Brigadier General Hollingsworth served as assistant commander of the
1st Infantry Division in 1966–67. Hollingsworth and new division commander Major General
William E. DePuy relieved a number of commanders whom they regarded as combat ineffective. During this tour he was profiled by English journalist
Nicholas Tomalin in his story
The General Goes Zapping Charlie Cong, which was published in
The Sunday Times on 5 June 1966. After reading of these activities DePuy and Hollingsworth were reprimanded by
Chief of Staff of the United States Army Harold K. Johnson who wrote to DePuy: "If I had wanted a lead scout in command of the 1st Division you would not have gotten the job. Your value and Holly's is proportional to the responsibility that you have for something over 15,000 men. Your job is not to shoot VC. Your job is to see that other people shoot VC." Tomalin's story was later used as part of the inspiration for the character Lieutenant Colonel Bill Kilgore in the film
Apocalypse Now. On 31 August 1967, as a result of the criticisms of the
Army National Guard during the
1967 Detroit riot, the
Chief of Staff of the United States Army set up a board under Hollingsworth, then deputy commanding general of the
United States Army Test and Evaluation Command, to look into the leadership of both the National Guard and the
Army Reserve. In 1972 Hollingsworth was serving as Commander of
Third Regional Assistance Command in
III Corps. During the
Battle of An Lộc, part of the North Vietnamese
Easter Offensive, Hollingsworth was responsible for organizing the air support that allowed the
Army of the Republic of Vietnam forces to hold the town and ultimately defeat the
People's Army of Vietnam assault. In April 1972 Hollingsworth commented on the declining morale and discipline among US forces remaining in South Vietnam stating: "It is very common to observe U.S. soldiers driving and riding in trucks along the roads and highways in the
Long Binh-
Bien Hoa-
Saigon area who are a disgrace to the Army and to the United States... Seldom does one see such a soldier with a proper haircut wearing a complete and proper uniform. Frequently, they wear no headgear and are in their undershirts. Many times they are bare to the waist. Further, many of our soldiers wear defaced hats and jackets with unauthorized embroidered and stenciled symbols and sayings, pins, buttons, and other items that give them a hippie like appearance. In addition, these soldiers often operate their vehicles in an equally careless manner...Standards (observed off post) merely reflect standards practiced on post." ==Post-Vietnam==