50 years ago, US troops bunkered down for the Vietnam War's most infamous siege here's how the B

January 21 marked the 50th anniversary of the start of the Battle of Khe Sanh. The battle started with around 20,000 men from the North Vietnamese Army (NVA) fighting against some 6,000 US Marines and South Vietnamese Army soldiers.

2018-01-26T21:20:35Z

January 21 marked the 50th anniversary of the start of the Battle of Khe Sanh. The battle started with around 20,000 men from the North Vietnamese Army (NVA) fighting against some 6,000 US Marines and South Vietnamese Army soldiers.

As the battle continued, up to 45,000 US soldiers, and up to 100,000 NVA troops would take part in the brutal 77-day fight. 24,000 airstrikes dropped more than 100,000 tons of bombs — roughly 5 tons for every one NVA soldier. The NVA fired over 10,000 rockets, mortars, and artillery rounds — 360 a day on average, and 1,300 during the heaviest bombardment.

Combat was so intense that the Khe Sanh Combat Base was completely surrounded and cut off, leaving the only way to resupply the base by air. 

There are still debates about the true number of casualties, but estimates range that 1,000 to 3,500 US soldiers died, and a secret report from the US Military Assistance Command, Vietnam, estimated that only 5,500 NVA troops were killed.

Both sides claimed victory; the siege was eventually broken in April of 1968 and US forces continued operations in the area after the battle, but the Khe Sanh Combat Base was destroyed, the Americans withdrew, and the McNamara Line was terminated.

Here's one of the largest and bloodiest battles of the Vietnam War unfolded over 77 days:

Khe Sanh was just 8-10 miles from Laos, an extremely important part of the Ho Chi Minh trail, which made the Khe Sanh Combat Base an important outpost because it could disrupt the flow of NVA weapons, troops, and supplies into South Vietnam.

An aerial view of the base in 1968, showing just how large it was. Associated Press

The Khe Sanh Combat Base was home to some 6,000 US Marines and a couple hundred Rangers from the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN). It was the closest US base to the Laotian border in Quảng Trị Province, and the Westernmost American stronghold near the Vietnamese Demilitarized Zone.

The Khe Sanh Combat Base, seen here in the lower left, was just one of a number of US Military bases.

A map showing the important areas of Quảng Trị Province during the Battle of Khe Sanh. US Marine Corps

The other bases, Rock Pile, Camp Carroll, and Ca Lu were manned by American and ARVN personnel. They became essential as their artillery helped fend off NVA attacks.

The NVA battle plan called for the encirclement of the Khe Sanh Combat Base with artillery, cutting off of Route 9 to prevent American supplies and reinforcements, and mass infantry attacks on the base from all directions. NVA tanks were also to be used- something that was rare at this point in the war.

The artillery attacks continued for 77 days straight. The bombardment was so intense that the base's main ammunition dump exploded.

An aerial view shows part of the U.S. Marine outpost and airfield at Khe Sanh with bunkers, ammunition dump and huts smoldering from rocket and mortar attack, January 21, 1968. Associated Press

"There was wreckage thrown everywhere," 1st LT/ Paul Elkan later said. "Vehicles were smashed, windshields shattered, blown tires- tents were shredded, pieces of gear, and torn sandbags were everywhere. What had been a combat base looked like rubble."

US Marines responded with artillery of their own.

A U.S. artillery gun goes into action during the siege of the U.S. Marine base at Khe Sanh, January 29, 1968 Associated Press

The 20 artillery pieces and numerous mortars at the Khe Sanh Combat Base were aided by 175mm guns artillery from the bases at Rock Pile (12 miles northeast) and Camp Carroll (17 miles east). 

The handful of tanks at the base were placed in ditches and used as artillery pieces.

"The Marines were told to button up," General William Westmoreland said. Constant artillery barrages and rain storms meant that the Marines had to repeatedly repair and remake their defenses.

In fog and rain U.S. marines dig in deeper at the Khe Sanh Combat Base, February 7, 1968. Associated Press

Eventually, Khe Sanh has deep trenches that connected all the major building and fighting positions.

U.S. Marines use the protection of deep trenches to move around their base during the siege of Khe Sanh, February 1968. Associated Press

The Marines and Naval Construction Battalions were able to dig deep trenches and bunkers throughout the Khe Sanh Combat Base. Important complexes like ammo dumps and hospitals were dug well underground in order to avoid being destroyed. 

The airfield was an absolutely vital lifeline for the soldiers at Khe Sanh.

