Vietnam Studies - Allied Participation In Vietnam [Illustrated Edition]
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This book forms part of the “Vietnam Studies” series produced by various senior commanders who had served in the U.S. Army during the Vietnam War; each officer was chosen for their knowledge of the number of specialized subjects that were covered by the series.
“More than forty nations provided assistance to the Republic of Vietnam in its struggle against North Vietnam. This aid ranged from economic and technical assistance to educational and humanitarian contributions. Hundreds of Free World civilians worked in Vietnam as doctors, teachers, and technical specialists. Eight nations also provided military assistance. The flags of these Free World countries-the United States, the Republic of Korea, Thailand, Australia, New Zealand, the Philippines, the Republic of China, and Spain-flew alongside the colors of the Republic of Vietnam at the headquarters of the Free World Military Assistance Forces in Saigon. The military contributions of these nations included combat troops, army medical teams, and individual political warfare advisers. The degree of assistance and co-operation among the concerned Free World nations resulted from years of work and involvement. While many nations expressed sympathy for the plight of South Vietnam, aid did not always come easily, quickly, or to the extent desired. Many nations, beset by their own internal economic and political problems, could do little to help; others did nothing. The story of the efforts of the contributing nations and the efforts to enlist their aid is the subject of this monograph.”
Lieutenant General Stanley Robert Larsen
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Vietnam Studies - Allied Participation In Vietnam [Illustrated Edition] - Lieutenant General Stanley Robert Larsen
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Text originally published in 1985 under the same title.
© Pickle Partners Publishing 2013, all rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted by any means, electrical, mechanical or otherwise without the written permission of the copyright holder.
Publisher’s Note
Although in most cases we have retained the Author’s original spelling and grammar to authentically reproduce the work of the Author and the original intent of such material, some additional notes and clarifications have been added for the modern reader’s benefit.
We have also made every effort to include all maps and illustrations of the original edition the limitations of formatting do not allow of including larger maps, we will upload as many of these maps as possible.
VIETNAM STUDIES
Allied Participation in Vietnam
By
Lieutenant General Stanley Robert Larsen
and
Brigadier General James Lawton Collins, Jr.
DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY WASHINGTON, D.C. 1985
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTS 4
Foreword 6
Preface 8
Tables 9
Charts 9
Maps 9
Illustrations 9
CHAPTER I — The Background -1961-1966 11
Early Negotiations for Aid to Vietnam 11
Free World Troops in Vietnam, 1965-1966 19
CHAPTER II — Thailand 27
Beginnings of Thai Assistance 27
Thai Operations 40
Last Years of Assistance 43
CHAPTER III — The Philippines 46
History of Philippine Aid 46
Pacification Efforts 62
The Thanh Dien Refugee Resettlement Project 66
CHAPTER IV — Australia and New Zealand 71
CHAPTER V — The Republic of China 89
CHAPTER VI — The Republic of Korea 92
The Korean Commitment 92
Operational Control of Korean Troops 99
Initial Developments 102
Results of Korean Combat Operations 110
Evaluation of Korean Operations 112
Tactics 114
Ambushes 115
Pacification Efforts 116
CHAPTER VII — Non-military Aid to Vietnam 119
REQUEST FROM THE PUBLISHER 127
Foreword
The United States Army has met an unusually complex challenge in Southeast Asia. In conjunction with the other services, the Army has fought in support of a national policy of assisting an emerging nation to develop governmental processes of its own choosing, free of outside coercion. In addition to the usual problems of waging armed conflict, the assignment in Southeast Asia has required superimposing the immensely sophisticated tasks of a modern army upon an underdeveloped environment and adapting them to demands covering a wide spectrum. These involved helping to fulfill the basic needs of an agrarian population, dealing with the frustrations of antiguerrilla operations, and conducting conventional campaigns against well-trained and determined regular units.
It is as always necessary for the US Army to continue to prepare for other challenges that may lie ahead. While cognizant that history never repeats itself exactly and that no army ever profited from trying to meet a new challenge in terms of the old one, the Army nevertheless stands to benefit immensely from a study of its experience, its shortcomings no less than its achievements.
