Hanoi erred monumentally in its certainty that the offensive would trigger a supportive uprising of the population. PAVN/VC troops throughout the South, from Hue to the Mekong Delta, attacked in force for the first time in the war, but to devastating cost as the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) and American troops killed close to 37,000 of the ill-supported enemy in less than a month for losses of 3,700 and 7,600 respectively. These reversals on the battlefield (the VC would never again fight effectively as a cohesive force) failed to register on the American home front, however and fueled what would ultimately prove to be a propaganda victory for Hanoi.
U.S. troop numbers peaked in 1968 with President Johnson approving an increased maximum number of U.S. troops in Vietnam at 549,500. The year was the most expensive in the Vietnam War with America spending US$77.4 billion (US$ 678 billion in 2024) on the war. The year also became the deadliest of the Vietnam War for America and its allies with 27,915 ARVN soldiers killed and the Americans suffering 16,592 killed compared to around two hundred thousand PAVN/VC killed. The deadliest day of the Vietnam War for the U.S. was 31 January at the start of the Tet Offensive when 246 Americans were killed in action.
The PAVN 3rd Regiment, 2nd Division attacked four U.S. firebases in the Quế Sơn Valley southwest of Hội An, launching ground attacks against Landing Zone Leslie and Firebase Ross. Leslie was occupied by D Company and a platoon from A Company, 2nd Battalion, 12th Cavalry. The PAVN penetrated the base, attacking bunkers with flamethrowers and satchel charges before being pushed out in the afternoon. Losses were 15 U.S and 63 PAVN.[14] The PAVN emplaced heavy machine guns around Leslie and over a nine-day period shot down seven 1st Cavalry Division helicopters and damaged a further 26.[13]: 100 At Ross the attack was repulsed with losses of 18 U.S. and 331 PAVN killed.[13]: 100
4 January
A unit of the U.S. 4th Infantry Division operating in Đắk Tô District captured a classified five-page North Vietnamese document, titled "Urgent Combat Order No. 1", that described the strategy for a series of attacks to take place in Pleiku in conjunction with the upcoming Tết holiday.[15]: 28
VC sappers penetrate the perimeter of Kontum Airfield and destroyed several helicopters with Satchel charges, killing 7 Americans and wounding 25. An estimated 16 VC were killed in the attack.[20]
At a White House luncheon with First Lady Lady Bird Johnson in a discussion about juvenile delinquency, singer Eartha Kitt said "You send the best of this country off to be shot and maimed. They rebel in the street. They will take pot ... and they will get high. They don't want to go to school because they're going to be snatched off from their mothers to be shot in Vietnam." Her remarks caused Mrs. Johnson to burst into tears and led to Kitt being blacklisted and investigated by the CIA, effectively ending her career.[24]
19 January
In the first two weeks of 1968, PAVN/VC forces shelled 49 district and provincial capitals in South Vietnam and temporarily occupied two of them. General Westmoreland described the fighting to Time magazine "as the most intense of the entire war." MACV claimed that 5,000 PAVN/VC had been killed.[7]: 896
North Koreancommandos carry out the Blue House raid, the most significant escalation in the low-intensity conflict that had been underway in South Korea since October 1966. The attack raised the possibility that the South Korean Government might want to withdraw some of their forces in South Vietnam for homeland defense, requiring their replacement by already overstretched American forces.[19]: 152
21 January – 31 March
Operation Jeb Stuart was planned as an operation by the 1st Cavalry Division to attack PAVN base areas in I Corps, but instead saw the division supporting other Allied forces during the Tet Offensive.[13]: 16
21 January – 9 July
The long and bloody Battle of Khe Sanh began with an assault by the PAVN on Khe Sanh Combat Base in northwestern Quảng Trị Province. The combatants were elements of the U.S. III Marine Amphibious Force (III MAF) and the ARVN against two to three PAVN division-size elements.[28] PAVN General Võ Nguyên Giáp later claimed that his objective was to create a diversion to draw U.S. forces away from the populated areas of South Vietnam. Khe Sanh diverted 30,000 US troops away from the cities that would be the main targets of the Tet Offensive.[29] The USAF began Operation Niagara to provide continuous air support during the siege.[30]
The Battle of Ban Houei Sane began on the night of 23 January, when the 24th Regiment of the PAVN 304th Division overran the small Royal Lao Army (RLA) outpost at Ban Houei Sane. The PAVN lost 29 killed, while RLA losses are unknown. The RLA survivors fled across the border to Lang Vei Special Forces Camp.[31]
In Time magazine, General Westmoreland said, "the Communists seem to have run temporarily out of steam."[7]: 896
Two companies of the PAVN 408th Sapper Battalion attacked Camp Holloway destroying five UH-1 helicopters and an ammunition storage area.[34]
28 January
General Westmoreland in his annual report said "In many areas the enemy has been driven away from the population centers; in others he has been compelled to disperse and evade contact thus nullifying much of his potential. The year ended with the enemy increasingly resorting to desperation tactics in attempting to achieve military/psychological victory; and he has experienced only failure in those attempts."[7]: 872
At half-past midnight on Wednesday morning the PAVN launch the Tet Offensive at Nha Trang. At 2:45 that morning the US Embassy in Saigon is attacked, the VC fail to enter the Embassy building and 18 are killed and one captured, U.S. losses are five killed.[15]: 34–6
29–30 January
The VC fired rockets at Da Nang Air Base and then at 02:30 on 30 January they launched a sapper and mortar attack on the south of the base killing four Marines. At 03:30 a renewed rocket attack on the base began with 55 122 mm rockets hitting within 20 minutes, killing three marines and wounding 11 and destroying five aircraft and damaging a further 14.[13]: 145–8
30 January-4 February
The PAVN 406th Sapper Battalion and a company from the VC 304th Local Force Battalion attacked Kontum Airfield but were forced back by U.S. helicopter gunships and armor. The PAVN renewed their attack but failed to penetrate the airfield defenses. On 31 January, Company D, 1st Battalion, 22nd Infantry Regiment was landed at the airfield and the next day two companies from the 1st Battalion, 12th Infantry Regiment were flown into the airfield securing its northern perimeter. By 4 February the city had been secured and normal operations resumed at the airfield.[26]: 302–7
30 January – 3 March
The Battle of Huế was one of the bloodiest and longest battles. The ARVN and three understrength U.S. Marine battalions attacked and defeated more than 10,000 entrenched PAVN/VC.[36]: 11 The PAVN/VC lost 5,113 killed and 98 captured in the battle, the ARVN lost 452 killed and the U.S. 216 killed.[13]: 213 844 Civilians were killed in the fighting. In the Massacre at Huế the PAVN/VC massacred 2,800–6,000 civilians and prisoners of war during their occupation of the city.[37] In the aftermath of the battle South Vietnamese forces killed an estimated 1,000-2,000 people suspected of being VC or VC sympathisers.[38]
31 January
In the deadliest single day for U.S. forces during the war 246 Americans were killed.[39]
A VC rocket and mortar attack on Chu Lai Air Base triggered an explosion in the bomb dump destroying three aircraft and damaging a further 23.[13]: 155
The VC attack on Vĩnh Long Airfield was repulsed at a cost of seven U.S. killed and three UH-1 helicopters destroyed.
