| North Vietnamese Invasion - Laos |
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Laos - North Vietnamese InvasionFree online information regarding North Vietnamese Invasion, LaosIn foreign and domestic affairs, the atmosphere changed in the summer of 1958. Souvanna Phouma announced that with the holding of elections the RLG had fulfilled the political obligations it had assumed at Geneva, and the ICC adjourned sine die. Phoui, less scrupulous about preserving Laos's neutrality than his predecessor, angered Beijing and Hanoi by admitting diplomats from Taipei and Saigon. China and North Vietnam, already upset by the departure of the ICC, which they had seen as a restraining influence, protested. The United States worked out an agreement with France that reduced the role of the French military mission and enlarged that of the PEO, which embarked on a major strengthening of its staff and functions. The occupation by North Vietnamese security forces in
December
1958 of several villages in Xépôn District near the
Demilitarized
Zone (DMZ) between North Vietnam and South Vietnam was an
ominous One of Washington's major preoccupations was the danger
that
the Royal Lao Army would integrate the Pathet Lao troops
without
the safeguard of "screening and reindoctrinating" them.
The embassy
was instructed to tell the government that it would be
difficult to
obtain congressional approval of aid to Laos with
communists in the
Royal Lao Army. Before the final integration of 1,500
Pathet Lao
troops (two battalions) into the Royal Lao Army could take
place as
planned in May 1959, the Pathet Lao used a quibble about
officer Fighting broke out all along the border with North
Vietnam.
North Vietnamese regular army units participated in
attacks on July
28-31, 1959. These operations established a pattern of
North
Vietnamese forces leading the attack on a strong point,
then
falling back and letting the Pathet Lao remain in place
once
resistance to the advance had been broken. The tactic had
the
advantage of concealing from view the North Vietnamese
presence.
Rumors of North Vietnamese in the vicinity often had a
terrifying
effect, however. Among the men who heard such rumors in
the
mountains of Houaphan Province that summer was a young
Royal Lao
Army captain named Kong Le. Kong Le had two companies of
the Second Direct North Vietnamese involvement in Laos began
taking
another form wherein aggression was difficult to prove.
Two months
after the 1954 Geneva Conference on Indochina, the North
Vietnamese
established a small support group known as Group 100, on
the Thanh
Hoa-Houaphan border at Ban Namèo. This unit provided
logistical and
other support to Pathet Lao forces. In view of the
reversion to a
fighting strategy, the North Vietnamese and Lao parties
decided to
establish an upgraded unit. The new unit, known as Group
959,
headquartered at Na Kai, just inside the Houaphan border,
began
operating in September 1959. Its establishment coincided
with a
major effort to expand the hitherto small Pathet Lao
forces.
According to an official history published after the war,
its
mission was "serving as specialists for the Military
Commission and
Supreme Command of the Lao People's Liberation Army, and
organizing
the supplying of Vietnamese matériel to the Laotian
revolution and The Vietnamese party's strategy was by now decided with regard to South Vietnam. At the same time, the party outlined a role for the LPP that was supportive of North Vietnam, in addition to the LPP's role as leader of the revolution in Laos. Hanoi's southern strategy opened the first tracks through the extremely rugged terrain of Xépôn district in mid-1959 of what was to become the Ho Chi Minh Trail. Phetsarath and Sisavang Vong, viceroy and king, died
within two
weeks of each other in October 1959. Sisavang Vong reigned
over
Laos for fifty-four turbulent years as a man of honor,
and, after
his death, his memory was so venerated that when the
communists
came to power in Vientiane they left his statue standing.
His
successor, Savang Vatthana, lacked both his father's hold
on his
people and Phetsarath's charisma. A deeply fatalistic man
who Data as of July 1994 |
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