Aware that some years must elapse before the official histories will provide a detailed and objective analysis of the experience in Southeast Asia, we have sought a forum whereby some of the more salient aspects of that experience can be made available now. At the request of the Chief of Staff, a representative group of senior officers who served in important posts in Vietnam and who still carry a heavy burden of day-to-day responsibilities has prepared a series of monographs. These studies should be of great value in helping the Army develop future operational concepts while at the same time contributing to the historical record and providing the American public with an interim report on the performance of men and officers who have responded, as others have through our history, to exacting and trying demands.
All monographs in the series are based primarily on official records, with additional material from published and unpublished secondary works, from debriefing reports and interviews with key participants, and from the personal experience of the author. To facilitate security clearance, annotation and detailed bibliography have been omitted from the published version; a fully documented account with bibliography is fled with the Office of the Chief of Military History.
The reader should be reminded that most of the writing was accomplished while the war in Vietnam was at its peak, and the monographs frequently refer to events of the past as if they were taking place in the present.
Brigadier General James Lawton Collins, Jr., presently the Chief of Military History, US Army, has the wealth of experience required to tell the story of allied participation in the Vietnam War. After having served in Korea as the Assistant Commander, I Corps (Group) Artillery, General Collins had two tours of duty in Vietnam that involved close liaison with all nations participating in the allied effort. In 1964 he was assigned as the senior U.S. adviser to the Vietnamese Regional Forces and Popular Forces, and in May 1965 was named Special Assistant to the Commander, US Military Assistance Command, Vietnam. In the latter capacity General Collins was the personal representative of General Westmoreland to the Vietnamese Joint General Staff on all matters pertaining to the co-ordination of U.S., Vietnamese, and allied forces operations. For his outstanding service in Vietnam, the Republic of Vietnam awarded him the National Order and the Army Distinguished Service Medal, two of its most coveted awards.
Washington, D. C. 1 May 1974
VERNE L. BOWERS
Major General, USA
The Adjutant General
Preface
More than forty nations provided assistance to the Republic of Vietnam in its struggle against North Vietnam. This aid ranged from economic and technical assistance to educational and humanitarian contributions. Hundreds of Free World civilians worked in Vietnam as doctors, teachers, and technical specialists. Eight nations also provided military assistance. The flags of these Free World countries-the United States, the Republic of Korea, Thailand, Australia, New Zealand, the Philippines, the Republic of China, and Spain-flew alongside the colors of the Republic of Vietnam at the headquarters of the Free World Military Assistance Forces in Saigon. The military contributions of these nations included combat troops, army medical teams, and individual political warfare advisers. The degree of assistance and co-operation among the concerned Free World nations resulted from years of work and involvement. While many nations expressed sympathy for the plight of South Vietnam, aid did not always come easily, quickly, or to the extent desired. Many nations, beset by their own internal economic and political problems, could do little to help; others did nothing. The story of the efforts of the contributing nations and the efforts to enlist their aid is the subject of this monograph.
The members of the Sixth Army Historical Staff, under the guidance of Mr. Herbert Avedon, Sixth Army Historian, gave generous assistance in putting together those elements of the monograph that refer to Korean activities after 1 August 1967. Without their detailed research and helpful suggestions the story of the Koreans in Vietnam would have taken much longer to complete. The revision of the Korean part of the manuscript owes much to the skill of Lieutenant Colonel Samuel Focer, Headquarters, U.S. Army, Pacific.
For their efforts in researching and drafting other chapters in this volume thanks are due especially to Dr. Richard A. Hunt, who helped to assemble the monograph in its final form, overseeing its progress through the staff and contributing to the first chapter; Lieutenant Colonel John E. Eshelman, U.S. Army, who helped to launch the volume; and Loretto C. Stevens, who gave skilled editorial assistance. Their work and support made the history of the Allied effort in Vietnam immeasurably less difficult to tell.
