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Army of the Republic of Vietnam Special Forces

The Army of the Republic of Vietnam Special Forces (Vietnamese: Lực Lượng Đặc Biệt Quân Lực Việt Nam Cộng Hòa; Chữ Hán: 力量特別軍陸越南共和, or LLDB) were the elite military units of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN). Following the establishment of the Republic of Vietnam (commonly known as South Vietnam) in October 1955, the Special Forces were formed at Nha Trang in February 1956. During the rule of Ngô Đình Diệm, the Special Forces were run by his brother, Ngô Đình Nhu, until both were assassinated in November 1963 in a coup. The Special Forces were disbanded in 1975 when South Vietnam ceased to exist after the Fall of Saigon.[citation needed]

ARVN Special Forces
ActiveFebruary 1956 – 30 April 1975
Country South Vietnam
Branch Army of the Republic of Vietnam
TypeSpecial forces
RoleAir assault
Airborne forces
Close-quarters combat
Counter-insurgency
Direct Action
HUMINT
Jungle warfare
Military intelligence
Mountain warfare
Raiding
Reconnaissance
Search and destroy
Special operations
Special reconnaissance
Unconventional Warfare
Size2,873 personnel (1965)[1]
  • 333 officers
  • 1270 NCOs
  • 1270 enlisted
Garrison/HQNha Trang
Nickname(s)LLDB
EngagementsVietnam War
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Lê Quang Tung
Ngô Đình Nhu

Early years edit

The Special Forces came into being at Nha Trang in February 1956 under the designation of the First Observation Battalion/Group (FOG). By 1960, most Special Forces units were involved in the FOG program. At Long Thành, they were trained in intelligence gathering, sabotage and psychological operations (PSYOP). The main duties of the Special Forces entailed the recruitment and training of one-to-four man teams in intelligence, sabotage, and psychological warfare missions in North Vietnam. The success of these missions was poor.

Although minor sabotage and unrest was fomented, Hanoi declared that all agents were to be killed or captured. Those who were captured were interrogated and executed. In 1961, the Special Forces and the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) 1st Infantry Division, based in the northernmost area of South Vietnam, conducted a joint operation against Communist infiltrators in northern Quảng Trị Province. In the autumn of 1961, Special Forces units began Operation Eagle at Bình Hưng with a night parachute assault. In September 1962, United States Special Forces personnel assumed responsibility of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)'s border surveillance and Civilian Irregular Defense Group (CIDG) programs and began working with the ARVN Special Forces. The Special Forces continued to expand and began to increasingly operate with the CIDG.[citation needed]

Diệm era edit

 
ARVN and US Special Forces

During the rule of President Ngô Đình Diệm, the Special Forces were used mainly for repressing dissidents. Despite the fact that South Vietnam was struggling against the communist insurgency of the Viet Cong in the rural areas, the Special Forces were mostly kept in the capital Saigon, where they were used to prevent coups or harass regime opponents. Under Diệm, the Special Forces were headed by Colonel Lê Quang Tung, who had been trained by the CIA in the United States and commanded some 1,840 men under the direction of Nhu. Tung's most notable military activity was leading a group run by the CIA, in which ARVN personnel of northern origin were sent into North Vietnam, posing as locals, in order to gather intelligence as well as sabotaging communist infrastructure and communications. They were trained in bases at Nha Trang, Đà Nẵng and sometimes offshore in Taiwan, Guam and Okinawa. Of the eighty groups of operatives, numbering six or seven per group, that were deployed in 1963 via parachute drops or night time sampan journeys, nearly all were captured or killed. Those who were captured were often used for propaganda by the North Vietnamese. Tung was heavily criticised for his management of the operations.[citation needed]

