Dale Andrade and Lieutenant Colonel James H. Willbanks, U.S. Army, Retired, PH.D
Dale Andrade and Lieutenant Colonel James H. Willbanks, U.S. Army, Retired, PH.D
Dale Andrade and Lieutenant Colonel James H. Willbanks, U.S. Army, Retired, PH.D
at moving into rural enclaves formerly dominated counterinsurgent’s strategy will depend on how he
by the VC. A Communist history of the war notes is organized and how he chooses to fight. The enemy
that “[b]ecause we did not fully appreciate the new is never static, and every situation will differ from
enemy [allied] schemes and the changes the enemy the next. Still, when an insurgency is stripped to
made in the conduct of the war and because we its essentials, there are some basic points that are
underestimated the enemy’s capabilities and the crucial to any COIN effort.
strength of his counterattack, when the United States Security forces must be prepared to use armed
and its puppets [the South Vietnamese] began to force to keep the enemy away from the population.
carry out their ‘clear and hold’ strategy our battle- To conclude that large-scale operations play no role
fronts were too slow in shifting over to attacking in COIN is a mistake. The big-unit war of 1965 and
the ‘pacification’ program. . . .”6 1966 robbed the Communists of a quick victory and
To cope with the new battlefield situation, the allowed the South Vietnamese breathing space in
Communist Politburo in Hanoi revised its strategy in which to begin pacifying the countryside. Without
a document known as COSVN Resolution 9.7 North the security generated by military force, pacification
Vietnam considered its Tet “general offensive and cannot even be attempted.
uprising” to be a great success that “forced the enemy At the same time, government forces must target
[U.S. and South Vietnam] to . . . sink deeper into a the insurgents’ ability to live and operate freely
defensive and deadlocked position,” but admitted that among the population. Given time, insurgents will
new techniques were required to force the Americans try to create a clandestine political structure to
out of the war.8 Rather than fight U.S. troops directly, replace the government presence in the villages.
Resolution 9 dictated that guerrilla forces would Such an infrastructure is the real basis of guerrilla
disperse and concentrate their efforts on attacking control during any insurgency; it is the thread that
pacification. The main objective was to outlast the ties the entire insurgency together. Without a wide-
allies: “We should fight to force the Americans to spread political presence, guerrillas cannot make
withdraw troops, cause the collapse of the puppets many gains, and those they do make cannot be rein-
and gain the decisive victory. . . .”9 Implicit in the plan forced. Any COIN effort must specifically target the
was a return to more traditional hit-and-run guerrilla insurgent infrastructure if it is to win the war.
tactics with less emphasis on big battles. These objectives—providing security for the
Between late 1968 and 1971 the battle for hearts people and targeting the insurgent infrastructure—
and minds went into full swing, and the government form the basis of a credible government campaign to
made rapid advances in pacifying the countryside. win hearts and minds. Programs aimed at bringing
Historians and military analysts still debate the a better quality of life to the population, including
merits of Abrams’s strategy vis-à-vis Westmore- things like land reform, medical care, schools, and
land’s, but the bottom line is that the two generals agricultural assistance, are crucial if the government
faced very different conflicts.10 There was no “cor- is to offer a viable alternative to the insurgents.
rect” way to fight; the war was a fluid affair with the The reality, however, is that nothing can be accom-
enemy controlling the operational tempo most of the plished without first establishing some semblance
time. The successes in pacification during Abrams’ of security.
