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That payback is history now. Payback (forward) for all of us now is to be the best possible influence on the future we can be.I was no longer young nor naive and I wanted payback
Just out of curiosity, here, how many northeners (%) do you think were dedicated ideological communists vs self identified patriots who just wanted the foreigners gone and the country reunified, and viewed Uncle Ho and his approach as the most likely means to that end? Did the average DRVN citizen live and work to create the ideal communist society, or did they just worship Uncle Ho as the "father of his country" with communism as part of the package?
Cheers,
Wes
Good question and valid one and the one which can not be answered. One can only speculate about this statistics - until the day when archives open in Hanoi. And that day might never come or the archives will disappear.
Why I think so. There is example of USSR. Until now it's hard to answer similar question ("how many... were ideological communists vs patriots...") regarding USSR citizens involved in WWII. How many were "dedicated" believers, now many just wanted the invaders gone, how many welcomed the invaders or wanted to stay away of all that... No free press, no polls, no sociological studies. NKVD/MGB (KGB later) acted as a sociology center and submitted reports on regular basis. Some of them survived in archives. But there is no way to cross check them or to compare to alternative sources.
We ask the same question about
Confederate soldiers from our Civil War, Italian fascists, and German soldiers of WWII. I think the answer is in their behaviors post-war.
Probably.
But if the country of the soldier in question remains authoritarian and does not allow free speech, can we really understand what their behavior mean? It took 50 years or more for surviving Red/Soviet Army veterans to start talking openly about their experiences but not so many survived to tell their stories. Saigon has fallen 44 years ago...
And the ARVN was not properly trained for a counter-insurgency operation, were riddled with corruption, and didn't give a crap about the people it was to protect."I don't think that unless a greater effort is made by the government to win popular support that the war can be won out there. In the final analysis, it is their war. They are the ones who have to win it or lose it. We can help them, we can give them equipment, we can send our men out there as advisors, but they have to win it, the people of Vietnam, against the communists."
Why?The top generals and admirals in Saigon and Washington both held tenaciously to this conventional way of war, despite paying lip service to the counterinsurgency training and doctrine that the war in Vietnam seemed to require.
And yet partisans and commando units were often small and exacted a punishing toll on the Germans at times. While they might have received assistance from the British, these guys were receiving assistance from the Soviet Union, so it's just a different country.The commanding generals of the US from John O'Daniel to William Westmoreland, had all come of age as junior officers in World War II. Under no circumstances could they imagine how a largely guerrilla army with no air force or tanks could possibly defeat the US trained and equipped ARVN forces, let alone the most technologically advanced army on the face of the planet.
Which served to make intel all but useless as nobody would risk telling the truth if it would get their career scuttled...These negative reports were routinely dismissed, and the advisers who filed them were told to "get on the team" and were often given negative fitness evaluations and shunted off to career-ending billets. Intelligence reports were routinely doctored, and "the Vietcong capability was always downgraded and reduced."
If JFK understood that this was a method, why didn't anybody operate along those lines? I know he was killed in 1963, but I'm surprised nobody after him in the military or the civilian leadership got it. There seemed to be few people in the US military that wanted to train along a counter-insurgency model (General Blackburn).So the Army's trainers organized the ARVN forces on the American model, as a nine-division force designed to repel a conventional invasion from North Vietnam, similar to the one the North Koreans had launched in June 1950 against South Korea.
Of course, they only attempted massive conventional campaigns a few times.Hanoi's strategists however had never for a minute contemplated such an invasion. Instead, the communists launched a well-conceived campaign to break down the legitimacy of the Saigon regime under Ngo Dinh Diem with propaganda, political subversion, and guerrilla warfare.
However once Ngo Diem was killed, what happened after that point?ARVN's senior officers were generally reluctant to engage their forces against the Vietcong for fear of taking casualties, and thus incurring the wrath of Diem for "losing face."
Was there anyway of finding skilled groups of people that could be properly trained and united around the basic cause of not having their homes overrun and not being under Communist control? I'm sure there's a share of outrages they committed that could be used to stoke up the feelings of indignation.battling the insurgency fell very heavily on the ill-trained regional and local paramilitary forces, the Civil Guard and Village Self-Defense Corps.
