Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 IV.A Evolution of the War (26 Vols.) U.S. MAP for Diem: The Eisenhower Commitments, 1954-1960(5 Vols.) 4. U.S. Training of Vietnamese National Army, 1954-59 Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - SENSITIVEl UNITED STATES - VIETNAM RELATIONS 1945 1967 VIETNAM TASK FORCE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF ITOP SECRET - SENSITIVE ■^■H Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 / TOP SECRET - Sensitive IV. A. k. EVOLUTION OF THE WAE US TRAINING 0F_THE YIETHAJ/iESE NATIONAL ABtal 195^ - 3-95 9 TOP SECRET - Sensiti\ Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive IV. A. h U.S. TRA INING OF TH E VIETNAMESE NATIONAL A RMY, 195^-1959 Forevrord This monograph treats U.S. provisions for the security of Vietnam in the period immediately following the Geneva Conference. The following are tabbed: Summary Chronology Table of Contents 'and Outline Footnotes Bibliography TOP SECRET - Sensitiv Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 H- Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive IV. A. k. U.S. TRAINING OF THE VIETNAMESE NATIONAL ARMY, 195--1959 SUMMARY "Hanoi was evacuated on 9 October /l95ji7- The /p. S. liaison/ team left with the last French troops, disturbed by what they had seen of the grim efficiency of the Viet Minh in their takeover, the contrast between the silent march of the victorious Viet Minh troops in their tennis shoes and the clanking armor of the well- equipped French whose western tactics and equipment had failed against the communist military-political-economic campaign." l/ Up to i960, Vietnam was one of the largest recipients of U.S. economic and military assistance in the world: the third ranking non-NATO recipient of aid, the seventh ranking worldwide. The U.S. Military Assistance Advisory Group, Vietnam (MAAG), was the only military mission commanded by a lieutenant general; the U.S. economic aid mission in Vietnam was the largest anywhere. In the years 1955 through i960, more than $2 billion in aid flowed into Vietnam, and more than 80$ of that assistance went toward providing security for the Government of. Vietnam. Nonetheless, in i960 the Joint Chiefs of Staff determined that the armed forces of the Republic of Vietnam (RVNAF) were inadequately trained and organized, and directed urgent action by MAAG to improve their anti-guerrilla capabilities. ?/ . Thus, despite the massive U.S. investment in "aid to Vietnam in the period 195^-1960, very little had been accomplished in the way of fashioning South Vietnamese forces into a suitable instrument for countering the "communist military-political- economic campaign" aimed at overturning the Government of Vietnam. The principal issue examined here is that of the role and effectiveness of U.S. advice and assistance provided the armed forces of the GVN prior to i960. The principal focus is on American assistance to the Vietnamese National Army — subsequently the ARVN — although plans and support for the Civil Guard -and Self -Defense Corps are also considered. Subsidiary questions include: - — Why did the U.S. undertake the training of ARVN? -- How was this decision taken? 1.1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 6 TOP SECRET - Sensitive — What was the threat to South Vietnam? ■ — What was the mission of the South Vietnamese army? — - What "was the state of the South Vietnamese army? * — How did the U.S. go about altering this condition? « — Did U.S. assistance through i960 result in creation of South Vietnamese army in the image of the U.S. army? » » The principal conclusion is that U.S. efforts in the period 195^- 1959 failed to produce an effective Vietnamese counterinsurgent force • • due to contemporary perceptions of and reactions to the threat, to exaggerated estimates of the value and relevance of American military- standards in responding to that threat, to lack of effective bargaining j techniques vis-a-vis the Government of Vietnam, and to fragmentation and other inadequacies in the American system of determining and administering the overall program of assistance to Vietnam.* U.S. efforts in the period 195*1- 1960 to create an effective South Vietnamese military establishment — and particularly an effective National Army — were critically affected by the following considerations — The reasons the U.S. undertook the training of the Vietnamese armed forces had their "roots not only in the desire to contain communism and preserve the freedom of South Vietnam, but also in U.S. discontent and frustration with French military policy during the Indochina War. A strong desire to correct French mistakes generated con- siderable bureaucratic 'momentum; preoccupation with the perceived inadequacies of French practices led to under- estimation of the problems the French had to overcome — including that of internal division and governmental reluctance — in developing an effective Vietnamese army, and to overcorrection of French mistakes by the creation of a conventional military force. That Vietnamese army came to be organized in divisions -- as the U.S. had so often and so unsuccessfully urged the French to do — that would have the capability to perform well against the Viet Minh divisions in the Red River Delta in 195*^ 9 or presumably against their post-195^ equivalent, communist divisions crossing the 17th parallel. But the French Indochina War was over; circumstances had radically changed. — The decision to train the South Vietnamese military was based on a compromise between the Departments of State and Defense in which "political considerations" which had nothing to do with the military objections to an affirmative decision, 2.1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive I Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive and did not in any way affect the probability of success of the undertaking, were allowed to govern rather than considerations of limitations in U.S. resources and capabilities, and the basic • difficulty of the task at hand. Increasingly a characteristic of U.S. decision making, such compromise maximized the probability . of consistently selecting the least desirable course of action. * • — The threat to Vietnam was perceived as constituted of the sects and the Viet Minh residue in the South, and the regular forces of the DRV in the North; although it was consistently estimated that the DRV had the capability to overrun South Vietnam, it was just as consistently estimated that the DRV neither needed nor intended to do so. Nonetheless, U.S. doctrine regarding estimates of capability as opposed to estimates of intention with its characteristic emphasis on Order of Battle data (so small a part of the real intelligence problem in counter insurgency) led to fixation upon the more massive, but less likely, threat of overt invasion. — The dual mission expected of the Vietnamese army of internal and external defense was, given resource and trained manpower limitations, internally inconsistent. Given the state of U.S. strategic thinking in the 1950's, the nature of SEATO, the - . withdrawal of the FEC, the pressures exerted by Diem, and .the background of the U.S. MAAG, rooted in the recent Korean experience, it was virtually certain to' lead to a conventional military establishment designed to counter a conventional threat. It did. In fact, given the strength of these influences and the lack of U.S. familiarity with effective counterinsurgertt techniques, it • is questionable whether assignment of a single mission related exclusively to internal security would have made any difference I in the type of military establishment that resulted. — The South Vietnamese army was in extremely poor condition in 195^; its prospects were worse, in view of the limited resources, particularly in terms of personnel, the U.S. was able to devote tQ its reorganization and training. In addition, as the JCS stated, "Unless the Vietnamese themselves show an inclination to make individual and collective sacrifices required to resist Communism, which they have not done to date, no amount of external pressure and assistance can long delay complete Communist victory in South Vietnam." * There was no over- whelming change in the willingness to sacrifice during the late 1950 ! s, which added to the already formidable task of creating an effective military establishment. — The way in which the U.S. MAAG went about creating an effective military establishment had four principal characteristics: * Memorandum for SecDef from JCS, "Indochina," 17 November 19^ (TS). 3.1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 •i TOP SECRET - Sensitive r concentration on the mission of resistance to overt aggression; training from the top down; employment of U.S. standards and techniques; and optimistic assessment of the future capabilities of paramilitary organizations outside the purview of MAAG. — The result of U.S. efforts was more a reflection of the U.S. military establishment than of the type of threat or terrain. With regard to the overall effectiveness of U.S. aid, it seems to have had, unfortunately, all the depth the term "mirror image" implies. Furthermore, U.S. performance in 'to creating an effective Vietnamese military establishment was adversely affected by the lack of well-founded bargaining techniques vis-a-vi s the Government of Vietnam, and by fragmenta- tion and other inadequacies in the American system of determining and administering the overall program of assistance. -- The U.S. quickly became so deeply and so overtly com- mitted to the Diem government that any leverage inherent in the assistance program rapidly approached zero. Perhaps the best illustration of the lack of leverage concerning the defense establishment is the case of the Civil Guard, in which the principal effects of the U.S. bargaining were negative and most directly affected the very organization the U.S. was trying to improve. — The case of the Civil Guard, a primary internal' security force, also affords excellent examples of two sorts of frag- mentation affecting the U.S. effort: U.S. interagency com- petition (the CG was ultimately transferred to the MOD on the advice of MAAG, but against not only the prior advice of the MSU advisory team but also against the wishes of the Bnbassy)*; and lack of coordination at Embassy level by which the entire military assistance effort could be evaluated and resources more rationally allocated (the Civil Guard was evaluated completely differently by MAAG and by the Bribassy) . — A third variety of fragmentation is revealed in the relations between Washington and its various representatives in the field. Both the GVN and the several U.S. agencies relied heavily on Washington for arbitration of disputes * Fragmentation in the U.S. community had an obvious and adverse effect on the U_. S. cajjability to bargain with the GVN. By devoting minimal care to the selection of .the U.S. official he would talk to first, Diem could often become the arbiter of, rather than a participant in, the bargaining process. Thus General Williams: "I can T t remember one time that President Diem- ever did anything of importance concerning the military that I recommended against." "Why U.S. Is Losing in Vietnam/ 1 U.S. News and World Report, November '9, 196^. U TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 S TOP SECRET! - Sensitive generated in Saigon, Diem carrying his position to the highest levels of the agency of. his choice, while U.S. representatives had to seek protagonists at various levels within their own agencies. The implications for U.S. policy in the field are obvious . Because of the divisions and diversions inherent in the above, U.S.- aid in the period up to i960 failed to produce an effective counterinsurgent force either within the National Army, or in the paramilitary organizations. This is not to imply that had resources been diverted from the creation of a conventional army to that of an effective counterinsurgent force the problem of Vietnam would have been solved, for the enemy has demonstrated both versatility and flexibility that would render such a statement vacuous. It is to suggest, however, that given the world situation in the period of relevance and the situation in Southeast Asia, it seems likely that the DRV, whatever strategic alternative it might have elected to follow, would not have been deterred from overt aggression by any army of Vietnam it was within U.S.-GVN capability to create. An effective counterinsurgent f orce, ' on the other hand, might teve limited its. choices; might well have prevented effective prosecution of the guerrilla alternative the Viet Cong and the DRV did elect to follow. 5.1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 I UNITED STATES OFFICE President Secretary of State Ambassador to GVN n Secretary of Defense it Chairman", JCS it Chief of Staff, Army it n Chief of Naval Operations m Chief of Staff, Air Force ti Commandant, Marine Corps it Chief, MAAG IT GOVERNMENT OF VIETI&M Head of State/President ti .' Prime Minister i» Minister of Foreign Affairs/ Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs it Minister of Defense/Minister of National Defense PRINCIPAL PERSONALITIES, 195^-1960 TERM OF OFFICE 20 Jan 1953 - 20 Jan I96I 21 Jan 1953 16 Apr 1959 25 Jun 1952 - 20 Apr 1955 15 Apr 1959 20 Jan I96I 20 Apr 1955 - Ik Mar 1957 Ik Mar 1957 28 Jan 1953 Ik Mar 1961 8 Oct 1957 9 Oct 1957 - 3 Dec 1959 - 2 Dec 1959 8 Jan 1961 Ik Aug 1953 - 15 Aug 1957 15 Aug I957 - 30 Sep I960 1 Oct I960 - 30 Sep 1962 15 Aug 1953 - 30 Jun 1965 30 Jun 1955 - 30 Jun 1959 1 Jul 1959 - 30 Sep I960 1 Oct i960 - 30 Sep 1962 16 Aug 1953 - 17 Aug 1955 31 Jul 1961 30 Jun 1957 30 Jun 1961 17 Aug 1955 30 Jun 19^3 1 Jul 1957 28 Jun 1952 - 31 Dec 1955 1 Jan I956 - 31 Dec 1959 1 Jan i960 - 31 Dgc I963 2k Oct 1955 - 31 Aug I960 1 Sep I960 Mar 19^9 26 Oct 1955 12 Jan 195^ 7 Jul' 195k 5 Mar I962 26 Oct I955 1 Nov I963 16 Jun 195^ 1 Uov I963 17 Dec 1953 - 16 Jun 195- 5 Jul "l95i4 - May 1955 Jul 1955 - 1 Hov 1963 25 Jun 1952 : 195M?) 5 Jul 195*1 - 1'Nov 1963 . 6.1 NAME Dwight D. Eisenhower John Foster Dalles Christian A. Kerter Donald R. Heath G. Frederick Reinhart Elb ridge Durbrow Charles E. Wilson Neil H. McElroy Thomas S. Gates, Jr. Admiral Arthur W. Radford, USN General Nathan F. Staining, USAF General Lyman L. Leir.nitzer, USA .General Matthew B. Ridgway General Maxwell D. Taylor General Lyman L. Lemnitzer General George H. Decker Admiral Robert B. Carney Admiral Arleigh A. Burke General Nathan F. Twining General Thomas D. White Genei-al Lemuel C Shepherd, Jr. General Randolph McC. Pate General David M. Shoup Lt. Gen. Samuel T. Williams, USA Lt. Gen. Lionel C. McGarr, USA Emperor Bao Dai Ngo Dinh Dien Prince Buu Loc Nf,o Dinh Diem Nguyen Quoc Dinh Tran Van Do Vu Van y Ngiem Van Tri Ngo Dinh Diem Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 o 73 O z o o < c c Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 i // I9L18- -VIETNAMESE NATIONAL ARMY WAS CREATED BY FRANCE. (FALL-RASKIN P. 82.) 0108^9 THE TERMS OF THE ELYSEE AGREEMENT CONCEDED IN PRINCIPLE THE CREATION OF A VIETNAMESE ARMY. 0110^9 BAO DAI HOPE FOR U.S. ARMS AID INDICATED. O602U9 DAI WAS PROCLAIMED VIETNAMESE EMPEROR. 0621^9 U.S. BACKED THE BAO DAI REGIME. 1017^9 JCS SUBMITTED A PLAN FOR USING MDA SECTION 303 FUNDS IN AREAS OTHER THAN CHINA, NAMELY SOUTHEAST ASIA. 011650 PEKING RECOGNIZED THE DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF VIETNAM HEADED BY HO CHI MINHo MOSCOW FOLLOWED SUIT ON JAN 31, 1950. /J.B. 020250 FIRST REPORTS ISSUED OF THE ARRIVAL OF CHINESE EQUIPMENT FOR THE VIETMINH. THEY STARTED A GENERAL OFFENSIVE. /J.B. 020750 U.S. AND GREAT BRITAIN RECOGNIZED VIETNAM, LAOS, AND CAMBODIA AS ASSOCIATED STATES WITHIN THE FRENCH UNION AFTER THE FRENCH RATIFICA- TION OF THE 19^9 ELYSEE AGREEMENT. 021650 FRENCH REQUESTED U.S. MILITARY AND ECONOMIC ASSISTANCE FOR THE INDOCHINA WAR. ■ 021950 U.S. CONSULATE GENERAL IN SAIGON WAS RAISED TO LEGATION, AND A MINISTER WAS ACCREDITED TO VIETNAM, CAMBODIA, AND LAOS. /J.B. 030650 RUSK REQUESTED THAT MILITARY ATTACHES BE ASSIGNED TO SAIGON LEGATION. /1ST 288. * 032550 DEFENSE MINISTER PHAN HUY QUAT OUTLINED A PLAN TO EQUIP THE VIETNAMESE ARMY WITHOUT FRENCH PARTICIPATION. (MESSAGE 20*4 GULLION TO ACHESON) - OU0550 JCS RECOMMENDED TO SEC. DEE. DIRECT MILITARY AID BE PROVIDED TO THE FRENCH IN INDOCHINA, THE RATIONALE WAS BASED ON THE DOMINO THEORY RE THE FALL OF SOUTHEAST ASIA COUNTRIES. 6k2k30 THE U C S. ASKED FRANCE WHAT IT HOPED TO ACHIEVE WITH U.S. MILITARY AID. TWELVE NATIVE BATTALIONS WERE TO BE READY FOR MILITARY SERVICE BY 1951. • 050850 AT THE FOREIGN MINISTERS CONFER E IN PARIS, MINISTER SCHUMAN ANNOUNCED THAT A VIETNAMESE NATIONAL ARMY WOULD BE ESTABLISHED, AND SEC. OF STATE ACHESON ANNOUNCED THAT THE U.S. WOULD SEND ECONOMIC AND MILITARY AID TO THE ASSOCIATED STATES OF INDOCHINA AND FRANCE. 052550 THE U.S. FORMALLY ANNOUNCED THE INTENT TO ESTABLISH AN ECONOMIC AID MISSION TO THE ASSOCIATED STATES OF INDOCHINA. R. BLUM WAS TO BE MISSION CHIEF. A Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 ■ • 053050 A U.S. ECONOMIC MISSION ARRIVED IN SAIGON. /J.B. 060650 THE VIETNAMESE GOVERNMENT TRIED TO OFFSET ITS FAILURE TO WIN OVER THE NATIONALISTS BY CRACKING DOWN ON THE GUERRILLAS AND STRESSING THE FORMATION OF A VIETNAMESE ARMY. BAO DAI WAS CRITICIZED FOR NOT ' . ASSUMING ACTIVE MILITARY COMMAND OF THE VIETNAMESE ARMY. 062950 MAJ.GEN. ERSKINE WAS DESIGNATED CHIEF OF THE MILITARY GROUP OF MDAP SURVIVAL MISSION TO VIETNAM. JUL-AUG 1950 THE KOREAN WAR AND U.S. FEAR OF THE CONSEQUENCES OF A VIETMINH VICTORY FOR SOUTHEAST ASIS LED TO A READINESS IN WASHINGTON TO INCREASE AMERICAN AID TO THE FRENCH IN INDOCHINA. U.S. AID HOWEVER, DID NOT CHANGE FRENCH POLICY IN VIETNAM. U.S. OFFICIALS IN SAIGON WHO DISAGREED WITH FRENCH POLICY IN INDOCHINA WERE TRANSFERRED AT THE INSISTENCE OF THE FRENCH. /J.B. 071550 THE U.S. MISSION HEADED BY MAJ. GEN. ERSKINE', ARRIVED IN VIETNAM TO PAVE THE WAY FOR MAAG. THIS MISSION WAS TO COMPLETE MAP PLANNING AND CONFER WITH THE FRENCH. NO U.S. COMBAT MEN WERE TO GO TO INDOCHINA, ONLY MILITARY SUPPLIES WOULD BE SENT TO AID THE FRENCH. 073150 FIRST ELEMENTS OF MAAG ARRIVED IN INDOCHINA. 080250 TEN OFFICERS, PERMANENT MEMBERS OF THE U.S. MILITARY ADVISORY GROUP, ARRIVED IN SAIGON. SHORTLY THEREAFTER AN AGREEMENT WAS REACHED WITH THE FRENCH ON OPERATIONS OF THE U.S. MISSION. 080550 THE REPORT OF MAJ. GEN. ERSKINE WAS FILED (NSC 6k). IN IT HE SPOKE OF THE FEC STALEMATE, POLITICAL PROBLEM RE FRENCH- VIETNAMESE, LACK OF INTERNAL SECURITY, INCREASED MILITARY ASSISTANCE REQUIREMENT FOR THE U.So, THE COIMIHIST CHINA THREAT. FRANCE 1 S INABILITY TO COPE WITH VIETMINH THREAT. 080650 THE $100-MILLION WORTH OF U.S. MILITARY SUPPLIES, WHICH ARRIVED BY AUGUST 9, WERE TO BE USED TO EQUIP THE NEW VIETNAM NATIONAL ARMY. THE FRENCH HOPED THAT THIS NATIONAL ARMY WOULD ASSUME A MAJOR PART OF FIGHTING THE VIETMINH. VIETNAM TROOPS AT THAT TIME WERE DISORGANIZED. 081050 THE FIRST SHIPMENT OF MILITARY SUPPLIES ARRIVED IN INDOCHINA FROM THE U.S. 081^50 THE FRENCH CABINET DECIDED TO REDUCE THE STRENGTH OF THE EXPEDITIONARY CORPS BY 9,000 MEN. THE REDUCTION, WHICH WAS MADE AGAINST MILITARY ADVICE, WAS DUE TO THE REFUSAL OF THE ASSEMBLY TO CONSIDER THE EMPL0Y1-IENT OF NATIONAL SERVICE RECRUITS IN INDOCHINA. 081550 BILATERAL AG: MERE BETWEEN U.S. -PRANCE COVERING MDA FOR INDOCHINA WAS SIGNED IN DJAKARTA. /217155. B Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 13 082^50 VIETNAMESE TROOPS WERE REPORTED TO BE SLOWLY RELIEVING FRENCH TROOPS. 0828U0 THE VIETNAM ARMY'S 2ND ANNIVERSARY WAS OBSERVED IN ANNAM. THE LACK OF OFFICERS AND NON-COMS , THE PRESENCE OF FACTIONS AND HIGH COSTS HINDER THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE VIETNAMESE ARMY. 0911450 THE kTE SESSION TRIPARTITE MEETINGS DISCLOSED 77,000 IN ARMIES OF THE ASSOCIATED STATES, Ml, 000 NATIONALS IN FEC. O92U5O THE FRENCH PROMISED THAN VAN HUU AID TO INCREASE THE VIETNAM ARMY. 10 50 MDAP MONTHLY REPORT FROM SAIGON DISCLOSED POOR RELATIONS BETWEEN FRENCH AND MAAG. (GULLION TO SEC .STATE) 100i+50 BRIG. GEN. BRINK BECAME HEAD OF THE U.S. MILITARY AID GROUP IN VIETNAM. 101050 U.S. ESTABLISHED A MILITARY MISSION IN SAIGON. 101350 THE FRENCH PLANNED TO ENLARGE THE VIETNAM ARMY. GENERAL DE LA TOUR DU MOULIN WAS APPOINTED ITS MILITARY ADVISOR. 102^50 DIFFICULTIES WITH RESPECT TO ESTABLISHMENT OF VIET FORCE WERE IN RECRUIT MENT, ORGANIZATION OF CADRES, FINANCING, CONSCRIPTION. /SAIGON MSG STATE 1ST NOTES 110550 AN INTER-SERVICE TRAINING COLLEGE WAS OPENED AT DAIAT. /LANCASTER. 110750 FRENCH AND VIETNAM LEADERS AGREED ON A RAPID BUILDUP OF THE VIETNAM ARMY. 110850 VIETNAM WAS EXPECTED TO SPEND 35-^0 PERCENT OF ITS .1951 BUDGET' ON ITS THREE-DIVISION ARMY. 112250 MINISTER LETOURNEAU TOLD THE FRENCH ASSEMBLY THAT BOTH FRENCH AND NATIONAL FORCES IN INDOCHINA WERE TO BE STRENGTHENED. 12 50 WITH THE CREATION OF THE MINISTRY FOR THE ASSOCIATED STATES, NINE SEPARATE MINISTRIES WERE DIRECTLY CONCERNED WITH AND RESPONSIBLE FOR SOME ASPECT OF FRENCH ACTIVITIES IN INDOCHINA. /NAVARRE. 120U50 IT V7AS ANNOUNCED TEAT GENERAL DE LATTRE DE TASSIGNY WOULD REPLACE GENERAL CARPENTIER AND HIGH COMMISSIONER PIGNON AS THE SUPERIOR MILITARY AND CIVILIAN COMMANDER. HE TOOK OFFICE TWO DAYS LATER. 120850 AND 122350 COMPLEMENTARY AGREEMENTS TO THE I9I49 ELYSEE AGREEMENT PROVIDED FOR THE FORMATION OF FOUR DIVISIONS BY THE ELID OF 1951. /LANCASTER. 120850 A NATIONAL VIETNAM ARMY WAS FORMALLY SET UP WITH NATIONAL STATUS FOR TROOPS BY ORDER OF BAO DAI. C Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 i 121550 GENERAL ERSKINE FINISHED HIS MISSION. 122350 THE U.S. SIGHED A MUTUAL DEFENSE ASSISTANCE PENTALATERAL AGREEMENT WITH FRANCE, VIETNAM, CAMBODIA, AND LAOS FOR INDIRECT U.S. MILITARY AID TO FRENCH UNION FORCES IN INDOCHINA. THE AGREEMENT ON DEFENSE AND MUTUAL ASSISTANCE LAID DOWN THE CONDITIONS UNDER MICH U.S. AID WOULD BE APPORTIONED AND ESTABLISHED THE PRINCIPLE THAT ALL MATERIALS PROVIDED WOULD BE HANDED OVER TO THE FRENCH COMMAND, WHILE DIRECT RELATIONS BETWEEN THE ASSOCIATED 'STATES AND MAAG WERE TO BE EXPRESSLY PRECLUDED. /LANCASTER. 122350 MAAG INDOCHINA WAS AUTHORIZED. /217155. 1951 HO CHI MINH'S ARMY WAS THOUGHT TO CONTAIN 70,000 LIGHTLY ARMED MEN. 2 PERCENT COMMUNISTS AND THE REST WERE STRONG NATIONALISTS. /NYT 1951 THE ARMED FORCES ON THE FRENCH SIDE - 150,000. ABOUT HALF WERE NATIVES OF UNCERTAIN LOYALTY AND EFFECTIVENESS. FLEM-CWO. JAN-MAR 51 DE LATTRE SUCCEEDED IN HALTING COMMUNIST ADVANCES. THE VIETMINH WAS FORCED TO RETURN TO GUERILLA TACTICS. THE TROOPS AT THE DISPOSAL OF THE FRENCH NOT NUMBERED 391,000. 01 51 THE FRENCH AND VIETMINH BOTH REORGANIZED THEIR FORCES INTO DIVISIONS , SINCE THE TYPE OF COMBAT HAD ESCALATED FROM GUERRILLA WARFARE. 010851 MAAG INDOCHINA WAS OFFICIALLY ESTABLISHED WITH A STRENGTH OF 128. /21?15 ) 4-5. 011051 GENERAL DE LATTRE' S LEADERSHIP INCREASED THE MORALE OF BOTH THE FRENCH AND THE VIETNAMESE FORCES. 03 51 DE LATTRE LEFT FOR PARIS TO ASK FOR REINFORCEMENTS IN OFFICERS, N.C.O'S AND TECHNICIANS WHOSE SERVICES WOULD BE REQUIRED TO TRAIN THE NATIONAL ARMIES. 0^2551 THE FRENCH TESTED THE ABILITY OF THE VIETNAMESE POLICE TO MAINTAIN ORDER AND TO CHECK THE VIETMINH INFILTRATION IN THE VINHBAO AREA SOUTH OF HAIPHONG. 05 51 THE ADVENT OF THE MONSOON GAVE DE LATTRE THE OPPORTUNITY TO DEVOTE MORE OF HIS TIME AND ATTENTION TO THE FORMATION OF THE NATIONAL ARMIES AND HIS RESPONSIBILITIES AS HIGH COMMISSIONER. 