command owed a lot to the severely weakened status Key to the entire strategy is the integration of
of the VC after the 1968 Tet Offensive. Even so, with all efforts toward a single goal. This sounds obvi-
U.S. President Richard Nixon’s order to “Vietnam- ous, but it rarely occurs. In most historical COIN
ize” the war, the South Vietnamese would be left efforts, military forces concentrated on warfighting
to cope with both the enemy main forces and the objectives, leaving the job of building schools and
Communist insurgency in the villages. Pacification clinics, establishing power grids, and bolstering
alone simply could not do the job. local government (popularly referred to today as
nationbuilding) to civilian agencies. The reality is
Essentials of Counterinsurgency that neither mission is more important than the other,
Insurgencies are complex affairs that defy all and failure to recognize this can be fatal. Virtually
attempts at seeking a common denominator. The all COIN plans claim they integrate the two: The
simply relying on the ambassador and the MACV other words, pacification had to be large-scale. Only
commander to “work things out” would not ensure with a truly massive effort could a turnaround be
pacification cooperation. A single civil-military focus achieved, and that was what Johnson required if he
on pacification was needed; however, the conference was to maintain public support for the war.
ended without a concrete resolution.13 It was Westmoreland himself, however, who
Although Johnson was displeased by slow prog- brought the issue to the forefront. Contrary to
ress and foot dragging, the embassy in Saigon con- popular belief, the MACV commander understood
tinued to resist any changes that would take away its the need for pacification and, like a good politician,
authority over pacification. Then, at a summit held in figured it would be better to have the assignment
Honolulu in February 1966 with South Vietnamese under his control than outside of it. On 6 October
President Nguyen Van Thieu and Premier Nguyen 1966, despite objections from his staff, he told
Cao Ky, Johnson pushed an agenda that tasked the Komer: “I’m not asking for the responsibility, but I
South Vietnamese Army with area security, allowing believe that my headquarters could take it in stride
the U.S. military to concentrate mostly on seeking and perhaps carry out this important function more
out enemy main forces. Johnson also demanded economically and efficiently than the present com-
greater American coordination in the pacification plex arrangement.”16
effort and called for a single manager to head the Komer lobbied McNamara, arguing that with 90
entire program. In April he assigned Robert W. percent of the resources, it was “obvious” that only
Komer, a trusted member of the National Security the military “had the clout” to get the job done.
Council, the task of coming up with a solution. Komer believed that the U.S. Defense Department
Johnson gave Komer a strong mandate that included (DOD) was “far stronger behind pacification” than
unrestrained access to the White House—a key asset the Department of State and was “infinitely more
that was put in writing. That authority gave Komer dynamic and influential.”17
the clout he needed to bring recalcitrant officials Now the DOD was on board, but the civilian agen-
into line.14 cies uniformly opposed the plan. As a compromise,
Other steps followed in quick succession. In in November 1966 the Office of Civil Operations
August 1966 Komer authored a paper titled “Giving (OCO) was formed, with Deputy Ambassador Wil-
a New Thrust to Pacification: Analysis, Concept, liam Porter in charge. The OCO combined civilian
and Management,” in which he broke the pacifica- agencies under one chain of command, but failed
tion problem into three parts and argued that no to bring the military into it. The entire plan was
single part could work by itself.15 The first part, doomed from the start.
not surprisingly, was security—keeping the main The OCO was really no different from the old
forces away from the population. In the second way of doing business because it kept the civilian
part he advocated breaking the Communists’ hold and military chains of command separate. Johnson
on the people with anti-infrastructure operations was deeply dissatisfied. So in June 1966 Komer
and programs designed to win back popular sup- went to Vietnam to assess the situation. He wrote
port. The third part stressed the concept of mass; in that the U.S. Embassy “needs to strengthen its
U.S.
AMBASSADOR
CIA USAID
COMUSMACV
DIRECTOR
CHIEF OF STAFF
OF MACEVAL
AC of S AC of S AC of S AC of S AC of S AC of S AC of S AC of S
J1 J2 J3 CORDS J4 J5 J6 MA
Source: Thomas W. Scoville, Reorganizing for Pacification Support (Washington, D.C.: Center of Military History, 1991).
