Showing posts with label Army of the Republic of Vietnam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Army of the Republic of Vietnam. Show all posts

Saturday, May 3, 2025

Saturday, May 3, 1975. End of the Cultural Revolution.

Chinese Communist Party, Chairman Mao Zedong spoke out against the Cultural Revolution and the Gang of Four in his last speech to the Politburo.

All former South Vietnamese military personnel and government officials were ordered to register with the new government.  This was the first step to sending them to reeducation camps.

The city of Jerusalem was hit by missiles for the first time, after two Czechoslovakian made Katyusha rockets struck 500 meters from the Knesset parliament building.  They were fired by Arab guerillas.

New edition:

Friday, May 2, 1975. Hold outs.

Friday, May 2, 2025

Friday, May 2, 1975. Hold outs.

Flag of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam.

The ARVN surrendered in the Battle of Long Xuyên, An Giang, the last South Vietnamese soldiers to do so.

Heavily criticized throughout the American period of involvement in the war, the ARVN had been engaged in fighting prior to largescale US involvement and while its conscript troops often did lack motivation, it's best units were good. The final fighting in 1972 demonstrated both qualities, with the ARVN coming apart in the northernmost section of South Vietnam, but putting up a stout fight outside of and in Saigon.  Frankly, the American Army had enormously declined in quality during the war and by the time the US withdrew in 1972 it was largely an ineffective fighting force.

Henry Kissinger wrote a memo:

25 year old Smokey the Bear, a black bear at the National Zoo in Washington, D.C., was retired from service as a living symbol of fire prevention.

Last edition:

Thứ Năm, ngày 1 tháng 5 năm 1975. Chiến tranh Việt Nam kết thúc.* Thursday, May 1, 1975. The conclusion of the Vietnam War. Jeudi 1er mai 1975. Fin de la guerre du Vietnam.


Thursday, May 1, 2025

Thứ Năm, ngày 1 tháng 5 năm 1975. Chiến tranh Việt Nam kết thúc.* Thursday, May 1, 1975. The conclusion of the Vietnam War. Jeudi 1er mai 1975. Fin de la guerre du Vietnam.

ARVN troops in Cần Thơ  surrendered to the VC following the suicide of Gen. Nguyễn Khoa Nam, age 48, Major General of IV Corps in Cần Thơ.  This effectively brought organized resistance to the VC and NVA almost to an end after twenty years of combat.  The country remains, of course, under the regime that won the war.

Quân VNCH ở Cần Thơ đầu hàng VC sau cái chết của Tướng Nguyễn Khoa Nam, 48 tuổi, Thiếu tướng Quân đoàn IV ở Cần Thơ.  Điều này đã khiến cho sự kháng cự có tổ chức chống lại VC và Bắc Việt gần như chấm dứt một cách hiệu quả sau hai mươi năm chiến đấu.  Tất nhiên, đất nước vẫn nằm dưới chế độ đã thắng trong chiến tranh.

Les troupes de l'ARVN à Cần Thơ se sont rendues au VC suite au suicide du général Nguyễn Khoa Nam, 48 ans, major général du IVe Corps à Cần Thơ.  Cela a effectivement mis fin à la résistance organisée au VC et à la NVA après vingt ans de combat.  Le pays reste bien entendu sous le régime qui a gagné la guerre.


By this point, I'd quit tracking the war on my National Geographic map of Vietnam.  There came to be no point.

Khmer Rouge forces landed on Phú Quốc which was claimed by Cambodia but controlled by South Vietnam.  It was also the location of a large South Vietnamese POW camp.

Hank Aaron broke the career record for RBIs.

Thursday, May 1, 2025

The New York Stock Exchange dropped the requirement of a fixed commission for stock transactions following pressure to do so from the SEC. 

Footnotes:

*Google Translate text.  I don't speak Vietnamese.

Last edition:

Wednesday, April 30, 1975. The Fall of Saigon.

Wednesday, April 30, 2025

Wednesday, April 30, 1975. The Fall of Saigon.

Saigon fell to the NVA.

Gen. Dũng received orders from the Politburo to attack and take Saigon, which was surrounded except on approaches from the sea.  Early in the morning NVA sappers tried to take the Newport Bridge but were repulsed by ARVN Airborne.  An armored battle ensued, holding the bridge.

NVA armor then attacked Tan Son Nhut, which was defended by ARVN Rangers.  An armored battle ensued there as well.  A pitch battle broke out, but the NVA overcame the ARVN.