Buddhist crisis edit

In 1963, South Vietnam faced civil unrest in the face of Buddhist protests against discrimination by the Catholic-oriented Diệm regime. In the wake of the shootings of nine Buddhist protesters on the birthday of Gautama Buddha for defying a ban on the Buddhist flag, mass protests calling for religious equality erupted around the country. With opposition to Diệm growing, Nhu plotted an attack against Xá Lợi Pagoda, the largest Buddhist centre in Saigon, where the movement was organizing its activities. Tung's Special Forces under Nhu's orders were responsible for the raid on 21 August 1963, in which 1,400 monks were arrested and hundreds were estimated to have been killed, as well as extensive property damage. These attacks were replicated across the country in a synchronised manner. Following the attacks, U.S. officials threatened to withhold aid to the Special Forces unless they were used in fighting communists, rather than attacking dissidents.[citation needed]

Another infamous religious assault on the Buddhist community was carried out by Tung's men in 1963. In a small pond near Đà Nẵng, a hugely oversized carp was found swimming. Local Buddhists began to believe the fish was a reincarnation of one of Gautama Buddha's disciples. As pilgrimages to the pond grew larger and more frequent, so did disquiet among the district chief and his officials, who answered to Ngô Đình Cẩn, another younger brother of Diệm. The pond was mined, but the fish swam on unhindered. After raking the pond with machine gun fire, the fish still lived. To deal with the problem, Tung's forces were called in. The pond was grenaded, killing the carp. The incident generated more publicity as newspapers across the world ran stories about the miraculous fish. ARVN helicopters began landing at the site, with ARVN paratroopers filling their bottles with water which they believed had magical powers. Tung was reported to have been planning an operation at the request of Nhu to stage a government organised student demonstration outside the US Embassy, Saigon. In this plan, Tung and his operatives would assassinate U.S. ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., other key officials and Buddhist leader Thích Trí Quang, who was given asylum after being targeted in the pagoda raids. On 1 November 1963, a coup was launched by the ARVN against Diệm. Knowing Tung was a loyalist who would order his Special Forces to defend Diệm, the generals invited him to Joint General Staff (JGS) headquarters on the pretext of a routine meeting. He was arrested and later executed along with his deputy and younger brother, Lê Quang Triệu. Diệm and Nhu were also executed after being captured at the end of the successful coup and the ARVN's leadership consequently changed.[citation needed]

In 1964, the U.S. Army's 5th Special Forces Group was officially assigned to Vietnam. The LLDB worked closely with the U.S. command and although the Americans funded the CIDG camps, the LLDB assumed ultimate responsibility. These camps were commanded by the ARVN Special Forces, supplemented by U.S. Special Forces advisors. From 24 June to 1 July 1964 under Project DELTA, LLDB teams performed five parachute drops into Laos to gather intelligence. By 1965, LLDB personnel were working with the ARVN in recruiting and training as well as sending groups into communist areas in South Vietnam to gather information.[citation needed] US Special Forces referred to the LLDB as "LL" or "LIMA-LIMA" using the phonetic alphabet. Over the radio they were called "XRAY" so it would not reveal the unit as CIDG.

1970s edit

In March 1970, aware of the impending withdrawal of U.S. Special Forces from Vietnam as part of a general withdrawal, the U.S. Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (MACV) agreed to convert CIDG camps into ARVN Border Ranger camps. The most highly regarded of the CIDG units, the Mobile Strike Force followed the conversion and integration into the ARVN as well. The LLDB were eventually disbanded. The former indigenous reconnaissance team personnel previously assigned to work with MACV-SOG (the US military reconnaissance office for MACV) were regrouped into the Intelligence Directorate of the Joint General Staff (JGS). This directorate was usually known by the nickname "the 7th Technical Directorate" and was divided into three sections:

  • the Coastal Defense Office to deal and manage with all maritime-related reconnaissance activities.
  • the Liaison Office to manage the reconnaissance and military intelligence in the northern part of South Vietnam and the adjoining tri-border area (Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia).
  • the Topography Office to manage the field reconnaissance activities within South Vietnam.