050151 VIETNAMESE ARMY HAD 38,500 MEN. 052651 GENERAL COLLINS STATED THAT ^-MILLION WORTH OF SUPPLIES HAD BEEN SHIPPED SINCE JUNE 19^9. 061^51 THE CAO DAI SECT MILITARY CHIEF COLONEL TRINH MINK TAY DEFECTED FROM FRENCH-VIETNAMESE FORCES AND LED 2,500 MEN 11710 CAMBODIA. D Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 / ■ - ( 071551 BAO DAl ORDERED TOTAL VIETNAM MOBILIZATION TO MEET A POSSIBLE THREAT BY CHINA IF A KOREA TRUCE WERE REACHED. 08 51 THE FRENCH COMMISSIONER FOR SOUTH VIETNAM, GENERAL CHANSON, WAS ASSASSINATED. /LANCASTER. . 080751 PROGRESS IN THE FORMATION OF A" NATIONAL VIETNAMESE ARMY WAS REPORTED. VIETNAMESE UNITS HAD PERFORMED ADEQUATELY IN ENGAGEMENTS. LACK OF LEADERSHIP, FRENCH- VIETNAMESE QUARRELS, LACK OF EQUIPMENT AND AN APATHETIC POPULACE PLAGUED THE EFFORT. /NIE 35 REPORT. • 09 51 DE LATTRE WENT' TO WASHINGTON TO ALLAY AMERICAN SUSPICIONS CONCERNING FRENCH INTENTIONS IN INDOCHINA AND TO ASK FOR INCREASED MILITARY SUPPLIES FOR THE NATIONAL ARMIES. HE RETURNED TO SAIGON OCT. 19. /LANCASTER. 090251 BRIG. GEN. BRINK REPORTED THAT THE FRENCH-VIETNAMESE FORCES WERE GAINING. 090751 U.S. SIGNED AND AGREEMENT WITH VIETNAM FOR DIRECT ECONOMIC ASSISTANCE. /J.B. 092051 DE LATTRE WENT TO WASHINGTON TO PLEAD FOR MORE AMERICAN AID, IN PARTICULAR FOR NEW PLANES AND OTHER MODERN EQUIPMENT', OF WHICH MORE AND MORE BEGAN TO ARRIVE IN VIETNAM. 092351 THE U.S. PROMISED TO ACCELERATE MILITARY AND ECONOMIC AID TO INDOCHINA. 10 51 CAO DAI COLONEL TRINH MINI! TAY BUILT A REBEL REGIME. HE DENOUNCED BOTH FRENCH AND VIETMINH. 100151 A SHIPMENT OF RIFLES ENOUGH FOR k DIVISIONS ARRIVED IN VIETNAM FROM THE U.S. 101651 60,000 VIETNAM DRAFTEES REPORTED FOR MILITARY TRAINING AS PART OF MOBILIZATION ORDER OF BAO DAI. 110651 PROGRESS REPORT ON NSC 56l2/l (OCB) CLAIMED THAT PERSONNEL STRENGTH OF CIVIL POLICE BOARD WAS REDUCED BY 20 PERCENT BECAUSE OF MODERNIZATION EQUIPMENT, COMMUNICATIONS, AND TRANSPORTATION. /l59~l- 12 51 A SPEECH BY THE RADICAL SOCIALIST DEPUTY DALADIER REVEALED A GROWING FRENCH OPPOSITION TO THE INDOCHINA WAR. DALADIER DEMANDED THAT FRANCE SEEK PEACE THROUGH THE TOUTED NATIONS. 121851 THE U.S. PROPOSED AN AGREEMENT BE MADE BETWEEN FRANCE AND THE U.S. TO INSURE THE CONTINUATION OF THE ELIGIBILITY OF THE STATE OF VIETNAM AND THE PROGRAMS OF MILITARY AND ECONOMIC ASSISTANCE NOW BEING EXTENDED. AN AGREEMENT WAS RATIFIED IN JANUARY 3, 1952. E Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 K, 1951 PROFITING FROM THE CHANGED CHARACTER OF THE WAR, DE LATTRE WAS ABLE DURING HIS BRIEF PROCONSULATE TO GIVE DECISIVE IMPETUS TO THE TARDY FORMATION OF A VIETNAMESE ARMY, FIRST BY PERSUADING THE VIETNAMESE ACCEPT THE PRINCIPLE OF NATIONAL CONSCRIPTION, AND SECONDLY BY SUCCESSFULLY NEGOTIATING IN WASHINGTON FOR MILITARY AID TO EQUIP THE NATIONAL DIVISIONS THAT IT WAS NOW PROPOSING TO RAISE AND TRAIN. /LANCASTER. EARLY 1952 A TRAINING SCHOOL FOR AIR FORCE PERSONNEL WAS OPENED AT NHA TRAN 010752 GENERAL DE LATTRE WAS ILL, GENERAL SALAN COMMANDED THE FRENCH FORCES IN HIS ABSENCE. 011152 DE LATTRE DIED. THE COMMUNISTS STARTED A NEW OFFENSIVE. WITH CHINESE EQUIPMENT, INCLUDING ARTILLERY, THEY WERE NOT ABLE TO REDUCE DE LATTRE 1 S GAINS AND TO ELIMINATE MANY SMALLER POSITIONS BETWEEN THE CITIES HELD BY THE FRENCH. • OIII52 VIETNAMESE ARMY STRENGTH WAS AT 65,000. 011152 TRIPARTITE CHIEFS OF STAFF CONFERENCE IN WASHINGTON. 012852 BAO DAI PLEDGED TO ESTABLISH A 120,000-MAN VIETNAM ARMY. 0201+52 MINISTER LETOURNEAU CONFERRED WITH BAO DAI ON THE BUILDUP OF, AT© U.S. FOR THE NATIONAL ARMY. LACK OF TOP OFFICERS SLOWED TRAINING. AGREEMENT WAS REACHED ON APPOINTING A VIETNAMESE CHIEF OF STAFF AND FULLTIME DEFENSE MINISTER. 021152 VIETNAMESE PARATROOPERS WERE USED IN AN ATTACK ON THE TONGKIN AREA. 022252 DISSIDENT CAODAIST FORCES CLASHED WITH THE FRENCH. THEIR LEADER, COLONEL TRINH MINH TAY, WAS DENOUNCED AS A TRAITOR. 022352 FRENCH ASKED FOR MORE U.S. AID IN ARMING THE NEW DIVISIONS. 022U52 GENERAL SAIAN EVACUATED FRENCH AND VIETNAMESE TROOPS FROM HOA BINH AND THE WESTERN END OF THE HOA BIHH-HANOI ROAD IN ORDER TO PROVIDE MORE TROOPS FOR THE TONGKIN DELTA OPERATIONS. 030852 BAO DAI APPOINTED GENERAL NGUYEN VAN HINH AS CHIEF OF STAFF. 031852 ACHESON TOLD A SENATE COMMITTEE THAT THE INDOCHINA SITUATION WAS VERY SERIOUS. HE STRESSED THE NEED FOR A LARGE AND EFFECTIVE NATIVE FORCE. LETOURNEAU FELT ACHESON' S ALARM WAS UNJUSTIFIED. Ok THRU END OF I952 NATIVE FORCES WERE INCREASINGLY USED IN THE FIGHTING. Ok0152 MINISTER LETOURNEAU WAS NAKED HIGH COMMISSIONER, AIID REMAINED IN THE FRENCH CABINET AS THE ASSOCIATED STATES' MINISTER. GENERAL SAIAN REMAINED AS THE MILITARY COMMANDER. F Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 17 0^0852 THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE WAS ADVISED BY THE SERVICE SECRETARIES THAT A POSITIVE COURSE OF ACTION IN INDOCHINA WOULD BE TO EXPAND THE MAAG TO TRAIN AMD EQUIP THE NATIONAL ARMY TO PROVIDE INTERNAL SECURITY. ■ 0*41052 LETOURNEAU SAID THAT FRANCE WAS TO MAINTAIN ITS TROOPS UNTIL NATIVE TROOPS WERE READY. * OU1652 NATIVE OFFICERS UNDER GENERAL NGUYEIf VAN HINH TOOK OVER THE VIETNAM ARMY GENERAL STAFF. 0141952 GENERAL SALAN PRAISED NATIVE TROOPS IN THE CLEAN UP DRIVE OF THE TONGKIN DELTA. 0^2752 THE VIETNAMESE ARMY WAS TO FORM A NATIVE REGIMENTAL COMBAT TEAM AS OUTLINED BY ITS CHIEF OF STAFF. 05 52 VIETNAMESE GENERAL STAFF CAME INTO EXISTENCE. 051852 EXPANSION OF NATIVE FORCES BROUGHT TOTAL FRENCH AND INDOCHINESE FORCES TO ^00,000 o 50,000 REGULAR GROUND TROOPS HAD BEEN ADDED SINCE JUNE 19 O52U52 VIETNAM PLANNED TO CALL 20-28 YEAR OLDS WITH GRADE SCHOOL EDUCATION FOR SERVICE AS OFFICERS. THE GENERAL MOBILIZATION WAS DROPPED. 052852 AT THE TRIPARTITE MEETINGS IN PARIS IT WAS STATED THAT MORE FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE FROM U.S. WAS NEEDED TO PUT' 200,000 TROOPS IN ARMIES OF THE ASSOCIATED STATES. 06 52 FOUR REGIONAL STAFFS OF THE VIETNAMESE ARMY WERE CREATED. 06 52 LETOURNEAU WENT TO WASHINGTON TO DISCUSS INCREASES IN U.S. AID. THESE DISCUSSIONS RESULTED IN AN AGREEMENT THAT U.S. MILITARY AND FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE SHOULD BE INCREASED TO COVER UO PERCENT OF FRENCH EXPENSES IN INDOCHINA. A FINAL COMMUNIQUE ISSUED ON JUNE 18 STATED THAT THE STRUGGLE IN WHICH THE FORCES OF THE FRENCH UNION AND THE ASSOCIATED STATES WERE ENGAGED, AGAINST THE FORCES OF COMMUNIST AGGRESSION IN INDOCHINA, WAS AN INTEGRAL PART OF WORLD WIDE RESISTANCE BY THE FR.EE NATIONS TO COMMUNIST ATTEMPTS AT CONQUEST AND SUBVERSION. /DEPT. STATE. 060352 UNDER THE HIGH COMMISSIONER LETOURNEAU, THE FRENCH PROVOKED MODERATE NATIONALISTS BY NAMING NGUYEN VAN TAM AS PREMIER OF THE CENTRAL GOVERNMENT. NGUYEN VAN TAM, FATHER OF NGUYEN VAN HIMH WHO WAS LATER MADE CHIEF OF THE VIETNAMESE ARMY, WAS HATED FOR THE PART HE HAD PLAYED EARLIER IN THE CRUET, SUPPRESSION OF VIETNAMESE RESISTANCE MOVEMENTS . 060752 FRENCH- VIETNAM COMMANDOS RAIDED THE ANNAM COAST. 060952 FRANCE HOPED TO SHIFT THE WAR BURDEN TO THE VIETNAM FORCES. G Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 O 061552 U.S. MINISTER HEATH AMD FRENCH MINISTER LETOURNEAU CONFERRED IN WASHINGTON. LETOURNEAU PRESSED FOR AID TO EXPAND THE NATIVE FORCES AND URGED FOR COMMON U.S. -BRITISH-FRENCH POLICY TO ASSURE VIETNAM OF WESTERN SUPPORT. 062^52 IN THE DEBATE OVER NSC 12k 9 THE TRAINING OF LOCAL ARMIES WAS AN ALTERNATIVE, PUT FORTH BY SECRETARY KIMBALL FOR SUCCESSFULLY COUNTERING RUSSIA AT THE LOCAL WAR LEVEL. 062552 NGUYEN VAN TAM TOOK OFFICE AS PREMIER, APPOINTED BY BAO DAI, WHO WAS OF STATE. 07 52 U.S. LEGATION IN SAIGON WAS RAISED TO EMBASSY STATUS. U.S. AMBASSADOR • PRESENTED CREDENTIALS TO BAO DAI. A VIETNAMESE EMBASSY WAS ESTABLISHED IN WASHINGTON D.C. /j.B. 071252 LETOURNEAU REVEALED THAT THE VIETNAM NATIONAL ARMY TOTALED 68,000 MEN. 073052 FRANCE WARNED TPIAT SHE MIGHT HAVE TO ABANDON THE WAR IF THE U.S. DID NOT INCREASE FUNDS FOR FRENCH DEFENSE CONTRACTS. AID TO INDOCHINA FOR 1953 WAS SET AT $350-MILLION. FRENCH HINTED FOR U.S. RELIEF FORCES. 080152 VIETNAM'S PREMIER PLEDGED WO MORE NATIVE DIVISIONS BY THE YEAR'S END. PLANNED A NEW TAX TO RAISE FUNDS FOR THE ARMY. 092152 THE VIETMIWH STAGED AN ATTACK NEAR SAIGON. 101252 THE 200TH U„S. SHIP CARRYING MILITARY AID ARRIVED IN SAIGON. /j.B. 53 A NAVAL TRAINING SCHOOL WAS ESTABLISHED AT NHA TRANG. 012053 GENERAL 0' DANIEL WENT TO VIETNAM TO REVIEW LETOURNEAU' S OPERATION PLANS . 02 53 AD HOC COMMITTEE TO THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR ISA RECOMMENDED AGAINST DIRECT AMERICAN PARTICIPATION IN THE VIETNAMESE TRAINING PROGRAM FOR THE FORESEEABLE FUTURE. /JCS HIST. 020^53 MINISTER LETOURNEAU REPORTED ON A NEW PLAN TO SPPED UP VIETNAMESE TROOP TRAINING. 021653 EX-PREMIER REYNAUD FELT INCREASING THE VIETNAM ARMY WAS THE ONLY SOLUTION TO THE MILITARY STALEMATE. MARSHALL JUIN CONCURRED. 022253 THE FRENCH-VIETNAMESE HIGH MILITARY COMMISSION CONSIDERED DOUBLING THE VIETNAM ARMY. IT APPEARED THAT THE FRENCH HAD ACCEPTED BAO DAI'S ARMY CHIEF OF STAFF GEN. NGUYEN VAN HINH'S PLAN TO INCREASE THE REGULAR. ARMY. FINANCING DIFFICULTIES WERE ANTICIPATED. H Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 79 022353 TALKS TOOK PLACE AT DALAT, VIETNAM, BETWEEN THE FRENCH AND VIETNAMESE THE HIGH MILITARY COMMAND, THEY DECIDED TO DOUBLE THE PROJECTED SIZE OF THE VNA BY ADDING 60 MORE LIGHT BATTALIONS . MEMBERS PRESENT TORE BAO DAI (CHIEF-OF-STATE), NGUYEN VAN TAM (PREMIER), NGUYEN VAN HINH (CHIEF OF STAFF), LETOURNEAU, AND SALM. THE DECISION WAS A MOVE TO END. THE MILITARY STALEMATE. THE REGULAR ARMY = 160,000. 30,000 WOULD-BE ADDED BY THE END OF 1953 IN 20 BATTALIONS.- 022^53 C. L.SULZBERGER REPORTED PREMIER MAYER AS SAYING THAT FRANCE COULD NOT FULFILL ANY MORE EUROPEAN COMMITMENTS UNLESS THE NATO ALLIES INCREASED THEIR AID. A COMMITTEE AGREED TO INCREASE VNA BATTALIONS FROM 30 TO THE U.S. OFFERED $1*2 MILLION IN AID CONDITIONAL 0^ THE PLACEMENT OF OBSERVERS WITH THE TROOPS. /NYT 022^3. 022^53 A JOINT FRENCH-VIETNAMESE HIGH MILITARY COMMITTEE DECIDED TO RAISE 71 BATTALIONS. 022553 VIETNAM WAS GIVEN MORE FREEDOM IN DEVELOPING ITS NATIONAL ARMY APART FROM FRENCH CONTROL. 5^ BATTALIONS WERE TO BE FORMED IN 1953, TO CONTROL AREAS LESS UNDER REBEL CONTROL. SPRING 1953 EXPEDITIONARY CORPS = LAND FORCES OF 175,000 REGULAR TROOPS, INCLUDING 5^,000 FRENCH, 30,000 NORTH AFRICAN, 18,000 AFRICAN, 20,000 LEGIONARIES, 53,000 LOCALLY RAISED TROOPS, AND 55,000 AUXILIARY TROOPS, A NAVAL CONTINGENT OF 5,000, AIR FORCE CONTINGENT OF 10,000. IN THE ARMIES OF THE ASSOCIATED STATES WERE 150,000 REGULAR AND 50,000 AUXILIARY TROOPS IN VIETNAM, 15,000 IN LAOS, 10,000 IN CAMBODIA. /NAVARRE. 03 53 THE FRANCO-VIETNAMESE HIGH MILITARY COUNCIL APPROVED A NEW PROGRAM CALLING FOR AN INCREASE IN VIETNAMESE STRENGTH DURING 1953 OF U0,000 MEN IN 5h "COMMANDO" BATTALIONS. 031^53 THE FRENCH CABINET CONSIDERED A PLAN THAT WOULD LESSEN ITS INDOCHINA COMMITMENTS BY TRAINING MORE VIETNAMESE. 032053 ON A VISIT TO INDOCHINA, U.S C GEN. MARK CLARK PRAISED FRENCH TACTICS AND TRAINING METHODS, SAW NO NEED FOR U.S. MILITARY INSTRUCTORS, AND SAID THE U.S. WOULD NOT FOIST ITS METHODS ON THE FRENCH. 032353 GEN. MARK CLARK STRESSED THE NEED TO EXPAND THE VIETNAM ARMY, AND WAS INTERESTED IN DEVELOPING THE LOCAL MILITIA, OFFICER CADRES, AND TROOP MOBILITY. 032553 H.W.BALDWIN WAS OPTIMISTIC RE FRENCH INVESTMENT AND VIETNAM ARM? STRENGTH. 0^42253 AT THE BIPARTITE (US -FRANCE) MEETINGS IN WASHINGTON, DULLES WAS VERY ANXIOUS FOR FRENCH TO ADOPT THE SUCCESSFUL U.S. -KOREAN INSTRUCTIONAL METHODS FOR USE IN INDOCHINA. /JCS HIST. Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 / 0^2253 THE PARIS GOVERNMENT DECREED THAT FRANCE WOULD BE REPRESENTED IN INDOCHINA BY A HIGH COMMISSION CONSISTING OF A COMMISSIONER GENERAL IN SAIGON AND HIGH COMMISSIONERS IN EACH OF THE ASSOCIATED STATES. OU2653 G.GAUTIER WAS APPOINTED HIGH COMMISSIONER IN VIETNAM. 05 53 ALTOGETHER VIETMINH INSURGENTS STRENGTH = 280,000 INCLUDING REGULARS, REGIONAL TROOPS, MILITIAMEN. THE MAIN STRIKING FORCE = 70,000 MEN IN FIVE ELITE DIVISIONS. 050853 GEN. HENRI NAVARRE WAS APPOINTED BY PREMIER MAYER AS COMMANDER IN CHIEF OF THE FRENCH UNION FORCES IN INDOCHINA, SUCCEEDING GEN. SALAN. HE TOOK OFFICE MAY 20 . 060^53 VNA DEVELOPMENT PROMISED BY FRENCH IN I9U9 HAD BEEN RETARDED BY A SHORTAGE OF OFFICERS, BY FRENCH LACK OF FAITH IN THE VIETNAMESE AND FRENCH FISCAL PROBLEMS. /NIE 91 07 53 THROUGHOUT THE MONTH NAVARRE WAS IN PARIS ATTENDING MEETINGS CONCERNING FRENCH ACTIVITIES IN INDOCHINA. THE SCALE OF HIS DEMANDS WERE OBJECTED TO BY THE CHIEFS OF STAFF BECAUSE FULFILLING THEM WOULD HAVE AN ADVERSE EFFECT ON THE GENERAL MILITARY SITUATION IN EUROPE AND NORTH AFRICA. IT WAS SUGGESTED TO TRY TO GET AN INTERNATIONAL GUARANTEE OF LAOTIAN TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY TO LESSEN THE FRENCH RESPONSIBILITY FOR SECURITY. /LANCASTER. 070353 FRENCH GOVERNMENT HANDED A NOTE TO THE HIGH COMMISSIONER OF VIETNAM, CAMBODIA IN WHICH IT MADE A SOLEMN DECLARATION OF ITS READINESS TO COMPLETE THE INDEPENDENCE AND SOVEREIGNTY OF THE ASSOCIATED STATES BY TRANSFERRING ALL FUNCTIONS WHICH REMAINED UNDER FRENCH CONTROL, AND INVITED THE GOVERNMENTS TO NEGOTIATE WITH THE FRENCH THE SETTLEMENT OF OUTSTANDING CLAIMS IN THE ECONOMIC, FINANCIAL, JUDICIAL, MILITARY, AND POLITICAL SPHERES. /LANCASTER. 070353 M.DEJEAN WAS APPOINTED COMMISSIONER GENERAL TO THE ASSOCIATED STATES. 070953 U.S. GEN. ! DANIEL ENDED A 3 -WEEK SURVEY. HE FAVORED AN INCREASE IN MILITARY AID AND WAS CONFIDENT OF FRENCH VICTORY ONCE THE VIETNAMESE ARMY WAS FULLY ORGANIZED. 071253 1^ FRANCO-U.S. BILATERAL TALKS, THE NAVARRE PLAN WAS DEFINED, AS CALLING FOR A STRUCTURAL REORGANIZATION TO CREATE UNITS BETTER ADAPTED FOR WAR CONDITIONS AND OFFENSIVE OPERATIONS. /lST NOTES 67. 071653 JAMES REST OF, NYT, LINKED THE LAG IN NATIVE TROOP DEVELOPMENT TO NON- ENTHUSIASM FOR BAO DAI ! S REGIME. 072753 AFTER THE KOREAN ARMISTICE, U.S. AID FOR THE FRENCH IN VIETNAM GREW IN VOLUME* Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 d — £1 090653 NON-COMMUNIST NATIONALISTS HELD A CONFERENCE IN SAIGON. THEY DENOUNCED FRENCH COLONIALISM, ATTACKED PREMIER TAM AND DEMANDED AN ELECTED NATIONAL ASSEMBLY. 092353 THE FRENCH FORMALLY AGREED TO ALLOWING U.S. PERSONNEL TO EXAMINE THE TO WHICH U.S. AID WAS BEING PUT. 10 53 IT WAS HOPED THAT 30,000 MEN WOULD BE MOBILIZED FOR THE VIETNAM ARMY BEFORE DECEMBER. 101^53 A VIETNAM NATIONAL CONGRESS OF 200 CONVENED IN SAIGON. RATHER THAN CHOOSE POTENTIAL DELEGATES FOR A MEETING WITH FRANCE THEY PASSED A RESOLUTION DECLARING AN INDEPENDENT VIETNAM WAS NOT TO PARTICIPATE IN THE FRENCH UNION. 101553 general navarre launched the heaviest offensive operation in wo years. 11 53 generals t daniel and bonsal conducted a second survey in vietnam. /report filed 12-19-53. 11 53 general o 1 daniel reported on recommendations he made to the french which all fell short of introduction of large american influence in planning of operations and training of vietnamese forces. /jcs hist. 11 53 brig. gen. paul w. caraway reported that there was little semblance of a national army. 111953 the 2nd report of general o f daniel stated that the french possessed the military initiative. indigenous army development had occurred as planned. vietnamese battalions should be used only with regular forces and not in separate battalions. reorganization of french forces into mobile groups and divisons had been significant. national army training had been unsatisfactory. chief maag indochina had keec abreast of french plans. 112953 ho chi menh issued a call for peace negotiations in a stockholm newspaper. 121753 nguyen van tam left hi's office as premier. 121853 bao dai asked prince buu loc to take the premiership of vietnam. he entered office jan. l6, i95u and served until june l6, 195^. 1953 a considerable portion of u.s. aid in 1953 was to equip the growing vietnamese army, which totaled 155,000 at the end of 1952, and was expanded by ^1-0, 000 by the end of 1953, to reach a total strength of 300,000 by the end of 195^. france planned* to increase fec strength in indochina to 250,000 by the end of 1953- /am 5 1 !- there were 25 americans attached to stem as economic at© technical assistants in indochina. stem had 100 native employees K Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 $0 01 $k FEC IN INDOCHINA = 2k), 000. VIETNAMESE NATIONAL ARMY = 211,000. LAOTIAN ARMY = 21,000. CAMBODIAN ARMY = 16,000. VIETMINH = 115,000. REGULARS PLUS 185,000 MILITIAMEN + GUERRILLAS. 01165^ THE CABINET OF PRINCE BUU LCC WAS INVESTED. 01265^ AT THE BIG FOUR CONFERENCE IN BERLIN, BIDAULT SPECIFIED THAT A CONFERENCE ON INDOCHINA BE HELD. / THE MAIN RESULT OF THE BERLIN CONFERENCE WAS THE SETTING OF APRIL 26 FOR A MEETING AT GENEVA ON INDOCHINA. /FLEM-CWO. 01295 1 * SEC.DEF. MEMO TO SEC. AF. DIRECTED 200 AIR FORCE PERSONNEL TO INDOCHINA TDY TO JUNE 15 , 195^. 01295^ MAJOR GENERAL ERSKINE, CHAIRMAN OF THE PRESIDENTS SPECIAL COMMITTEE ON INDOCHINA, THOUGHT 1 MAAG INDOCHINA SHOULD BE RAISED TO MISSION LEVEL TO HELP WITH TRAINING. 02 5*4 THE NEW FIRST VIETNAMESE DIVISION WHICH HAD BEEN CREATED ACCORDING TO THE NAVARRE PLAN AND LEFT IN A STATIC POSITION, TURNED AGAINST BAO DAI AND THE FRENCH. /FLEM-CWO. 02 5k PRESIDENT RHEE OF KOREA OFFERED TO SEND A ROK DIVISION TO INDOCHINA. WERE OPPOSED. /31^-1 02015^ PRESIDENT EISENHOWER, THE NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL, THE JOINT CHIEFS • OF STAFF, OTHER AGENCIES OF THE GOVERNMENT AND A SPECIAL COMMITTEE UNDER THE CHAIRMANSHIP OF W. BEDELL SMITH HAD STUDIED THE INDOCHINA SITUATION IN TERMS OF WHAT COURSE THE U.S. SHOULD FOLLOW. THEY HAD CONSIDERED THE USE OF U.S. GROUND AIR AND NAVAL FORCES IN INDOCHINA AND ALSO REVIEWED THE OLD THEORY THAT INDOCHINA WAS THE KEY TO SOUTHEAST ASIA, WEIGHED ALTERNATIVE PLANS LIKE THE STRENGTHENING OF THAILAND. /FLEM-CWO. 02055 1 *- GEN. 0' DANIEL T S REPORT ON HIS 3RD VISIT TO VIETNAM RECOMMENDED l) ORGANIZATION OF A SMALL STAFF TO GO QUICKLY TO VIETNAM WITH DETAILED OPERATIONS AND TRAINING PLANS 2) TOO OFFICERS TO BE ATTACHED TO VIETNAMESE GOVERNMENT 3) MORE FUNDS FOR STEM k) TRAINING COMMAND FOR VIETNAMESE NAVAL AND AIR FORCES. 020951+ WAR MINISTER RENE PLEVEN TOURED VIETNAM. /LANCASTER. MID FEB. I95U GENERALS FAY AND BLANCK, CHIEFS OF STAFF OF AIR FORCE AND ARMY RESPECTIVELY, AND SECRETARY OF WAR PIERRE DE CHEVIGNE TOURED VIETNAM FOR FRANCE. /LANCASTER. MAR -APR 5>k THE BATTLE OF DIEN BIEN PHU RAGED. 03035^ PRINCE BUU LOC ARRIVED IN PARIS WITH A DELEGATE TO NEGOTIATE A SETTLEMENT OF VIETNAM CLAIMS 0¥\ THE BASIS OF THE FRENCH GOVERNMENT'S SOLEMN AT I ON OF JULY 3, 1953. THE FRENCH INSISTED ON A COMMITTEE TO EXAMINE THE TOTAL INDEPENDENCE Aim A COMMITTEE TO DEFINE THE NATURE OF VIETNAM 1 S ASSOCIATION TO FRANCE. THIS EFFECTIVELY TIED UP AW PUT OFF ACTIONS UNTIL THE GENEVA CONFERENCE OPENED. (SEE 0^285*0 -/LANCASTER. L Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 ri3 03205 [ l- ALSOP REPORTED THAT GENERAL ELY SAID IN WASHINGTON THAT FRANCE COULD NOT WIN WITH THE MEANS AT HAND AND MUST THEREFORE SEEK A NEGOTIATED PEACE BUT THE U.S. COULD NOT ACCEPT THIS BECAUSE THERE WAS 110 FIGHTING IN INDOCHINA, AS IN KOREA. THE ENEMY WAS EVERYWHERE, SO IF THE FRENCH WITHDREW. ANY NEGOTIATED SETTLEMENT MUST LEAD RAPIDLY TO TOTAL CQMMOTIST CONTROL. " /FLEM-CWO. 03225 1 ! ADMIRAL ARTHUR RADFORD, CHAIRMAN OF JCS, DECLARED THAT THE FRENCH WERE GOING TO WIN THIS WAR. /FLEM-C^O. 0321*5^ THE PRESIDENT OF U.S. PRAISED THE HEROISM OF THE FRENCH FORCES AND DECLARED THAT COMMUNIST AGGRESSION WAS BEING FOUGHT IN INDOCHINA. COMMUNIST AGGRESSION WAS THE STOCK PHRASE USED IN WASHINGTON TO THE INDOCHINA WAR. /FLEM-CWO. 03295^ DULLES MADE A SPEECH APPROVED BY THE PRESIDENT IN ADVANCE, DECLARING THAT COMMUNIST DOMINATION OF INDOCHINA AND SOUTH EAST ASIA BY WHATEVER WOULD BE A GRAVE THREAT TO THE FREE COMMUNITY AND SHOULD NOT BE PASSIVE- LY ACCEPTED. IN THESE WORDS HE RULED OUT EVEN A FREE ELECTION AS A MEANS OF LEGITIMIZING THE COMMUNIST GOVERNMENT OF HO CHI MINH IN INDO- CHINA, STRESSING INSTEAD THE RICHES OF THE AREA AND ITS GREAT STRATEGIC IMPORTANCE. REACTION IN SAIGON WAS U.S. UNPOPULAR. /FLEM-CWO CHECK FLEM-CWO PG 689 NOTE 99 Ok 5k GENERAL O'DNAIEL WAS ASSIGNED PERMANENTLY TO INDOCHINA. /JCS HIST. 0^035^ IN WASHINGTON A SECRET CONFERENCE WAS HELD IN WHICH DULLES AND RADFORD TRIED TO PERSUADE EIGHT LEADERS OF CONGRESS TO AGREE TO SUPPORT A CONGRESSIONAL RESOLUTION AUTHORIZING OUR ENTRY INTO THE INDOCHINA WAR. THE MEETING WAS CALLED BY AUTHORITY OF THE PRESIDENT. THE LEGISLATORS PRESENT WERE SEN. WILLIAM F. KNOWLAND, SEN. EUGENE MILLIMAN, SEN. LYNDON JOHNSON, SEN. RICHARD B. RUSSELL, SEN. EARL C. CLEMENTS, HOUSE SPEAKER JOSEPH MARTIN, REP, JOHN H. MC CORMACK, AND REP. J. PERCY PRIEST. RADFORD WANTED TO SEND 200 PLANES FROM THE CARRIERS ESSEX AND WHICH HE HAD READY IN THE SOUTH CHINA SEA, PLUS OTHER PLANES FROM THE PHILIPPINES, TO SAVE DIEN BIEN PHU. QUESTIONING BROUGHT OUT THAT NOLLE OF THE OTHER THREE JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF APPROVED OF THE IDEA. RADFORD SAID THIS WAS BECAUSE HE HAD SPENT MORE TIME IN THE FAR EAST THAN MY OF THEM AND SO HE UNDERSTOOD THE SITUATION BETTER. /FLEM-CWO. Ok075k PRES. EISENHOWER USED THE; ROW OF DOMINIES THEORY AT A PRESS CONFERENCE. /GETTLEMAN P. 100 0^135^ IN A MEMO FROM JCS TO SEC. DEF. IT WAS STATED THAT THE ARMY WAS CURRENTLY CAPABLE OF ESTABLISHING AND MAINTAINING INTERNAL SECURITY AGAINST DISSIDENTS AND BANDITS BUT NOT AGAINST VIETMINH ALL OUT AGGRESSION UNDER DRV DIRECTION. ■ 0^155^ ADMIRAL RADFORD, CHAIRMAN OF JCS SAID IN A SPEECH THAT INDOCHINA'S LOSS WOULD BE THE PRELUDE TO THE LOSS OF ALL SOUTHEAST ASIA AND A THREAT TO A FAR WIDER AREA. /GETTLEMAN P. 100 M Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 *-7 OUl65 ] + VICE PRESIDENT NIXON IN AN ADDRESS TO THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEWSPAPER EDITORS RULED OUT NEGOTIATIONS WITH THE COMMUNISTS TO DIVIDE THE TERRITORY. HE SAID, "IT IS HOPED THAT THE U.S. WILL NOT HAVE TO SEND TROOPS THERE, BUT IF THE GOVERNMENT CANNOT AVOID IT, THE ADMINISTRATION MUST FACE UP TO THE SITUATION AND DISPATCH FORCES." /GETTLEMEN i 0^265*4 PUBLIC REACTION WAS SO ADVERSE TO NIXON 1 S STATEMENT THAT DULLES SAID THAT THE SENDING OF TROOPS WAS UNLIKELY. /FLEM-CWO. 0^285^ A JOINT FRANCO-VIETNAMESE DECLARATION STATED THAT VIETNAM, (THE INDEPEND- ENCE OF WHICH THE FRENCH HAD PROCLAIMED HALF A DOZEN TIMES), WAS FULLY INDEPENDENT. 05 5^ THE QUAI D'ORSAY AT THE INSISTENCE OF THE U.S. DEPT. OF STATE SENT ITS EMISSARIES TO BAO DAI AT CANNES TO RIG THE APPOINTMENT OF DIEM ARRIVED IN SAIGON 195*+. (WID Ul-57) EARLY IN MAY DIEM HAD TROUBLE ' WITH BAO DAI. NEITHER FRENCH NOR BAO DAI HAD ANY LIKING FOR DIEM. DULLES AND CARDINAL SEELLMAN WERE IN FAVOR OF A GOVERNMENT HEADED BY DIEM ALTHOUGH THERE ARE INDICATIONS THAT DULLES WAS NOT OVERENTHUSIASTIC ABOUT DIEM. THE FRENCH GOVERNMENT DID NOT OPPOSE IT. SOME FRENCH LEADERS ENCOURAGED IT --FORMER HIGH COMMISSIONER LETOURNEAU AND FREDERIC -DUPONT, WHO FOR A FEW DAYS BEFORE THE FALL OF THE LANIEL HAD SERVED AS MINISTER FOR THE ASSOCIATED STATES OF INDOCHINA. /J.B. 05035 1 !- MAJOR GENERAL THOMAS J.H. TRAPNELL DISAGREED IN NEARLY ALL RESPECTS WITH GENERAL O 1 DANIEL ON ASSESSMENT OF THE INDOCHINA WAR. HE STRESSED THE POLITICAL NATURE OF THE WAR AND SAID THAT A STRICTLY MILITARY SOLUTION WAS NOT POSSIBLE. 