I'm surprised they didn't realize what the UK, and the OSS did in WWII. They were quite effective, and when combined with airpower (I don't just mean bombing cities like some pyromaniac, I mean using aircraft to interdict and perform air support).JFK's ideas were greeted with a total lack of enthusiasm by the Army's senior leadership. Pushed by Washington studies were prepared on counterinsurgency. British experts like Sir Robert Thompson were brought in and consulted. And the subject of counterinsurgency was inserted into the curriculum of military training schools.
However the WWII/Korea model was simply too entrenched in the military mind to be overcome. Thus in the end, the Army took the view that the lethality of conventional combat as waged by U.S. forces was such that no guerrilla force could long survive.
I'm surprised JFK realized this, and nobody else did.ARVN's operations against the VC were effectively alienating the population from the Saigon administration and pushing them into the open arms of the communists. Washington and Saigon could simply not comprehend that the war was only 15 percent military and 85 percent political. That is it was not just a matter of killing Vietcong, but of coupling security with the people's welfare in the countryside.
Sure, you don't wnat to tick off the people you want to win over...The VC adhered to a strict code of conduct in their interactions with the villagers. They never stole from them; never molested women; they paid for whatever food they obtained. And they were masters of small-unit infantry tactics that the ARVN had long neglected and that were indispensable in fighting a "people's war."
This was all in 1963... I'm surprised nobody changed anything or got anything from 1963 to 1965.Thanks to Vann's sterling reputation and contacts, he was ultimately able to secure a hearing with the Joint Chiefs of Staff in Washington about what needed to change if the United States and South Vietnam were to prevail in Vietnam. A couple of hours before he was scheduled to give his briefing, General Maxwell Taylor, chairmen of the JCS, nixed the presentation when he was informed of its substance. He didn't want bad news on the record.
BINGO!Which served to make intel all but useless as nobody would risk telling the truth if it would get their career scuttled...
Revolving door. One regime after another, all equally corrupt and equally out of touch with the common people.However once Ngo Diem was killed, what happened after that point?
That makes sense, I'm still surprised they didn't know or remember much about the resistance of partisans.Minds grow rigid with age and responsibility.
That's an interesting point, why is this so?Americans are used to thinking of military and political as separate arenas, which I think is our greatest weakness.
LBJ was a domestic issues politician. McNamara was an industrial whizkid beancounter. Neither was a student of history or international affairs or of eastern culture. What they "knew" was that insurgencies and liberation movements, while they can damage and embarras a major power, can seldom subject it to outright defeat. It stands to reason, doesn't it? A bunch of barefoot, ragtag, radicals hiding in the woods haven't a chance against the most powerful army in the world, right?That makes sense, I'm still surprised they didn't know or remember much about the resistance of partisans.
Look at our history. The USA came into being as a rebellion against what was in effect a military dictatorship. Our founding fathers had a deathly fear of military power and refused to establish a standing army or navy, preferring the militia approach to domestic defense. As our stature in the world grew and our frontiers and foreign trade expanded this became more and more impractical. Indian wars, internal rebellions, and foreign interference with our merchant shipping quickly outgrew the capabilities of the militia system. By 1812 we had a small standing army and a six frigate navy. And along with these we had a new class of citizen, the professional military man. This re-awakened the old fears of military power and re-emphasized the importance of civilian control over the military and the separation of military activity from political activity. And it's worked. (after a fashion) How many times in its 243 year history has the US suffered a military coup d'etat? None. How many times has this separation of military thinking and political thinking led to disastrous mistakes in conflicts and foreign affairs? Too many to count.That's an interesting point, why is this so?
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LBJ was a domestic issues politician. McNamara was an industrial whizkid beancounter. Neither was a student of history or international affairs or of eastern culture. What they "knew" was that insurgencies and liberation movements, while they can damage and embarras a major power, can seldom subject it to outright defeat. It stands to reason, doesn't it? A bunch of barefoot, ragtag, radicals hiding in the woods haven't a chance against the most powerful army in the world, right?
