ARVN: 1968 – 1975
by Bill Laurie
1
RVNAF, the Republic of Viet Nam Armed Forces, underwent a significant
change, both qualitatively and quantitatively, between 1968 and 1975. It was a
change that went unnoticed by the news media and remains generally unknown
to the American public, and is inadequately identified and described in many
would-be "history"books, in part because the nature and extent of change
could not readily be foreseen or predicted based on RVNAF performance and
capabilities up to 1968. None of this is to deny serious problems existed, or
that corruption and poor leadership did not continue to plague RVNAF's ability
to defend the Republic of Viet Nam, yet to a degree these problems were being
addressed and the positive aspects of RVNAF cannot be excluded from honest
history.
I experienced this personally, arriving in Viet Nam in late 1971, serving
one year with MACV, and returning for two more years, 1973-1975, with the
Defense Attache Office. Originally scheduled and trained to serve as an
advisor, I attended Infantry Officer Basic at Ft. Benning, Georgia; Combat
Tactical Intelligence and Southeast Asia Orientation at Ft. Holabird, Maryland;
and Viet Namese Language School at Ft. Bliss, Texas. Upon arriving in Viet
Nam I was told advisory slots were being phased out and instead I was assigned
to MACV J-2 as an intelligence analyst, first covering Cambodia and then
concentrating on Military Region IV, covering the entire Mekong Delta. This job
expanded informally and encompassed liaison work with RVNAF staff, US
advisory teams, GVN provinces, and RVNAF units in the Delta. During these
three years I was, at one time or another, in 18 of the former RVN's 44
provinces, dealing with not only US and RVNAF elements but also with the
Australians, USAID, and the CIA. I sat in on very high level briefings at MACV
HQ as well as the RVN JGS, while the next week I might be in a Kien Phong rice
paddy with PF troops, or flying across Dinh Tuong province in an ARVN Huey,
or at Tra Cu Ranger Base along the Vam Co Dong River. Of great importance
was the ability to speak Viet Namese, and within one month after arriving in
Viet Nam it was clearly apparent that nothing I'd heard in the US, either the
"news reports"or rather silly debates on college campuses, described what I
experienced and encountered. In sum, I asked myself "If all those people in the
2
U.S. are talking about Viet Nam, then where am I?" My off-duty hours were
spent entirely within a Viet Namese dimension of reality. Whether in Saigon, or
Cao Lanh, or Rach Gia, I frequented the "quan nho,"the card-table soup and
coffee stands, eagerly listening to Viet Namese people and troops, asking
questions, and learning far, far more than I'd ever learned in the States, or even
knew there was to be learned. My education did not end in 1975. Since then I
have read cubic feet of declassified documents and hundreds of books (to
include works in Viet Namese), interviewed scores upon scores of Southeast
Asia- and US-born veterans of the war, and prowled the internet's hundreds of
Viet Nam and Southeast Asia websites. There remains much, much more to
Viet Nam, Laos, Cambodia and Thailand than is suspected by the American
public, and conclusions presenting themselves do not conform to what most
people think they know.
Yes, there were serious problems with corruption. Yes, there were
examples of inept leadership. Still, no one told me, or even suggested, that my
initial exposure to the ARVN 9th Infantry Division would reveal the professional
and highly competent performance witnessed at a division FDC (Fire Direction
Center for allocation of supporting artillery fire). Nor had anyone told me that
the 7th ARVN Infantry Division, forever condemned by its lackluster
performance at Ap Bac, years earlier, had evolved into a highly effective unit
under the leadership of General Nguyen Khoa Nam, a man of impeccable
integrity and tactical skills who remains unknown to the American public, while
being justly revered by the Viet Namese people. Nor did any suggest it would
even be possible for Hau Nghia Province's RF forces, the provincial militia, to
thoroughly humiliate not one but three NVA regular regiments during Hanoi's
1972 Offensive, systematically chewing up and spitting out attacking enemy
forces that could have feasibly changed the course of history during this
period.1 The RF did not have the artillery and air support available to regular
ARVN (to include Airborne and Rangers) and Marine units, and relied heavily on
basic hard-ball infantry skills. Had the NVA broken through they would have
posed an immediate and direct threat to Saigon, a mere 25 miles away, forcing
ARVN 21st Division forces to pull back from QL 13, and thereby allow NVA
forces to direct all their attention to An Loc. As has been noted by James H.
3
Willbanks(2) in his excellent work, the 21st division, while not succeeding in
breaking through to besieged An Loc, did force the NVA to divert a division away
from An Loc, which conceivably might otherwise have fallen, with dire
consequences.
In sum, RVNAF in its entirety, and often mistakenly referred to as simply
"ARVN,"was capable of far more than I had learned before going to Viet Nam,
and far more than was conveyed to the American people. Then...and now. Going back to the period discussed in this presentation, it is acknowledged that RVNAF had serious problems. This is obvious. Were this
not so, U.S., Australian, South Korean, Thai and New Zealand combat units
would not have been required. Still, there were indications of what well-led,
properly armed and equipped RVNAF forces were capable of. In 1966 the 37th
ARVN Ranger battalion decimated an NVA regiment three times its size at
Thach Tru, receiving a Presidential Unit Citation from Lyndon Johnson for its
feat. An American advisor to the 37th, Capt. Bobby Jackson, described his
counterpart, company commander Capt. Nguyen Van Chinh, as being "utterly
fearless."3 The 2nd Marine, or Thuy Quan Luc Chien, Battalion, whose
shoulder patch depicted a "Trau Dien,"a "Crazy Buffalo,"had likewise bullied
VC and NVA units, demonstrating the appropriateness of their unit symbol (all
the more meaningful for those who've encountered an enraged water buffalo).