February
1 February
The ARVN 3rd Armored Cavalry Squadron, fought a pitched battle with the VC H-15 Local Force Battalion near Pleiku.[44] They were later awarded the United States Presidential Unit Citation for extraordinary heroism against hostile forces during the Tet Offensive, making them one of only a few non-U.S. military units to receive the highest U.S. military honor awarded at the unit level.[45]
Deputy U.S. Secretary of Defense Paul H. Nitze inaugurated a program to curtail the growing use of marijuana among U.S. troops fighting in Vietnam.[48]: 183
International reporters arrive at the embattled city of Bến Tre in South Vietnam. Peter Arnett, then of the Associated Press, writes a dispatch quoting an unnamed US major as saying, "It became necessary to destroy the town to save it."[49]
In a telephone conversation with General Westmoreland, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Earle Wheeler advised that the U.S. government "is not prepared to accept a defeat in South Vietnam... In summary... if you need more troops, ask for them."[19]: 153
Operation Coronado XI was conducted by the MRF and ARVN forces to secure Cần Thơ in the aftermath of the Tet Offensive. The operation resulted in 297 VC killed.[26]: 379
13 February
A Gallup poll indicated that 50 percent of the American public disapproved of Johnson's handling of the war, 35 percent approved and the rest were undecided.[50]: 346
North Vietnam released three American prisoners of war, the first of nine, to the custody of peace activists Daniel Berrigan and Howard Zinn.[51] As part of the propaganda event, the POWs each "expressed their thanks to their captors for the humane and lenient treatment" that they had received, and "expressed remorse over the war". All but one of the nine met the order of release approved by the senior ranking officers (SROs) in each POW camp ("sick and injured first, then enlisted personnel and the remaining officers by order of shoot-down". The exception would be a Navy seaman who was given permission by his superiors to accept release because he had memorized the names of all his fellow prisoners of war.[52]
The Selective Service System revised its rules for deferments and exemptions from the draft, allowing the induction of most graduate students who were pursuing a master's degree, a decision that affected 600,000 men. Students in medical school, dental school, or other health field remained exempt, as did those in a theological seminary who planned on "going into ministry".[53]
16 February to 1 March
Operation Maeng Ho X was an ROK Capital Division search and destroy operation in Bình Định Province. The operation resulted in 664 PAVN/VC killed.[22]
17 February to 28 March
Operation Tran Hung Dao II was a continuation of Operation Tran Hung Dao I in the Saigon area with slightly reduced forces. The operation resulted in 713 PAVN/VC killed.[36]: 13
18 February
A VC rocket and mortar attack on Tan Son Nhut Air Base destroyed 6 aircraft and damaged 33 others and killed one person.[54]
Between 8,000 and 20,000 people attended an antiwar demonstration in West Berlin. The city government organised a similarly sized counter-demonstration.[55]: 152
19 February
A VC rocket attack on Tan Son Nhut Air Base hit the civilian air terminal at Tan Son Nhut Airport killing one person and six further rocket/mortar attacks over this period killed another six people and wounded 151.[54]
23-6 February
General Wheeler, Major General William E. DePuy and Philip Habib visited South Vietnam. During the visit Wheeler and Westmoreland prepared a reinforcement request for up to 205,000 additional troops to support all possible contingencies in Vietnam.[19]: 158–9
24 February
A VC rocket and mortar attack on Tan Son Nhut Air Base killed four U.S. personnel and wounded 21 and damaged base buildings.[54]
PAVN rocket and mortar fire hit Firebase Betty exploding an ammunition bunker and this was followed by a PAVN sapper attack. U.S. losses were three killed and 29 wounded and 21 PAVN killed and one captured.[57]
26 February to 12 September
Operation Houston, a security operation conducted by the U.S. Marines' Task Force X-Ray to reopen and secure Route 1 between Da Nang and Phu Bai Combat Base, results in 702 PAVN/VC killed and 29 captured for the loss of 117 U.S. killed.[13]: 414
27 February
Walter Cronkite, reporting after his recent trip to Vietnam for his television special "Who, What, When, Where, Why?" gives a highly critical editorial and urges America to leave Vietnam "...not as victors, but as an honorable people who lived up to their pledge to defend democracy, and did the best they could."[58]
28 February
General Wheeler briefed President Johnson and his national security team. Wheeler gave the impression that General Westmoreland needed the entire 205,000 troops simply to repel another PAVN/VC offensive and
regain lost ground in South Vietnam. Wheeler portrayed the Tet Offensive as coming close to success in many places, with the Allies' victory margin "very very small indeed." He predicted that the PAVN/VC would renew the attack with even greater force. The South Vietnamese forces had held together under the first assault and recouped many of their losses. However, their staying power against a renewed offensive was uncertain. Westmoreland's US forces were in good shape and fighting well, but they were stretched thin and "he does not have a theater reserve." Under these circumstances, "If the enemy synchronizes his
expected major attacks with increased pressure throughout the country, General Westmoreland's margin will be paper thin." The only alternative to the requested reinforcements, would be a decision "to be prepared to give up areas in lieu of more troops," specifically "the 2 northern provinces of South Vietnam." Wheeler's report was a staggering blow to a politically beleaguered administration already shaken by Tet. Johnson and his advisers were dismayed by Wheeler's gloomy assessment of the Vietnam situation, which was in sharp contrast to the more reassuring reports they had been receiving from Westmoreland and Ambassador Bunker. In response Johnson appointed a task force, headed by incoming Secretary of Defense Clark Clifford, to examine afresh the reinforcement and mobilization issue as part of a major review of Vietnam policy and strategy[19]: 159–61
March
March – November 1968
Project Combat Lancer was the combat testing of six USAF F-111Aswing-wing fighter-bombers. F-111A #66-0022 disappeared on 28 March, #66-0017 disappeared on 30 March and #66-0024 crashed on 22 April and this halted combat operations and all aircraft were returned to the U.S. in November.[59]
1 March
Three North Vietnamese fishing trawlers were destroyed by the U.S. Navy and South Vietnamese forces while attempting to resupply the VC and a fourth was turned back as part of Operation Market Time. Because the fourth trawler got more than 12 miles (19 km) away from the coast and reached international waters, the U.S. Navy was forbidden from firing on the ship.[60]
1–30 March
Operation Patrick was a security operation conducted by the U.S. 3rd Brigade, 4th Infantry Division in Bình Định Province. The operation resulted in 70 PAVN killed.[26]: 473–4
2 March
While patrolling 4 miles (6.4 km) north of Tan Son Nhut Air Base near the small village of Quoi Xuan to locate VC rocket sites, Company C, 4th Battalion, 9th Infantry Regiment walked into an ambush losing 48 killed in just 8 minutes. U.S. forces claimed they killed 20 VC.[61]
A USAF C-123 was shot down by PAVN anti-aircraft fire near Khe Sanh killing all 44 persons on board.[62]
The "Clifford Committee" proposed the immediate deployment of about 22,000 reinforcements to South Vietnam, which could be done from existing resources. A decision on deploying the rest of the 205,000 should be deferred, contingent upon a "week-by-week" review of the situation in South Vietnam, effectively killing the request.[19]: 163
6–10 March
Operation Rock was a 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines sweep on the peninsula formed by the Vu Gia and Thu Bồn Rivers, the so-called "Arizona Territory" northwest of An Hoa Combat Base. the operation resulted in 35 PAVN and three Marines killed.[13]: 248
