Operation Bold Lancer
                                       (Map of Base Area 354)


    The 1st Brigade conducted Operation Toan Thang 44, Base area 354, and was the 25th Division's first surge into Cambodia.
    At first light on 6 May 1970, assault helicopters at Cu Chi and Tay Ninh lifted off their pads and headed toward Fire support Base Wood, just west of Thien Ngon. Here they picked up troops of the 3rd Battalion, 22nd Infantry for an air assault into enemy sanctuaries south of “The Dog's Face,” the western most sector of War Zone C.
    White Alpha, Bravo and Delta Companies of the3rd Battalion, 22nd Infantry were airlifted to Tasuos, a village four miles inside Cambodia, Charlie Company secured a bridgehead on the Cambodian side of the Rach Cai Bac River.
    First contact was made in an open field outside Tasuos. “They seemed surprised mostly,” said one soldier. “We caught them running across an open field and it seemed like the NVA just couldn't believe we were really here.”
    Meanwhile, two mechanized units escorted the 65th Engineer Battalion to the Vietnamese bank of the Rai Cai Bac River. In eight hours, the engineers spanned the river with a floatation bridge and the first tracks of the mechanized unit crossed into Cambodia to secure the bridge for the night.
    The next morning, the1st Battalion (Mech), 5th Infantry, and the 2nd Battalion (Mech), 22nd Infantry roared through the dense jungle along the river and across the dusty fields and rice paddies west of the jungle searching out the enemy.
    The 1st Battalion (Mech), 5th Infantry moved west to link with 3rd Battalion, 22nd Infantry before moving further south. Meanwhile the 2nd Battalion (Mech), 22nd Infantry swept south from the bridge in two columns. The 2nd Battalion, 14th Infantry was airlifted to a position between the two mechanized battalions and began a careful search of massive training areas and staging points concealed in the jungle.
    The brigade elements formed a giant pincer along both sides of a massive jungle sheath surrounding the river. The move drove the bewildered enemy south where the Vietnamese navy stood guard on another branch of the river.
    “We must have gone through at least two kilometers of base camps,” said one Triple Deuce soldier. During the first operation, Tropic Lightning troops uncovered more than 270 tons of rice, killed 266 enemies and held 41 detainees. Supplies captured included bicycles, motorcycles, trucks, 221 individual weapons and 22 crew served weapons.
    Soldiers were elated as the found and destroyed above ground structures connected by interlocking board sidewalks, Inside were blackboards and benches for classrooms, tables and mess facilities, living quarters with nearby bunkers and evidence of recent enemy activity.
    But the enemy was gone. He was sometimes caught in small groups running away, but he fought only if he had to fight. One battalion commander put it this way: “We have destroyed in a very short time what it has taken the enemy months, perhaps even years to build.”
    On 14 May the 1st Brigade withdrew from Base Area 354 back to Vietnam to regroup for operations in Base Area 353 the division's third phase of operations