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Australian Army Training Team Vietnam

The Australian Army Training Team Vietnam (AATTV) was a specialist unit of military advisors of the Australian Army that operated during the Vietnam War. Raised in 1962, the unit was formed solely for service as part of Australia's contribution to the war, providing training and assistance to South Vietnamese forces. Initially numbering only approximately 30 men, the size of the unit grew several times over the following years as the Australian commitment to South Vietnam gradually grew, with the unit's strength peaking at 227 in November 1970. Members of the team worked individually or in small groups, operating throughout the country from the far south to the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) in the north. Later they were concentrated in Phước Tuy Province as Australian forces prepared to withdraw from Vietnam. It is believed to be the most decorated Australian unit to serve in Vietnam; its members received over 100 decorations, including four Victoria Crosses, during its existence. The unit was withdrawn from South Vietnam on 18 December 1972 and was disbanded in Australia on 16 February 1973. A total of 1,009 men served with the unit over a period of ten years, consisting of 998 Australians and 11 New Zealanders.

Australian Army Training Team Vietnam
AATTV advisers instruct South Vietnamese Regional Forces on the M16 rifle in Ben Tranh District, June 1970
Active31 July 1962 – 16 February 1973
CountryAustralia
BranchAustralian Army
TypeMilitary advisors
RoleCounter-insurgency
Military education and training
Size~30–227 men
Part ofAustralian Force Vietnam
Garrison/HQSaigon, South Vietnam
Nickname(s)"The Team"
"The Expendables"
Motto(s)"Persevere"[1]
EngagementsBattle of Duc Lap
Battle of Kham Duc
DecorationsMeritorious Unit Commendation (United States)
Vietnam Gallantry Cross Unit Citation (South Vietnam)
Commanders
Notable
commanders
F.P. Serong

History edit

Formation edit

The Australian Army Training Team Vietnam (AATTV) was raised in 1962 and initially consisted of approximately 30 officers and warrant officers and was tasked to train and advise units of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) as part of the existing US advisory effort controlled by Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG), and later United States Military Assistance Command Vietnam (MACV).[2][3] Most of the advisors were career officers and senior NCOs, with the majority from the infantry, SAS or Commandos, although there were a number of signalers, engineers and other specialist corps represented. They were hand picked for the task and were considered experts in counter-revolutionary warfare and jungle operations, with many having served in the Malayan Emergency.[4] Due to the nature of service as a combat advisor personnel serving with the AATTV were all mature and experienced soldiers, with an average age of 35.[4]

The Australian government's decision to raise the force was announced on 24 May 1962 and shortly afterwards personnel began concentrating at the Intelligence Centre at Mosman, New South Wales. After initial induction training, the team moved to the Jungle Training Centre at Kokoda Barracks, in Canungra, Queensland, for field training. Initially, the unit was designated the "Australian Army Component – Vietnam" on 1 July 1962, and then the "Australian Army Training Component", but on 12 July 1962, the unit was redesignated the "Australian Army Training Team Vietnam".[5][6] This was soon abbreviated to "The Team".[7] At the conclusion of pre-deployment training, the 30 advisors departed Australia from Mascot, New South Wales, aboard a Qantas charter flight on 29 July 1962.[5] The unit's first commanding officer, Colonel Ted Serong, arrived in Saigon on 31 July – the date that is mistakenly considered the unit's "birthday"[8] – and the main body arrived three days later.[2][Note 1] Serong would later be seconded, and in one capacity or another would remain in Vietnam until the Fall of Saigon in April 1975, serving as a senior advisor to both the US and South Vietnamese governments.[10]

Operations edit

On arrival, the unit joined a large group of US advisors and were dispersed across South Vietnam in small groups. Three groups were dispatched to South Vietnam's northern provinces, training members of the ARVN at the National Training Centre at Dong Da near Phu Bai Combat Base[11] and South Vietnamese Regional Forces (RF) at Hiep Khanh northwest of Huế,[12] while a fourth was based at the Ranger Training Centre at Dục Mỹ Camp near Nha Trang in the south;[13][14] a headquarters was established in Saigon.[15] The groups began training the Vietnamese in barracks, providing instruction in "jungle warfare techniques and technical areas such as signals and engineering".[16] The jungle-warfare methods practiced by the AATTV emphasised patrolling and contact drills which taught soldiers to react automatically in battle with the aim of providing them with an advantage over an enemy which was reliant on command.[17] Initially, the team was prevented from actively taking part in combat operations,[16] and while this restriction was later lifted, until this occurred, the advisors deployed on operations as observers only.[13]

Over time the role and of the AATTV changed, and in addition to training, individuals would often command units, advise South Vietnamese personnel and officials, serve as staff on headquarters and determine policy.[18] On 1 June 1963, Sergeant William Francis Hacking became the AATTV's first casualty when he was accidentally killed while on duty.[19][20][21] In late 1963 members of the team were redeployed into combat advisory roles, with two officers and eight NCOs working with Special Forces teams involved in counter-insurgency operations by February 1964.[22] In mid-1964, the restriction on the AATTV advisors taking part in combat operations was lifted.[15] The first advisor officially killed in action was Warrant Officer Class Two Kevin Conway at the Battle of Nam Dong on 6 July 1964.[23] With the war escalating the AATTV increased, first to 60 in June and then to approximately 100 personnel – 15 officers and 85 warrant officers[24][25] – by December. Soon its area of operations stretched from the far south to the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) forming the border between North Vietnam and South Vietnam in the north.[26]

 
A member of the AATTV speaking with South Vietnamese soldiers undergoing field training in Phuoc Tuy Province during 1968

After June 1964, members of the team were involved in many combat operations, often leading formations of Vietnamese soldiers. Some advisors worked with regular ARVN units and formations – at first mainly infantry, but after 1967 artillery and cavalry units as well[27] – while others, such as Captain Barry Petersen,[13] worked with the Montagnard hill tribes in conjunction with US Special Forces (USSF).[28] A few were attached to Provincial Reconnaissance Units with whom they became involved in the controversial Phoenix Program run by the US Central Intelligence Agency,[29] which was designed to target the Vietcong infrastructure through infiltration, arrest and assassination.[26] Others were attached to the all-Vietnamese RF and Popular Forces and the National Field Police Force, or served with the USSF Mobile Strike Force.[28] Members of the AATTV served tours of duty of between 12 and 18 months in Vietnam.[2]

