Tuy Hoa Air Base

For the civil aviation use of this facility after 1970, see Dong Tac Airport.
Tuy Hoa Air Base
 
Part of South Vietnamese Air Force (VNAF)
Pacific Air Forces (USAF)

F-100C of the 188th Tactical Fighter Squadron, New Mexico Air National Guard, over Tuy Hoa Air Base, South Vietnam in 1968.
Tuy Hoa AB
Location of Tuy Hoa Air Base, Vietnam
Coordinates 13°02′58″N 109°20′01″E / 13.04944°N 109.33361°E / 13.04944; 109.33361 (Tuy Hoa AB)
Type Air Force Base
Site information
Controlled by   United States Air Force
Condition Closed 1970, now civil airport
Site history
Built 1966
In use 1966-1970
Battles/wars
Vietnam War
Garrison information
Garrison
31st Tactical Fighter Wing (USAF)
Airfield information
IATA: noneICAO: none
Summary
Elevation AMSL 20 ft / 6 m
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
03L/21R 9,520 2,902 Concrete
02/20 2,720 844 Concrete
03L/21L 9,300 2,935 Concrete
North American F-100D-60-NA Super Sabres Serials 56-2927 (Front) and 56-2952 of the 309th TFS on the ramp at Tuy Hoa, April 1970.
North American F-100D-25-NA Super Sabre Serial 55-3642 of the 308th Tactical Fighter Squadron.
North American F-100D-90-NA Super Sabre Serial 56-3311 of the 306th Tactical Fighter Squadron.
North American F-100C-25-NA Super Sabres on the flightline from the Federalized 188th Tactical Fighter Squadron, New Mexico Air National Guard, 1968. Serial 54-2045 is in foreground.
355th TFS F-100D 56-3456 1969

Tuy Hoa Air Base is a former air force base in Vietnam, being closed in 1970. It was built by the United States between 1965–1966 and was used by the United States Air Force during the Vietnam War in the II Corps Tactical Zone of South Vietnam. It was seized by the People's Army of Vietnam in April 1975 and was abandoned for several decades. Today, the site has been redeveloped as Dong Tac Airport.

History

Origins

Plans for a United States Air Force Base at Tuy Hoa were developed in 1965 after the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin Resolution and the decision to deploy large numbers of United States forces to South Vietnam. The base was one of several air bases in South Vietnam built by United States Air Force RED HORSE civil engineering squadrons in 1966. An advance construction party of the 820th Civil Engineering Squadron (Heavy repair) arrived in June. Within six months, with the completion of interim airfield facilities, the base was in operation. This unit completed nearly 50 percent of all construction at Tuy Hoa, including: 170 aircraft protective revetments, 120,000 square feet (11,000 m2) of wooden buildings, and 175,000 square yards of AM-2 matting. In addition, the 820th CES operated a rock crusher 9.5 miles from the base and hauled aggregate through enemy-held territory to the base.

Tuy Hoa was originally envisioned as a Strategic Air Command B-52 base. However, security concerns of basing SAC's bombers directly in South Vietnam resulted in the assignment of B-52s to U-Tapao Air Base in neighboring Thailand. Tuy Hoa was given a tactical air support mission instead.

31st Tactical Fighter Wing

With construction completed, the Tactical Air Command 31st Tactical Fighter Wing was reassigned from Homestead AFB, Florida to Tuy Hoa Air Base effective 16 December 1966. The base was under the jurisdiction of Seventh Air Force, Pacific Air Forces. The APO for Tuy Hoa Air Base was APO San Francisco 96316

In South Vietnam the 31st TFW commanded five F-100 Super Sabre fighter squadrons and was the most important F-100 wing in South Vietnam. The first squadron of F-100s (the 308th) actually touched down on 15 November 1966, forty-five days ahead of schedule. Within a month, it was joined by two others (the 306th and 309th); and on 6 December the 31st Tactical Fighter Wing became combat ready at Tuy Hoa.

Assigned operational squadrons of the 31st TFW were:

In June 1967, federalized Air National Guard squadrons were deployed from the United States to supplement the 31st TFW. These were:

In turn, when the National Guard units returned to the United States after their one-year active duty was ended, F-100 squadrons from the 37th TFW at Phù Cát Air Base, which was converting to F-4Ds were deployed as replacement units. These were:

From Tuy Hoa, the wing conducted combat operations, 16 December 1966-September 1970. It controlled interdiction strikes, conducted visual and photo reconnaissance, rescue combat air patrols, and suppressed enemy antiaircraft artillery. The wing also conducted air operations against enemy forces during the Tet Offensive and the Siege of Khe Sanh from February–April 1968. It flew close air support missions during the extraction of friendly troops from Kham Duc on 12 May 1968.

"Misty" Forward Air Controllers

The wing gained forward air control mission in May 1968 as well as continuing other combat operations. The Misty "Fast FACs" of Project Commando Saber transferred from Phù Cát AB on 1 May 1969. The use of airborne forward air controllers (FACs) to direct and correct the efforts of tactical aircraft close air support aircraft had proved invaluable in Vietnam, although their piston-engine O-2 Skymasters were slow and vulnerable, The obvious solution was to put a FAC in the back seat of two-seat F-100F aircraft, and in 1967 the Commando Saber program was instituted to do just that.

