Vietnamese Communist grand strategy: Difference between revisions
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Countering that argument, however, is the reality that they apparently expected a fairly quick resolution when they invaded [[Cambodia]] in 1978, and found themselves enmeshed in 13 years of war. When the press started referring to the Soviet invasion of | '''Vietnamese Communist grand strategy''' during the [[Vietnam War]] is related to that of [[Mao Zedong]], but diverged considerably from his classical three-phase model. In addition, they came up with a phased model of their enemy's behavior, and then tested their theories against it. Since they now control [[Vietnam]], that does suggest that they eventually came up with a viable model. | ||
Going well before Mao took control over China, there were conflicts within the [[Indochinese Communist Party]] about the role of nationalism versus Marxist world revolution; [[Ho Chi Minh]] saw decolonialization and nationalism as a first step. Still, the leadership had, in its Marxism, a Stalinist bent, certainly exemplified in the centrally planned economy until the introduction of ''[[doi moi]]'' market reforms in 1986. | |||
The early ideologues never foresaw the Sino-Soviet split. Both China and the Soviets helped the North Vietnamese during the [[Vietnam War]], but the tilt to the Soviets angered the Chinese. The fall of the Soviet Union also was unexpected, causing a reassessment of relations with China. | |||
Countering that argument, however, is the reality that they apparently expected a fairly quick resolution when they invaded [[Cambodia]] in 1978, and found themselves enmeshed in 13 years of war. When the press started referring to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan as the "Soviets' Vietnam", cynics have called the invasion of Cambodia "Vietnam's Vietnam". | |||
One iconoclastic view of the war comes from Harry Summers, who argued it had always been a conventional war. <ref name=Summers>{{citation | One iconoclastic view of the war comes from Harry Summers, who argued it had always been a conventional war. <ref name=Summers>{{citation | ||
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His counterpart pondered, and then responded, "True. But irrelevant." Perhaps when Summers says "conventional", he is considering the Clausewitz doctrine that war is the extension of national politics by military means, thus making political results the goal of conventional warfare. | His counterpart pondered, and then responded, "True. But irrelevant." Perhaps when Summers says "conventional", he is considering the Clausewitz doctrine that war is the extension of national politics by military means, thus making political results the goal of conventional warfare. | ||
{{seealso|Vietnam wars}} | |||
==Background== | ==Background== | ||
The strategy clearly draws from general Marxist-Leninist doctrine, and particularly Maoist ideas, but introduced some uniquely Vietnamese ideas. Some come from Vietnamese culture. | The strategy clearly draws from general Marxist-Leninist doctrine, and particularly Maoist ideas, but introduced some uniquely Vietnamese ideas. Some come from Vietnamese culture. | ||
===Nationalism and revolution=== | ===Nationalism and revolution=== | ||
{{seealso|Ho Chi Minh}} | {{seealso|Ho Chi Minh}} | ||
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#Conventional military confrontation with the intent of capturing and holding ground | #Conventional military confrontation with the intent of capturing and holding ground | ||
In a purely military context, [[Vo Nguyen Giap]] called these "defensive, equilibrium, and offensive". North Vietnamese grand strategy, however, evolved another path, especially in changing the third stage from conventional military victory to a victory in a political, diplomatic, or psychological context. While the final victory ending the 1954 war was at the diplomatic table in Geneva, a good deal of conventional warfare led to the table, especially the French defeat at [[Dien Bien Phu]]. | In a purely military context, [[Vo Nguyen Giap]] called these "defensive, equilibrium, and offensive". North Vietnamese grand strategy, however, evolved another path, especially in changing the third stage from conventional military victory to a victory in a political, diplomatic, or psychological context. While the final victory ending the 1954 war was at the diplomatic table in Geneva, a good deal of conventional warfare led to the table, especially the French defeat at the [[Battle of Dien Bien Phu]], in which the Viet Minh used several [[division]] equivalents. | ||
Elliott suggests that the North Vietnamese leadership basically was flexible, and, as early as 1961,had altered their model to cope with the "flexible response" doctrine of the [[John F. Kennedy|Kennedy Administration]],<ref name=Elliott1993>{{citation | Elliott suggests that the North Vietnamese leadership basically was flexible, and, as early as 1961,had altered their model to cope with the "flexible response" doctrine of the [[John F. Kennedy|Kennedy Administration]],<ref name=Elliott1993>{{citation | ||
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Between 1959 and 1965, if not 1972, the Vietnamese politburo changed methods. They went back to something close to Mao's third stage in 1972-1975. Against Cambodia, however, they themselves came closer to their model of western behavior. Against China, yet another model might apply, far closer to a Western model of limited war. | Between 1959 and 1965, if not 1972, the Vietnamese politburo changed methods. They went back to something close to Mao's third stage in 1972-1975. Against Cambodia, however, they themselves came closer to their model of western behavior. Against China, yet another model might apply, far closer to a Western model of limited war. | ||
Against the French, the Maoist model certainly applied in its first two stages, although while [[Dien Bien Phu]] and other major military actions were clearly conventional, they were not trying to defeat France on its own territory, which would have been the ultimate Phase 3 victory. Their idea of Phase 3 was conventional warfare in a limited area, possibly with a complete defeat of French forces in Indochina, but, as events established, could be ended at the negotiating table in Geneva. | Against the French, the Maoist model certainly applied in its first two stages, although while the [[Battle of Dien Bien Phu]] and other major military actions were clearly conventional, they were not trying to defeat France on its own territory, which would have been the ultimate Phase 3 victory. Their idea of Phase 3 was conventional warfare in a limited area, possibly with a complete defeat of French forces in Indochina, but, as events established, could be ended at the negotiating table in Geneva. | ||
