PDA

View Full Version : South vietnam in desperate plight



vinhtruong
11-16-2010, 06:17 PM
Republican George H W Bush succeeded to the Company dynasty, but was immediately derailed out of Democrat Harriman’s strategy track; though on behalf as merely a surrogate for A. Harriman. Clearly I have justified in my conviction that the nature of the war was transformed to “a counter-espionage war”. George H W Bush lean toward his intelligent superlative degree striving defeat the Soviet Union happening at last by “Stooping to conquer” or he ever thought he’d stoop so low as to cheat on his partner [Soviet Union] in the Axis of Evil’s scam through the CIP counter NLF’ craps, under umbrella of the Rule Of Engagement:
- On June, 9 1967 a great conflict between Soviet and China about Soviet wanted to control the transshipment of Soviet good from USSR and through China to Hanoi. However, the Chinese objected and stated that they would assume control at the USSR border. At this point the North Vietnamese officials intervened and said that if the USSR and China were going to disagree over this, then North Vietnamese would not continue the war. Of course for resolved this solution, this Axis of Evil know how, the way of unknot it. The US okay-enjoyed a philosopher Socrates’ theorem (399-470 B.C Socrates, a Greek philosopher) – “give them the bone, when two dogs fight together, a tantalizing smell of food as an attractive Indochina’s bone”
- November 1970, suddenly US force launched a surprising raid on a prisoner of war camp in North Vietnam, an operation planned and controlled in Washington, by General Haig at Pentagon Command and Control Post. It was known that the Son-Tay Camp had held US-POW. By the time the raid was launched, however, those people had been moved elsewhere, apparently as a result of flooding that made Son Tay untenable. Later it was revealed that last-minute intelligence had revealed that fact, but the decision was made to let the raid go anyway. The operation was successful in its own terms, although of course no prisoners were rescued because none were there. Clearly another goal was to let Hanoi know their rear area – the camp was only less than forty kilometers from Hanoi – wasn’t as secure as they might have thought. Much later it was learned that the rescue mission benefited the POW still held captive, since the Hanoi subsequently consolidated them in better facilities and their treatment improved significantly. Now Hanoi Hilton appeared right in the hearth of the capital. The so called Hotel-Hilton stands for POW’s an only one concentrated prison.
- In 1968 Tet-Offensive, ARVN though outgunned by enemy, performed admirably in repelling to surprise of many Americans and the consternation of the Communist, but a venal Walter-Cronkite [bribed by the WIB] reports: “the South Vietnam could not have won the war under any circumstances”[according axiom-1] together with Bill O’Reilly, Dan Rather unquestionable they had talent. But simple not just a talent for lying, the world would see their news: fair, open-minded, genuine impartial.
- In early 1970, former Justice Department Ramsey Clarke, Jane Fonda, David Ifshin had been a Vietnam antiwar protester, went to Hanoi, where David Ifshin denounced U.S involvement in the war on Radio Hanoi. David’s denunciation was piped into the Hanoi Hilton, where POW got to hear it in their tiny solitary cell, a significant flyer was held, beaten and torture for years, much of that time served after they heroic refused to accept freedom on terms that violated the POW code of honor governing the order of prisoner releases.
- On 21, November 1970, movie-star from Hollywood, Jane Fonda at University Michigan, audience-2000 students “If you understood what communism was, you would hope, you would pray on your knees that we would some day become communist.” Actually, then the U.S was Super-finest Communist country now.
- July 1971, Ping pong diplomacy with a mediator President Yahya Khan, Pakistan, Henry Kissinger was secretly contacted with Prime of China Zhou Enlai for next summit meeting between Mao Zedong and Nixon on February 21, 1972 for normalization of diplomatic relations.
- On June 20 1972, Henry Kissinger meeting with Zhou Enlai, discussing issue of Indochina
After complete American withdrawal, the Indochinese people change their governments, the US will not interfere. The US will abide by the determination of the will of the people.
- On July 8, 1972, Jane Fonda arrived to Hanoi by Russia Aeroflot airline– She left the United States to French. From French to Moscow by Aeroflot and secretly fly to Neutral Laos and from Laos fly to Hanoi. At Hanoi, she seat on a position of gunner of antiaircraft made by Russia to shot US fighter side be side with AAA gunner. She praised the communist. She wore the Red “ao-dai” Vietnamese dress with the Red Color proclaimed “I feel shame the US into doing something like inhumanity”
- On August 23, 1972, Nixon in the campaign presidential reelection, because on the course inertia of US combat progressive withdraw back home, like South Vietnam President Thieu need the political stability for the accomplished CIP. By chance, the Permanent Government let him getting along assured by his political advisor, Henry Kissinger.
Below is Nixon’s speech:
“As your President, I pledge that I shall always uphold that proud bipartisan tradition. Standing in this Convention Hall four years ago, I pledged to seek an honorable end to the war in Vietnam. We have made great progress toward that end. We have brought over half a million men home, and more will be coming home. We have ended America’s ground combat role. No draftees are being sent to Vietnam. We have reduced our casualties by 98 percent. We have gone the extra mile; in fact have gone ten of thousands of miles trying to seek a negotiated settlement of the war. We have offered a cease-fire, a total withdrawal of all American forces, an exchange of all prisoners of war, internationally supervised free elections with the Communist participating in the elections and in the supervision”
- On November, 14, 1972 President Nixon’s message “… I repeat my personal assurances to you that the United States will react very strongly and rapidly to any violation of the agreement.” (WSAG should proceed to initiate a scandal Watergate, prying his seat off power out of US government for being his “pledges letters” to President Thieu no longer valid)
- On January, 27, 1973. Because the outrage of antiwar movement, President Nixon gave pressure on South Vietnam regime:
“… As General Haig has told you, I am prepared to send Vice President Agnew to Saigon in order to plan with you our post-war relationship (How could President Nixon feel that firstly, Skull and Bones eliminated his Vice president likewise A Harriman hated vice president Johnson as the running mate of Kennedy, and his later for unvalued these assurance-letters by Watergate scandal?) He would leave Washington on January 28, the day after the Agreement is signed, and during his visit, he would publicly reaffirm the guarantees. I have expressed to you [President Thieu] Let me state these assurances once again in this letter:
- First, we recognize your Government as the sole legitimate Government of South Vietnam
- Secondly, we do not recognize the right of foreign troops to remain on South Vietnamese soil.
