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Leaders in the U.S. capital, Washington, D.C., were surprised and
delighted by Diem's success. American military and economic aid continued to
pour into South Vietnam while American military and police advisers helped train
and equip Diem's army and security forces. Beneath the outward success of the
Diem regime, however, lay fatal problems. Diem was a poor administrator who
refused to delegate authority, and he was pathologically suspicious of anyone
who was not a member of his family. His brother and close confidant, Ngo Dinh Nhu, controlled an extensive
system of extortion, payoffs, and influence peddling through a secret network
called the Can Lao, which had clandestine members in all government bureaus and
military units as well as schools, newspapers,
and businesses. In the countryside, ambitious programs of social and economic
reform had been allowed to languish while many local officials and police
engaged in extortion, bribery, and theft of government property. That many of
these officials were, like Diem himself, northerners and Roman Catholics further
alienated them from the local people.
Diem's unexpected offensive against communist political organizers and
propagandists in the countryside in 1955 had resulted in the arrest of thousands
and in the temporary disorganization of the communists'
infrastructure. By 1957, however, the communists,
now called the Viet Cong, had begun a program of terrorism and assassination against
government officials and functionaries. The Viet Cong's ranks were soon swelled
by many noncommunist Vietnamese who had been alienated by the corruption and
intimidation of local officials. Beginning in the spring of 1959, armed bands of
Viet Cong were occasionally engaging units of the South Vietnamese army in
regular firefights. By that time the Central Committee of the Vietnamese
Communist Party, meeting in Hanoi, had endorsed a resolution calling for the use
of armed force to overthrow the Diem government. Southerners specially trained
in the North as insurgents were infiltrated back into the South along with arms
and equipment. A new war had begun.
Despite its American training and weapons, the Army of the Republic of Vietnam,
usually called the ARVN, was in many ways ill-adapted to meet the insurgency of
the Viet Cong, or VC. Higher-ranking officers, appointed on the basis of their
family connections and political reliability, were often apathetic, incompetent,
or corrupt—and sometimes all three. The higher ranks of the army were also
thoroughly penetrated by Viet Cong agents, who held positions varying from
drivers, clerks, and radio operators to senior headquarters officers. With its
heavy American-style equipment, the ARVN was principally a road-bound force not
well configured to pursuing VC units in swamps or jungles. U.S. military
advisers responsible for helping to develop and improve the force usually lacked
knowledge of the Vietnamese language, and in any case they routinely spent less
than 12 months in the country.
At the end of 1960
the communists in the South announced the formation of the National Liberation Front (NLF), which was designed to serve as the
political arm of the Viet Cong and also as a broad-based organization for all
those who desired an end to the Diem regime. The Front's regular army, usually
referred to as the “main force” by the Americans, was much smaller than Diem's
army, but it was only one component of the Viet Cong's so-called People's
Liberation Armed Forces (PLAF). At the base of the PLAF were village guerrilla units, made up of part-time combatants who lived at home
and worked at their regular occupations during the day. Their function was to
persuade or intimidate their neighbours into supporting the NLF, to protect its
political apparatus, and to harass the government, police, and security forces
with booby traps,
raids, kidnappings, and murders. The guerrilla
forces also served as a recruiting agency and source of manpower for the other
echelons of the PLAF. Above the guerrillas were the local or regional forces,
full-time soldiers organized in platoon- or company-sized units who operated
within the bounds of a province or region. As members of the guerrilla militia
gained experience, they might be upgraded to the regional or main forces. These
forces were better-equipped and acted as full-time soldiers. Based in remote
jungles, swamps, or mountainous areas, they could operate throughout a province
(in the case of regional forces) or even the country (in the case of the main
force). When necessary, the full-time forces might also reinforce a guerrilla
unit or several units for some special operation.
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