Their accomplishments were unreported in the US news media and are ignored
in later day "histories."
By 1968, and in the aftermath of Hanoi's failed '68 strategic counter-
offensive, it was clear to US decision makers that "Viet Namization"must be
accelerated, which many people falsely assume is the demarcation between a
period when RVNAF wasn't fighting, and now would begin to fight. This
overlooks the fact that RVNAF monthly combat fatalities greatly exceeded those
of combined allied forces for the entire war. RVNAF was finally supplied with
modern weapons, replacing the WW II equipment most had been using (by early
1968 only 5% of RVNAF were using the M-16 rifle), generally inferior to VC/NVA
weaponry. Concurrently, RVNAF strength increased the board:
4
1968 1972
Regular Forces
Army 380,000 410,000 Plus 30,000/7.9%
Air Force 19,000 50,000 Plus 31,000/163%
Navy 19,000 42,000 Plus 23,000/110%
Marines 9,000 14,000 Plus 5,000/56%
Total Regular 427,000 516,000 Plus 89,000/21%
RF/PF Militia*
RF 220,000 284,000 Plus 64,000/29%
PF 173,000 248,000 Plus75,000/43%
Total 393,000 532,000 Plus 139,000/35%
Overall Total 820,000 1,048,000 Plus 228,000/28%
(4)
*The term "militia"is often used yet may wrongly suggest the final evolution of
these elements took the form of part-time irregulars. Sometimes referred to as
"territorials,"the RF(Regional Forces, or Dia Phuong Quan) and PF(Popular
Forces, or Nghia Quan) were full time military units, typically limited to their
home province, or district, respectively.
As can be seen, "ARVN"-the Republic of Viet Nam ARMY, was only one
component-56%-of the total armed forces. There were yet other elements, to
include the National Field Force Police, People's Self Defense Force/Nhan Dan
Tu Ve (PSDF), and Rural Developemt (RD) teams. While the latter were not
considered full-time combat troops, and the PSDF often ridiculed, they were an
impediment to the VC/NVA. In one case, not known to be documented, an RD
cadre team turned back a VC battalion in Vinh Long province, its members
skilled in calling in province artillery.5 While the PSDF were too young, too old,
or too disabled to join the regular military, serving only as a village hamlet
defense force against local VC tax, recruiting, or agitprop teams, they were
another factor the local communists had to deal with, and one that had not
been in place before 1968, when local VC could freely enter hamlets at night.
Sometimes the PSDF were ineffectual, and sometimes they were propagandized
into joining the VC (6), yet at other times:
5
"...they (two VC) were trying to abduct a member of the PSDF when
another PSDF appeared on the scene and shot both of them dead with an
M-1. An AK-47 and 9mm Chicom pistol were captured."
And... "Both Prey Vang and Tahou hamlets received small arms fire and B-40s
tonight. The local PSDF managed to drive off two light ground probes."(7)
It was also an 18-year-old PSDF member who knocked out the first of many
tanks destroyed at An Loc in the 1972 siege. (8)
Hanoi was not pleased:
"They [RVNAF] strengthened puppet [sic] forces, consolidated the puppet
[sic] government, and established an outpost network and People's Self
Defense Force organizations in many villages. They provided more
technical equipment for, and increased mobility of, puppet [sic] forces,
establishing blocking lines, and created a new defensive and oppressive
system in densely populated areas. As a result, they caused many
difficulties and inflicted losses on friendly [VC] forces."9
This would not and could not have happened prior to 1968's creation and
arming of PSDF with cast-off WWII weapons passed down from main force
RVNAF elements. Likewise, the RF/PF, with assistance of US Mobile Advisory Teams
(MATs), belatedly employed in 1968 (10), and armed with better weapons, began making progress, as witnessed in 1970 by MAT member David Donovan during a classic infantry
assault:
"We had just gotten past the major infestation of booby traps when we
began to receive fire from a tree line in front of us. Water spouted up
around us, bullets whined overhead, and we heard the stuttered popping
of light small arms fire. The men reacted well now, not like the early
days when getting any reaction from them under fire was next to
impossible. Sergeant Abney took the rear of the column and swung
around to the right, using it as a maneuver element while those of us in
the front returned fire. When Abney's troops got to a good protected
position they stopped and began firing themselves. Under the cover of
their fire we moved ahead to yet another position. In this back-and-forth
stepwise manner Abney's and my group finally got to the tree line and
into the direct assault. Three men in the element I was with had been
hit, I didn't know how badly, but everyone kept moving up. We had done
well."11
6
Donovan's experience was not unique. Advisor John Cook recalled his
optimism of 1970:
"We [Cook and his Viet Namese counterparts] were riding high, feeling
almost indestructible. The morale and aggressiveness in the district was
extremely high, causing us to pursue the enemy with almost reckless
abandonment."12
Performance of this caliber was not universal. There were units that did
not respond to changing times and remained plagued by poor leadership,
complete absence of aggressive patrolling and tactics, and instances in which
American advisors may have been killed, or threatened by, RF/PF counterparts
with whom they did not get along.13 Other American advisors did not encounter
these unpleasantries but were unimpressed with their advisee charges. Still,
accounts of favorable experiences and observations abound, yet are virtually
absent from the national discussion and common American perceptions, or
what is taught in our schools.