- Thirdly, the US will react vigorously to violations to the Agreement.
In addition I remain prepared to meet with you personally three to four weeks later in San Clemente, California, at which time we could publicly reaffirm once again our joint cooperation and US guarantees. (Kissinger wrote: Nixon never thought South Vietnam will be abolished)
Consequently, Vice-president Agnew had to resign recently, (masterminded Harriman didn’t want a political dilemma, he hates like poison once again the so called presidential running mate: vice president Johnson became acting president) now President Nixon for his turn on August, 9 -1974 by the skull and Bones pressure as a scandal not “War-Powers Act” but Watergate initiated by the Skull and Bones keyed-up-time prior the Saigon Fall. (Wedge on line http://www.markriebling.com.deepthroat.html. In wedge, we reviewed clues to the identity of the legendary source on who claimed to rely in their Watergate probe. Obviously, through Emperor-II’ CIA experience, I considered from CIA officers who first heard about the Watergate break-in to its own records. And Richard Helms would have liked to settle the matter quietly, without publicity. My view is clues suggest that Deep Throat was Helms present secretly at the June, 19 control meeting. Included from Vietnam’s Phoenix Program to Chilean assassinations and improper domestic surveillance – from indictment by Gerald Ford’s Justice Department – In the eyes of Attorney General Edward Levi, Emperor-II’ [George H W Bush] actions verged on obstructing Justice Department investigations. Not least, Emperor-II had been insistent in any price protecting former CIA director Richard Helms – aptly named by his biographer “the man who kept the secrets” – who was ultimately let off with a fine and suspended sentence for lying to Congress (in his son, prince presidency tried to close the case in domestic home land the Watergate author is officially the number two of FBI did it. Like I said “don’t prosecute the bullet destroyed the object… but just the finger pull-on the trigger)
Strangely ridiculous, we take these into consideration: in discussion about two cases, prince George-II and Richard Nixon – the U.S. president has the right to grant an amnesty for himself – Particularly the “Watergate scandal” President Richard Nixon must step down because easily understandable, the CIP strategy was a small wheel in a component-system of various wheels in assembly-lines by freewheeling unit that Super Government has to eliminate the acted president with a simple – “the axiom-1 must be done”.(the dissolution of a Saigon regime) All letters which Nixon pledges to President Thieu though they were too personal and confidential to disclose, and besides there was nothing confidential about them, but important matter how could explain to the world public if Nixon on the seat of power when Hanoi’s troop overrun South Vietnam.
Meanwhile majority of Democratic in the Congress at November, 1973 and War Power Act Nixon might get impeachment. As for American citizen, in this case of Richard Nixon, the public extremely reluctant to remove Nixon (“Polarization and Presidentialism” by R.J. Ellis- Society, no 3&4 1999, pp.8-11) But thing have gone from bad to worse as George-II case, Americans support their president remains so low 34percent. But no problem he is still okay; because he was a prince of Skull and Bones dynasty’s Emperor-II. As of U.S. constitution, despite Congress pressure like Nixon status the majority of Democrat overwhelmed, George-II has the right to declare for himself an amnesty, but no one dare impeach him. So you could distinguished Nixon be gone out of power seat for American-First and “welfare imperialism.” Now inside the Republic Party, “One of Bush’s rivals for the Republican nomination in 2000, Senator John McCain, also said he slept better at night as a POW in Vietnam for five-and-a-half years, knowing that George-II was protecting the coast of Texas from invasion.
I am trenchant classic “Impeachment”: In US history, the impeachment of President Truman, apparently for his conduct of the Korea War? Including forced President Truman to assert his leadership and drafted McArthur’s dismissal announcement, was suggested by its staff to the Republican high command? I thought the direction from the founder of Skull and Bones, Democrat A. Harriman, his foreign advisor. There have been reiterated demands for the impeachment of President Nixon, arising out of dissatisfaction with his program for disengagement from the war in Vietnam by urging Congress prosecuted President Nixon lying about US military involvement in Cambodia. Whereas President Kennedy concurred with Attorney General Robert Kennedy as well as Vice president LB Johnson, this triumvirate was trying prosecuted them on the cause of trading with the enemy Act, another word a necessary of CIP-performance. That if Kennedy had not moved to expel Soviet Union nuclear missiles from Cuba at the time of the confrontation with Khrushchev, “Kennedy would have been impeached.” But the world survived the most dangerous moment in human history.
For becoming a powerful magician, Permanent Government [George H W Bush] also assigned Kissinger taken more charge of State Department from Secretary Rogers on date 22/ August/ 1973, prior two months, at 4: PM on 13/ June, secretly Kissinger flew to Paris met Le Duc Tho put the “green-Light”: authorized Communist North Vietnam attack on course Highway-I through DMZ to Saigon on keyed TOT timetable. The South Vietnamese will see – on highway-1 scattered among these troop transports rolled long semi trailers with tarp-covered, cigar shaped cargos, big SAM, and SA-2 missiles on the long trailers and their mobile launching systems accompany them. These brand-new batch of modern weapon for next campaigns to overrun Saigon 1975, Phnom-Penh 1979 and later defense at northern when China gave the lesson that the cost expensed by U.S dollars and Soviet working-class manufactured.
- On June 29, 1973, two months after Lowenstein and Moose’s report, Congress placed a rider on the 1974 budget authorization bill that required a halt to all combat air operations in Southeast Asia. Idaho Democrat Senator Frank F. Church and New Jersey Republican Senator Clifford P. Case authorized this amendment, which bore their names: “Case-Church”.
- On December 13, 1974, John Kerry and Jane Fonda conspired with Hanoi to overrun Phuoc-Long province to checking how sure the US reacted and South Vietnam run out of supplies, ammunition and persuaded regardless the Paris peace talk agreement. Closely followed advised by KGB counselor to Prime minister of North Vietnam, Pham Van Dong responded to Stephen Young. “Well, when Nixon stepped down because of Watergate, we knew we would win. Dong said of President Gerald Ford, the new president, “he’s the weakest president in U.S history: the people didn’t elect him; even if you gave him candy, he doesn’t dare to intervene in Vietnam again. “We tested Ford’s resolve by attacking Phuoc Long province in January 1975. When Ford kept B-52 in their closed shut-hangars, our leadership decided on a big offensive against South Vietnam. We had the impression that American commanders had their hands tied by political factors. Your generals could never deploy a maximum force for greatest military effect” because Cooper, and Case-Church Amendments tied double knotted – must do nothing.