05O65h DIEN BIEN PHU FELL. 05075^ AFTER DIEN BIEN PHU FELL, SECRETARY DULLES SAID THAT THE PRESENT CONDITIONS IN INDOCHINA DID NOT PROVIDE A SUITABLE BASIS FOR THE U.S C TO PARTICIPATE WITH ITS ARMED FORCES. HE DECLARED HOWEVER, THAT IF AN ARMISTICE OR CEASEFIRE CONCLUDED AT GENEVA PROVIDED A ROAD TO A COMMUNIST TAKEOVER AND FURTHER AGGRESSION, OR IF HOSTILITIES CONTINUED, THEN THE NEED WOULD BE EVEN MORE URGENT TO CREATE THE. CONDITIONS FOR UNITED ACTION IN DEFENSE OF THE AREA. THE SECRETARY THEN POINTED OUT THAT PRESIDENT EISENHOWER HAD REPEATEDLY EMPHASIZED THAT U.S. WOULD NOT TAKE MILITARY ACTION IN INDOCHINA WITHOUT THE SUPPORT OF CONGRESS AND THAT HE WOULD NOT SEEK SUCH SUPPORT UNLESS THERE WAS ADEQUATE COLLECTIVE EFFORT BASED ON GENUINE MUTUALITY OF PURPOSE IN DEFENDING VITAL INTERESTS. 05085^ GENEVA CONFERENCE ON INDOCHINA, (MAY 8 - JULY 2l) 05125^- REPORTS OF A PRESS CONFERENCE IN WASHINGTON AT WHICH DULLES WAS REPORTED TO HAVE DECLARED TPIAT THE RETENTION OF INDOCHINA WAS NOT ESSENTIAL TO THE DEFENSE OF SOUTHEAST ASIA AFFECTED FRENCH MORALE ADVERSELY AT GENEVA. N Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 J& 05155^ GEN. ELY AGREED TO ALLOWING U.S. TO TRAIN VIETNAMESE AND TO U.S. ADVISORS IN VIETNAMESE UNITS. HE DID NOT GIVE ASSENT TO FORMATION OF VIETNAM INTO LIGHT DIVISIONS PER GENERAL f DANIEL'S REQUEST. /JCS HIST. 05185^ GENERALS ELY, SALAN, AND PELISSIER ARRIVED IN SAIGON. /LANCASTER. 0518+20 I95I+ BAO DAI SOUGHT SUPPORT FROM U.S. FOR VNA. THIS WAS VIEWED AS AN ATTEMPT TO ASCERTAIN WILLINGNESS OF U.S. TO REPLACE FRENCH. ( 05205^ JCS WERE CONVINCED THAT U.S. INTERVENTION IN INDOCHINA SHOULD BE PREDICATED ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF EFFECTIVE NATIONAL ARMIES AT THE BEST GUARANTEE OF A MILITARY VICTORY. /JCS HIST. 052^5^ GENERAL 0' DANIEL PRESENTED A PLAN TO SECRETARY OF DEFENSE WILSON TO CREATE 2 VIETNAMESE DIVISIONS IN THE NORTH AND 9 IN THE SOUTH WITH FRENCH COMMAND BUT U.S. COUNTERPART STAFF REPRESENTATION. THE JCS FELT THIS WAS AN UNWORKABLE ARRANGEMENT WITHOUT PRIOR AGREEMENT AT GOVT, LEVEL. /JCS HIST. 05265^ MEMO FROM JCS TO SEC. DEF. STATED 2250 U.S. PERSONNEL OVER THE 350 WERE MAAG REQUIRED TO TRAIN THE ASSOCIATED STATES FORCES. 06 5^ THE VIETNAMESE GOVERNMENT DECIDED TO SET UP A COMMITTEE FOR THE DEFENSE OF THE NORTH WHICH WAS INVESTED WITH THE POWERS HITHERTO EXERCISED BY THE GOVERNOR, AND WAS INSTRUCTED TO PREPARE THE DEFENSE OF HANOI IN THE EVENT OF A FRENCH WITHDRAWAL. THESE ORDERS WERE LATER AMENDED WITH THE RESULT THAT THE COMMITTEE DIRECTED ITS ACTIVITIES TOWARD THE ORGANIZA- TION OF RECEPTION CENTERS FOR THE REFUGEES WHO WERE LATER TRANSFERRED SOUTH. JUNE-JULY 195*4 THE 11TH AND 1^-TH FRENCH INFANTRY DIVISIONS WERE MOVED TO TUNISIA WITH MDAP EQUIPMENT WITHOUT U.S. BUT WITH SACEUR APPROVAL. 06 5h PRESIDENT RHEE OF KOREA'S OFFER TO SEND A ROK ARMY CORPS TO INDOCHINA WAS KEPT WIDER CONSIDERATION. /3lA-l. 06 5^ VIETNAM ARMY WAS AT ITS PEAK STRENGTH OF 219,000. /WID 20-56. 06015*+ LANDSDALE ARRIVED IN SAIGON TO HEAD SAIGON MILITARY MISSION. /SMM REPT. 06035^ ADMIRAL RADFORD SUGGESTED TO GENERAL VALLUY, HEAD OF THE FRENCH MILITARY MISSION, THE USE OF SOUTH KOREAN TROOPS IN INDOCHINA WAR. ACCORDING TO VALLUY THE FRENCH WERE READY TO TURN OVER TO THE U.S. 2 LARGE TRAINING CAMPS. 06035*+ GENERAL PAUL ELY WAS APPOINTED FRENCH HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR INDOCHINA. 060^5*+ FRANCE INITIALED TREATIES WHICH GAVE THE FRENCH-RECOGNIZED VIETNAMESE GOVERNMENT COMPLETE INDEPENDENCE. VIETNAM AGREED TO A FREE ASSOCIATION ; WITH FRANCE WITHIN THE FRENCH UNION. /NYT Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 060k5k IN PARIS, FRENCH PREMIER LANIEL AND VIETNAMESE PREMIER BUU LOC INITIALED WO TREATIES, A TREATY OF INDEPENDENCE OF VIETNAM ANT) A TREATY OF ASSOCIATION PROVIDING FOR COOPERATION THROUGH A HIGH COUNCIL. (DETAILS ON FUTURE COLLABORATION, ESPECIALLY MILITARY AND ECONOMIC, WERE TO BE WORKED OUT IN SEPARATE CONVENTIONS WHICH WERE NEVER CONCLUDED . ) 0605 5H GEN. PAUL HENRI ELY WAS APPOINTED TO REPLACE DEJEAN AS COMMISSIONER GENERAL FOR THE ASSOCIATED STATES AND REPLACING NAVARRE AS COMANDER AND CHIEF OF THE FRENCH UNION FORCES IN INDOCHINA. 06065^ THE FRENCH AGREED TO THE APPOINTMENT OF NGO DINH DIEM AS PREMIER OF SOUTH VIETNAM. 06085^ GENERAL NAVARRE TURNED OVER HIS COMMAND TO GENERAL PAUL ELY. 06095^ GENERAL ELY, THRU T DANIEL, REQUESTED THAT THE U.S. ASSUME ORGANIZATIONAL AOT SUPERVISORIAL DUTIES IN TRAINING VIETNAMESE DIVISIONS. /JCS HIST. 0609-26 195^ ELY ! S REQUEST GENERATED A CRISIS IN WASHINGTON. SUCH A TRAINING MISSION WAS FELT BY DULLES TO BE CONTRARY TO U.S. INTERESTS SINCE THE WAR WAS DEGENERATING SO QUICKLY. GENERAL O 1 DANIEL WAS REFUSED PERMISSION TO GO AHEAD WITH THE TRAINING. /JCS HIST. 062 55^ DOD REQUESTED CHIEF MAAG INDOCHINA TO PROVIDE INFORMATION ON TONNAGE AND TYPES OF EQUIPMENT IN INDOCHINA. REPLY RECEIVED FROM CHIEF MAAG ON JULY 3, AND 7. /309-1 O6295I4 THE FRENCH BEGAN TO EVACUATE THE SOUTHERN PARTS OF THE RED RIVER DELTA. JUL-DEC 1954 VIETMINH ADDED 5 HEW DIVISIONS TO THEIR FORCES. /JCS HIST. THE GENEVA CONFERENCE HAD BEEN A DISASTER FOR SECRETARY DULLES. AFTER THE TWO WEEK RECESS IN THE MIDDLE OF IT HE ANNOUNCED NEITHER HE NOR GENERAL WALTER BEDELL SMITH WOULD RETURN. HOWEVER, AFTER • AN URGENT CALL FROM MENDES -FRANCE, DULLES FLEW TO PARIS ON JULY 12, AND SMITH RETURNED TO GENEVA. THE INITIATIVE WAS EITHER IN THE HANDS OF THE COMMUNIST POWERS ON THE ONE SIDE AND EDEN AND MENDES-FRANCE ON . THE OTHER. AT THE END DULLES ANNOUNCED TPIAT THE U.S. WOULD NOT SIGN PACTS AND PRESIDENT EISENHOWER SAID ON JULY 21 THAT THE U.S. WOULD NEITHER ACCEPT PRIMARY RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE AGREEMENTS NOR ATTEMPT OVERTURN THEM BY FORCE. THIS WAS DUBBED A POLICY OF INNOCENCE BY DISASSOCIATION. /FLEM-CWO 07 5^ U.S. AND GREAT BRITAIN MET TO DISCUSS THE COLLECTIVE DEFENSE OF SOUTHEAST ASIA. • . 07 5^ GENERAL O f DANIEL RECOMMENDED TO JCS AH EXPANDED MAAG IN INDOCHINA TO PROVIDE AN ORGANIZATION WITH SUFFICIENT PERSONNEL TO PROVIDE A REALISTIC TRAINING PROGRAM. EXPANSION HAD TO TAKE PLACE BEFORE THE AUGUST 11, DEADLINE AS ESTABLISHED IN THE GENEVA AGREEMENT,, THE STATE DEFT. CONCURRED. /JCS HIST. 07015'+ MAJOR LUCIEN CONIEN ARRIVED IN SAIGON AS SECOND MEMBER OF SMM. /SMM REFT. Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 rt 070354 DOD INFORMED DEFT. OF STATE CONCERNING ACTIONS IT HAD TAKEN TO RECOVER MDAP EQUIPMENT IN INDOCHINA. STATE COUNTERED WITH AN INQUIRY TO BE DIRECTED TO CHIEF MAAG AS TO WHAT FRENCH WERE DOING TO RECOVER MDAP EQUIPMENT. CHIEF MAAG REPLIED ON JULY 3 (AND 7). 070354 AND 070754 CINCPAC ASSIGNED CHIEF MAAG INDOCHINA THE RESPONSIBILITY FOR RECOVERY AND/ OR DESTRUCTION OF U.S. MDAP MATERIAL IN INDOCHINA. 07075 1 * NGO DINH DIEM ARRIVED IN VIETNAM. '/SMM REPT. 070754 HEAD OF STATE AND FORMER EMPEROR BAO DAI APPOINTED NGO DINH DIEM PREMIER OF VIETNAM. 07095^ DOD REQUESTED STATE TO USE DIPLOMATIC CHANNELS TO ENSURE FRENCH COMPLY WITH CHIEF MAAG REQUEST FOR INFORMATION ON FRENCH INTENTIONS RE MDAP EQUIPMENT. /309-1 071254 CHIEF MAAG INDOCHINA SUBMITTED PROGRESS REPORT OH SAFEGUARDING MDAP EQUIPMENT. IT'S SUCCESS WAS DIRECTLY PROPORTIONAL TO AMOUNT OF FRENCH ADVANCE INFORMATION. /309-1 07165*4 SECRETARY OF STATE SENT MESSAGE TO SMITH AT GENEVA ADVISING HIM TO ATTEMPT TO PROTECT MDAP MATERIAL IN THE TERMS OF THE CEASE-FIRE. /309-1 071754 CHIEF MAAG SUBMITTED 2ND REPORT ON INDOCHINA EQUIPMENT. /309-1 07185^ UNDER-SECRETARY OF STATE WALTER BEDELL SMITH TALKED WITH PREMIER MENDES- FRANCE ABOUT MDAP EQUIPMENT WHO PROMISED TO DISCUSS PROBLEM WITH THE APPROPRIATE FRENCH MEN. / 309-1. 07195^ SEC.DEF. THRU THE ARMY CHIEF OF STAFF REQUESTED CHIEF MAAG TO INFORM ON SPECIFIC FRENCH PLANS FOR SAFEGUARDING MDAP EQUIPMENT IN INDOCHINA. /309-1 072054 CHIEF MAAG INDOCHINA MESSAGE SAID FRENCH PLANS FOR RECOVERY OF MDAP EQUIPMENT WERE ADEQUATE SO NO PROBLEMS. 072054 GENEVA AGREEMENT SIGNED. 07205^ PARTITION AT THE 17TH PARALLEL BECAME A FACT. DIEM DISCLAIMED ANY OBLIGATION TO ACKNOWLEDGE THE GENEVA ACCORDS WHICH HIS GOVERNMENT DID NOT SIGN. /WID 41-57. 072154 GENERAL DELTIEL ON BEHALF OF ELY, AND TA QUANG BUU, THE VIETMINH VICE- MINISTER FOR NATIONAL DEFENSE SIGNED THE ARMISTICE AGREEMENTS. /LANCASTER 072754 CEASE FIRE (INDOCHINA WAR) WENT INTO EFFECT IN NORTH VIETNAM. 08 " 54 MUTUAL SECURITY ACT WAS AMENDED TO PROVIDE FOR DIRECT AID TO THE' VIETNAMESE . Q Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 I & 08 l2255 SOUTH VIETNAMESE AND VIETMINH TROOPS BEGAN LARGE SCALE MOVEMENTS INTO ARFAS ASSIGNED UNDER THE TRUCE. 0)-l2355 DIEM ANNOUNCED GENERAL ELECTIONS WOULD BE HELD IN 3 OR k MONTHS. THIS WAS A POLITICAL MOVE TO MAINTAIN HIMSELF IN POWER. /j.B. DRAGON. 0-'l2655 DIEM OUSTED THE REBEL NATIONAL POLICE CHIEF LAI VAN SANG, STRIPPED THE BINH XUYEN OF ITS POLICE POWER, APPOINTED NGUYEN NGOC LE IN SANG'S PLACE AND SET A DEADLINE FOR ALL MEMBERS OF THE POLICE FORCE TO REPORT. OU2755 DULLES AND COLLINS AFTER CONFEF: [ IG WITH CONGRESSIONAL LEADERSHIP STATED THE U.S. POSITION WAS TO CONSIDER A SHIFT OF SUPPORT FROM DIEM BUT IF FRENCH WOULD GUARANTEE FULL BACKING TO THE VIETNAMESE GOVERNMENT EVOLVED AND WOULD RESOLVE ITS AMBIGUOUS POSITION RELATIVE TO NORTH VIETNAM. /JCS HIST. OU2755 DIEM-SECT TRUCE WAS BROKEN. /JCS HIST. OU2855 BAO DAI ORDERED THAT TP.E MILITARY POWER BE TURNED OVER TO THE OPPOSITION GENERAL NGUYEN VAN VY, BUT DIEM IGNORED THE ORDER. 0^2855 CIVIL WAR BROKE OUT IN SAIGON. DIEM ORDER]® THE VIETNAMESE ARMY TO ATTACK. 0^3055 FRANCE UNDER THE TRUCE ACCORD, CUT ITS MILITARY FORCES IN SOUTH" VIETNAM TO 90,000 WHILE REMOVING MOST TROOPS FROM CAMBODIA AND LAOS. BB Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 OP I 01+3055 THE NATIONAL REVOLUTIONARY CONGRESS, A REPORTED ' BROAD BASED GROUP, CALLED ON DIEM TO FORM A HEW GOVERNMENT AND ELIMINATE BAO DAI. /JCS HIST. 050155 GENERAL NGUYEN VAN VY TOOK CONTROL OF SOUTH VIETNAM FOR A DAY. HE HELD DIEM PALACE PRISONER AMD ORDERED TROOPS INTO STRATEGIC SAIGON POSITIONS. MILITARY LEADERS WERE CONFUSED BY THE COMMAND SHIFT AND CLAIMED THAT IT BLOCKED AN OFFENSIVE AGAINST THE REBELS. BY THE NEXT DAY DIEM RESUMED CONTROL WITH GENERAL LE VAN TY T S HELP. 050255 THE NATIONAL ARMY OPENED AN OFFENSIVE AGAINST THE REBELS OUTSIDE SAIGON. 050555 THE PEOPLE'S NATIONAL REVOLUTIONARY COMMITTEE COMPRISING SOME 4,000 DIEM SUPPORTERS MET AND DEMANDED REMOVAL OF BAO DAI. 05085-5 AT TRIPARTITE MEETINGS (US -FRANCE -GREAT BRITAIN, MAY 8-lU) FAURE THREATENED TO WITHDRAW THE EEC BECAUSE OF U.S. -FRENCH DISAGREEMENT OVER WITHDRAWAL OF DIEM. DULLES BELIEVED HIS THREAT. /JCS HIST. DULLES AGREED THAT BAO DAI COULD BE RETAINED IF HE STOPPED INTERFERING WITH DIEM'S EXERCISE OF POWER. DULLES REFUSED TO SEE BAO DAI IN PARIS. /J.B. DRAGON. 050955 JCS MEMO TO SEC.DEF. STATED THAT THE VNA WAS LITTLE GOOD, THAT PRESENCE OF AN OUTSIDE FORCE IN VIETNAM WAS ESSENTIAL AND THAT EVENTUAL FRENCH WITHDRAWAL WOULD BE DESIRED. /353-1 O5.IO55 THE REBELLION WAS BROKEN, DIEM RECONSTITUTED HIS GOVERNMENT BY FORMING A NEW CABINET COMPOSED LARGELY OF HIS OWN FOLLOWERS. 051155 GENERAL NGUYEN VAN HINH WAS RELIEVED OF HIS GENERALSHIP AND MEMBERSHIP IN THE VIETNAMESE ARMY. 051155 IN TALKS BETWEEN FAURE AND DULLES, THE U.S. HELD THAT THE FRENCH WITHDRAWAL FO FORCES SHOULD BE CO-ORDINATED WITH THE TRAINING AND ORGANIZATION OF VIETNAM'S NATIONAL ARMY TO ASSURE THAT NATION'S DEFENSE. THE VIETNAM SITUATION DID NOT LEND ITSELF TO A CONTRACTUAL AGREEMENT BETWEEN FRANCE AND THE U.S., (I.E. -THE U.S. IN THE FUTURE WOULD ACT INDEPENDENTLY OF FRANCE.) /JCS HIST. 051255 DIEM HOPED THAT FRANCE WOULD MOVE ITS EXPEDITIONARY CORPS TO THE 1?TH PARALLEL AND NOT KEEP THEM IN SAIGON, TOURANE AND CAP ST. JACQUES. FELT THE FRENCH TROOPS MAJOR ROLE WAS TO GUARD AGAINST AGGRESSION FROM THE NORTH. 051355 IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE ARMISTICE AGREEMENTS, THE FRENCH EVACUATED HAI 051355 FRANC AND U.S. PRODUCED A TOTAL AGREEMENT ON A POLICY FOR VIETNAM. AGREED TO BACK DIEM WITH DIFFERENCES OF EMPHASIS. FAURE WAS REPORTED TO HAVE OBTAINED FRC ' DULLES ASSURANCE THAT THE U.S. WOULD LOYALLY BACK FRANCE IN SEEKING TO PREPARE FOR THE I956 ALL-VIETNAM ELECTIONS. FAURE REPORTED THAT GREAT BRITAIN, FRANCE, AND U.S. HAD REACHED A NON-WRITTEN AGR ; AT FRANCE WOULD CONTINUE FORCE WITHDRAWAL BUT POSSIBLY ONE C( . .GENT CGHT BE LEFT. CC Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 7 051^55 GENERAL COLLINS LEFT SAIGON FOR A NATO POSITION. /JCS HIST. ■ 051.555 THE IMPERIAL GUARD OF BAO DAI WAS ABOLISHED AND MERGED WITH THE ARMY. 051655 DEADLINE OF WITHDRAWAL FOR FRENCH UNION FORCES TO SOUTH OF 17'TH PARALLEL AND VIETMINH TO NORTH. 051855 THE VIETNAMESE NATIONAL ARMY COMPLETED OCCUPATION OF QUI NEON, HELD BY THE VIETMINH FOR 10 YEARS. ' 052055 GENERAL ELY DEMANDED TO BE RELIEVED. HE WAS WORN OUT BY HIS EFFORTS TO CARRY OUT AN IMPOSSIBLE MISSION. /J.B. DRAGON. 052055 THE FRENCH COMMAND AGREED TO RETIRE ITS TROOPS FROM THE SAIGON-CHOLON. /J.B. DRAGON. 052055 THE FIRST MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY (MSU) POLICE TECHNICIANS ARRIVED IN VIETNAM, UNDER ICA AUSPICES. 052155 BOA DAI WAS DEPOSED AS EMPEROR. 052155 DIEM SENT THE NATIONAL ARM REINFORCEMENTS TO THE HAO HAO AREA. 052355 SVN TROOPS WERE FLOWN TO THE HAO HAO AREA IN COCHIN CHINA. ARMY FORCES WERE THERE AS A SAFETY MEASURE --NO ATTACK WAS PLANNED. 052655 AMBASSADOR G. FREDERICK REINHARDT ARRIVED IN SOUTH VIETNAM REPLACING GENERAL COLLINS. 052955 DIEM ATTACKED SECTS. 06 55 LT.COL.JORGENSEN, ASSIGNED BY GENERAL O'DANIEL TO ASSIST AMBASSADOR COLLINS IN STAFF PLANNING FOR A CIVIL GUARD, WAS REQUESTED BY AMBASSADOR REINHARDT TO CONTINUE THIS WORK. COLONEL VALERIANO AND MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY ADMINISTRATION PERSONNEL WERE ALSO INVOLVED IN THE EARLY NATIONAL POLICE PLANNING PROGRAM. 05 55 DIRECT FRENCH INTERFERENCE IN THE SECT -DIEM FIGHT HAD EFFECTIVELY ENDED. /J.B. DRAGON. 060155 THE VIETNAMESE ARMY TOOK OVER THE SUPPLY SYSTEM WHEN THE FRENCH EVACUATED THE PHU THO DEPOT. 060155 THE NATIONAL ARMY AND POLICE TOOK OVER THE SECURITY OF SAIGON. 060555 THE NATIONAL ARMY BEGAN A LARGE SCALE OFFENSIVE AGAINST THE FORCES OF GENERALS BA CUT AND TRAN VAN SOAI SOUTH WEST OF SAIGON. 060655 THE VIETMINH GOVERNlvENT DEMANDED TALKS, IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE GENEVA AGREEMENT TO PREPARE THE ELECTIONS IN JULY, 1956, TO UNIFY VIETNAM. LD Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 . 060655 DIEM INSISTED THAT FRANCE HONOR THE PROMISE MADE BY MENDES-FRANCE AT GENEVA TO WITHDRAW FRENCH TROOPS FROM VIETNAM SINCE THIS WAS THE ONLY WAY THAT FRENCH COLONIAL AEGIS COULD BE REMOVED. FRANCE WAS WILLING TO WITHDRAW BUT WAS NOT ABOUT TO LEAVE ITS LOGISTICAL SUPPORT UNDER VIETNAM CONTROL AS DIEM HOPED. /JCS HIST. 062055 GENERAL ELY LEFT SAIGON AFTER TURNING OVER HIS COMMAND TO GENERAL PIERRE JACQUCT, WHO WAS DESIGNATED ACTING COMMISSIONER GENERAL AND COMANDER AND CHIEF OF FRENCH UNION FORCES IN INDOCHINA, PENDING NOMINATION OF ELY'S REPLACEMENT. /JCS HIST. ( 070155 FRANCE FORMALLY RELINQUISHED COMMAND AUTHORITY OVER THE VIETNAMESE NAVY AND AGREED THAT FRENCH AND VIETNAMESE FORCES SHOULD BE UNDER INDEPENDENT COMMANDS. 070155 THE ARVN BEGAN OPERATIONS AGAINST THE HAO HAO IN THE THAT SON AREA. 070255 THE DEPENDENCE OF THE VIETNAMESE ARMY COMMAND ON THE FRENCH HIGH COMMAND AT LAST CAME TO AN END. THE EXPEDITIONARY CORPS WAS THEN CONCENTRATED IN THE CAP ST. JACQUES VICINITY AND HAD BEEN REDUCED FROM 175,000 TO 30,000 MEN. /J.B. DRAGON. 070355 THE U.S. APPROVED DROPPING THE PLAN TO CUT THE ARMY TO 100,000 MEN SO THE ARM COULD ABSORB THE ARMIES OF THE RELIGIOUS SECTS. 070755 ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF HIS INSTALLATION AS PRIME MINISTER, DIEM ANNOUNCED THE NATIONAL REFERENDUM SET FOR OCTOBER 23, 1955- /J.B. DRAGON. 070755 FRENCH FORMALLY TRANSFER NHA PRANG AIR BASE TO VIETNAMESE CONTROL. 071655 NGO DIM DIEM DECLARED THAT SOUTH VIETNAM, NOT HAVING SIGNED THE GENEVA AGREEMENT, WOULD NOT TAKE PART IN GENERAL ELECTIONS UNLESS THEY WERE GUARANTEED TO BE FREE IN THE NORTH AS WELL AS IN THE SOUTH. /J.B. DRAGON. 071855 AFTER AN ANNOUNCEMENT OF AID BY THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA TO THE DRV ON JULY 7, MOSCOW ALSO CONCLUDED AN AID AGREEMENT WITH HANOI. 071855 THE NATIONAL ARMY BATTLED THE HOA MO IN HA TIEN. 071855 U.S. OFFICERS STARTED TO TRAIN VIETNAMESE OFFICIALS IN QUANG TRI. 071955 NGO DINH DIEM REFQSED TO ATTEND TALKS WITH DELEGATES FROM THE NORTH ON ELECTIONS TO BE HELD IN 1958. TALKS WERE SCHEDULED BY TEE GENEVA TO BEGIN JULY 20, 1955. SVA REJECTED THE NORTH VIETNAMESE GOVERNMENT'S INVITATION TO DISCUSS ELECTIONS ON THE GROUNDS THAT IN THE NORTH THE PEOPLE WOULD NOT BE ABLE TO EXPRESS THEIR WILL FREELY AND THAT FALSIFIED VOTES IN NORTH VIETNAM COULD OVERRULE THE VOTES IN SOUTH VIETNAM. /READER 072955 THE ASST.SEC.DEF. (ISA) REQUESTED A JCS EVALUATION OF THE MAAG-RECOMi D- ed 150,000 MAN VILA FOR FY 1955-56. ISA REITERATED FORCE REQUIREMENTS TO ME T INTERNAL NOT EXTE L AGGRESSION. /323-1 EE Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 n 08 55 THE U.S. COUNTRY TEAM SUBMITTED THE TEAM PLAN FOR TRAINING THE SECURITY FORCES OF SOUTH VIETNAM. /COUNTRY TEAM MESSAGE 933, DISPATCH 08' 55 THE FRENCH AGR.EED TO ABOILISH THE MINISTRY FOR THE ASSOCIATED STATES OF INDOCHINA. ITS FUNCTIONS, MUCH ALTERED BY THE REALIZATION OF INDEPENDENCE, WERE TRANSFERRED TO THE MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS. 08 55 NO AGREEMENT ON FRENCH FORCES STATUS AND WITHDRAWAL WAS REACHED IN NEGOTIATIONS BETWEEN FRENCH AND SOUTH VIETNAMESE REPRESENTATIVES IN PARIS . 080955 DIEM'S REFUSAL TO DISCUSS ELECTIONS WITH NORTH VIETNAM INCREASED THE LIKELIHOOD OF AN ATTACK BY THE, NORTH. U.S. POLICY IN THIS EVENT WITH RESPECT TO SEATO AND APPLICATION OF FORCES WAS DEVELOPED. /JCS HIST. 080955 GENERAL O f DANIEL PROPOSED U.S. SUPPORT 150,000 FORCE LEVEL IN VIETNAMESE ARMY, PLUS 10,000 TROOPS OF THE SECT ARMIES BY JULY 1, 1956. O8IO55 AMBASSADOR REINHARDT AND CINCPAC ENDORSED GENERAL T DNAIEL'S FORCE LEVEL, JCS RECOMMENDED IT BE APPROVED. /JCS HIST. 081655 HENRI HOPPENOT, AMBASSADOR OF FRANCE ON EXTRAORDINARY MISSION AND HIGH COMMISSIONER OF THE FRENCH REPUBLIC NEAR THE STATE OF VIETNAM PRESENTED HIS LETTERS OF CREDENCE TO PRIME MINISTER DIEM. THIS ACTION TERMINATED THE OFFICE OF COMMISSIONER GENERAL OF FRANCE IN INDOCHINA. 083055 DULLES DECLARED THE U.S. GOVERNMENT WAS IN AGREEMENT WITH DIEM AND SUPPORTED THE CONTENTION THAT CONDITIONS IN NORTH VIETNAM RULED OUT POSSIBILITY OF HOLDING FREE ELECTIONS. /LANCASTER. 09 55 FATHERLAND FRONT WAS ORGANIZED IN HANOI, FORMERLY WAS LIEN VIET. 090255 JCS AGREED WITH THE TAYLOR ANALYSIS. 090255 VOD CONCURRED IN SECRETARY OF THE ARMY'S DESIGNATION OF SAMUEL T. WILLIAMS TO SUCCEED 0' DANIEL AS CHIEF MAAG. /326-1 ■ SEPT 6-29 1955 LT. GEN. BRUCE C. CLARK CO ENDING GENERAL USARPAC VISITED WEST PACIFIC AND S.E. ASIA, REVIEWED THE TRIM ORGANIZATION. /JCS HIST. 090955 JCS ENVISAGED DEFENSE OF S.E. ASIA AS RELYING INITIALLY 01: INDIGINOUS FORCES. U.S. AIR AND NAVAL POWER, ARMY MOBILE STRIKE FORCE. JCS HOWEVER FELT SUBVERSION WAS REAL THREAT. NO ADDITIONAL FORCES SHOULD BE SENT TO ASIA UNTIL THAT CHANGED. /JCS TO SEC.DEF. MEMO. 093255 JCS HE 938351 REQUESTED CINCPAC TO EXPRESS THEIR VIEWS ON PHILIPPINE TRAINING IN COUNTER SUBVERSION FOR VNA. 092055 DIEM OPENED A CAMPAIGN AGAINST THE BINH XUYEN WITH 22 BATTALIONS. 092155 DIEM ISSUED A STATEMENT THAT THERE WAS NO QUESTION OF A CONFERENCE BETN I SOUTH AND NORTH VIETNAM. /LANCASTER. FF Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 i'J 10 55 CINCPAC RECOMMENDED VNA TRAINING IN PHILIPPINES. BOTH JCS AND DOD CONCURRED BY NOVEMBER 1955- /323-1. 10 55 BINH XUYEN WAS DEFEATED AS AN ORGANIZED ARMED INSURGENT FORCE. 10 55 SOUTH VIETNAM RECALLED ITS DELEGATION FROM PARIS. WHICH HAD BEEN TRYING TO REACH AN AGREEMENT ON THE STATUS OF THE FRENCH FORCES. 101055 WASHINGTON APPROVED THE COUNTRY TEAM PLAN FOR TRAINING- THE SECURITY FORCE IN SOUTH VIETNAM. /STATE DEPI. •: MESSAGE 1221. 101155 NIE 63, 1-3-35 REPORTED THE STRENGTH OF THE VNA AT lVf,000 PLUS 8-10,000 SECT FORCES IN THE PROCESS OF BEING INTEGRATED. THE GVN WANTED A FORCE OF 200,000 WHEREAS THE U . S . -APPROVED FORCE LEVEL WAS 150,000 BY JULY 1956. THE VNA WAS NOT CONSIDERED CAPABLE OF COUNTERING MAJOR GUERRILLA OPERATIONS. VIETNAMESE NATIONAL POLICE HAD U,500 MEN. CIVIL GUARD WAS TO BE ORGANIZED FROM PROVINCIAL GUARDS, LOCAL MILITIA AND OTHER ELEMENTS UNDER MINISTER OF INTERIOR. ORGANIZATION TO CONTAIN 65,000 MEN THE U.S. TO SUPPORT ONLY 25,000. 0212-1ST. THE FRENCH EXPEDITIONARY CORPS WAS REDUCED TO 1+5,000 TROOPS. IOI855 THE REFERENDUM TO BE HELD TO CHOOSE BETWEEN DIEM AND BAO DAI AS ANNOUNCED BY DIEM WAS DECLARED ILLEGAL BY BAO DAI. 102355 IN A NATIONAL REFERENDUM HELD TO ELECT THE CHIEF OF STATE, NGO DINH DIEM RECEIVED 5,721,735 VOTES, AGAINST 63,017 FOR BAO DAI, FORMER EMPEROR SINCE MARCH 7, 19^9, HEAD OF STATE OF VIETNAM. /j.B. 102655 A REPUBLIC WAS PROCLAIMED BY NGO DINH DIEM. HE BECAME THE FIRST PRESIDENT OF SOUTH VIETNAM. 102855 CINCPAC DISPATCH 280503A REDESIGNATED MAAG INDOCHINA AS MAAG VIETNAM. 217155. 103155 PRESIDENT DIEM ISSUED HIS FIRST ORDER TO THE VIETNAMESE ARMED FORCES AS THEIR SUPREME COMMANDER. 11 55 MDAP EQUIPMENT WAS VALUED AT $508,000,000 ACCORDING TO FRENCH INVENTORY. 11 55 REPORT FROM VIETNAM COUNTRY TEAM INDICATED REDUCTION IN FRENCH FORCES RESULTED IN LOSS OF CONTROL OF MDAP MATERIALS. COULD NOT SUPPLY FORCES IN THE EVENT OF CONTINGENCY BY MID-I956. FRENCH WERE ALSO REMOVING GOOD EQUIPMENT. /JCS HIST. 11 55 CIVIL GUARD TRANSFERRED BY DIEM FROM MINISTRY OF INTERIOR TO PRESIDENCY. 11 55 GENERAL S.T. WILLIAMS ARRIVES IN SAIGON. 110155 JCS APPROVED ADMIRAL STUMP'S VIEWS AND AUTHORIZED CINCPAC TO BUDGET AND PLAN THE PROGRAM. 1.13055 PROGRAM FOR REDISTRIBUTION OF MDAP EQUIP' REACHED THE CRITICAL STAGE. GG Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 12 55 TRIM ACCOMPLISHED LITTLE TRAINING DURING 1955', BECAUSE OF CONTINUED EMPLOYMENT OF THE VIA IN OPERATIONS AGAINST THE SECTS AND THE LACK OF INTEREST BY THE FRENCH. /JCS HIST. 12 55 HOA RAO, BINH XUYEN AMD CAO DAI WERE NO LONGER AN ORGANIZED THREAT TO THE GOVERNMENT . . 120655 THE CNO (AS JCS EXECUTIVE AGENT) REPORTED TRAINING HAD PROGRESSED BUT CRITICAL STAGE HAD BEEN REACHED. ( STEPS HAD TO BE TAKEN TO RETAIN THE TEMPO OF MAAG. 120855 VNA ARMY, DEPLOYED THROUGHOUT SOUTH VIETNAM, HAD BEEN ABLE TO THWART VIETMINH AND SECTS. LATE 1955 THE VNA GENERAL STAFF BEGAN TO REGROUP THE ARM INTO DIVISIONS TO TRAIN. ADDITIONAL SECURITY FORCES WERE EEDED TO FILL THE VOID CREATED BY THE WITHDRAWING ARMY UNITS. /JCS HIST 121255 THE U.S. CONSULATE IN HANOI WAS CLOSED. 121255 JCS REQUESTED OSD TO ASK NSC TO RECONSIDER ADDITIONAL PERSONNEL FOR VIETNAM, 121355 SEC.DEF. , WILSON TO SECRETARY OF STATE, DULLES MEMO DISCUSSING GENEVA AGREEMENT, ARTICLE 16 RELATIVE TO EXPANDED MAAG TO HANDLE MDAP EQUIPMENT. JCS, CINCPAC, DOD FELT THAT ARTICLE 3.6 AND ITS RESTRICTIVE CLAUSE DID NOT APPLY TO U.S. AND SVN SINCE NEITHER HAD SIGNED. 121355 A COMMITTEE CHAIRED BY LT. COL. EVANS MET IN PLANS SECTION, MAAG, TO PLAN THE PREPARATION OF TOO NEW TD'S (TERM) FOR MAAG. THE FIRST PLAN WAS TO ACCOMPLISH PRESENT MISSION AND THE SECOND TO ACCOMPLISH A MISSION TO BEGIN JULY 1, 1956. 121.655 ALLEN DULLES WROTE JOHN FOSTER DULLES THAT IT WAS ESSENTIAL TO CIA OPERATIONS THAT RESTRICTIONS ON THE NUMBER OF MILITARY PERSONNEL BE RELAXED SO THAT AGENCY WOULD BE ASSURED OF SUFFICIENT SLOTS UNDER MILITARY COVER TO DO ITS JOB. /335-1. 122055 THE NEW PLANS (TD) BEING DEVELOPED AT MAAG -VIETNAM WERE COMPLETED. 122755 LT. COL. HANELIN REPORTED TO CHIEF, MAAG ON WASHINGTON ACTION ON MAAG- VIETNAM PERSONNEL REQUIREMENTS. 