Improvement, or outright excellence, was not limited to the territorial
forces, and ARVN infantry divisions-admittedly not all-demonstrated aggressive
tactical brilliance. Quang Tri Pacification advisor Richard Stevens, who'd
served a prior tour in the Marines, was amazed at the performance of ARVN 1st
Division elements successfully attacking an NVA rocket launch site:
"I was totally impressed and just dazzled actually, by the way they
operated and by their daring in doings things. ... This was the thirteenth
operation like this that this guy [a battalion XO] had led. You're talking
about people that are total experts at what they're doing and who have
done so many hair-raising things already and are still doing it. ... This
regiment's advisors told me all the time I went there that...you're
working with the best now. There's nothing we can tell these guys about
anything. We're [the advisors] just fire support people. But as far as
knowing how to operate, they're the ones that teach us.' We had both
Australian and American advisors; they all said the same thing."14
To the south, in MR IV's Dinh Tuong Province, the 7th ARVN division also
performed flawlessly, as testified by advisors and US "slick"pilots who flew 7th
division troops on combat assaults. While the 7th, perhaps by virtue of the Ap
Bac debacle of 1963, was termed by some a "search and avoid"unit, those
working directly with the 7th have nothing but praise and admiration for the
7 7th's aggressiveness and tactical expertise. A former NVA infiltrator testified to the ARVN 7th's prowess:
"....the liberated zone was shrinking. ... I spent more and more time
moving around, trying to stay away from ARVN operations.
"In Ben Tre [AKA Kien Hoa Province] it was mainly the ARVN 7th
division that was causing problems. Most of the division was recruited
from the Delta so they knew the whole area. They were just as familiar
with it as we were."15
Conditions became even worse as newly arrived NVA fillers to "VC"units did not
know the area at all and were ill-equipped to wage the tree-line warfare of the
northern delta. One POW indicated he was captured shortly after arriving when
he and others were assigned to ambush a 7th division sweep the following day.
In place before dawn, the would-be ambushers were hit from behind by 7th
division flank elements ahead of the main body.16
The results of this became increasingly evident between 1968 and 1971,
a period during which US troop strength was reduced by more than half, and
decline in VC/NVA offensive operations was clear and distinct:
1968 1972 1968-1972 Change
US Forces 537,000 224,000 Down 312,000/58%
VC/NVA Bn Atks 126 2 Down 124/98%
Small Scale Atks 3,795 2,242 Down 1,553/41%
Terrorist Atks 32,362 22,700 Down 9,662/30%
Assassinations 5,389* 3,573 Down 1,816/34%
Abductions 8,759** 5,006 Down 2,573/43%
Percentage Secure 47 84 Up 37/56% Hamlets
Rice Growing Area 2,296 2,522 Up 226/9.8% (1,000 Hectares)
VN Civilians Admitted to Hospital For War-Related Injuries(% total Population) 88,149 39,402 Down 48,474/55%
VC/NVA Strength 250,300 197,700 Down 52,600/21%
8
*Excludes assassination victims at Hue
**Few abductees ever returned. They are assumed to have been killed.
The disparity of change between VC/NVA strength and offensive actions is
illustrative:
Percentage Drop, 1968-1971
VC/NVA Bn. Sized Attacks 98%
Abductions 43%
Small Scale Attacks 41%
Assassinations 34%
Terrorism 30%
VC/NVA Strength 21%
The percentage decline in all forms of VC/NVA offensive operations declined
more than did overall strength figures, indicating a decrease in overall military
capabilities below that expected from a 21% troop strength drop. This occurred
while American troop strength declined 58%. Not only were there fewer
VC/NVA in country but they less capable of initiating offensive operations.
Little doubt exists that many Viet Nam statistics were of questionable
veracity, and the HES rating (secure hamlets) in particular is frequently and
justifiably damned for inaccuracies, yet the trend line is clear and there is no
body of evidence, statistical or anecdotal, suggesting anything but a precipitous
decline in VC/NVA fortunes between 1968 and 1971. While the VC, as distinct
from the NVA, were not completely destroyed, and pockets of strong VC
influence and control remained in such provinces as Chuong Thien, Dinh
Tuong, Quang Nam and Quang Ngai, the indigenous VC were no longer a
strategic force and had it not been for massive NVA infiltration and provision of
modern weaponry, the war were have gradually expended itself. Even those VC
units and areas that remained were entirely dependent on the NVA for their
survival. "Anti-war"writer Frances FitzGerald, author of Fire in the Lake
(ironically enough thoroughly lambasted by both Hanoi chief ideologue Nguyen
Khac Vien and NLF/Hanoi supporter Ngo Vinh Long) acknowledged survival
odds for both VC and RVNAF troops, in 1966 was 50-50, yet by 1969 VC
survival odds plummeted to 10% while an RVNAF soldier had a 90% survival
chance.18 Nguyen Van Thanh, after 23 years as a Viet Cong, defected in 1970,
viewing the NLF cause as hopeless, citing improved RVNAF operations,
9
expansion of district PF and PSDF programs, and the GVN's impending land
reform program as factors he could no longer deal with.19 Stanley Karnow
states forthrightly in his profoundly over-rated book, without ever having
explained how this all came about, that by 1971 "...the Viet Cong alone was no
match for the Saigon government army."20
Don Colin spent years in Viet Nam and was widely renowned for his
gruff, excessively blunt rejection of anything he viewed as, and vociferously
damned, as utter bullsh-t. He suffered through the frustrating difficulties,
false-starts, and the very same problems viewed as constant unchanging
universals, if not harbingers of doom. Yet by 1971 he saw the cumulative
results materialize in the delta:
"Thirty months ago the number of good leaders in MR IV could be
measured on one hand. Even the corps commander, while he was a
good, honest and fairly capable leader, was shy, unimaginative and not
capable of stirring his subordinates to aggressive and positive activity.