After Geneva, the Maoist model did not seem to fit, for several reasons: <ref name=Duiker1993>{{citation | After Geneva, the Maoist model did not seem to fit, for several reasons: <ref name=Duiker1993>{{citation | ||
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#In 1954, there was to be a referendum on unification in two years, and Hanoi believed it would win | #In 1954, there was to be a referendum on unification in two years, and Hanoi believed it would win | ||
#Even elections did not occur, the Party believed that the government of [[Ngo Dinh Diem]] was so inherently unstable that there would be a popular [[General Offensive-General Uprising|General uprising of the people]] in the South, which, at most, would need support from paramilitary forces. | #Even elections did not occur, the Party believed that the government of [[Ngo Dinh Diem]] was so inherently unstable that there would be a popular [[General Offensive-General Uprising|General uprising of the people]] in the South, which, at most, would need support from paramilitary forces. | ||
===Vietnamese concepts of military force=== | ===Vietnamese concepts of military force=== | ||
Duiker suggests that the definitive Vietnamese version of peoples' war comes from Truong Chinh, in the 1947 Vietnamese-language ''The Resistance will Win''. <ref name=TC>{{citation | Duiker suggests that the definitive Vietnamese version of peoples' war comes from [[Truong Chinh]], in the 1947 Vietnamese-language ''The Resistance will Win''. <ref name=TC>{{citation | ||
| author = [[Truong Chinh]] | | author = [[Truong Chinh]] | ||
| title = The August Revolution: Periodicals and Monographs | | title = The August Revolution: Periodicals and Monographs | ||
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| year = 1969}}, p.120 </ref> | | year = 1969}}, p.120 </ref> | ||
*''Chinh Binh'', the "real army" or overt combat arms | *''Chinh Binh'', the "real army" or overt combat arms | ||
*''Ky Binh'', a "hidden army" operating with | *''Ky Binh'', a "hidden army" operating with guerrilla or covert techniques | ||
*''Nghi Binh'', the "phantom army" that does not actually exist, but that the Vietnamese commander makes the opponent believe does exist | *''Nghi Binh'', the "phantom army" that does not actually exist, but that the Vietnamese commander makes the opponent believe does exist | ||
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Earlier that year, [[Ho Chi Minh]] had said, at the Ninth Plenum in April, that the Soviet idea of a "peaceful road to socialism" might not work given the "aggressive nature of U.S. imperialism and its ally in Saigon"; armed ''dau tranh'' might be needed. Some of this idea was part of the statement issued by the Conference of Communist Parties of Socialist Parties (Moscow, November 1957) might be needed. | Earlier that year, [[Ho Chi Minh]] had said, at the Ninth Plenum in April, that the Soviet idea of a "peaceful road to socialism" might not work given the "aggressive nature of U.S. imperialism and its ally in Saigon"; armed ''dau tranh'' might be needed. Some of this idea was part of the statement issued by the Conference of Communist Parties of Socialist Parties (Moscow, November 1957) might be needed. | ||
An argument against the need, however, came in their assessment of Western behavior. In July 1962, [[Le Duan]] wrote a letter to [[Nguyen Van Linh]] analyzing the lessons learned from the negotiated settlement in Laos. He said that the U.S. would not have settled had there not been military success by the | An argument against the need, however, came in their assessment of Western behavior. In July 1962, [[Le Duan]] wrote a letter to [[Nguyen Van Linh]] analyzing the lessons learned from the negotiated settlement in Laos. He said that the U.S. would not have settled had there not been military success by the guerrillas. Had they had too much success, might have provoked a full U.S. intervention. "How far we win, and how far they lose, is very important."<ref>Duiker1993, p. 30</ref> | ||
Yet another aspect of the grand strategic model is the use of "coalition government" as a term of art. This does not mean a parliamentary coalition in the European sense, but forming a broad front that is increasingly dominated by the former insurgents. <ref>Pike, pp. 131-132</ref> | Yet another aspect of the grand strategic model is the use of "coalition government" as a [[term of art]]. This does not mean a parliamentary coalition in the European sense, but forming a broad front that is increasingly dominated by the former insurgents. <ref>Pike, pp. 131-132</ref> | ||
==Contrast: their model of western behavior== | ==Contrast: their model of western behavior== | ||
In his way, Le Duan conceived of an escalation ladder, without the 43 steps described by Herman Kahn,<ref name=Kahn>{{citation | In his way, [[Le Duan]] conceived of an escalation ladder, without the 43 steps described by [[Herman Kahn]],<ref name=Kahn>{{citation | ||
| title = On Escalation: Metaphors and Scenarios | | title = On Escalation: Metaphors and Scenarios | ||
| author = Herman Kahn | | author = Herman Kahn | ||
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Here, Le Duan began to draw some nuanced distinctions. He differentiated from a "decisive victory", typified by [[Dien Bien Phu]], from a "total victory". He believed that "decisive victory" was possible through the [[General Offensive-General Uprising]] (Vietnamese abbreviation TCN-TCK), even at a U.S. troop commitment of 500,000 troops. | Here, Le Duan began to draw some nuanced distinctions. He differentiated from a "decisive victory", typified by [[Dien Bien Phu]], from a "total victory". He believed that "decisive victory" was possible through the [[General Offensive-General Uprising]] (Vietnamese abbreviation TCN-TCK), even at a U.S. troop commitment of 500,000 troops. | ||
It was not clear what he considered the "worst case". Presumably, he did not consider the symbolic bombings of [[Operation | It was not clear what he considered the "worst case". Presumably, he did not consider the symbolic bombings of [[Operation Rolling Thunder]] to be a full attack on the North. It can only be speculated if bombing of the intensity in [[Operation Linebacker II]] would have constituted "worst case", or if the "worst case" required a ground invasion of the North. Certainly, other North Vietnamese wrote that they were greatly concerned with even a limited ground invasion that would cut the [[Ho Chi Minh trail]]. | ||
