Special Operations.Com
The Mayaguez Incident
The
Mayaguez Incident
By
John L. Frisbee, Contributing Editor, published
in Air Force Magazine, 1991
It
was a "peacetime" military operation conducted
by an ad hoc force of airmen, Marines, and sailors.
The last US military
forces left South Vietnam in April 1975 in what President
Gerald Ford termed "a humiliating withdrawal."
US military involvement in southeast Asia had ended.
Or had it?
On May 12, 1975, the Cambodian Navy seized an American
merchant ship, SS Mayaguez, in international
waters off Cambodia's coast. The ship was being towed
to Kompong Som on the mainland when word reached the
White House. President Ford insisted that this not
become another Pueblo incident. Beyond that, it was
important to counter a growing feeling among US allies
and adversaries that this country was "a helpless
giant," an unreliable ally lacking resolve.
It was far from the simple military operation it
might seem. The US had no diplomatic relations with
the Khmer Rouge, which had taken over Cambodia a few
weeks earlier. US forces in Thailand were inadequate
for ground action against Cambodia. There were no
US warships in the area.
The President ordered the carrier Coral Sea
and other Navy ships to steam at full speed to the
Gulf of Thailand and US military planes in the Philippines
to find the Mayaguez and keep it in sight.
A Navy P-3 located the ship anchored off Kho Tang
Island, 40 miles from the Cambodian shore. Several
monitoring aircraft were damaged by fire from the
island. This would be no picnic.
A battalion-sized Marine landing team was airlifted
from Okinawa to U Tapao AB in Thailand, some 300 miles
from Kho Tang. The destroyer Holt was directed to
seize the Mayaguez, while Marines, airlifted
and supported by the Air Force, were to rescue the
crew, at least some of whom were believed to be held
on Kho Tang. Concurrently, the Coral Sea would
launch four bombing strikes on military targets near
Kompong Som to convince the Khmer Rouge the US was
serious.
On the morning of May 15, 175 Marines of a planned
600-man force were flown by helicopters of the 3d
Aerospace Rescue and Recovery Group and the 21st Special
Operations Squadron from U Tapao to Kho Tang, expecting
only light resistance. They were met by a force of
150-200 heavily armed Khmer Rouge troops, who shot
down three of the first eight helicopters and damaged
two others. About 100 Marines were put ashore, but
it soon became evident that substantial reinforcements
on the ground would be needed. The assault force was
supported by Air Force A-7s, F-4s, OV-10s, and AC-130s,
but the attack was not going well.
While the firefight on Kho Tang was at its height,
carrier bombing of targets on the mainland apparently
convinced the Khmer Rouge leaders that they had underestimated
US resolve. A fishing boat was seen approaching the
destroyer Wilson with white flags flying. Aboard
were the 39 crewmen of the Mayaguez. The Marines
on Kho Tang were ordered to disengage and withdraw.
However, Khmer Rouge troops, perhaps directed by a
local commander, continued the battle, turning from
defense to attack as Air Force helicopters moved through
heavy fire to withdraw US forces. The last of 230
Marines were not evacuated until after dark on the
night of May 15. As they had throughout the Vietnam
War, helicopter crews performed with unsurpassed heroism.
Four CH-53 and HH-53 crewmen were awarded the Air
Force Cross, the last to be accorded that honor in
Southeast Asia: 1st Lt. Donald R. Backlund, 1st Lt.
Richard C. Brim, SSgt. John D. Harston, and Capt.
Rowland W. Purser.
Lieutenant Backlund began his day by putting a contingent
of Marines on the destroyer Holt to assist in retaking
the Mayaguez. He then landed the rest of his
Marines on Kho Tang in the face of heavy fire. Early
in the afternoon, Backlund escorted a damaged HH-53
to the Coral Sea. He returned to Kho Tang and.recovered
several wounded Marines and downed airmen at dusk,
despite continuous ground fire and a grenade attack.
Backlund had been flying since before dawn.
Lieutenant Brim flew his helicopter through a curtain
of small arms and automatic weapons fire to land a
group of Marines on the island. He courageously held
his position, while enemy fire perforated his aircraft,
until four seriously wounded Marines were aboard.
Later he evacuated an aircraft load of Marines who
were under attack and about to be overrun.
Sergeant Harston was a flight mechanic on a CH-53
in the first landing wave. His aircraft was hit and
crashed in flames. Although wounded, Harston rescued
three survivors from the burning helicopter and gave
them covering fire as they swam away from shore. He
reentered the CH-53 to rescue another wounded Marine
and kept two shot-up leathernecks afloat with his
damaged life jacket until they were picked up by a
destroyer three hours later.
Captain Purser landed 29 Marines on the island after
being driven off in his first attempt. Returning to
U Tapao, he picked up another group of Marines and
flew them to Kho Tang. While evacuating wounded, his
helicopter was severely damaged by enemy fire. He
flew to the Coral Sea, helped make temporary
repairs, then returned to the island, picked up 54
Marines, and carried them to the Coral Sea
with one engine of his HH-53 shot out. Eighteen Marines
and airmen were killed or missing in the assault and
withdrawal from Kho Tang. Twenty-three others were
killed in a helicopter crash en route from Hakhon
Phanom to U Tapao, but the objectives of the operation
were achieved. The Mayaguez and its crew had
been rescued, though at high cost.
The Mayaguez incident is no more than a footnote
in most histories of the period. It and the men who
carried out the rescue deserve better than that. At
a time when its resolve was in doubt, the US showed
the world that it would pay whatever price was necessary
to protect its citizens and preserve its national
honor.
Mirrored from http://www.afa.org/magazine/valor/0991valor.html
Photos:
USMC
soldiers deploying on Koh Tang Island, 1975 -
US Air Force Picture
LINKS:
The
Mayaguez Incident - Dedicated to the KIA/MIA