Division commanders were largely incompetent and most Province chiefs
were largely incompetent and corrupt. Subordinate commanders not
only mirrored but in most case magnified these faults. Now, the overall
level of competence, honesty and dedication has risen to levels I would
previously have thought unimaginable. ... This particular change has
made me more sanguine regarding the ultimate ability of the Government
to fully control Viet Nam and establish a stable government."21
Then came Hanoi's 1972 offensive, a conventional blitzkrieg
characterized by modern heavy weapons and introduction of such lethal devices
as the SA-7 Grail anti-aircraft missile, the AT-3 wire-guided Sagger missile, and
a veritable armada of T-54 tanks supported by several hundred 122mm and
130mm artillery pieces, superior to anything and everything in the US-supplied
RVNAF artillery arsenal. RVNAF took some heavy hits; it appeared at times as
if the end might be near and collapse imminent, yet RVNAF took a standing 8
count, recovered and blunted the heaviest offensive to date in Viet Nam. None
other than America's preeminent VN scholar, Douglas Pike, declared Hanoi's
invasion failed because "...the South Viet Namese outfought the invaders from
the North."22 Many commentators, to include Gen. Ngo Quang Truong, cite
American air power as a decisive factor, and it was pivotal. Yet the implication
that RVNAF would not or could not fight without US airpower omits
10
consideration of two key points. First, US troops would have expected, and
been entitled to, the exact same air power that was used to support RVNAF.
Secondly, and this point is seldom recognized: US airpower was a
compensatory factor countering both superior NVA armor and, most
significantly, superior artillery, the accurate 122mm and 130mm guns
delivering massive destruction at ranges up to 19 miles. The US did not provide
its ally, the Republic of Viet Nam, with as good an arsenal, especially in the
realm of artillery, as the Soviets and Chinese Communist provided Hanoi.
Hanoi had hundreds of 122mm and 130mm guns; RVNAF had no artillery
sufficient to fire counter-battery, and had only two dozen or so 175mm guns,
which are not as accurate as and have a lower cyclic rate of fire than 122s and
130s. Not even reinforced bunkers can withstand 130mm rounds with delayed
fuses. Finally, again addressing the subject of airpower, RVN's own air force
performed admirably during the 1972 battles, yet remain ignored by American
commentators. An American FAC admired the VNAF A-37 pilots with whom he
conducted an air strike against NVA positions:
"His dive took him down within range of automatic weapons and sure
enough as I saw several lines of tracer ammo arcing toward Pepper lead, I
shouted a warning. I saw him release his bombs at the very low altitude
and score a perfect hit on the wall. In their succeeding passes, the VNAF
pilots scored perfect hits each time and each time they were met by a hail
of ground fire. ...ground fire [against the aircraft] was extremely
intensive. The North Viet Namese seemed to know their antagonists were
South Viet Namese."
"I fully expected the A-37s to be shot down but both delivered all
their ordnance unscathed. The two VNAF pilots put on quite a show and
I admired their bravery if not their good sense."23
This was not an isolated incident, as attested by another American observer:
"VNAF came into its own during the 1972 offensive. ... In the defense of
Kontum the VNAF has been magnificent, absolutely magnificent."24
RVNAF took Hanoi's best shot in 1972, a shot far exceeding '68 Tet battles in
terms of troop numbers and firepower. Roughly 150,000 NVA were believed to
have been committed in the offensive's first phase, and another 50,000
deployed as the battles ensued. Tet '68 on the other hand, saw 84,000 VC/NVA
committed, with limited artillery and armor (excepting MR I).
11
RVNAF continued to do reasonably well after the fraudulent Paris "Peace"
Accords were signed and promptly violated. By late September 1973 an
RVNAF task force had driven the 1st NVA division out its Seven Mountains
redoubt and inflicted such heavy casualties that the 1st was disbanded, its
surviving members parceled out to other units. A few months later the ARVN
7th division launched a major operation to drive NVA units out their Tri Phap
base area in the Dinh Tuong-Kien Tuong-Kien Phong tri-border area, inflicting
heavy casualties. Tri Phap had never been penetrated throughout the war and
was characterized by hardened defensive positions; the defeat was so
humiliating that communist authorities were cautioned to hide this defeat from
their troops lest they become demoralized.25 The Polish and Hungarian
delegates to the impotent ICCS (International Commission for Control and
Supervision (of the "cease fire")) doubled as spies for the Hanoi's communists.
One of their 1973 reports stated no VC units (what few there were) were equal
to RVNAF regulars, and even the NVA's best weren't comparable to RVNAF's
Airborne or Marines.26
By mid-1974 however US aid cutbacks began to slowly strangle RVNAF,
and it would only get worse from thereon out. By 1975 the Available Supply
Rates (ASR) for artillery rounds had plummeted to unacceptable low levels (per
tube, per day):
1972 1975
105mm 180 10 Down 170/94%
155mm 150 5 Down 145/97%
175mm 30 3 Down 27/90% (27)
Everything was cut to the bone, and into the marrow. Some infantry troops
were provided a basic load of 60 M-16 rounds, per week. Some units forbid
troops from firing M-16s on full automatic. Infantry units in contact were
sometimes limited to two artillery rounds on call unless being overrun. Lack of
spare parts forced mothballing of tanks, river patrol boats, and aircraft. Worse
yet, RVNAF troops and their families suffered under an economy shredded by
50% inflation and a 25% unemployment rate. A US DAO study conducted in
1974 revealed 82% of RVNAF did not receive enough food to meet family
needs.28 Hunger and malnutrition eroded morale and combat capabilities. The
12
situation worsened in following months, and was sickening to watch, a veritable
death by a thousand cuts. A year later, when the GVN finally collapsed and, as
can be inferred from reading would-be history books, many Americans were
apparently surprised, wondering how everything could collapse overnight. The
more intriguing question is how RVNAF fought on as long as it did after mid-
1974, with inadequate weapons, equipment, munitions, fuel, medical supplies,
a constantly empty stomach, and an equally hungry family.