At 10:24 South Vietnamese President Minh surrendered unconditionally, although the ARVN continued to fight at the Newport Bridge, unaware of the surrender.  They stopped fighting upon learning of the surrender.

The surrender was announced to the nation at 2:30.

I, General Duong Van Minh, president of the Saigon administration, appeal to the armed forces of the Republic of Vietnam to laydown their arms and surrender unconditionally to the forces of the Liberation Army of South Vietnam. Furthermore, I declare that the Saigon government is completely dissolved at all levels. From the Central government to the local governments must be handed over to the Provisional Revolutionary Government of the Republic of South Vietnam.

Duong Van Minh on the transcript written by Bùi Văn Tùng

This was followed by:

We, the representatives for the forces of the Liberation Army of South Vietnam, solemnly declare that the City of Saigon was completely liberated. We accepted the unconditional surrender of General Dương Văn Minh, the president of the Saigon administration.

Bùi Văn Tùng.

In the Mekong Delta, the ARVN actually fought on for a day thereafter.  Upon learning of the unconditional surrendered, they abandoned the ARVN or surrendered to VC forces that they outnumbered.

ARVN generals Le Van Hung, 42, Tran Van Hai, 50, Le Nguyen Vy, 42, and Pham Van Phu, 46, committed suicide.

Brig Gen. Pham Duy Tat, the ARVN officer known for his hopelessly naive cheerful attitude in Ken Burn's documentary on the Vietnam War, survived but would serve 17 years in a Communist reeducation camp.  Upon being released, he relocated to the United States, passing away in 2019.

ARVN generals, Le Van Hung, Tran Van Hai,  Le Nguyen Vy, and Pham Van Phu, committed suicide.

Operation Frequent Wind concluded.


Over 7,000 people were evacuated.

Last Marines out.  Both are wearing tropical combat uniforms which have been altered to be short sleeved, something never officially authorized. The one in front carries a M1 or M2 carbine in addition to his M16A1 rifle, probably an embassy weapon.

This date has been widely marked in Vietnam this year, as well as the Vietnamese Diaspora community in the US, which naturally view it differently.  Celebrations have been taking place in Vietnam.  Indeed, a rather odd video clip of young women, very contemporarily addressed, watching a parade in Hanoi in which the Chinese Army was participating, shows them yelling catcalls at the Chinese troops of  Chinese PLA honor guards get catcalls of "老公,老公!" (husband, husband!).

I don't get it, but perhaps if a Vietnamese person stops in, they'll explain it.

Anyway, a momentous day in history, certainly for Vietnam, but also for the United States.

Monday, April 28, 2025

Monday, April 28, 1975. Ordering the ARVN to hold on.

U.S Consul Francis Terry McNamara met with ARVN Major General Nguyễn Khoa Nam about the plans to evacuate U.S consulate employees, some American civilians and some Vietnamese employees by boat. General Nam didn't want any members of the ARVN to be included, so they could remain and fight. 

A North Vietnamese air raid on Tan Son Nhut Air Base caused half of the fixed winged aircraft to be evacuated from the air base.

The RVNAF launched a helicopter attack on VC troops who were attempting to occupy the Newport Bridge, which was followed by a ground attack.

President Dương Văn Minh made an inaugural speech about the struggle of the South Vietnam military and finding ways for the peace to end the war.  He ordered the ARVN to hold all remaining ground and urged the South Vietnamese to stay in the country pending a ceasefire which he promised would keep South Vietnam separate from the north.

Last edition:

Sunday, April 27, 1975. Big Minh takes charge.

    Monday, April 21, 2025

    April 21, 1975. The end at Xuân Lộc.

    The ARVN, which had fought hard at Xuân Lộc, finally abandoned the city and retreated toward Saigon.

    Thiệu in 1968.

    President Thiệu resigned, leaving the government in the hands of Vice President Trần Văn Hương.

    He was a career army officer who interestingly started off in the Việt Minh, in which he rose to be a district chief.  He left them, however when it became obvious they were Communist and were committing atrocities.  He enrolled in the French controlled Vietnamese governments Merchant Marine Academy but rejected a position on a ship when he discovered that the French owners were going to pay him less than his French colleagues.  He thereafter  transferred to the National Military Academy in Đà Lạt, graduating in 1949.  He was part of the junta that overthrew Ngô Đình Diệm in 1963, after having prevented a coup a few years earlier.  He was elected President in 1967 after the US insisted on democratic elections.  He was reelected in 1971, as the only candidate running, as opponents believed the polls would be rigged.  His resignation speech was a whopping two hours long, but did include the memorable lines,"I resign, but I do not desert."