Washington, D. C. 1 May 1974
STANLEY ROBERT LARSEN Lieutenant General, U.S. Army
JAMES LAWTON COLLINS, JR. Brigadier General, U.S. Army
Tables
1.—Strength of Free World Military Assistance Forces, 1964-1970
2.—Location, Strength, and Mission of New Zealand Forces, June 1969
Charts
1.—Organization of Royal Thai Army Volunteer Force, 25 January 1968
2.—Royal Thai Forces, Vietnam
3.—Philippine Civic Action Group, Vietnam
4.—Organization of Philippine Contingent, Vietnam
5.—Republic of China Military Assistance Group, Vietnam
Maps
1.—Royal Thai Forces, Vietnam, August 1969
2.—Concept of Ben Cam Operation, Royal Thai Army Volunteer Force, 24 November 4 December 1969
3.—1st Philippine Civic Action Group, Vietnam, Disposition, 1967
4.—1st Philippine Civic Action Group, Vietnam, Tay Ninh Province, 1967
5.—Community Plan, Thanh Dien Resettlement Project
6.—Australia-New Zealand Area of Responsibility, Phuoc Tuy Province, 1969
7.—Korean Corps Area of Responsibility, December 1966
Illustrations
Soldiers of the Queen's Cobras Conduct a Search and Sweep Mission in Phuoc Tho
Troops of Royal Thai Black Panther Division Dock at Newport, Vietnam
Royal Thai Flag Is Carried Down Gangplank of USS Okinagon
Thai Soldiers Board C-130 at Long Thanh for Trip Home
Lieutenant General William B Rosson Presents Meritorious Unit Citation to Thai Panther Division
Philippine Security Troops Rebuild a Base Camp Bunker
Philippine Civic Action Group Member Distributes Medicines
Philippine Group Clears Debris After Viet Cong Mortar Hit
Entertainers of Philippine Group Play to Villagers
Troops of Royal Australian Regiment After Arrival at Tan Son Nhut Airport
Living Quarters at an Australian Fire Support Base
Australian Soldier Mans Machine Gun Position
Members of Australian Civic Action Team Confer With Village Officials
Soldier of Royal Australian Regiment Pauses During Sweep of Cultivated Area Around a Village
Members of Royal New Zealand Artillery Carry Out a Fire Mission
Australian Civil Affairs Team Member Treats Village Boy
Soldier of Royal New Zealand Army Cooks His Lunch
Australian Soldier Searches for Enemy in Hoa Long Village
Soldier of Royal Australian Regiment With M60
Royal Australian Air Force Civic Action Team Moves Out Past Vietnamese Temples to Mung Due
Korean Marines Prepare Defensive Positions
Field Command Headquarters of Republic of Korea Force, Vietnam
Korean Troops Use Chart to Show Villagers Types of Viet Gong Booby Traps
Korean Soldiers Search the Jungle Near Qui Nhon for Viet Cong
Color Guard Displays Flags at Ceremonies
General Creighton W Abrams Presents Bronze Stars to Soldiers of the Tiger Division
Medic of Tiger Division Treats Village Boy
Korean Instructor in Tae-kwon-do Watches Vietnamese Practice After Class
All illustrations are from the Department of Defense files
CHAPTER I — The Background -1961-1966
Putting the contribution of the Free World allies into proper focus requires first of all a knowledge of the negotiations leading to the commitment of allied economic and military aid, and, second, an understanding of why multilateral aid was sought. The context in which the early discussion of possible troop commitments by the United States or the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization took place indicates the assumptions of U.S. policy-makers. They considered Vietnam, like Korea, a testing ground where the Free World had to use its strength against the forceful expansion of communism. As the Korean War had been an effort of Free World allies against North Korean and Chinese Communist aggression, so they saw the Vietnam War as an allied effort against the aggression of the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese, who were aided by the Russian and Chinese Communists. It is not at all surprising that in the early sixties, when the nature of the US commitment to Vietnam was taking shape, the idea of multilateral aid was being considered.
From the earliest discussions in 1961, Free World troop deployments were tied to and contingent upon the deployment of US troops. Thus in the story of aid to South Vietnam, Free World and US military assistance are intertwined and inextricable, especially in the background of the decisions to deploy troops to South Vietnam. To tell the story of Free World participation it is necessary, therefore, to refer to the background of the deployment of US forces.
Throughout 1961 many possible kinds of troop deployment were considered, from unilateral US intervention to a multilateral Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) force. In May an ad hoc task force appointed by Assistant Secretary of Defense Roswell L. Gilpatric recommended to the National Security Council that the United States should be prepared to fulfill its obligations under the treaty organization, unilaterally if necessary; the State Department redraft of this memorandum also supported the employment of SEATO troops in South Vietnam. The Joint Chiefs of Staff further recommended deployment of sufficient US forces to deter Communist aggression against South Vietnam. These proposals led to a formal request, National Security Action Memorandum 52, directing the Department of Defense to examine the size and composition of possible troop deployments.
