CHAPTER 14
Continuing Operational Problems, 1970-1971
Protecting the Da
Nang Vital Area—Base Defense—Intelligence: Collection and Use—The Boobytrap War
Protecting the Da
Nang Vital Area
Marines had first landed in Vietnam in
1965 to protect the Da Nang airfield. Defense of the airfield, and also of
the city of Da Nang and the teeming military and civilian complex surrounding
it, continued to be a III MAF responsibility during the last year and a half of
combat. The Da Nang Vital Area (DVA), as it was called, in early 1970
encompassed about 45 square miles of territory, was bordered on the south by the
Cau Do River and on the east by the South China Sea and extended westward to
include the airbase. An estimated 600, 000 Vietnamese civilians lived in
the DVA, their villages and hamlets crowding close to 65 South Vietnamese and 45
United States military installations. These installations included ARVN I Corps
Headquarters, the III MAF and later XXIV Corps Headquarters at Camp Horn, the
1st MAW and MAG-11 cantonments at Da Nang, and MAG-16's field at Marble
Mountain, as well as a variety of combat support and service support
commands.
Most of the civilians in the DVA lived
in Da Nang, South Vietnam's second largest city. Called Tourane by the French,
Da Nang had grown explosively as a result of the war, its population increasing
from 110, 000 in 1961 to 400, 000 10 years later. Government and public services
had not kept pace with growth. In 1969, the city had only six postmen and 380
telephones. It possessed neither a sewage system nor a newspaper. Only 10
percent of the population was served by the municipal electric system and seven
percent by the water system. A U.S. Government report described Da Nang as
'a miserable collection of un-serviced huts, infused with temporary military
infrastructure, surrounding a heavily overused and outdated city core.''
The congested downtown area and the outlying hamlets were a refuge for U.S.
and ARVN deserters and AWOLs, prostitutes, and drug peddlers. Viet Cong
agents and terrorists mingled with the city's rootless, often unemployed
lower class.
South Vietnamese political and military
authority within the DVA was divided. The area around Marble Mountain Air
Facility and a strip of land between the south end of the airfield and the Cau
Do River were part of Hoa Vang District, with defense and civil government
conducted by the district under the supervision of Quang Nam Province. The
rest of the DVA, including the city and the airfield, constituted the
municipality of Da Nang, controlled both militarily and politically by a
mayor appointed from Saigon. The mayor was independent of and often hostile to
the province chief. ARVN Colonel Nguyen Noc Khoi, Mayor of Da Nang during 1970,
also acted as Commander, Da Nang Special Sector (DSS), and as Deputy for
Garrison Affairs to the I Corps commander, Lieutenant General Lam. As
Mayor, Khoi supervised the activities of the 1, 376 national policemen and three
companies of the National Police Field Force stationed in Da Nang. As Commander,
Da Nang Special Sector, he controlled 3 Regional Force companies, 19
Popular Force platoons, and 16, 000 armed PSDF members. As Deputy for
Garrison Affairs, Khoi was responsible for maintaining order among all
RVNAF military personnel in Da Nang City and directed the Vietnamese Armed
Forces Police there.2
Ill MAF, in cooperation with Da Nang
Special Sector and Hoa Vang District, coordinated the defense of the U.S.
military installations in and around Da Nang and assisted in the general
protection of the city. Under III MAF supervision, the 1st Military Police
Battalion, which had arrived at Da Nang in 1966 to relieve Marine infantry
guarding the vital airfield, performed the defense function. At the beginning of
1970, the battalion, commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Speros D. Thomaldis, was
assigned the mission of planning and directing the integrated defense of the
DVA. This was to be accomplished in cooperation with the Commander, Da Nang
Special Sector, by coordinating the activities of tenant units to assign and
secure sectors of responsibility, establish and maintain lines of
communication, and constitute reserve contingency forces.
In essence, the battalion supervised
the close-in defense activities of the commands within the DVA and ensured that
these commands were ready to furnish company and platoon reaction forces,
as required, for operations in the area. The MP battalion itself manned the
fortifications surrounding Da Nang Air-base. It conducted antiinfiltration
patrols and ambush-