In mid-1965, Australia's involvement in the war increased as the government committed a full infantry battalion, the 1st Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment. By mid 1966 Australia's contributions had expanded, resulting the formation of the 1st Australian Task Force (1 ATF), operating in its own area of operations in Phước Tuy Province, which was in the III Corps Tactical Zone (III CTZ).[30] But despite the concentration of Australian forces, the AATTV members remained dispersed, often serving with only one other advisor, either Australian or American.[28] Unlike 1 ATF, the majority of team members were deployed in I CTZ and the Central Highlands, where the fighting was often of a higher tempo and more protracted.[31] Thus, due to its small size and widespread area of operations, it was rare for the entire AATTV to be in the same place at the same time; this usually occurred only on ANZAC Day – the only other occasion the whole unit paraded together was when it received the Meritorious Unit Commendation from COMUSMACV on 30 September 1970.[2]

From October 1970 a small group of New Zealanders, consisting of one officer and four SNCOs, were attached to the AATTV.[32] That year, as the Australians, New Zealanders, and Americans prepared to withdraw, a process of Vietnamization began, and the AATTV established a jungle training centre in Phuoc Tuy Province.[4] Some members of the AATTV also served in Mobile Advisory and Training Teams (MATTs) operating within Phuoc Tuy Province at this time.[33] In November 1970, the unit's strength peaked at 227, at which time the team was expanded with an intake of corporals.[24][34][14] In 1971, the 1 ATF combat units were withdrawn and the AATTV reverted to their original role of training only.[4] As the final 1 ATF units left the country in early 1972 the AATTV, having been reduced to around 70 personnel,[35] remained in Phuoc Tuy to provide training and advisory assistance to the ARVN and to training Cambodian soldiers of the Force Armée Nationale Khmère (FANK). The last Australians left Vietnam in mid-December 1972 – the AATTV left on 18 December[2] – following the election of the Whitlam Labor government.[26] The AATTV had the longest tour of duty of any Australian unit in Vietnam, serving a total of ten years, four months and sixteen days. The unit also had the distinction of being the first Australian unit committed to Vietnam and the last to be withdrawn.[36]

Disbandment edit

The unit was disbanded in Australia on 16 February 1973.[37] The AATTV was Australia's most decorated unit of the war, including all four Victoria Crosses awarded during the conflict (awarded to Warrant Officer Class Two Kevin Wheatley, Major Peter Badcoe, Warrant Officer Class Two Rayene Simpson and Warrant Officer Class Two Keith Payne respectively). The unit also received the United States Army Meritorious Unit Commendation and the Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry with Palm Unit Citation.[2][38] Individuals who served with the 5th Special Forces Group between 1 November 1966 and 31 January 1968 are also entitled to wear the United States Army Presidential Unit Citation. The Valorous Unit Award was also awarded to B-20, 1st Mobile Strike Force Battalion for service between 3–11 April 1970 and a few members of the AATTV are also entitled to this award.[39]

Members of the AATTV received many decorations for their service and the unit "gained the distinction of being probably the mostly highly decorated unit for its size in the Australian Army".[34] According to the Australian War Memorial, AATTV personnel received the following decorations: four Victoria Crosses, two Distinguished Service Orders, three Officers of the Order of the British Empire, six Members of the Order of the British Empire, six Military Crosses, 20 Distinguished Conduct Medals, 15 Military Medals, four British Empire Medals, four Queen's Commendations for Brave Conduct and 49 Mentions in Despatches.[2] In addition, 245 US and 369 South Vietnamese awards were bestowed on unit members and the unit itself also received two unit citations.[40] Because of the nature of the AATTV's work in Vietnam, all members, regardless of their corps, were awarded the Infantry Combat Badge.[41]

Over the course of its service, a total of 1,009 men served with the unit, consisting of 998 Australians and 11 New Zealanders.[42][Note 2] Many men served multiple tours over the ten years of the unit's existence.[4] During the 10 years that the unit was deployed to Vietnam, it lost 33 personnel killed and 122 wounded.[36] These members are commemorated by a memorial at Kokoda Barracks at Canungra, Queensland.[43] In 2002, the AATTV's badge and an Australian flag were included on a memorial unveiled in North Carolina, in the United States, dedicated to US special forces that served during the war. The unit was "one of the first groups of foreign soldiers to be honoured on a US war memorial".[44] In October 2004, the Australian Army training contingent in Iraq was renamed the "Australian Army Training Team Iraq" in honour of the AATTV.[45]

Unit badge edit

 
Unit badge

Although initially the intention was that the AATTV would wear Australian uniforms in order to ensure that Australia's contribution was clearly identifiable,[46] due to infrequent resupply AATTV personnel often wore a mixture of uniforms and equipment drawn from a variety of nations including Australia, Britain, the US, and South Vietnam.[47][48] In 1966, the AATTV's commanding officer, Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Milner, decided that the unit and its far-flung members needed an identifying unit badge.[49] Warrant Officer Class Two Laurie Nicholson, who had been temporarily attached to AATTV HQ,[50] was instructed by Milner to come up with designs for his consideration. This instruction included no guidelines except that the design had to include the motto Persevere.[51][52]

Nicholson developed a design that incorporated symbolism representing various facets of the AATTV's service in Vietnam including the Australian advisory relationship with South Vietnam, the co-operative relationship with the USMACV, and the people of South Vietnam to whom Australia was providing military support in their fight against communism. To represent the environment, a green background was chosen. For the nexus with the Republic of Vietnam, the red and yellow colours of their national flag were chosen, and for America, the badge was shaped as a shield similar to that of the US MACV badge. Inspiration for the symbol representing the South Vietnamese people was provided by a crossbow – a weapon which was as iconic in Vietnam as the boomerang was in Australia – which an AATTV member, who had been serving with the Nung tribal people, had left at the unit's headquarters for safe keeping. These symbols of the indigenous peoples of the two nations were chosen to represent all of the peoples of each nation. The AATTV initials were imprinted on the boomerang at the head of the badge and the motto Persevere on a scroll at the base of the badge. Both texts were in red whilst the boomerang and scroll were in yellow.[52][53][54]