Various North Vietnamese have said that a small invasion would have completely disrupted their ability to fight in the south. [[Bui Tin]] asked Gen. Le Trong Tan, PAVN Chief of Staff in 1977, how he would have won the war had he been in charge of U.S. forces.<blockquote> "A slight shift in strategy, nothing earthshaking, would have made all the difference. The Americans needed to deploy no more than a division of troops in the Dong Hoi panhandle ([[Quang Binh Province]]) slightly to the north of the 17th parallel, supported by a fleet of ships off the coast. They could have declared this American incursion into North Vietnam was limited in scope, both in terms of time and space. Not offensive in nature, it was required merely to prevent the People's Army of the North from infiltrating into the South. This strategy would have been lethal, because China would have sat idly by, while, our troops were pinned down, defending our rear in the North, which, of course, was our main and unavoidable priority. The military configuration of the war would have flipped. The impetus of the fighting in the South would have reversed itself. The United | Various North Vietnamese have said that a small invasion would have completely disrupted their ability to fight in the south. [[Bui Tin]] asked Gen. Le Trong Tan, PAVN Chief of Staff in 1977, how he would have won the war had he been in charge of U.S. forces.<blockquote> "A slight shift in strategy, nothing earthshaking, would have made all the difference. The Americans needed to deploy no more than a division of troops in the Dong Hoi panhandle ([[Quang Binh Province]]) slightly to the north of the 17th parallel, supported by a fleet of ships off the coast. They could have declared this American incursion into North Vietnam was limited in scope, both in terms of time and space. Not offensive in nature, it was required merely to prevent the People's Army of the North from infiltrating into the South. This strategy would have been lethal, because China would have sat idly by, while, our troops were pinned down, defending our rear in the North, which, of course, was our main and unavoidable priority. The military configuration of the war would have flipped. The impetus of the fighting in the South would have reversed itself. The United States with impunity could have invaded and withdrawn, invaded and withdrawn, with its mobility guaranteed by the covering fire of the [[United States Seventh Fleet|Seventh Fleet]]<ref name=BTFLH>{{citation | ||
| author = [[Bui Tin]] | | author = [[Bui Tin]] | ||
| title = Rolling Thunder in a Gentle Land: the Vietnam War Revisited | | title = Rolling Thunder in a Gentle Land: the Vietnam War Revisited | ||
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Edwin Moise estimated there were between 3,000 and 15,000 deaths, although other Western commentators put the toll between 50,000 ([[Bernard Fall]]) and 500,000 ([[Richard Nixon]]). Contrary to the belief that it was indicative of future purges and the source of internal resentment, Western interrogations, in the 1960s, indicated that the self-criticism and correction gained popular support. Subsequent agrarian reform and industrialization was much more cautious, but by 1968, 90 percent of the rural North Vietnamese were involved in cooperatives.<ref>Young, pp. 49-51</ref> | Edwin Moise estimated there were between 3,000 and 15,000 deaths, although other Western commentators put the toll between 50,000 ([[Bernard Fall]]) and 500,000 ([[Richard Nixon]]). Contrary to the belief that it was indicative of future purges and the source of internal resentment, Western interrogations, in the 1960s, indicated that the self-criticism and correction gained popular support. Subsequent agrarian reform and industrialization was much more cautious, but by 1968, 90 percent of the rural North Vietnamese were involved in cooperatives.<ref>Young, pp. 49-51</ref> | ||
While there had been some land reform in the South, it was not as widespread, and the Communists used this as a rallying argument to support the Southern insurgency. The usually intensely anti-communist American journalist, [[Joseph Alsop]], had toured Viet Minh governed areas of the South in 1954, and was shocked to observe that "it was difficult for me, as it is for any Westerner, to conceive of a Communist government's | While there had been some land reform in the South, it was not as widespread, and the Communists used this as a rallying argument to support the Southern insurgency. The usually intensely anti-communist American journalist, [[Joseph Alsop]], had toured Viet Minh governed areas of the South in 1954, and was shocked to observe that "it was difficult for me, as it is for any Westerner, to conceive of a Communist government's genuinely 'serving the people'. I could hardly imagine a Communist government that was also a popular government and almost a democratic government."<ref>Joseph Alsop, "A Man in a Mirror", ''The New Yorker'', June 25, 1955; quoted by Young, p. 55</ref> This is not to say that the Southern Communists could not be savage to local leaders, even popular ones, who supported the [[Republic of Vietnam]] southern government. | ||
==First evolution: General Offensive-General Uprising== | ==First evolution: General Offensive-General Uprising== | ||
This was uniquely Vietnamese contribution to revolutionary theory, and, while it never took place, was the planned endpoint of all other actions. In Western terms, it assumed the populace of the South was the [[centers of gravity (military)|center of gravity]]; upset it and all else would fall. | This was uniquely Vietnamese contribution to revolutionary theory, and, while it never took place, was the planned endpoint of all other actions. In Western terms, it assumed the populace of the South was the [[centers of gravity (military)|center of gravity]]; upset it and all else would fall. | ||
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| publisher = Doubleday | year = 1971}}, p. 44</ref> He stressed the need to find new and special way to fight the Americans. | | publisher = Doubleday | year = 1971}}, p. 44</ref> He stressed the need to find new and special way to fight the Americans. | ||
In December 1963, the Politburo apparently decided that it was possible to strike for victory in 1965. Theoretician [[Truong Chinh]] stated the conflict as less the classic, protracted war of Maoist doctrine, and the destabilization of doctrine under | In December 1963, the Politburo apparently decided that it was possible to strike for victory in 1965. Theoretician [[Truong Chinh]] stated the conflict as less the classic, protracted war of Maoist doctrine, and the destabilization of doctrine under Khrushchev, than a decision that it was possible to accelerate. "on the one hand we must thoroughly understand the guideline for a protracted struggle, but on the other hand we must seize the opportunities to win victories in a not too long a period of time...There is no contradiction in the concept of a protracted war and the concept of taking opportunities to gain victories in a short time."<ref name=Palmer>{{citation | ||