Once the dam broke and the rout began following Thieu's order to pull
out of the Highlands, chaos and panic took over, helped in part by confusing
and changing orders emanating from the Presidential palace. As ignominious
as the final collapse was, there were more than a few little "Alamos"as RVNAF
defenders fought to the end. The 18th infantry division's stand at Xuan Loc was
an epic battle, yet the 1st Airborne Brigade's presence and role in this very same
battle is virtually unknown. While MR II was collapsing and the end appeared
near, ARVN 7th division troops defeated an NVA attempt to cut QL 4, the sole
highway connecting the Mekong Delta to Saigon. On the final day, the "ngay
quoc han (day of national indignation),"an AC-119K gunship flown by Lts.
Thanh and Tran Van Hien circled Saigon providing fire support for the last
units engaged. Out of fuel and munitions, they landed to refuel and re-arm and
were told by their operations officer they need not take off again, all was lost.
Lt.s Thanh and Hien stood firm, received their fuel and munitions and,
accompanied by two A-1H Skyraiders piloted by a Major Truong Phung and a
Captain Phuc, resumed their desperate battle. Only Capt. Phuc survived,
strafing until he ran out of ammunition. Lt.s Thanh and Hien, along with Major
Truong Phung, all met their deaths, shot down by SA-7 missiles. They fought
to the very end.29
Overall, no military, as starved as RVNAF was, could have withstood the
NVA onslaught, as engorged as the NVA were with communist bloc artillery,
armor, weapons, fuel, troop transport trucks, and munitions. As it was, even
though RVNAF was gutted by aid cutbacks, it took everything the NVA had.
Approximately 400,000 communist forces, almost 90% NVA, were required to
defeat RVNAF. Hanoi had never before fielded a force as large and as modern
as it did in 1975. It had never pulled all its units out of Laos and Cambodia.
13
Quantitatively, the 400,000 is just under 5 times the VC/NVA forces committed
in Tet '68, yet qualitatively, enhanced by hundreds of long range artillery pieces,
hundreds of tanks, thousands of trucks, and a complete arsenal of modern
weaponry, the 1975 legions had more than 5 times the combat capability of Tet
'68 forces. Examining matters from another perspective, it can be safely
asserted that had the NVA been as enervated by supply cuts as was RVNAF, it
could never have launched much less sustained its final offensive. Superior fire
power proved decisive, hardly a novel development in military history. By the
end, RVNAF suffered a total of approximately 275,000 combat fatalities
(excluding assassinations), from a country whose average population during the
course of the war was about 17 million. Had the United States, with a
population average of 200 million during the same time frame, sustained
proportional fatalities, the death toll would have exceeded 3,200,000,
necessitating another 56 "Walls"to record the names of the fallen. This did not
go unnoticed by some observers. Sir Robert Thompson, while fully cognizant of
RVNAF's shortcomings and growth pains, concluded:
"They [RVNAF and the GVN] surmounted national and personal crises
which would have crushed most people and in spite of casualties which
would have appalled and probably collapsed the United States, they
could still maintain over one million men under arms after more than ten
years of war. The United Kingdom did just that, proportionately, in 1917
after three year of war but never again. The United States has never done
it (emphasis added)."30
Correspondent Peter Kann, far more enlightened than many of his journalistic
colleagues, also weighed in, following Saigon's defeat:
"South Viet Nam did manage to resist for a great many years and not
always with a great deal of American help. Few nations or societies that I
can think of would have struggled so long."31
Did "Viet Namization"work? Had RVNAF matured and grown into a
capable fighting force? It can be argued it did, only to be eviscerated by lethal
aid cutbacks. A 1974 survey of U.S. generals who served in Viet Nam asked
how well "Viet Namization"had succeeded. The answers:
1)ARVN is very acceptable fighting force 8%
14
2)ARVN is adequate and chances of their
holding in the future are better than fifty-fifty 57%
3)Doubtful ARVN will make it against a firm 25%
push in the future by VC/NVA
4)Other/No Answer 10% (32)
Thus, 65% of commanding generals gave RVNAF (in this case 'ARVN') a positive
vote, yet these responses may have a built-in downward bias. It is not known
how many of the U.S. generals served their tours in, say, 1966 or 1967, before
RVNAF had embarked on its greatest improvement. It is not revealed just what
role any of these officers served, with whom, and to what extent they were
intimately familiar with RVNAF as a whole, the increasing effectiveness of
RF/PF, etc. Nor was the question asked: "How would US troops have fared, in
1974-1975, under supply cutbacks suffered by RVNAF?" What can be said
with certainty is that RVNAF, from 1968 on, accomplished far more than is
generally known, that RVNAF units developed such proficiency that they were
able to withstand and eventually defeat, NVA invaders in 1972, often, in the
case of RF/PF, without massive artillery or tacair fire support. What also can
be said with certainty is that American understanding of this is abysmally and
disgustingly low.