7 March – 7 August
Operation Truong Cong Dinh was a security operation to reestablish South Vietnamese control over the northern Mekong Delta conducted by the U.S. 9th Infantry Division, the MRF and the ARVN 7th Division. The operation resulted in 343 VC and 51 U.S. killed.[26]: 472–3
10 March
Signed by President Ho Chi Minh four months earlier, a decree took effect in North Vietnam outlawing local opposition to the nation's conduct of the war. A long list of "counterrevolutionary" crimes was subject to punishments ranging from brief detention, to life in prison or the death penalty.[63]
The New York Times published details of the 205,000-man reinforcement request and Johnson administration policy debates denouncing the proposal as "suicidal escalation" and called for abandonment of this "bankrupt policy." In the Senate, Democrats and Republicans alike condemned the troop request as a disastrous and futile escalation of the war.[19]: 165
10–11 March
The Battle of Lima Site 85 was a battle for control of a secret radar site at Phou Pha Thi, Laos. The U.S. lost 13 killed and the RLA and Thai forces lost 42 killed, PAVN losses are unknown.[64]
11 March - 7 April
Operation Quyet Thang was a U.S./ARVN security operation to reestablish South Vietnamese control over the areas immediately around Saigon in the aftermath of the Tet Offensive. 2,658 VC were killed and 427 captured.[26]: 464
12 March
President Johnson barely edged out antiwar candidate Eugene McCarthy in the New Hampshire Democratic primary, the opening event in nominations for the 1968 U.S. presidential election. The vote highlighted deep divisions in the country, and the party, over the war, and would demonstrate Johnson's increasing unpopularity. Johnson received 49.6% of the votes cast, but McCarthy who had campaigned on a platform of ending U.S. involvement in Vietnam got 41.9% despite being relatively unknown outside of his home state.[65]
US troops from C Company, 1st Battalion, 20th Infantry Regiment, 11th Brigade and B Company, 4th Battalion, 3rd Infantry Regiment, 23rd Infantry Division carry out the My Lai Massacre killing more than 500 Vietnamese civilians from infants to the elderly. The event would remain concealed for more than a year.[66]
17 March
An antiwar demonstration outside the U.S. Embassy in London's Grosvenor Square turned violent; 91 people were injured and 200 demonstrators arrested.[67]
17 March to 30 July
Operation Duong Cua Dan/Operation People's Road was a U.S. 9th Infantry Division security operation for repair of Route 4 between Cat Lay and Mỹ Tho. The operation resulted in 1,357 PAVN/VC and 93 U.S. killed.[22]
17 March to 31 January 1969
Operation Walker was a security operation conducted by the U.S. 1st Battalion, 503rd Infantry Regiment, 173rd Airborne Brigade in Bình Định Province. The operation resulted in 272 PAVN/VC and 42 U.S. killed.[68]: L-3
18 March – 17 May
Operation Carentan and Operation Carentan II were security operations conducted by the U.S. 1st and 2nd Brigades, 101st Airborne Division and the 3rd Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division in Thừa Thiên Province. The operations resulted in 2,320 PAVN and 214 U.S. killed.[26]: 506
24 March
Generals Westmoreland and Wheeler met at Clark Air Base in the Philippines. Wheeler advised Westmoreland that a major reinforcement and expansion of ground operations were out of the question. Westmoreland advised that in the light of the improved situation after the defeat of the Tet Offensive and the strong showing of the South Vietnamese forces, further reinforcements beyond those already committed would not be required.[19]: 166
25 March
A Harris Poll found that 60% of Americans regarded the Tet Offensive as a defeat of U.S. objectives and basic support for the war had dropped from 74 to 54 percent.[69]: 256
26 March
President Johnson met with his group of advisers, led by Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Secretary of Defense Clifford, who had come to be known as "The Wise Men". After long supporting and encouraging Johnson's conduct of the war, a majority of the group informed him that "an American military solution in Vietnam was no longer attainable" and that he should take steps to disengage the U.S. from further participation. Another author would note that former Secretary of State Dean Acheson told Johnson "the financial and social costs of the struggle... would be hard for the United States to sustain" and noted that "The Wise Men's conclusion that the United States had to find a new way out of Vietnam rocked Johnson as nothing else had." [70]
The PAVN 7th Battalion, 209th Regiment attacked Firebase 14 on Hill 995 19 miles (31 km) west of Kontum defended by units of the 4th Brigade, 4th Infantry Division. The PAVN lost 135 killed and the U.S. 19 killed.[71]
30 March
A Gallup Poll shows that 63% of Americans disapprove of Johnson's handling of the war.[15]: 258
30 March – 31 January 1969
Operation Cochise Green was a security and pacification operation conducted by the 173rd Airborne Brigade in Bình Định Province. The operation resulted in 929 PAVN/VC killed and 25 captured and 114 U.S. killed.[26]: 620–1
31 March
President Johnson addresses the nation, announcing steps to limit the war in Vietnam and reporting his decision not to seek reelection. The speech announces the first in a series of limitations on US bombing, promising to halt these activities above the 20th parallel north.[72]
Secretary of Defense Clark Clifford gets the President to authorize 24,500 more troops on an emergency basis, raising authorized strength to the Vietnam War's peak of 549,500, a figure never reached.[1]
April
1 April
U.S. aircraft ceased attacking North Vietnam north of the 20th parallel, an area which included Hanoi and Haiphong. Missions would continue for the remainder of the country, between the 17th parallel and 20th parallel.[73]
1–14 April
In Operation Pegasus the 1st Cavalry Division relieved the Marines at Khe Sanh.[13]: 284
2 April
North Vietnam's official government radio station broadcast that "The North Vietnamese government declares its readiness to send its representatives to make contact with U.S. representatives to decide with the U.S. side the unconditional cessation of bombing and all other war acts... so that talks could begin."[74]
8 April
Captain Max Cleland serving with the 2nd Battalion, 12th Cavalry Regiment was seriously wounded by a grenade blast near Khe Sanh losing both legs and his right forearm.[75]
8–19 April
Operation Norfolk Victory was a 1st Battalion, 20th Infantry Regiment clear and search operation in Nghĩa Hành District, Quảng Ngãi Province. the operation resulted in 43 PAVN/VC and five U.S. killed.[22]
8 April to 31 May
Operation Toan Thang I was a US and ARVN operation conducted between 8 April 1968 and 31 May 1968. Toan Thang, or "Complete Victory", was part of a reaction to the Tet Offensive designed to put pressure on the PAVN/VC. The PAVN/VC lost 7,645 killed and 1,708 captured for the loss of 762 ARVN and 564 U.S. killed.[36]: 12
A 250-man PAVN force attempted to block Route 19 west of Landing Zone Schueller. A reaction force from the 1st Battalion, 69th Armor Regiment at Schueller was called forward and quickly overwhelmed the PAVN ambushers some of whom retreated to a nearby hill where they were assaulted by the 1st Battalion, 503rd Infantry Regiment. The engagement resulted in 1 U.S. and 40 PAVN killed.[76]
Operation Jasper Square was a 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines operation on Go Noi Island, Quảng Nam Province. The operation resulted in 54 PAVN/VC and six Marines killed.[13]: 250
13 April
In an unnamed operation east of Huế, the 1st Battalion, 27th Marines killed 60 PAVN/VC for the loss of 24 Marines.[13]: 252
15 April – 28 February 1969
Following the relief of Khe Sanh the 3rd Marine Division began Operation Scotland II in the area round Khe Sanh. The operation continued until February 28, 1969, and results in 3,304 PAVN killed and 435 Marines killed.[13]: 289 [78]
19-26 April
Operation Baxter Garden was a harvest security operation on the Phu Thu peninsula by the 2nd Battalion, 5th Marines supported by two ARVN battalions. The operation resulted in 55 PAVN/VC and 13 Marines killed.[13]: 252