- On January 8, 1975 Le Duc Tho was assured by Kissinger of his willingness Saigon occupation at the time two Soviet delegations, Nicolai Firyunbin as diplomat shuttle like Kissinger, and military-delegation, General JCS V, A Jukilov pledged a new batch of sophisticated-weapons will anchored at Hai Phong Harbor very soon; meanwhile military delegation of Red China on February 28, head by Yang Yung sponsored an assault-sapper division with the plot divided South Vietnam two parts.
- On March 25, Secretary of Defense Schlesinger found himself standing on the outside of the President’s inner circle. He stood in direct contradiction to Kissinger’s foreign policy strategy. If the house and Senate would approve a massive emergency (as rescue West Berlin or Israel) infusion of war goods to South Vietnam, based on the Weyand assessment, then in the worst case, if Saigon fell, the world could not blame Unites States for it. But that Permanent Government turned down, because CIP’ stratagem was accomplished on keyed time on road map course. The craps must done for the next job will be start in Middle-East, central Asia – Eurasian Great Game stratagem
I could give you an objective opinion: For months earlier of Saigon Fall – lurching from the chair, President Thieu felt deserted and alone, rushed to a table where he picked up a pale green, manila folder stuffed with papers and shook it at General Phu (when President Big-Minh surrendered, Phu and another four Generals committed suicide) “These reports indicate that we have depleted the greater majority of those very supplies and munitions”
“Sir, I have seen with my own eyes what we hold in many of these caches,” General Phu said, rising from the chair in a respectful response to the president abruptly leaping his feet.
“We drafted those reports in hopes of gaining additional American support. Just as when we submitted our budgets, the truth that they tell represents a different set of circumstances and realities”
“Our forces, thus far, have stood no match against the North Vietnamese,” Thieu snapped:
“You lost, what, two regiments already? Or is it now three? Annihilated! Sixty percent of the men killed before they could even land!”
“This is not the same situation, sir,” Phu said in a soft, conciliatory voice, hoping to ease the tensions that had sent President Thieu into such an explosive tantrum.
“That is very one battle not the war, nor does it represent the whole country. We must now resolve to isolate the enemy’s forces and contain them where they presently stand”
“I have solid information, documented in a top secret intelligence report from a very reliable American military resource, that tells me that while United States withdrew their support of us during the past two years and cut our aid to a fraction, the Soviet Union have covertly shipped no less then 700 million long tons of new military equipment, ammunition, and supplies to Hanoi in preparation for this very campaign! They blatantly violate the Paris Accords, just as the North Vietnamese now ignore its rules with this invasion!” President Thieu preached, his voice crescendo to a shout as his face flushed dark red and blood veins pulsed outward on his forehead and temples.
General Phu keep quiet, said nothing, waiting for the president’s rage to subside. He deeply suspected that no such intelligence report ever existed, nor had any of the American military staff shown Thieu anything even similar to the document he described. It contradicted everything that the Americans had otherwise said.
Furthermore, General Phu American old friend, Brigadier General James Vaught, an U.S general assigned to the CIA in Saigon, had pretend to visit him only weeks ago. When General Phu asked him for advice, Vaught had refused because he claimed that the Paris Accords prohibited him lending such help. Not even advice from an old and trusted friend. Who would have known? It was only the two of them, yet Vaught, still, had said “NO” – when Saigon Fall in a cruel April 1975, Phu was the first among five generals committed suicide. General Phu felt a sense of isolation and betrayal.
From now on, President Thieu had no real friends within any of the American diplomatic, intelligence, or military communities. Ambassador Martin merely tolerated the man because his job required of him a minimum of such conduct. No one, in Phu’s mind, would have given President Thieu such incredible news.
Actually, the communists clearly hold the upper hand, due to the Axis of Evil played the craps “On the Strong-man Side” and nearly carried out the “axiom-1”. Observer said in a matter of fact “A lot of them think that this is the beginning of the end.” Spontaneously, Thieu roared, continuing to bluster as he walked back to the table and threw down the green folder on a stack of others like it, toppling them across several cardboard tubes that contained charts and maps.
“America has turned its back. Deserted us in the breach! How do we stand in defense against such forces when they can now so easily overwhelm us?”
“How can we withdraw our units from their defenses without placing them and the republic at far more risk?” Phu said, now courageously pleading for the president to simply consider what nearly any military strategist finds immediately obvious and most basic. “Forces in movement face the greatest vulnerability if all situations. On the march, our soldiers will have no defenses and can rely only on the equipment, ammunition, and stores that they carry and the great drawback by the civilians will joint with us. In such a massive retreat, they will have highly inadequate armor and artillery defenses, and even those that they can deploy cannot respond rapidly enough to an attack. They cannot count on air cover, either. The Communists now have widespread antiaircraft defense missile – new batch-weapons from Soviet after General Pavel Batitski in March 1972, SA.2 on long trailers, and their mobile launching systems accompany them. We never saw these big SAM except near the DMZ, where they shot down countless number of the American fighters. Now they bring them toward Saigon, deployed throughout the northern-provinces and Central Highlands, making our pilots very timid to fly into these hostile zones. A reinforced enemy lying in ambush will find such in army in movement and easy prey indeed.
Remaining in defense, our forces will have the advantage of holding high ground fortresses, heavily supported by artillery and armor, with ample provisions. Placed in movement, the army must desert these fortifications and the greatest majority of their supplies and munitions. They are simple too vast to carry with us. What of them? (For carrying out of their “axiom One,”: Cruel April: The Fall of Saigon by the mastermind George I, tucked away in China, Beijing, Shackley in Saigon, Rumsfeld, Cheney and many others WSAG-staffs in Washington D.C)
Furthermore, consider the reaction of the people when they see the massive movement of our units. They will surely panic and crowd the routes, following the retreating forces to safety, and thus choke traffic to a crawl. The strong mind anti-communist became the weak to our retreat forces.
