14 January 1950 |
Nationalist leader Ho Chi Minh, who had trained
in the Soviet Union but received aid from the US
to fight the Japanese during World War II,
declares that the Democratic Republic of Vietnam
is the only legal government. This is
recognised by the Soviet Union and China, but
Australia supports the French-sponsored government
of Emperor Bao Dai. Us provides military and
economic aid to the French in Indochina. |
7 May 1954 |
French defeated by Viet Minh at Dien Bien Phu,
after a 55 day siege. The defeat signals the
end to French presence in Indochina. |
1955 |
US begins to funnel aid directly to the Saigon
Government and agrees to train the South
Vietnamese army. |
September 1957 |
South Vietnam's President Ngo Dinh Diem visits
Australia. Prime Minister Menzies reaffirms
support. |
20 December 1960 |
Hanoi leaders form National Liberation Front
for South Vietnam, which the Saigon regime dubs
"Viet Cong", meaning communist
Vietnamese. |
24 May 1962 |
The Minister for Defence (Reginald Townley)
announces intention to send 30 army advisers to
South Vietnam (SVN). |
03 August 1962 |
The first members of the Australian Army
Training Team Vietnam (AATTV) arrive in South
Vietnam. |
01 June 1963 |
Advisor, Sergeant William Hacking becomes the
first Australian to die in Vietnam when his weapon
accidentally discharges after being caught in
vegetation. |
01 November 1963 |
Vietnam's President Diem and his brother Ngo
Dinh Nhu are murdered in a military coup, with the
foreknowledge of the US Government. |
22 November 1963 |
Lyndon B. Johnson becomes US president after
the assassination of John F. Kennedy, and
announces that the US will continue support of
South Vietnam. By year's end 15,000 US
advisors are serving in Vietnam, which received
$500m in US aid that year. |
08 June 1964 |
The Minister for Defence (Hon. Shane Partridge)
announces the AATTV will be increased to 83
advisers with expanded role. |
06 July 1964 |
Warrant Officer Class 2, Kevin Conway becomes
the first Australian to die as a result of enemy
action in South Vietnam. |
7 August 1964 |
Following a reported attack on US ships in
Tonkin Gulf, US Congress passes Tonkin Gulf
Resolution giving President Johnson extraordinary
powers to act in South Vietnam |
10 November 1964 |
The Prime Minister (Rt. Hon. Sir Robert
Menzies) announces introduction of national
service to increase the army’s strength from
22,750 to 37,500. Opposition to the war in
Vietnam is not accepted as a reason for exemption. |
18 December 1964 |
Australian Government, responding to requests
from the US President and South Vietnam Prime
Minister for 200 additional advisers, offers to
send ground troops to South Vietnam. |
29 April 1965 |
The Prime Minister announces the dispatch of an
infantry battalion to South Vietnam, with an
armoured personnel carrier (APC) troop, a signals
troop and a logistic support company. |
24 May 1965 |
Advance party from 1st Battalion, Royal
Australian Regiment (1RAR), departs for South
Vietnam, for service with the US 173rd Airborne
Division. |
08 June 1965 |
HMAS Sydney arrives at Vung Tau, South Vietnam,
carrying the bulk of the Australian force. |
30 June 1965 |
First national service intake begins recruit
training. |
17 August 1965 |
Australian Government approves increase of
Australian forces to a battalion group, supported
by an artillery, additional APCs, engineers, army
helicopters, light aircraft and more logistic
support. |
September 1965 |
A Morgan Gallup Poll finds 56% of those polled
were in favour of continuing the war in Vietnam. |
22 October 1965 |
A demonstration against the war in Sydney
results in 65 arrests. |
13 November 1965 |
WO2 Kevin "Dasher" Wheatley refuses
to leave his mate, WO2 Bob Swanston, and is
killed. His actions earned him Australia’s
highest honour, the Victoria Cross. |
26 January 1966 |
Harold Holt succeeds Menzies as Prime Minister. |
06 March 1966 |
Holt announces the Australian commitment in
South Vietnam will be Increased to a 4350-man task
force, and will include conscripts.
The 1st Australian Task Force (1ATF) will
include two infantry battalions, a Special Air
Service squadron, combat and support logistic
units and eight RAAF Iroquois helicopters (9 SQN).