On the shield version, the AATTV unit name on the boomerang was in block higher case text and the motto on the scroll was in heraldic higher case. On unit correspondence, all text was displayed in block higher case. As the boomerang is a ready-to-use weapon, the crossbow was presented loaded so that both symbolised the AATTV and the ARVN as being ready for action. Each item on the badge, each colour, each item of text and the shape of the shield, in combination, are symbolic of Australia's military traditions, the individual Australian soldier's reputation in combat and, in particular, the AATTV's record of valour.[51] Ironically the crossbow was not a symbol of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam, but a weapon used by the Montagnard and banned by President Ngo Dinh Diem in 1955.[55]

In 1967 Commander Australian Forces Vietnam authorised the patch to be worn on the right shoulder of field uniform as a "theatre-specific" item. An initial batch was subsequently produced using unit funds in Japan, and then later locally in Vietnam. In October 1969 the badge was officially confirmed as a catalogue item, and in September 1969 it was subsequently approved as an item of dress which could be issue at public expense.[50] In 1970 a metallic version of the badge became available, and was worn on a unique "rifle green" beret which was adopted in an attempt to standardise the uniform of members of the team. Produced locally in Vietnam of low quality pressed brass, it was allowed to dull to a dark patina.[50] The beret and badge were initially authorised for wear only in Vietnam,[52] but this decision was later changed by an Army Headquarters Dress Committee authorisation in July 1971 allowing them to be worn by AATTV members in Australia while posted to the unit. In 2012 the Chief of Army, Lieutenant General David Morrison, officially recognised the AATTV unit badge.[56]

Commanders edit

The following officers commanded the AATTV:[57]

  • Colonel F.P. Serong (1962–65);
  • Colonel O.D. Jackson (1965);
  • Lieutenant Colonel A.V. Preece (1965);
  • Lieutenant Colonel R.G.P. St V. McNamara (1965–66);
  • Lieutenant Colonel A.J. Milner (1966–67);
  • Lieutenant Colonel M.T. Tripp (1967–68);
  • Lieutenant Colonel R.L. Burnard (1968–69);
  • Lieutenant Colonel R.D.F. Lloyd (1969–70);
  • Colonel J.A. Clark (1970–71);
  • Colonel G.J. Leary (1971);
  • Lieutenant Colonel J.D. Stewart (1971–72);
  • Lieutenant Colonel K.H. Kirkland (1972); and
  • Lieutenant Colonel P.T. Johnston (1972–73).

See also edit

Notes edit

Footnotes
  1. ^ According to Davies and McKay, 31 July is "mistakenly celebrated as the units birthday" because the unit was raised on the Order of Battle on 1 July 1962 and served in Australia prior to deploying to Vietnam.[9]
  2. ^ Slightly lower figures are provided by McNeill, who lists a total of 1,000 men as having served with the unit, including 990 Australians and 10 New Zealanders.[36]
Citations
  1. ^ "Vietnam Veterans Pause to Remember Fallen Ones". Northern Miner. Charters Towers, Queensland: News Limited. 12 August 2012. p. 3. OCLC 816500210.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "Australian Army Training Team Vietnam". Australian military units. Australian War Memorial. from the original on 11 December 2008. Retrieved 3 January 2009.
  3. ^ Lyles 2004, pp. 5–6.
  4. ^ a b c d e Lyles 2004, p. 8.
  5. ^ a b Hartley 2002, p. 241.
  6. ^ Davies & McKay 2005, p. 18.
  7. ^ Lyles 2004, p. 5.
  8. ^ Guest & McNeill 1992, p. xiv.
  9. ^ Davies & McKay 2005, pp. 18–20.
  10. ^ Dennis et al 2008, pp. 490–491.
  11. ^ Kelley 2002, pp. 5–154.
  12. ^ Kelley 2002, pp. 5–533.
  13. ^ a b c Hartley 2002, p. 242.
  14. ^ a b Lyles 2004, p. 6.
  15. ^ a b Palazzo 2011, p. 153.
  16. ^ a b Dennis et al 1995, p. 64.
  17. ^ Blair 1996.
  18. ^ Davies & McKay 2005, pp. v–vi.
  19. ^ "Vietnam War Roll of Honour". Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 10 June 2009.
  20. ^ "Such a Grave Dishonour, On Many Fronts". The Sydney Morning Herald. Sydney, New South Wales: Fairfax Media. 6 May 2006. ISSN 0312-6315. Retrieved 8 August 2010.
  21. ^ Davies & McKay 2005, p. 33.
  22. ^ Horner 2005, p. 216.
  23. ^ Guest & McNeill 1992, p. xii.
  24. ^ a b Hartley 2002, p. 244.
  25. ^ Davies & McKay 2005, p. 51.
  26. ^ a b c Dennis et al 1995, pp. 62–64.
  27. ^ Hartley 2002, p. 243.
  28. ^ a b c Lyles 2004, p. 7.
  29. ^ Wilkins, David. "The Enemy And His Tactics". 5th Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment Association website. Retrieved 4 July 2013.
  30. ^ Lyles 2004, pp. 9–11.
  31. ^ Davies & McKay 2005, p. xiii.
  32. ^ McGibbon 2010, p. 473.
  33. ^ Davies & McKay 2005, p. 174.
  34. ^ a b Guest & McNeill 1992, p. xiii.
  35. ^ Caufield 2007, p. 415.
  36. ^ a b c McNeill 1984, p. 515.
  37. ^ Davies & McKay 2005, p. 210.
  38. ^ McNeill 1984, p. 510.
  39. ^ Davies & McKay 2005, p. 379.
  40. ^ Hartley 2002, pp. 246–247.
  41. ^ Jobson 2009, pp. 182–183.
  42. ^ Davies & McKay 2005, p. 367.
  43. ^ Remeikis, Amy (29 July 2012). "Vietnam Vets Honoured". The Sun Herald. Sydney, New South Wales: Fairfax Media. p. 3. OCLC 42300695.
  44. ^ Crawford, Barclay (10 June 2002). "US to Honour Aussie Vietnam War Advisor Team". The Australian. Canberra, Australian Capital Territory: News Limited. p. 6. ISSN 1038-8761.
  45. ^ Hill, Robert (29 October 2004). "Army Trainers Return Home From Iraq". Media Release: Senator, The Hon Robert Hill, Minister for Defence. Retrieved 10 July 2013.
  46. ^ Blair 2002, p. 79.
  47. ^ Caufield 2007, pp. 68–69.
  48. ^ McNeill 1984, pp. 20, 215, 279 & 369.
  49. ^ McNeill 1984, p. 104.
  50. ^ a b c Lyles 2004, p. 55.
  51. ^ a b Ryan, Rick. "'Persevere': The Story of the Team Badge". AATTV Association (Western Australia) Branch. Retrieved 4 July 2013.
  52. ^ a b c Guest & McNeill 1992, p. xv.
  53. ^ "Brassard with AATTV Patch". Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 8 July 2013.
  54. ^ Jobson 2009, p. 174.
  55. ^ Ahern 2000, p. 148.
  56. ^ Terrett & Taubert 2015, p. 343.
  57. ^ McNeill 1984, p. 506.

