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MAP - 85-67 - BIEN HOA COMBAT BASE - 1970 - US MILITARY AIR BASE - Vietnam War

$ 83.15

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Condition: Used
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Item must be returned within: 14 Days
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

    Description

    Very Rare Map - 1970 issue, US / ARVN / RVNAF Issue.
    85-67 Series L8021
    This is a super rare piece showing Bien Hoa Combat Base (and Airbase Security area).
    This map prepared by the US Army 1st Engineer, Topographic Group in conjunction with the Air Force of the Republic of Vietnam and the Engineer Command of the US Army Vietnam.
    Part of the rare SAIGON - BIEN HOA map series.
    US MILITARY MAP - Vietnam War Map
    Maps showing
    KHU QUÂN SỰ (Military Area) of US Long Binh Post and the surrounds of Bien Hoa airbase / Combat Base
    Wyoming St, Frankfurt St, Emporia St, Denver St, Cincinnati St, Wisconsin St, Chicago St, Outer Ring Rd, Colorado St, Connecticut St, ElkharSt, Fairbank St, Albany St, Alaska St and More
    At this time, Bien Hoa Airbase and Tan Son Nhut Airbase to the south were the two busiest airports in the world in terms of Take Offs and Landings.
    Measures - 29 x 22.5 inches ( 74 x 59 cms )
    Printed - September 1970
    Saigon - Bien Hoa - Map Series
    Bien Hoa
    During the Vietnam Wars, French Indochina and the American War (1955–75), the base was used by the Republic of Vietnam Air Force (VNAF).
    The United States used it as a major base from 1961 through 1973, stationing Army, Air Force (USAF), US Navy, US Special Forces and US Marine units there.
    At all times, between 1967 and 1970, Bien Hoa Air base and Tan Son Nhut Air base (Saigon) were alternated between been the first and second busiest airports in the world.
    In December 1960, The U.S. Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG) requested the U.S. Navy (the designated contract construction agent for the Dept. of Defense in Southeast Asia) to develop plans for and construct several jet-capable airfields in South Vietnam, including at Bien Hoa.
    In December 1961, the American construction company RMK-BRJ was directed by the Navy’s Officer in Charge of Construction RVN to begin construction of a new concrete runway, the first of many projects built by RMK-BRJ at the Bien Hoa Air Base over the following ten years.
    Fall of Bien Hoa Airbase
    In March 1975 Hanoi made its next seriously aggressive move. In the preceding two years, North Vietnam's army patiently moved into the South enormous quantities of Soviet artillery, surface-to-air missiles, and armored vehicles, along with 100,000 fresh troops.
    On 10 March the North Vietnamese Army began a new offensive in South Vietnam. Northern forces isolated the provincial capitol of Buôn Ma Thuột by cutting off or blocking the main highways to it. It was at Ban Me Thuot that the first phenomenon which would increasingly undermine the South's morale occurred. Many of its army officers used helicopters to pick up their families and flee to the south with them.
    South Vietnamese civilians then began to flee the countryside, crowding the main roads and the pathways in a mass exodus for the coast, where they ultimately jammed seaports seeking transport to the south. The refugees included not only those civilians who had helped the South's army or the Americans, but also a great mass who expected bad treatment from the communists.
    By early April of 1975 the end of South Vietnam was at hand.
    North Vietnam's forces had severed the roads around Saigon and had begun shelling Bien Hoa. On 9 April the ARVN engaged the PAVN at Xuan Loc, located on Highway 1 only 37 miles northeast of Saigon.
    Xuan Loc fell on 23 April, and there was now little to prevent or slow the Communist advance on Saigon.
    The loss of Xuan Loc made Bien Hoa Air base indefensible, although the VNAF continued to fly from the base until PAVN artillery fire forced the evacuation of Bien Hoa on 25 April.
    Command Control, North, South, Central, MACV, Special Forces, SOG, Special Op’s, Special Operations Group, 5 th Special Forces, Army Security Agency, Military Intelligence, Psy-Ops, US Army, De Oppresso Liber, Airborne, 1 st Special Forces, CIDG, Mike Force, Mobile Guerrilla Force, Mobile Strike Force, Operations Detachment, Provincial Recon Unit, Recon Teams, RT, USMC, United States Marine Corps, Vietnam War, WWII, WWI, French Indochine War, French Foreign Legion, Legion Etrange, Project Omega, Recondo School, Rapid Fire, Project Delta, Special Missions Advisory Force, Project Gamma, Project Sigma, Indigenous Troops, MACV-SOG, CCC, CCS, CCN, USARV, SMAG, TAG, Field Training Command, Recon Team Leader, US Navy, Air Force, AATTV, Long Tan, Nui Dat, AAFV, ATF, New Zealand V Force, Big Red One, 1st Infantry Division, 1st Cavalry Division, Tropic Lightning, 25th Infantry Division, Subdued, Patch, Patches, Uniform, Helmet, Flash, Beret, Arc, Tab, 101 st Airborne Division, 82nd Airborne, 173rd Airborne, Combat, Militaria, Medal, Badge, Map, 199th Infantry Brigade, Old Ironsides, 5th Infantry Division, MAAG, USARPAC, XXIV Corps, 23rd Infantry Division, Americal, 38th Infantry Division, Black Op’s, Clandestine, Non-Conventional Warfare, 11th Infantry Brigade, 11th Armored, 196th , 1st Aviation, 18th Engineers, Medic, Medical, Viet Cong, VC, Viet Minh, Dien Bien Phu, Saigon, Tiger Force Rangers, Ranger, Logistical Command, Khe Sanh, POW, RVN,
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