THE
US ARMY QUARTERMASTER AIR DELIVERY UNITS
AND THE DEFENSE OF KHE SANH
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The following published article includes ALL known
US Army Quartermaster Corps Aerial Delivery units that made
contributions to air delivery at Khe Sanh from January 21, 1968
to April 1968. Previous articles were written about the
109th Qm Co (AD) role only. This article ties
all the QM units together.
Research
of retired Warrant Officer Lowell Hammel USA (383rd
Qm Det., 1st. Sergeant) and retired Lt. Col. Charles
Williford USA ( AD Officier, 1st Logistical Command,
Captain) allowed all these units to be documented. Also
veteran Ray Anderson searching for documents with retired
Col. Al Lanier (Company Commander, 109th QM CO
(AD), Major) received documentation from the National Archives,
1st Logistical Command collection, to further document
this article.
MEMOIRS
THE
US ARMY QUARTERMASTER AIR DELIVERY UNITS
AND THE DEFENSE OF KHE SANH
Copyright
© 2001 By Ray Anderson and Peter Brush
In
1993 a monument was dedicated in Arlington National Cemetery
to the Marines who fought at Khe Sanh, arguably the longest
and most bitterly contested battle of the Vietnam War. This
formally acknowledged the enduring relationship between Khe
Sanh and the Marine Corps. However, it was not only Marines
who faced the North Vietnamese Army. The defense of Khe Sanh
was very much both a joint and combined effort by various
American and South Vietnamese forces.
The combination of air support and firepower provided the
key to the defense of Khe Sanh. Before the siege was over,
over 100,000 tons of bombs were dropped by aircraft of the
U.S. Air Force, Navy, and Marines, as well as planes of the
South Vietnamese Air Force. To the forces on the ground, however,
air support meant more than the massive numbers of B-52 and
tactical bomber sorties. Aerial supply was crucial to the
defense of Khe Sanh. This article describes how U.S. Army
Quartermaster Air Delivery (AD) units played a vital role
in the defense of the Khe Sanh Combat Base.
The mission of the AD units was to provide parachute packing,
storage, and rigging of supplies for drop by aircraft of all
services as well as assisting in loading and ejecting of these
supplies. In 1955 personnel of the 109th QM participated
in the development of a new air delivery technique. This low-altitude
parachute extraction system (LAPES) required cargo planes
to fly a few feet above ground level. A parachute was
released, pulling the palletized cargo out of the aircraft
and onto the drop zone. A related system was the ground
proximity extraction system (GPES) in which the cargo was
yanked from the aircraft by a hook which snagged a cable traversing
the runway.
In 1965 General William C. Westmoreland, the commander of
U.S. forces in Vietnam, requested the deployment of
an air delivery unit. In May 1965, 64 men were assigned from
the 109th QM (Air Delivery) at Ft. Lee Virginia
to form the 383rd QM Detachement. The 383rd
was sent to South Vietnam and the 109th QM was
sent to Fort Campbell, Kentucky, under the operational control
of the 101st Airborne Division. LAPES/GPES training
continued.
In
June 1966 the 109th QM received overseas movement
orders. On July 23, the unit embarked onboard the USNS General
John N. Pope at Tacoma, Washington. The main body arrived
at Cam Ranh Bay, South Vietnam, on August 12 1966. By
November 7 the 383rd moved from Saigon to Cam Ranh
Bay and was attached to the 109th. The 623rd QM
Company with resources to repair air delivery items also shared
the 109th QM Company facilities. The establishment
of the 109th’s operational area was complete; General
Westmoreland now had the air delivery assets in place that
he requested the previous year.
The summer and fall of 1966 saw the buildup of large North
Vietnamese Army (NVA) units in the area along the Demilitarized
Zone (DMZ). In response, General Westmoreland ordered Marine
units northward to meet this threat. Positions were established
just south of the DMZ to act as blocking forces to impede
NVA infiltration. Khe Sanh was the western anchor of this
defensive line.