References edit

  • Ahern, Thomas L. (2000). CIA and the House of Ngo: Covert Action in South Vietnam 1954–63 (U) (PDF). Washington, D.C.: Centre for the Study of Intelligence.
  • Blair, Anne (1996). . After the Cold War: Reassessing Vietnam 18–20 April 1996. 1996 Vietnam Symposium. Lubbock, Texas: Vietnam Centre, Texas Tech University. OCLC 60822334. Archived from the original on 11 March 2009.
  • Blair, Anne (2002). Ted Serong: The Life of an Australian Counter-Insurgency Expert. South Melbourne, Victoria: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195515923.
  • Caufield, Michael (2007). The Vietnam Years: From the Jungle to the Australian Suburbs. Sydney, New South Wales: Hachette Australia. ISBN 9780733619854.
  • Davies, Bruce; McKay, Gary (2005). The Men Who Persevered. Crows Nest, New South Wales: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 9781741144253.
  • Dennis, Peter; Grey, Jeffrey; Morris, Ewan; Robin Prior (1995). The Oxford Companion to Australian Military History (First ed.). Melbourne, Victoria: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-553227-9.
  • Dennis, Peter; Grey, Jeffrey; Morris, Ewan; Prior, Robin; Bou, Jean (2008). The Oxford Companion to Australian Military History (Second ed.). Melbourne: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195517842.
  • Guest, Robert; McNeill, Ian (1992). The Team in Pictures: A Pictorial History of the Australian Army Training Team Vietnam, 1962–1972. Canberra, Australian Capital Territory: National Executive, Australian Army Training Team Vietnam Association. ISBN 9780646104447.
  • Hartley, John (2002). "The Australian Army Training Team Vietnam". In Dennis, Peter; Grey, Jeffrey (eds.). . Canberra, Australian Capital Territory: Army History Unit. pp. 240–247. ISBN 0-642-50267-6. Archived from the original on 12 May 2015. Retrieved 8 July 2013.
  • Horner, David (2005). Strategic Command: General Sir John Wilton and Australia's Asian Wars. Melbourne: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-555282-2.
  • Jobson, Christopher (2009). Looking Forward, Looking Back: Customs and Traditions of the Australian Army. Wavell Heights, Queensland: Big Sky Publishing. ISBN 9780980325164.
  • Kelley, Michael (2002). Where We Were in Vietnam. Hellgate Press. ISBN 978-1555716257.
  • Lyles, Kevin (2004). Vietnam ANZACs – Australian & New Zealand Troops in Vietnam 1962–72. Elite Series 103. Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 1-84176-702-6.
  • McGibbon, Ian (2010). New Zealand's Vietnam War: A History of Combat, Commitment and Controversy. Auckland: Exisle. ISBN 978-0908988969.
  • McNeill, Ian (1984). The Team: Australian Army Advisers in Vietnam 1962–1972. Sydney, New South Wales: Australian War Memorial. ISBN 0-642-87702-5.
  • Palazzo, Albert (2011) [2009]. Australian Military Operations in Vietnam. Australian Army Campaigns Series # 3 (2nd ed.). Canberra, Australian Capital Territory: Army History Unit. ISBN 9780980475388.
  • Terrett, Leslie; Taubert, Stephen (2015). Preserving our Proud Heritage: The Customs and Traditions of the Australian Army. Newport, New South Wales: Big Sky Publishing. ISBN 9781925275544.

Further reading edit

  • Australian Army Training Team Vietnam Association South Australian Branch (26 July 1997). The Team Unique. Adelaide: Gillingham Printers.
  • Ekins, Ashley; McNeill, Ian (2012). Fighting to the Finish: The Australian Army and the Vietnam War 1968–1975. The Official History of Australia's Involvement in Southeast Asian Conflicts 1948–1975. Vol. Nine. St Leonards, New South Wales: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 9781865088242.
  • Faulkner, Andrew (2016). Stone Cold: The Extraordinary Story of Len Opie, Australia's Deadliest Soldier. Sydney, New South Wales: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 9781742373782.
  • Krasnoff, Stan (2002). Shadows on the Wall. Crows Nest, New South Wales: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1865088870.
  • McNeill, Ian (1993). To Long Tan: The Australian Army and the Vietnam War 1950–1966. The Official History of Australia's Involvement in Southeast Asian Conflicts 1948–1975. Vol. Two. St Leonards, New South Wales: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1863732829.
  • McNeill, Ian; Ekins, Ashley (2003). On the Offensive: The Australian Army and the Vietnam War 1967–1968. The Official History of Australia's Involvement in Southeast Asian Conflicts 1948–1975. Vol. Eight. St Leonards: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-86373-304-3.
  • Petersen, Barry; Cribbin, John (1988). Tiger Men: An Australian Soldier's Secret War in Vietnam. London: Sidwick & Jackson. ISBN 0283998164.
  • Savage, David (1999). Through the Wire: Action with the SAS in Borneo and the Special Forces in Vietnam. St Leonards, New South Wales: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1864488689.
  • Smith, Terry (2011). Training the Bodes: Australian Army Advisers Training Cambodian Infantry battalions - A Postscript to the Vietnam War. Newport, New South Wales: BigSky. ISBN 9781921941016.
  • "The War Before the War". Vietnam: The War That Made Australia. Episode 1. 2016. SBS On Demand. Special Broadcasting Service. Retrieved 29 May 2017.