| first = Dave R. | last = Palmer | | first = Dave R. | last = Palmer | ||
| title = Summons of the Trumpet | publisher = Presidio Press | year = 1978}}, p. 73</ref> This may reemphasize Thanh's comments above against external dependency. Pike refers to Party Resolution 13 of April 1967, which stated a goal of "a decisive victory in South Vietnam in the shortest possible time." He quotes the British historian P.J. Honey as interpreting this as a rejection of protracted war, with the strongest supporters of this rejection being [[Le Duan]], [[Nguyen Van Vinh]] and [[Nguyen Chi Thanh]].<ref>P.J. Honey, "The Offensive: Hanoi's Change of Strategy", ''China News Analysis'', March 22, 1968; quoted by Pike, p. 136</ref> | | title = Summons of the Trumpet | publisher = Presidio Press | year = 1978}}, p. 73</ref> This may reemphasize Thanh's comments above against external dependency. Pike refers to Party Resolution 13 of April 1967, which stated a goal of "a decisive victory in South Vietnam in the shortest possible time." He quotes the British historian P.J. Honey as interpreting this as a rejection of protracted war, with the strongest supporters of this rejection being [[Le Duan]], [[Nguyen Van Vinh]] and [[Nguyen Chi Thanh]].<ref>P.J. Honey, "The Offensive: Hanoi's Change of Strategy", ''China News Analysis'', March 22, 1968; quoted by Pike, p. 136</ref> | ||
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One possibility is that while decisions were made in 1963 to take effect in 1966, the unexpected large-scale introduction of U.S. ground troops caused the schedule to be revised. It is unclear whether there really was a serious goal of victory in 1966. If the [[General Offensive-General Uprising]] model was in force, then why were there no apparent preparations for urban combat, and widespread small raids, as there were in the [[Tet Offensive]]? | One possibility is that while decisions were made in 1963 to take effect in 1966, the unexpected large-scale introduction of U.S. ground troops caused the schedule to be revised. It is unclear whether there really was a serious goal of victory in 1966. If the [[General Offensive-General Uprising]] model was in force, then why were there no apparent preparations for urban combat, and widespread small raids, as there were in the [[Tet Offensive]]? | ||
===Changes from U.S. ground intervention=== | ===Changes from U.S. ground intervention=== | ||
Setting aside the issue of whether the theory, at this point, required preparation for the General Uprising, the next question becomes what end result was intended in 1965, after the U.S. elections were over. The plan made some sense as a Mao Phase III operation, because moving from the Ho Chi Minh trail in Cambodia, in central Vietnam (i.e., ARVN [[II Corps tactical zone]]), with a goal of driving through to the seacoast over [[National Highway 19 (Vietnam)|Highway 19]], would split South Vietnam in half. For this large operation, the PAVN created its first [[division]] headquarters, under then-brigadier general [[Chu Huy Man]]. | Setting aside the issue of whether the theory, at this point, required preparation for the General Uprising, the next question becomes what end result was intended in 1965, after the U.S. elections were over. The plan made some sense as a Mao Phase III operation, because moving from the Ho Chi Minh trail in Cambodia, in central Vietnam (i.e., ARVN [[II Corps tactical zone]]), with a goal of driving through to the seacoast over [[National Highway 19 (Vietnam)|Highway 19]], would split South Vietnam in half. For this large operation, the PAVN created its first [[division]] headquarters, under then-brigadier general [[Chu Huy Man]]. | ||
===What was the revolutionary goal in November 1965?=== | ===What was the revolutionary goal in November 1965?=== | ||
This goal at first seemed straightforward, but was reevaluated when major U.S. ground units entered the area, first the [[United States Marine Corps]] at [[Danang]], and then the | This goal at first seemed straightforward, but was reevaluated when major U.S. ground units entered the area, first the [[United States Marine Corps]] at [[Danang]], and then the 1st Cavalry Division (Airmobile), the "First Cav". In particular, the PAVN were not sure of the best tactics to use against the [[air assault]] capability of the 1st Cav, so BG Man revised a plan to bring to try to fight the helicopter-mobile forces on terms favorable to the North Vietnamese. They fully expected to incur heavy casualties, but it would be worth it if they could learn to counter the new U.S. techniques, inflict significant casualties on the U.S. Army, and, if very lucky, still cut II CTZ in half. That planned movement was very similar to the successful PAVN maneuver in 1975. The revised plan first was evidenced in the [[Battle of the Ia Drang]], which had three major subphases, and a followup at the [[Battle of Bong Son]]. | ||
Elliott quotes Le Duan's November 1965 letter to COSVN, confirming that the Party, in Resolution 9 of December 1963, confirms that American intervention (i.e., "Limited War") was a | Elliott quotes Le Duan's November 1965 letter to COSVN, confirming that the Party, in Resolution 9 of December 1963, confirms that American intervention (i.e., "Limited War") was a possibility. In the letter, he speaks of the need to fight both the U.S. and the ARVN,"..in deploying on the battlefield, we must aim at annihilating the puppet army first, because they are the weaker." That could be consistent with the initial phase of the [[Battle of the Ia Drang]], which was to attrit ARVN forces, and possibly ambush U.S. forces, at [[Plei Me]]. He continued,<blockquote>In fighting the American troops we must try to select their weak points and situations where they are weak in order to annihilate them. With regard to the strong points or the situations in which they are strong we should temporarily avoid them — although this is not an unbreakable rule.<ref>Elliott, p. 82</ref></blockquote> | ||
