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Target Saigon: the Fall of South Vietnam - Volume 2: the Beginning of the End, January 1974 - March 1975 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R544
Discovery Miles 5 440
You Save: R71
(12%)
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Target Saigon: the Fall of South Vietnam - Volume 2: the Beginning of the End, January 1974 - March 1975 (Paperback)
Series: Asia@War
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List price R615
Loot Price R544
Discovery Miles 5 440
You Save R71 (12%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 17 working days
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Drawing on a wide range of Vietnamese-language sources, the author
presents a detailed account of the continuing efforts of North
Vietnam to invade the South, enlivened by a large number of
previously unpublished photographs, and colour profiles for
modellers. A year after the Paris peace accord had been signed, on
17 January 1973, peace had not been settled in Vietnam. During that
period, the North Vietnamese continued their attacks now that the
United States had pulled out completely their forces, with the
definitive conquest of South Vietnam as the goal. The South
Vietnamese forces' erosion on the field increased in face of a
series of concerted North Vietnamese offensives at Corps level. The
drastic American aid reduction began to impact heavily on the South
Vietnamese ability to wage war. Equally, Saigon could not respond
to a Chinese invasion of the Paracel Islands after a brief naval
battle, and if Hanoi had been bolstered by massive deliveries of
equipment from Peking and Moscow, both the Chinese and the Soviet
had withheld the delivery of sufficient ammunitions for the
artillery and the tanks, to deter the North Vietnamese from
attempting a new widescale offensive against the South. It was with
these constraints that the North Vietnamese leadership planned
their new campaign, initially expecting it to take 2 to 3 years. A
last test had to be done in order to assess the American intentions
in case of an all-out North Vietnamese offensive against the South
- if a South Vietnamese provincial capital was taken without
American reaction, then Hanoi would begin the last campaign of the
war. After the fall of Phuoc Long, the North Vietnamese decided to
attack the strategic Central Highlands area where they hoped to
destroy the greater part of an ARVN Corps. The battle of Ban Me
Thuout would be the pivotal event leading to the rapid collapse of
South Vietnam. While the battle was going on, without taking
advices from his generals, President Nguyen Van Thieu of South
Vietnam decided to take radical measures by redeploying his forces.
That meant abandoning no less than half of the country, in order to
shorter his logistic communication lines and to concentrate his
remaining depleted forces around Saigon and the Mekong Delta area.
He probably also hoped that by aggravating the military situation
he would force Washington to fulfil its promise that "in case of
massive violation of the cease-fire", the Americans would resume
their military aid and would send back the B-52s.
General
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