External links edit

    australian, army, training, team, vietnam, aattv, specialist, unit, military, advisors, australian, army, that, operated, during, vietnam, raised, 1962, unit, formed, solely, service, part, australia, contribution, providing, training, assistance, south, vietn. The Australian Army Training Team Vietnam AATTV was a specialist unit of military advisors of the Australian Army that operated during the Vietnam War Raised in 1962 the unit was formed solely for service as part of Australia s contribution to the war providing training and assistance to South Vietnamese forces Initially numbering only approximately 30 men the size of the unit grew several times over the following years as the Australian commitment to South Vietnam gradually grew with the unit s strength peaking at 227 in November 1970 Members of the team worked individually or in small groups operating throughout the country from the far south to the Demilitarized Zone DMZ in the north Later they were concentrated in Phước Tuy Province as Australian forces prepared to withdraw from Vietnam It is believed to be the most decorated Australian unit to serve in Vietnam its members received over 100 decorations including four Victoria Crosses during its existence The unit was withdrawn from South Vietnam on 18 December 1972 and was disbanded in Australia on 16 February 1973 A total of 1 009 men served with the unit over a period of ten years consisting of 998 Australians and 11 New Zealanders Australian Army Training Team VietnamAATTV advisers instruct South Vietnamese Regional Forces on the M16 rifle in Ben Tranh District June 1970Active31 July 1962 16 February 1973CountryAustraliaBranchAustralian ArmyTypeMilitary advisorsRoleCounter insurgencyMilitary education and trainingSize 30 227 menPart ofAustralian Force VietnamGarrison HQSaigon South VietnamNickname s The Team The Expendables Motto s Persevere 1 EngagementsBattle of Duc LapBattle of Kham DucDecorationsMeritorious Unit Commendation United States Vietnam Gallantry Cross Unit Citation South Vietnam CommandersNotablecommandersF P Serong Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation 1 2 Operations 1 3 Disbandment 2 Unit badge 3 Commanders 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory editFormation edit The Australian Army Training Team Vietnam AATTV was raised in 1962 and initially consisted of approximately 30 officers and warrant officers and was tasked to train and advise units of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam ARVN as part of the existing US advisory effort controlled by Military Assistance Advisory Group MAAG and later United States Military Assistance Command Vietnam MACV 2 3 Most of the advisors were career officers and senior NCOs with the majority from the infantry SAS or Commandos although there were a number of signalers engineers and other specialist corps represented They were hand picked for the task and were considered experts in counter revolutionary warfare and jungle operations with many having served in the Malayan Emergency 4 Due to the nature of service as a combat advisor personnel serving with the AATTV were all mature and experienced soldiers with an average age of 35 4 The Australian government s decision to raise the force was announced on 24 May 1962 and shortly afterwards personnel began concentrating at the Intelligence Centre at Mosman New South Wales After initial induction training the team moved to the Jungle Training Centre at Kokoda Barracks in Canungra Queensland for field training Initially the unit was designated the Australian Army Component Vietnam on 1 July 1962 and then the Australian Army Training Component but on 12 July 1962 the unit was redesignated the Australian Army Training Team Vietnam 5 6 This was soon abbreviated to The Team 7 At the conclusion of pre deployment training the 30 advisors departed Australia from Mascot New South Wales aboard a Qantas charter flight on 29 July 1962 5 The unit s first commanding officer Colonel Ted Serong arrived in Saigon on 31 July the date that is mistakenly considered the unit s birthday 8 and the main body arrived three days later 2 Note 1 Serong would later be seconded and in one capacity or another would remain in Vietnam until the Fall of Saigon in April 1975 serving as a senior advisor to both the US and South Vietnamese governments 10 Operations edit On arrival the unit joined a large group of US advisors and were dispersed across South Vietnam in small groups Three groups were dispatched to South Vietnam s northern provinces training members of the ARVN at the National Training Centre at Dong Da near Phu Bai Combat Base 11 and South Vietnamese Regional Forces RF at Hiep Khanh northwest of Huế 12 while a fourth was based at the Ranger Training Centre at Dục Mỹ Camp near Nha Trang in the south 13 14 a headquarters was established in Saigon 15 The groups began training the Vietnamese in barracks providing instruction in jungle warfare techniques and technical areas such as signals and engineering 16 The jungle warfare methods practiced by the AATTV emphasised patrolling and contact drills which taught soldiers to react automatically in battle with the aim of providing them with an advantage over an enemy which was reliant on command 17 Initially the team was prevented from actively taking part in combat operations 16 and while this restriction was later lifted until this occurred the advisors deployed on operations as observers only 13 Over time the role and of the AATTV changed and in addition to training individuals would often command units advise South Vietnamese personnel and officials serve as staff on headquarters and determine policy 18 On 1 June 1963 Sergeant William Francis Hacking became the AATTV s first casualty when he was accidentally killed while on duty 19 20 21 In late 1963 members of the team were redeployed into combat advisory roles with two officers and eight NCOs working with Special Forces teams involved in counter insurgency operations by February 1964 22 In mid 1964 the restriction on the AATTV advisors taking part in combat operations was lifted 15 The first advisor officially killed in action was Warrant Officer Class Two Kevin Conway at the Battle of Nam Dong on 6 July 1964 