Look at our history. The USA came into being as a rebellion against what was in effect a military dictatorship. Our founding fathers had a deathly fear of military power and refused to establish a standing army or navy, preferring the militia approach to domestic defense. As our stature in the world grew and our frontiers and foreign trade expanded this became more and more impractical. Indian wars, internal rebellions, and foreign interference with our merchant shipping quickly outgrew the capabilities of the militia system. By 1812 we had a small standing army and a six frigate navy. And along with these we had a new class of citizen, the professional military man. This re-awakened the old fears of military power and re-emphasized the importance of civilian control over the military and the separation of military activity from political activity. And it's worked. (after a fashion) How many times in its 243 year history has the US suffered a military coup d'etat? None. How many times has this separation of military thinking and political thinking led to disastrous mistakes in conflicts and foreign affairs? Too many to count.
It's a two-edged sword.
Cheers,
Wes
Supposedly, a military coup was very close early in FDR's first term in office.
True enoughLBJ was a domestic issues politician. McNamara was an industrial whizkid beancounter. Neither was a student of history or international affairs or of eastern culture.
While they couldn't take the war straight to our shores, they could kill a lot of our people.What they "knew" was that insurgencies and liberation movements, while they can damage and embarras a major power, can seldom subject it to outright defeat.
True, but there was the OMGUS...Look at our history. The USA came into being as a rebellion against what was in effect a military dictatorship. Our founding fathers had a deathly fear of military power and refused to establish a standing army or navy, preferring the militia approach to domestic defense.
I'm amazed they didn't give it the college try anyway. I'm guessing if they did...If you're thinking of the 'Wall Street Pusch' that was in 1933 and was not military. A group of wealthy Wall Street financiers believed that America should be headed by a Fascist dictator and not FDR, who was suspected of being a communist. So, they began to plot a coup d'état that would later come to be known as the Wall Street Putsch.
The conspirators included Gerald MacGuire, a bond salesman; Bill Doyle, commander of the Massachusetts American Legion; investment banker Prescott Bush, the father of George H. W. Bush and grandfather of George W. Bush; and other wealthy bankers.
The plotters need a General to lead the coup and so approached retired Major General Smedley Butler, who was at that time the most decorated soldier in U.S. history. After his military career, however, Butler became a vociferous critic of war and an influential figure in the Bonus Army, a group of 43,000 World War I veterans and their families, who were camped in Washington to demand the early payment of the veteran's bonus promised to them for their service (These veterans were eventually attacked by regular army Calvary units lead by Douglas Mac and a six tank unit lead by Patton).
The bankers were to finance a 500,000 man army lead by Butler who would proceed to overthrow FDR and reduce him to a ceremonial position. The actual governmental power would be held by a Sectary of General Affairs (essentially a Fascist dictator). After meeting with the men several times and learning of the extent of their plan, Butler went to Congress to expose them as traitors. When news broke, nobody really believed that such a coup attempt could even be considered, let alone planned or put into action. Initially, Congress's reaction was similar, but with Butler's testimony and the testimony of reporter Paul French they began to take it more seriously and investigated the subject. The Congressional investigation found that Butler was telling the truth about the existence of the plot, but Congress felt that the plot had little chance of success and so nobody was prosecuted, in fact, some later went on to serve in office, such as Prescott Bush.
The one shining example of military-political planning and action that got it right. But that was overseas, not domestic to the US.True, but there was the OMGUS...
There were many in the service who knew and understood, but they were voices in the wilderness, not to be heard over the roar of the heavies. Besides, most of those in the know were in the special ops community, the "ugly stepchild", the "snake eaters", the "filthy, nasty, not fit to be seen in polite society" types who were an embarrassment to "civilized" soldiers. Our ROTC company advisor was one. He was a Special Forces Captain, then Major, just returned from "Never Neverland" (Laos), who was never comfortable in his class As, didn't even own a "Mess Dress" uniform, was regularly excluded from ROTC detachment parties and the Military Ball, and in the field, had the instincts of a panther.I'm surprised there were so few people in the military that knew so little about resistance movements.