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#1 |
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Muse
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Australia
Posts: 663
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Looking for sources on a dubious Vietnam Story
I stumbled across the text below while searching for interesting material to provide ideas for role-playing scenarios. It has also piqued my curiosity and I'm wondering if anyone would be willing to help by providing additional sources, especially into the part of the account highlighted.
It supposedly appeared on a now defunct website (alliedcoldwarvets DOT com) and a google search only brings up the site it now appears on (http://freerangeinternational.com/blog/?p=2291, look for Cannoneer No. 4) and also the gaming site I posted the text to.
Quote:
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"I need hard facts! Bring in the dowsers!" 'America Unearthed' Season 1, Episode 13: Hunt for the Holy Grail Everybody gets it wrong sometimes... |
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#2 |
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Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Aug 2001
Posts: 10,637
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I'm not as strong on my Vietnam history as I am in other areas, but the specifics smell wrong here. 15,000 people to tie down 10 battalions? Very poor ratio, I think, but I'll have to recheck my memory on the size of Viet Minh and NVA battalions.
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#3 |
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Mafia Penguin
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Netherlands
Posts: 10,406
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Given that the bulk of those 15,000 men were local tribesmen who were volunteers, and behind enemy lines to begin with, led only by a handful of French per unit, that may have not been a bad deal.
Here's another page with essentially the same writeup - though missing the 1969 line. |
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#4 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: California
Posts: 4,047
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#5 |
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Evil Fokker
Join Date: Aug 2001
Posts: 9,252
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Calls in French for help wouldn't exactly be a surprise in Vietnam.
Vietnam had a DMZ? Where was that? |
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#7 |
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Illuminator
Join Date: May 2002
Posts: 3,037
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Ask the French Defence Ministry:
Quote:
and the US Department of Defense: at http://www.dod.mil/pubs/foi/submit_foiaform.html |
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#8 |
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Graduate Poster
Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 1,667
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Less obscure an explanation than John Prine's, but not as good: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vietnam...litarized_Zone
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#9 |
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Anti-homeopathy illuminati member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: UK
Posts: 26,640
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The version at militaryphotos.net appears to be the oldest online. The person who posted it is still active there.
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#10 |
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Insert something funny here
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Norway
Posts: 8,286
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#11 |
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Critical Thinker
Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 307
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As you said, it's dubious. Everything really seems to lead back to the one source that tells the story. I would say the best bet is to contact the original source, or as someone has suggested previously, to contact the French and American governments.
OR Try shooting some emails to military historians that specialize in Vietnam? Perhaps people who have written books specifically about Special Ops. groups. Maybe they've heard something or can point you someone/place with useful information |
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#12 |
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Muse
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Australia
Posts: 663
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Thanks to all of the above for the suggestions and to Kookbreaker for pointing out, one of the things I'd overlooked, but which further contributes to why I felt dubious about this story.
Thanks also to Ddt for finding the 2004 version of the story. Research with the Wayback Machine shows the alliedcoldwarvets DOT com site was not archived prior to 2010 when it already appears to have dropped off the internet, which makes tracking down the origin of that version rather difficult. My Google searches using the highlighted phrase in the OP as the basis returns only the results I reported. |
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"I need hard facts! Bring in the dowsers!" 'America Unearthed' Season 1, Episode 13: Hunt for the Holy Grail Everybody gets it wrong sometimes... |
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#13 |
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Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Aug 2001
Posts: 10,637
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__________________
My kids still love me. |
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#14 |
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Critical Thinker
Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 307
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Found this: (Emphasis added)
Quote:
Found the magazine in question: http://www.aferguson.net/vietnam/default.asp?year=1992 Here it is for sale on Amazon if you're that desperate: http://www.amazon.com/VIETNAM-MAGAZI.../dp/B003GRP6TO Found this version as well http://forums.somethingawful.com/sho...pagenumber=105 |
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#15 |
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Muse
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Australia
Posts: 663
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__________________
"I need hard facts! Bring in the dowsers!" 'America Unearthed' Season 1, Episode 13: Hunt for the Holy Grail Everybody gets it wrong sometimes... |
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#16 |
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Muse
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Oregon
Posts: 972
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On first reading this story I thought that the airlift requirement of 300 tons a month was more than could have been conducted covertly, given the size of the French establishment in theater. Further research showed that the capability was considerably larger than I had recalled.
At the start of the war the French had 40 transports in Indochina, a mix of C-47s and Ju-52s. This was increased to about 100 C-47s and 12 C-119s in regular French Air Force service. For high threat airdrops (agent dropping and behind the lines resupply) PB4Y-2 Privateers were also used. In addition to the French assets, the US provided considerable support. CAT operated a number of aircraft, both in country, and in strategic airlift support. Ten to twenty C-46s were in country on logistic support and airdrop duty, smaller numbers of C-47 and DC-3 variants were used (often for specialised duties) and one or two PBYs were utilised for night covert operations. Dien Bien Phu saw the deployment of twenty "loaned" C-119s (mostly from the 37th TCS, Blue Tail Flies). They were operated by mixed crews, CAT pilots, French liaison officer/navigators and Vietnamese kickers (loadmaster). Maintenance was provided by sheep dipped USAF mechanics. Taking the median airdrop load of about 2 tons for this fleet, that would require 150 sorties a month to meet the requirement, or about one additional flight per month per aircraft. That would be easy to hide. That portion of the story is plausible. |
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#17 |
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Penultimate Amazing
Join Date: Aug 2001
Posts: 10,637
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When in doubt, check the Rand Institute for papers.
I found "Translation from the French Lessons of the Indochina War Volume 2." It's a free download, but there's a glitch if you click "Open." Instead, click "Save," and it should work just fine. Start with the section on "Pacification" (pages 110-116) which hint about some irregular ops and the difficulties in creating native self defense organizations. Other interesting stuff in there, too. Then go to the section on "Irregular Forces" (pages 156-160). The GCMA is briefly mentioned there, primarily indicating its ineffectiveness. It wasn't alone in that; the entire section bemoans the general ineffectiveness of French and native irregular operations. Page 159 also lists the flights and tonnage of support to irregular forces by the "end of hostilities," so you can match that against your article. The section also gives numbers of Viet Minh battalions tied down and mentions the 15,000 figure given, but it doesn't do it in a positive light. In short, the GCMA existed but wasn't the only irregular force, and -- like other forces -- was fairly ineffective. |
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My kids still love me. |
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#18 |
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121.92-meter mutant fire-breathing lizard-thingy
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Northern St. Louis County, Missouri.
Posts: 13,857
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Given that the airwaves were being combed pretty thoroughly back then I think more than one broadcast would have been caught if they were being made. And why radio? If they survived 10 years in the boonies they could have walked to India in that time.
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World War II Diplomatic and Political Resources Hyperwar, WWII Military History Kido Butai did not transmit. 木戸舞台は、無線メッセージを送信しませんでした |
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