122755 GENERAL 0' DANIEL REPORTED THAT MR. ROBERTSON, DEFT. OF STATE, STATED THAT STATE MIGHT REACT FAVORABLY TO AN INCREASE OVER THE AUTHORIZED 3^2 EARLY 1956 CONTROVERSY EXISTED BETWEEN FRENCH AND VIETNAMESE OVER ADMINISTRATION OF THE TRIM PROGRAM. IT FUNCTIONED WITH SOME U.S. ADVISORS BUT WAS PREDOMINATELY STAFFED WITH FRENCH INSTRUCTORS. /WID 17-56. 01 56 SOUTH VIETNAMESE ARMY UNITS OCCUPIED TAY NINE, PRINCIPAL CAO DAI POLITICAL CENTER, LEADj ! TO THE BREAK UP OF THE OR fIZED CAO DAI ARMED INSURGENCY. AGRE I . WITH CAO DAI LEADERS ON FEBRUARY 28 LEGALIZED CAO DAI RELIGIOUS PRACTICES AND FORBADE ITS POLITICAL ACTIVITIES AS RELIGIOUS SECT. HH Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 ¥< c 011156 CNO ASKED CINCPAC FOR MINIMUM U.S. PERSONNEL REQUIRED TO REPLACE FRENCH. 011356 CHIEF-MAAG REPORTED TO CINCPAC THAT SECRETARY QUARLES SUGGESTED THAT FRENCH OR VIETi: :SE CIVILIAN TECHNICIANS BE HIRED TO REPLACE THE WITHDRAWING FRENCH FORCES. THIS WAS NOT POLITICALLY ACCEPTABLE TO VIETNAMESE.. 0111+56 THE FRENCH ANNOUNCED PLANS TO RETAIN 230 PERSONNEL AS ADVISORS TO VNAF PLUS 130 OF THEIR PERSC . EL TO SERVE AS A TRAINING CENTER FOR F-8-F TRAINING AND TO RETAIN EXCLUSIVE RESPONSIBILITY OF VNAF AND NAVY THRU 3956. 01ll:56 CHIEF -MAAG INFORMED CINCPAC THAT MAAG VIETNAM WAS DEVELOPING A HEW TD ANTICIPATION OF A RAISE IN PERSONNEL CEILING. 011*156 MAAG CABLE TO CINCPAC STATED THEIR SECOND PLAN WOULD PROVIDE FOR ADVICE DOWN TO BATTALION LEVEL AND WOULD THUS REQUIRE 10^9 U.S. PERSONNEL AS AGAINST PRESENT 3^2 AUTHORIZED. 011956 CHIEF -MAAG INFORMED CINCPAC THAT THE FIRST PLAN CALLED FOR 636 U.S. MILITARY. 012156 A MESSAGE FROM CHIEF, MAAG, VIETNAM TO CINCPAC, DEPTAR, CNO, AND DEPIA STATED THAT THE CONTINUED WITHDRAWAL OF FRENCH PRESENTED A PROBLEM IN THE DISPOSAL OF EXCESS EQUIPMENT. HELP ASKED IN THE SPEED-UP OF ADMIN- ISTRATIVE PROCESSING OF DECLARATIONS AND SHIPPING INS RUCTIONS. 012556 MEMO TO SECRETARY OF DEFENSE FROM ASD STATED THAT REPORT OF INTERAGENCY COSTING TEAM THAT HAD RECENTLY RETURNED FROM A 5 WEEK MISSION TO VIETNAM INDICATED 150-200 MORE WERE NEEDED AT MAAG FOR LOGISTIC PURPOSES. 012656 PRES. DIEM FORMALLY ASKED FOR AN INCREASE IN U.S. ADVISORS. IT WAS THE VIETNAMESE GOVERNMENTS POSITION THAT REPLACING DEPARTING FRENCH FORCES WITH U.S. FORCES WOULD NOT VIOLATE EITHER THE SPIRIT NOR THE LETTER OF THE GENEVA ACCORDS. 012756 CINCPAC INFORMED CNO THAT WITHDRAWAL OF FRENCH AND INABILITY OF FRENCH AND VIETNAMESE TO COMPROMISE REQUIRED EXPEDITING AUGMENTATION PLANS DECISION TO RAISE 3^-2 CEILING WAS MADE. 013156 A JOINT INVENTORY OF MDAP EQUIPMENT WAS PROPOSED TO FRENCH. 013156 SEC.DEF. C.E. WILSON WROTE SEC. STATE DULLES OUTLINING PROBLEMS OF MAAG VIETNAM RE SHORTAGE OF PERSC L TO HANDLE LOGISTICS PROBLEMS. 02 56 THE GOVE? ENT GAINED OCCUPATION OF CAO DAI POSTS IN TAY NINH AND INTEGRATION OF MOST OF GENERAL PHUONG'S FORCES. /WID 9-56. 02 56 FEC STRENGTH DOWN TO 15,000. II Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 Hi 020256 DULLES DECIDED PROTECTION OF MDAP EQUIBffiNT WARRANTED AN INCREASE IN PERSONNEL AND THEREFORE AUTHORIZED A GROUP OF 350 FOR THE TEMPORARY EQUIPMENT RECOVERY MISSION TO BE SENT TO VIETNAM. THE MISSION FAS TO PREVENT A GREATER DOLLAR LOSS THROUGH MISUSE OR WASTE OF U.S. PROVIDED MATERIEL. 020356 SEC. OF STATE DULLES DECIDED THAT THE TERM OPERATION SHOULD BE USED TO IMPLEMENT HIS DECISION TO EXPLORE WITH OTHER GOVERNMENTS A MEANS OF RECOVERING U.S. EQUIPMENT. /l-33- 021256 FOLLOWING SECRET NEGOTIATIONS WITH THE VIETNAMESE GOVERMENT, TRAN VAN SOAI, THE LEADER OF AN IMPORTANT MO MO FACTION REJOINED THE VIETNAM ARMY. BA CUT, ANOTHER PRINCIPAL HOA MO LEADER, WAS CAPTURED ON APRIL 13, LEADING TO THE BREAKUP OF ORGANIZED HOA HAO ARMED INSURGENCY. /WID 9-59. 021356 A MESSAGE FROM AMBASSADOR TO SECRETARY OF STATE STATED TMT TERM SHOULD BE PRESENTED SOLELY AS AN EQUIPMENT RECOVERY MISSION AND NOT AS A TRAINING MISSION. 022156 FRANCE AGREED TO WITHDRAW ITS REMAINING FORCES FROM SOUTH VIETNAM. 03 56 THE FREE VIETNAMESE INTERNAL SECURITY AGENCY WAS OFFICIALLY DESIGMTED SELF DEFENSE CORPS. /WID 13-56. 03 56 DIEM DEMANDED THE WITHDRAWAL OF THE FEC FROM VIETNAM. G 030956 DIEM. HELD ANOTHER CONFERENCE WITH NAVAL COMMANDER LE QUANG MY REGARDING THE COMMUNIST OCCUPATION OF BOISEE ISLAND OF THE PARACEL GROUP. PURPOSE OF CONFERENCE APPARENTLY TO FORMULATE POLICY PRIOR TO TALKS WITH FRENCH TO COMMENCE MARCH 3.0. NO MILITARY ACTION AGAINST THE PARACELS WAS TAKEN. /WID IO-56. 031^56 U.S. SECRETARY OF STATE JOHN FOSTER DULLES VISITED SOUTH VIETNAM. 031556 FIRST PHASE OF FRANCO-VIETNAMESE TALKS ENDED WITH THE VIETNAMESE INSISTING UPON COMPLETE FRENCH WITHDRAWAL FROM ALL BASES IN VIETNAM. DIFFICULTY IN TALKS CENTERED AROUND THE FRENCH NAVAL ARSENAL IN SAIGON. ITS REPAIR FACILITIES WERE IMPORTANT TO THE VIETNAM NAVY. THE FRENCH ALSO NEEDED THE REPAIR FACILITIES FOR ITS NAVY ALT) WANTED EITHER PRIORITY REPAIR SERVICE FOR FRENCH SHIPS AT THE ARSENAL OR THE NON-MDAP EQUIPMENT TO SET UP SUCH A FACILITY WOULD HAVE TO BE WITHDRAWN AND MOVED ELSEWHERE. MUCH OF THE NON-MDAP EQUIPMENT THERE WAS BELIEVED TO HAVE BEEN GIVEN TO THE FRENCH BY THE U.S. /WID 10-56. 031656 AGREE WAS REACHED BETWEEN THE GOVERNMENT AT© THE CAO DAI. SECT WHICH RELEGATED THE LATTER TO A PURELY RELIGIOUS ROLE. A COROLLARY TMT AGREE IT WAS THAT ALL THE CAO DAI ARMED DISSIDENTS, ESTIMATED MAX] : 'i.OOO, HAVE CAPITULATED WITH THEIR ARMS AND AM UTIOBT. PROCESSING OF THE SURRENDEREES STARTED AROUND MARCH 13, 1956. BA CUT REMAINED AIT OPPO] IT OF THE GOV! 1 IT. /WID 10-56. 032256 AGREE IT WAS SIGNED BY FRENCH AND VTETN 1SE STIPULATING THE WITHDRAWAL OF FEC BY JUNE 30, 1956. JJ r r v ■7 I Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 Oh 56 TERM WAS PRESENTED TO THE ICC FOR APPROVAL. NEITHER APPROVAL NOR DISAPPROVAL WAS RECEIVED SO THE PROJECT PROCEEDED IN JUKE. /WID 0^-0656 VIETNAM GOVERNMENT ANNOUNCED THAT IT WOULD CONTINUE TO COOPERATE WITH ICC AND REITERATED ITS POSITION OF SUPPORTING VIETNAM-WIDE ELECTIONS AT SUCH TIME AS CONDITIONS IN COMMUNIST NORTH VIETNAM PERMITTED GENUINE- • LY FREE VOTING. - 040856 TRIM MISSION ENDED. REDESIGNATED COMBAT AND TRAINING ORGANIZATION. 0^1056 THE LAST ELEMENTS OF FRENCH EXPEDITIONARY CORPS LEFT SAIGON. 0^1256 DIRECTIVE FROM CNO TO COFSA+COFSAF ISSUED IMPLEMENTING THE TERM PROGRAM. IN IT THE CNO STATED THAT TERM SHOULD APPEAR TO BE SEPARATE ORGANIZATION FROM MAAG. CHIEF OF TERM SHOULD BE A SENIOR COLONEL OR BRIG. GEN. NOT PRESENTLY APPEARING ON MAAG'S ROSTER. 042356 THE FRENCH HIGH COMMAND WAS INACTIVATED. /NIE 2k$ 1ST N. 0^2556 AT THE REQUEST OF THE GVN MOST OF THE FEC WERE WITHDRAWN FROM INDOCHINA. OU2856 THE DEPARTURE FROM SAIGON OF GENERAL JACUOT, COMMANDER IN CHIEF OF THE FRENCH EXPEDITIONARY CORPS, MARKED THE DISSOLUTION OF THE; FRENCH HIGH COMMAND IN VIETNAM. /PROGRESS REPT. NSC 5^05/5^28/5 OU2856 ARVN TRAINING BECAME THE RESPONSIBILITY OF MAAG. 05 56 THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF .DEFENSE VISITED VIETNAM AND URGED MORE SUPPORT FOR THE CIVIL GUARD. EARLY MAY 1956 AGREEMENT HAD NOT YET BEEN REACHED CONCERNING THE STATUS OF SAIGON NAVAL ARSENAL RELATIVE TO THE FRENCH WITHDRAWAL. /WID 19-56 050156 ROBERT D. MURPHY, DEPUTY UNDER SECRETARY OF STATE WROTE WILSON THAT TERM PERSONNEL SHOULD NOT BE USED AS A TRAINING FORCE, BUI THEY SHOULD BE ADMINISTRATIVELY SUPERVISED BY MAAG NOT EMBASSY. 051556 VNA STRENGTH WAS 156,000. 051556 DEADLINE FOR WITHDRAWAL OF ALL FRENCH NAVAL PERSONNEL (EXCEPT FOR SMALL LIQUIDATING DETACHMENTS). TRANSFER OF CONTROL OF THE ARSENAL TO THE VIETNAMESE WAS TO BE MADE. /WID IO-56. 052356 DOD OFFICIALLY ESTABLISHED THE TERMS OF REFERENCE FOR TERM. /JCS HIST. 06 56 GVN ESTIMATED VIETMINH ACTIVE STRENGTH AT 1,360 OUT OF 6-8,000 HOSTILE FORCE. U.S. PUT STRENGTH AT 8-10,000 IN SKELETON UNITS. 06 56 THE GVN FORMALLY REQUESTED AUGMENTATION OF MAAG. A SPECIAL DETACH' : IT OF 350 MEN WAS ORGANIZED AND CHARGED WITH RECOVERING AND EXPORTING LARGE QUA .. 'TIES OF U.S. WAR MATERIEL. A COLLATERAL PURPOSE WAS TO INCREASE THE LOGISTICAL CAPABILITIES OF THE VTETNAME EE ARMY. THE PROJECT WAS T- . /WID 13-57- KK Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 '.• 060156 AFTER JUNE 1, 1956, THE DEADLINE FOR WITHDRAWAL OR TURNOVER TO THE VIETNAMESE OF AIR FORCE EQUIPMENT, THE FRENCH WERE COMPLETELY PHASED OUT OF THE VIETNAMESE AIR FORCE. ONLY A FEW FRENCH INSTRUCTORS REMAINED IN SOUTH VIETNAM. /WID 17-56. 060156 U.S. TEMPORARY. EQUIPMENT- RECOVERY MISSION (TERM) ACTIVATED. 060756 ADMIRAL RADFORD BRIEFED THE NSC ON THE STRATEGY FOR THE DEFENSE OF SOUTH VIETNAM WHICH REPEATED THE PLANS 'SET FORTH IN FEBRUARY AND SEPTEMBER. 063056 THE VNA HAD 11*2,000 MEN IN h FIELD DIVISIONS AND 6 LIGHT DIVISIONS AND 13 TERRITORIAL REGIMENTS, PLUS SERVICE SUPPORT UNITS. THIS WAS APPROVED STRENGTH. /WID 20-56. 07 56 THE CRUCIAL MONTH DURING WHICH THE ELECTIONS TO UNIFY VIETNAM SHOULD HAVE BEEN HELD AS PROVIDED IN THE GENEVA AGREEMENT PASSED WITHOUT INCIDENT. /J.B. 07 56 CIVIL GUARD 51,000 STRONG, OPERATED IN THREE MILITARY REGIONS. O70656 VICE PRESIDENT RICHARD NIXON VISITED SOUTH VIETNAM. 070756 ADMIRAL RADFORD BRIEFED THE NSC ' ON CONCEPT DELINEATED IN 56l2/l. O7II56 JCS DIRECTED CINCPAC TO PREPARE A CONTINGENCY PLAN BASED ON THE QUICK RESPONSE STRATEGY AS SET FORTH BY ADMIRAL RADFORD IN THE JUNE 7, 1956 BRIEFING TO NSC, FOR DEFENSE OF SOUTH VIETNAM. 071356 BA CUT EXECUTED. /WID 32-56. 071756 COMMUNIST ARMED STRENGTH IN THE SOUTH ESTIMATED AT 5-10,000 1955-56, PROBABLY ABOUT 8,000 WITH 5,000 ORGANIZED IN SKELETON. COMPANIES. /2U7 NIE 1ST. 071756 THE VNA HAD THE APPROXIMATELY 1^5,000 TROOPS. /NIE. 071756 NIE 63-56 STATED WASHINGTON'S CONCEPT OF THE CIVIL GUARD AND THE SELF- DEFENSE CORPS. THE GVN ORGANIZED THE CIVIL GUARD TO RELIEVE THE VNA'S MANY STATIC INTERNAL SECURITY DUTIES. THE 1*8,000 MEN IN LIGHTLY ARMED MOBILE COMPANIES WERE TO MAINTAIN LAW AND ORDER, COLLECT INTELLIGENCE, CONDUCT COUNTER-SUBVERSION OPERATIONS IN PROVINCES PACIFIED BY THE V THE 60,000 MAN SELF-DEFENSE CORPS WAS TO MAINTAIN VILLAGE SECURITY. 072056 THE ALL-VIETNAMESE ELECTION AS PROVIDED IN 195 1 * GENEVA DECLARATION FAILED TO TAKE PLACE. /READER. 072156 FRENCH ACCEDED TO SOUTH VIETNAM'S REQUEST TEAT FRENCH BE REPRESENTED BY AN AMBASSADOR RATHER THAN A HIGH COMMISSIONER. 073056 A VIE! USE LIAISON MISSION TO THE ICC WAS ESTABLISHED PREPARATORY TO THE TRANSFER OF FUNCTIONS FROM THE FRENCH LIAISON MISSION. /READER. 08 56 ESTIMATES OF VIETMINH IN SVH WERE 5,000-7,000. /WID 32-56. LL Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 083156 TERM AT FULL STRENGTH OF 350. 090556 THERE WAS A CHANGE IN POLICY FROM TRAINING THE VIET ESE ARMY FROM INTERNAL SECURITY ALONE TO BOTH A MISSION OF INTERNAL SECURITY AND LIMITED INITIAL RESISTANCE. CCMH. O91656 U.S. TRAINING PROGRAM OF ARVN WENT INTO EFFECT. O91956 FRENCH AIR FORCE OFFICIALLY TRANSFERRED THE TOURANE AIR EASE TO VIETNAMESE CONTROL. 100156 OPLAN ^6-56 DEFENSE OF SOUTH VIETNAM PRE'PARED BY CINCPAC. 102^56 STATE DEPARTMENT REPORT EMPHASIZED THAT THE SUBVERSION-POLITICAL THREAT TO SOUTH VIETNAM WAS MORE LIKELY TO BE A REAL DANGER THAN OVERT AGGRESSION. 110156 THE CHIEF OF MAAG PROPOSED SUPPORTING THE CIVIL GUARD AT A STRENGTH OF 59.160 AND A SELF DEFENSE CORPS OF 60,000. OCMH. 12 56 COUNTRY TEAM JUDGED THE VNA CAPABLE OF MAINTAINING INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL SECURITY. /JCS HIST. 01 57 DIEM ASKED THE U.S. TO INCREASE HIS FORCE TO 200,000. THIS WAS REFUSED. 010357 THE ICC REPORTED THAT BETWEEN DECEMBER 1955 AND AUGUST 1956 NEITHER . NORTH OR SOOTH VIETNAM HAD BEEN FULFILLING ITS OBLIGATIONS UNDER THE 195^ ARMISTICE AGREEMENT. 021557 THE TWO PACIFICATION OPERATIONS TRUONG TAN BUU AND THOAI NGOC HAU TERMINATED. THE VN MILITARY FELT THAT THE ARMY SHOULD PERFORM ONLY MILITARY FUNCTIONS WHICH DID NOT INTERFERE WITH NORMAL TRAINING. HOWEVER DIEM WAFTED THE TWO OPERATIONS TO BE CONTINUED AS PART OF THE PARTICIPATING ORGANIZATIONS ROUTINE FUNCTIONS. BUU AND HAU HAD BEEN VAST MILITARY AND PSYCHOLOGICAL OPERATIONS EMPLOYING MEN FROM THE ARMED CIVIL GUARD, AND CIVIL ACTION COMMITTEES WITH THE PURPOSE TO BRING ALL UNDER GOVERNMENT CONTROL AND TO PUBLICIZE AND POPULARIZE THE DIEM GOVERNMENT. /WID 15-57- 03 57 THE GOVERNMENT OF PRESIDENT DIEM ANNOUNCED A SERIES OF REGULATIONS INTENDED TO ENCOURAGE FOREIGN INVESTMENTS. /J.B. 031957 OPLAN ^6-56 DEFENSE OF SOUTH VIETNAM WAS APPROVED BY JCS. 0^1657 ELBRIDGE DURBROW PRESENTED HIS CREDENTIALS AS AMBASSADOR OF THE U.S. TO SOUTH VIETNAM. 050257 PEES. DIEM REINSTITUTED A DRAFT LAW. /JCS HIST. 050^57 ARVN'S FIRST MAJOR TACTICAL CONTROL HEADQUARTERS WAS ESTABLISHED, I CO /JCS HIST. 050557 PRESIDENT DIEM VISITED THE U.S. 050957 PRESIDENT DIEM ADDRESSED A JOINT ASSEMBLY OF CONGRESS. MM Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 750 051057 IN A MEETING BETWEEN PRESIDENT DIEM AND DEPUTY SECRETARY QUARLES, DIEM PUT FORTH HIS PLAN TO MOVE THE CIVIL GUARD INTO HIGH PLATEAU AREAS TO FILL THE VACUUM THERE. HE ALSO PUT FORTH THE NEW ARMY REORGANIZATION. HE WANTED THE SAME NUMBER OF DIVISIONS BUT WITH A STRENGTH INCREASE UP TO 10,000 WHICH REQUIRED A TOTAL FORCE INCREASE OF 20,000. 051157 PRESIDENT EISENHOWER AND PRESIDENT DIEM DECLARED THAT BOTH COUNTRIES WOULD WORK TOWARD A PEACEFUL UNIFICATION OF VIETNAM (JOINT COMMUNIQUE). 051157 ACCORDING TO EISENHOWER AND DIEM THE CHIEF DANGER TO SOUTH VIETNAM WAS THE IARGE BUILDUP OF MILITARY FORCES IN WRTH VIETNAM. 051757 NORTH VIETNAMESE LIAISON MISSION TO THE ICC WAS WITHDRAWN FROM SAIGON AT THE REQUEST OF SOUTH VIETNAM. . 052^57 ASST. SECRETARY OF DEFENSE, GVN, SUBMITTED A WRITTEN REQUEST TO CHIEF-M FOR U.S. ADVISOR ASSISTANCE FOR THE VIETNAM AIR FORCE AND NAVY. 052857 NEW YORK STATE POLICE INSPECTOR UPDIKE WAS ASKED TO. SET UP THE SOUTH VIET- NAMESE POLICE FORCE. 053157 FRENCH PARTICIPATION IN THE TRAINING OF THE VIETNAMESE AIR FORCE, NAVY, AND AT THE VIETNAMESE COMMAND AND GENERAL STAFF COLLEGE TERMINATED. FRENCH LEGAL INSTRUCTORS TO GENDARMERIE AND CIVIL GUARD STILL REMAINED. 06 57 THE FRENCH NAVAL AND AIR FORCE TRAINING MISSION WAS WITHDRAWN FROM SOUTH VIETNAM. 061357 THREE NEW YORK STATE POLICEMEN WERE ASSIGNED TO HELP ORGANIZE THE POLICE IN SOUTH VIETNAM. 07 57 GVN REQUESTED $60 MILLION FOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT FOR THE CIVIL GUARD. MA AND MSU PROPOSED $1^-18 MILLION. /JCS HIST. 07 57 AN ICA SURVEY REPORT ON VIETNAM INDICATED THAT COMMODITY ASSISTANCE FUNDING TO THE INTERNAL SECURITY PROGRAM WAS TO END IN 1958. /159-1 07 57 SINCE THE ARVN f S ANTI -DISSIDENT CAMPAIGNS HAD ACHIEVED SUCH SUCCESS, THE SOUTH VIETNAM GOVERNMENT DIVERTED MOST OF THE MILITARY TO TRAINING FOR CLASSICAL WARFARE AS A NECESSITY FOR NATIONAL DEFENSE AGAINST POSSIBLE DRV AGGRESSION. /WID 30-58. 09 57 ALL 10 ARVN DIVISIONS HAD COMPLETED BASIC TRAINING. 7 DIVISIONS HAD FINISHED THIRD LEVEL TRAINING. 102257 U.S. PERSONNEL WERE INJURED IN SAIGON IN THE BOMBING OF INSTALLATIONS THE U.S. MILITARY ASSISTANCE ADVISORY GROUP AND OF THE U.S. INFORMATION SERVICE. 11 57 INTELLIGENCE REPORTS DEPICTED VIETCONG EFFORTS AS ONE OF SURVIVAL DURING JULY 1956 - JULY 1957. /JCS HIST. m Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 •-■ i 120957 SOUTH VIETNAM EX-DIRECTOR OF POLICE NGUYEN VAN TON WAS SENTENCED FOR AIDING THE REBEL ELEMENTS. 58 THE VIETNAMESE ARMY WAS REORGANIZED. FIELD AMD LIGHT DIVISIONS WERE CONVERTED TO 7 IMPROVED DIVISIONS. (LATE 1958-SEFI. 1959) OIOU58 LARGE COMMUNIST GUERRILLA BAND ATTACKED A PLANTATION NORTH OF SAIGON, REFLECTING STEADY INCREASE IN COMMUNIST ARMED ACTIVITY IN SOUTH VIETNAM SINCE MID-1957- 032758 PERMANENT SECRETARIAT GENERAL OF NATIONAL DEFENSE UNDER THE PRESIDENCY ESTABLISHED. Ok 58 THROUGH INTENSIVE RECRUITING IN THE SOUTH, THE NORTH VIETNAM GUERRILLA STRENGTH IN THE SOUTH ROSE TO ABOUT 2,100. /WID 51-58. 05 58 ORGANIZED COMMUNISTS IN SOUTH VIETNAM WERE ESTIMATED AT 1,1^0-1,^+00. /WID 22-58. 07 58 THE SVN GOVERNMENT ATTEMPTS TO ANNIHIIATE VIETCONG SUFFERED FROM RELYING TOO HEAVILY ON THE INEFFICIENT PARAMILITARY FORCES INSTEAD OF THE ARMY TO PUR DOWN ARMED INSURGENCY. /WID 30-58. 07 58 GENERAL PHAM XUAN CHIEU WAS THE DEPUTY CHIEF OF STAFF FOR ARVN. /WID 09 58 MAAG REPORTED U.S. PERSONNEL WERE VC TARGETS. 091058 FRANCE AND SOUTH VIETNAM SIGNED AN AGREEMENT UNDER WHICH FRANCE PROVIDED AID FOR THE VIETNAM GOVERNMENT'S AGRARIAN REFORM PROGRAM -- l,*+90 12 58 VIETNAMESE BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION STRENGTH OF 6,500, INCLUDING 2,500 PERMANENT AGENTS. /WID 52-58. 120858 PRESIDENT EISENHOWER APPROVED A NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL ACTION WHICH AMONG OTHER ITEMS EMPHASIZED POLICE AND CONSTABULARY TYPE FORCES FOR INTERNAL SECURITY PURPOSES IN LIEU OF LARGER INDIGENOUS MILITARY ESTABLISHMENTS. 59 IT WAS ESTIMATED THAT THERE WERE BETWEEN 5 ,000 --12, 000 COMMUNIST GUERRILLAS ACTIVE IN SOUTH VIETNAM IN 1959- • ' 01 59 JCS REPORTED ARVN WAS READY TO FULFILL THE MISSION THE U.S. HAD SET /JCS HIST. 01 59 GVN AGREED TO TRANSFER THE CIVIL GUARD TO THE MINISTRY OF INTERIOR. AID PROGRAM TO THE CIVIL GUARD WAS THEN RESUMED. /JCS HIST. 010759 30,000 POLICE AND CIVIL GUARDSMEN HAD BEEN LOCALLY TRAINED IN LAW ENFORCEMENT AND TECHNICAL TRAINING COURSES. MORE TRAINING IN ADMINISTRATION AND COMMAND FUNCTIONS WAS BEING REQUESTED. 00 Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 w'- 010759 NSC 5309 REPORTED THAT THE U.S. EMBASSY AND THE GVN HAD REACHED AN AGREE- MENT ON TRAINING AND EQUIPPING A CIVIL GUARD FORCE OF 32,000. THE WAS IN WASHINGTON FOR APPROVAL. THE QUESTION BEING ASKED WAS WHETHER THIS SITUATION REQUIRED IMPROVEMENT IN THE CIVIL GUARD OR WHETHER OTHER EXISTING VIETNAMESE SECURITY FORCES COULD ADEQUATELY DEAL WITH THE SITUATION. - 011259 A NORTH-SOUTH VIETNAM MEETING WAS HELD TO DISCUSS PROBLEMS CONCERNING DEMILITARIZED ZONE. THE OPPOSING PARTIES PREPARED TO DISCUSS SPECIFIC LOW-LEVEL MATTERS OF MUTUAL CONCERN. ARRANGED BY ICC. /WID 39-58. 032959 VNAF FLEW ITS FIRST MISSION AGAINST A VC TARGET. /SAIGON-STATE MSG M*57. /JCS HIST. Ok 59 DIEM ENCOURAGED TERRORIST ACTIVITY REPORTING. 0^0959 DIJRBROW-DIEM-WILLIAMS CONFERENCE ON WORSENING INTERNAL SECURITY SITUATION. 050659 EMBASSY DID NOT BELIEVE DIEM'S STORY THAT SECURITY WAS AT ITS WORST SINCE 1955. U.S. SKEPTICISM RE THREAT TO SVN CONTINUED THROUGH 1959- S-STATE 2345 6MAY59. 052659 THE ICC STATED TERM SHOULD END ACTIVITIES BY MID-1959- 052659 2,000 GUERRILLAS WERE REPORTED IN SVN. THOUSANDS MORE WERE INACTIVE. CIVIL GUARD STRENGTH = k -7,000. WA = 136,000 REGULARS. INTERNAL SECURITY FORCES WERE NOT CONSIDERED CAPABLE OF ERADICATING A DRV SUPPORTED GUERRILLA FORCE. VNA WILL HAVE TO BE DIVERTED TO THIS TASK. /2U9- 052959 U.S. ADVISORS WERE AT REGIMENTAL, SEPARATE ARTILLERY, ARMOR AND MARINE BATTALION LEVEL. 052959 USOM PUBLIC SAFETY DIVISION BEGAN RETRAINING AND RE-EQUIPPING CIVIL GUARD. /JCS HIST. 063059 THE MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY POLICE ADVISORY GROUP LEFT VIETNAM. USOM PUBLIC SAFETY DIVISION TOOK OVER TRAINING RESPONSIBILITY. THEY OBTAINED NO RESOLUTION TO THE PROBLEMS OF THE CIVIL GUARD DURING THE NEXT TWO YEARS. /JCS HIST. 070859 COMMUNIST GUERRILLAS ATTACKED THE VIETNAMESE MILITARY BASS AT BIEN HOA TWO U.S. MAAG PERSONNEL WERE KILLED AND ONE WAS WOUNDED. 033059 SECOND NATION ELECTIONS GAVE THE NATIONAL REVOLUTIONARY MOVEMENT AND OTHER PRO-GOVERNMENT POLITICAL PARTIES ALL SEATS IN THE. NATIONAL ASSEMBLY IN SOUTH VIETNAM. NO OPPOSITION CANDIDATES WERE ALLOWED TO TAKE THEIR SEATS. 09 59 DIEM ESTIMATED THAT THERE WERE 1000 VC REGULARS. 09 59 THE ARVN FRENCH STYLE k FIELD AID 6 LIGHT DIVISIONS CONVERTED TO 7 U.S. TYPE 10,000 M DIVISIONS. /JCS HIST. PP Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 09 59 JCS PAPER TO NSC URGED U.S. TO BACK PROGRAMS HOT PERSONALITIES. 103059 SPOKESMAN OF TEE VIETNAMESE ARMY DISCLOSES THAT A CAMPAIGN AGAINST COMMUNIST GUERRILLAS IN THE COUNTRY'S SOUTHERNMOST REGION, THE CAMA PENINSULA, RESULTED IN HEAVY GUERRILLA LOSSES. 12 59 OSD DIRECTED CINCFAC TO PREPARE A NEW JOINT DISTRIBUTION TABLE REFLECTING TERM PHASE OUT. /ITEM 56.. 12 59 FIRST USE OF HELIOCOFTERS TO MOVE TROOPS. /SAIGON TO STATE 206l 1/3 020160 GVN DIRECTIVE ISSUED ORDERING CONCENTRATION ON ANTI -GUERRILLA TRAINING TACTICS. 021860 AMBASSADOR DURBROW TOLD CINCPAC CIVIL GUARD ANTI -GUERRILLA TRAINING WAS URGENT. CINCPAC HELD OUT FOR MAAG/TERM RESOLUTION RE ICC. /JCS HIST. 03 60 FIRST AGROVILLE ESTABLISJffiD IN PHONG DIM PROVINCE. 032U60 CHIEF OF STAFF ARMY TOLD THE JCS THAT THE SECURITY SITUATION IN VIETNAM HAD BADLY DETERIORATED AND THAT DIEM CONSIDERED THAT VIETNAM WAS IN ALL OUT WAR WITH THE VIETCONG. Ok 60 VIETCONG STRENGTH U,000. 031760 NORTH VIETNAM PROTESTED TO THE CHAIRMEN OF THE 195^ GENEVA CONFERENCE (BRITAIN AND THE USSR) THE FORMIDABLE INCREASE OF PERSONNEL IN THE U.S. MILITARY ASSISTANCE ADVISORY GROUP IN SOUTH VIETNAM AND ACCUSED THE U.S. OF TURNING SOUTH VIETNAM INTO A U.S. MILITARY BASE FOR THE PREPARATION OF A NEW WAR. OJ+3060 AN OPPOSITION GROUP OF 18, CALLING THEMSELVES THE COMMITTEE FOR PROGRESS AND LIBERTY, SENT A LETTER TO PRES. DIEM DEMANDING DRASTIC ECONOMIC, ADMINISTRATIVE, AND MILITARY REFORMS. 050560 U.S. ANNOUNCED THAT AT THE REQUEST OF THE GOVERNMENT OF SOUTH VIETNAM, THE U.S. MILITARY ASSISTANCE AND ADVISORY GROUP WAS TO BE INCREASED BY THE END OF THE YEAR FROM 327 TO 685 MEMBERS. 052060 THE SOVIET UNION PROPOSED TO THE UNITED KINGDOM THAT THE WO GOVERNMENTS AS CO-CHAIRMEN OF THE GENEVA CONFERENCE, SHOULD APPEAL TO THE U.S. TO REFRAIN FROM INCREASING THE NUMBERS OF ITS MILITARY ADVISORS (MAAC-) SOUTH VIETNAM AND ALSO TO CONSIDER THE QUESTION OF WITHDRAWING MAAG SOUTH VIET!. . THEIR PRESENCE IN SOUTH VIETNAM CONTRADICTED THE SP OF THE GENEVA AGREEMENTS. THE AIM WAS TO LIQUIDATE ONE OF THE SOURCES OF UNREST /■ OF STR] . ttNG PEACE IN INDOCHINA. 06 60 COMMUNIST GUERRILLA ACTIVITIES IN SOUTH VIETNAM INCREASED. (JUNE-OCTOBER) 060160 MAJ.GEN. LIONEL T. MC GARR WAS APPOINTED THE HEAD OF THE U.S. MAAG. O6O06O COUNTER-INSURGENCY TR/ !G PROGRAM UNDER MAAG FOR THE V] !SE ARMED FORCES WAS STARTED. QQ Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 7 063060 THERE WERE ONLY 25 MSU ADVISORS IN SOUTH VIETNAM. • 101260 SEC.DEF. TOLD THE JCS THAT THE RESPONSIBILITY FOR TRAINING AND LOGISTICAL SUPPORT OF THE CIVIL GUARD SHOULD BE TRANSFERRED TO THE MAAG BROMPTLY AND THAT THE CIVIL GUARD SHOULD BE PUT IN THE VIETNAMESE MINISTRY OF DEFENSE, RATHER THAN IN THE MINISTRY OF INTERIOR. 122960 CIVIL GUARD WAS TRANSFERRED TO DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE FROM MINISTRY OF INTERIOR AT MAAG'S REQUEST.' /JCS HIST. 01 6l THE FIRST INCREMENT OF CIVIL GUARD BEGAN TRAINING UNDER THE MAAG. 013061 PRES. KENNEDY AUTHORIZED $29^100,000 TO EXPAND THE VIETNAM ARMED FORCES TO 170,000 PLUS $12,700,000 FOR THE CIVIL GUARD. 03286.1 MESSAGE FROM TRAPNELL TO JCS INDICATED FAILURE OF CG AND VNA TO COPE WITH VIETCONG. RECOMMENDED U.S. SUPPORT FULL 68,000 CIVIL GUARD FORCE. OJ4O36I U.S. -VIETNAMESE TREATY OF AMITY AN"D ECONOMIC RELATIONS WAS SIGNED IN SAIGON. THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY RATIFIED THE TREATY ON JUNE 1*+. OhOkGl PRESIDENT DIEM APPEALED TO THE ICC TO MAKE AN IMMEDIATE AND ENERGETIC INVESTIGATION OF GROWING TERRORISM AND SUBVERSION THROUGHOUT SOUTH VIETNAM. 0^0961 PRESIDENT DIEM AND VICE PRESIDENT THO WERE ELECTED BY AN OVERWHELMING MAJORITY IN THE VIETNAM PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS. 0^2961 PRESIDENT KENNEDY AUTHORIZED MAP SUPPORT FOR ALL 69,000 CIVIL GUARD. MAAG VIETNAM WAS DIRECTED TO SUPPORT ANT) ADVISE SDC. MAAG STRENGTH TO BE INCREASED AS NEEDED. 