALO method, two C-130s
dropped sixteen bundles. No parachutes opened prematurely and all but one bundle
landed in the DZ.
On 8 May, twenty-foot slings were inserted between each parachute and its load
to allow a better chance for proper chute filling. The results were positive.
The incidence of unopened parachutes dropped to five percent on 10 May and
remained negligible thereafter.
Eleven high velocity missions were made at An Loc between 8-10 May. Out of 140
bundles 139 hit the DZ. The NVA launched their last major ground assault on 10
May. When drops resumed on 13 May, the suitability of high velocity drops became
even more obvious, despite the fact that descending bundles could be dangerous
to those on the ground. On several occasions, loads of artillery rounds
detonated on impact and fuel drums ruptured after the parachutes malfunctioned.
While small arms ammunition usually survived the drops, medical supplies proved
too fragile for this kind of drop, even under optimum conditions. On 29 May an
even more reliable chute was introduced, a slotted twenty-two footer which
carried a one-ton bundle.
Strong communist forces remained around An Loc during June, but ARVN relief
forces were making a slow approach toward the city along Route 13, clearing the
ground lines of communication and establishing fire bases. On 11 June VNAF
helicopters began bringing replacements into An Loc, and between 13-14 June,
U.S. Army choppers lifted 1,400 fresh troops into the besieged city. Beginning
on 18 June, the defenders slowly pushed out of the rubble that had once been An
Loc and the South Vietnamese Command declared the siege over, despite the fact
that Highway 13 remained closed.
After mid June, drops into An Loc were cut to two per day. Although pressure on
An Loc decreased in late 1972, communist forces continued to hold Quan Loi
airfield and threatened movement along Route 13. C-130s continued to resupply An
Loc by air until December 1972. Both sides maintained defensive positions in the
region as the likelihood of cease-fire increased. In MR I, General Truong, the
“Savior of Hue,” emerged as the hero of the Easter Offensive. In MR II, the
redoubtable Colonel Ba, who held Kontum, was the hero. On the southern front, in
MR III, the hero was Major General Hollingsworth. It was he who saved An Loc. He
strengthened the resolve of the ARVN corps commander when the situation looked
grim. He visited An Loc daily during the worst of the shelling and encouraged
both the ARVN troops and American advisors defending the city. Above all,
largely because of his rapport with MACV Commander General Abrams, Hollingsworth
was able to divert B-52 strikes from MR I and MR II to An Loc when the city was
most seriously threatened. It was Hollingsworth and his deputy, Brigadier
General John R. McGiffert, an artillery officer who had also served in the 1st
Infantry Division in 1966-67, who personally planned the B-52 and tactical air
strikes that saved An Loc.
Like Stalingrad, Dien Bien Phu, and Khe Sanh, An Loc was a classic siege with
the garrison supplied entirely by air. Unlike Stalingrad and Dien Bien Phu, the
end results were much better for the besieged at An Loc. Through the coordinated
efforts of the U.S. Army advisors under Hollingsworth; the air resupply effort,
B-52 attacks, and tactical air strikes by the Air Force; and the determined
resistance of the besieged ARVN forces, the South Vietnamese and their American
allies were able to withstand a massive assault by the NVA and save the city of
An Loc.
For more information on the Siege of An Loc and the Easter Offensive read:
Jeffrey J. Clarke, Advice and Support: The Final Years; LTG Phillip B. Davidson,
USA (Ret)., Vietnam at War; Dale Andrade, Trial by Fire; and Donaldson D.
Frizzell and Ray L. Bowers, Eds., “Airpower and the 1972 Spring Invasion,” in
Air War - Vietnam.