PROVINCE SENIOR
ADVISOR SUPPORT SECTION
DPSA
CIVIL *One or more MATS were often supervised directly by the PSA
SEABEES
AFFAIRS
MILPHAP
Source: Ngo Quang Truong, Indochina Monographs: RVNAF and US Operational Cooperation and Coordination (Washington, D.C.: Army Center of Military
History, 1980), p. 154.
his new deputy became close and respectful, which fell under the CORDS aegis. CORDS assumed
started the new program on the right track. responsibility for reports, evaluations, and field
Time was the crucial ingredient, and eventually inspections from all agencies.23
Komer’s assertive personality and Westmoreland’s CORDS organization. At corps level, the
increasing trust in his new civilian subordinates CORDS organization was modeled on that of
smoothed over many potential problems. According CORDS at the MACV headquarters. (See figure 2.)
to one study, “[a] combination of Westmoreland’s The U.S. military senior adviser, usually a three-
flexibility and Komer’s ability to capitalize on it star general who also served as the commander of
through the absence of an intervening layer of com- U.S. forces in the region, had a deputy for CORDS
mand permitted Komer to run an unusual, innovative (DepCORDS), usually a civilian. The DepCORDS
program within what otherwise might have been the was responsible for supervising military and civilian
overly strict confines of a military staff.”22 plans in support of the South Vietnamese pacifica-
With the new organization, almost all pacifica- tion program within the corps area.24
tion programs eventually came under CORDS. Province advisory teams in the corps area of
From USAID, CORDS took control of “new life responsibility reported directly to the regional
development” (the catch-all term for an attempt to DepCORDS. Each of the 44 provinces in South
improve government responsiveness to villagers’ Vietnam was headed by a province chief, usually
needs), refugees, National Police, and the Chieu Hoi a South Vietnamese Army or Marine colonel, who
program (the “Open Arms” campaign to encourage supervised the provincial government apparatus
Communist personnel in South Vietnam to defect). and commanded the provincial militia as well as
The CIA’s Rural Development cadre, MACV’s civic Regional Forces and Popular Forces (RF/PF).
action and civil affairs, and the Joint U.S. Public The province advisory teams helped the province
Affairs Office’s field psychological operations also chiefs administer the pacification program. The
50 percent. By 1971 total territorial militia strength villages was more than just military. Cadre running
was around 500,000—about 50 percent of overall the Viet Cong infrastructure (VCI) sought to form
South Vietnamese military strength. Advisory num- a Communist shadow government to supplant the
bers increased correspondingly: In 1967 there were Saigon regime’s influence.
108 U.S. advisers attached to the militia; in 1969 In 1960, when Hanoi had formed the Viet Cong
there were 2,243.”26 The enemy saw this buildup movement (formally known as the National Libera-
as a serious threat to his control in the countryside, tion Front), the VCI cadre was its most important
and Communist sources consistently cited the need component. Cadre were the building blocks of the
to attack as central to their strategy.27 revolution, the mechanism by which the Com-
What effect did all of this have on the security munists spread their presence throughout South
situation? Numbers alone do not make for success- Vietnam. Cadre did not wear uniforms, yet they
ful pacification, but they are a big step in the right were as crucial to the armed struggle as any AK-
direction. By placing so much manpower in the vil- toting guerrilla. The cadre spread the VCI from the
lages, the allies were able to confront the guerrillas regional level down to almost every village and
consistently, resulting in significant gains by 1970. hamlet in South Vietnam. A preferred tactic was
Although pacification statistics are complicated to kill local government officials as a warning for
and often misleading, they do indicate that CORDS others not to come back.
affected the insurgency. For example, by early 1970, Indeed, the VC’s early success was due to the
93 percent of South Vietnamese lived in “relatively VCI cadre, which by 1967 numbered somewhere
secure” villages, an increase of almost 20 percent between 70,000 and 100,000 throughout South
from the middle of 1968, the year marred by the Vietnam. The VCI was a simple organization. Vir-
Tet Offensive.28 tually every village had a cell made up of a Com-
munist Party secretary; a finance and supply unit;
The Phoenix Program and information and culture, social welfare, and
Within CORDS were scores of programs designed proselytizing sections to gain recruits from among
to enhance South Vietnamese influence in the coun- the civilian population. They answered up a chain
tryside, but security remained paramount. At the root of command, with village cadre answering to the
of pacification’s success or failure was its ability district, then to the province, and finally to a series
to counter the insurgents’ grip on the population. of regional commands which, in turn, took orders
Military operations were designed to keep enemy from Hanoi.
main forces and guerrillas as far from the popula- The Communists consolidated their influence in
tion as possible, but the Communist presence in the the countryside by using a carrot-and-stick approach.