General Westmoreland stated, “There is no more important airfield
in Vietnam from a tactical standpoint than Khe Sanh.” Navy
Seabees were ordered to undertake a crash program to upgrade
the base’s airstrip. Still, Khe Sanh was proving difficult
to resupply. During December and January there were only six
days when the weather was good enough for aerial resupply.
Rations and fuel occasionally were reduced to less than one
day’s needs. Rain made road travel almost impossible. April
1967 saw bitter fighting around Khe Sanh between the Marines
and NVA forces, illustrating the seriousness with which both
sides viewed the area.
In the second half of 1967 American
intelligence learned that large numbers of NVA were
deploying into the A Shau Valley and the area around Khe Sanh.
To help meet this threat, a heavy drop platoon composed of
men from both the 109th and 383rd
AD units stationed in Da Nang men undertook airdrops to supply
the Navy Seabees at Khe Sanh with materials to rebuild the
airstrip.
To
meet the threat in the A Shau area an offensive into the valley
was planned for early 1968. The plan called for the 1st
Calvary division to be supplied by airdrops for the first three
days of the offensive. This operation would require seven hundred
short tons a day of air delivered supplies. To accomplish this
more riggers were needed. In December 1967 the 1st
Logistical Command ordered the 383rd QM Detachment
to Bien Hoa to establish another separate Air Delivery Unit
.
Since
the 383rd was but a single platoon, it was augmented
with a platoon of riggers from the 549th QM Company
(Air Supply) in Japan, a platoon of riggers from the
173rd Airborne, and another platoon from the 101st
Airborne. An additional platoon of 101st Airborne riggers
joined the 109th to replace the 383rd
platoon of men lost during their move to Bien Hoa.
General
Westmoreland estimated the forces size around Khe Sanh at between
fifteen and twenty thousand men. This buildup caused the U.S.
command to conclude that reinforcing Khe Sanh was the only feasible
alternative to abandoning it. Westmoreland ruled out abandonment
because a presence at Khe Sanh blocked the ability of the North
Vietnamese to circumvent the DMZ barrier and bring the war into
the populated coastal plain.
In fact, General Westmoreland wanted to fight the North Vietnamese.
The area around Khe Sanh was relatively unpopulated by civilians.
This would allow unrestricted use of U.S. firepower and further
the U.S. strategy of attrition by killing large numbers of enemy
soldiers. By January the allied force at Khe Sanh totaled about
6,000 men.
Before
the offensive into A Shau Valley could be implemented, the
siege of Khe Sanh and the 1968 Tet Offensive began. The large
number of riggers accumulated for the A Shau offensive soon
became fully engaged supplying Khe Sanh and other isolated
outposts. Consequently, the offensive into the A Shau Valley
had to be delayed until April of 1968, after the end of the
siege at Khe Sanh.
On January 21 1968, the NVA began their attack of Khe Sanh.
At approximately 0530 hours that morning Communist gunners
scored a hit on the main ammunition dump. 98 percent of the
dump’s muntions, 1,500 tons, was destroyed in the ensuing
explosions. This caused an immediate request for emergency
air supply. Available U.S. aircraft included C-130’s plus
smaller C-123’s and C-7A’s. The C-130’s were the logical choice
to quickly replenish ammunition stocks. However, the fact
that shrapnel from the ammunition dump explosion covered half
the runway precluded their use. C-123’s delivered 130 tons
of supplies in the next 36 hours, even flying and unloading
at night by the light of Marine artillery flares. By January
23 the runway was cleared of debris, permitting the return
of the C- 130’s.
Through February 10, seven Air Force C-130’s were hit by gunfire
or shrapnel. Air Force commanders felt these airplanes, at
$2.5 million each, were too valuable to risk unnecessarily.