The ARVN also fielded an airborne-qualified special strike unit, 81st Airborne Ranger group (Vietnamese: Liên đoàn 81 Biệt cách dù), under the direct command of the JGS. It can be counted as part of the Special Forces and was under the Special Forces command, later being placed under the JGS command. The unit was bloodied during the 1968 Tet Offensive and the 1972 Easter Offensive when it was launched into battle to relieve the garrison of An Lộc northwest of Saigon from a People's Army of Vietnam siege. Some former LLDB personnel were formed into a new clandestine unit, the Vietnamese Special Mission Service (SMS), while others went to serve in the Republic of Vietnam National Police Field Force (Vietnamese: Cãnh Sát Dã Chiên – CSDC).[2] Approximately 5,000 personnel served in the Special Forces during the Vietnam War. After the Fall of Saigon, those who did not manage to escape were sent to reeducation camps.[citation needed]

Effectiveness edit

The LLDB's largest operation occurred with the CIDGs, an immense network of ethnic minorities and Montagnards funded and trained with CIA-U.S. Special Forces resources. Historically, the South Vietnamese considered such minorities inferior, especially the semi-primitive mountain tribes, and this diminished effective cooperation and a mutual sense of purpose between the LLDB and its Central Highland militia. Command and control was frequently strained, a factor that contributed to an unsuccessful rebellion in September 1964, by tribal groups loyal to the United Front for the Liberation of Oppressed Races (FULRO).[3][4][5][6]

The degree to which the tribal minorities influenced the war cannot be underestimated. They provided intelligence, acted as scouts, and in many cases became effective guerrilla soldiers. Thus, the South Vietnamese, despite their racist attitudes, needed the assistance they received from the Montagnards, and U.S. Special Forces and Australian Special Air Service (SAS) advisers acted as intermediaries when clashes occurred between the LLDB and the montagnards. Ultimately, however, the advisers could not exercise complete jurisdiction because the South Vietnamese were technically, though not realistically, in charge of these programs. During the period of Vietnamization (1969–1972), the number of U.S. advisers was reduced, then eliminated, which forced the LLDB to assume complete control over tens of thousands of ethnic troops, which the ethnic troops resented.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "South Vietnam - Special Forces - Luc Luong Dac Biet (LLDB)".
  2. ^ Tarrius, La Police de Campagne du Sud-Vietnam 1967–1975 (2005), p. 39.
  3. ^ Kelly, Francis J. U.S. Army Special Forces, 1961–1971. 1973.
  4. ^ Reske, Charles F. MACV-SOG Command History, Annex B. Vols. 1 and 2. 1990.
  5. ^ Simpson, Charles M., III. Inside the Green Berets. 1983.
  6. ^ Stanton, Shelby. Green Berets at War. 1985.
  • Gordon L. Rottman and Ron Volstad, Vietnam Airborne, Elite series 29, Osprey Publishing Ltd, London 1990. ISBN 0-85045-941-9.
  • Gordon L. Rottman and Ramiro Bujeiro, Army of the Republic of Vietnam 1955–75, Men-at-arms series 458, Osprey Publishing Ltd, Oxford 2010. ISBN 978-1-84908-182-5
  • Kenneth Conboy and Simon McCouaig, South-East Asian Special Forces, Elite series 33, Osprey Publishing Ltd, London 1991. ISBN 978-1855321069
  • Lee E. Russell and Mike Chappell, Armies of the Vietnam War 2, Men-at-arms series 143, Osprey Publishing Ltd, London 1983. ISBN 0-85045-514-6.
  • Phillip Katcher and Mike Chappell, Armies of the Vietnam War 1962–1975, Men-at-arms series 104, Osprey Publishing Ltd, London 1980. ISBN 978-0-85045-360-7
  • Spencer Tucker, Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War, ABC-CLIO 2000. ISBN 1-57607-040-9
  • Valéry Tarrius, La Police de Campagne du Sud-Vietnam 1967–1975, in Armes Militaria Magazine, March 2005 issue, Histoire & Collections, Paris, pp. 37–43. ISSN 0753-1877 (in French)