The VCI provided medical treatment,
education, and justice—along with
heavy doses of propaganda—backed
by threats from VC guerrillas. The VC
waged an effective terror campaign
aimed at selected village officials and
authority figures to convince fence-sit-
ters that support for the revolution was
the best course. In short, the VCI was
Texas Tech Vietnam Virtual Archive
● Establishment of files and dossiers on suspects, generally the problem with CIA assets, PRUs were
and placing of emphasis on “neutralizing” (captur- not numerous enough to deal effectively with the
ing, converting, or killing) members of the VCI. VCI. Never numbering more than 4,000 men nation-
● Institution of rules by which suspected VCI wide, the PRU also had other paramilitary tasks to
could be tried and imprisoned. perform and so were not always available.32
● Emphasis on local militia and police rather DIOCCs. The district was the program’s basic
than the military as the main operational arm of building block, and the DIOCC was its nerve center.
the program.31 Each DIOCC was led by a Vietnamese Phung Hoang
This last aspect was crucial. While military forces chief, aided by an American Phoenix adviser. The
could be used to attack the VCI, they had other press- adviser had no authority to order operations; he could
ing responsibilities, and anti-infrastructure opera- only advise and call on U.S. military support. The
tions would always be on the back burner. So the DIOCC was answerable to the Vietnamese district
program concentrated on existing forces that could chief, who in turn reported to the province chief.
be tailored to seek out the VCI, the most important DIOCC personnel compiled intelligence on VCI
of these being the RF/PF militia, the National Police, in their district and made blacklists with data on
and Provincial Reconnaissance Units (PRU). VCI members. If possible, the DIOCC sought out a
Recruited locally, the RF/PF were ideally suited suspect’s location and planned an operation to capture
to anti-VCI operations because they lived in the him (or her). Once captured, the VCI was taken to the
villages. In addition to providing security against DIOCC and interrogated, then sent to the province
marauding VC guerrillas, the RF/PF reacted to intel- headquarters for further interrogation and trial.33
ligence sent from the DIOCC. The National Police Because Phoenix was decentralized, the programs
had two units specially tailored to VCI operations: differed from district to district, and some worked
the intelligence-gathering Police Special Branch and better than others. Many DIOCCs did little work,
the paramilitary National Police Field Force. For taking months to establish even the most basic
the most part, however, the police did not perform blacklists. In many cases the Phung Hoang chief was
well, although there were exceptions. PRUs, which an incompetent bureaucrat who used his position to
were recruited and trained by the CIA, were the best enrich himself. Phoenix tried to address this problem
action arm available to Phoenix. However, as was by establishing monthly neutralization quotas, but
Misconceptions about
Phoenix
pacification program.39
Although the anti-infrastructure pro-
gram did not crush the VCI, in combina-
tion with other pacification programs it
probably did hinder insurgent progress.