    He was a convert to Catholicism.

    He died on September 29, 2001, in Boston.  In Hawaii to celebrate his 50th wedding anniversary with his wife Mai Anh, the September 11 attacks impacted him psychology and contributed to his death which occurred after his return to his home in Boston.

    Kissinger bizarrely believed that his resignation would lead to a negotiation to save Saigon, which is something that apparently his successor, Dương Văn Minh, also believed would occur.

    The last New Zealanders at their embassy in South Vietnam were evacuated from the country.

    Last edition:

    Saturday, April 19, 1975. The ARVN withdraws from Xuân Lộc.

    Saturday, April 19, 2025

    Saturday, April 19, 1975. The ARVN withdraws from Xuân Lộc.

    The ARVN withdrew from Xuân Lộc.

    The Khmer Rouge declared that all former regime employees, including soldiers, needed to register with the new government.

    A largescale military wedding took place involving members of the ROK SWC 9th Brigade.  This is linked directly to Reddit:


    More photos of it can be found here:  Wedding.

    Note the uniforms heavily impacted by the Vietnam War, which South Korea participated in.

    Last edition:

    Friday, April 18, 1975. Executing the radicals.

    Friday, April 11, 2025

    Friday, April 11, 1975. The looming end for Cambodia and the NVA takes the Spratlys.

    North Vietnam took control of the Spratly Islands, which had been controlled by the Republic of Vietnam. The landing forces consisted of NVA special forces, but the islands were lightly defended. Interestingly, Communist Vietnam today still recognizes a South Vietnamese defense of the islands against China, which are also claimed by China, as heroic.

    While portrayed in Vietnamese propaganda as a great victory, the operation was only a success due to the extreme distress that South Vietnam was then in, and the fact that the U.S. Navy didn't intervene. Additionally, and importantly, the islands had no strategic value to the ongoing offensive, but with South Vietnam collapsing, the North Vietnamese no doubt correctly guessed that if they did not take the islands, China would.

    I should note that this is somewhat confusing, as there are numerous small islands in the chain, and not all of them are occupied by the Vietnamese.


    Some tourism of the islands takes place today.

    A White House conversation took place regarding Operation Eagle Pull.

    President: I would like to be brought up to date on where we are and what we are going to do. We will restrict ourselves to Cambodia. I am optimistic and I think we will make it.

    Schlesinger: “Eagle Pull” will commence at 0900 local. They will be on the ground one hour and 20 minutes total. It will be completed by 11:30 p.m. our time if all goes well.

    There’ll be 33 helicopters, including three for search and rescue. The first twelve will hold 346 Marines.

    President: Will Long Boret go?

    Kissinger: “Eagle Pull” will collapse the Government. Even if Long Boret doesn’t, enough of his people will go that it will collapse.

    President: Do we know if there will be much fighting? There will be a crowd gathering, but there is a better than 50% chance of getting out without fighting.

    Brown: There will be air cover but it will only return fire if fire is directed on the evacuation and only to protect the evacuation. The helicopters will come in a stream from the Carrier Ubon and peel off from hold points. We can do it all in one lift unless there are too many Khmer.

    Schlesinger: We must do it all in one lift.

    Brown: The Khmer have quite a lift capability of their own.

    Kissinger: Do the Khmer think it is over or is this an American decision?

    Brown: It is a U.S. decision. Our intelligence thinks tomorrow will be the last day, but probably it would come on the 13th, an auspicious time.

    President: There will be air cover?

    Buchen: Yes. They will be under positive control all the time and under FAC.

    President: By what authority is this being done?

    Schlesinger: The rescue operation is to protect American lives, any fire is to protect American lives and Khmer evacuation is incidental to the American evacuation.

    Buchen: Yes. The Khmer evacuation is incidental.

    Marsh: We would use the same force anyway, wouldn’t we?

    Schlesinger: If we had gotten it down to 50 Americans, we would have used a much smaller force and got them out in 10 minutes.

    Kissinger: I think we should say we are stretching the law so we don’t run counter to the President’s request of last night.2

    Rumsfeld: Don’t use “incidental”—because there are five times as many Khmers and it will be seen as a subterfuge.

    Schlesinger: The original list contained 50 Khmer. That has swollen to 1,100. It is there we might be vulnerable.

