Operation Sam Houston

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Date12 February – 5 April 1967
Location
Plei Trap Valley and Plei Doc, South Vietnam
14°04′30″N 107°23′24″E / 14.075°N 107.39°E / 14.075; 107.39
Result Inconclusive
Operation Sam Houston
Part of the Vietnam War

Operation Sam Houston, January–April 1967
Date12 February – 5 April 1967
Location
Plei Trap Valley and Plei Doc, South Vietnam
14°04′30″N 107°23′24″E / 14.075°N 107.39°E / 14.075; 107.39
Result Inconclusive
Belligerents
 United States  North Vietnam
Commanders and leaders
MG William R. Peers
COL James B. Adamson
Unknown
Units involved

4th Infantry Division

  • 1st Brigade
  • 2nd Brigade
32nd Regiment
66th Regiment
88th Regiment
95B Regiment
Casualties and losses
155 killed US body count: 733 killed

Operation Sam Houston was a US Army operation that took place in the Plei Trap Valley and around Plei Doc, lasting from 12 February to 5 April 1967.

In early February 1967, intelligence reported that the People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN) 1st Division was operating in the Plei Trap Valley near the Vietnam-Cambodia border and the 10th Division was believed to also be nearby.[1]:167 The area of the operation was described as being "an area of almost continuous jungle with hardwood trees of several varieties up to six or seven feet in diameter and 200-250 feet in height. Where sunlight can break through the overhead canopy, the jungle floor is covered with thick, dense undergrowth restricting observation to a few meters and making movement extremely difficult. The area represents some of the most difficult jungle terrain in all of Southeast Asia. It is intersected by valleys and mountains with elevations varying from about 500 to nearly 600 feet, presenting additional difficulties to movement and maneuver."[2]:49

Operation

Aftermath

References

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