In the absence of a decision by the President of the United States, memorandums continued to stream forth. Presidential adviser Walt W. Rostow suggested in October 1961 a 25,000-man SEATO force to guard the South Vietnam-Laos border; the joint Chiefs modified this, saying the force should be used instead to secure the Central Highlands. The logical and inevitable synthesis of these proposals was made in a memorandum drafted by Under Secretary of State U. Alexis Johnson. Blending Rostow's border control proposal with the joint Chiefs of Staff's concept of winning control of the highlands, Secretary Johnson advocated his synthesis as the initial twofold mission for U.S. forces in Vietnam and spelled out the US objective: to defeat the Viet Cong and preserve a free non-Communist government in the south.
Early Negotiations for Aid to Vietnam
In an October 1961 message requesting more US aid, sent with the concurrence of US Ambassador to South Vietnam Frederick C. Nolting, Jr., President Ngo Dinh Diem also asked the United States to consider the possibility of having President Chiang Kai-shek send a division of Nationalist Chinese troops to South Vietnam.
No firm decisions were made in 1961. The attention of the United States was focused on Laos, Diem was growing increasingly reluctant to accept additional outside intervention, and the internal security situation in South Vietnam did not then seem acute. By 1964, however, the situation had changed: the Laotian war had apparently been settled by the 1962 Geneva Accords, Diem had been overthrown and killed, the Viet Cong insurgency had grown, and South Vietnam had become politically unstable. There was a growing awareness from 1963 on that the war against the Viet Cong, and later against the North Vietnamese Army, was not going well. The issue of increased US or allied assistance was consequently again brought up in high policy councils, this time with greater urgency.
Signaling the growing need of allied and US assistance for South Vietnam was President Lyndon B. Johnson's public call on 23 April 1964 for more flags
to come forth to support a beleaguered friend. In a similar move in April, the Ministerial Council of the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization issued a communiqué declaring the defeat of the Viet Cong essential to Southeast Asia's security and underscoring the necessity for SEATO nations to fulfill their treaty obligations. McGeorge Bundy, Presidential Assistant for National Security Affairs, in a related memorandum dated 25 May, recommended that a high-level Southeast Asia strategy conference be convoked to consult with the SEATO allies of the United States in order to obtain specific force commitments. This proposal of a SEATO conference—a conference that was never held-was the last official attempt to place Free World assistance under the aegis of the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization. Certain members, especially France, were growing more antipathetic to American policy in Vietnam; hence, when the issue of Free World support for South Vietnam surfaced again in December 1964, it was discussed outside the context of SEATO commitments.
When troop commitments to South Vietnam were further discussed at a White House meeting on 1 December 1964, US objectives were reiterated: first, to end Democratic Republic of Vietnam support of Viet Cong operations in South Vietnam; second, to maintain the security of other non-communist nations in Southeast Asia; and third, to re-establish an independent and secure South Vietnam. The meeting resolved also that aid be sought from key allies.
Thailand was to be asked to support the US program and intensify its own counterinsurgency efforts in Thailand. Prime Minister J. Harold Wilson of England was to be briefed on the US position and his support sought. William P. Bundy of the State Department was to ask Australia and New Zealand for additional help as well as consideration of the possibility of sending small combat units when and if the United States moved to the second phase of its strategy of increasing military pressure against the enemy. The Philippines were to be asked for a commitment of approximately 1,800 men. The conferees decided to press generally and strongly for more outside aid.
A memorandum for the chief of staff of US Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (MACV), implementing the 1 December White House decision, specifically stated that "Australia, New Zealand and the Philippines should be encouraged to provide combat advisory personnel now and, in event of US troop deployment in RVN, to provide combatant units to reinforce DMZ Defense."{1}
At the time the memorandum was written sixteen countries including the United States were already providing aid-some advisory military but largely economical and technical-to South Vietnam. At the end of December the Philippine, Korean, and Nationalist Chinese governments had made known through diplomatic: channels their readiness to