05 6l MAAG PERSONNEL IN SOUTH VIETNAM NUMBERED 685- ABOUT HALF WERE AIRBORNE COMMANDOS. 050561 PRES. KENNEDY DECLARED AT A PRESS CONFERENCE THAT CONSIDERATION WAS BEING GIVEN TO THE USE OF U.S. FORCES, IF NECESSARY, TO HELP SOUTH VIETNAM " RESIST COMMUNIST PRESSURES. HE DECLARED THAT THIS WOULD BE ONE OF THE SUBJECTS DISCUSSED DURING THE FORTHCOMING VISIT OF VICE PRESIDENT JOHNSON IN SOUTH VIETNAM. 051161 U.S. VICE PRESIDENT JOHNSON WAS IN SOUTH VIETNAM. 051361 WHILE JOHNSON WAS IN VIETNAM A JOINT COMMUNIQUE DECLARED THAT ADDITIONAL U.S. MILITARY AND ECONOMIC AID WOULD BE GIVEN TO HELP SOUTH VIETNAM IN ITS FIGHT AGAINST COMMUNIST GUERRILLA FORCES. 06 6l IT WAS ESTIMATED THAT THERE WERE BETWEEN 7,000-15,000 COMMUNIST GUERRILLAS IN SOUTH VIETNAM. 06 6l LOCAL MILITIAMEN IN SOUTH VIETNAM NUMBERED 50,000, SAME A3 IN 1959 . O60961 DIEM ASKED SUPPORT FOR AN INCREASE IN THE VIETNAMESE ARMY TO A FORCE OF 270,000. RR Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 60 DO > z Ln J Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET "■- Sensitive IV. A. k. U.S. TRAINING OF THE VIETNAMESE NATIONAL ARMY I95IP1959 i TABLE OF CONTENTS AND OUTLINE J^g£ A. Why did the U.S. undertake the training of ARVN? 1 B. How was the decision to organize and train Vietnamese forces taken? 3 C. .."What was the threat to South Vietnam? .'. • 6 1. The Sect Forces •• 6 2. The Viet Minh Residue \ • 7 3- The Vietnamese People ' s Army ......... 8 D. What was the mission of the Vietnamese forces? 10 1. U.S. strategic military policy . 10 2. The nature of SEATO • • • H 3* The French Expeditionary Corps 13 k. The pressures exerted by the Diem Government lh 5- Recent U.S. experiences in Korea . . . . 15 E. What was the state of the South Vietnamese Army? 15 F. How did the U.S. go about altering the state of the VNA? 17 G. Did U.S. assistance through i960 result in creation of a South Vietnamese Army in the image of the U.S. Army? 2k 3_. Evolution of the mission ■ 2k 2. The strategy of the regular establishment 2k 3. On the tactical level 2k i TO? SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Page - h. The organization of the defense establishment 25 5- Manpower policies 26 6. The equipment provided the Vietnamese regular forces 30 7. The training of the Vietnamese armed forces . . . 30 Table: Comparison of U.S. 7T ROCID Infantry Division (1956) and ARVN Standard Division (1959) 27 Diagrams: U.S. Infantry Division TOE 7T ROCID (20 December 1956).. 28 ARVN Reorganized Infantry Division, 1959 (standard ARVN division) 29 FOOTNOTES 2 3 » - . . BIBLIOGRAPHY .' , k2 ii TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive IV. A. h. U.S. TRAINING OF THE VIET NAMES E NATI ONAL ARMY, ' 195^-1959 A . V? hy did the U.S. undertake the training of ARVi-I?. Underlying the U.S. decision to train the ARVK were broad political objectives and beliefs relating to Asia, together with narrower considerations relating to methods of achieving U.S. objec- tives in Southeast Asia. Both broad and narrow considerations had their origins in the post-World War II chaos in Asia; both stemmed from the overall U.S. aim to deter or defeat communist aggression wherever and whenever it might occur; and both became pillars of U.S. Indochina policy with the fall of Mainland China to the communists in 19^9. On the broader level, the U.S. decision to train the Vietnamese armed forces was "viewed as necessary to preserve the independence and 'freedom of Vietnam south of the 17th parallel, an essential prerequisite to the containment of communism. Containment- -lately a function of SEATO as well as of the U.S. --was viewed as essential to the preserva- tion of the rest of Southeast Asia from communist domination and control Communist domination of the area was viewed as the outcome associated with the fall of Free Vietnam by the proponents of the domino theory, which continued as a major influence on U.S. foreign policy throughout the period examined here, "in view of the importance of Vietnam to all of Southeast Asia, I am convinced that the United States should expend the funds, materiel, and effort required to strengthen the country and help it retain its independence," reported General J. Lawton Collins, "if the chances of success are difficult to calculate, the results of a withdrawal of American aid are all too certain, not only in Vietnam, but throughout Southeast Asia. Such a withdrawal would hasten the rate of communist advances in the Far East as a whole and could result in the loss of Southeast Asia to communism. In my opinion, the chance of success is not only worth the gamble; we' cannot afford to let free Viet- nam go by default." 3/ On the narrower level, several considerations tended to urge an affirmative decision concerning a training role for the U.S.: 1. Throughout the French-Indochina war, U.S. authorities continually \irged the French to create and train a Vietnamese national Army. This measure was pressed not only because the U.S. believed it to be a necessary political gesture (evidence of the true independence of the Associated States), but also because U.S. experts viewed it as a military measure vital to the successful prosecution of the war. kj TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 hi 2. The U.S. was never satisfied with French efforts concerning the Vietnamese National Army and was continually frustrated by apparent French reluctance to act on this score. Particularly disturbing to U.S. officials were French in'action concerning formation of the VrlA. into divisional units, French training procedures, and French reluctance to develop a Vietnamese officer corps: in short, acute frustration was caused by French refusal to initiate changes U.S. officials believed, rightly or wrongly, that the U.S.. could and would initiate if the U.S. were in charge. 3- The U.S. had the capability to train "native armies," as demonstrated by Korean forces. Although U.S. pressure on the French culminated in a French visit to Korea to observe U.S. training methods and procedures, the French were most impressed with the unsuitability of Korean forces and the methods used to train them to the situation in Indochina. 5/ h. The U.S. had been considering the idea of U.S. training of Vietnamese forces since early in the Indochina war; in fact, the U.S. had been asked as early as 1950 to participate in a Vietnamese plan for a Vietnamese National Army trained and equipped by the U.S. without French participation. 6/ The U.S. attitude was ambivalent- As early as April 1952 the Service Secretaries suggested that the U.S. expand the Indochina MAAG to undertake training and equipping of a national army should the French declare their intention to withdraw from Indo- china; 7/ in January 195^ General Erskine suggested elevating MAG to the status of a mission "to help in training." 8/ On the other hand, although the theme of U.S. training of Vietnamese forces became increasingly prominent from early 1953 on, a high-level committee in Defense recommended against seeking direct American participation in training in January of that year, and the JCS agreed with this recom- mendation, which stemmed from French opposition to any such role for the U.S., relatively higher French qualifications to train the local armies, and from the language problem. 9/ As the war neared its close, however, CHMAAG General 1 Daniel, in face of firm and consistent opposi- tion from the French, pressed harder and harder for a direct American involvement in the training of Vietnamese forces; in May 195*1- General Ely, the French High Commander, apparently succumbed to ! Daniel's pressure to agree to U.S. training of, and the positioning of U.S. advisors with, Vietnamese units. 10/ On 9 June 195 l U Ely, through ! Daniel, requested the U.S. to organize and supervise the training of Vietnamese divisions, and to do the same for all other Vietnamese training, 11/ By this time, however, U.S. decisionmakers believed 'that the "situation in Vietnam has- degenerated to point where any commitments at this time to send over U.S. instructors in near future might expose us to being faced with situation in which it would be contrary to our interests to have to fulfill such commitments," 12/ and they feared that, "it may be that in effort to draw U.S. into conflict without having U.S. con- ditions on intervention met, French military may now seek U.S. training TOP SECRET - Sensitive ■• :' Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive in advance of U.S. commitment to intervene with own combat forces.... We are resolved not to get dr.awn in to training program to reverse situation training program has virtually no chance of success...." 13/ Although T Daniel repeatedly requested a reversal of this decision, going as far as to request his plea by passed on "to the highest authority" on 26 June 5 1^/ the denial stood to the end of the Indochina war. 5- Tli is prolonged involvement with the problem of affording U.S. assistance in training of the Vietnamese National Army lost hardly any of the momentum given it by General r Daniel during the final days of the Indochina war in spite of the U.S. decision to stop all aid ship- ments to Indochina on 30 July 195^- and to reconsider the entire problem of U.S. actions relating to Indochina. 15/ On 27 July, General T Daniel again urged that the U.S., without French interference, undertake a priority program for training the Vietnamese Army, and took steps to expand the authorized roster of MAAG personnel prior to the Geneva-imposed strength ceiling deadline of 11 August without Washington approval of the program. 16/ It is believed that this momentum, generated in Saigon and supported by the department of State, was of itself 03" considerable importance in the actual taking of the decision to organize and train Vietnamese forces o . B ■ How was the decision to organi ze and tr a.in Vietname se forces taken? Ambassador Heath and his superiors in the Department of State "strongly concurred" with General 0" 1 Daniel's recommendation of 27 July that the U.S. undertake a priority program to train the Vietnamese Army. 17/ The JCS, however, recommended that "before the United States assumes responsibility for training the forces of any of the Associated States certain preconditions were four in number: "a reasonably strong, stable civil government in control"; a request from each of the Associated States that the U.S. "assume responsibility for training their forces and pro- viding the military equipment, financial assistance, and political advice necessary to insure internal stability"; arrangements with the French "granting full independence to the Associated States a.nd providing for the phased orderly withdrawal of French forces, French officials, and French advisors from Indochina"; and "the size and composition of the forces. .. should be dictated by the local military requirements and the over-all U.S. interests." 18/ These recommendations were transmitted by the Secretary of Defense to the Secretary of State by letter. 19/ In response to this letter, Secretary Dulles indicated that Cambodia, had already met the recommended conditions, and that although Vietnam had not yet done so, the U.S. should nonetheless undertake a training program since strengthening the army was in fact prerequisite to stability ("one of the most efficient means of enabling the Viet- namese Government to become strong is to assist it in reorganizing the National Army and in training that Army.") 20/ Alt! ugh in approvi TOP SECRET - Sensitive 57 O Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive NSC 5^-29/2 , which provided for the maintenance of forces in Indochina as necessary to assure the internal security of the area, the NSC had apparently decided the issue in favor of the Secretary of State, the disagreement between State and Defense continued with an additional dispute concerning the level of forces to be maintained. In agreeing to train Cambodian forces , the JCS in effect reasserted their earlier position vis-a-vis Vietnam: However, the Joint Chiefs of Staff note with concern the unstable political situation presently existing within the state of South Vietnam, and accordingly consider that this is not a propitious time to further indicate United States intentions with respect to the support and training of either the Vietnamese regular or police forces. Accord- ingly, the Joint Chiefs of Staff recommend against the assignment of a training mission to MAAG Saigon. 2l/ In recommending force levels for Vietnam, the JCS reiterated the above recommendation and pointed out that the US MAAG would be limited by the Geneva cease-fire agreement, that "the development of the proposed forces. . .will require extensive and detailed training which will extend over a period of 3 to 5 years," and that "in view of the uncertain capabilities of the French and Vietnamese to retrieve, retain, and reorganize the dispersed forces of Vietnam, it may be several years before an effective military force will exist. Therefore, U.S. military support to that area,, including the training and equipping of forces, should be accomplished at low priority and not at the expense of other U.S. military programs and should not be permitted to impair the develop- ment through MBA. programs of effective and reliable forces elsewhere. 11 22/ The JCS proposed Vietnamese forces of 18^,000 (5 divisions of light infantry including one light artillery battalion per division- - 111, 000; 12 regiments — 24, 000; gendarmerie- ~9> 000; Headquarters, Service and Support forces— 110,000), a militia of 50,000, and a small air force and navy, and proposed that "French forces consisting of a minimum of k divisions .. .should be retained in this country until phased out by U.S. -trained Viet Nam units." 23/ The Secretary of State, still believing in the need for a U.S. training mission, disagreed with the force levels proposed by the JCS, considering them excessive to the requirement of maintaining internal security as expressed in NSC 5*129/2. 2k/ On 19 October the JCS argued that their force proposals were justified by the ultimate objectives of the forces of Vietnam and repeated their opposition, from a military point of view, to U.S. participation in the training of Vietnamese forces. Their memorandum concluded, however, by providing the concession the Department of State must have so eagerly sought: _ TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 Cf TOP ^ECRU;'! 1 - Sensitive However, if it is considered that political considera- tions are overriding, the Joint Chiefs of Staff would agree to the assignment of a training mission to MMG 5 Saigon, _ with safeguards against French interference with the U.S. training mission. 25/ With this crack in the Defense position, the OCB recommended, and the NSC approved a limited and interim training program for Vietnam. On 22 October a, Joint State-Defense message was dispatched to Saigon authorizing Ambassador Heath and General ! Daniel to "collaborate in setting in motion a crash program designed to bring about an improve- ment in the loyalty and the effectiveness of the Free Vietnamese forces," 26, and on 26 October the Secretary of Defense, in accordance with the request of the President, instructed the JCS to prepare a "long-range program for the reorganization and training of the minimum number of Free Viet- namese forces necessary for internal security (paragraph lOd/l of NSC 5^29/2)." 27/ The decision, subject only to refinement, negotiation with the French, and reexamina/cion in the light of redevelo-pments, had been taken- -and had been taken largely on the basis of an opening in the position of the Department of Defense which, far from dealing with the specific and reasonable objections to U.S. training of Vietnamese forces, simply avoided those objections by making the concession on totally different grounds. 28/ The impact of the Presidents decision, not to assist the French by bombing at Dien Bien Phu and of his refusal to permit the landing of a U.S. force in the Hanoi -Haiphong area after the fall of Dien Bien Fnu as recommended by the Chairman of the JCS also seems to have contributed to this concession. As reported by James Gavin, "...there was a com- promise. We would not attack North Vietnam, but we would support a South Vietnamese government that w-' would provide a sta.ble, independent govern- ment that "was representative of the people. As I said before, we saw ourselves as the good guys. The French had let us down, but we would continue the battle. Also, we in the Army were so relieved that we had blocked the decision to commit ground troops to Vietnam that we were in no mood to quibble over the compromise." 29/ The refinement of the decision to organize and train the national army, dealing with missions and force levels, was comp3-eted by the JCS on 17 November 195*'; in an interesting change of position (see note 28), the Joint Chiefs asserted that "KAAG Indochina is capable of furnishing training assistance to develop the internal security Army and Navy forces, provided: a. A maximum portion of the MAAG military personnel is devoted to training; and b. The cooperation and collaboration of the French MAAG is secured." 30/ Negotiations with the French were completed when the agreed minute of understanding between General J. Lawton Collins and General X t TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 & TOP SECRET - Sensitive Paul Ely of 13 December 195^ was approved by the U.S. and, later, by the French governments. The agreement, which provided for full autonomy for Vietnamese forces by 1 July 1955 and for assumption by the US MAAG of full responsibility for assisting the Government of Vietnam in the organizing and training of armed forces (under the general supervision of the French High Commander and with the help of French advisors), led to the assumption of this responsibility by General 0' Daniel on 12 Febru- ary 1955- The reexamination of the decision, reported by the JCS on 21 Janu- ary I955 , suggested that "although national policy prescribes making every possible effort to prevent South Vietnam from falling to the communists, the degree to which the United States is willing to support this policy in men, money, materials, and acceptance of additional war risks is not readily apparent," and urged that: "Prior to consideration of military courses of action with respect to this area, a firm decision at national level as to implementation of U.S. policy in Southeast Asia is mandatory." Although no such decision was forthcoming, and even this reexamination of the decision to assist the Vietnamese did not choose one course of action over any other, it did imply by repeated honks on the domino klaxon that U.S. assistance to Vietnam was required. When, a week later, General Collins expressed in more positive terms this need, the way was clear for the NSC to endorse a strong U.S. policy in Vietnam, 31/ confirming General 1 Daniel's takeover on February 12- -but the extent to which the U.S. was prepared to support this policy (then or now) was never made clear. C. What was the th reat to South Vi etnam? In addition to the more general considerations underlying the U.S. decision to train Vietnamese forces was the specific consideration of the enemy threat to South Vietnam. As perceived during the time this decision was being taken, the threat consisted of three elements: the dissident sect forces in South Vietnam; the communist forces in South Vietnam, dominated by the decisionmakers in Hanoi; and the Vietnamese People's Army of North Vietnam. -*-• The sect forces, consisting of an estimated 10,000 Cao Dai, 2,500 Hoa Hao, and 2,600 Bien Xuyen forces, plus the urban police forces which were at that time under the control of the Binh Xuyen, were in opposition to the fledgling Diem government. 3-/ "The politico-religious armed groups called the Cao Dai, Hoa Hao, and Binh Xuyen are anti- communist in orientation, but feudalistic and regressive in all other respects. At present they have an effective veto power ever government action. This power they use to block reforms which might threaten their preferred military, economic, and political status, They will TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive retain their power to threaten and harass the government until the National Army is strong enough to neutralize their forces." 33/ The sects thus were regarded as an internal security threat— and more specifically as a threat to the Diem government. By some in Saigon they were regarded as the major internal threat. 3V Long subsidized by the French as their partners in the Indochina war., and faced with the end of French financial assistance; major elements of the sect forces were integrated into the Vietnamese National Army; other elements 3 including the Koa Hao forces of Ea Cut, were fragmented and reduced to low-level dissidence by government forces 5 according to contemporary intelligence estimates ; by 1956. 35/ There is some evi- dence that these fragmented groups were penetrated by the communists, however 9 and that they were used by the communists throughout the period. In this role the sects represented a continuing, if low-level * insurgent threat as an element in the overall internal security problem not qualitatively different from that repre ented by the communists them- selves. ' 4 2. The Viet 'Minh Residue in South Vietnam was generally regarded as the instrument with which "the Communists" would pursue their "objective of securing control of all Indochina." 36/ Contem- porary (195^) intelligence reports indicated the belief that ...the Viet Minh will seek to retain sizeable military and political assets in South Vietnam. Although the /Geneva/ agreements provide for the removal to the north of all Viet Minh forces , many of the regular and irregular Viet Minh soldiers now in the south are natives of the area, and large numbers of them will probably cache their arms and remain in South Vietnam. In addition, Viet Minh administrative cadres have been in firm control of several large areas in Central and South Vietnam for several years. These cadres will probably remain in place.... 3?/ Later reports confirmed this statement and continued to describe the situation as "precarious." 38/ Estimates during the period of relevance were consistent on the issue of control of the Viet Minh movement in the South: They did not question unity of purpose among the communists of the north and south (or 3 for that matter, among the members of the communist bloc); they did continue to assert or infer that the Viet Minh in the south were under the control of the Viet Minh in the north. 