Royal Thai Air Base Nam Phong

Nam Phong Royal Thai Air Force Base
Part of Royal Thai Air Force (RTAF)

Nam Phong in 1973
Coordinates 16°39′06″N 102°57′56″E / 16.65167°N 102.96556°E / 16.65167; 102.96556 (Nam Phong RTAFB)
Type Air Force Base
Site information
Condition Military Air Force Base
Site history
Battles/wars Vietnam War
Garrison information
Occupants Marine Aircraft Group 15
Airfield information
IATA: noneICAO: none
Summary
Elevation AMSL 750 ft / 227 m
Coordinates 16°39′06″N 102°57′56″E / 16.65167°N 102.96556°E / 16.65167; 102.96556Coordinates: 16°39′06″N 102°57′56″E / 16.65167°N 102.96556°E / 16.65167; 102.96556
Map
Airfield information

Location of Nam Phong Royal Thai Air Force Base

Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
01/19 9,843 x 200 3,000 Concrete
Source: thaiflyingclub.com[1]

The Royal Thai Air Base Nam Phong in Nam Phong district, Khon Kaen Province, Thailand in June 1972 became a base of operations for United States Marine Corps air operations by Marine Aircraft Group 15, 1st Marine Aircraft Wing.

Elements of squadrons that had previously been located at Da Nang Air Base, South Vietnam were moved to Namphong starting in June 1972. The advance party that first arrived landed to find basically an airfield in the middle of the jungle. At that time the base consisted of a runway, parking apron and a few wooden buildings. A United States Navy Seabee battalion (MCB 5) was soon clearing the jungle and some 10 man tents were hastily erected to sleep and work in. Since the conditions were rugged, the base soon came to be called "The Rose Garden" after the song by Miss Lynn Anderson and the Marine recruiting campaign based on it saying "We never promised you a Rose Garden", depicting a scary Marine Drill Instructor addressing a mortified recruit.[2]

The squadrons soon in residence included H&MS-15, MABS-15, VMFA-115 and VMFA-232 with F-4 Phantom IIs, VMA(AW)-533 with A-6 Intruders, VMGR-152 with KC-130 Hercules, and H&MS-36, Det "D" with CH-46 Sea Knights.[2]

This group soon was joined by 3rd Battalion 9th Marines who served as the security element. Marine Air Traffic Control Unit 62 (MATCU 62) handled the airport traffic control operations including the airport tower and GCA radar(Ground Controlled Approach). The force occupying "The Rose Garden" was designated Task Force Delta. The base was made up of Marines, Sailors (Medical and Construction staff), Air Force (mostly cargo handing), a six-man United States Army contingent from the 11th Signal Brigade (United States) (providing specialized communications security to the command from June to December 1972), and Thai military elements. The base was in existence until September 1973 when all the units returned to their home bases.[2]:24

During its operational occupation by U.S. forces the base was used to fly air operations against targets in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. The base was used as a primary divert airbase for battle damaged aircraft and those in a fuel low state.

Nam Phong also received refugee flights evacuating Hmong from Long Tieng, Laos in May 1975.[3]

Nam Phong is today a Royal Thai Air Force bombing range. However, the World Aeronautical database states that the runway is still in use. There is not a quoted ICAO location indicator allocated for this field.

See also

References

  1. http://www.thaiflyingclub.com/linkairportnamphong.html
  2. 1 2 3 Dunham, George R (1990). U.S. Marines in Vietnam: The Bitter End, 1973–1975 (Marine Corps Vietnam Operational Historical Series). History and Museums Division Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps. p. 23. ISBN 9780160264559.
  3. The Ravens by Chris Robbens


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