19 April – 17 May
Operation Delaware was a military operation in the A Shau Valley, an important PAVN logistics corridor and base area. American and South Vietnamese had not been present in the area since the Battle of A Shau, when a Special Forces camp located there was overrun. The PAVN lost 869 killed while the U.S. lost 142 killed and 47 missing and the ARVN lost 26 killed.[36]: 12
U.S. Vice President Hubert Humphrey formally announced that he would seek the Democratic Party nomination to run for President of the United States.[80]
30 April – 3 May
In the Battle of Dai Do the 2nd Battalion, 4th Marines and the 1st Battalion, 3rd Marines, fight a pitched, hand-to-hand battle with two full-strength battalions of the PAVN 320th Division. The Marines suffer 50% casualties with 81 killed, while the PAVN lose more than 600 men killed. "E" Co & "F" Co Commanders are each awarded the Medal of Honor, while 2/4th Marines Commander, Lieutenant Colonel Weise is awarded the Navy Cross.[13]: 303–4
May
1 May – 20 November
Operation Kudzu was a 9th Infantry Division reconnaissance and security operation around Đồng Tâm Base Camp. The operation resulted in 187 PAVN/VC killed and 41 captured and 28 U.S. killed.[69]: 260
3 May
The U.S. and North Vietnam agreed that their representatives would meet in Paris on 10 May to begin the first discussions on the format for peace talks to end the war.[81]
3–10 May
In the deadliest week of the war for American forces, 562 U.S. troops are killed.[69]: 260
4 May – 24 August
Operation Allen Brook was a 1st Marine Division security and pacification operation on Go Noi Island. The operation resulted in 917 PAVN/VC killed and 11 captured and 172 Marines killed.[13]: 343
5 May
May Offensive was launched in the early morning hours of 4 May, in which PAVN/VC units initiated PHASE II of the Tet Offensive of 1968 (also known as the May Offensive, "Little Tet", and "Mini-Tet") by striking 119 targets throughout South Vietnam, including Saigon.[82] The PAVN/VC lost over 24,000 killed and 2,000 captured while the U.S. lost 2,169 killed and the ARVN lost 2,054 killed.[26]: 589–90 The offensive caused extensive destruction in west and south Saigon.[26]: 583
After midnight the PAVN/VC shelled Bien Hoa Air Base for 3 hours and then shelled it again at dawn, wounding 11 USAF personnel and damaging 13 aircraft, 5 trucks and 3 50,000-gallon rubber fuel bladders.[83]: 71
Landing Zone Peanuts located approximately 5 km southwest of Khe Sanh Combat Base and occupied by Companies A and B, 1st Battalion, 5th Cavalry Regiment and Company A, 1st Battalion, 77th Artillery Regiment was hit by 120 mm mortar rounds and B-40 rockets followed by a PAVN sapper attack. The attack was repulsed with 11 U.S. and 32 PAVN killed.[84]
Operation Concordia Square/Lam Son 224 was a 2nd Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division operation in Quảng Trị Province. The operation resulted in 349 PAVN and 19 U.S. killed.[22]
10 May
Representatives of the U.S. and North Vietnam met at Paris for the first time to discuss peace talks and agreed that discussions would take place at the International Conference Center of the French Foreign Ministry, located in the former Hotel Majestic. W. Averell Harriman led the American delegation with the assistance of Cyrus Vance, and former North Vietnamese foreign minister Xuan Thuy was assisted by Colonel Ha Van Lau.[86]
10–12 May
The Battle of Kham Duc was the struggle for the United States Army Special Forces camp located in Quảng Tín Province. The camp was occupied by the 1st Special Forces detachment consisting of U.S. and South Vietnamese special forces, as well as Montagnard irregulars.[87] A USAF C-130B was shot down after takeoff from the base killing all 155 on board.[88]
12 May – 6 June
The Battle of Coral–Balmoral was a series of actions fought between 1 ATF and PAVN/VC forces, north-east of Saigon. The battle resulted in 267 PAVN/VC killed and 11 captured and 25 Australians killed.[89]
13 May
The first US and North Vietnamese delegations meet at the Paris peace talks to discuss American withdrawal.[90]: 274
13/4 May
The U.S. radio relay station on Nui Ba Den was attacked and overrun by the VC before they were driven off by helicopter gunship and artillery fire. The attack killed 24 U.S. and 25 VC.[91]
17 May
A group of anti-war demonstrators, later dubbed the Catonsville Nine, entered the Selective Service offices in Catonsville, Maryland, took draft records, and burned them with homemade napalm.[92]
17 May – 3 November
Operation Jeb Stuart III was conducted by the U.S. 1st Cavalry Division to attack PAVN base areas in Quảng Trị and Thừa Thiên Provinces. The operation resulted in 2,014 PAVN killed and 251 captured and 222 U.S. killed.[93]
17 May – 28 February 1969
Operation Nevada Eagle was a security operation conducted by the 101st Airborne Division and 3rd Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division in Thừa Thiên Province. The operation resulted in 3,299 PAVN killed and 853 captured and U.S. 175 killed.[94]
Operation Mameluke Thrust was a 1st Marine Division spoiling attack into the valleys west of Danang and around Thường Ðức Camp. The operation resulted in 2,728 PAVN killed and 47 captured and U.S. losses of 269 killed.[13]: 726
23 May
The U.S. Navy guided-missile cruiserUSS Long Beach, operating off of the coast of North Vietnam shot down a Vietnam People's Air Force (VPAF) jet fighter with a RIM-8 Talos missile fired from a distance of 65 nautical miles (120 km; 75 mi) making it the first combat kill by a naval surface to air missile.[96]: 39
24 May to 12 June
Operation Mathews was a 1st Brigade, 4th Infantry Division and 3rd Brigade, 101st Airborne Division search and destroy operation in Kon Tum Province. The operation resulted in 352 PAVN and 69 U.S. killed.[22]
25 May to 10 June
The second phase of the May Offensive attacks on Saigon began. The VC lost an estimated 600 killed and another 107 captured in the attacks, while the South Vietnamese lost 42 killed.[26]: 585–9
Trần Văn Hương, a former schoolteacher, was sworn in as the new Prime Minister of South Vietnam.[98]
29 May
A VC unit stopped all traffic on Route 155 in Vĩnh Bình Province; 50 civilians were kidnapped, including a Protestant minister; two buses and 28 three-wheeled taxis were burned.[99]
Operation Toan Thang II was designed to keep pressure on PAVN/VC forces in III Corps, the PAVN/VC lost 25,428 killed and 10,724 captured while the U.S. lost 1,798 killed.[103]: 31
2 June
A gunship from the 120th Assault Helicopter Company fired a 2.75-inch rocket that struck a building that contained the forward command post of the ARVN 30th Ranger Battalion. The blast killed 6 high-ranking South Vietnamese officials allied to Prime Minister Kỳ, including Saigon Police chief Lieutenant Colonel Nguyen Van Luan.[104]: 35–6
2–19 June
Operation Robin was a 3rd Marine Division operation into the "Vietnam Salient" of Quảng Trị Province. The operation resulted in 635 PAVN killed and 48 captured and Marine losses of 65+ killed.[13]: 324
South Vietnamese Minister of Information Tôn Thất Thiện described the impact of the U.S. presence on South Vietnamese life as "devastating" and "disintegrating."[105]
12 June
A VC rocket and mortar attack on Tan Son Nhut Air Base destroyed two aircraft and killed one USAF airman.[54]
The South Vietnamese military mobilization law was promulgated. The law lowered the military draft age from 20 to 18 and allowed the government to conscript males between the ages of 18 and 38 for service in either the ARVN or the territorial Regional Force and Popular Forces. The term of service was made indefinite, or as long as the war lasted. In addition, the legislation specified that youths of 17 and men between the ages of 39 and 43 could be conscripted for noncombat military service, and all other males between 16 and 50 were to serve in a new paramilitary organization, the People's Self-Defense Force, a part-time hamlet militia.[107]
152 members of the VC Quyet Thang Regiment surrendered to ARVN forces, the largest communist surrender of the war.
