Operation Diamond Arrow

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Date20 September 1969  9 March 1970
Location
Southern Laos, near the Ho Chi Minh Trail
Result Royalists withstand communist siege to hold Thatheng
Operation Diamond Arrow
Part of Laotian Civil War; Vietnam War
Date20 September 1969  9 March 1970
Location
Southern Laos, near the Ho Chi Minh Trail
Result Royalists withstand communist siege to hold Thatheng
Belligerents
 Kingdom of Laos  North Vietnam
Units involved
Bataillon Volontaires 46
Bataillon Infanterie 7
U.S. Air Force
Royal Lao Air Force
Raven Forward Air Controllers
Nail Forward Air Controllers
Three infantry battalions from Group 968
Strength
Battalion-size Battalion-size
Casualties and losses
40 killed
100 wounded
30 missing
Estimated 500

Operation Diamond Arrow was a battle in southern Laos, waged from 20 September 1969 through 9 March 1970. The struggle centered on a Royal Lao Army stronghold at the strategic road intersection of Routes 16 and 23. Due to intervention by U.S. and Lao tactical air strikes, and an air bridge supply effort, the Royal Lao Army troops survived besiegement in a fixed defensive position, only to abandon their position post-battle.

Located in the southern panhandle of the territory of the Kingdom of Laos, the Ho Chi Minh Trail was the logistics backbone of the communist forces during the Second Indochina War, as it was the main supply route for Viet Cong and People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN) forces fighting in South Vietnam. During 1969, there were a number of military operations waged against the Trail in southern Laos, including Operation Maeng Da, Operation Honorable Dragon, and Operation Junction City Jr., that originated in Laos.[1] Road intersections, such as the junction of Lao Routes 16 and 23 (since renumbered as Route 20), were prime objectives for both sides.[2]

Operation

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