In Vietnam, with its blend of guerrilla
and main-force war, this was not enough
RF/PF adviser with counterpart in Binh Duong Province, 1969.
to prevail, but it seems clear that without
Phoenix, pacification would have fared
senior leaders eluded capture. In fact, in 1968, far worse. Communist accounts after the war bear this
before the VCI adapted to aggressive pursuit by out. In Vietnam: A History, Stanley Karnow quotes
Phoenix, about 13 percent of neutralizations were the North Vietnamese deputy commander in South
district and higher level cadre. In 1970 and 1971, Vietnam, General Tran Do, as saying that Phoenix was
that figure dropped to about 3 percent.37 The drop, “extremely destructive.”40 Former Viet Cong Minister
however, masks two positive results: Thanks to of Justice Truong Nhu Tang wrote in his memoirs that
Phoenix, ranking VC had been forced to move to “Phoenix was dangerously effective” and that in Hau
safer areas, thereby removing themselves from the Nghia Province west of Saigon, “the Front Infrastruc-
“sea of the people (which did not negate their abil- ture was virtually eliminated.”41 Nguyen Co Thach,
ity to control village populations, but did make the who became the Vietnamese foreign minister after
job more difficult); and by attacking mid level Viet the war, claimed that “[w]e had many weaknesses
Cong, Phoenix actually severed the link between in the South because of Phoenix.”42
the population and the Party-level cadre calling the Clearly, the political infrastructure is the basic
shots—a serious blow to the VCI. building block of almost all insurgencies, and it
must be a high-priority target for the counterinsur-
Communist Testimony to gent from the very beginning. In Vietnam the allies
Phoenix’s Success faced an insurgency that emphasized political and
In the end, attacking the VCI was not as difficult
military options in equal measure, but before the Tet
as it might seem. The VCI was a secret organiza-
Offensive weakened the Communists sufficiently
tion, but to be effective in the villages it had to stay
to allow concentration on both main-force warfare
among the population, which made it vulnerable.
and pacification, it was difficult to place sufficient
Guerrillas could melt into the bush; in contrast, the
emphasis on anti-infrastructure operations. Yet in
VCI had to maintain contact with the people.
just 2 years—between 1968 and 1970—the Phoenix
Although they were not completely successful,
anti-infrastructure operations were a serious prob- program made significant progress against the VCI.
lem for the enemy, and he took drastic steps to limit What might have happened had the Americans and
the damage. By 1970, Communist plans repeatedly South Vietnamese begun it in 1960, when the Viet
emphasized attacking the government’s pacification Cong were much weaker?
program and specifically targeted Phoenix officials.38 Assessing Pacification in
District and village officials became targets of VC Vietnam
assassination and terror as the Communists sought to Historian Richard A. Hunt characterizes the
reassert control over areas lost in 1969 and 1970. Iron- achievements of CORDS and the pacification
NOTES
1. Thomas C. Thayer, How to Analyze a War Without Fronts: Vietnam, 1965-72 primary missions in 1969-1970 was to “frustrate the enemy’s pacification plan.” See
(Washington, DC: Defense Research Projects Agency, 1975), 788-89. Su Doan 9 [9th Division] (Hanoi: Nha Xuat Ban Quan Doi Nhan Dan [People’s Army
2. William C. Westmoreland, A Soldier Reports (New York: Doubleday & Co., Publishing House], 1990), 100.
1976), 175. 28. Hamlet Evaluation Survey (HES) Annual Statistical Analysis, 1968-71, Histo-
3. For an important source from the Communist perspective, see Merle L. Prib- rians files, CMH, Fort McNair, Washington, D.C.
benow, trans., Victory in Vietnam: The Official History of the People’s Army of Vietnam, 29. The Intelligence Coordination and Exploitation Program (ICEX) was established
1954-1975 (Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 2002). by MACV Directive 381-41, “Military Intelligence: Coordination and Exploitation for
4. Message, Westmoreland Military Advisory Command 0117 to BG James Lawton Attack on the VC Infrastructure; Short Title: ICEX,” 9 July 1967, Historians files, CMH,
Collins, Jr., Washington, 7 January 1966, Westmoreland files, U.S. Army Center of Fort McNair, Washington, D.C. For a detailed study of ICEX, see Ralph W. Johnson,
Military History (CMH), Fort McNair, Washington, D.C. “Phoenix/Phung Hoang: A Study of Wartime Intelligence Management” (Ph.D. diss,
5. Ibid. The American University, 1985).
6. Pribbenow, 237. 30. Dale Andrade, Ashes to Ashes: The Phoenix Program and the Vietnam War
7. Central Office for South Vietnam (COSVN) Resolution 9, 4, 19. English transla- (Lexington, MA: Lexington Books, 1990), Appen. A-2, “Resource Allocations.”
tion available at the Texas Tech Virtual Vietnam Archive, item no. 4080418002. 31. Ibid., 87-91.