21 June
U.S. Secretary of State Rusk stated that nearly three months after the U.S. had limited its bombing to below the 17th parallel, infiltration by PAVN troops into South Vietnam had increased to record levels and North Vietnam had started a campaign of indiscriminate rocket attacks into residential areas of Saigon.[108]
22 June
In a complete reversal from previous statements, North Vietnam (through their representative in Budapest) admitted that it had troops stationed and fighting in South Vietnam.[109]
27-8 June
In the Battle of Binh An the U.S. 3rd Squadron, 5th Cavalry Regiment and Troop D, 1st Squadron, 9th Cavalry Regiment defeated the PAVN K14 Battalion, 812th Regiment. The battle resulted in 233 PAVN killed and 44 captured and three U.S. killed.[110]: 147
The Phoenix Program to identify and neutralize the VC infrastructure, was launched by the CIA and South Vietnamese agencies.[112]
1-8 July
Operation Thor was a U.S. combined arms operation against PAVN positions around, Mũi Lay, North Vietnam. The operation resulted in 125 PAVN killed and 500+ targets destroyed and U.S. losses of one killed and three aircraft shot down.[13]: 548
4 July
A PAVN rocket and mortar attack followed by ground probes against Dầu Tiếng Base Camp resulted in five U.S. and 16 PAVN killed.
Operation Pocahontas Forest was a security operation conducted by the U.S. 23rd Infantry Division and the ARVN 2nd Division in the Quế Sơn Valley. The operation resulted in 127 PAVN and 18 U.S. killed.[26]: 611
A U.S. Army Landing Craft Utility (LCU) and its crew of 11 Americans and one South Vietnamese, was seized by Cambodia after veering into the Cambodian side of the Mekong River that marked its border with South Vietnam. Cambodia's leader Prince Norodom Sihanouk, demanded a ransom of 12 bulldozers or tractors for return of the LCU and its men, and refused an American apology.[113] Although treated well during their captivity, the Americans would not be released until December 20.[114]
18–20 July
Johnson met Thiệu in Honolulu and reaffirmed the U.S. commitment to defend South Vietnam. Thiệu stated that the South Vietnamese would "continue to assume all the responsibility that the scale of forces of South Vietnam and their equipment will permit."[115]
22 July
In a briefing with his staff after a visit to South Vietnam, Secretary Clifford stated that: "[We] must get out of there." and that "No way can we terminate the war militarily." He expressed suspicion that the South Vietnamese government "doesn't want war to stop now" as long as the money kept flowing. "Corruption runs through everything." He saw a need to "convey to our representatives in Saigon they [are] seeing it too narrowly, from GVN pt. of view" and that they should "look at it from interest of U.S."[19]: 215
USAF Major General Robert F. Worley was killed when his RF-4C Phantom was hit by ground fire and crashed approximately 65 miles (105 km) northwest of Da Nang Air Base.
26 July
Trương Đình Dzu an unsuccessful candidate in the 1967 Presidential election was sentenced to five years imprisonment by a Special Military Court for proposing the formation of a coalition government to end the war.[69]: 268
28 July
Four VC detonated a 60-pound plastique charge in city room of Chợ Lớn Daily News, the most prominent of city's seven Chinese language newspapers, after ordering workers out of building; the four escaped before police arrived.[99]
29 July
A VC sapper attack on Tuy Hoa Air Base destroyed two C-130s and damaged a further five C-130s, one F-100 and one C-47.[116]: 67
Operation Lam Son 245 was a security operation by the ARVN 54th Regiment, 1st Division in Thừa Thiên Province. The operation resulted in 636 PAVN/VC killed.[69]: 268
3 August – 30 November
Operation Quyet Chien was a security operation by U.S. 9th Infantry Division, MRF and the ARVN 7th Division in the Mekong Delta. The operation resulted in 1,571 VC killed and 94 U.S. killed and ten missing.[117]: 44
4–20 August
Operation Somerset Plain was a 1st Brigade, 101st Airborne Division and ARVN 1st Division operation in the A Sầu Valley. The operation resulted in 181 PAVN killed and four captured and seven U.S. and 11 ARVN killed.[26]: 608
5–8 August
The 1968 Republican National Convention took place in Miami Beach, Florida. Richard Nixon and Spiro T. Agnew were selected as the party's candidates for the Presidential Election. Nixon pledged to "bring an honorable end to the war in Vietnam" and to restore "the strength of America so that we shall always negotiate from strength and never from weakness."[69]: 268
XXIV Corps was activated to control the activities of U.S. Army ground combat units deployed in I Corps.[69]: 269
17 August to 27 September
The Phase III Offensive — also known as the "August Offensive" or the "Third Offensive", was launched by the PAVN/VC. The Offensive followed from the May Offensive and had the similar aim of diverting U.S. forces from urban areas through attacking multiple border towns simultaneously.[118] The operation was a failure; American forces pre-emptively stopped an assault on Danang, and some other attacks failed to materialize.[118] PAVN/VC losses exceed 29,000 and 1,0936 civilians are killed.[26]: 672
19 August
In a speech to the Veterans of Foreign Wars convention, Johnson called on North Vietnam to respond to his 31 March limitation of bombing. He also said that "there are some among us who appear to be searching for a formula which would get us out of Vietnam and Asia on any terms , leaving the people of South Vietnam, Laos and Thailand... to an uncertain fate."[69]: 269
A Harris Poll showed that 61% of Americans opposed a bombing halt.[69]: 269
22 August
A PAVN/VC rocket attack on Saigon killed 18 and wounded 59.[69]: 270
22–3 August
A company from the VC R20 Battalion and a sapper platoon infiltrated Forward Operating Base 4, killing 17 Special Forces soldiers (their largest one-day loss of the war) and wounding another 125 Allied soldiers. Thirty-two VC were killed.[26]: 656–7
23–4 August
U.S. forces captured a PAVN regimental headquarters 12 miles (19 km) south of Huế, killing 176 PAVN, many youths only 15–17 years old, for the loss of seven U.S. killed. Seven anti-aircraft guns and 435 individual weapons were captured.[119]
23-5 August
The PAVN 95C Regiment attempted to overrun Duc Lap Camp. The assault was defeated at a cost of six U.S., one ARVN, 37 CIDG, 20 civilians and over 303 PAVN killed.[120]
Operation Tien Ho was a security operation in Quang Duc Province conducted by the ARVN 23rd Division. The operation resulted in 1,091 PAVN/VC casualties.[69]: 270
28 August
U.S. Vice President Humphrey was nominated as the Democratic Party's candidate for president on the first ballot at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago. Afterward, after different speakers at Chicago's Grant Park addressed a crowd of 15,000 antiwar protesters, a crowd of about 1,500 people marched along Michigan Avenue toward the convention site at the International Amphitheatre where the convention was taking place, protesting Humphrey's nomination. The Chicago police confronted and attacked the protesters with billy clubs and tear gas at various places between the park and the convention center as violence reached its peak. As one historian would note later, "Millions of Americans turned on their televisions expecting to see Hubert Humphrey win the Democratic presidential nomination," but saw the networks cut away to live coverage of the riots;[121] recognizing what was happening, the protesters began to chant "The whole world is watching!".[122]
29 August - 7 September
African-American inmates rioted at the Long Bình Jail, the military prison for U.S. servicemen near Saigon. The uprising would last for 9 days; one inmate was killed and 52 inmates and 63 military policemen were injured and numerous buildings burnt down.[123]
30 August – 2 September
The PAVN captured Hà Thanh Special Forces camp 14 miles (23 km) west of Quảng Ngai with 12 PAVN and four U.S. killed. Allied forces would recapture the camp on 2 September.[69]: 270
Typhoon Bess hit I Corps causing most Allied operations to be suspended and inflicting major damage on civilian homes and rice crops.[13]: 383
