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On the night of March 3rd, 1969, Staff Sergeant Jerry W. Jones heard something that should not have existed: the sound of heavy diesel engines moving through absolute darkness at the exact point where Laos, Cambodia, and South Vietnam share a single border. What happened next lasted less than an hour. It was the only tank-versus-tank battle of the entire Vietnam War — and almost no one has ever told this story properly. Ben Het Special Forces Camp sat at the tri-border junction in Kontum Province, II Corps Tactical Zone, overlooking the Ho Chi Minh Trail at its most critical convergence point. The camp's 175mm artillery battery was interdicting North Vietnamese supply routes deep into Cambodia — making it a priority target for NVA planners. In February 1969, the enemy began systematic bombardment to wear down the defenders. Then the shelling stopped. Three days of calculated silence. Then, at 2100 hours on March 3rd, the artillery returned — and with it, the armored regiment that American intelligence had known existed but had not confirmed was moving that night. The 16th Company, 4th Battalion, 202nd NVA Armored Regiment approached through fog with PT-76 amphibious tanks, following doctrine designed to destroy the camp's defenses before infantry could exploit the breach. They had planned well. Their intelligence was thorough. Their timing was precise. They had not planned for Frank Hembree firing at muzzle flashes in absolute darkness. They had not planned for Jerry Jones running to a tank under fire after losing two crew members. Company B, 1st Battalion, 69th Armor held the camp with four tankers, diminishing ammunition, and a refusal to accept what the situation was offering as the only possible outcome. This channel exists to preserve the stories of men like Jones, Hembree, Havermale, and Stovall — soldiers who served in places and situations the evening news never found, whose courage deserves accurate documentation rather than silence. This story is drawn from primary source materials including the U.S. Army Center of Military History's official record of mounted combat in Vietnam. Every tactical detail, every name, every sequence of events has been verified against the historical record. The North Vietnamese soldiers who fought at Ben Het that night also served with documented courage and professionalism — their story is told here with the same respect. Honor the warriors. Question the wars. #VietnamWar #MilitaryHistory #TankBattle #BenHet #VeteranStories