Another very important factor that many commentators overlook and
remain ignorant of was the younger generation of RVNAF officers and NCOs
who were dedicated to the cause of a non-communist Viet Nam. They were
open, candid, rational and honest, acknowledging, for example, that the
Montagnards should not be treated as inferiors, that corruption need to be
attacked, and that the a new Viet Nam need be forged, freed from shackles of
the past. Many of these people were well-positioned to dodge the draft or
secure a safe non-combat position; they did neither, and could be found in
serving in high-risk combat positions, as volunteers. Their attitudes were
articulated by one young RVNAF officer:
"....the people my age joined the military [RVNAF] because we had an
ideal and we understood what it was to live in a free world and to live in
a Communist world. It was not like people said, that those who joined
the military were just conscripted into the service and didn't have any
15
ideas of their own. But the Americans never seemed to understand
that."33 Tran Quoc Buu was chairman of RVN's Labor Confederation, equivalent to
America's AFL-CIO. He had influence and could have arranged for his son to
find safe duty, much safer than his position as an ARVN infantry officer. In the
closing weeks of RVN's existence, while pounded with NVA artillery and
desperately short of munitions, Buu's son wrote him a letter:
"You must explain to them [Americans] the gravity of our situation. ...
They have to provide the military and technical aid they had promised. I
beg you Father, to intervene with them. Otherwise, we will be crushed
and defeated. We are not cowards. We have no fear to die. ... In any
event, I will hold my position and not withdraw."34
Tran Quoc Buu's son was killed in action. Dr. Phan Quang Dan was minister
of refugee resettlement, a former opponent of Ngo Dinh Diem, and known for
his honesty. He had the power and influence to keep his son, Phan Quang
Tuan, out of harm's way. Neither accepted this option and Tuan volunteered to
fly A-1E Skyraiders, used solely and expressed for close tactical air support.
After killing 7 NVA tanks along the DMZ during Hanoi's '72 offensive, Captain
Tuan was shot down and killed by NVA anti-aircraft fire.35 These individuals
were not unique. This author routinely encountered young gunship pilots,
rangers, marines, airborne, all volunteers for hazardous combat duty, and all
of whom were repulsed by the idea of a communist Viet Nam, and the
continuation of business-as-usual corruption emanating from Saigon. One of
the more poignant examples of dedication to the nationalist cause occurred
when cadet officers from RVN's Da Lat military academy prepared to make their
last stand, as witnessed by French correspondent Raoul Coutard who
encountered them moving out to block advancing NVA units:
"'You are going to be killed?'
'Yes,' answered a warrant officer.
'Why? It is finished.'
'Because we don't want communism.'
And, bravely, these young cadets in their beautiful new uniforms, their
well-polished shoes, went to get themselves killed."36
16
The Truong Thieu Sinh Quan, in Vung Tau, was a boarding school and military
academy for Viet Namese youth whose fathers died in the war. When the end
came, the 12- and 13-year boys sent the smaller children home, barricaded the
school, and engaged advancing NVA units:
"They kept fighting after everyone else surrendered! ... Many of them
were killed. And when the Communists came in the cadets fought them.
The Communists could not get into that academy."37
People of caliber were rising in RVNAF's ranks, and exigencies of the situation
forced greater reliance on promotion based on ability, not political reliability or
family connections.
The American news media failed, utterly and pathetically, in Viet Nam,
far, far more than the military forces, RVN, US and allied, they frequently
condemned with smug and presumptuous inferences. A survey of 9,604
broadcasts by NBC, CBS and ABC, from 1963 to 1977, clearly showed the
inadequacies of television reporting(sic). 67 (0.7% of total) dealt with RVNAF
training. 79 (0.8%) with Pacification. 256 (2.7%) with either RVN or Cambodia
government or military. A total of 392 broadcasts, comprising 2.7% of all
television news coverage of Viet Nam.38 There was nothing about the more than
200,000 VC/NVA hoi chanh vien(defectors), nothing about RVNAF forces that
fought well. Nothing about the famed "Kingbees,"RVN helicopter pilots who
saved lives of US Special Forces elements under fire along the Ho Chi Minh
Trail. Most if not all Americans recall the dramatic photo of the Chinese man
who stood before a tank in Tiananmen Square yet no one knows of RVN Marine
Sergeant Huynh Van Luom who stood on the Dong Ha Bridge and stopped an
NVA tank column, firing his LAW anti-tank missile:
"The spectacle of this 95-pound Marine lying in the direct path of a 40-
tank, which had no intention of stopping, was in one respect incredibly
mad. In another, more important respect, it was incredibly inspiring to a
pathetically thin defensive force and to many refugees, few of whom had
ever witnessed such an act of defiance and bravery. ...The extraordinary
bravery of this one South Viet Namese Marine had caused an armored
attack, which until that moment had been almost certain of success, to
lose its momentum."39
17
In a telling instance of news media myopia, reporter Donald Kirk exhibited
absolutely no interest in visiting the ARVN 7th division, where, under the
leadership of Gen. Nguyen Khoa Nam, the 7th had become an extremely effective
unit, whose members appreciated the division farm Gen. Nam established to
alleviate economic hardships of his troops. Yet when Kirk and other reporters
were detained at an NVA road block, and later set free, Kirk was upset that he
didn't have the chance to talk with the NVA:
"I kept thinking how much they looked like they were right out of the
movies. ... They seemed to be like regular guys, you know. I only wish
we could have stayed and talked to them longer."40
Mr. Kirk can rest assured that 7th division troops were "regular guys,"well
worth talking to, and learning from. He, like the much of the news media, was
not interested and there is little mystery as to why most Americans who served
in Southeast Asia view the news media with bitter contempt.