8 September
U.S. negotiator W. Averell Harriman had his first private meeting with Le Duc Tho in the Paris suburb of Vitry-sur-Seine.[125]
Brigadier General Trương Quang Ân, commander of the 23rd Division was the first ARVN general killed in action when his helicopter crashed near Duc Lap Camp. Also killed were his wife and an adviser and three U.S. crewmen.[69]: 271
10 September
Harvard University professor Henry Kissinger began a relationship with Republican presidential nominee Richard Nixon with a telephone call to the Nixon campaign's foreign policy adviser, Richard V. Allen, offering his services that would lead to Kissinger's appointment as Nixon's National Security Adviser and, later, as the U.S. Secretary of State. Allen recounted later that Kissinger said that he had many friends who were involved in the Paris Peace Talks on behalf of President Johnson, and began providing the Nixon campaign with classified information from the talks.[126] In 2016, notes from another Nixon adviser, H. R. Haldeman, would confirm suspicion that Nixon had used Kissinger's information to sabotage the peace talks in the days before the election.[127]
In a speech before the American Legion, Johnson stated that Abrams had advised that a U.S. bombing halt without reciprocal North Vietnamese de-escalation would result in increased U.S. losses.[69]: 271
10–29 September
Operation Vinh Loc was a security operation conducted by the 2nd Brigade, 101st Airborne Division and ARVN 54th Regiment on Vinh Loc Island, Phú Vang District. The operation resulted in 154 VC killed, 370 captured and 56 Chieu Hoi. U.S. losses were two killed.[128]
11 September
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Wheeler advised President Johnson not to halt bombing of North Vietnam.[129]
11 September – 24 April 1969
Operation Lam Son 261 was conducted by the ARVN 1st Division in Quảng Trị and Thừa Thiên Provinces. The operation resulted in 724 PAVN/VC killed.[69]: 272
12 September
A VC report (captured in Bình Dương Province) from the Châu Thành District Security Section to the provincial Party Central Committee stated that seven prisoners in the district's custody were shot prior to an expected Allied sweep operation, the report read: "we killed them to make possible our safe escape."[99]
13 September
1st Infantry Division commander Major General Keith L. Ware and seven others are killed when their helicopter is shot down near Lộc Ninh.[26]: 668
25 September
The VC attacked Katum Camp but the attack was repulsed at a cost of 14 CIDG killed and 61 VC killed and 10 captured.[130]
26 September
In his annual report, the UN Secretary General U Thant stated that the war was a nationalist struggle and that the major powers should "let the Vietnamese themselves deal with their own problems."[69]: 272
28–30 September
In the Battle of Thượng Đức the PAVN 2nd Division attempted to overrun Thường Ðức Camp. The attack was repulsed and 70+ PAVN killed.[13]: 726
30 September
Trailing Richard Nixon in presidential preference polls, Democratic Party candidate and U.S. Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey made the decision to come out against U.S. President Johnson's policy on the war, delivering a speech pledging that if elected, he would halt U.S. bombing of North Vietnam unconditionally.[131] He further stated that he would support the resumption of bombing if the North Vietnamese "were to show bad faith".[132]
30 September – 1 April 1969
The battleship USS New Jersey joined the gunline off the coast of South Vietnam initially providing naval gunfire support against PAVN targets in and near the DMZ.[133]
October
1–19 October
Operation Maui Peak was a 1st Marine Division operation near Thường Ðức Camp to keep pressure on the PAVN 2nd Division. The operation resulted in 202 PAVN and 28 Marines killed.[13]: 726
3 October
U.S. presidential candidate George C. Wallace, who was running as the American Independent Party selection against Republican Richard Nixon and Democrat Hubert Humphrey, introduced his running mate, retired USAF General Curtis E. LeMay. LeMay told a press conference that although he didn't believe that nuclear weapons would be necessary in the Vietnam War, he wouldn't be opposed to their use. "It doesn't make any difference to the soldier whether he is killed by a rusty knife or a nuclear explosion," LeMay commented, adding, "In fact, I'd lean toward the nuclear weapon."[134]
A USAF C-7 Caribou (#63-9753) that had just taken off from the Camp Evans airstrip collided with a 1st Cavalry Boeing CH-47 Chinook (#66-19041) resulting in the death of all 24 passengers and crew on both aircraft.[135]
Former Johnson Administration national security adviser McGeorge Bundy called for a bombing halt and substantial U.S. troop reductions.[69]: 275
14 October
The Defense Department announced that up to 16,000 Army and 6,000 Marine career officers and NCOs would be sent back to South Vietnam for involuntary second tours due to a shortage of experienced personnel.[69]: 275
16 October
In a telephone conference call with all three of the major U.S. presidential candidates, President Johnson informed them that he had no plans to change the U.S. bombing of North Vietnam.[137]
16 October – 24 April 1969
Operation Lam Son 271 was conducted by the ARVN, 2nd Regiment, 1st Division in Quảng Trị Province. The operation resulted in 603 PAVN/VC killed.[69]: 275
20 October
A USAF C-47D crashed 32 km south of Buôn Ma Thuột killing all 23 on board.[138]
22 October
Republican presidential candidate Richard Nixon instructed H. R. Haldeman to get intermediaries to persuade South Vietnamese President Thiệu to refuse to participate in the Paris Peace Talks to end the war.[139] Efforts by private citizens to "defeat the measures of United States" were a federal crime, but this interference remained secret for 48 years.[140]
23-7 October
Operation Rich was a 1st Brigade, 5th Infantry Division (Mechanized) combined arms assault near the Bến Hải River. The operation resulted in 308 PAVN and eight U.S. killed.[22]
23 October to 6 December
Operation Henderson Hill was a 1st Marine Division operation in Happy Valley, Quảng Nam Province. the operation resulted in 700 PAVN/VC killed and 94 captured and 35 Marines killed.[141]: 15
25 October to 2 November
Operation Vernon Lake was an 11th Infantry Brigade clear and search operation west of Quảng Ngai. the operation resulted in 455 PAVN/VC and 35 U.S. killed.[22]
25 October to 16 November
Operation Garrard Bay was a 2nd Battalion, 26th Marines clear and search operation in Quảng Nam Province. The operation resulted in 19 PAVN/VC and seven Marines killed.[22]
26 October
The 1st Cavalry Division was ordered to move from northern I Corps to III Corps northwest of Saigon near the Cambodian border in an operation named Operation Liberty Canyon. The 3rd Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division was the lead element of the Division and was air-lifted to Quần Lợi Base Camp to begin operations.[142]
27 October
In the largest anti-American protest in British history, a crowd of 30,000 demonstrators marched through London near the U.S. Embassy.[143]
29 October
Abrams met with Johnson and advised him that given battlefield conditions a complete halt on bombing North Vietnam is acceptable.[69]: 276
30 October
A PAVN sapper and mortar attack on Camp Radcliff resulted in two South Vietnamese guards killed, four vehicles destroyed and damage to several buildings.[144]
31 October
President Johnson announces a total halt to US bombing in North Vietnam.[90]: 280
November
1 November
After three-and-a-half years, Operation Rolling Thunder comes to an end. In total, the campaign had cost more than 900 American aircraft. Eight hundred and eighteen pilots are dead or missing and hundreds are in captivity. Nearly 120 VPAF planes have been destroyed in air combat, accidents, or by friendly fire. According to U.S. estimates, 182,000 North Vietnamese civilians have been killed. Twenty thousand Chinese support personnel also have been casualties of the bombing.[145]
The Accelerated Pacification Program began in South Vietnam.