8. Ibid. 32. Data on the Provincial Reconnaissance Units (PRU) is scarce, but some
9. Ibid. useful documents exist. For general information see MACV “Fact Sheet: Provincial
10. The leading source taking the viewpoint that General Creighton Abrams had Reconnaissance Units (PRU), RVN,” 16 October 1969. For neutralization statistics
the only correct strategy is Lewis Sorley, A Better War: The Unexamined Victories see Thayer, A Systems Analysis View of the Vietnam War, 1965-1972, 10 (publishing
and Final Tragedy of America’s Last Years in Vietnam (New York: Harcourt, Brace information unavailable), 91.
and Co., 1999). 33. Deputy Undersecretary of the Army John Siena to Secretary of Defense Melvin
11. Lyndon B. Johnson to Henry Cabot Lodge, 28 July 1965, Historians files, CMH, Laird, Subject: Memorandum of Army Vietnam Trip, 28 August 1969, Historians files,
Fort McNair, Washington, D.C. CMH, Fort McNair, Washington, D.C.
12. Robert S. McNamara, quoted in Military Advisory Command Vietnam Command 34. Ibid., 61; Military Advisory Command CORDS-PSD, “Fact Sheet: Legal
History, 1965, 229, Historians files, CMH, Fort McNair, Washington, D.C. Processing of VCI Detainees,” 8 June 1970, 3, Historians’ files, CMH, Fort McNair,
13. Thomas W. Scoville, Reorganizing for Pacification Support (Washington, DC: Washington, D.C.
CMH, 1991), 18-19. 35. Andrade, appen. A-1, “Phoenix/Phung Hoang Neutralization Results.”
14. National Security Action Memorandum 343 of 28 March 1966 charged Robert 36. Phuong Hoang 1970 End of Year Report, 11 May 1971, 4-5, Historians’ files,
W. Komer with assuring “that adequate plans are prepared and coordinated covering all CMH, Fort McNair, Washington, D.C.
aspects [of pacification]. [Komer] will also assure that the Rural Construction/Pacifica- 37. MACCORDS-PSD, “Fact Sheet,” 2.
tion Program is properly coordinated with the programs for combat force employment 38. By mid-1969, U.S. Army division operational reports contained numerous
and military operations.” references to captured enemy plans that aimed to “disrupt pacification,” in particular
15. Memorandum from Komer to John T. McNaughton, Assistant Secretary for the Regional Forces/Popular Forces (RF/PF) and Phoenix programs, because these
International Security Affairs, Department of Defense, “Giving A New Thrust to Paci- were a constant threat to Communist domination in the villages. See also memoran-
fication: Analysis, Concept, and Management,” 7 August 1967. dum to William Colby from Wilbur Wilson, Deputy for CORDS, Subject: Motivation
16. Westmoreland Historical Briefing, 17 October 1966, cited in Scoville, 38. of [Government of Vietnam] GVN Leadership in the Phung Hoang Program, 24 June
17. Komer, The Organization and Management of the New Model Pacification 1971, Historians files, CMH, Fort McNair, Washington, D.C.
Program, 1966-1969 (Santa Monica, California: RAND Corporation, 1970), 38. 39. “Military Activity Plan of Sub-Region 5: July-September 1970, no. 25/KH,”
18. Memorandum from Lyndon B. Johnson to Komer, Subject: Second Komer from captured document log no. 09-1366-70, 3, Historians files, CMH, Fort McNair,
Trip to Vietnam, 23-29 June 1966, 1 July 1966, 6, Historians files, CMH, Fort McNair, Washington, D.C.