Had the news media made any attempt to connect with the Viet Namese
people and troops they would have found, as I did time and time again, that
they viewed Hanoi's communism with contempt and disgust, as a betrayal of
Viet Nam's culture and values. They were not fighting, and dying, to protect
the "corrupt Thieu regime"but to secure a better life for their people, their
children, and their country. In an extreme expression of this view, one Viet
Namese Marine enlisted man told me that after they'd finished with the NVA
they were going to turn their guns on Saigon corruption. The dismal and tragic
events that followed after 1975 verify the logic and validity of their commitment.
The entertainment media and American education have done no better
and remained content to repeat if not embellish media-established mythology.
A widely used high school history textbook's Viet Nam chapter has no mention
of RVNAF to speak of, saying only that "Viet Namization failed,"and otherwise
incorporating over 200 demonstrably false or grossly misleading statements in
just over 13 pages of text. There is mention of the Cambodian Incursion, yet no
indication that more RVNAF troops were involved-29,000-than the 19,300 US
troops committed, or that RVNAF had previously conducted spoiling raids
18
against NVA positions in the Cambodia. RVNAF, as will be the topic of another
presentation here, was "invisible." Movies and television are, some historical documentaries
notwithstanding, even worse. Even the film "Bat 21,"purporting to depict the
rescue of LTC Iceal Hambleton in 1972, inexplicably leaves out the fact that an
RVN SEAL, Nguyen Van Kiet, conducted the rescue with US SEAL Tom Norris,
earning a US Navy Cross for his valor and heroism. How can the American
public expect to learn anything when de facto censorship erases any and all
indications of exemplary RVNAF performance?
Finally, it needs to be acknowledged that RVNAF was saddled with one
serious burden that proved impossible to overcome: an amazingly inept and
disturbingly ignorant ally in the form of the U.S. government. An entire
seminar could be given on this subject – and should be. Pseudo-strategies
emanating from Washington were, in essence, criminally negligent. Nothing
was ever done to block and hold the Ho Chi Minh Trail, without which Hanoi's
war could never have been prosecuted. Nothing was ever done to engage in the
propaganda/counter-propaganda information war, which was, in the form of
dich van, a sine qua non for Hanoi's strategy, and one that was conducted with
diabolical deceitful brilliance. Nothing was done, until late in the game in May
1967 when CORDS was set up, to plan and intelligently coordinate military and
pacification operations. Nothing was done to develop a theater-wide coalition
among Viet Namese, Laotians, Cambodians and Thais against a common
enemy, while Hanoi did just that, building an Indochina Theater command
structure to integrate all factors into a coherent regional strategy. America's
excuse for leadership was "mu loa", blind, and fumbled like a hog on ice, like a
"coc vang,"a golden toad, very wealthy but very dumb.
Counter-historical propositions can seldom be proven with complete
certainty, and perhaps the war was "unwinnable." Maybe. Yet those Americans
and Australians who served alongside their RVNAF comrades, "chien huu, ban
be, giong nhu anh em ruot,"carry with them the profound sadness of having
lost the venture, of having lost scores of dedicated friends, and also the great
honor of having tried to attain a better world for the common people of Viet
Nam, Laos, Cambodia and Thailand. They were not driven by sophisticated
19
concerns over world geo-politics, but rather by respect and admiration for the
many Southeast Asians who valued their country, who "the bao ve giang son
que huong." Much history remains unexplored, reflecting a continuation of the
American propensity to see only through American eyes, filtered by American
pre-conceptions. Some books refer to Viet Nam as an "American ordeal,"never
once asking what type of ordeal the Southeast Asians experienced. An
abundance of valuable historical information and astute observations, without
which full comprehension is impossible, is found in books written by Viet
Namese (and Laotians). Works by Ly Tong Ba, Ha Mai Viet, Pham Huan, Phan
Nhat Nam, Tran Van Nhut and others cry out for translation, as do the dozens
of articles published in Viet Namese military journals and publications each
year, many of them describing battles, developments, and personalities that are
completely unknown to American historians. Failure to consult these sources
ensures that Viet Nam, and Hanoi's Indochina war, will both remain
indecipherable enigmas, and that RVNAF's real history will remain buried
under layers upon layers of myth, ignorance, and unfounded conjecture.
1. Stuart Herrington's Silence Was A Weapon (Novato, CA: Presidio Press, 1982), later re-
published as Stalking the Viet Cong, remains the sole narrative of Hau Nghia RF 1972 battles.
2. James H. Willbanks, The Battle of An Loc (Bloomington, ID: Indiana University Press, 2005),
pp. 140-141.
3. Personal interview with author, December 1993.
4. Brigadier General James Lawton Collins, Jr., The Development and Training of the South Viet
Namese Army (Washington, D.C.: Department of the Army, 1975), p. 151.
5. The author saw the report on this event, which occurred in Vinh Long Province, sometime in
early 1975. It is not known if the report still exists or even made it out of Viet Nam.
6. See Herrington, Silence Was A Weapon for commentary on abduction and proselyting of PSDF.
7. Frank Brown, Delta Advisor (Bennington, VT: Merriam Press, 1990), (both incidents) p. 12.
8. General Lam Quang Thi, Autopsy-The Death of South Viet Nam (Phoenix, AZ: Sphinx Press, 1986), pp. 49-50.
9. Dr. Lewis Sorley, A Better War (New York: Harcourt Brace & Company, 1999), pp. 274-275.
10. No known comprehensive study of MATs has been conducted. There were approximately 350 of these small teams deployed after 1968, primarily assisting RF and PF units. This topic needs and deserves research.