23 With the war escalating the AATTV increased first to 60 in June and then to approximately 100 personnel 15 officers and 85 warrant officers 24 25 by December Soon its area of operations stretched from the far south to the Demilitarized Zone DMZ forming the border between North Vietnam and South Vietnam in the north 26 nbsp A member of the AATTV speaking with South Vietnamese soldiers undergoing field training in Phuoc Tuy Province during 1968After June 1964 members of the team were involved in many combat operations often leading formations of Vietnamese soldiers Some advisors worked with regular ARVN units and formations at first mainly infantry but after 1967 artillery and cavalry units as well 27 while others such as Captain Barry Petersen 13 worked with the Montagnard hill tribes in conjunction with US Special Forces USSF 28 A few were attached to Provincial Reconnaissance Units with whom they became involved in the controversial Phoenix Program run by the US Central Intelligence Agency 29 which was designed to target the Vietcong infrastructure through infiltration arrest and assassination 26 Others were attached to the all Vietnamese RF and Popular Forces and the National Field Police Force or served with the USSF Mobile Strike Force 28 Members of the AATTV served tours of duty of between 12 and 18 months in Vietnam 2 In mid 1965 Australia s involvement in the war increased as the government committed a full infantry battalion the 1st Battalion Royal Australian Regiment By mid 1966 Australia s contributions had expanded resulting the formation of the 1st Australian Task Force 1 ATF operating in its own area of operations in Phước Tuy Province which was in the III Corps Tactical Zone III CTZ 30 But despite the concentration of Australian forces the AATTV members remained dispersed often serving with only one other advisor either Australian or American 28 Unlike 1 ATF the majority of team members were deployed in I CTZ and the Central Highlands where the fighting was often of a higher tempo and more protracted 31 Thus due to its small size and widespread area of operations it was rare for the entire AATTV to be in the same place at the same time this usually occurred only on ANZAC Day the only other occasion the whole unit paraded together was when it received the Meritorious Unit Commendation from COMUSMACV on 30 September 1970 2 From October 1970 a small group of New Zealanders consisting of one officer and four SNCOs were attached to the AATTV 32 That year as the Australians New Zealanders and Americans prepared to withdraw a process of Vietnamization began and the AATTV established a jungle training centre in Phuoc Tuy Province 4 Some members of the AATTV also served in Mobile Advisory and Training Teams MATTs operating within Phuoc Tuy Province at this time 33 In November 1970 the unit s strength peaked at 227 at which time the team was expanded with an intake of corporals 24 34 14 In 1971 the 1 ATF combat units were withdrawn and the AATTV reverted to their original role of training only 4 As the final 1 ATF units left the country in early 1972 the AATTV having been reduced to around 70 personnel 35 remained in Phuoc Tuy to provide training and advisory assistance to the ARVN and to training Cambodian soldiers of the Force Armee Nationale Khmere FANK The last Australians left Vietnam in mid December 1972 the AATTV left on 18 December 2 following the election of the Whitlam Labor government 26 The AATTV had the longest tour of duty of any Australian unit in Vietnam serving a total of ten years four months and sixteen days The unit also had the distinction of being the first Australian unit committed to Vietnam and the last to be withdrawn 36 Disbandment edit The unit was disbanded in Australia on 16 February 1973 37 The AATTV was Australia s most decorated unit of the war including all four Victoria Crosses awarded during the conflict awarded to Warrant Officer Class Two Kevin Wheatley Major Peter Badcoe Warrant Officer Class Two Rayene Simpson and Warrant Officer Class Two Keith Payne respectively The unit also received the United States Army Meritorious Unit Commendation and the Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry with Palm Unit Citation 2 38 Individuals who served with the 5th Special Forces Group between 1 November 1966 and 31 January 1968 are also entitled to wear the United States Army Presidential Unit Citation The Valorous Unit Award was also awarded to B 20 1st Mobile Strike Force Battalion for service between 3 11 April 1970 and a few members of the AATTV are also entitled to this award 39 Members of the AATTV received many decorations for their service and the unit gained the distinction of being probably the mostly highly decorated unit for its size in the Australian Army 34 According to the Australian War Memorial AATTV personnel received the following decorations four Victoria Crosses two Distinguished Service Orders three Officers of the Order of the British Empire six Members of the Order of the British Empire six Military Crosses 20 Distinguished Conduct Medals 15 Military Medals four British Empire Medals four Queen s Commendations for Brave Conduct and 49 Mentions in Despatches 2 In addition 245 US and 369 South Vietnamese awards were bestowed on unit members and the unit itself also received two unit citations 40 Because of the nature of the AATTV s work in Vietnam all members regardless of their corps were awarded the Infantry Combat Badge 41 Over the course of its service a total of 1 009 men served with the unit consisting of 998 Australians and 11 New Zealanders 42 Note 2 Many men served multiple tours over the ten years of the unit s existence 4 During the 10 years that the unit was deployed to Vietnam it lost 33 personnel killed and 122 wounded 36 These members are commemorated by a memorial at Kokoda Barracks at Canungra Queensland 43 In 2002 the AATTV s badge and an Australian flag were included on a memorial unveiled in North Carolina in the United States dedicated to US special forces that served during the war The unit was one of the first groups of foreign soldiers to be honoured on a US war memorial 44 In October 2004 the Australian Army training contingent in Iraq was renamed the Australian Army Training