Le Duan's letter could mean that the Ia Drang combats were principally to force the U.S. troops into battle, and learn techniques, as they did. While the fight at LZ Albany was a successful ambush, both the PAVN and the U.S. commander recognized that the best PAVN approach was "hugging the belt", or moving so close to U.S. units that they risked [[fratricide]] from their air or artillery support. In his after-action report from LZ X-ray, LTC Hal Moore emphasized that some fratricide risk needed to be accepted at the time of initial contact, to prevent them moving the bulk of their force too close to the U.S. troops. <ref name=Moore1965>{{citation | Le Duan's letter could mean that the Ia Drang combats were principally to force the U.S. troops into battle, and learn techniques, as they did. While the fight at LZ Albany was a successful ambush, both the PAVN and the U.S. commander recognized that the best PAVN approach was "hugging the belt", or moving so close to U.S. units that they risked [[Fratricide (military)|fratricide]] from their air or artillery support. In his after-action report from LZ X-ray, LTC Hal Moore emphasized that some fratricide risk needed to be accepted at the time of initial contact, to prevent them moving the bulk of their force too close to the U.S. troops. <ref name=Moore1965>{{citation | ||
| date = 9 December 1965 | | date = 9 December 1965 | ||
| title = After Action Report, IA DRANG Valley Operation 1st Battalion, 7th Cavalry | | title = After Action Report, IA DRANG Valley Operation 1st Battalion, 7th Cavalry | ||
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#The ARVN, so the U.S. was forced to a politically infeasible choice of further escalation or withdrawal | #The ARVN, so the U.S. was forced to a politically infeasible choice of further escalation or withdrawal | ||
#The urban populace, to cause a General Uprising | #The urban populace, to cause a General Uprising | ||
===Pike's theory of the TCK/TCN=== | ===Pike's theory of the TCK/TCN=== | ||
[[Douglas Pike]] believed the TCK/TCN <ref name=Pike-Oral>{{citation | [[Douglas Pike]] believed the TCK/TCN <ref name=Pike-Oral>{{citation | ||
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| publisher = History and Museums Division, [[United States Marine Corps]]}}, p. 97</ref> | | publisher = History and Museums Division, [[United States Marine Corps]]}}, p. 97</ref> | ||
The answer may be somewhere | The answer may be somewhere in-between: Giap indeed wanted to draw American forces away from the coastal urban areas, but tried too hard for a victory at Khe Sanh. <ref name=Gilbert>{{citation | ||
| title = The Tet Offensive | | title = The Tet Offensive | ||
| editor = Marc Jason Gilbert and William Head | | editor = Marc Jason Gilbert and William Head | ||
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Earlier but localized offensives, using armor and artillery, gave an increasingly conventional flavor to the warfare. The 1972 Easter offensive was unquestionably conventional warfare; while neither side used its tanks especially well, nor the North provide [[close air support]], the significant thing was that the North used [[combined arms]] including armor, artillery, and both [[anti-tank missile|anti-tank]] and [[surface-to-air missile]]s, over significant distances. | Earlier but localized offensives, using armor and artillery, gave an increasingly conventional flavor to the warfare. The 1972 Easter offensive was unquestionably conventional warfare; while neither side used its tanks especially well, nor the North provide [[close air support]], the significant thing was that the North used [[combined arms]] including armor, artillery, and both [[anti-tank missile|anti-tank]] and [[surface-to-air missile]]s, over significant distances. | ||
In a way, the success of [[Operation | In a way, the success of [[Operation Linebacker I]], an air campaign of intense [[battlefield air interdiction]] in stopping the invasion — as well as some inspired ARVN fighting — proved that the war had become conventional. Guerrilla wars cannot be stopped by airpower. | ||
In 1975, however, there was no U.S. airpower. Since South Vietnam had always kept control of air assets at the Corps tactical zone level, the RVN Air Force had never developed doctrine for, or practiced, massing air assets to concentrate on enemy rear areas. | In 1975, however, there was no U.S. airpower. Since South Vietnam had always kept control of air assets at the Corps tactical zone level, the RVN Air Force had never developed doctrine for, or practiced, massing air assets to concentrate on enemy rear areas. | ||
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==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist|2}} | {{reflist|2}} | ||
[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]] |
Latest revision as of 07:01, 5 November 2024
This article may be deleted soon. | ||
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Vietnamese Communist grand strategy during the Vietnam War is related to that of Mao Zedong, but diverged considerably from his classical three-phase model. In addition, they came up with a phased model of their enemy's behavior, and then tested their theories against it. Since they now control Vietnam, that does suggest that they eventually came up with a viable model. Going well before Mao took control over China, there were conflicts within the Indochinese Communist Party about the role of nationalism versus Marxist world revolution; Ho Chi Minh saw decolonialization and nationalism as a first step. Still, the leadership had, in its Marxism, a Stalinist bent, certainly exemplified in the centrally planned economy until the introduction of doi moi market reforms in 1986. The early ideologues never foresaw the Sino-Soviet split. Both China and the Soviets helped the North Vietnamese during the Vietnam War, but the tilt to the Soviets angered the Chinese. The fall of the Soviet Union also was unexpected, causing a reassessment of relations with China. Countering that argument, however, is the reality that they apparently expected a fairly quick resolution when they invaded Cambodia in 1978, and found themselves enmeshed in 13 years of war. When the press started referring to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan as the "Soviets' Vietnam", cynics have called the invasion of Cambodia "Vietnam's Vietnam". One iconoclastic view of the war comes from Harry Summers, who argued it had always been a conventional war. [1] Summers, however, argues with himself when he recounts a conversation with a North Vietnamese colonel, whom he told "You know, you never beat us on the battlefield." His counterpart pondered, and then responded, "True. But irrelevant." Perhaps when Summers says "conventional", he is considering the Clausewitz doctrine that war is the extension of national politics by military means, thus making political results the goal of conventional warfare.