army, republic, vietnam, special, forces, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, s. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Army of the Republic of Vietnam Special Forces news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Army of the Republic of Vietnam Special Forces Vietnamese Lực Lượng Đặc Biệt Quan Lực Việt Nam Cộng Hoa Chữ Han 力量特別軍陸越南共和 or LLDB were the elite military units of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam ARVN Following the establishment of the Republic of Vietnam commonly known as South Vietnam in October 1955 the Special Forces were formed at Nha Trang in February 1956 During the rule of Ngo Đinh Diệm the Special Forces were run by his brother Ngo Đinh Nhu until both were assassinated in November 1963 in a coup The Special Forces were disbanded in 1975 when South Vietnam ceased to exist after the Fall of Saigon citation needed ARVN Special ForcesActiveFebruary 1956 30 April 1975CountrySouth VietnamBranch Army of the Republic of VietnamTypeSpecial forcesRoleAir assaultAirborne forcesClose quarters combatCounter insurgencyDirect ActionHUMINTJungle warfareMilitary intelligenceMountain warfareRaidingReconnaissanceSearch and destroySpecial operationsSpecial reconnaissanceUnconventional WarfareSize2 873 personnel 1965 1 333 officers 1270 NCOs 1270 enlistedGarrison HQNha TrangNickname s LLDBEngagementsVietnam WarCommandersNotablecommandersLe Quang TungNgo Đinh Nhu Contents 1 Early years 2 Diệm era 2 1 Buddhist crisis 3 1970s 4 Effectiveness 5 See also 6 ReferencesEarly years editThe Special Forces came into being at Nha Trang in February 1956 under the designation of the First Observation Battalion Group FOG By 1960 most Special Forces units were involved in the FOG program At Long Thanh they were trained in intelligence gathering sabotage and psychological operations PSYOP The main duties of the Special Forces entailed the recruitment and training of one to four man teams in intelligence sabotage and psychological warfare missions in North Vietnam The success of these missions was poor Although minor sabotage and unrest was fomented Hanoi declared that all agents were to be killed or captured Those who were captured were interrogated and executed In 1961 the Special Forces and the Army of the Republic of Vietnam ARVN 1st Infantry Division based in the northernmost area of South Vietnam conducted a joint operation against Communist infiltrators in northern Quảng Trị Province In the autumn of 1961 Special Forces units began Operation Eagle at Binh Hưng with a night parachute assault In September 1962 United States Special Forces personnel assumed responsibility of the Central Intelligence Agency CIA s border surveillance and Civilian Irregular Defense Group CIDG programs and began working with the ARVN Special Forces The Special Forces continued to expand and began to increasingly operate with the CIDG citation needed Diệm era editMain article Le Quang Tung nbsp ARVN and US Special ForcesDuring the rule of President Ngo Đinh Diệm the Special Forces were used mainly for repressing dissidents Despite the fact that South Vietnam was struggling against the communist insurgency of the Viet Cong in the rural areas the Special Forces were mostly kept in the capital Saigon where they were used to prevent coups or harass regime opponents Under Diệm the Special Forces were headed by Colonel Le Quang Tung who had been trained by the CIA in the United States and commanded some 1 840 men under the direction of Nhu Tung s most notable military activity was leading a group run by the CIA in which ARVN personnel of northern origin were sent into North Vietnam posing as locals in order to gather intelligence as well as sabotaging communist infrastructure and communications They were trained in bases at Nha Trang Đa Nẵng and sometimes offshore in Taiwan Guam and Okinawa Of the eighty groups of operatives numbering six or seven per group that were deployed in 1963 via parachute drops or night time sampan journeys nearly all were captured or killed Those who were captured were often used for propaganda by the North Vietnamese Tung was heavily criticised for his management of the operations citation needed Buddhist crisis edit Main article Xa Lợi Pagoda raids See also Buddhist crisis and Arrest and assassination