Phu Loi Base Camp
{{Infobox military installation
|name=Phu Loi Base Camp
|partof=
|location=
|coordinates={{Coord|10|59|57|N|106|42|10|E|display=inline|name=Phu Loi Base Camp}}
|image=File:Phu Loi Base Camp, June 1970.jpg
|caption=Phu Loi Base Camp, 16 June 1970
|type=Army Base
|code=
|built=1965
|builder=
|materials=
|height=
|used=1965-72
|demolished=
|condition=
|ownership=
|controlledby=
|garrison=
|commanders=
|occupants= 2nd Brigade, 1st Infantry Division
3rd Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division
|battles= 60px
Vietnam War
|events=
}}
{{Infobox airport
| name = Phu Loi Airfield
| elevation-f = 95
| elevation-m =
| website =
| metric-rwy =
| r1-number =
| r1-length-f = 2800
| r1-length-m =
| r1-surface = asphalt
| footnotes =
}}
Phu Loi Base Camp (also known as Darkhorse Base or Phu Loi Field) is a former U.S. Army base north of Saigon in southern Vietnam.
History
=1940s-1963=
Phu Loi airfield was originally established by the Japanese in the 1940s and was located approximately 20 km north of Saigon in Bình Dương Province. During the First Indochina War the base was used by the French as a prisoner of war camp for captured Viet Minh. Following the end of the war it was used to imprison opponents of the Ngo Dinh Diem government.
Here, according to North Vietnamese and Vietcong sources was the site of the Phu Loi massacre in December 1958 by Ngo Dinh Diem troops, more than 1,000 prisoners were killed by poison.{{cite web | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=J7vZYu3Hdg0C&q=phu+loi+1958 | title=New Facts: Phu Loi Mass Murder in South Viet Nam | date=1959 }}
=1965-72=
The U.S. Army base was established in 1965.{{cite book|last=Kelley|first=Michael|title=Where we were in Vietnam|publisher=Hellgate Press|year=2002|isbn=978-1555716257|page=400}}
File:Phu Loi refugee camp, January 1967.png at Phu Loi, 29 January 1967]]
File:Phu Loi September 1967.png
The 2nd Brigade, 1st Infantry Division comprising:
- 2nd Battalion, 16th Infantry Regiment{{cite book|last=Stanton|first=Shelby|title=Vietnam Order of Battle|publisher=Stackpole Books|year=2003|isbn=9780811700719|page=142}}
- 1st Battalion, 18th Infantry Regiment{{rp|143}}
- 2nd Battalion, 18th Infantry Regiment{{rp|143}}
was based at Phu Loi from December 1965-February 1966.
The 3rd Brigade, 82nd Airborne Division comprising:
was based at Phu Loi from September 1968-December 1969
Other units stationed at Phu Loi included:
- 11th Combat Aviation Battalion:
- 128th Assault Helicopter Company{{cite book|last=Van Etten|first=B|title=50 Years Before The (Rotor) Mast|year=2018|publisher= WaveCloud Corporation|isbn=978-1-5356-1248-7|page=19}}
- 173rd Assault Helicopter Company before moving to Lai Khe
- 205th Aviation Support Helicopter Company
- 213th Aviation Support Helicopter Company
- D Troop, 1st Squadron, 4th Cavalry Regiment{{cite book |last1=Mills Jr|first1=H.|title=Low Level Hell |year=2011 |publisher= Orion Books|location= UK|isbn=978-1-9080-5903-1|page=23}}
- AVEL Central Avionics (January 1966-April 1972){{rp|187}}
- 2nd Battalion, 34th Armor{{rp|93}}
- 34th Engineer Battalion (May 1968-October 1971){{rp|171}}
- 1st Battalion, 27th Artillery (April–November 1967){{rp|102}}
- 6th Battalion, 27th Artillery (March 1970-April 1971){{rp|102}}
- 2nd Battalion, 32nd Artillery (October 1969-January 1972){{rp|103}}
- A Battery, 5th Battalion, 42d Field Artillery (January–March 1972)
- 44th Signal Battalion (May–June 1972){{rp|182}}
- 82nd Brigade Support Battalion
- 3rd Battalion, 197th Artillery (September 1968-September 1969){{rp|108}}
Current use
The base is largely abandoned, but a small section serves a museum. The former airfield is still clearly visible on satellite images.