BackgroundThe strategy clearly draws from general Marxist-Leninist doctrine, and particularly Maoist ideas, but introduced some uniquely Vietnamese ideas. Some come from Vietnamese culture. Nationalism and revolution
One of the complex issues of the Vietnamese movement against the French, especially as conceived by Ho Chi Minh, were the relative priorities of nationalism and anticolonialism, as opposed to world Communist revolution. In the 1930s, as the Vietnamese Communist Party formed, the international Communist (i.e., Comintern) position was that any action must simultaneously overthrow colonial rule, but also fight a class war, especially including agrarian land reform. Ho, however, wrote that nationalism had to be achieved first. He did not argue that both objectives were not desirable, but that they need not be simultaneous. [2] There was a significant tradition of Vietnamese nationalism that long preceded Marxism, principally against Chinese domination, as with the Trung Sisters' revolt in the first century CE. Dai Viet had broken from China in 939 CE, and governed the Red River Delta but eventually collapsed internally by the 14th century;[3] until the Chinese retook control. Later, the area of Dai Viet, widely called Annam, came back under Vietnamese leadership, with consolidation over warlords by the Ly Dynasty,[4] which was eventually overthrown by the final Vietnamese empire, the Nguyen Dynasty. The last Nguyen emperor was Bao Dai, whom the French would use as a symbolic leader. Other analysts, however, believe Ho, and his supporters, were purely interested in world Communism; that he "owed little to Vietnamese tradition and almost everything to his foreign models, Lenin, Stalin and Mao."[5] Protracted warMao Zedong developed a model of "protracted war" that has been the model for the phases many revolutionary movements:[6]
In a purely military context, Vo Nguyen Giap called these "defensive, equilibrium, and offensive". North Vietnamese grand strategy, however, evolved another path, especially in changing the third stage from conventional military victory to a victory in a political, diplomatic, or psychological context. While the final victory ending the 1954 war was at the diplomatic table in Geneva, a good deal of conventional warfare led to the table, especially the French defeat at the Battle of Dien Bien Phu, in which the Viet Minh used several division equivalents. Elliott suggests that the North Vietnamese leadership basically was flexible, and, as early as 1961,had altered their model to cope with the "flexible response" doctrine of the Kennedy Administration,[7] which derived from Maxwell Taylor's earlier work.[8] Between 1959 and 1965, if not 1972, the Vietnamese politburo changed methods. They went back to something close to Mao's third stage in 1972-1975. Against Cambodia, however, they themselves came closer to their model of western behavior. Against China, yet another model might apply, far closer to a Western model of limited war. Against the French, the Maoist model certainly applied in its first two stages, although while the Battle of Dien Bien Phu and other major military actions were clearly conventional, they were not trying to defeat France on its own territory, which would have been the ultimate Phase 3 victory. Their idea of Phase 3 was conventional warfare in a limited area, possibly with a complete defeat of French forces in Indochina, but, as events established, could be ended at the negotiating table in Geneva. After Geneva, the Maoist model did not seem to fit, for several reasons: [9]
Vietnamese concepts of military forceDuiker suggests that the definitive Vietnamese version of peoples' war comes from Truong Chinh, in the 1947 Vietnamese-language The Resistance will Win. [10] With these assumptions, there was no reason to believe, in 1954, that the main forces of the People's Army of Viet Nam would be needed. "Main force", however, should be taken in a Vietnamese context, going well back into pre-communist history. Deception has always been part of their military tradition:[11]
Not by military means aloneBy 1956, however, Le Duan, then the Party's main representative in the South, began to argue more active measures were needed than organization alone. The Vietnamese have a general term, dau tranh, usually translated as "struggle". There is "political dau tranh" and "military dau tranh", with fine distinctions in the dau tranh article. Le Duan's recommendation was approved by the Politburo at the Eleventh Plenum in December 1956, phrased as enabling the revolutionary movement in the south to defend itself against "counterrevolutionary terror". The form of such defense might itself take the form of terrorism, which is a large part of the Maoist first phase. Earlier that year, Ho Chi Minh had said, at the Ninth Plenum in April, that the Soviet idea of a "peaceful road to socialism" might not work given the "aggressive nature of U.S. imperialism and its ally in Saigon"; armed dau tranh might be needed. Some of this idea was part of the statement issued by the Conference of Communist Parties of Socialist Parties (Moscow, November 1957) might be needed. An argument against the need, however, came in their assessment of Western behavior. In July 1962, Le Duan wrote a letter to Nguyen Van Linh analyzing the lessons learned from the negotiated settlement in Laos. He said that the U.S. would not have settled had there not been military success by the guerrillas. Had they had too much success, might have provoked a full U.S. intervention. "How far we win, and how far they lose, is very important."[12] Yet another aspect of the grand strategic model is the use of "coalition government" as a term of art. This does not mean a parliamentary coalition in the European sense, but forming a broad front that is increasingly dominated by the former insurgents. [13] Contrast: their model of western behaviorIn his way, Le Duan conceived of an escalation ladder, without the 43 steps described by Herman Kahn,[14] but very much with trigger points that would cause new escalation. The first level was Special War. . The ideal was for the Communists to win at the Special War level, without direct U.S. involvement.
Here, Le Duan began to draw some nuanced distinctions. He differentiated from a "decisive victory", typified by Dien Bien Phu, from a "total victory". He believed that "decisive victory" was possible through the General Offensive-General Uprising (Vietnamese abbreviation TCN-TCK), even at a U.S. troop commitment of 500,000 troops. It was not clear what he considered the "worst case". Presumably, he did not consider the symbolic bombings of Operation Rolling Thunder to be a full attack on the North. It can only be speculated if bombing of the intensity in Operation Linebacker II would have constituted "worst case", or if the "worst case" required a ground invasion of the North. Certainly, other North Vietnamese wrote that they were greatly concerned with even a limited ground invasion that would cut the Ho Chi Minh trail. Various North Vietnamese have said that a small invasion would have completely disrupted their ability to fight in the south. Bui Tin asked Gen. Le Trong Tan, PAVN Chief of Staff in 1977, how he would have won the war had he been in charge of U.S. forces.