Washington, D.C. 40. Stanley Karnow, Vietnam: A History (New York: The Viking Press, 1983), 602.
19. Johnson to Komer, National Security Action Memorandum 362, Responsibility 41. Truong Nhu Tang, A Viet Cong Memoir: An Inside Account of the Vietnam War
for U.S. Role in Pacification (Revolutionary Development), on-line at <http://www.lbjlib. and Its Aftermath (New York: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1985), 268.
utexas.edu/johnson/archives.hom/NSAMs/nsam362.asp>, accessed 27 March 2006. 42. Nguyen Co Thach, cited in Mark Moyar, Phoenix and the Birds of Prey: The
20. For more detail on the CORDS organization, see Scoville, Reorganizing for CIA’s Secret Campaign to Destroy the Viet Cong (Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute
Pacification Support, 62-68. Press, 1997), 246.
21. Ibid., 72. 43. Hunt, 252.
22. Ibid., 76. 44. Colby, Lost Victory: A Firsthand Account of America’s Sixteen-Year Involve-
23. Richard A. Hunt, Pacification: The American Struggle for Vietnam’s Hearts ment in Vietnam (Chicago: Contemporary Books, 1989); Komer, Bureacracy Does Its
and Minds (Boulder: Westview Press, 1995), 93. Thing: Institutional Constraints on U.S.-GVN Performance in Vietnam, (Santa Monica:
24. The CORDS organization in IV Corps was different. Because there were Rand, R-967-ARPA, 1972); Bruce Palmer, Jr., The 25-Year War: America’s Military
fewer U.S. forces in the Mekong Delta than in the other corps areas, IV Corps had Role in Vietnam (New York: Touchstone, 1984). Taking the opposite stance from Colby,
no U.S. three-star general. Komer, and Palmer are William Duiker, The Communist Road to Power in Vietnam
25. These figures have been compiled by the authors from several sources. For (Boulder: Westview Press, 1981), and William S. Turley, The Second Indochina War
statistics on 1969-70, see Jeffrey J. Clarke, Advice and Support: The Final Years, (New York: Mentor, 1987), among others.
1965-1973 (Washington, DC: CMH, 1988), 373. 45. Military History Institute of Vietnam, Victory in Vietnam: The Official History
26. Thayer, 884-87. of the People’s Army of Vietnam, 1954-1975, trans. Merele L. Pribbenow (Lawrence:
27. The history of the North Vietnamese 9th Division points out that one of its University Press of Kansas, 2002), 283; Hunt, 255.
Dale Andrade is a senior historian at the U.S. Army Center of Military History in Washington, D.C., where he is writing the
official volume on U.S. Army combat operations in Vietnam between 1969 and 1973. He is the author of three books on the
Vietnam War: Ashes to Ashes: The Phoenix Program and the Vietnam War (Lexington Books, 1990); Spies and Commandos:
How America Lost the Secret War in North Vietnam (University Press of Kansas, 2000), with co-author Kenneth Conboy; and
America’s Last Vietnam Battle: Halting Hanoi’s 1972 Easter Offensive (University Press of Kansas, 2001).
Lieutenant Colonel James H. Willbanks, U.S. Army, Retired, is Director of the Department of Military History, U.S. Army Com-
mand and General Staff College. He received a B.A from Texas A&M University, an M.A. and a Ph.D. from the University of
Kansas, and is a graduate of the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College and the School of Advanced Military Studies.
He served in various command and staff positions in the continental United States, Panama, Japan, and Germany, and was an
adviser in Vietnam to a South Vietnamese Army infantry regiment during the 1972 North Vietnamese Easter Offensive. He is
the author of Abandoning Vietnam (University Press of Kansas, 2004), The Battle of An Loc (Indiana University Press, 2005),
and a forthcoming book on the 1968 Tet Offensive to be published by Columbia University Press.