Operation
On 3 March the 2nd Battalion, 28th Infantry Regiment marched into the Lo Ke Rubber Plantation west of Bau Bang and established a patrol base.[1]: 175–6
On 4 March patrols discovered trenches that could be used as jumping off positions for an attack on the patrol base.[1]: 176
In the early morning of 5 March a patrol led by 2Lt Robert John Hibbs detected movement north of the base. At dawn they observed a supply column of children and armed women to the northeast of the base which met up with a company of VC coming from the north. The VC and some of the supply column moved south towards the patrol which then triggered two Claymore mines and began engaging the VC. The patrol then disengaged and moved back to the base, fighting through another enemy unit 100m from the base perimeter. Hibbs and his sergeant stopped to help a wounded man, but were hit by VC machine-gun fire, Hibbs then attacked the machine-gun position and was mortally wounded. The VC then launched an attack on the northern perimeter of patrol base but were repulsed and then started attacking from multiple directions. Airstrikes were called in and by mid-morning the VC withdrew.[1]: 176–7
At 10:50 the 1st Battalion, 16th Infantry Regiment was deployed by helicopter to a landing zone 2km northeast of the patrol base in an attempt to block the retreating attackers. The Battalion moved southwest towards the patrol base engaging a small VC unit and reached the patrol base at 14:30.[1]: 177
On 6 March the 2nd Battalion, 2nd Infantry Regiment was also deployed into the area and the three Battalions swept the area finding only VC dead and equipment. The operation concluded on 8 March 1966.[1]: 178