As North Vietnamese artillery fire hits the U.S. Marine base at Khe Sanh on February 10, 1968, these marines try to find cover behind piled-up cargo pallets at the base airstrip. Associated Press

Just like the defenses, the airfield had to be repaired and maintained as well. Almost as soon as the battle started, it became impossible to resupply the base over land, leaving air delivery the only option.

The airfield was not designed to hold jets, but C-130 and C-123 transport planes could land on its surface, as could helicopters.

If any attack was to succeed, the NVA would need to take these hills, as they were the crucial high ground.

A map showing the approximate area where the fighting would take place. The numbers around the base represent hills that have Marine outposts on them. US Marine Corps

The most intense fighting would take place at the outposts on the hills that guarded the high ground, especially hills 881N/S, 861, 558, and 950.

The hills were named after their height in meters. Route 9 was the only road in this part of Quảng Trị Province that lead to the coast.

President Lyndon Johnson was determined to keep Khe Sanh.

National Security Advisor Walt Rostow shows President Lyndon B. Johnson a model of the Khe Sanh area, February 15, 1968. US Department of Defense

By mid February, Khe Sanh became a symbol of the US' fight against communism in Southeast Asia. Johnson was worried that Khe Sanh would become America's Dien Bien Phu.

As a result, he ordered that Khe Sanh be held at all costs. General Westmoreland would step up the air campaign with B-52 bombers, and move half of the US Army's mobile reserve in Vietnam to the area.

By the end of February, it was clear that the NVA were not going to give up on taking Khe Sanh. As the Marines continued to fight the NVA, elements of battlefield humor began to make appearances, such as this message on a Marines vest.

A U.S. Marine shows a message written on the back of his flack vest at the Khe Sanh combat base in Vietnam on February 21, 1968. Associated Press

Another example of battlefield humor is seen here.

U.S. marines cleans his M16 rifle under sign noting fact of life at Khe Sanh, misspelled, Feb. 21, 1968. Associated Press

Artillery barrages were sometimes so intense, that helicopter pilots like the one here were forced to wait until they were over before they could take off.

U.S. Marines wait out an enemy artillery barrage in a trench on the perimeter of the embattled Khe Sanh outpost in extreme northwestern South Vietnam on Feb. 21, 1968. Associated Press

Despite the bombings, the fight continued. American casualties started to mount, and could only be evacuated by air.

U.S. Marines carry a comrade, wounded in communist shelling to an evacuation helicopter at Khe Sanh, Vietnam, on February 28, 1968. Associated Press

The supplies coming in from the air enabled the artillery at the Khe Sanh Combat Base to keep firing at attacking NVA units who were moving in on the outposts in the Hills.

The gunner of this 105 mm artillery piece, right, throws aside empty shell casing, just fired at North Vietnamese position, as smoke issues from the barrel of the weapon at the United Sates Marine Base, at Khe Sanh, South Vietnam, on Feb. 28, 1968. Associated Press

What kept the Marines alive were airstrikes from the Air Force, Marines, and Navy.

The U.S. aircraft carrier Bon Homme Richard is seen from the air as she sails in the Gulf of Tonkin in March 1968. Associated Press

American airstrikes sometimes totalled 600 a day, and were launched from bases in South Vietnam, Thailand, and even aircraft carriers in the Gulf of Tonkin. 

"We started pouring it on," General Westmoreland said. "The bombs fell all the month of February and all the month of March."

Resupplying the base by the air was not without its risks.

An American C-123 cargo plane burns after being hit by communist mortars while taxiing on marine post at Khe Sanh, South Vietnam on March 1, 1968. Associated Press

The NVA had placed anti-aircraft guns around Khe Sanh, and continued to shell the airstrip. This resulted in a number of aircraft losses, clogging up the runway, and further complicating evacuation and supply efforts.

Different countermeasures were used, such as the use of white phosphorous to prevent the NVA from seeing what was going on on the airfield.

White phosphorous bomblets burn in midair to create a smoke screen alongside the Khe Sanh runway to protect planes landing with supplies and reinforcements at the base, March 10, 1968. Associated Press

B-52 bombers proved absolutely essential.

U.S. Marines in sandbagged trenches watch smoke rise from a B52 strike at the Communists only 1,000 yards from the embattled base at Khe Sanh in South Vietnam on March 3, 1968. Associated Press

Codenamed Arc Light, B-52s could drop 500 and 750 pound bombs and conduct 50 flights a day. A single B-52 could drop over 100 bombs and destroy an area one mile long and a quarter mile wide. They were also able to conduct strikes at night and in bad weather.