Team Iraq in honour of the AATTV 45 Unit badge edit nbsp Unit badgeAlthough initially the intention was that the AATTV would wear Australian uniforms in order to ensure that Australia s contribution was clearly identifiable 46 due to infrequent resupply AATTV personnel often wore a mixture of uniforms and equipment drawn from a variety of nations including Australia Britain the US and South Vietnam 47 48 In 1966 the AATTV s commanding officer Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Milner decided that the unit and its far flung members needed an identifying unit badge 49 Warrant Officer Class Two Laurie Nicholson who had been temporarily attached to AATTV HQ 50 was instructed by Milner to come up with designs for his consideration This instruction included no guidelines except that the design had to include the motto Persevere 51 52 Nicholson developed a design that incorporated symbolism representing various facets of the AATTV s service in Vietnam including the Australian advisory relationship with South Vietnam the co operative relationship with the USMACV and the people of South Vietnam to whom Australia was providing military support in their fight against communism To represent the environment a green background was chosen For the nexus with the Republic of Vietnam the red and yellow colours of their national flag were chosen and for America the badge was shaped as a shield similar to that of the US MACV badge Inspiration for the symbol representing the South Vietnamese people was provided by a crossbow a weapon which was as iconic in Vietnam as the boomerang was in Australia which an AATTV member who had been serving with the Nung tribal people had left at the unit s headquarters for safe keeping These symbols of the indigenous peoples of the two nations were chosen to represent all of the peoples of each nation The AATTV initials were imprinted on the boomerang at the head of the badge and the motto Persevere on a scroll at the base of the badge Both texts were in red whilst the boomerang and scroll were in yellow 52 53 54 On the shield version the AATTV unit name on the boomerang was in block higher case text and the motto on the scroll was in heraldic higher case On unit correspondence all text was displayed in block higher case As the boomerang is a ready to use weapon the crossbow was presented loaded so that both symbolised the AATTV and the ARVN as being ready for action Each item on the badge each colour each item of text and the shape of the shield in combination are symbolic of Australia s military traditions the individual Australian soldier s reputation in combat and in particular the AATTV s record of valour 51 Ironically the crossbow was not a symbol of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam but a weapon used by the Montagnard and banned by President Ngo Dinh Diem in 1955 55 In 1967 Commander Australian Forces Vietnam authorised the patch to be worn on the right shoulder of field uniform as a theatre specific item An initial batch was subsequently produced using unit funds in Japan and then later locally in Vietnam In October 1969 the badge was officially confirmed as a catalogue item and in September 1969 it was subsequently approved as an item of dress which could be issue at public expense 50 In 1970 a metallic version of the badge became available and was worn on a unique rifle green beret which was adopted in an attempt to standardise the uniform of members of the team Produced locally in Vietnam of low quality pressed brass it was allowed to dull to a dark patina 50 The beret and badge were initially authorised for wear only in Vietnam 52 but this decision was later changed by an Army Headquarters Dress Committee authorisation in July 1971 allowing them to be worn by AATTV members in Australia while posted to the unit In 2012 the Chief of Army Lieutenant General David Morrison officially recognised the AATTV unit badge 56 Commanders editThe following officers commanded the AATTV 57 Colonel F P Serong 1962 65 Colonel O D Jackson 1965 Lieutenant Colonel A V Preece 1965 Lieutenant Colonel R G P St V McNamara 1965 66 Lieutenant Colonel A J Milner 1966 67 Lieutenant Colonel M T Tripp 1967 68 Lieutenant Colonel R L Burnard 1968 69 Lieutenant Colonel R D F Lloyd 1969 70 Colonel J A Clark 1970 71 Colonel G J Leary 1971 Lieutenant Colonel J D Stewart 1971 72 Lieutenant Colonel K H Kirkland 1972 and Lieutenant Colonel P T Johnston 1972 73 See also editMilitary history of Australia during the Vietnam War Republic of Vietnam National Police Field Force NPFF Army of the Republic of Vietnam Special Forces LLDB Khmer Special ForcesNotes editFootnotes According to Davies and McKay 31 July is mistakenly celebrated as the units birthday because the unit was raised on the Order of Battle on 1 July 1962 and served in Australia prior to deploying to Vietnam 9 Slightly lower figures are provided by McNeill who lists a total of 1 000 men as having served with the unit including 990 Australians and 10 New Zealanders 36 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Australian Army Training Team Vietnam Citations Vietnam Veterans Pause to Remember Fallen Ones Northern Miner Charters Towers Queensland News Limited 12 August 2012 p 3 OCLC 816500210 a b c d e f g Australian Army Training Team Vietnam Australian military units Australian War Memorial Archived from the original on 11 December 2008 Retrieved 3 January 2009 Lyles 2004 pp 5 6 a b c d e Lyles 2004 p 8 a b Hartley 2002 p 241 Davies amp McKay 2005 p 18 Lyles 2004 p 5 Guest amp McNeill 1992 p xiv Davies amp McKay 2005 pp 18 20 Dennis et al 2008 pp 490 491 Kelley 2002 pp 5 154 Kelley 2002 pp 5 533 a b c Hartley 2002 p 242 a b Lyles 2004 p 6 a b Palazzo 2011 p 153 a b Dennis et al 1995 p 64 Blair 1996 Davies amp McKay 2005 pp v vi Vietnam War Roll of Honour Australian War Memorial Retrieved 10 June 2009 Such a Grave Dishonour On Many Fronts The Sydney Morning Herald Sydney New South Wales Fairfax Media 6 May 2006 ISSN 0312 6315 Retrieved 8 August 2010 Davies amp McKay 2005 p 33 Horner 2005 p 216 Guest amp McNeill 1992 p xii a b Hartley 2002 p 244 Davies amp McKay 2005 p 51 a b c Dennis et al 1995 pp 62 64 Hartley 2002 p 243 a b c Lyles 2004 p 7 Wilkins David The Enemy And His