Makeshift booby traps created by the enemy in the jungles of Vietnam weren’t high quality but they were deadly

Photo Credit: Photo12 / Universal Images Group / Getty Images (Colorized by Palette.fm)
Photo Credit: Photo12 / Universal Images Group / Getty Images (Colorized by Palette.fm)

During the Vietnam War, Viet Cong fighters developed a fearsome reputation for their use of guerrilla tactics, particularly their ingenious and deadly traps. Often constructed from bamboo and other locally sourced materials, these devices blended seamlessly into the dense jungle landscape. Because they contained little or no metal, they were frequently invisible to conventional U.S. mine-detection equipment, making them especially dangerous for American troops operating in thick vegetation.

Many of these traps were designed not necessarily to kill but to incapacitate. By wounding soldiers, they forced units to halt their movement, provide medical treatment, and reorganize—slowing operations and tying up valuable personnel and resources. Some traps were even equipped with secondary triggers intended to harm medics or other soldiers rushing to assist the wounded, amplifying confusion and disruption in already chaotic combat situations.

Between 1965 and 1970, such traps accounted for roughly 11 percent of U.S. combat deaths and 17 percent of injuries during the conflict. In 1965 alone, nearly 70 percent of American casualties were attributed to these hidden hazards.

Beyond their physical toll, the traps imposed a heavy psychological burden. The constant possibility of stepping onto an unseen device created an atmosphere of relentless tension for soldiers moving through the jungle. That persistent stress eroded morale in the field and left many veterans with lasting mental scars long after the war had ended.

Bow trap

US Marine walking in the middle of a street with a machine gun while two others hide behind a wooden fence
US Marines watching for Viet Cong snipers. (Photo Credit: Bettmann / Getty Images)

The bow trap was a simple but effective weapon used by the Viet Cong in the early stages of the Vietnam War. A bow was stretched and ready to shoot, then connected to a tripwire. When an American soldier triggered it, the bow went off right where they were standing, hitting them in the chest.

In some cases, the guerrillas set up this trap in a small pit. Here, the bow was tilted upward, causing the arrow to hit the soldier in the legs instead.

Punji sticks

US Army soldier watching Don Burchell walk through punji sticks
Lt. Don Burchell makes his way through punji sticks placed in a drained canal by the Viet Cong. (Photo Credit: Bettmann / Getty Images)

Punji sticks, also known as punji stakes, were a common booby trap deployed by the Viet Cong. The sharpened bamboo, wooden and sometimes metal stakes were often coated in feces or urine, with the goal of causing an infection in their victim. They could also be coated with poisonous substances from animals and plants. 

Punji sticks were placed pointing upright at the bottom of a hole, before being covered with material that would camouflage them. When a US soldier broke through the flimsy cover over the hole, they would step on the spikes at the bottom and suffer injuries to their feet and legs.

This particular booby trap could be made worse in two different ways. The first was installing them at a downward angle, along the sides of the hole. When these extra stakes were added, it became difficult for the victim to get themselves out without causing further injury to themselves. This often resulted in the slowing down of their unit while efforts were made to free them.

A second way was by digging another hole next to the one equipped with the punji sticks, with the aim being to trap a second combatant with little additional effort. When a soldier came to rescue his injured comrade, he’d fall into the adjacent hole and become trapped.

Along with physically injuring American troops, punji sticks were also effective at hurting the overall morale of those serving within Vietnam’s dense jungles.

Bamboo whip

Members of the 173rd Airborne Division scaling Hill 875
173rd Airborne Division troops scaling Hill 875. (Photo Credit: Bettmann / Getty Images)

Bamboo whips were another cruel booby trap used by the Viet Cong. A bamboo pole, pulled back under high tension, was connected to a tripwire. The pole was outfitted with foot-long spikes, and when the tripwire was triggered, it would snap forward, impaling the person who set it off.

As reported by We Are The Mighty, the pole and its spikes could reach speeds of up to 100 MPH. Similar to punji sticks, the spikes could be coated with toxic substances to weaken the victim’s ability to recover.

Swinging mace

Viet Cong guerrilla standing next to a ball covered in spikes
Spiked ball used by the Viet Cong as a booby trap during the Vietnam War. (Photo Credit: Pictures From History / Universal Images Group / Getty Images)

The swinging mace functioned much like the bamboo whip but differed in that it was not anchored to a fixed post. Instead, it consisted of a spiked ball roughly 24 inches in diameter, crafted from clay, wood, or metal, and suspended from a frame. A tripwire released the mechanism, and the entire contraption often exceeded 40 pounds in weight.

Considered among the most perilous devices deployed by the Viet Cong, the mace relied on gravity to swing downward with deadly force when triggered. Impacts to the head or torso were frequently fatal or caused severe, incapacitating injuries, cementing its reputation with American soldiers as an exceptionally menacing and lethal trap.