C-123’s and C-7A’s were used instead, but proved unable to
deliver a sufficient volume of supplies. Enemy gunners and
bad weather simply would not permit a sufficient number of
landings of these aircraft. In order to
survive, the Marines would have to be supplied in the same
manner as the French at Dien Bien Phu—by parachute.
Initially, bulk cargo such as ammunition, rations, and fuel
was delivered using the container delivery system. A C-130
could transport 14 to 16 of these loads. At a height of 600
feet over the drop zone the restraints holding the loads were
cut. The pilot raised the nose of the plane and applied power
to the engines. The cargo moved rearward on floor rollers
and then out of the plane. A large cargo parachute carried
the one-ton bundle to the ground. Riggers often flew with
the cargo planes to ensure proper delivery. Several 109th
personnel landed at Khe Sanh in order to retrieve parachutes
for future use.
The
109th was rigging supplies at Da Nang and Cam Ranh
Bay. The 383rd and its attached platoons
were rigging supplies at Bien Hoa. Cam Ranh Bay was
the safest of these locations, as Da Nang and Bien Hoa
were frequently under rocket or mortar attacks. Riggers often
worked during the night, using flood lights in order to rig
loads for aerial delivery.
The
383rd rigged CDS (Container Delivery System) while
the 109th rigged both CDS and extraction systems
(LAPES and GPES). The riggers of the 109th QM geared
up to meet the challenge posed by events at Khe Sanh. Initially,
riggers at Cam Ranh Bay worked three days and two nights continuously
without rest. This was followed by shifts consisting of 24
hours on duty followed by a six hours rest break. Similar
schedules were followed by the 383rd.
These loads were not dropped within the main base perimeter.
To do so would necessitate the complete closing of the airstrip
during drops. The area chosen for the drop zone (DZ) was a
small area beyond the end of the runway. Supplies were parachuted
into this DZ with good accuracy. Still, some drops missed
the DZ and drifted into enemy territory. These loads were
destroyed by airstrikes or Marine artillery to prevent their
utilization by the enemy.
The constant enemy shelling forced the Marines to dig underground
for protection. To further this move, the Marines requested
an emergency supply of large timbers for bunker construction.
Because of the size and handling difficulties involved, low
level extraction was chosen over airland or container delivery.
On February 16 a C-130 loaded with timbers flew down the long
axis of the Khe Sanh runway. The pilot maintained an airspeed
of 130 knots at an altitude of five feet. A parachute, constrained
to a 48" diameter, was attached to the load and projected
out the rear of the cargo door. Upon reaching a precisely
calculated point, a crewmember fired a device that allowed
the parachute to open to a diameter of 28 feet. This sudden
force broke the restraints attaching the timber load to the
floor of the aircraft. The plane continued, essentially flying
out from underneath the palletized timbers, which coasted
to a stop close to the proposed bunker construction sites.
This was the first of 52 LAPES missions as perfected by the
109th QM. Larger scale use of LAPES was not possible
due to the lack of sufficient LAPES components as well as
concern over damage to the runway by the heavy LAPES pallets.
Logistics specialists then turned to the ground proximity
extraction system.
On March 30 a C-130 began rolling down the runway at Khe Sanh.
Attached to the cargo pallet was a boom with a hook at the
free end. The rear cargo door was open. The airplane rolled
across the arresting cable which traversed the runway and
was moored to the ground at each end. The cable rose, engaged
the hook, and yanked the cargo out of the plane. The pilot
applied power and took off. In all, 15 loads of cargo, mostly
construction materials, were delivered to Khe Sanh using the
GPES.
American logistics personnel showed impressive ingenuity and
versatility in accomplishing the airlift to Khe Sanh. The
combination of airland, container drop, parachute and ground
extraction delivery techniques meant the garrison could hold
out indefinitely. Large-scale Communist infantry movements
were constantly disrupted by allied air and artillery firepower.