2 November
President Thiệu announced to the National Assembly that South Vietnam would refuse to participate in the Paris Peace Talks: "The Republic of Vietnam government is very sorry that such conditions for direct and serious talks between us and Hanoi have not yet come about. And therefore, the Republic of Vietnam cannot participate in the present Paris conference." At the same time, North Vietnamese negotiators in Paris said that it was up to the United States to guarantee that South Vietnam would join the peace talks.[146]
2–7 November
Operation Commanche Falls III was a clear and search operation conducted by elements of the 1st Cavalry Division, 1st Brigade, 5th Infantry Division and ARVN 1st Division clear southeast of Quảng Trị City. the operation resulted in 107 PAVN/VC killed and ten captured and 20 U.S. killed.[69]: 277
5 November
Richard Nixon won the 1968 United States presidential election. The results of the popular vote were 31,770,000 for Nixon, 43.4 percent of the total; 31,270,000 or 42.7 percent for Humphrey; 9,906,000 or 13.5 percent for Wallace; and 0.4 percent for other candidates.[147][148]
The Paris Peace Talks were called off less than 24 hours before they were to open, after the VC negotiator, Nguyen Thi Binh, said at her press conference that the group had a series of demands before it would negotiate, and the conditions were unacceptable to South Vietnam.[149]
7 November – 4 April 1969
Operation Sheridan Sabre was a security operation conducted by the 1st Cavalry Division (which had just moved from I Corps to III Corps), U.S. 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment and ARVN 36th Rangers in Bình Long Province to prevent PAVN infiltration from Cambodia. The operation resulted in 2,898 PAVN killed and 53 captured, 219 U.S. killed and six missing and 32 ARVN killed and one missing.[150]
11 November
A VC mortar and recoilless rifle attack on Camp Radcliff killed four South Vietnamese civilians and ignited 13,643 barrels of POL, one VC was killed.[151]
Nixon was briefed on the war by members of the Johnson Administration and agreed that Johnson could follow current policy until his inauguration.[69]: 278
12 November
Clifford warned that if South Vietnam continued refusing to participate in the Paris Peace Talks the U.S. would start negotiating without them.[69]: 278
13 November
A 1,000-man PAVN force attacked Landing Zone Dot which was defended by the ARVN 36th Regiment supported by Battery D, 1st Battalion, 5th Artillery. The attack was beaten back with support from aerial rocket artillery and artillery at nearby firebases. PAVN losses were 287 killed, while ARVN losses were 4 killed and 23 wounded.[152]
14 November
PAVN sappers attacked Firebase Vera under cover of mortar fire, killing six U.S. for the loss of six PAVN.
PFC Francis Baldino, a rifleman with the 2nd Platoon, D Company, 1st Battalion, 4th Marines was killed by a tiger while on a night patrol out of LZ Alpine 9 miles (14 km) northwest of Khe Sanh Combat Base.[153]
15 November
MACV reported a massive increase in PAVN activity in southern North Vietnam and that all bombed bridges below the 19th parallel had been repaired.[69]: 279
Operation Meade River was a 1st Marine Division cordon and search operation in Dodge City, Quảng Nam Province. The operation resulted in 1,023 PAVN/VC killed and 123 captured and 108 Marines killed.[13]: 436
25 November
New rules of engagement (ROE) were promulgated for U.S. Navy and USAF fighters that were escorting reconnaissance aircraft over North Vietnam. Although bombing of North Vietnam had been halted, planes still flew in North Vietnamese airspace as far north as the 19th parallel. Under the new ROE, U.S. escort planes were allowed to fire missiles if they missions came under attack, including not just anti-aircraft weapons, as well as "installations and immediate supporting facilities." "American pilots," a U.S. Navy historian would later note, "became more aggressive over time, occasionally attacking sites that illuminated them with radar even if no shots were fired."[155]
Under American pressure, President Thiệu reversed his 2 November decision not to participate in the Paris Peace Talks.[157]
26 November – 7 January 1969
Operation Pigfat was mounted by the RLA against PAVN/Pathet Lao forces around Lima Site 85. While initially successful the arrival of PAVN reinforcements from the 316th Division forced the RLA to withdraw. RLA losses were 300 killed and 400 missing while PAVN/Pathet Lao losses are unknown.[158]: 201–5
28 November
North Vietnam announced that it would negotiate only with the United States, or refuse to attend the talks altogether.[159]
29 November
Radio Hanoi broadcast a VC directive for a new offensive to "utterly destroy" Allied forces, particularly the Phoenix Program units.[69]: 279–80
December
December to 11 May 1969
Operation Speedy Express a controversial United States military operation conducted in the Mekong Delta provinces of Kien Hoa and Vĩnh Bình begins. The operation was launched to prevent VC units from interfering with pacification efforts and to interdict lines of communication and deny them the use of base areas.[36]: 12
3 December – 19 February 1969
In the Battle of Hat Dich 1ATF and ARVN forces engaged PAVN/VC units in the Hat Dich Secret Zone, Hắc Dịch. The battle resulted in 245 PAVN/VC killed and 17 captured and 22 Australians/New Zealanders and 31 ARVN killed.[160]
8 December - 10 February 1969
Operation Le Loi I was a security operation conducted by the ARVN 1st Ranger Group in Quảng Nam Province. The operation resulted in 695 PAVN/VC killed.[69]: 280
9 December to 28 February 1969
Operation Marshall Mountain was a 1st Brigade, 5th Infantry Division (Mechanized) and ARVN 1st Regiment, 1st Division clear and search operation in eastern Quảng Trị Province. The operation resulted in 78 PAVN and six U.S. killed.[22]
12 December – 9 March 1969
Operation Taylor Common was a search and destroy operation conducted by Task Force Yankee, a task organized force of the 1st Marine Division. The objective was to clear the An Hoa Basin, neutralize the PAVN's Base Area 112 and develop Fire Support Bases (FSBs) to interdict PAVN infiltration routes leading from the Laotian border.[36]: 12 The operation resulted in 1,398 PAVN killed and 29 captured and 183 Marines and 100 ARVN killed.[78]: 94