39/ Viet Minh* force "levels in the south were variously esti- mated by the U.S. during this period but never exceeded 10>000i GVN estimates, which tended to include all organized dissidents , were con- sistently lower than the U.S. estimates, never exceeding 8,000. Of 7 : ' TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 6 ■ TOP SECRET - Sensitive these estimated dissidents, no more than some 2,000 were considered "active" by any available- official estimate in the period 195^-1960. These forces were consistently estimated to be augmented by political and administra- tive cadre; koj - their modus operandi was seen as subversion and small- scale guerrilla operation. Thus the main internal threat to South Vietnam was viewed i throughout the period as Hanoi- controlled subversion and small-scale guerrilla operations carried our primarily by military and political cadre of the Viet Minh. 3- The Vietnamese Peo ple 's Army "continued evolution" into a regular military force during the last year of the French-Indochina war, kl/ and in the period during which the U.S. was deciding to assume responsi- bility for organizing and training the South Vietnamese army the VB\ was judged to be increasing its already formidable capabilities. k2/ In April 1955> the regular VPA^ "reorganized and strengthened since Geneva/' was estimated to have increased in numbers to 2^0,000 (largely at the expense of the regional forces of 37,000 and the popular forces of 75>°°0) and to have been organized into 10 infantry divisions, 2 artillery divisions, 1 AAA groupment, and 25 independent infantry regiments. ^3 / Throughout the period 19^1-1960 the VPA grew slowly and was consistently estimated to have the capability of defeating both French and Vietnamese forces were VPA forces to' undertake an invasion of South Vietnam. It was gener- ally assumed that these forces would be backed by Communist Chinese forces, if such backing proved necessary. Just as consistent as the high estimates of VPA capabilities were the estimates of the VPA's intentions: the communists, although continuing to pursue their goal of controlling all of Indochina, would "without violating the armistice to the extent of launching an armed invasion to the south or west, pursue their objective by political, psychological , and paramilitary means." hk/ In the fall of 195^- it was reported that "the Viet Minh probably now feels that it can achieve control over all Vietnam without initiating large-scale warfare. Accord- ingly, we believe that the Communists will exert every effort to accomplish their objectives through means short of war.... If, on the other hand, South Vietnam should appear to be gaining in strength or if elections were postponed over Communist objections, the Communists probably would step up their subversive and guerrilla activities in the South and if necessary would infiltrate additional armed forces in an effort to gain control over the area. However, we believe that they would unlikely openly to invade South Vietnam at least prior to July I95I;...." k^J The theme of political, psychological, and paramilitary operations as the communist method of securing its objectives was stressed 8' TOP SECRET - Sensitive I Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 in all available estimates throughout the years 195^-1960. No U.S. estimate that it was likely the VPA would overtly invade South Vietnam during that period has been found; on the contrary , in spite of insistence by Diem that invasion by the DRV was a serious possibility, h§/ U.S. estimates continued to stress that such an invasion was unlikely. In the words of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, engaged in the business of deter- mining U.S. policy in the event of aggression in Vietnam, "the Joint Chiefs of Staff are of the opinion that at this time the major threat to South Vietnam continues to be that of subversion " Wf/ In a somewhat later period it was stated that "The North Vietnamese Army is almost twice the size of the South Vietnamese Army. The threat posed by the large northern forces has put constant psycho- logical pressure on the GVN." k8/ In view of the nature of the U.S. response to the combined .threat posed by the sects, the Viet Minh in South Vietnam, and the VPA as reflected in the missions assigned the forces of South Vietnam, it would appear that this "constant psycho- logical pressure" had telling effects on U.S. as well as GVN policymakers. TOP SECRET - Sensitive 6" Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive ^ • What was the mission of V ietnamese force s? The mission initially envisioned for the forces of Free Vietnam by the principal advocate of a U.S C role in organizing and training those forces, the Secretary of State y was simply that of providing and maintaining security within the borders of their country, k§/ and it was on this basis that the decision to assume responsibility for the organization and training of the Vietnamese National Army was taken. This single mission concept was in dispute, however, before, during, and after its pronouncement; the joint Chiefs of Staff, in an attempt logi- cally to trace through the web of U.S C commitments woven largely by the Secretary of State, were on the record in opposition to it; 50/ end, in fact, by early 1956 a two- or three-fold mission for South Vietnamese forces was considered more or less established by the Chiefs and by others more directly concerned with the organization and training of the Vietnamese forces 51/ . The evolution of the mission of the Vietnamese forces from that of maintaining internal security to (a) maintaining internal security; (b) resisting external aggression; and (c) contributing to regional defense with other non-Communist countries was affected critically by five factors: the state of U.S. strategic military policy in the mid--1950 T s; the nature of SEATO and of U.S. views concerning fulfillment of its com- mitments under that treaty; the withdrawal of the French Expeditionary Corps; pressures exerted by the Diem government; and recent U.S. experi- . ences in Korea. - 1# U.S. strategic military policy in the mid-1950 T s, as has been well documented, 52/ was both complex and confused, and confusion over the issue of massive retaliation versus local defense was particular- ly intense c The JCS ~ among others -- were unable ever to resolve the dilemma posed by U.S. policy in this regard with respect to the defense of Southeast Asia. Co o The JCS had contended, first, that "from the point of view of the United States, with reference to the Far East as a whole, Indochina is devoid of decisive /presumably narrowly defined/ military objectives 1 ' 53/ when considering U.S. intervention in the Indochina war, and that the main target of U.S. air and naval forces should be the source of the aggression (i.e., China). But they also contended both during and after the Indochina war that atomic weapons should be used within Vietnam in the local defense of that country -- and that if permission to use such weapons were denied (a spectre which appeared constantly to haunt the Chiefs), U.S. force requirements and the time required to achieve victory would soar. 53/ > jjfft/ Finally, afi:er the French defeat, the Chiefs argued that a ground defense against aggression from Forth Vietnam by South Vietnamese forces would be necessary to provide time for the U.S. to intervene wit h ground forces, again using atomic weapons for local defense. 55/ - • TOP SEC RET - Sensitive 10 Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 YO • • TOP SECRET - Sensitive ■ • Thus 3 although U.S. defense policy in the mid-1950 f .s called for main but not sole reliance on nuclear weapons, and on use of massive re- taliatory power in response to acts deemed hostile to the interests of the United States , definition of .and planning for use of such weapons , in retaliation or otherwise, were so ambiguous, and the concepts them- . selves so unclear that, particularly when applied to specific remote local defense situations , their value as guidance was virtually nil. 2 ' The nature of SEATO, and of U.S. views concerning fulfillment of its obligations under the SEATO treaty, necessarily reflected the con- fusion in overall U.S. defense policy and planning. Added to this general problem was the more specific matter of matching U.S. resources to the worldwide commitments, including SEATO, that had been assumed since the end of World War II. Thus the Joint Chiefs stated that !? U.S. commitments ; to Formosa, Japan and Korea, which nations have been excluded from the /SEATO/ treaty, make it imperative that the United States not be restricted by force commitments in the subject treaty area;- $6/ to these commitments must be added the numberous U.S. obligations outside Asia. 'As is well-known, the.SEATO treaty, pressured into existence by • the United States and intended to deter overt aggression by China or other Communist nations, relied heavily in concept on the military participation i of the U.S. Faced with the magnitude of U.S. commitments, particularly •.in relation to the capabilities of the defense establishment, and con- __ • tinually confronted by the. considerations and requirements of general war, the JCS sought a way in which U e S. SEATO obligations might be carried out: 5- a Continued development of combat effective indigenous forces, with their structure and training mutually coordinated to develop local leadership and prestige, and with improved capabilities to create a aohesive fighting force through inte- ; ' gr at ion of their operations with adjacent indigenous forces and with support by operations of forces of other Manila Pact members c be Readiness to retaliate promptly with attacks^ by the . most effective combination of U.S. armed forces a.gainst the mili- tary power of the aggressor. - c. Encouragement of other Manila Pact countries to main- tain forces in readiness to counter aggression,, ! d. Discussion, in general terms, of unilateral military plans by the Military Representatives to the Council to the extent necessary to insure maximum participation and cooperation by other member nations but not to the extent that U.S. strategic plans or the availability of U.S. forces for implementing such plans might be revealed o TOP SECR?iT - Sensitive 11 7/ Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive e* Periodic visits by U.S. forces into the area as demonstrations of intent % and for joint and combined training exercises, . f. Availability of appropriate mechanism for the •' employment of U.S. forces in support of friendly indigenous forces in support of friendly -indigenous forces in the general area, ( 6. The concept of prompt retaliatory attacks does not envisage attacks on targets within the aggressor country other' than on military targets involved in the direct support of the aggressor action. If authorized, atomic weapons would be used, even in a local situation, if such use will bring the aggression to a swift and positive cessation, and if, on a balance of political and military consideration, such use will best advance U.S. security interests. Under the alternative assumption that authority to use atomic weapons cannot be assured, the above concept would not require change, but this assumption would -not permit the most effective employment of U,S. armed forces, and consequently might require greater forces than the U.S. would be justified in providing from the over-all point of vi:ew. 57/ The clear intent of this concept --in accordance with SEATO objectives -~ is deterrence of and response to overt aggression against South Vietnam, among other countries; in view of limited U.S resources, and of the recognition of this problem in NSC 162/2, which "envisages reliance on indigenous ground forces to the maximum extent possible," 58/ and in view of the psychological pressure generated by the powerful VTA, the logical consequence of assignment of the mission T 'to countery ex- ternal aggression" to local South Vietnamese forces is virtually unavoid- able. Therefore, the JCS stated their view — and held to it throughout the period 195^--19oO — - "that the ultimate objectives of the military forces of the Associated States should be: VIETNAM — to attain and maintain internal security and to deter Viet Minh aggression by a limited defense of the Geneva Armistice demarcation line. 59/ Although it was not until the publication of NSC 5612/1 in mid- 1956 that approved U.S. policy recognized this mission by stating that the U.S. should "assist Free Vietnam to build up indigenous armed forces, including independent logistical end administrative services, which will be capable of assuring internal security and of providing limited initial resistance to attack' by the Viet Minh," 60/ "unofficial U.S. policy, from the JCS in Washington through the MAAG in Vietnam, 61/ h:^ set in motion programs which implicitly assigned a mission of limited* initial resistance to Vietnamese forces which attempted to be both responsive to SEATO re- quirements and cognizant of-U c S. resource limitations. TOP SECRET - Sensitive 12 Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 r TOP SECRET - Sensitive 3- The French Expeditionary Cor ps, with a force of 176,000 men in October 1954, figured heavily' in U.S 7- French plans for the defense of South Vietnam. In effect, the FEC was planned to be the shield behind which training of the VKA could be conducted, free of major concern over a Viet Minh attack across the 17th parallel. Unfortunate from the point of view of these plans were the major policy disputes that plagued — and finally did in — joint U.S. -French acti- vities in Vietnam. Dominant among U.S. -French disagreements were the French reluc- tance to support the Diem Government and the apparent French attitude of conciliation toward the Communists in both North and South Vietnam depends at a minimum on an early and convincing demonstration by the French of their wholehearted support." 62/ It was particularly frustrating not only that no such "wholehearted support" was forthcoming but also that considerable evidence tended to support the belief that the French were actively attempting to overthrow Diem during the period they remained in Vietnam. 63/ - French reluctance to support Diem -- or, as the U.S. estimated, "any nationalist government" 6k/ -- was consistent with their attitude toward Communist North Vietnam. Although Generals Collins and Ely enjoyed a cordial relationship of mutual trust, there is considerable evidence that Ely was, in a sense, the victim of both his superiors in the French Government and of his subordinates in Vietnam. Thus while Collins almost never expressed doubts regarding Ely's statements to him (and never of his integrity), French politics both high- and low-level, were particularly intense and seemed to be directed toward preservation of French commercial and cultural influence in both North and South Vietnam. The high-level French mission to Hanoi, the Saintenay Mission, was in particular regarded as evidence of French duplicity, although General Ely, in his memoirs, denies such duplicity. 65/ Suspected French assistance to the sect forces opposing the Diem Government and French activities within the joint U.S. -French Training Relations Instruction Mission were also consistent with the policy of preservation of French interests. For some time U.S. policymakers had been thinking seriously about going it alone in Vietnam without the French. When at the Washing- ton Conference in September 195^5 "the French delegates discussed their intentions to cut the FEC to 100,000 by the end of 1955 and asked for $330 million in U.S. svvport for the FEC at that level, the reaction among U.S.- decision makers was negative. On November 5 it was decided that on balance the U.S. would probably fare better in Vietnam without the French, and it was tentatively agreed that the U.S. should not con- tinue its support that had been requested, but should limit the contri- bution to $100 million. In their view a complete withdrawal of the FEC in Ip55 would create a vacuum that only the Viet Minh could fill, for the VNA would remain incapable of coping even with Viet Minh irregular forces TOP SECRET - Se nsiti ve 13 •t • • Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive for at least that period* Furthermore, French cooperation was essential to the success of any U.S. project in Vietnam, and a decision to grant any support for the FEC would jeopardize French cooperation. 66/ Although Heath and Collins prevailed and $100 million was allocated to support the FEC during 1955 5 the French were informed that no further assistance could "be expected beyond that time. 6jJ The French responded by making it clear that a drastic reduction of the FEC was in the offing — to a level of Ho,000 by the end of 1955> and the Foreign Office emphasized that although this action was based entirely on monetary considerations there was also much sentiment in France for transferring the FEC to Forth Africa. In Vietnam, it was stated, French troops were serving the interests of the Free World; if the Free World would not pay their costs, then they should be sent to Forth Africa, where they would be serving the interests of France and the French Union. 68 / Pressures applied by Diem also influenced the French exodus. Mailing' no secret of his Franco-phobia, Diem asked the French to withdraw the FEC as early as September 195 1 !-, and in March 1955 Premier Faure announced that France would withdraw the FEC at the demand of the Viet- namese Government . By October 1955, the FEC had been reduced to i|5 ? 000; 69/ by February I956 only 15,000 remained; 70/ and on April 1, 1956 the remnants of the FEC left Saigon, leaving only small Air Force and Navy training missions behind. With the dissolution of the French dissolution of the French high. command on April 23, only the VKA was left to carry out the mission of guarding South Vietnam against aggression from the north, a mission which the French had oeen expected to perform*, ^' The pressures exerted by the Pi era Government on the U.S. regarding the Vietnamese* National Army were consistently in favor of larger forces than the U.S. was willing to support 71/ and in the criti- cally formative .years of 195^ an ^- 1955 were oriented toward regular forces organized to combat an invasion from the north as well as to pro- vide internal security. Just as Diem had felt the FEC should be deployed along the Ifth parallel, 72/ he believed that the VKA should be manned and organized in such a way as to counter any such invasion, although "from the earliest days senior Vietnamese officers, including General Minh, argued for the creation of an effective grass-roots security organization in the countryside. They knew how the war had been fought and lost. Diem at first had no idea. While the Viet Minh tactics were changing from attrition to annihilation, Diem was abroad. He returned with the opinion that aircraft and naval craft were the essentials and that even infantry were no necessary. -Later he developed an attachment to artillery. . * • By the time he came round to accepting the advice of his f Daniel had begun to implement that agreement in 195*4 by organizing TRIM, which consisted of all French and U.S. advisory and training -oersonnel as well as French cadres with Vietnamese units, for this purpose. 32/ During 1955> TRIM occupied itself with organizing a military school system, setting up programs for training officers and specialists in the U.S. and other countries, and reducing the language barrier. Much time and thought went into planning for reorganizing and. training the army on a divisional rather than a battalion ba^is, but TRIM accomplished little in this area during TOP SECRET - Sensitive 18 % Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive 1955 "because of the continued employment of the WA against the sects and because of the French phaseout, which was veil underway during that year. 83/ - « The continuing conflict with sect forces, the reduction and even- tual withdrawal of the FEC, the lack of a capability to demobilize efficiently, concern about overloading the economy with unemployed veterans (potential grist for the sects 1 < and for the Communists 1 mill), and the fact that the 88,000-man VEA was viewed as only slightly larger than the sect forces alone led the Vietnamese Ministry of Defense (KOD) to object to the 88,000 force level in 19?1+. As a first compromise, CHMAAG indicated that the U.S. would agree to supporting a goal of 100,000 by the end of 1955; the same factors led to O'Daniel's recom- mendation of a goal of U.S. -supported forces of 150,000 (plus 10,000 sect-troops) by 1 July 195I4 . 8k/ Ambassador Reinhardt and CBICPAC fully endorsed T Daniel T s recommendation, and the JCS recommended ap- proval of this force basis. 85/ Upon D0D approval, MAAG immediately began planning for the reorganization of Vietnamese forces "according to American concepts" 86/ and at the newly approved level. The organiz- ing and training of this force of h field divisions, 6 light divisions, 13 territorial regiments, 1 airborne EOT, and supporting troops, plus an air force and navy of limited size, was to occupy MAAG until the reorgani- zation of 1959. 8j/ To accomplish this task, MAAG had a total strength of 3^2 officers and men, of which 220 were assigned TRIM in February 1955- With the French withdrawing personnel engaged in processing- MDAP equipment, MAAG found it difficult to supervise redistribution and end use of this material. 88/ As early as February, before the French began to withdraw, O'Daniel had reported he needed twice the authorized MAAG strength to accomplish this mission; 89/ both 0'Daniel and CINCPAC argued against the State Department T s interpretation that Article l6 of the Geneva Agreement held MAAG to a ceiling of 3^2 personnel and the JCS recommended "that the Secretary of Defense inform the National Security Council of the gravity of the situation in Vietnam, requesting the authority to raise the 3^-2 limitation;" 90/ and the Secretary of Defense, in forward- ing these dissenting views to the Secretary of State, agreed with the dissenter, gl/ Before the Secretary of State could reply to the D0D inquiry, an interagency costing team which had just returned from Vietnam reported that because of the reduction in French personnel control of MDAP supplies and spaces had been lost and that as a result, "the capa- bility of supply of forces in the field in the event hostilities should be resumed in mid-1956 would be virtually non-existent." 92/ On February 3, '1956, the Department of State acquiesced in the creation of the Temporary Equipment Recovery Mission (TERM). 93/ By the end of 1956* this group of 350 military personnel had greatly facili- tated the recovery and redistribution of MDAP equipment; although they TOP SECRET - Sensiti-, 19 Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 '// • * TOP SECRET - Sensitive were not part of MAAG, they had also improved the organization of Viet- namese logistical services and had launched an extensive logistical training program, . In addition, TERM relieved MAAG of logistical re- sponsibilities, thus freeing MAAG personnel for training. %kf There- after, the RAA.G training program "gained momentum." 