Tiger trap

Viet Cong guerrillas standing around a model of the Bến Cầu fortress
Viet Cong guerrillas around a model of the Bến Cầu fortress, near Tây Ninh province, during a briefing for an attack during the Vietnam War. (Photo Credit: Bettmann / Getty Images)

The tiger trap was another Viet Cong booby trap that, like the swinging mace, caused significant injury to a soldier’s upper body. The trap was sprung when the intended victim triggered a tripwire, causing a wooden plank imbued with metal spikes to fall on them.

This was made all the more brutal by the addition of weighted bricks or other objects on the board.

Snake pit

Two American soldiers filling a tunnel with dirt
American soldiers shoveling dirt into the entrance of a tunnel believed to have been used by the Viet Cong. (Photo Credit: Bettmann / Getty Images)

Snake pits were primarily used within the Viet Cong’s tunnel systems.

A poisonous snake would be attached to a piece of bamboo, and when released on the victim would place the reptile in the perfect location to attack. Snake pits were encountered by American “tunnel rats,” but the Viet Cong would put snakes in other locations, too, such as in their bags or in old weapons caches.

Bamboo pit vipers were a common snake used by the Viet Cong. Within a few minutes of being bitten, the flesh surrounding the bite turned necrotic, swollen and extremely painful. However, the Malayan krait was the most infamous, earning the nickname, the “two-step snake,” sometimes mischaracterized as the “three-step snake.” This is rooted in a myth that a soldier bitten by one was killed in the short time it took him to move two steps.

Cartridge trap

Viet Cong guerrillas running with weapons
Viet Cong soldiers moving forward, under covering fire from a heavy machine gun, during the Vietnam War. (Photo Credit: Three Lions / Hulton Archive / Getty Images)

Cartridge traps were ingeniously simple but cruelly effective, resembling the concept of punji sticks. A live bullet was placed inside a bamboo tube, positioned above a nail driven into a wooden block that acted as a rudimentary firing pin. The entire mechanism was then camouflaged with soil or foliage to blend seamlessly into the environment.

When an unsuspecting soldier stepped on the hidden device, the pressure forced the nail into the cartridge, firing the round straight into the foot. These traps earned the grim moniker “toe-poppers.” Injuries varied depending on the bullet’s size—smaller rounds could cause permanent disability, while larger ones carried the risk of being fatal.

Grenade-in-a-can

US Army instructor teaching a student how to deactivate a tripwire
US Army instructor showing a recruit how to deactivate a tripwire used by the Viet Cong. (Photo Credit: Underwood Archives / Getty Images)

The so-called “grenade-in-a-can” trap was as simple as it was deadly. An armed grenade—with its safety pin already removed—was placed inside a can that held the striker lever tightly in place. A tripwire was attached to the grenade, and once triggered, the wire pulled it free from the can, releasing the striker and setting off the blast.

These makeshift weapons could be arranged in a variety of ways. Sometimes a single can was fixed to a stake, while in other cases two cans were secured on opposite sides of a trail, connected by a taut tripwire. They were often hidden in shallow streams or near the concealed entrances of Viet Cong tunnel complexes, where they posed an immediate and lethal danger to American and allied soldiers moving through the area.

Rigging war trophies

Three members of the US 1st Cavalry Division walking along a path in the Vietnamese jungle
Members of the US 1st Cavalry Division patrolling near the Cambodia-South Vietnam border. (Photo Credit: Toshio Sakai / UPI / Bettmann / Getty Images)

These booby traps were created based on the fact that American troops enjoyed capturing the flags of their enemies. When Viet Cong guerrillas were forced from their bases, they’d rig their flags with explosives, which detonated when the US soldiers took them down. 

More from us: Cessna A-37 Dragonfly: The Forgotten Legend of Vietnam

The Viet Cong knew the Americans also enjoyed taking other items as war trophies. As such, they rigged them with similar explosives, so that, if the enemy combatants wanted to take anything from abandoned camps, the explosives would detonate, causing additional casualties. 

Rosemary Giles

Rosemary Giles is a history content writer with Hive Media. She received both her bachelor of arts degree in history, and her master of arts degree in history from Western University. Her research focused on military, environmental, and Canadian history with a specific focus on the Second World War. As a student, she worked in a variety of research positions, including as an archivist. She also worked as a teaching assistant in the History Department.

Since completing her degrees, she has decided to take a step back from academia to focus her career on writing and sharing history in a more accessible way. With a passion for historical learning and historical education, her writing interests include social history, and war history, especially researching obscure facts about the Second World War. In her spare time, Rosemary enjoys spending time with her partner, her cats, and her horse, or sitting down to read a good book.

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