The Long Blue Line: Coast Guard small boat ops in Vietnam

By Written by William H. Thiesen, Ph.D. Coast Guard Atlantic Area Historian

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Small boat showing the minimal protection for boat and crew of flak vests and battle helmets. Photo courtesy of Gordon M. Gillies.
Small boat showing the minimal protection for boat and crew of flak vests and battle helmets. Photo courtesy of Gordon M. Gillies.

 

“If our aim is to control the riverbanks, this will have to be done by ground forces. To look at it another way, we are asking our untrained small boat crews to do the jobs really in the province of [Navy] SEALs or RACs [Army Riverine Assault Craft forces].”
Cmdr. Charles Blaha, executive officer, Coast Guard Operations-Vietnam, 1968

During the Vietnam War, the 82-foot “Point”-Class cutters of Squadron One supported small boat reconnaissance missions. Called “Salem Operations” by naval strategists, or “Sitting Duck Ops” by Coast Guard crews, these missions were similar to Special Forces reconnaissance operations and required the use of the patrol boats’ small boat.

Known as a “skimmer” by some Coast Guardsmen, or “bait” by others, the small boat used on the 82-footers was a 13-foot fiberglass Boston Whaler, the size of a large dinghy. Weapons for these missions included an M60 machine gun with bandoliers of extra rounds, M16s, and an M79 grenade launcher with spare grenade rounds. A well-worn flak vest and World War II-vintage battle helmet provided the only protection from automatic weapons fire or rocket propelled grenades. In addition, the Whaler was equipped with an underpowered and unarmored 35-horsepower outboard motor, which was vulnerable to enemy fire.

Profile view of Point Cypres, one of the Coast Guard Squadron One 82-foot patrol boats that carried the skimmers used in small boat operations. U.S. Coast Guard photo.
Profile view of Point Cypres, one of the Coast Guard Squadron One 82-foot patrol boats that carried the skimmers used in small boat operations. U.S. Coast Guard photo.
Stern of an 82-foot WPB showing the typical size and arrangement of the Boston Whaler-style small boat. Photo courtesy of Gordon M. Gillies.
Stern of an 82-foot WPB showing the typical size and arrangement of the Boston Whaler-style small boat. Photo courtesy of Gordon M. Gillies.

After the Navy launched “Operation SEALORDS (Southeast Asia, Ocean, River and Delta Strategy)” in 1968, small boat operations became frequent. For example, in October 1968, the skimmer on board the 82-foot Pt. Cypress participated in a canal probe on the Ca Mau Peninsula in which it came under heavy enemy fire, but Pt. Cypress and another patrol boat managed to destroy enemy river barriers, fortified structures, bunkers and armed sampans before withdrawing. On November 9, Pt. Cypress’s skimmer deployed on a gunfire damage assessment mission near Hon Da Bac Island to assess a fire support mission just completed by another U.S. vessels. During this mission, the small boat located and destroyed four enemy sampans.

By December, Pt. Cypress conducted almost daily small boat operations. On Wednesday, December 4, the cutter rendezvoused with a Royal Thai navy gunboat to embark Cmdr. Charles Blaha, deputy commander for Coast Guard operations in Vietnam. Blaha visited the patrol boat to familiarize himself with cutter operations and evaluate the effectiveness of small boat operations. Blaha planned to deploy the next day with the skimmer, which was to determine the depth of local waterways for Navy Swift Boat operations. Pt. Cypress’s executive officer, Lt. j.g. Gordon Gillies, would serve as coxswain and Fireman 1/c Heriberto Hernandez volunteered to ride point in the bow.

Heriberto “Eddie” Hernandez in a faded image taken on the deck of Point Cypress in his typical small boat patrol attire of battle helmet, flak vest and machine gun bandoliers. Photo courtesy of the Hernandez Family.
Heriberto “Eddie” Hernandez in a faded image taken on the deck of Point Cypress in his typical small boat patrol attire of battle helmet, flak vest and machine gun bandoliers. Photo courtesy of the Hernandez Family.

At 2:30 pm, on Thursday, December 5, Blaha, Gillies and Hernandez deployed in Pt. Cypress’s small boat and began their survey of the nearby estuaries. After they carried out the mission, they received orders to destroy the nearest village structures, or “hooches,” using their M79 grenade launcher and highly flammable night illumination rounds. As the small boat approached the hooches, the crew noticed an armed Viet Cong guerilla entering a shore-side bunker. Blaha fired a volley at the fortification with his M16 and the Viet Cong returned fire. As soon as he heard the gunfire, Gillies gunned the engine and the Whaler motored away from shore, but it was too late to dodge hostile fire. In his after-action report, Blaha wrote “For me, this incident was a moment of terror I will never forget—not only because of what did happen, but because I see that it could happen again and again.”

With only their flak vests to protect them against enemy rounds, each crew member suffered severe bullet wounds. The wounded officers were treated aboard the cutter and medevacked to a hospital near Saigon before returning stateside for extended medical care. Hernandez died of his wounds before he could be evacuated to a hospital. His body was returned with a Coast Guard escort to San Antonio where he was interred with full military honors. Hernandez posthumously received the Purple Heart and Bronze Star medals and the service named the Fast Response Cutter Heriberto Hernandez in his honor.

Typically carried out under cover of darkness, Salem Ops missions required the small boats to probe the canals and waterways of South Vietnam. These missions gathered intelligence regarding enemy weapons, troop movements, fortified positions and bunkers. Small boat crews also took depth soundings for the larger patrol boats, gathered navigation information, observed U.S. artillery barrages and provided damage assessments for fire support missions. However, the small boat operations often entered enemy-held territory under the watchful eye of the Viet Cong. For small boat crews, these missions likely brought new meaning to the old Coast Guard saying, “You have to go out, but you don’t have to come back.”

A small boat mission showing dense cover provided by foliage along Vietnam’s inland waterways. Photo courtesy of Gordon M. Gillies.
A small boat mission showing dense cover provided by foliage along Vietnam’s inland waterways. Photo courtesy of Gordon M. Gillies.

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