“Sir, abandoning the Central Highlands and the Northern provinces to establish a damn new DMZ appears to me a recipe for disaster.”
“You have no choice in the matter…General Phu,” President Thieu snarled. “We will sacrifice those forces necessary to protect the redeployment so that my plan does succeed. I have already ordered such units to fight to the man. It is the republic’s only hope.”
General Phu said nothing more and turned his gaze to the ornate design and dark colors of the Persian carpet spread across the floor. He realized that President Thieu had now let fear dominate his thinking, and panic, driven by the defeat at BaMeThuot province, his loss of fair in the fighting abilities of South Vietnam’s armed forces, and the absence of hope for any American supports, obviously guided his decisions. Clearly, the president’s resolution to the crisis, if executed, spelled the end for the Republic of Vietnam.
General Phu now began to consider his own safety and what he must do to stay alive and free. He had endured captivity and torture by the Viet Minh in Dien Bien Phu 1954 and felt certain that he couldn’t again survive imprisonment under the communist hand; especially his rank often got promotion on the battle and his old age. He stepped back to the sofa chair and stood, waiting for Thieu to return to his seat and spell out details of his plan. The diminutive-general resolved to say no more about the matter and only to listen dutifully. Seeing the president so demoralized and now consumed with such trepidation that it warped his thinking. Phu concluded that more words would only serve to further inflame President Thieu
(continued)

vinhtruong
11-18-2010, 02:38 AM
NhaTrang, Army Corps-II Headquarters: President Thieu sat at the head of the long conference table at NhaTrang garrison headquarter. He listened as members of the Joint General Staff and representatives of South Vietnam’s military regions offered their assessments of the crisis as a prelude to the presentation of his redeployment plan. Thieu had to chide and pressure his only ally, General Phu, into supporting his position. President knew that Major General Phu did it because Phu had no choice. His losses at Ban-Me-Thuot had essentially emasculated him. Now the man just sought a way out, not merely out of the situation, but out of the country.
Who at this table could he trust? Major General Pham Van Phu? A weary commander, who today, seated in the large, leather conference chair behind the great mahogany table, appeared even more dwarfish than ever; His only ally? He had no idea who the heavyset, burly general Nguyen Van Toan truly supported nowhere his real loyalties lay. Toan had the reputation a man easily swayed with dollar, or promise of power. Toan held no qualms in getting what he wanted by any available means, inside or outside the law or command structure. Toan wielded his muscle in Saigon and Military Region-III more as a warlord than as a uniformed commander of forces.
President Thieu felt alone and deserted. However, He felt confident that burly general Toan would stand with him, since the president’s plan also benefited the general’s own self-servicing interests.
Thieu’s only openly defiant critic, General Ngo Quang Truong, commander of Military Region-I, didn’t attend at NhaTrang meeting, nor did he offer any reason excuses for his absence. He regarded the entire conference as merely an exercise in procedure, a game of smoke and mirrors, and totally a waste of his time. President Thieu already had his plan. Today’s commentary simply shuffled more papers for no good reason other than to satisfy bureaucratic egos.
On 10 March 1975, President Thieu had ordered General Truong to redeploy the entire Airborne Division from the defenses of Hue and Danang so that he could move them into position to reinforce units that his plan had established to cordon off Saigon and at least save that city. Thieu didn’t even have a specific mission for the Airborne Division, other than they should report to Military-Region-III at once and that they would fill in where General Toan needed them.
At the onset of president Thieu issuing his order to redeploy the force, which represented more than a third of the defense of Hue and Danang, General Truong had emphatically refused and had vehemently pled for his commander in chief to reconsider.
On 13 March 1975, that following morning at presidential Palace; General Truong flew to Saigon to argue his case, face to face, with President Thieu. General Toan didn’t bother to stand as his senior-ranking protégé Lieutenant General Truong stepped through the conference-room doorway inside the Presidential Palace, where the two men awaited their audience with President Thieu. The serious faced general from M.R-I, Danang glanced at general Toan and then at Toan’s aide-de-camp, who had leaped to his feet when Truong entered the room.
Scowling now, General Truong sat in a leather armchair at the opposite end of the conference table from General Toan and dismissed the disrespect as another quality in the man’s gangster-like demeanor. In January, President Thieu had relieved the former M.R-II I commander who had lost an entire regiment, more than three thousand men from the 5th ARVN Division, attempting to defend Phuoc Long, province. General Toan had stepped into the commander’s billet and immediately boasted that his three divisions, armored brigade, and five ranger groups would lose no more ground.
“I hope you had a smooth flight from Danang,” Toan said casually, trying to cut the ice with small talk. General Truong simply looked at his colleague and nodded. He had few indulgent words for anyone today.
More than half hour passed before President Thieu finally entered the conference room. General Toan had fidgeted and chatted nervously with his aide-de-camp, while General Truong had sat quietly, jotting notes and studying a thick stack of battle-planning documents.
“Please remain seated, gentlemen,” President Thieu said as he breezed into the room and took a seat in the leather armchair at the right of General Toan. The distance of the conference table looked like a long mahogany highway to General Truong. Clearly he had no advantage, and he immediately realized that his bumpy flight to Saigon this morning had only wasted his precious time. He felt suddenly sick at his stomach, and for the first time in his life he genuinely feared for his country, and for his fellow soldiers, whom he greatly loved.
“With all due respect, Mr. President,” General said with a sharp edge in his voice, “I had hoped that we could discuss that matter privately”
“My decision to redeploy the Air Borne Division from Hue is a matter of direct important with General Toan,” Thieu said, “Since I’m reassigning that force to his command.”
“And what of Hue city” Truong asked.
“Those Army and Marine Corps units that I have allowed you to keep there will defend that citadel to a man,” Thieu said. “We have already had this discussion, Lieutenant General Truong… you must obey my order, could you?”
“No, sir” General Truong snapped and stood defiantly.
President Thieu remained seat and smiles. General Toan leaned back in his chair and glared at General Truong.
“You will bring the whole nation to ruin with this insanity, sir,” Truong said, his pent-up rage beginning to boil in his voice.
“That’s quit enough, Lieutenant General,” President said, still keeping his seat.