The Task Force will be supported by 1
Australian Logistic Support Group (1 ALSG) to be
established at Vung Tau. For the first time,
national servicemen will be sent to South Vietnam. |
24 May 1966 |
5 RAR deploys by helicopter from 1ATF
concentration area at Vung Tau to secure the Task
Force area at Nui Dat. Private Errol Noack becomes
the first national serviceman and member of 1ATF
to die from enemy action. |
04 June 1966 |
Concentration of 1ATF at Nui Dat is completed. |
18 August 1966 |
The Battle of Long Tan
D Company, 6 RAR, strength of 108 men, battles
North Vietnamese Army (NVA) and Viet Cong (VC)
forces estimated at between 1500 and 2500 until
relieved by A Company, carried in by armoured
personnel carriers of 3 Troop, 1 APC Squadron. The
enemy leaves 245 bodies on the battlefield while
17 Australian infantrymen and one APC crewman are
killed. The Company earns the US Presidential
Citation. |
19 November 1966 |
Morgan Gallup Poll finds that 63% are in favour
of conscription, but only 37% approve of sending
National Servicemen to Vietnam. |
07 April 1967 |
Major Peter Badcoe, AATTV, is killed in action
leading two companies of Vietnamese regional
forces. For his outstanding heroism in this and
two previous actions, he will be posthumously
awarded the Victoria Cross. |
26 May 1967 |
A New Zealand rifle company - V Company of the
1st Battalion, Royal New Zealand Regiment (RNZIR)
- arrives at Nui Dat to serve with 2 RAR. The
Australian Battalion is re-designated
2RAR/NZ/ANZAC. |
May 1967 |
Morgan Gallup Poll finds 62% in favour of
continuing the war in Vietnam. |
18 October 1967 |
The Prime Minister announces an increase of
1700 to Australia’s commitment in South Vietnam,
including a third infantry battalion and a tank
squadron. |
17 December 1967 |
Prime Minister Harold Holt missing, presumed
drowned off Portsea in Victoria. His body is
never recovered. |
28 December 1967 |
3 RAR establishes itself at Nui Dat as 1 ATF’s
third battalion. |
10 January 1968 |
John Grey Gorton sworn in as Prime Minister. |
29 January 1968 |
Communist forces in South Vietnam launch what
becomes known as the Tet Offensive, with
concentrated attacks against every major city and
regional centre. Although Tet costs the Communists
45-50,000 troops, it sows serious doubt in the
minds of the Australian and American people and
leads to major changes in government policy
towards the conflict in South Vietnam. |
01 February 1968 |
Tet comes to Baria, the capital of Phuoc Tuy
province. A Company of 3 RAR and a troop of APCs
fight a savage 24-hour battle to clear the town. |
12 February 1968 |
Prime Minister Gorton indicates that Australia
will not increase its commitment to Vietnam. |
13 May 1968 |
The Battle of Coral & Balmoral
The Battle for Fire Support Base (FSB) Coral
begins with an enemy attack that overruns 1 RAR
Mortar Platoon and captures one of 102 Field
Battery’s gun pits. The base is cleared with the
help of helicopter gunships. After a second attack
on May 15, Australian casualties around Coral
stand at 15 killed and 56 wounded while enemy
losses are estimated to exceed 100 dead. |
16 March 1968 |
Massacre of civilians by US soldiers at My Lai
village. At least 450 unarmed people are
killed. |
26 May 1968 |
At FSB Balmoral, near Coral, infantry supported
by Centurions tanks turn back an assault by two
battalions of NVA regulars. |
27 May 1968 |
A sweep outside Coral by D Company 1 RAR,
supported by four Centurion tanks, smashes an
enemy bunker systems and kills large numbers of VC
and NVA. |
28 May 1968 |
A second attack on Balmoral is crushed by
combined infantry, tank, artillery and mortar
fire, leaving 47 enemy dead and six prisoners for
1 Australian killed. |
6/11 May 1968 |
Serving as a company commander with a
Vietnamese mobile strike force, WO2 Ray Simpson
displays outstanding heroism and disregard for
personal safety in two firefights with enemy
forces. His actions will make him the third member
of the AATTV to be awarded the Victoria Cross. |
24 May 1969 |
WO2 Keith Payne, also a company commander with
a mobile strike force, earns the AATTV’s fourth
Victoria Cross. |
06 June 1969 |
The Battle of Binh Bah
Two companies from 5 RAR, supported by APC and
Tank troops and Australian helicopter gunships,
engage in house-to-house fighting to clear the
town of a strong force of NVA regulars. The