15 December
Clifford states that the U.S. has no obligation to maintain current force levels in South Vietnam and that U.S. and North Vietnamese forces can be withdrawn as talks progress.[69]: 281
15 December to 5 January 1969
Operation Valiant Hunt was a BLT 2nd Battalion, 26th Marines and HMM-362 clear and search operation on Barrier Island, south of Hội An. the operation resulted in 33 PAVN/VC and three Marines killed.[13]: 300
15 December to 28 February 1969
Operation Fayette Canyon was a security operation conducted by the 196th Infantry Brigade in "Antenna Valley", Hiệp Đức District and in the Nui Mat Rang mountains northwest of Tam Kỳ. The operation resulted in 327 PAVN/VC killed and four captured and two U.S. killed.[161]
17 December
Democratic senator George McGovern described Kỳ as a "little tinhorn dictator" in comments that Saigon was delaying the peace negotiations.[69]: 281
18 December
Writing in Foreign Affairs Henry Kissinger proposed twin track negotiations with the U.S. and North Vietnam agreeing a mutual de-escalation and South Vietnam and the VC agreeing a political settlement. He said that once the U.S. had withdrawn its forces from South Vietnam it was under no obligation to maintain South Vietnam by force.[69]: 281
28 December
The 3rd Marine Division base at Camp Carroll is deactivated and control passed to the ARVN.[162]
^Numbers are US casualty figure estimates. North Vietnamese records do not record yearly totals although estimates are that during the Tet Offensive alone communist forces lost through deserters, killed cadres, and defectors anywhere between 30,000–90,000.[8]
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^ abOberdorfer, Don (1971). Tet!: The Turning Point in the Vietnam War. The Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN0801867037.
^"North Vietnam Frees Three U.S. Pilots". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. 16 February 1968. p. 1.
^Wiest, Andrew (2009). New Perspectives on the Vietnam War: Re-examining the Culture and History of a Generation. Routledge. p. 179.
^"Cut Draft Deferments – Graduate Students Hit Hard by Change". Chicago Tribune. 17 February 1968. p. 1.
^ abcdThompson, A.W. (14 December 1968). Project CHECO Southeast Asia Report. The Defense of Saigon. HQ Pacific Air Force. p. 14. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
^ abKurlansky, Mark (2005). 1968 The year that rocked the world. Vintage. ISBN978-0099-429623.
^Kiernan, Ben (1985). How Pol Pot Came to Power: Colonialism, Nationalism, and Communism in Cambodia, 1930–1975. Yale University Press. ISBN978-0300102628.
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^Arnold, James (1990). Tet Offensive 1968: turning point in Vietnam. Osprey Publishing. p. 88. ISBN978-0-85045-960-9.
^Davies, Peter; Thornborough, Anthony (1997). F-111 Aardvark. The Crowood Press Ltd. pp. 40, 43. ISBN1-86126-079-2.
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^Anderson, David (2004). The Columbia Guide to the Vietnam War. Columbia University Press. p. 176. ISBN978-0231114936.
^"Foe penetrates U.S. perimeter west of Kontum". The New York Times. 27 March 1968. p. 1.
^Hamilton-Merritt, Jane (1993). Tragic mountains: the Hmong, the Americans, and the secret wars for Laos, 1942–1992. Indiana University Press. p. 187. ISBN978-0-253-20756-2.
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^"Cabinet Resigns In Saigon Shakeup". Pittsburgh Press. 18 May 1968. p. 1.
^Thompson, A.W. (14 December 1968). The Defense of Saigon. Headquarters Pacific Air Force. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
^"U.S. impact on Vietnam life called devastating". the New York Times. 11 June 1968. p. 5.
^Grey, Jeffrey (1998). Up Top: the Royal Australian Navy and Southeast Asian conflicts, 1955–1972. The Official History of Australia's Involvement in Southeast Asian Conflicts 1948–1975. Allen & Unwin. pp. 175–80. ISBN1-86448-290-7.
^Cheng, Guan Ang (2005). Ending the Vietnam War: The Vietnamese Communists' Perspective. Routledge. p. 13. ISBN978-0415326094.
^Hersh, Seymour Hersh (1983). The Price of Power: Kissinger in the Nixon White House. Summit Books. pp. 12–24. ISBN978-0671447601.
^John A. Farrell (31 December 2016). "Nixon's Vietnam Treachery". New York Times Sunday Review.
^Tolson, John (1973). Vietnam Studies: Airmobility 1961–1971. Department of the Army. p. 208. ISBN9781494721848. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
^"MACV Monthly Summary December 1968"(PDF). Headquarters United States Military Assistance Command, Vietnam. 15 February 1969. Retrieved 5 July 2020. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
^"Thieu Boycotts Paris Talks". Pittsburgh Press. 2 November 1968. p. 1.
^Boyer, Paul; Clifford, Clark; Hawley, Sandra; Kett, Joseph; Rieser, Andrew (2009). The Enduring Vision: A History of the American People, Volume 2: From 1865, Concise Volume 2 of The Enduring Vision. Cengage Learning. p. 696. ISBN978-0-547-22278-3.
^Brune, Lester; Burns, Richard (2003). Chronological History of U.S. Foreign Relations: 1932-1988. Routledge. p. 775. ISBN978-0-415-93916-4.
^"Saigon Forces Delay In Talks— Tomorrow's Session Off Indefinitely". Pittsburgh Press. 5 November 1968. p. 1.
^"Saigon Agrees To Attend Peace Talks in Paris— Thieu Regime Will Join Hanoi, NLF In Negotiations; Johnson Warns That Hard Bargaining and Fighting Still Lie Ahead". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. 27 November 1968. p. 1.
^Conboy, Kenneth; Morrison, James (1996). Shadow War: The CIA's Secret War in Laos. Paladin Press. ISBN0-87364-825-0.
^"Hanoi Snubs Saigon Regime In Paris Talks". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. 29 November 1968. p. 1.
^Avery, Brian (2002). In the ANZAC Spirit: The Fourth Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment/NZ (ANZAC): South Vietnam 1968 to 1969. Slouch Hat Publications. p. 155. ISBN0-95797521X.
^"Weekly Summary"(PDF). Headquarters United States Military Assistance Command, Vietnam office of Information. 23 January 1969. Retrieved 5 July 2020. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
^"Headquarters MACV Monthly Summary December 1968"(PDF). Headquarters United States Military Assistance Command, Vietnam. 15 February 1969. p. 44. Retrieved 28 August 2021. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.