B-52 strikes were so effective that the NVA were never able to properly gather their troops together for the all-out mass assault they had planned on the Combat Base.

Some of the airstrikes were "danger close" meaning they were within 600 meters of the impact point, like this strike here.

A 1,000-pound bomb explodes 300 yards from the perimeter at the U.S. Marine Combat Base at Khe Sanh, sending shrapnel and dirt 300 feet into the air, March 7, 1968. A 1,000-pound bomb explodes 300 yards from the perimeter at the U.S. Marine Combat Base at Khe Sanh, sending shrapnel and dirt 300 feet into the air, March 7, 1968.

In all, B-52s flew over 2,500 missions on Khe Sanh. Khe Sanh was, in the words of General Westmoreland; "the first time in history where a siege of that magnitude was broken by airpower."

U.S. Air Force bombs create a curtain of flying shrapnel and debris barely 200 feet beyond the perimeter of South Vietnamese Ranger positions defending Khe Sanh during the siege of the U.S. Marine base, March 1968. Associated Press

Makeshift medical facilities at the base were mostly underground. Despite this, doctors and medics had to work around the clock wearing helmets and flak jackets, as seen here.

Dr. Joseph W. Wolfe, center, works on a wounded soldier in the crowded underground hospital bunker at Khe Sanh while Dr. James Finnegan, left and Dr. Edward M. Feldman, back to camera, stand by, March 8, 1968. Associated Press

Resupplying the base by air became so dangerous, that aircraft could no longer actually land to deliver their cargo.

A U.S. Air Force C-130 plane hovers over the Marine airstrip at Khe Sanh, South Vietnam, as a load of supplies is accidentally dropped at low altitude, March 9, 1968 Associated Press

C-130s and C-123s had to do low passes and drop equipment. To drop off reinforcements or evacuate the wounded, the planes had to land but keep moving while personnel would run in and out of the cargo bay.

Eventually, aircraft were forced to drop supplied from the air by parachute, a contingency that had actually been planned for.

A camouflaged C-130 transport plane drops supplies over the U.S. Marine base at Khe Sanh, South Vietnam, as it tries to gain altitude before North Vietnamese gunners can shoot it down, March 11, 1968. Associated Press

Coupled with the intense airpower and artillery, the fabled marksmanship of the Marines kept the NVA from entering the base itself.

U.S. marines at Khe Sanh use “Sniperscopes” attached to their M-16 rifles for some sharp-shooting at the North Vietnamese who surround the base on March 17, 1968. Associated Press

By April, the weather had cleared up and the US Army moved its forces to break the siege.

Cavalrymen leave their helicopters and scramble up the hillside to start off an Operation Pegasus in Vietnam, April 5, 1968. Associated Press

With the monsoon that had hung over Khe Sanh passing, General Westmoreland ordered his men to relieve the siege, starting Operation Pegasus.

The Army's 1st Cavalry Division made up the majority of the relief force. They, along with another detachment of Marines and ARVN soldiers numbered over 30,000 strong, and reopened Route 9.

By April 7th, elements of the relief force finally made it to the Khe Sanh Combat Base. The 1st Cavalry Division, the Marines, and the ARVN now needed to clear out any remaining resistance

Men of the U.S. 1st Cavalry Division move out to support an attack on the Lang Vei Special Forces Camp on April 19, 1968 Associated Press

Fighting continued well into June. By early July, the NVA had retreated and the battle was over.

A U.S. Marine carries an American flag on his rifle during a recovery operation six miles (10 km) south of Khe Sanh, Vietnam, June 17, 1968. Associated Press

The base was essentially destroyed by the battle. The remaining soldiers were now tasked with guarding the base while the final evacuation was carried out.

Marines of the first battalion, ninth marines ride on a lightweight tank-like vehicle carrying four 106mm recoilless rifles near Khe Sanh in Vietnam, July 3, 1968. Associated Press

With the base in ruins, the US fully pulled out of Khe Sanh as a result of the battle, as this image taken just two months after the battle shows.

The one-time American Marine base of Khe Sanh, October 10, 1968, lies completely deserted only the partially dismantled airstrip remains Associated Press

The Khe Sanh Combat Base was completely evacuated. Both sides declared victory, but in reality, not much had changed. The NVA and the US continued to fight each other in the region. 

Khe Sanh would prove to be a large diversion. A week after the battle started, the Tet Offensive was launched. The offensive saw the NVA and the Viet Cong start brutal urban battles all across South Vietnam — most notably in Saigon and Hue. 

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