95/ ~~" * This momentum was in the direction of training and organizing the VNA so that it would have its proper role in the overall defense of Vietnam as had already been envisioned by the MAAG in 1955: (1) The organization and missions of the National Army, Civil Guard and Self -Defense Corps all supplementary in assur- ing adequate internal security for Free Vietnam, The National Army retains overall responsibility for internal security in accordance with its assigned mission. The development of the Civil Guard and Self -Defense Corps as supplementary internal security agencies will, at nominal cost, provide for increased internal security and simultaneously afford necessary relief £JL^™yjjj^lJi s . "^r necessary combat tra ining , thus gr eatly JJ^£^A^iLJ^Jp otential °~ Free Vietnam to "resist armed aggression from without > coordinated with guerrilla and sub- versive action from within. (2) The Civil Guard will be responsible for (a) nation- wide civil law enforcement except in those, cities having municipal police, (b) supplementing, the Array Territorial - Regiments in maintain internal security, and (c) serving as an operating agency for the Vietnamese Bureau" of Investigation in the collection of ant i~ subversive intelligence. The Civil Guard will possess the necessary mobility to concentrate against strong subversive actions, supplementing and lending breadth to the Army Territorial Battalions. * . • . (3) Neither the Army nor the. Civil Guard will have the necessary strength, dispersion or familiarity to provide neces- sary protection for widely scattered and numerous (approximately 6,000) villages against subversive actions of Viet Minh cadres and dissident sect personnel. The Self-Defense Corps, operating with 10-men armed units in each village, would possess these requirements to the degree necessary to ferret, out and eliminate existent or potential subversive movements ... . The Army and the Sel3"-Defense Corps will have the same command channels.... Close coordination will exist between Self-Defense Corps units and the Civil Guard, on the lower levels. S'6/ No concept for defending Free Vietnam could be clearer: the regular army in command of (or in close coordination with) the irregulars who will have the capability to free the army to fill an army role -- "to resist armed aggression from without." Unfortunately, however sound this TOP SECRET' - Sensitive 20 . - Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 . TOP SECRET - Sensitive concept may have been ~~ and in view of demonstrated Viet Cong and DRV flexibility it is not clear that the concept was completely unsound — it was never successfully implemented e The VNA, gradually transformed into ARVN, was organized and trained along U.S. lines (at least in the view of those doing the training and reporting on their progress 57 / and by the end of 1958 MAAG was able to state that "The combat posture of the Vietna:nese Armed Forces has 'improved to a marked degree in the past few years. At the end of CY 1958, the Vietnamese Army, competed with other army forces in Southeast Asia, reached a relatively high degree of combat effectiveness.... 1 ' 98/ But the Civil Guard and the ; Self -Defense Corps were never brought to the stage of development at which they might have relieved the army of the internal security mission for which its new-found organization, training, and equipment were rendering it unfit. As far as can be estimated on the basis of available information, training within Vietnam was conducted in as centralized a fashion as possible. Limited availability of personnel and GW opposition pre- cluded posting of U.S. advisors to lower than airborne brigade level until 1961, although the need for advisors at lower levels was well recognized. 99 / Training methods were, as far as can be judged, standard U.S. methods minimally adapted to the Vietnamese context; standard training cycles similar to U.S. programs were employed; ex- tensive use was made of translated U.S. training films and training jf and field manuals. Extensive training of Vietnamese officers in the U.S. was conducted. Combat and support units, especially logistics units, benefited equally from U.S. methods and procedures. Equipment (including personal gear) reflected U.S. taste in kind, if not in quality. And U.S. organizational preferences became fully realized when, in 1959, the agitation begun by General D'Daniel during the Indo- china war had its full flowering in the reorganization of the Vietnamese Army into a General Headquarters, Field Command, six Military Region Headquarters, two Corps Headquarters and Corps Troops, one provisional Corps Headquarters, and seven standard divisions of 10,500 men each. By 1959 these forces were judged capable of maintaining internal security s and of providing limited initial resistance to any renewed aggression . from the North. 100/ In spite of all this progress, however, MAAG statements in 1959 - reveal that many of the problems and deficiencies found in the VKA of 195*4 and noted above were still to be found in the ARVJS of 195?: 101 / although force size had been settled oy fiat, it was still a troublesome problem particularly vis-a-vi s the (JVM which persisted in its desire for larger forces; force structure was still unclear, particularly with reference to command and control; as the abortive coup of i960 was to show, high-ranking officers were still politically active; 102 / plans for an internal security program relied heavily on the virtually non- existent capabilities of the Civil Guard and Self -Defense Corps; TOP SECRET - Sensitive 21 Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 21 TOP SECRET - Sensitive correction of a spirit of insubordination and irresponsibility was not compete, as revealed at low as well as high (or "coup") levels- 103/ French cadre had been replaced, but with Vietnamese cadre generally less well-adapted to their role; a self-reliant officer corps was still a vision of the future, as were an independent logistics capability and adequate technical services; and although something had been learned about the problems of semi -military and police forces, not enough had been done to cope with them to provide genuine internal security. There were, in fact, several views of the roles and missions of the paramilitary forces . The Michigan State University Advisory Group, under contract to USOM, Vietnam to provide counsel and guidance on the development of the Civil Guard (CG), viewed this organization as a national police, civilian in character and function, lightly but adequately equipped, with sufficient delegated authority and training to enforce all laws, con- trol subversion, and collect intelligence data in areas not covered by municipal police, as well as establishing close ties with the population of the rural areas by- fixed basing in the villages within pacified areas. 10 v Diem envisaged the CG as a large and powerful military organization accountable to him through his appointed province chiefs -- a counter to the army in the struggle for power which would also provide provincial security through mobility from posts outside the villages; in line with this view, he transferred the CG from the Ministry of the Interior to the . Presidency in 1956. The USMAAG came to view the CG much as Diem did ~- not, of course, -as an anti-coup safeguard, but as a mobile counter sub ver- sion force, an adjunct to the army that would relieve it of internal • security duty and free it to learn how to counter the threat from the North. 105/ As of the end of 1956 the CG were being trained at the Quang Trung School to assist the army in case of crisis or of overt attack; JL06/ by late 1957, they were conducting operations with ABVii in unpacified areas. 167/ The MSU Advisory Group, in a 1956 report, 108/ outlined the problems that existed with respect to the problems of the several Vietnamese law enforcement agencies, including the CG, and made far-reaching recommenda- tions, some of which were reiterated in the Counter insurgency Plan of I960. 109/ - This reiteration supports the hypothesis that few of the MSU recommendations were acted upon effectively in the intervening years . In July 1957, the GVK requested $60 million worth of heavy equipment for the CG, which had been equipped only with non-U. S. weapons surplus . to the army's requirements. MAAG and MSU proposed §lk - 18 million in lighter equipment; in 1958, a compromise was reached, providing for only $14 million but including some of the heavy equipment to be issued over a U-year period with the understanding that the CG be reorganized into a civilian operation under the Ministry of Interior and along lines proposed by U.S. advisors. Lip/ Little progress was made in changing the Civil Guard, however, in spite of this U.S. leverage; txhe §lk million in TOP SECRET - Sensitive 22 r\ /•» Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive assistance was withheld for almost two years. In January 1959, Diem agreed to transfer the CG to the Minister of the Interior, and the U.S. agreed to go ahead -with the aid program The new Public Safety Division of USOM assumed responsibility for training the CG in June, but the impasse over the concept of the CG continued until December i960, when Diem, at MAAG's urging, transferred the CG to the DOD. Ill / The Self -Defense Corps (SDC),'like the CG, was armed with non-U. S, weapons surplus to the army's requirements . Established by Diem as a part of the DOD, the SDC received U.S. 'assistance from its inception in the form of a $6 million per year subsidy for salaries. All reports indicate that the SDC was in even worse shape than the CG. The contro- versy that engulfed both these organizations for five years produced two paramilitary units that, far from being adequate to free the army for combat, " were confusingly organized, inadequately equipped, poorly trained, and badly led -~ even when compared with ABVR. 112/ * According to the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College "Study on Army Aspects of the Military Assistance Program in Vietnam/' published in June i960, 113/ n The Armed Forces of the Republic of Vietnam are anxious to take the offensive and 'march to Hanoi. 1 The Chief, MAAG, and his principal assistants who come in direct contact with the Viet- namese high command must be constantly alert to detect this desire and any evidence of preparations therefor, as the consequences of such a premature act, not only to the numerically inferior South Vietnamese Armed Forces, but also to the entire region and possibly the whole world, could be most serious." Given the deficiencies remaining in the seven standard division regular army that would do the marching, and the state of the paramilitary forces, the authors of this study were well advised to add, parenthetically and perhaps wistfully: "(Eventual reunification through 'peaceful means' is to be hoped for.)" TOP SECRET - Sensitive 23 S3 Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive G • Did U,So assistance through i960 result in cre ation of a South Vietnamese Army in the image of the U.S P Army ? ' While it would" probably be incorrect to assert that the UoS created a complete "mirror image" of its own forces in the Vietnamese defense estab- lishment, consideration of the mission, strategy, tactics, organizations, manpower policy, equipment, and training of that establishment indicates that conscious and unconscious U.So efforts did result in emphasis on conventional forces (at the expense of paramilitary forces) "governed by the concept of a war front enabling use of the superior weaponry and technology of the West against a guerrilla force that was potentially the spearhead of a more mas- sive thrust out of North Vietnam." UJj/ 1* Evolution of the mission of the VNA has been described The fact is that assignment of a dual mission to VNA led rapidly to formation of a regular military establishment designed primarily to counter the threat of' overt invasion from the North • Countering the internal threat- -as is so often the case~-was downgraded to the status of a "lesser-included capa- bility in the regular forces." 11$/ 2o The strategy of the r eg ular establishment was described as early as 1956 as defensive in nature and involves the conduct of a delaying action against external aggression of sufficient duration and effec- tiveness to hold as much ground as possible, and retain the key strategic entity, the Saigon Complex, in order to permit the arrival of the foreign military assistance which will be neces- sary to preserve her territorial integrity and national sovereignty •00. This defensive strategy must not only include consideration of the enemy threat in the form of overt military aggression from outside her borders but also from separate or concurrent extensive guerrilla and clandestine activities conducted by indigenous dis- sident groups or foreign military and political cadres already present or infiltrated into the country,, 116/ The latter threat was countered by the territorial regiments in 19^6; these 3^£imgnts _were abolished i n 1959 , wit h the^'advent of the 7 standard division- force. Thus on the strategic level the regular forces came to reflect the strategy evolved by the U S in Korea arid elsewhere. 3« On the tactical level the Vietnamese forces also came to re- flect standard U S doctrine --with one possible exception, that of "paci- fication o" Thus the tactical doctrine which will probably emerge from the present /l956/ reorganization and training period will most likely # •* TOP-SECRET - Sensitive 2k ■ Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 £t TOP SECRET - Sensitive reflect past., relatively small-unit, infantry-type operations under the French; the inherently mobile infantry nature of the present forces influenced by increased firepower; a capability for coor- dinated operations up to division and eventually corps level; and increased service and logistical support for the essentially . infantry-type forces Mobility and increased infantry firepower will dictate the utilization of essentially infantry tactics o. o The VNA /will/ adopt a highly mobile tactical doctrine character- ized by extensive movement and maneuvering of the main body with extensive mining and ambuscades, irj / The preponderant evidence gleaned from ARVN experience against the Viet Cong supports the hypothesis that ARVN tactics, influenced by the factors listed above, rapidly evolved toward relatively large-scale operations, heavily reliant on increased prepower including artillery and air support, and away from "relatively small-unit, infantry-type operations," again reflecting UoSo practice, if not U.So doctrine, in countering large-scale aggression. The concept and tactics of the pacification mission, unlike those of countering aggression, required particular concentration on specialized methods of dealing with the local populace as well as countering insurgents. Thus the Saigon Military Mission reported that as a result of its teaching efforts, . - Troops were courteous, they had constructed a school and were holding classes for both children and adults with Army volunteers as teachers, they had helped rebuild the marketplace and church, they carried out active patrolling, and they had placed locked boxes to receive information and suggestions from the population,, People responded to the treatment. In a few days they started being friendly with the troops (something usually reserved for Communist troops in Asian countries) and, after a Viet Minh hand-grenade attack on the marketplace, information about names and locations of the Viet Minh cadres started to flow to the Army from the people 118/ In spite of this apparent good start, MAAG Country Statements from 1955 to 1959 a ^e silent on the subject of training for pacification, although National Security Action, as pacification was then called, was actually underway c This is a reasonably good indication of how important this set of concepts and tactics was regarded by MAAG officers. I Iff/ In fact, quite the opposite was the case: MAAG reports constantly complained of the diver- sion of the Vietnamese Army from unit training to pacification, without suggesting that specialized training in the tactics of this mission might be useful o I'jtf/ The clear inference is that the orthodoxy of UoS tactical doctrine prevailed • m ^s k. The organization of the defense establishment in general re- flected the UoSc practices insofar as it was feasible to persuade the Diem TOP SECRET - Sensitive 25 So . Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET ~ Sensitive government to adopt them. Igt'/ Available evidence indicates that the standard ARVN division of 1959 was patterned after the 1956 U.S. Army division- reduced in scale , and without organic armor, aviation, and band. Each ARVN standard division had 10,^50 tf' ien organized in three regiments, each of which was capable of independent action and could be broken into company-size task forces c Each division had two artillery battalions equipped with towed 105 'mm howitzers and k.2" mortars, one engineer battalion, and technical and logistics support companies The seven divisions were formed into two Corps. There were also four armor battalions, one airborne brigade, one marine group, one air force fighter- bomber squadron, two C-Vf transport squadrons, two light aircraft observa- tion squadrons, and one squadron of helicopters . 3-27^/ In 196h Lieutenant General Samuel T. Williams (Chief MAAG : Vietnam 1955~6o) during the course of an interview was asked whether MAAG had created the Vietnamese Division in the image of the American Division. His vehement denial included the statement that "Actually, there was little similarity between the South Vietnamese division in existence then flS59j or now 'f^9Q\J "." 12z/ However, an examination of the following table and figures indicates that there were more similarities than differences in the overall structure of the two organizations All of the technical services were to be found in the 1959 ARVN Division, although at somewhat reduced strength in some cases . Division artillery was 50 percent heavier in the UcSo Division and was concentrated in 105 mm howitzer battalions with some 155 mm, 8-inch and 763 mm weapons. The ARVN Division had a k. 2-inch mortar battalion in addition to the 105 mm battalion. Maneuver units, the regiments of the U.S. and ARVN Division, were about equal in strength. Both regiments contained a mortar company. There were more regiments in the U.S. Division (5) as opposed to ARVN T s 3, and the U.S. regiments were divided into rifle companies (k per regiment). In the ARVN Division there was an intermediate battalion echelon. In this respect the 1959 ARVN Division more closely resembled the J-HR Regiment of the U.S. Army 7R Division (l955)» This regiment type was heavier than both the ROC ID 7-111 Infantry Regiment and the ARVN 1959 Regiment and was evidently capable of more sustained operations, since it had organic support units attached to it including a company of tanks. A similar regiment (7-11R) without the technical support units was supposed to provide the division with the flex- ibility to conduct operation with task forces of any size, a stated goal of the authors of the ARVN Divisional reorganization. !£:?•/ Thus, while the mirror image accusation is not entirely correct, neither is the denial that there were no similarities between the U.S. and ARVN Division The evi- dence available suggests that clearly the blueprint for the 1959 ARVN Division reorganization was to be found in the T0E T s of the U.S. Army. 5. Manpower policies in Vietnam in the late 195^ : s resulted in allocation of the best personnel to the Vietnamese Armed Forces. TOP S ECRET - Sensitive 26 00 no CO K O ! CO CD < COMPARISON OF U.S. 7.T ROCID INFANTRY DIVISION (1956) AND ARVN STANDARD DIVISION (1959) (U) Iten or Unit Division Total Strength Div Hq 6c Hq Co Tank Bn Arm'd Car Bn. Engineer Combat Bn Signal Division Arty • 105 mm How Bn 4.2" Mortar Bn Infantry Regiment Hq 6c Hq Spt Co Rifle Co Heavy Mort 81 mm Hq & Hq Det & Band Quartermaster Company Medical Ordnance Combat Aviation Co Administrative Service Co Transportation a. U.S. 7T ROCID Inf Div 1956 Have Yes No x X X X X X X X X X X X X X X .X X X X Strength 13,748 292 .1 763 669 791 Bn 525 1,763 897 7,135 1,550 4,860 725 70 194 Bn-302 Bn-327 223 162 Bn 532 ARVN 1959 Inf Div Have Yes x X X X X No X X X X X X X X X X X X Strength 11,076 186 466 Co 164 • 976 420 551 7,353 a a a 65 Co 151 Co 114 Co THJo c: - v Not known. [Source: Infantry Reference Data, 1958 (U) ; Weekly Intelligence Digest, PAC0M, 3-28-58, p. 15" (S)] J h3 O to o £J 1-3 ! CO CD i — i i— • CO H- c+ < z 2; 9 a ^0 ^^ oje r/i o r» b g 3 cr 2 tn X Z a> Z 9 i— f o < IT) oj U) o ^— i i 0> D. ■ (U -1 Z 1 ^ as 00 £> f-f c ; • • D to U-> o OJ Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 27 TOP SECRET - Sensitive • X . X • — «• . .-, — Q < ~- o • — ^_ CD r^ r. • -- 4.. o 6 •*— «- O -*.- cp u D r* a."} LU o lis i u /• ~+ IS) z < Y- o > Q o • »- C .Ju- a ■4- • V- c t a -• - kT% u f. l' 1 o V-. Y- x J £ GO cr on * !Z> " ' ■• ..28 TOPSECR ET - Sensiti ve » • »-3 o CO o I CO fD to < CD Pioneer Battalion nf entry Division 492 HQ & HQ Company Ordnance Company ?,958 Transportation Company Reconnaissance Company Quartermaster • Company i \ Arti t ,ery Division !05-mm Hov. ifzer Battalion ( Howitzers 12 ) 4.2" Mortar Battalion ( 2/ Mortars ) •PRINCIPAL WEAPONS AND VEHICLES .J n*ies Source Study on Ai m y Aspects pf r h e M I ! I ta ry Ass« c t r. n :e F;c Ofi ■::■'■ rs \/:,~.f 3 V : 2 carbines 652 bsr : * 13 rv;c' ineauns. ca! .30 An..y Command end Gener-.;l Staff College, 1 June >960 (S) - o « * rocKet launchers, o.o 56 «ecoI!!#ss rifles, 57— n n 72 mortars, 60-mm 72 moi tors , 3 1 -mm 27 mortars, 4.2V 1 2 hov, I tzers , 1 05-mm to v. e d 3)5 truck, 1, 4 ton 442 truck, 3/4 ton fej truck", J / ton [1-3 O CO 53 1-3 1 o: H c* H o uj Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 1 .TOP SECRET - Sensitive Rational direction of manpower was not proposed by American advisors and would have lain "beyond the capacity for organiza- tion of the RVN Government; all young professional graduates were enlisted into the army, which then controlled most of the manpower to do the jobs and had to be allowed to make good the civilian shortcomings engendered by conscription. 12$/ • This insatiable requirement for the "best" men to build up the officer corps was in part a reflection of the requirements of the South Vietnamese social structure; in any event, it was much closer to the conventional U S o view of an officer corps than to the view of llo Chi Minh and Vo Nguyen Giap, and reflected the view that well-schooled men are required to manage complex modern armies ^° The equipment provided the Vietnamese regular forces was more suited to countering aggression from the North than to preserving internal security in the South While ARVN were not equipped as heavily as those of the UeS.--they had no tracked vehicles (tanks or personnel carriers), fewer trucks, and generally lighter weapons --727 trucks, 660 trailers— to make them mechanized and road -bound .. Armor was provided, but was not organic to the standard division . e • o U.So military aid was programmed in more or less the same fashion as for countries like Turkey and Korea, where guer- rillas were not a threat . The Vietnamese armed forces not only were equipped with tanks, planes, artillery and similar hardware that was relatively little value against guerrrillas as the French had discovered so painfully and the Pentagon apparently had not noticed „ They were also trained to depend on that kind of big bang support in battle, reducing both their capability and their psychological willingness to get out and fight the guerrillas the only way that works: with rifles, close in. 12>g/ 7« That the training of the Vietnamese armed forces was conducted along U0S0 lines has been documented above « Between 1950 and 1959* (1) 3.>296 Vietnamese military personnel had received training in military facilities in the United States, while 7^7 had been trained in other Free Vforld military schools . 