|
|
- NEWSLETTERS
- MOBILE APPS
-
ADD TIME NEWS
The World: The Man Behind the Offensive
THE man who directs North Viet Nam's unprecedented offensive never went to military school or even trained formally as a soldier."The only military academy I have been to," he once boasted, "is that of the bush." By now, of course, Hanoi's Defense Minister, General Vo Nguyen Giap, is a figure of legend. Along with Mao Tse-tung, he pioneered the art of modern guerrilla warfare. Giap probably stands behind only Ho Chi Minh in the history of North Viet Nam, where he is known quite simply as "the organizer of the victory"meaning the long campaign that culminated in the triumph over the French in 1954.
At 60, Giap is small (5 ft.), somewhat corpulent, and possessed of a mind that one French acquaintance calls "very orderly, logical, Cartesian" and a manner that another describes simply as "eloquent bluntness." Once again, he is trying to organize a victoryone that he hopes will retrace the lines that led to Dien Bien Phu 18 years ago. As the creator of the Viet Minh army in 1941, Giap has long been a proponent of a kind of warfare that would be a political as well as a military enterprise. The merits of Giap's 1968 offensive, in which 60,000 Communist lives were lost, will be debated for years, but for Giap himself it may have been enough that it set the American withdrawal in motion. As early as 1970, when the Nixon withdrawal plan was well under way, the North Vietnamese Politburo had begun to plan what Giap was openly describing as a step up to "regular warfare." The object: annihilation of Saigon's burgeoning military forces.
The present offensive, as one Pentagon general says, "has Giap's stamp on it." Among the trademarks: the skillful use of ambushes and roadblocks, assaults mounted from unexpected directions and the shrewd manipulation of farflung battlefields in order to exhaust and overextend Saigon's much more numerous forces. There is even a Giap precedent for the startling switch from a small-arms war to one of missiles and tanks. At Dien Bien Phu, Giap's men opened up with scores of heavy guns that they had secreted high up in the mountains; in less than two months, the guns killed or wounded about half of the 13,000-man French garrison. Back then, Giap's surprise weaponsmostly American-made howitzers that he had obtained from Chinawere hauled uphill piece by piece, reassembled and hidden away in caves until ready for use. Now, Giap has done it again. Many of the Soviet-made guns and tanks whose appearance so surprised the U.S. command had been hauled down the Ho Chi Minh Trail in pieces, hidden under tarpaulins in the beds of trucks; at secret staging areas in Laos and Cambodia, the pieces were reassembled. Some of the tanks were simply driven down the trail over roads that were covered with leafy trellises to foil American reconnaissance pilots.
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- Israel vs. Hizballah: Drumbeats of War
- Super-Earth: Astronomers Find a Watery New Planet
- Under U.S. Pressure, Pakistan Balks at Helping on Afghan Taliban
- America's Most Wanted Teenage Bandit
- Why Home Churches are Filling Up
- Study: European Muslims Feel Shut Out
- Proposed 'Botox Tax' Draws Wide Array of Opponents
- Rattled by Iran, Arab Regimes Draw Closer
- Crazy Heart Review: Jeff Bridges Abides
- Church Group Attacks Christmas Commercialism
- Singapore: 10 Things to Do in 24 Hours
- Super-Earth: Astronomers Find a Watery New Planet
- Majority U.S. Population Non-White by 2050
- Consumer Electronics Light Up the Holiday Season
- Why Home Churches are Filling Up
- Can Obama Get Dems to Agree on Health Reform?





RSS