Tactics 5th Battalion Royal Australian Regiment Association website Retrieved 4 July 2013 Lyles 2004 pp 9 11 Davies amp McKay 2005 p xiii McGibbon 2010 p 473 Davies amp McKay 2005 p 174 a b Guest amp McNeill 1992 p xiii Caufield 2007 p 415 a b c McNeill 1984 p 515 Davies amp McKay 2005 p 210 McNeill 1984 p 510 Davies amp McKay 2005 p 379 Hartley 2002 pp 246 247 Jobson 2009 pp 182 183 Davies amp McKay 2005 p 367 Remeikis Amy 29 July 2012 Vietnam Vets Honoured The Sun Herald Sydney New South Wales Fairfax Media p 3 OCLC 42300695 Crawford Barclay 10 June 2002 US to Honour Aussie Vietnam War Advisor Team The Australian Canberra Australian Capital Territory News Limited p 6 ISSN 1038 8761 Hill Robert 29 October 2004 Army Trainers Return Home From Iraq Media Release Senator The Hon Robert Hill Minister for Defence Retrieved 10 July 2013 Blair 2002 p 79 Caufield 2007 pp 68 69 McNeill 1984 pp 20 215 279 amp 369 McNeill 1984 p 104 a b c Lyles 2004 p 55 a b Ryan Rick Persevere The Story of the Team Badge AATTV Association Western Australia Branch Retrieved 4 July 2013 a b c Guest amp McNeill 1992 p xv Brassard with AATTV Patch Australian War Memorial Retrieved 8 July 2013 Jobson 2009 p 174 Ahern 2000 p 148 Terrett amp Taubert 2015 p 343 McNeill 1984 p 506 References editAhern Thomas L 2000 CIA and the House of Ngo Covert Action in South Vietnam 1954 63 U PDF Washington D C Centre for the Study of Intelligence Blair Anne 1996 Get Me Ten Years Australia s Ted Serong in Vietnam 1962 1975 After the Cold War Reassessing Vietnam 18 20 April 1996 1996 Vietnam Symposium Lubbock Texas Vietnam Centre Texas Tech University OCLC 60822334 Archived from the original on 11 March 2009 Blair Anne 2002 Ted Serong The Life of an Australian Counter Insurgency Expert South Melbourne Victoria Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195515923 Caufield Michael 2007 The Vietnam Years From the Jungle to the Australian Suburbs Sydney New South Wales Hachette Australia ISBN 9780733619854 Davies Bruce McKay Gary 2005 The Men Who Persevered Crows Nest New South Wales Allen amp Unwin ISBN 9781741144253 Dennis Peter Grey Jeffrey Morris Ewan Robin Prior 1995 The Oxford Companion to Australian Military History First ed Melbourne Victoria Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 553227 9 Dennis Peter Grey Jeffrey Morris Ewan Prior Robin Bou Jean 2008 The Oxford Companion to Australian Military History Second ed Melbourne Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195517842 Guest Robert McNeill Ian 1992 The Team in Pictures A Pictorial History of the Australian Army Training Team Vietnam 1962 1972 Canberra Australian Capital Territory National Executive Australian Army Training Team Vietnam Association ISBN 9780646104447 Hartley John 2002 The Australian Army Training Team Vietnam In Dennis Peter Grey Jeffrey eds The 2002 Chief of Army s Military History Conference The Australian Army and the Vietnam War 1962 1972 Canberra Australian Capital Territory Army History Unit pp 240 247 ISBN 0 642 50267 6 Archived from the original on 12 May 2015 Retrieved 8 July 2013 Horner David 2005 Strategic Command General Sir John Wilton and Australia s Asian Wars Melbourne Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 555282 2 Jobson Christopher 2009 Looking Forward Looking Back Customs and Traditions of the Australian Army Wavell Heights Queensland Big Sky Publishing ISBN 9780980325164 Kelley Michael 2002 Where We Were in Vietnam Hellgate Press ISBN 978 1555716257 Lyles Kevin 2004 Vietnam ANZACs Australian amp New Zealand Troops in Vietnam 1962 72 Elite Series 103 Oxford Osprey ISBN 1 84176 702 6 McGibbon Ian 2010 New Zealand s Vietnam War A History of Combat Commitment and Controversy Auckland Exisle ISBN 978 0908988969 McNeill Ian 1984 The Team Australian Army Advisers in Vietnam 1962 1972 Sydney New South Wales Australian War Memorial ISBN 0 642 87702 5 Palazzo Albert 2011 2009 Australian Military Operations in Vietnam Australian Army Campaigns Series 3 2nd ed Canberra Australian Capital Territory Army History Unit ISBN 9780980475388 Terrett Leslie Taubert Stephen 2015 Preserving our Proud Heritage The Customs and Traditions of the Australian Army Newport New South Wales Big Sky Publishing ISBN 9781925275544 Further reading editAustralian Army Training Team Vietnam Association South Australian Branch 26 July 1997 The Team Unique Adelaide Gillingham Printers Ekins Ashley McNeill Ian 2012 Fighting to the Finish The Australian Army and the Vietnam War 1968 1975 The Official History of Australia s Involvement in Southeast Asian Conflicts 1948 1975 Vol Nine St Leonards New South Wales Allen amp Unwin ISBN 9781865088242 Faulkner Andrew 2016 Stone Cold The Extraordinary Story of Len Opie Australia s Deadliest Soldier Sydney New South Wales Allen amp Unwin ISBN 9781742373782 Krasnoff Stan 2002 Shadows on the Wall Crows Nest New South Wales Allen amp Unwin ISBN 1865088870 McNeill Ian 1993 To Long Tan The Australian Army and the Vietnam War 1950 1966 The Official History of Australia s Involvement in Southeast Asian Conflicts 1948 1975 Vol Two St Leonards New South Wales Allen amp Unwin ISBN 1863732829 McNeill Ian Ekins Ashley 2003 On the Offensive The Australian Army and the Vietnam War 1967 1968 The Official History of Australia s Involvement in Southeast Asian Conflicts 1948 1975 Vol Eight St Leonards Allen amp Unwin ISBN 1 86373 304 3 Petersen Barry Cribbin John 1988 Tiger Men An Australian Soldier s Secret War in Vietnam London Sidwick amp Jackson ISBN 0283998164 Savage David 1999 Through the Wire Action with the SAS in Borneo and the Special Forces in Vietnam St Leonards New South Wales Allen amp Unwin ISBN 1864488689 Smith Terry 2011 Training the Bodes Australian Army Advisers Training Cambodian Infantry battalions A Postscript to the Vietnam War Newport New South Wales BigSky ISBN 9781921941016 The War Before the War Vietnam The War That Made Australia Episode 1 2016 SBS On Demand Special Broadcasting Service Retrieved 29 May 2017 External links editPeterson of the Montagnard Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Australian Army Training Team Vietnam amp oldid 1199848669, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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