During the period from January 21 until April 8, 1968, Air
Force C-130’s made 273 landings at Khe Sanh, 496 container
drops, 52 LAPES and 15 GPES deliveries. These accounted for
over 90 percent of the 12,430 tons of supplies delivered by
the Air Force. Over 8,000 tons of the total amount were delivered
by parachuting, As early as March 15 the number of supply
drops into Khe Sanh exceeded the total for all of Vietnam
up to that time.
On April 1, Army airmobile units working in concert with Marine
infantry and engineers began Operation PEGASUS to reestablish
the overland supply link to Khe Sanh. This force linked up
with the base on April 6. The Marine logistics support area
was allowed to deteriorate. By July 1968 the base has dismantled
and abandoned.
Army
riggers continued supporting U.S. military operations in Vietnam.
The 109th supplied the Cambodia invasion and also
rigged the extraction of captured enemy supplies and weapons.
The 109th QM rigged 350 tons of fuel, rations,
and ammunition for the 1971 invasion of Laos. The 549th
Quartermaster Company, by now in Okinawa, sent 76 men TDY
(Temporary Duty) to Vietnam to aid in dropping 4,853 tons
of supplies in 369 sorties into An Loc during the 1972 Easter
Offensive. Like Khe Sanh before it, the defenders at An Loc
held their ground. The US Army riggers pioneered the use of
fuel air explosives by rigging 55 gallons drums of aviation
fuel onto skids of which were then loaded onto C-130’s. Each
of the sixteen skids consisted of 2 barrels of AVGAS and 2
barrels JP4 fuel. The skids would free fall with smoke
grenades attached to assured they would ignite upon ground
impacted. In terms of destructive power, these drops compared
to napalm drops but at one-tenth the expense. The 109th
and 383rd both rigged the famous 15,000 pound "Daisy
Cutter" bomb used to clear helicopter landing zones.
In general, the Army favored delivery by helicopter over delivery
by parachute. But Khe Sanh was a special case. The advent
of cheap surface-to-air missiles meant the situation would
not repeat itself. Before 1968 the Communists had never concentrated
their forces to the degree they did at Khe Sanh. The base
garrisoned a large number of U.S. personnel. The siege lasted
eleven weeks. It would have been impossible to resupply the
base solely by using slow-moving helicopters. Once encircled
by the North Vietnamese, there was nothing the Marines could
do except dig in and fight. Certainly there was no quick way
out: the overland supply route was cut again in mid-1967.
Supply levels at Khe Sanh are better described as adequate
for survival rather than abundant. The Marines sometimes went
weeks without hot meals. Rations were frequently limited to
two meals per man per day; some Marines ate one meal per day
for several days at a time. Artillery firing patterns were
also affected. Initially, the Marines tried to prevent NVA
forces from getting too close to the base. Overwhelming
volumes of artillery could have blocked them. It was not possible
to air deliver this volume of artillery shells. Consequently,
the enemy was allowed to move in close to the base in order
to provide more concentrated targets for the shells available
to Marine artillerymen.
It would not have been possible to evacuate the American garrison
overland. According to General Philip B. Davidson, Jr., Westmoreland's
intelligence chief, a single reinforced Marine regiment cannot
fight its way on foot through two or three NVA divisions when
the latter have the initiative, superior numbers, and every
terrain advantage. Emergency evacuation by air would have
resulted in a sacrifice of half the garrison. It was the flexibility,
technical expertise, and untiring efforts of aircrews and
logistics personnel such as the Army air delivery units that
enabled the Marines to successfully resist the Communists’
best efforts: the ongoing attacks against the Khe Sanh
Combat Base during the Tet Offensive of 1968.
As the
defense of Khe Sanh was a joint effort, so too is the writing
of this article. Ray Anderson, who served with the 109th
Quartermaster Company in Vietnam, provided much of the research
upon which this article is based. Peter Brush was with
a Marine heavy mortar battery on the ground at Khe Sanh during
the siege. Versions of this article previously appeared in
Army and Vietnam magazines. Army_Magazine
April 1997; Vietnam_Magazine December 1999
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