Internal revolutionAgrarian reform has always been a key Marxist concept. After Geneva, "independence from Frane was only the ground on which revolution in Vietnam could take place; it was hardly the revolution itself." The ruling Lao Dong Party initiated a major land reform in 1955, under central control. Its implementation was disastrous. Much as with the Cultural Revolution in China, it caused major disruption, and, by mid-1956, had collapsed into a Party self-criticism exercise. Truong Chinh, who had led the program, lost much internal power, including his seat in the Politburo, although he eventually regained it.[16] Edwin Moise estimated there were between 3,000 and 15,000 deaths, although other Western commentators put the toll between 50,000 (Bernard Fall) and 500,000 (Richard Nixon). Contrary to the belief that it was indicative of future purges and the source of internal resentment, Western interrogations, in the 1960s, indicated that the self-criticism and correction gained popular support. Subsequent agrarian reform and industrialization was much more cautious, but by 1968, 90 percent of the rural North Vietnamese were involved in cooperatives.[17] While there had been some land reform in the South, it was not as widespread, and the Communists used this as a rallying argument to support the Southern insurgency. The usually intensely anti-communist American journalist, Joseph Alsop, had toured Viet Minh governed areas of the South in 1954, and was shocked to observe that "it was difficult for me, as it is for any Westerner, to conceive of a Communist government's genuinely 'serving the people'. I could hardly imagine a Communist government that was also a popular government and almost a democratic government."[18] This is not to say that the Southern Communists could not be savage to local leaders, even popular ones, who supported the Republic of Vietnam southern government. First evolution: General Offensive-General UprisingThis was uniquely Vietnamese contribution to revolutionary theory, and, while it never took place, was the planned endpoint of all other actions. In Western terms, it assumed the populace of the South was the center of gravity; upset it and all else would fall. Nguyen Chi Thanh, writing in the the Party theoretical journal Hoc Tap, [19] called for the need to have simultaneous revolutions in production, technology and ideology. In that context, he called for avoiding excessive dependence on external aid, and increasing self-sufficiency, which may have indicated a desire to be independent of Chinese and Soviet pressure. He also cautioned against the classic error of fighting the last war. [20] He stressed the need to find new and special way to fight the Americans. In December 1963, the Politburo apparently decided that it was possible to strike for victory in 1965. Theoretician Truong Chinh stated the conflict as less the classic, protracted war of Maoist doctrine, and the destabilization of doctrine under Khrushchev, than a decision that it was possible to accelerate. "on the one hand we must thoroughly understand the guideline for a protracted struggle, but on the other hand we must seize the opportunities to win victories in a not too long a period of time...There is no contradiction in the concept of a protracted war and the concept of taking opportunities to gain victories in a short time."[21] This may reemphasize Thanh's comments above against external dependency. Pike refers to Party Resolution 13 of April 1967, which stated a goal of "a decisive victory in South Vietnam in the shortest possible time." He quotes the British historian P.J. Honey as interpreting this as a rejection of protracted war, with the strongest supporters of this rejection being Le Duan, Nguyen Van Vinh and Nguyen Chi Thanh.[22] Protracted war theory, however, does not urge rapid conclusion. Palmer suggests that there might be at least two reasons beyond a simple speedup:[23]
They may also have believed the long-trumpeted U.S. maxim of never getting involved in a land war in Asia, and that the U.S. was too concerned with Chinese intervention to use airpower outside South Vietnam. One possibility is that while decisions were made in 1963 to take effect in 1966, the unexpected large-scale introduction of U.S. ground troops caused the schedule to be revised. It is unclear whether there really was a serious goal of victory in 1966. If the General Offensive-General Uprising model was in force, then why were there no apparent preparations for urban combat, and widespread small raids, as there were in the Tet Offensive? Changes from U.S. ground interventionSetting aside the issue of whether the theory, at this point, required preparation for the General Uprising, the next question becomes what end result was intended in 1965, after the U.S. elections were over. The plan made some sense as a Mao Phase III operation, because moving from the Ho Chi Minh trail in Cambodia, in central Vietnam (i.e., ARVN II Corps tactical zone), with a goal of driving through to the seacoast over Highway 19, would split South Vietnam in half. For this large operation, the PAVN created its first division headquarters, under then-brigadier general Chu Huy Man. What was the revolutionary goal in November 1965?This goal at first seemed straightforward, but was reevaluated when major U.S. ground units entered the area, first the United States Marine Corps at Danang, and then the 1st Cavalry Division (Airmobile), the "First Cav". In particular, the PAVN were not sure of the best tactics to use against the air assault capability of the 1st Cav, so BG Man revised a plan to bring to try to fight the helicopter-mobile forces on terms favorable to the North Vietnamese. They fully expected to incur heavy casualties, but it would be worth it if they could learn to counter the new U.S. techniques, inflict significant casualties on the U.S. Army, and, if very lucky, still cut II CTZ in half. That planned movement was very similar to the successful PAVN maneuver in 1975. The revised plan first was evidenced in the Battle of the Ia Drang, which had three major subphases, and a followup at the Battle of Bong Son. Elliott quotes Le Duan's November 1965 letter to COSVN, confirming that the Party, in Resolution 9 of December 1963, confirms that American intervention (i.e., "Limited War") was a possibility. In the letter, he speaks of the need to fight both the U.S. and the ARVN,"..in deploying on the battlefield, we must aim at annihilating the puppet army first, because they are the weaker." That could be consistent with the initial phase of the Battle of the Ia Drang, which was to attrit ARVN forces, and possibly ambush U.S. forces, at Plei Me. He continued,Le Duan's letter could mean that the Ia Drang combats were principally to force the U.S. troops into battle, and learn techniques, as they did. While the fight at LZ Albany was a successful ambush, both the PAVN and the U.S. commander recognized that the best PAVN approach was "hugging the belt", or moving so close to U.S. units that they risked fratricide from their air or artillery support. In his after-action report from LZ X-ray, LTC Hal Moore emphasized that some fratricide risk needed to be accepted at the time of initial contact, to prevent them moving the bulk of their force too close to the U.S. troops. [25] PAVN doctrine recognized the U.S. could not be driven out, but the PAVN goal was to