Pilots were temporarily detached from their parent units for four-month tours, flying reconnaissance, FAC, and search-and-rescue missions over Laos and North Vietnam using the call sign Misty. The aircraft were crewed by a pair of volunteer pilots, both of whom had to have logged at least 25 combat sorties and 1,000 flying hours before joining the program. The back-seater carried a comprehensive set of detailed maps, a handheld 35-mm 'strike camera' (actually an SLR with a telephoto lens) and handled communications with the fighter-bombers. The pilot found the targets and marked them, using the Misty F-100F's armament of two seven-shot white phosphorus rockets. The Misty FAC F-100Fs also flew reconnaissance and ResCAP missions, acting as on-scene controllers and co-ordinators during combat SAR missions. Missions often involved inflight refueling and could last up to six hours, with four inflight refueling contacts.

Misty pilots were an elite group, their number including two future USAF Chiefs of Staff (Ronald Fogleman and Merrill McPeak) and the round-the-world record breaker, Dick Rutan. 70 of the 157 Commando Saber pilots flew part or all of their tour at Tuy Hoa. The mission was hazardous and many aircraft were hit by ground fire as they orbited the target area at low level. Seven Misty FAC pilots were killed in action and four more became POWs.

Inactivation

The 31st Tactical Fighter Wing the reached 100,000 combat sortie milestone in September 1969. It earned two Outstanding Unit Awards, one with Combat “V” Device, a Presidential Unit Citation, two Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Crosses with Palm, and ten Campaign Streamers for action in Vietnam.

The 31st TFW was inactivated at Tuy Hoa Air Base on 15 October 1970 as part of the general US withdrawal from South Vietnam. On 16 October it was reactivated without personnel or equipment at Homestead Air Force Base, Florida. With the American withdrawal from Tuy Hoa, the 308th TFS was inactivated in place on 5 October 1970.

The 306th and 309th TFS were inactivated, then reassigned without personnel or equipment on 8 September 1970 and initially assigned to the 4403d TFW at England AFB, Louisiana. The 306th and 309th TFS were returned to the 31st TFW at Homestead AFB, Florida on 30 October 1970. The 355th TFS was inactivated in place and reassigned to 354th TFW at Myrtle Beach on 1 November 1970, and the 416th TFS was inactivated in place and reassigned to 4403d TFW at England AFB on 28 September 1970.

The base was placed under the control of the provisional Seventh Air Force 6257th Air Base Squadron on 15 October 1970 which facilitated the transfer of United States equipment to the control of the Republic of Vietnam Air Force (VNAF) or to other United States controlled bases in South Vietnam. The base was renamed Tuy Hoa Army Airfield and various U.S. Army units, including all army aviation units based at Phú Hiệp Airfield were relocated here.[1] The facility was turned over to South Vietnamese government control on 15 January 1971.

VNAF Use of Tuy Hoa Air Base

After the American withdrawal, Tuy Hoa was used for flyable storage of VNAF propeller-driven aircraft (A-1, T-28) and helicopters. After the 1973 Paris Peace Accords, United States Congressional cuts in military aid to South Vietnam forced the VNAF to abandon use of the base with no permanent personnel or active aircraft assigned. By 1975, the base showed lack of signs of maintenance and being abandoned, with little or no activities taking place on the facility.

Capture Of Tuy Hoa Air Base

In early 1975 North Vietnam realized the time was right to achieve its goal of re-uniting Vietnam under communist rule, launched a series of small ground attacks to test U.S. reaction.

On 8 January the North Vietnamese Politburo ordered a major People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN) offensive to "liberate" South Vietnam by NVA cross-border invasion. By 14 March, attacks by North Vietnamese forces led South Vietnamese President Nguyễn Văn Thiệu to abandon the Central Highlands region and two northern provinces of South Vietnam and ordered a general withdrawal of ARVN forces from those areas. Instead of an orderly withdrawal, it turned into a general retreat, with masses of military and civilians fleeing, clogging roads and creating chaos.

Panic mounted and observers overhead watched in horror as survivors plodded south suffering terrible heat and thirst. Communist forces finally cut the road just south of Tuy Hoa on 22 March. Desperate attacks by Vietnamese Rangers eventually reopened the way, and, during the evening of 27 March, the first vehicles began to roll into Tuy Hoa.

On 1 April, South Vietnamese forces abandoned the area around Tuy Hoa Air Base and withdrew south.

Current use

A small terminal building has been erected where the former USAF base operations existed. The former base has been largely torn down, the streets now deteriorating as they criss-cross though brushy, abandoned areas. A few buildings from the former air base remain and are used for civil purposes. The most significant remnants of the Vietnam War years are the concrete aircraft shelters, which have been abandoned since 1975, their reinforced concrete still standing and not being easy to tear down. The former USAF control tower and large fire department building with garages for the large fire engines on the flightline remain standing, their current use is undetermined. One of the two jet runways is now abandoned and deteriorated, and the large parking ramp remains largely unused except for a small section by the civil air terminal. The former large aircraft hangars and supply warehouses are long gone, their concrete floors exposed to the elements for over 30 years.

Accidents and incidents

See also

References

 This article incorporates public domain material from the Air Force Historical Research Agency website http://www.afhra.af.mil/.

  1. "Citation Nr: 0840013". U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. Retrieved 13 November 2014.
  2. "B-308 Accident description". Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved 20 October 2010.

Sources

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