“What is the purpose of this lunacy” General Truong said. “Abandoning our cities makes no sense. Deserting our fortresses and our stockpiles hands the enemy victory.
“You order my soldiers to stand and die, for what; So that you and your cronies can cut and run? Meanwhile those units that you order to redeploy will be slaughtered on the highways. The timing is too late. The enemy is in place! Do you not realize this?
“Pulling such a force from Hue will cause its utter destruction overnight. Those soldiers left to fight will quickly lose heart. Those who actually remain their posts, and do not desert, will surely die or fall prisoner to the Communists.
“Once Hue falls, refugees will flood over the Hai-Van Pass into Danang, and with inadequate defenders there, it will quickly collapse too. Then Chu-Lai will topple, and an unstoppable tidal wave will come crashing down Highway-I through Qui-Nhon then NhaTrang, and straight into Saigon. I will not do it!” (CIA Ted Shackley’ plan via Kissinger offered a conspiracy of silence to Le Duc Tho an attacked-throng trajectory to Vietnam War’s blood end or Axiom-I carried-out)
“You will send those forces I order, and you will send them immediately” President Thieu barked, now standing and walking around the conference table to meet General Truong face to face.
“Relieve me! Shoot me for insubordination! But I will not abbey such an insane order, sir!” General firmly said, looking at Thieu squarely in the face.
“I already have transmitted orders to your subordinate commanders, and the Airborne Division,” President Thieu said, turning his back on General Truong.
“You will return to your command post, and you will fight and defend Hue and Danang and Chu Lai to the last man standing. Is that clear? You may not surrender!”
“History will bitterly remember you, Mr. President! Our people will come to scorn your name,” strongly General Truong said, snapping his satchel filled with working papers under his arm and marching defiantly out of the room. In his heart he knew the entire plan held together like feathers in a torn pillow. One good shade and everything would fly to the four winds.

The lone ranger, Schlesinger’s increasingly isolated out of favor with his own cabinet
Secretary Defense Schlesinger’s pragmatism stood in direct contradiction to Kissinger’s [Skull and WIB’ class] foreign policy strategy, America’s not lose face with the rest of the world should South Vietnam fall. As it stood, the secretary of Defense found himself standing on the outside of the President’s inner circle. Their Skull session in meeting included attendance of national security expert General Brent Scowcroft, General Weyand, and Ambassador Martin. It did not include attendance or even notification of Secretary of Defense James Schlesinger, even though their discussion and planning heavily involved Department of Defense assets, personnel, and one of its most high-ranking military officers as General Weyand.
The lone ‘duty, honor, country’ Schlesinger, He’s out of favor with his own Skull’s administration. He’s increasingly isolated. But my view of point this Secretary of Defense James Schlesinger, a man of decency and compassion, dispatched a message to all members of the American armed forces. “For many of freedom-fighters,” he acknowledged, “the tragedy of Southeast Asia is more than a distant and abstract event. American have fought there; they have lost comrades there; they have suffered there,” He reminded those who fought the war that they had been victorious and had left the field with honor, stating also his conviction that America’s involvement had not been without purpose. “He salutes them for it,” he told the forces worldwide. “Beyond any question they are entitled to the nation’s respect, admiration and gratitude.”
Schlesinger and Kissinger stood at direct odds when it came to handling the latest events in South Vietnam. Schlesinger had told President Ford when President Thieu had begun to panic and the Central Highlands fell that he believed his represented the final Communist offensive and that South Vietnam had little hope of surviving it. He told puppet President Ford, (the weakest president in US history, the people didn’t elect him) “The handwriting is on the wall.”
Pretender Kissinger and Ambassador Martin spoke with great seemed optimism for South Vietnam rallying and even toyed with the notion of using détente with the Soviet Union as a hole card to encourage Moscow to stop the North Vietnamese short of Saigon, Schlesinger voiced caution. Kissinger had urged the President by pressures like Nixon recently to empty the warehouses of South Vietnam’s allocations of war supplies and to expedite those shipments, while Schlesinger wanted them held back. Pragmatically, he reasoned that with South Vietnam now a lost cause, anything America sent to the country would wind up in the hands of the Communists.
The WSAG don’t want the notorious bloodshed will took place in South Vietnam by their scam. So if the Senate and the House would approve a massive emergency infusion of war goods to South Vietnam, based on the Weyand assessment, then in worst case, if Saigon fell, the world could not blame America for it. The Unites States had the goods on the way. The failure of South Vietnam’s resolve would then have to shoulder the blame. America had not, after all, run out on an ally. It seemed to me that “It was a very neat CYA [cover your ass] strategy. However, it would allow America to retain the respect of those other nations who also looked to the United States for a commitment to their protection.
At last, the problems that America face in protect South Vietnam are an elementary question of what kind of people America are. For fifteen years America have been encouraging the people of South Vietnam defended themselves against [Red-menace] what America conceive to be an external danger. Now America stands on the brink of betraying that trust?
In the past almost four years, Congress has dramatically cut aid to South Vietnam, going against a long-standing commitment. As a result, that nation now falters because of a grievous lack of spare parts and replacement equipment by project “enhance” as Paris accords permitted. American cannot betray this sacred trust with South Vietnam.

At United States Embassy, Saigon: “Sir, Ambassador Martin and I met with President Thieu this morning, and Thieu has again pled for help,” General Frederick Weyand said to President Gerald Ford in a conference telephone call to Palm Springs from the United States Embassy in Saigon. “Given what they have lost in Danang, it will require at the very least another $700 million in equipment and supplies on top of what U.S have already committed to them.”
“Congress will never agree (under pressure of Skull and Bones) to more than $1.5 billion after they cut the authorization by half that much last year alone,” President Ford said.(in the past four years, Congress has dramatically cut aid to South Vietnam, even one replaced one in the Enhance Project that permitted by Paris accord agreement)
“Mr. President, Graham Martin here,” the ambassador to Saigon interjected: “If we can only reassure President Thieu that American has not abandoned South Vietnam, I am certain he can lead their forces to rally. All of this doomsday reporting by the media has set the South Vietnamese armed forces on their ears. We need to demonstrate some resolve and reassure them”
“President Ford and his chief staff, Donald Rumsfeld also knew well that President Thieu had lost a great deal of credibility as his nation’s leader, not only with his own people and their armed forces, but with the international political world as well. The Chief of staff WSAG knew backing a loser did not sit well with either man.