of Ngo Đinh Diệm In 1963 South Vietnam faced civil unrest in the face of Buddhist protests against discrimination by the Catholic oriented Diệm regime In the wake of the shootings of nine Buddhist protesters on the birthday of Gautama Buddha for defying a ban on the Buddhist flag mass protests calling for religious equality erupted around the country With opposition to Diệm growing Nhu plotted an attack against Xa Lợi Pagoda the largest Buddhist centre in Saigon where the movement was organizing its activities Tung s Special Forces under Nhu s orders were responsible for the raid on 21 August 1963 in which 1 400 monks were arrested and hundreds were estimated to have been killed as well as extensive property damage These attacks were replicated across the country in a synchronised manner Following the attacks U S officials threatened to withhold aid to the Special Forces unless they were used in fighting communists rather than attacking dissidents citation needed Another infamous religious assault on the Buddhist community was carried out by Tung s men in 1963 In a small pond near Đa Nẵng a hugely oversized carp was found swimming Local Buddhists began to believe the fish was a reincarnation of one of Gautama Buddha s disciples As pilgrimages to the pond grew larger and more frequent so did disquiet among the district chief and his officials who answered to Ngo Đinh Cẩn another younger brother of Diệm The pond was mined but the fish swam on unhindered After raking the pond with machine gun fire the fish still lived To deal with the problem Tung s forces were called in The pond was grenaded killing the carp The incident generated more publicity as newspapers across the world ran stories about the miraculous fish ARVN helicopters began landing at the site with ARVN paratroopers filling their bottles with water which they believed had magical powers Tung was reported to have been planning an operation at the request of Nhu to stage a government organised student demonstration outside the US Embassy Saigon In this plan Tung and his operatives would assassinate U S ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge Jr other key officials and Buddhist leader Thich Tri Quang who was given asylum after being targeted in the pagoda raids On 1 November 1963 a coup was launched by the ARVN against Diệm Knowing Tung was a loyalist who would order his Special Forces to defend Diệm the generals invited him to Joint General Staff JGS headquarters on the pretext of a routine meeting He was arrested and later executed along with his deputy and younger brother Le Quang Triệu Diệm and Nhu were also executed after being captured at the end of the successful coup and the ARVN s leadership consequently changed citation needed In 1964 the U S Army s 5th Special Forces Group was officially assigned to Vietnam The LLDB worked closely with the U S command and although the Americans funded the CIDG camps the LLDB assumed ultimate responsibility These camps were commanded by the ARVN Special Forces supplemented by U S Special Forces advisors From 24 June to 1 July 1964 under Project DELTA LLDB teams performed five parachute drops into Laos to gather intelligence By 1965 LLDB personnel were working with the ARVN in recruiting and training as well as sending groups into communist areas in South Vietnam to gather information citation needed US Special Forces referred to the LLDB as LL or LIMA LIMA using the phonetic alphabet Over the radio they were called XRAY so it would not reveal the unit as CIDG 1970s editIn March 1970 aware of the impending withdrawal of U S Special Forces from Vietnam as part of a general withdrawal the U S Military Assistance Command Vietnam MACV agreed to convert CIDG camps into ARVN Border Ranger camps The most highly regarded of the CIDG units the Mobile Strike Force followed the conversion and integration into the ARVN as well The LLDB were eventually disbanded The former indigenous reconnaissance team personnel previously assigned to work with MACV SOG the US military reconnaissance office for MACV were regrouped into the Intelligence Directorate of the Joint General Staff JGS This directorate was usually known by the nickname the 7th Technical Directorate and was divided into three sections the Coastal Defense Office to deal and manage