    President: I would think there would be a crowd gathered.

    Schlesinger: We can use Red Cross agents. And they have C130’s.

    Buchen: Why do we take them out then?

    Schlesinger: Ask State.

    Kissinger: It was assumed that the airfield would be unusable. We didn’t want to pull the plug by talking to them about evacuation.

    [The statements to be read and given to Congress were reviewed.]

    President: There is no connection between this and the Vietnam evacuation. There is no connection at all. This is a unique situation.

    Brown: Unless we give orders, the Marine Commander may load up with Khmer and leave the Marines, thus necessitating a second flight.

    President: I agree. The Commander should be told that all Americans must be aboard the last chopper.

     The ARVN put up still resistance at Xuan Loc.

    April 11, 1975: The J.P. Parisé Game

    A unique flight:

    11 April 1975

    Last edition:

    Thursday, April 10, 1975. A request, and a denial, for aid.

    Wednesday, April 9, 2025

    Wednesday, April 9, 1975. Holding out.

    The ARVN held out against a superior NVA force at the Battle of Xuân Lộc.


    South Korea executed eight people who were involved in the People's Revolutionary Party Incident, were hanged. Korea University had been closed the prior day.

    The Indian Army invaded the Kingdom of Sikkim in response to a request by the prime minister.  The king was placed under arrest.

    The National Association of Broadcasters voted 12–3 to designate the first hour of weeknight network television as "Family Viewing Hour", starting with the 1975–76 season, following a requirement set by the FCC which was soon found to be unconstitutional.

    Last edition:

    Tuesday, April 8, 1975. "Over in a month".

    Tuesday, April 1, 2025

    Tuesday, April 1, 1975. Hurried departures.

    The ongoing collapse in South Vietnam was increasingly spreading to neighboring Cambodia, where Neak Leung fell to Khmer Rouge after fierce Cambodian resistance. cutting off a supply route to Phnom Penh from South Vietnam.

    Cambodian President Lon Nol went into exile, being succeeded by Saukaum Khoy.  He'd spend the rest of his life in Hawaii.

    Qui Nhơn in South Vietnam fell to the NVA giving the communists control of half of South Vietnam's landmass.

    South Vietnamese Gen.hú departed Nha Trang secretly by helicopter after having previously refused requests from his men to retreat from the city. The American Consul General in Nha Trang, Moncrieff Spear, ordered the evacuation of American personnel from the city, leaving behind about 100 of the consulate's Vietnamese employees and one of the five Marine Security Guards, Sergeant Michael A. McCormick by accident.

    McCormick was later able to leave Nha Trang on a CIA  Air America helicopter.

    The bicentennial "Freedom Train" began its tour of the United States starting with a display in Wilmington, Delaware.


    Last edition:

    Saturday, March 29, 2025

    Saturday, March 29, 1975. NVA takes Da Nang.

    World Airlines made its fourth and last refugee evacuation flight from Da Nang.  The flight was designed to take out refugees, but 400 ARVN soldiers forced their way onto the plane.   At the same time, the NVA entered the city center.

    Of the ARVN in I Corps, 16,000 of the 160,000 in the area managed to escape.  And of course, while they could not know it, for the most part all of the people escaping would soon simply be further south in the country when the Communist prevailed.

    Da Nang had been the site of the first U.S. Marine Corps landings in Vietnam on March 8, 1965.

    Last edition:

    Friday, March 28, 1975. Managing the defeat.

      Thursday, March 27, 2025

      Thursday, March 27, 1975. NVA at Chơn Thành Camp reinforced, Construction of Alaska Pipeline commences.

      Construction began on the Alaska Pipeline.

      TAPS Throwback, March 27, 1975: First pipe installed at Tonsina River

      I remember this well from grade school. The nation was going to build the pipeline and drill our way out of the Oil Crisis of the 70s.  It was a monumental accomplishment, and it changed Alaska forever.

      Map showing location of the camp.  This map depicts attacks in the 1972 Easter Offensive.

      The NVA 273d Regiment was sent to reinforce the 9th Division for its ongoing assault on Chơn Thành Camp.  Further attacks on that day, however, failed.

      Stacy Ferguson, "Fergie", was born.

      Linda Ronstadt appeared on the cover of Rolling Stone and was interviewed in the magazine.

      Related threads:

      Before the Oil. And after it? The economies of Wyoming and Alaska.

      Last edition: 

      Wednesday, March 26, 1975. A new king.