Citing Dien Bien Phu, Le Duan had written that "decisive victory" was not synonymous with "complete victory." Theoretician Truong Chinh wrote "our strategy is defensive, but our tactics and campaigning principles are constantly to attack."[27] There is little to suggest what the PAVN would have done had they managed to drive from the Ho Chi Minh trail to the South China Sea. At the time, did they believe this would be sufficient to trigger the General Uprising, or were they really committed to the General Uprising model at that time? Purely from an operational standpoint, they had capability to drive south, through the DMZ, and try to link up with the salient at the coast. That drive to the south, however, would not just have faced the ARVN and U.S. air support they met in 1972; they also would have gone against a U.S. corps-sized ground force. Truong Chinh's observation about defensive strategy may well have meant that they had no serious intention of reaching the coast, but the subsequent Ia Drang battle with the ARVN Airborne followed by an admittedly undisciplined retreat into Cambodia, and the more limited Battle of Bong Son shortly afterwards, may well have meant that the PAVN, in 1965, basically wanted to bog down the U.S. in the west, and never intended a drive to the coast. In contrast, when they attacked in the same area in 1975, that was in concern with attacks from the DMZ to pin the I Corps tactical zone forces, and they had mobile forces capable of driving south from the coast. Second Evolution: 1968By late 1966, however, North Vietnam began a buildup in the northwest area of the theater, in Laos, the southernmost part of the DRV, the DMZ, and in the northern part of the RVN. Given that moving significant distances on the Ho Chi Minh trail would take months, this still was earlier than Pike's idea of the October-November starting point (see below). Were they simply planning to get into base camps before the start of the monsoon season in April or May, and then start the "concentrated" fighting when the rains stopped? Questions continue on the real intent of the Battle of Khe Sanh and Tet Offensive, and the extent to which they related to one another, or were part of a larger plan. After the war, Giap said
Nguyen Chi Thanh, also known as Truong Son was a senior general[29] in the People's Army of Viet Nam, who commanded all Communist forces in South Vietnam. He was also a member of the Politburo, and his political writings are more under the Truong Son name. He planned and was to have directed the Tet Offensive, but died before the operation. Some reports say he died of natural causes in a Hanoi hospital, while others say he was killed by a B-52 strike. Some of the reports say he died of cancer while others say a sudden heart disease; some of the latter suggest the heart disease was due to bomb fragments from chest wounds incurred in the South. Different analysts drew different conclusions on the Politburo's idea of the center of gravity of their opposition, which they considered controlled by the U.S. There is little evidence, however, that either potential center of gravity was the U.S. forces themselves. The centers of gravity could be:
Pike's theory of the TCK/TCNDouglas Pike believed the TCK/TCN [30] was to have three main parts:
Pike used Dien Bien Phu as an analogy for the third phase, although Dien Bien Phu wa an isolated, not urban, target. Losing elite troops during the Tet Offensive never let them develop the "second wave" or "third phase". "We don't ever know what the second wave was; we have never been able to find out because probably only a couple of dozen people knew it." The description of the three fighting methods is consistent with the work of Nguyen Chi Thanh, who commanded forces in the south but died in 1967; Thanh may very well have been among those couple of dozen. He described it as consistent with the armed dau tranh theory espoused by Vo Nguyen Giap but opposed by the politically oriented Truong Chinh. Pike said he could almost hear Truong Chinh saying, "You see, it's what I mean. You're not going to win militarily on the ground in the South. You've just proven what we've said; the way to win is in Washington." Alternatively, Giap, in September 1967, had written what might well have been a political dau tranh argument: the U.S. was faced with two unacceptable alternatives: invading the North or continue a stalemate. Invasion of "a member country of the Socialist camp" would enlarge the war, which Giap said would cause the "U. S. imperialists...incalculable serious consequences." As for reinforcements, "Even if they increase their troops by another 50,000, 100,000 or more, they cannot extricate themselves from their comprehensive stalemate in the southern part of our country." [31] The answer may be somewhere in-between: Giap indeed wanted to draw American forces away from the coastal urban areas, but tried too hard for a victory at Khe Sanh. [32] Tet OffensiveThis section, while it does discuss some relatively current intelligence, deals only with the part of the material that supports the strategic theory. Other aspects, which dealt with exactly where and how attacks might take place, remain in the articles on the specific battles. The most common Western explanation is that North Vietnamese planners expected popular uprising (khnoi nghai), but this almost completely failed to occur. many South Vietnamese demonstrated stronger support for the ARVN. [33] Elliott, however, suggests that since the main targets in Tet were ARVN, with the U.S. attention on Khe Sanh, that the goal may have been to break a U.S. stalemate by defeating the ARVN component of a force under U.S. conrol, and put the U.S. into a position where it either had to escalate further, or withdraw. The costs to Hanoi were indeed enormous, but he suggests that there was never evidence that this was a price unacceptable to the Politburo. He quotes one U.S. official as saying "Essentially, we are fighting a birthrate." However, the Tet Offensive had a devastating impact on Johnson's political position in the U.S., and in that sense was a strategic victory for the Communists.[34] There were very serious U.S. military proposals to ask for another 206,000 or more troops, and go into a pursuit of the badly hurt enemy. Westmoreland and JCS Chairman Wheeler believed it was the right time to attack the sanctuaries. Westmoreland had asked for 200,000 troops, a year earlier, to force a decision, but he considered the correlation of forces even better. Nevertheless, the leak, to the New York Times, on March 10 doomed the debate. Rightly or wrongly, the U.S. electorate could not understand if the enemy had been terribly hurt, why did the commander, who three months before had declared all was well, want to widen the fighting? [35] Reports from the Saigon CIA station, however, saw a different alternative than Elliott. Where Elliott saw the PAVN view of the center of gravity as the ARVN, CIA Saigon saw it as a distinct change in Communist thinking, away from the protracted war attritional model to something more decisive. It cited documentation of "an all-out military and political offensive during the 1967-68 winter-spring campaign [the period beginning around Tet] designed to gain decisive victory...large-scale continuous coordinated attacks by main force units, primarily in mountainous areas close to border sanctuaries"--a strategy subsequently reflected in the enemy's major attacks on Khe Sanh--and "widespread guerrilla attacks on large US/GVN units in rural and heavily populated areas." The PAVN saw the urban population as the center of gravity, not attrition to U.S. troops or the defeat of ARVN forces. It continued: "If the VC/NVN view the situation in this light, it is probably to their advantage to use their current apparatus to the fullest extent in hopes of fundamentally reversing current trends before attrition renders such an attempt impossible."
Third evolution: adapting to the conventionalEarlier but localized offensives, using armor and artillery, gave an increasingly conventional flavor to the warfare. The 1972 Easter offensive was unquestionably conventional warfare; while neither side used its tanks especially well, nor the North provide close air support, the significant thing was that the North used combined arms including armor, artillery, and both anti-tank and surface-to-air missiles, over significant distances. In a way, the success of Operation Linebacker I, an air campaign of intense battlefield air interdiction in stopping the invasion — as well as some inspired ARVN fighting — proved that the war had become conventional. Guerrilla wars cannot be stopped by airpower. In 1975, however, there was no U.S. airpower. Since South Vietnam had always kept control of air assets at the Corps tactical zone level, the RVN Air Force had never developed doctrine for, or practiced, massing air assets to concentrate on enemy rear areas. Palmer suggests that the fall of Phuoc Long Province (now part of Binh Phuoc Province), in January 1975, was the "first real crack" in the Army of the Republic of Vietnam, a harbinger of the fall of South Vietnam.[21] References
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