Battle of Gang Toi

Battle of Gang Toi
Part of the Vietnam War
A soldier holding a map is talking while two other soldiers sitting nearby look on while taking notes.
Second Lieutenant Clive Williams during orders with his section commanders.
Date8 November 1965
Location
Gang Toi Hills, Bien Hoa Province, South Vietnam (now in Dong Nai Province, Vietnam)
11°04′N 106°58′E / 11.06°N 106.97°E / 11.06; 106.97
Result Minor Viet Cong tactical victory
Belligerents
 Australia
 New Zealand
 United States
Viet Cong
Commanders and leaders
Australia Lou Brumfield
Australia John Healy
Nguyễn Văn Bảo
Units involved
Australia A Company 1 RAR
New Zealand 161 Battery, RNZA
United States 1/503rd Infantry
Company 238
Strength
120 men unknown
Casualties and losses
Australia 2 killed 6 killed
5 captured

The Battle of Gang Toi (8 November 1965) was fought during the Vietnam War between Australian troops and the Viet Cong. The battle was one of the first engagements between the two forces during the war and occurred when A Company, 1st Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment (1 RAR) struck a Viet Cong bunker system defended by Company 238 in the Gang Toi Hills, in northern Bien Hoa Province. It occurred during a major joint US-Australian operation codenamed Operation Hump, involving the US 173rd Airborne Brigade, to which 1 RAR was attached. During the latter part of the operation an Australian rifle company clashed with an entrenched company-sized Viet Cong force in well-prepared defensive positions. Meanwhile, an American paratroop battalion was also heavily engaged in fighting on the other side of the Song Dong Nai.

The Australians were unable to concentrate sufficient combat power to launch an assault on the position and consequently they were forced to withdraw after a fierce engagement during which both sides suffered a number of casualties, reluctantly leaving behind two men who had been shot and could not be recovered due to heavy machine-gun and rifle fire. Although they were most likely dead, a battalion-attack to recover the missing soldiers was planned by the Australians for the next day, but this was cancelled by the American brigade commander due to rising casualties and the need to utilise all available helicopters for casualty evacuation. The bodies of the two missing Australian soldiers were subsequently recovered more than 40 years later, and were finally returned to Australia for burial.


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