12 : 4j ■ (2) Training films, manuals and lesson plans were those used by the UcS, military adapted to Vietnamese culture and environment . lg? (3) The U.S. was particularly proud of its accomplishments in the training of armed forces in Korea, where a large conven- tionally organized force had proven itself in the combat recently experienced there. iXfj TOP SECRET - Sensitive ■ ' - " „ - 1 . . ~- ■ . • 30 10 Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 .TOP SECRET - Sensitive These factors, then- -the dual mission, strategy, tactics, organization, manpower policy, equipment, and training- -all directly contri buted to the formation of a Vietnamese military establishment, and in parti cular to an ARW, that in i960 bore overall resemblance to the UoS. military establishment and particularly close resemblance to the U S Army* Unfortunately, events since i960 have demonstrated that the ARVN was not well-suited to countering the internal security threat; its efficacy against overt aggression still remains to be tested. r f . TOP SECRET - Sensitive . 31 Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 c ri TOP SECRET - Sensitive IV. C. FOOTNOTES ••■Report of the Saigon Military Mission (SMM), August 195 1 *- August 1955 (S). 2 JCS telegram to CINCPAC 97^802, 30 March i960; JCSM-90-6-60, 15 September i960. Cf., Duneanson, Dennis J. } Government and Revolution in Vietnam , 196S, pp. 290-305. J. Law ton Collins, Special Representative of the United States in Vietnam, "Report on Vietnam for the National Security Council," January 20, 1955 (TS). See also NSC documents throughout the period 1950-1960 which are consistent with this statement of objectives and consequences. A The key to th is problem [the Indochina war] is a strong and effective Nationalist army with the support of t he Populace behind it ." Debriefing, M/General Thomas J. H. Trapnell, Jr., 3 May 1954, in 0SD files 092/092.2 Indochina. U.S. decisionmakers seemed to agree virtually unanimously with this statement. In April 1953 CHMAAG General Trapnell reported that French observers had returned from Korea with little but a list of reasons why U.S. training procedures could not be effectively applied in Indochina. Msg, CHMAAG Indochina to AC of S G-3 and CINFE, MG619A, DA-IN-257701 , 15 April 53. Although the minutes of the Bipartite U.S. -French Conversations (First Session, April 22, 1953, 3:30 p.m., Quai d'Orsay) reported that "The French missions which have been received in Korea were very useful. Marshall Juin himself ha§ brought back information the French propose to use in the formation of the Vietnam army," the qualifiers added, even at this high diplomatic level ("But the problem is not the same in Indochina as in Korea. The problems facing the two armies are not comparable, but some lessons can be applied") lend weight to the Trapnell Interpretation that the French visits to Korea had been largely a waste of time (S). This plan, outlined to then Charge d'Affaires Gullion, was dismissed as "fantastic," although it was seen that this Vietnamese attitude raised serious -problems . Msg, Gullion to Acheson, 204, 25 March 1950 (S). History of the Indoch ina Inciden t, Historical Section, JCS. Series B, 1 February 1955 (TS). (Hereinafter referred to as JCS History.) In May 1954, Ngo Dinh Luyen, Bao Dai's personal representative, told Philip W, Bonsai that Bao Dai seeks U.S. help for the National Army. Memcon, May 18 and 20, 1954 (TS), OSD- Files 1954. Memorandum for SECDEF from Service Secretaries, "Draft State Department Statement on Indochina, dated 27 March 1952," 8 April 1952 (TS). g Memorandum for Record, "Meeting of President's Special Committee on Indochina, 29 January 1954," 30 January 1954 (TS). 32 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 *2 - ' TOP SECRET - Sensitive 9 ' Report by the Ad Hoc Committee to the Assistant to the Secretary for . International Security Affairs.../' ND, End to (TS) Memorandum, Acting SECDEF to Service Secretaries, "Forty Additional Vietnam Battalions," 19 February 1953. °JCS History. 11~ Msg, CHMAAG 1C to CSUSA, MG 1651, DA, 091515Z June 54, DA-IN-64188 (9 June 1954) (S). 12 Msg, Murphy to AmEmb (Paris)", TOSEC 392, 10 June 1954 (TS). " 13 • Msg, SECSTATE to Amb (Paris), 4551, TEDUL 191, 12 June 1954 (TS). 14 JCS History. Memorandum for SECDEF from JCS, "Suspension of U.S. Military Aid to Indochina in Event of a Cease Fire," April 30, 1954; Memorandum from SECDEF to Service Secretaries and JCS, July 30, 1954. Msg, CHMAAG Indochina to DEPTAR, Mg 2062A, 271130Z July 1954, DA-IN-74737, (TS). JCS History . Although interpretations of the Geneva '■.•■• Agreements with regard to ceilings as they applied to U.S. military forces • varied, the Department of State interpreted the agreement as fixing the number of forces at or below the level existing on 11 August 1954. 17 JCS His tory. 1 o Memorandum for SECDEF, "U.S. Assumption of Training Responsibilities in Indochina," 4 August 1954 (S) . 19 Letter, SECDEF to SECSTATE, 12 August 1954 (S), " 20 Memorandum SECSTATE to SECDEF, 18 August 1954 (S). JCS His tory . 21 Memorandum for SECDEF from JCS, "U.S Assumption of Training Responsibilities in Indochina," 22 September 1954 (TS) . """'" 22 Memorandum for SECDEF from JCS, "Retention and Development of Forces in Vietnam," 22 September 1954 (TS). - 23 Memorandum for SECDEF from JCS, "Retention and Development of Forces in Indochina," 22 September 1954 (TS)., 24 Memorandum, SECSTATE to SECDEF, October 11, 1954 (TS). " 25 Memorandum, SECDEF from JCS, "Development and Training of Indigenous Forces in Indochina," 19 October 1954 (TS) . Msg, SECSTATE to AmEmb (Saigon) 1679, 22 October 1954 (TS). 27 Memorandum, -SECDEF to JCS, 26 October 1954 (TS). oo TOP SECRET - Sensitive .n Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive 954 (TS) % ' 28 lrr . • With reference to the question of training Vietnamese forces the Joint Chiefs 1 of Staff desire to point out that in addition to the curren t- unstable political situation in Vietnam the terms of the Geneva Armistice Agreement have been interpreted to limit t he strength" of MAA G, Indochina to 342 personnel. Even if all these military personnel were replaced by U.S. civilians to perform the normal functions of the MAAG and the military personnel were thereby released for training duties only, the number of U.S. personnel would permit_miT y limited participa tion^ in the over- all training program . Under these conditions, U.S. participation in training not only would probably nave but jj.mi.ted beneficial effect but also would assu re res po nsibility for any failure o f the prog ram." (Italics added). Memorandum for SECDEF from JCS, "Development and Training of Indigenous Forces in Indochina," 19 October 19 29 James M. Gavin, Crisis Now, p. 49. 3 . , Memorandum to SECDEF from JCS, "Indochina," 17 November 1954 (TS). 31 - NSC Record of Action 131b, 27 January 1955 (TS). JCS History. Memorandum, SECDEF . to Service Secretaries and JCS, "Report on Vietnam . for the NSC," 3 February 1955 (TS). 32 - - NIE 63-7-54, 23 November 1954 (S). Excluded from this estimate are those Ho a Hao forces under the control of the VNA or the French. 33 Report to SECSTATE by J. Lawton Collins, Special Representative in Vietnam, January 20., 1955 (TS) . 34 Discussions with a member of US MAAG in 1954-1955 period (U) . 35 „ . . . thq government by force and bribery has drastically reduced the importance of these groups to challenge its authority." NIE 63.1-3-55, 11 October 1955. ."All significant sect resistance in South Vietnam has been eliminated " NIE 63-56, 17 July 1956. (S). 36 NIE 63-5-54, 3 August 1954. (S). 37 tt -A Ibid . NIE 63-7-54, 23 November 1954 (S) . * 39 In fact, many estimates failed to make any distinction between northern and southern forces. See MAAG Narrative Statement dated August 23, 1958 (S), which estimated "Viet Cong strength in North Vietnam" at 268,000. 40 For particularly detailed estimates of Viet Minh organization in South Vietnam, see Department of State documents, "The Communist Subversive Threat in Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos," DR/SP 57.1, December 29, 1955 (S); and "The Communist Subversive Threat to the SEATO Treaty Areas, II. The Subversive Threat in South Vietnam," DRF SP-62, October 24, 1956 (S) • NIE 91, 4 June 1953 (S). 42 NIE 63-7-54, 23 November 1954 (S) . 43 NIE 63.1-2-55, 26 April 1955 (TS). 44 NIE 63-5-54, 3 August 1954 (Italics added) (S). 3k TOP SECRET - Sensitive % .» - ' * ■ Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 ° ' TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 105 Pan, Stephen, Daniel Lyons, Vietnam Crisis , Robert Speller & Sons, New York, 1966. Raskin, Marcus G. and Bernard B. Fall, eds., The Vietnam Reorder: Articles and Documents on American Foreign Policy and the Vietnam Crisis , Random House, New York, 1965. Ridgway, Matthew B. , Soldier: The Memoirs of Matthew B. Ridgway; as told to Harold H. Martin , Harper, New York, 1956. Ridgway, Matthew B., The Korean War , Doubleday, Garden City, New York, 1967. Salmon, Malcolm, Focus on Indo-China , Foreign Languages Publishing House, Hanoi, 1961. Scigliano, Robert, South Vietnam: Nation Under Stress , Houghton ' Mifflin, Boston, 1964. Scigliano, Robert, Guy H. Fox, Technical Assistance in Vietnam: The Michigan State University Experience , Frederick A. Praeger, New York, 1965. Shaplen, Robert, The Lost Revolution: The Story of Twenty Years of Neglected Opportunities in Vietnam and of America's Failure to Foster Democracy There , Harper and Row, New York, 1955. Warner, Denis, The Last Confucian; Vietnam, Southeast Asia, and the West , Penguin, Baltimore, Maryland, 1964. Zagoria, Donald S., Vietnam Triangle: Moscow, Peking, Hanoi , Pegasus, New York, 1967. B. Articles Conner, Judson, J., "Teeth for the Free World Dragon," Army Information J Di gest , November 1960. Tlarriman, W. Averill, "What Are We Doing in Southeast Asia," New York Times Magazine , May 27, 1962. • . . Myers, Samuel L. , "Building a Strong National Vietnamese Army, Free World Forum , May 1959. ■ Noll, John V., Jr., "The Armored School South Vietnam," Armor , January- February, 1958. Stevenson, Charles S., "The Far East MAAGs : Good Investment in Security," Army , November 1960. Williams, Samuel T. , "The Practical Demands of MAAG," Mil itary Review , July 1961. Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 (6(o . | * • Williams, Samuel T. , "Why the U. S. is Losing in Vietnam: An Inside Story," U. S. News and World Report, November 9, 1964. C. Other Fo urth Semiannual Report to Congress on the Mutual Defense Assistance Program; Message from the President of the United States , House Document No. 352, 82nd' Congress , 2nd Session, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C. , February 1952. House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Special Study Mission to South - east Asia and the Pa cific, House Report No. 2024, 83rd Congress, 2nd Session, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C, July 1954. Mansfield, Mike, Indochina: R e port on a Study Mission to the Associated States of Indochina, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos , 83rd Congress, 1st Ses- • sion, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C, October 27, 1953. New York Times issues throughout the period. Subcommittee on State Department Organization and Public Affairs, United States Aid Program in Vietnam: Report to Senate Committe e on Foreign Relation s, 86th Congress, 2nd Session, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C. , February 26, 1960. Memo: Dr. Edward W. Weidner to Mr. Leland Barrows, USOM, "Recommen- dation for American and Vietnamese Action re.. Civil Security," October 11, 1955. "Report on the Proposed Organization of the Law Enforcement Agencies of the PvVN," Michigan State University Police Advisory Staff, Saigon, Vietnam, April 1956.. • (Vol. II. ) Supplement to the Composite Report of the President's Committee to Study the United States Military Assi stance Program , William H. Draper, Chairman, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C, August 17, 1959. U. S. Foreign Assistance and Assistance from International Organi- zations: Obli ga tions and Other Commitment s, ICA, Office of Statistics and Reports, July 1, 1945 through June 30, 1960. U. S . F oreig n Assistance and Assistance from International Org a nizations: Obligations and Other Commitments, ICA, Office of Statistics and Re- ports, July 1, 1945 through June 30, 1961 (Preliminary). U. S. Army Infantry Reference Data, 1956. U. S. Army Inf antry R eference Data , 1957. U. S. Army Infantry Reference Data , 1958. V Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 Tog II. Classified Materials A. National Security Council Documents NSC 48, June 10, 1949. (TS) NSC 41/1, December 23, 1949. (TS) NSC 64, February 27, 1950. (TS) * NSC 64/1, December 21, 1950. (TS) NSC 64, Progress Report, April 27, 1951. (TS) NSC 124, February 13, 1952. (TS) NSC 124/1, June 10, 1952. (TS) NSC 124/2, Progress Report, August 5, 1963. (TS) Memorandum for Defense Members, NSC Planning Board, "Draft Revision NSC 124/2, n December 8, 1953. (TS) NSC 177, December 30, 1953. (TS) • "Army Position on NSC Action, 11 No. 1074-a, April 1954. (TS) NSC Action 1074-a, April 5, 1954. (TS) NSC Action 1086~a,b,c, April 15, 1954. (TS) ■ NSC Action 1147-b, June 4, 1954. (TS) NSC 5421, June 1, 1954. (TS - Special Security Precautions) NSC Record of Action 1316, January 27, 1955. (TS) NSC 5519, May 17, 1955. (TS) NSC 5405/5429/5, "Progress Report, " July 11, 1956. (S) # NSC 5612, Draft, August 15, 1956. (TS) NSC 5612/1, September 5, 1956. (TS) NSC 5612/1, Progress Report, November 6, 1967. (S) OCB Report in NSC 5809, August 12, 1959. (S) NSC 6012, July 25, 1960. (S) 46 :» TOE Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 B. National Intelligence Estimates NIE 5, December 29," 1950. (S) NIE 20, March 20, 1951. (S) NIE 35, August 7, 1951. (S) t NIE 35/1, March 3, 1952. (S) NIE 35/2, August 27, 1952. (S) NIE 47, October 31, 1952. (TS) « NIE 91, June 4, 1953. (S) NIE 10-2-54, March 15, 1954. (S). NIE 63, April 30, 1954. (S) ....'.• ' NIE 63-3-54, May 21, 1954. (S) NIE 10-3-54, June 1, 1954. (TS - Limited Distribution) NIE 63-4-54, June 15, 1954. (S) NIE 63-5-54, August 3, 1954. (S) • NIE 63-7-54, November 23, 1954. (S) NIE 10-7-54, November 23, 1954. (S) NIE 63.1-2-55, April 26, 1955. (TS) NIE 63.1-3-55, October 11, 1955. (S) NIE 63-56, July 17, 1956. (S) NIE 63.2-57, May 14, 1957. (S) NIE 63-59, May 26, 1959. (S) NIE 14.3/53-61, August 15, 1961. (S) C . Special Estimates and Sp e cial National Intelligence Estimates SE 22, March 4, 1952. (TS) • SE 32, October 3, 1952. (S) V? (Of Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 SE 52, November 10, 1953. (TS) SE 53, December 18; 1953. (TS) SNIE 63-2-54, June 9, 1954. (S) SNIE 10-4-54, June 15, 1954. (TS- Limited Distribution) ( SNIE 63-6-54, September 15, 1954. (S) SNIE 63.1-2/1-55, May 2, 1955. (S)' SNIE 63.1-4-55, September 13, 1955. (TS) SNIE 58-2-61, July 5, 1951. (TS - NO FORN) r~ D. State Department: Doc uments Documentary History of United States Policy Toward Indochina, 1940-53, Research Project 354, April 1954, Historical Division, Department of State. (TS) - Message, Murphy to AmEmb (Paris), TOSEC 392, June 10, 1954. (TS) Message, SECSTATE to Amb (Paris), 4551, TEDUL 191, June 12, 1954. (TS) Memorandum, SECSTATE to SECDEF, August 18, 1954. (S) Memorandum, SECSTATE to SECDEF, October 11, 1954. (TS) § Message, AmEmb (Saigon), from State/Defense, ' October 21, 1954, Draft. (TS) Message, SECSTATE to AmEmb (Saigon), 1679, October 22, 1954. (TS) Message, Heath to SECSTATE, 1761, November 8, 1954. (S) . Message, Collins signed Kidder to SECSTATE, 1830, November 15, 1954, DA-IN-99015 (November 16). (TS) ""^ Message, Dillon to SECSTATE, 2433, December 8, 1954. (TS) J. Lav7ton Collins, Special Representative of The United States in Vietnam, "Report on Vietnam for the National Security Council," • January 20, 1955 (TS) with Supplement (S). Department of State, INR, "The Communist Subversive Threat in Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos," DR/SP 57.1, December 29, 1955. (S) Letter, Deputy Under-Secretary of State to SECDEF, dated May 1, 1956. (S) HS (10 I Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 Department of State, INR, "The Communist Subversive Threat to the SEATO Treaty Area, II. The Subversive Threat in South Vietnam," DRF SP-62, October 24, 1956. (S) Dispatch, Saigon to State, 400, May 29, 1959. (S) Dispatch, Saigon to State, 276, January 4, 1960. (S) Chronology on Vietnam, 1950-1965 , Research Project No. 747, Histori- cal Studies Division, Historical Office, Bureau of Public Affairs, Department of State, November 1965. E. Defense Department Documents Memorandum for SECDEF from Service Secretaries, "Draft State Depart- ment Statement on Indochina, of March 27, 1952," April 8, 1952. (TS) Enclosure to Memorandum, Acting SECDEF' to Service Secretaries, "Forty Additional Vietnam Battalions," February 19, 1953. Report by the Ad Hoc Committee to the Assistant to the Secretary for International Security Affairs. Message, CINFE, MG619A, DA-IN-257701 , April 15, 1953. "Report of U. S. -Joint Military Mission to Indochina," July 15, 1953. (TS) "Progress Report on Military Situation in Indochina," November 19, 1953. (TS) "Comments on 'Progress R.eport on Military Situation in Indochina, 1 November 19, 1953," (Comments by Army Attache, Saigon), December 24, I ' 1953. (S) "Report of U. S. Special Mission to Indochina," February 5, 1954. (TS) Memorandum for SECDEF from JCS, "Suspension of U. S. Military Aid to Indochina in Event of a Cease Fire," April 30, 1954. "Debriefing, Major General Thomas J. H. Trapnell, Jr., May 3, 1954, OSD File No. 092/092.2, Indochina. (TS) Memorandum for SECDEF from JCS, "Studies with Respect to Possible U. S. Action Regarding Indochina," May 26, 1954. (TS) Message, CHMAAGIC to CSUSA, MG 165 1 DA, 0915 15Z, June 1957, DA-IN-64188 (June 9, 1954). (S) Message, CHMAAG Indochina, to DEPTAR, MG 2062A, 271130Z, July 1954, DA-IN-74737. (TS) Memorandum from SECDEF to Service Secretaries and JCS, July 30, 1954. /// . Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 Memorandum for SECDEF from JSC, "U. S. Assumption of Training I Responsibilities in Indochina, August 4, 1954. (S) Letter, SECDEF to SECSTATE, August 12, 1954. (S) Memorandum for SECDEF from JCS, l! U. S. Assumption of Training Responsibilities in Indochina, 11 September 22, 1954. (TS) Memorandum for SECDEF from JCS, "Retention and Development of Forces in Vietnam," September 22, 1954. (TS) » Memorandum for SECDEF from JCS, "Military Consultation under the Southeast Asia Collective Defense Treaty, 11 October 8, 1954. (TS) Memorandum, SECDEF from JCS, "Development and Training of Indigenous Forces in Indochina," October 19, 1954. (TS) Memorandum, SECDEF to JCS, October 26, 1954. (TS) Memorandum for SECDEF from JCS, "Indochina," November 17, 1954. (TS) Memorandum for JCS from SECDEF, "Reconsideration U. S. Military Pro- grams in Southeast Asia," January 5, 1955. (TS) Memorandum for SECDEF, "Reconsiderations of U. S. Military Programs i in Southeast Asia," January 21, 1955. (TS) History of the Indochina Incident , Historical Section, JCS, Series B, February 1, 1955. (TS) Draft, History of the Indochina Incident ; Supplements 1-3, Series B, Historical Section, n.d.(TS) • . Message CHMAAG Indochina to CNO MG 125A 100810A, February 1955, DA-IW 117629. (S) Memorandum, SECDEF to. SERVICE SECRETARIES and JCS, "Report on Vietnam • . • for the NSC," February 3, 1955. (TS) Memorandum for SECDEF from the JCS, "Concept and Plans for the Imple- mentation If Necessary of Article IV, 1, of the Manila Pact," February 11, 1955. (TS) Report of the Saigon Military Mission, August 1954 - August 1955. (S) Memorandum for SECDEF from the JCS, "U. S. Policy in the Event of a Reversal of Aggression in Vietnam," September 9, 1955. (TS) Report of Visit of Lt. General Bruce C. Clarke, Corroanding General, U. S. Army Pacific to Western Pacific and Southeast Asia, September 6-29, 1955. (S) Memorandum for SECDEF, "Raising U. S. Military Personnel Ceiling of MAAG Vietnam," December 9, 1955. (S) Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 HZ - Memorandum for SECDEF from ASD (ISA), January 25, 1956. (S) Letter, SECDEF to SECSTATE* January 31, 1956. (S) Memorandum for SECDEF from JCS, "Development of Defense Information Relating to Certain U. S. AID Programs (Vietnam), 11 April 13, 1956. (TS) Letter, SECDEF to SECSTATE, December ( 13, 1956. (S) Memorandum for SECDEF from JCS, "U. S. Policy in Mainland Southeast Asia," December 21, 1956. (TS) Minutes of Meeting between President Diem and Deputy Secretary Quarles, May 10, 1957, May 15, 1957. (S) Memorandum for the Record by Colonel Edward G. Lansdale, "Pacifi- cation in Vietnam," July 15, 1958. (S) "Study on Army \spects of the Military Assistance Programs in Vietnam," U. S. Army Command and General Staff College, ' June 1, 1960. (S) Notes on U. S. Policy Toward Vietnam since 1945, OCMH, TS-62-5-3, May 24, 1962. (TS) MAAG Country Statement for Vietnam and Laos as of December 31, 1955. (S) MAAG Country Statement for Vietnam as of June 30, 1956. (S) MAAG Country Statement for Vietnam as of December 31, 1956. (S) MAAG Country Statement for Vietnam as of June 30, 1957. (S) MAAG Vietnam Country Statement for Vietnam as of December 31, 1957. (S) MAAG Vietnam Narrative Study, August 23, 1958. (S) MAAG Vietnam Narrative Statement, November 1958, Corrected to March 31, 1959. (S) Weekly Intelligence Digest , Joint Intelligence Division, PACOM, April 27, 1956; January 4, 1957; July 5, 1957; March 28, 1958; December 9, 1960. (All Secret) F. Other Official Documents ■ ■ Memorandum for the Record, "Meeting of President's Special Committee on Indochina, January 29, 1954," January 30, 1954. (TS) "Report of Working Group of Special Committee on Indochina," February 6, 1954. (TS) SI 'S n Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 President's Special Committee Report, April 5, 1954. (TS) Memcon, May 18 and 20, 1954, OSD Files 1954. (TS) Message FOA Washington, signed Stassen to USAMB Paris USAMB Saigon,, USFOTO 263, November 24, 1954. (C) Memorandum for SECSTATE from Director, CIA, December 16, 1955. (S) ( "Supplement to the Composite Report of the President's Committee to Study the United States Military Assistance Program," Volume III, August 17, 1959. (S) G. Other Bykerk, Norman H. , MAAG Vietnam: Manacled by Geneva (U) , Army War College, Pennsylvania, March 19, 1958. (S) Erickson, John L. , Impact of the United States Military Assistance Advi sory Group in Vietnam (U) , U. S. Army War College, Log No. 61-2-54 S, Pennsylvania, February 10, 1961. (S) Heymont, Irving, Ronald B. Emery, John G. Phillips, Cost Analysis of Counterinsurgency Land-Combat Operations: Vietnam, 1957-1964 , Volume I, Main Body (U), Research Analysis Corporation, McLean, Virginia, June 1967. (S) Heymont, Irving, Ronald B. Emery, John G. Phillips, Cost Analysis of Counterinsurgency "^and-Combat Operations: Vietnam, 1957-1964 , Volume II, Appendixes (U) , Research Analysis Corporation, McLean, Virginia, August 1967. (S) Heymont, Irving, James W. Lash, Planning Factors for Counterinsur g ency Land-Combat- Operations, Based on RVN Experience, FY 1958-FY 19 64 (U), Research Analysis Corporation, McLean, Virginia, November 1967. (S) Nees, Charles M. , Th e Establishment of a United States Joint Task Force , Southeast Asia (U) , U. S. Army War College, Log No. 57-2-124 S, Pennsylvania, February 18, 1957. (S) . ?2