- 108 Australians of D Company, 6th Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment (including 3 New Zealanders).
- ~2,000 North Vietnamese Army and Viet Cong.
- A storm ridden rubber plantation in Vietnam.
- A nine hour battle, 50 years ago.
Don't forget, the Australians and New Zealanders fought with distinction in Vietnam with us. This was one of their finest hours.
D Company left the base at 11.15 that morning bound for the Long Tan rubber plantation. As they departed Nui Dat the sounds of a concert by Little Pattie, the Australian entertainer, reached their ears. They entered the Long Tan plantation at 3.15 that afternoon. Less than an hour later the Viet Cong attacked in force, putting the Australians under mortar, machine gun and small arms fire. Only the quick response of a New Zealand artillery battery to desperate calls for support saved D Company from annihilation.
Almost as soon as the battle began a torrential downpour added to the gloom in the rubber plantation. The Australians, surrounded, short of ammunition and fighting an enemy whose strength they could only guess at, called for helicopters to drop ammunition to them. Flying at tree-top height, braving the terrible weather and heavy Viet Cong fire, two RAAF helicopters located the beleaguered Australians and dropped boxes of ammunition and blankets for the wounded.
The survivors of D Company along with accurate artillery fire from New Zealand's 161 Field Battery as well as the Australian 103 and 105 Field batteries and a United States battery inflicted heavy losses on the Viet Cong. As the fighting continued Australian reinforcements were committed to the battle. B Company was on the way and A Company, loaded into Armoured Personnel Carriers of 3 Troop, 1 Armoured Personnel Carrier Squadron, which fought its way into D Company just before 7 pm as daylight was fading. The Viet Cong had been massing for another assault but were forced to retreat into the plantation. They had suffered terrible casualties, but only when the Australians returned to the scene of battle the following morning did they realise the extent of the defeat that they had inflicted on the enemy. The Australians counted 245 enemy dead still in the plantation and surrounding jungle with evidence that others had already been removed from the battlefield. Captured documents and information from prisoners suggested that D Company had faced some 2,500 Viet Cong. Eighteen Australians were killed in the Battle of Long Tan and 24 wounded, all but one of the dead were from D Company.
At the end of the battle, 18 killed, 24 wounded with the Australians.
For the Vietnamese Communists? 245 killed, 350 wounded (estimate), 3 captured.
A bit more detail on the battle here.
Fullbore.
Fullbore. Funny that while Hollywood was content to let the 50th anniversaries of the major Vietnam War events pass without notice, the Aussies produced an exceptional movie honoring the Diggers that fought at Long Tan:
https://youtu.be/n5aeo56ofjA
My Father was a staffie for Westmoreland's staff at this time and later said "when they walked in to the room for debriefs you knew they were tough sum bitches and had nothing to prove".
Full Bore and great choice. Glad they are still on our side.