“Shipments of equipment and supplies will go a long way in doing that,” General Weyand said. “When I return in a few days, I will give you a formal report, but for now it looks like they will need at least double what Congress has already allowed them in the current budget.”
Long ago, under pressure of totalitarian-Skull and Bones over the House and Senate, the first volley in Congress came in 1970 when influenced Senator Church and Kentucky Republic Senator John Sherman Cooper Church authored a bill that cut off funding of all military activity in Southeast Asia. That measure narrowly failed in its original form. However, on December 29, 1970, as a shirttail amendment to the defense authorization bill, a watered-down version of the measure finally passed. That version of the amendment only barred the introduction of America ground forces in Laos and Thailand. Senator Church and other members of Congress (influenced by George H W Bush) so angered by President Nixon openly lying about United States military involvement in Cambodia (War Power Act) that they immediately took action to begin cutting funding for the war.
As American air and ground forces swept through Cambodia during April of 1970, President Nixon, when confronted with press reports of the United States-led aerial bombing and ground combat operations there, addressed the issue in a nationally televised speech. President Nixon directly stated that the United States had no advisors on the ground in Cambodia, had no American military forces involved in any actions in Cambodia, and no American military air assets supporting any action in Cambodia. President Nixon’s blatant lie set off a congressional firestorm and did more to cripple assistance in South Vietnam and Cambodia.
Throughout most of years of United States involvement in South Vietnam, although Cambodia proclaimed a nonbelligerent, neutral status, it actually supported the Viet Cong and North Vietnam forces by providing them refuge, primary in the Parrot’s Beak region along Mekong River, hardly more than fifty kilometers west of Saigon. In this so called neutral territory, Communist forces successfully-escaped American and South Vietnamese pursuit and rested and recuperated between commitments to combat operations. In this Cambodia haven, they also stashed large caches of weapons and supplies ferried over the notorious Harriman’s Highway, which crossed through Cambodia at several points, exiting into the Mekong region and the Central Highlands. Nixon’s characterization of the incursion’s purposes shifted attention from the far more important goals of disrupting the enemy’s lines of communication and clearing out his base areas, achievement that could set back his timetable for further aggression to the advantage of both ARVN improvement and US withdrawals. But this is against the axis of evil’s craps.
Cambodia incursion is the changing Nature of the War. In reality, the nature of the military conflict in South Vietnam has been under change since Tet-Offensive 1968 [Westmoreland stand for US combat troop moving in a peak 543,400 in term “Search and Destroy. And Abrams stand for withdrawal to the last G.I, in term “Clear and Hold] Although shifts in the level of violence, type of military operations, and size and location of forces involved are characteristic of this change, the allied realization that the war basically a political content has, thus far, been decisive. Not until the early of 1970 was authority granted for on “incursion” of limited duration and depth into Cambodia. Intelligence had indicated, said President Nixon that the enemy was building up large concentration of men and equipment in the border sanctuaries of Laos and Cambodia. This led him to contemplate actions that U.S could undertake to show the enemy that U.S was still serious about US’s commitment in South Vietnam. Of course the unexpected overthrow of Sihanouk also presented a changed and potentially favorable situation.

(continued)

vinhtruong
11-19-2010, 07:43 PM
That’s a flat contradiction of what Secretary Laird said before! In Washington, some fairly novel command arrangements surfaced. A presidential blue ribbon commission later reported that, “As was widely noted by the press at the time…. Defense Secretary Laird had been bypassed the Joint Chiefs staff in advising the White House on preparations to intervene in Cambodia in April and May 1970.” Clearly that had been done on orders from the White House. [WSAG’ chief staff Donald Rumsfeld] there were other problems, including conflicting guidance from Washington that led General Abrams to state some Standard Operation Procedures.
Storm blown a gale: Three weeks into the operation, General Alexander Haig in the White House, part of Kissinger’s National Security Council staff, seems the likely source. Perhaps Haig himself was the principal author, a prospect congruent with his later involvement in and reaction to the operation – sent by the WSAG to look into what was happening in the war zone – arrived in Saigon. Haig’s discussions with General Abrams and others were prickly, his perspective relentlessly political. “I’d hate like hell to think that the President was justifying his action on faulty information, or lagging information,” said Haig, his unsavory face voicing an implied criticism. That apparently related to Nixon’s announcement that the operation targeted COSVN headquarters [violated the axis of evil ROE stratagem] “He maintains, and frankly this is what he was getting from his cabinet and from the briefings we were getting, that it was ambiguous.” Well, yes, agreed the MACV briefer, “it was ambiguous, at the time,” Obviously, there was unhappiness in the White House over some procedural matter, perhaps an assessment of the North Vietnamese outlook on negotiations, even as the operation itself was proceeding admirably.
Those at MACV had their own concerns about ambiguity and they weren’t shy about bringing them up with Haig. “We have two of your messages,” he was told. “One of them says ‘go get ‘em
And the other one says “hurry up and get out,” in the anticipated plot of WSAG. “What is it you people really want?” “Well,” Haig responded, “its ‘go get ‘em’ until the end of the period.”
Another eye of the storm: In April of 1973, the United States Congress sent a fact finding team to Cambodia to examine the situation. James G. Lowenstein and Richard M. Moose headed the team and issued the report from the mission to Missouri Senator Stuart Symington, who chaired the Subcommittee on US Security Agreements and Commitments Abroad. Lowenstein and Moose reported that to offset Communist guerrillas’ increasing successes in gaining control of key territory, the United States had increased its air support of Cambodia republic forces to ensure the survival of the Khmer Republic. The report cited that the fighting would continue indefinitely since the Khmer Rouge and their North Vietnamese, Soviet Union, and Chinese Communist allies were clearly not interested in any cease-fire options. The report further stated that even if the Communist might agree to a cease fire, it would no doubt hinge on the condition that the United States stop all of its support to Cambodia, similar to the stipulation laid out in the Paris Peace Accords. The report concluded that without American support the Cambodian republic could not last very long.