with all maritime related reconnaissance activities the Liaison Office to manage the reconnaissance and military intelligence in the northern part of South Vietnam and the adjoining tri border area Vietnam Laos and Cambodia the Topography Office to manage the field reconnaissance activities within South Vietnam The ARVN also fielded an airborne qualified special strike unit 81st Airborne Ranger group Vietnamese Lien đoan 81 Biệt cach du under the direct command of the JGS It can be counted as part of the Special Forces and was under the Special Forces command later being placed under the JGS command The unit was bloodied during the 1968 Tet Offensive and the 1972 Easter Offensive when it was launched into battle to relieve the garrison of An Lộc northwest of Saigon from a People s Army of Vietnam siege Some former LLDB personnel were formed into a new clandestine unit the Vietnamese Special Mission Service SMS while others went to serve in the Republic of Vietnam National Police Field Force Vietnamese Canh Sat Da Chien CSDC 2 Approximately 5 000 personnel served in the Special Forces during the Vietnam War After the Fall of Saigon those who did not manage to escape were sent to reeducation camps citation needed Effectiveness editThe LLDB s largest operation occurred with the CIDGs an immense network of ethnic minorities and Montagnards funded and trained with CIA U S Special Forces resources Historically the South Vietnamese considered such minorities inferior especially the semi primitive mountain tribes and this diminished effective cooperation and a mutual sense of purpose between the LLDB and its Central Highland militia Command and control was frequently strained a factor that contributed to an unsuccessful rebellion in September 1964 by tribal groups loyal to the United Front for the Liberation of Oppressed Races FULRO 3 4 5 6 The degree to which the tribal minorities influenced the war cannot be underestimated They provided intelligence acted as scouts and in many cases became effective guerrilla soldiers Thus the South Vietnamese despite their racist attitudes needed the assistance they received from the Montagnards and U S Special Forces and Australian Special Air Service SAS advisers acted as intermediaries when clashes occurred between the LLDB and the montagnards Ultimately however the advisers could not exercise complete jurisdiction because the South Vietnamese were technically though not realistically in charge of these programs During the period of Vietnamization 1969 1972 the number of U S advisers was reduced then eliminated which forced the LLDB to assume complete control over tens of thousands of ethnic troops which the ethnic troops resented See also editList of defunct special forces units Civilian Irregular Defense Group program Vietnamese Rangers United States Army Special Forces SPECOM Republic of Vietnam National Police Field Force Khmer Special ForcesReferences edit South Vietnam Special Forces Luc Luong Dac Biet LLDB Tarrius La Police de Campagne du Sud Vietnam 1967 1975 2005 p 39 Kelly Francis J U S Army Special Forces 1961 1971 1973 Reske Charles F MACV SOG Command History Annex B Vols 1 and 2 1990 Simpson Charles M III Inside the Green Berets 1983 Stanton Shelby Green Berets at War 1985 Gordon L Rottman and Ron Volstad Vietnam Airborne Elite series 29 Osprey Publishing Ltd London 1990 ISBN 0 85045 941 9 Gordon L Rottman and Ramiro Bujeiro Army of the Republic of Vietnam 1955 75 Men at arms series 458 Osprey Publishing Ltd Oxford 2010 ISBN 978 1 84908 182 5 Kenneth Conboy and Simon McCouaig South East Asian Special Forces Elite series 33 Osprey Publishing Ltd London 1991 ISBN 978 1855321069 Lee E Russell and Mike Chappell Armies of the Vietnam War 2 Men at arms series 143 Osprey Publishing Ltd London 1983 ISBN 0 85045 514 6 Phillip Katcher and Mike Chappell Armies of the Vietnam War 1962 1975 Men at arms series 104 Osprey Publishing Ltd London 1980 ISBN 978 0 85045 360 7 Spencer Tucker Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War ABC CLIO 2000 ISBN 1 57607 040 9 Valery Tarrius La Police de Campagne du Sud Vietnam 1967 1975 in Armes Militaria Magazine March 2005 issue Histoire amp Collections Paris pp 37 43 ISSN 0753 1877 in French Retrieved from https en 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