fighting destroys much of the town and costs the
NVA more than 100 dead for the loss of one
Australian. |
August 1969 |
Morgan Gallup Poll finds 55% want Australians
brought home from Vietnam. |
3 September 1969 |
Ho Chi Minh dies in Hanoi, aged 79. |
16 December 1969 |
Following the withdrawal of 25,000 US troops
from South Vietnam, and plans by the US Government
to withdraw another 50,000, the Prime Minister
(Sir John Gorton) advises any further substantial
reductions will include Australian forces. |
22 April 1970 |
The Prime Minister announces 8 RAR will not be
replaced at the end of the year, some support
elements will be withdrawn from South Vietnam and
the AATTV will be increased by about 120 soldiers. |
08 May 1970 |
Anti-Vietnam War protesters stage the first
moratorium marches in Australian cities (70,000 in
Melbourne, and about 120,000 throughout
Australia). |
18 September 1970 |
About 100,000 people take part in a second
moratorium march. |
12 November 1970 |
8 RAR returns to Australia at the end of its 12
month tour in South Vietnam. It is the first 1ATF
unit not to be replaced. |
10 March 1971 |
Sir William McMahon replaces Gorton as Liberal
leader and Prime Minister. |
30 March 1971 |
Prime Minister McMahon announces further cuts
in Australian forces in South Vietnam, including
withdrawal of the tank squadron, RAAF Canberra
bomber squadron and some Caribou transport
aircraft. |
30 June 1971 |
Third and last of the big anti-war
rallies. About 110,000 demonstrate in State
capitals. |
18 August 1971 |
The Prime Minister announces the bulk of
Australian forces in South Vietnam are to be
withdrawn, leaving only a modified training team.
The period of national service is reduced from two
years to 18 months. |
06 October 1971 |
3 RAR is airlifted onto HMS Sydney, leaving
only one battalion at Nui Dat. |
07 November 1971 |
4 RAR moves out of Nui Dat to Vung Tau, ending
Australian combat operations in Phuoc Tuy
province. |
27 January 1972 |
USA and North Vietnam sign a peace agreement. |
05 March 1972 |
The last Australian logistic units leave Vung
Tau and Australia’s commitment in South Vietnam
returns to a training role with the 150-man
Australian Assistance Group, Vietnam (AAAGV) and
the AATTV. |
02 December 1972 |
Australian Labor Party elected to Government. |
05 December 1972 |
Conscription ends, draft resisters are released
from jail and pending prosecutions for draft
resistance are dropped. |
08 December 1972 |
Australia’s military commitment in South
Vietnam ends, although controversy about the
precise end date of the war continues. |
23 January 1973 |
Nixon announces agreement that has been reached
for 'peace with honour'. |
27 January 1973 |
Ceasefire begins. |
26 February 1973 |
Prime Minister Gough Whitlam announces
establishment of diplomatic relations with Hanoi,
but retains recognition of South Vietnam's
Government. |
29 March 1973 |
Last US troops leave Vietnam. |
10 April 1973 |
International Conference on
Vietnam receives first official complaints of
violations to the ceasefire. |
30 June 1973 |
The Saigon Embassy Guard
Platoon are the last Australian troops to leave
Vietnam.
After departure of the
Embassy Guard, Transport Support Flight
Butterworth continued their regular Saigon courier
service. |
04 January 1974 |
South Vietnam's President Nguyen Van Thieu
declares that war has begun again. |
29 March 1975 |
Australian Government responds to urgent requests for
transport assistance from Governments of South Vietnam
and United States by hastily dispatching a contingent
of seven RAAF Hercules and two Dakota aircraft to
Vietnam on a humanitarian relief mission
The RAAF is utilized in various roles during final
weeks of the war, including movement of refugees,
transport of Red Cross and UN supplies, and on 4th and
17th April, evacuation of Vietnamese war orphans from
Saigon to Bangkok during 'Operation Baby Lift'. |
17 April 1975 |
Phnom Penh, Cambodia falls to the Khmer Rouge |
25 April 1975 |
Australia closes its embassy in Saigon,
completing withdrawal from Vietnam on ANZAC Day.
The final task of Australia's military in the
Vietnam War is conducted on ANZAC Day, when the
RAAF participates in evacuation of the Australian
Embassy and final withdrawal of personnel from
Saigon |
30 April 1975 |
Communist forces capture Saigon as the last
Americans leave in scenes of panic and confusion.
|