Most significantly, once Cambodia fell, then South Vietnam would face its worst nightmare: NVA forces poised on its western flank with no American air support. The Moose and Lowenstein also report virtually laid out a set of no-win options for Congress. Continued support of Cambodia would potentially mire the United States in another war much like the one in South Vietnam. The alternative literally gave away Southeast Asia to the Communists.
On 29/ June/ 1973, two months after Moose and Lowenstein’s report, Congress placed a ride on the 1974 budget authorization bill that required a halt to all combat air operations in Southeast Asia as Permanent Government’s anticipated plot. New Jersey Republican Senator Clifford P. Case and Idaho Democrat Senator Frank F. Church authorized this amendment, which bore their names. To seal out all American involvement in any combat in Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam, Congress passed yet another amendment. This measure, a shirttail rider attached to the December 1973 foreign aid bill, forbade any funding of any military operations anywhere in Southeast Asia.
“No matter what happens in Cambodia or South Vietnam,” the U.S have several mandates passed by both houses of Congress and signed into law by the President that say Americans can only watch while Southeast Asia goes down the tubes. Americans can land no ground forces, can send no air support, Americans can provide no military advisors nor any military aid.
At the end of axiom-1’s for Vietnam War, the ARVN fought the war alone at the most difficult situation due to short supplies in logistics and the US military disengagement; however the ARVN, unfortunately, this classic epic battle seemed to get lost in the political fog of phony Paris agreement at that time. More than three decades was a long time, yet the images of Vietnam in March and April 1975 are still vivid: precipitated withdrawals of South Vietnamese troops from Quang Tri, Hue, and Danang in the north to Kon-Tum, Pleiku, and Ban Me Thuot in the highlands; thousands of civilians with their meager belongings and in tattered clothing fleeing the incoming Communist troops on National Route-1; desperate parents, holding children in their arms, trying to swim to the ships anchored offshore; total chaos in Saigon (the capital of South Vietnam, now officially called Ho Chi Minh City) and finally on April 30, a long line of people climbing on helicopters on the rooftop of the U.S. embassy to get out of the doomed country. The Vietnam War finally came to an end terminated by Pennsylvania game. After years of bitter fighting, South Vietnam was forcibly taken over by the Communist North. The Vietnam-War was often portrayed as an Imperialist-War which started when U.S. Marines landed in Danang in 1965. In fact, it started in 1961 when the Communists assassinated Colonel Hoang Thuy Nam, the head of the South Vietnamese delegation to the International Joint Control Commission. This group was set up following the signing of the Geneva Accord of 1954 to monitor the cessation of hostilities between the Communist North (Democratic Republic of Vietnam) and the non-Communist South (Republic of Vietnam), and many assassinations of government officials, guerilla ambushes against the army that followed. The Geneva Accord called for a national election in 1956, ostensibly for people to decide on the political future of the country. The South Vietnamese government, however, did not sign this agreement as U.S Permanent Government suggested. In believing that it would never be possible to organize fair elections in Communist-dominated areas, the South Vietnamese refused to fall into this trap, hoping that the country would eventually become strong enough to defend itself against the Communist onslaught. The election, therefore, never took place. Having failed to take the South by the much hoped-for election, the Communists started to make plans to eventually realize their dreams by force, at all costs. Thus began the Vietnam war, which eventually led to an estimated three million deaths on both sides, hundreds of thousands of former members of the Armed Forces and government of South Vietnam, as well as numerous intellectuals, religious leaders, as well as other civilians killed in revenge or imprisoned for years in concentration camps officially called “re-education camps” and thousands of refugees losing their lives in the perilous and pirate-infested South China Sea in their quest for freedom elsewhere. More than thirty years has been just passing on our grey hair since the collapsing of Saigon and South Vietnam, our beloved capital, our country. And it seems to me that the pain and the sorrow of the "Saigon Mayday" in 1975 just happened yesterday. The United States Army and The South Vietnam Army have not lost the Vietnam War, but the policy makers from WIB Bones and the members of the United States' Congress have forced us to lose it. I have fought with my whole young during years; I admired our American comrade in arms, and I still admire SOG recon-team now." "I think that at the end, freedom and democracy will win the final victory..."
So American just let all that the U.S forces fought for, everything that more than fifty-eight thousand Americans died for, all just float down the binjo ditch? Americans doing nothing but merely mention George H.W Bush tucked away in running a damn Chinese fire drill. The fighting- The frustration. The nearly three decades of conflict- Done- The more than ten years of American soldiers losing their limbs, hearts, and lives- Finished- At 10:30 A.M on Wednesday morning, April 30, 1975 – brought down the Vietnam War’s final curtain! “Skull and Bones will not find a safe haven here!”

Spring 1975, at Washington national capital, a few cherry blossoms still lingered on the late-blooming trees that grew along the Potomac near the Jefferson Memorial. President Ford stood by one of the tall windows behind his desk in the Oval Office, looking toward the river of the now leaf covered cherry trees that, although they blossomed beautifully, never bore fruit. A gift from Japan, the Sakura, the nonbearing fruit tree, raised an ironic parallel in the President’s mind. How much like them was Vietnam now? For ten years America had cultivated the small nation, spilled its sons’ and daughters’ blood urging it to bloom. (They will bloomed in the scope of Skull and Bones for couple more decades ahead, be patiently, I guessed) But today, just as the trees that lined the Potomac by the Jefferson Memorial had done in recent weeks, the bloom dropped to the ground. Vietnam would never bear its costly fruit. “Who know…who tell the prophetically!”
President Ford knocked the right door. A voice came from the curved door that disappeared into the Oval Office wall, “Sir”
“Don [Donald] comes on in,” the President said to WSAG Chief of Staff Don Rumsfeld.
“Update on the situation in Saigon,” Rumsfeld said, handing the President the two pages flash message.
“It says that the South Vietnamese are trying to storm the gates at the embassy and at the DAO compound,” President Ford said. “I am afraid that this will only lead to big trouble. Order the Marines and remaining embassy staff to evacuate now. No more South Vietnamese evacuees. I want only Americans on these helicopters now.”
Week ago, though Kissinger had sent an urgent message to Ambassador Martin, “We have just completed an interagency review on the state of play in South Vietnam. You should know that at the WSAG meeting today, there was almost no support for the evacuation of Vietnamese, and for the use of American force to help protect any evacuation. The sentiment of our military, DOD (Department Of Defense) and CIA colleagues was to get out fast and now.