11. David Donovan, Once A Warrior King (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1985), pp. 151-152.
12. John Cook, The Advisor (Philadelphia, PA: Dorrance & Company, 1973), p. 167. Reprint: (NY, Bantam Books, 1987), p. 181.
13. One former advisor told the author he was and is sure his fellow advisor was shot by bad
elements of the troops he advised. Another told the author he was directly threatened by his
counterpart and was reassigned to another province. This was not a common occurrence.
14. Howard C.H. Feng, The Road to Ben Hai, master's thesis, University of Hawaii, 1987, pp. 108-109. 20
15. David Chanoff and Doan Van Toai, Portrait of the Enemy (New York: Random House, 1986), pp. 74-75) p. 185.
16. Author read this POW's interrogation report, which included description of circumstances of capture.
17. American forces in Viet Nam: Michael Clodfelter, Viet Nam in Military Statistics (Jefferson, NC:
McFarland Press, 1995), p. 253; VC/NVA battalion-sized attacks and small scale attacks:
Clodfelter, p. 151; terrorist attacks: Philip Davidson, Viet Nam At War (Novato, CA: Presidio Press,
1988), p. 633; percentage of secure hamlets: Gunter Lewy, America In Viet Nam (London/New
York: Oxford University Press, 1978), p. 192; Viet Namese civilian hospital admissions: Lewy, p.
443; assassinations and abductions: Lewy, p. 454; rice planting area: Nguyen Anh Tuan, Viet
Nam-Trial and Experience (Athens, OH: Ohio University Center for International Studies, 1987),
p. 399. [[Note: Clodfelter's excellent work is badly mis-titled. While it does have abundant
statistics it also contains a great deal of narrative history, regarding both Viet Nam adjoining
countries of Laos, Cambodia, Thailand. Highly recommended.]]]]
18. Cited in Michael Charlton and Anthony Moncrieff, Many Reasons Why-The American
involvement in Viet Nam (New York: Hill and Wang, 1978), p. 159.
19. Jeffrey Race, War Comes to Long An (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1972), p. 270.
20. Stanley Karnow, Viet Nam, A History[sic] (New York: Viking Press, 1983), p. 595. Author of this paper is willing, at any time, to discuss how and why Karnow's work is, and there's no other way to put it, sloppy, shoddy history.
21. Mark Moyar, Birds of Prey (Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 1997), p. 180. The author knew Colin personally; he was caustically honest and candid and was not reluctant to verbally demolish fatuous statements.
22. Douglas Pike, Viet Nam and the Soviet Union (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1986), p. 93.
23. Norbert Simon, "The Nails-FACs in Viet Nam," Military, Vol. XIX, No. 4, September 2002, p. 12.
24. Sorley, A Better War, p. 338 .
25. Col. William E LeGro, From Ceasefire to Capitulation (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Army Center of Military History, 1981). Seven Mountains: pp. 66-67. Tri Phap: 89-91. Captured document read by author in Viet Nam, 1974. No known copies exist.
26. Oliver Todd, Cruel April (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1987), p. 438.
27. Thi, Autopsy-The Death of South Viet Nam, p. 7.
28. Anthony B. Lawson, Director of Special Studies, US Defense Attache Office, Saigon, RVN: Survey of the Economic Situation of RVNAF Personnel(Phase III). Tab B, unnumbered 8th page, Question A15.
29. http://www.vnaf.net/
30. Sir Robert Thompson, Peace Is Not At Hand (New York: David McKay, 1974), p. 58.
31. Cited in Anthony Buscaren, editor, All Quiet on the Eastern Front (Old Greenwich, CT: Devin- Adair Company, 1977), p. 122.
32. Douglas Kinnard, The War Managers (Hanover, NH: University Press of New England, 1977), p.153.
33. Compendium of Viet Nam news broadcasts, by subject matter, prepared by Professor
Lawrence Lichty, submitted to The Viet Nam Project, WGBH Television, Boston. Author
photocopy undated.
34. Larry Engelmann, Tears Before The Rain-An Oral History of the Fall of South Viet Nam (New York/Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1990), p. 233.
35. Thi, Autopsy-The Death of South Viet Nam, pp. 17-20.
36. Ray Fontaine, The Dawn of a Free Viet Nam (Brownsville, TX: Panamerican Business Services, 1992), pp. 100-105.
37. Raoul Coutard, "L'Adieu Saigon,' (Date/publication unk.) cited in Phan Vinh Kim, Viet Nam-A Comprehensive History (Solana CA : PM Enterprises, 1992), p. 520.
38. Engelmann, Tear Before the Rain, p. 256.
39. Col. G. H. Turley, USMC, Ret. The Easter Offensive (Novato, CA: Presidio Press, 1985), pp. 134-135.
40. Sam Anson, War News (New York: Simon & Schuster/Touchstone, 1989), p. 85. The author met Kirk in Viet Nam and strongly suggested he write a story on the ARVN 7th and its accomplishments, elaborating on Gen. Nam's integrity, tactical brilliance, and dedication to a free Viet Nam. Kirk received this with all the enthusiasm of someone hearing a phone solicitation for 21aluminum siding. He asked no questions and simply walked away. Other advisors experienced the same disdain, asking reporters to come and see how well their counterparts were doing, only to be shunned with blank stares of utter indifference.
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