“One other thing Sir,” Bitterly Rumsfeld, a head of WSAG, complaint “Kissinger wants to see you about Ambassador Martin, [a Vietnamese-philanthropist] Apparently, Kissinger has gotten wind of a plan the ambassador is trying to hatch that gets him to the French embassy, where he can continue negotiations with the North Vietnamese.” How come Martin knew the secret negotiation between Le Duc Tho and Kissinger about ‘axiom I’, South Vietnam will be a good token gift to Hanoi for carried-out the ‘Strongman side stratagem’. “The more immediate origins of the Vietnam-War, namely the White House” But later I dare said “illustrate how completely the U.S presidents and their NSC staffs dominated the overall control and conduct of both the war and the closely interrelated negotiations to end the war.” While acknowledging that as a proper role for the President, who was after all the Commander in Chief, I observed that Henry Kissinger “became for all intents and purposes the de facto chairman of the JCS”. But in reality, Kissinger was just the George H W Bush’s tool, having the skill of a ‘Quarterback’ It was the ultimate team effort, but every member of the team had to have the grit of a ‘Linebacker’ as WSAG’ Donald Rumsfeld and the very brains of a coach George H W Bush.
“Tell Henry,” President Ford began to say, “No, I will talk to Henry. Have him come on over.”
“He has that State Department black tie dinner tonight,” Rumsfeld said.
“I think that can wait until we get this done,” President Ford said.
“History will appreciate the reasons for his tardiness, (at least the South Vietnamese) at that dinner.”
“Yes, Sir,” the Chief of Staff said and walked toward the door
“Don,” President Ford said, “When you send my evacuation order to Saigon, be sure that you specially address Ambassador Martin. I want him out of the embassy on the next helicopter. Is that clear?”
The president directs that no more Vietnamese evacuees fly out on U.S helicopters, only Americans, very important, Ford specially directed that Ambassador Martin depart the embassy on the next helicopter out.
Immediately, Jim Kean jogged down the stairs and found Ambassador Martin seated behind his desk. His aide-de-camp, Brunson McKinley, stood by the desk when the Marine stepped inside the ambassador’s suite.
“Sir, I just received orders from President Ford, via General Carey, that all further evacuations of South Vietnamese cease and that’s all the remaining American now evacuate,” Kean said.
Still Ambassador Martin didn’t know the War-Game of the Axis of Evil is over now.
“I’m awaiting a response from the French ambassador,” Martin said in a tired voice.
“We still might have a chance if I can get over there and go to work.”
“Sir,” Kean said. “President Ford specially ordered you out on the next helicopter.”
The gray man, whose face now looked drawn and haggard, stood and looked around his office.
“Well, I guess that’s it then,” Martin said in a calm and low voice. Major Kean had already taken down the United States flag and had carried it in his hand, folded in a triangle, when he came to Ambassador Martin’s office. As the beaten diplomat stepped out of his spacious grand suite for the last time, Kean handed him the embassy’s national colors.
As Graham Martin waited for his helicopter to set down on the roof and his signal to board, Brunson McKinly, jogged down to the courtyard to get an outdate of the situation down there for the ambassador before he departed.
“Tiger, tiger, tiger,” Pilot called on his radio to the command vessel, USS Blue Ridge. “Tiger, tiger, tiger”
“Go ahead, Tiger,” responded the voice on Pilot’s radio.
“Tiger’s out of his cage,” Pilot said, signaling that he had the ambassador aboard.
President Ford confessed. “It looks like we just quit and ran. Yet I did all that I could for them. However, it still remains very difficult for me to sit here as President of the United States and watch South Vietnam collapse.”

At 10:24 A.M President Duong Van Minh issued a statement, broadcast to the North Vietnamese, offering the surrender of the Republic of Vietnam. The announcement seemed to represent the latch on the gate because in a matter of minute parades of victorious Viet Cong and North Vietnamese soldiers, walking, riding in trucks, and sitting on tanks T-55, T-57 and armored personnel carriers came streaming into Saigon from every direction.
Seeing President Minh’s motorcade driving to the presidential Palace, a Australian motion picture news photographer, Al Dawson set up his camera on the front steps of Big Minh’ headquarters [presidential Palace] He had his camera rolling when the Soviet-build T-55 tank, with soldiers waving the PRG flag, crashed down the palace gates and rumbled up the wide walkway to the great building’s front steps. The Australian photojournalist stood, waved at the Communists, and kept his camera rolling.
Meanwhile, not far from here, an observer from the roof of the United States Embassy – four stories and a helicopter platform above Saigon – He could see for several kilometers. This gloomy moment, his world looked a mess with wrecked cars, trashed streets, and broken windows. Just beyond the courtyard fence, the embassy’s once-beautiful Olympic swimming pool now floated with suitcases, clothing, guns, and chairs. During the night, with no facilities, the Vietnamese waiting to escape had even used the pool as o toilet.
The Permanent Government would like Nguyen Cao Ky joining in the postwar on strategy track of Post-Vietnam “Road-Map”; Ky was a former Prime minister and Vice President, Republic of Vietnam. He held the rank of air vice marshal, commander of the South Vietnamese Air Force, and had flamboyantly played to be named president of South Vietnam when President Nguyen Van Thieu resigned. At one time, the CIA feared that Premier Ky was leading a coup to take over what remained of the South Vietnamese government when Tran Van Huong was named president on April 21, 1975, in accord with the South Vietnamese constitution, to succeed President Thieu. When former President Thieu departed South Vietnam, Ky labeled him a coward and said that anyone who would flee in the face of the enemy was also a coward. He want the people in Saigon must undergone a terrible pounding shelling by Hanoi artillery and after sixty days, like defense at Leningrad and the United Nation should be intervened; but it not like the WSAG strategy. Ky remained in Saigon until late afternoon, He may have a secret instruction to flee out of Saigon at once. Therefore on 29, when he flew his personal helicopter to the deck of the USS Blue Ridge. His observations and actions provided valuable insight into the political death those of South Vietnam during the final days. He will be the necessary tool for Skull and Bones Dynasty in the post Vietnam

QUEENBEE-1