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Marine Advisors With the Vietnamese Provincial Reconnaissance Units, 1966 -1970 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R325
Discovery Miles 3 250
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Marine Advisors With the Vietnamese Provincial Reconnaissance Units, 1966 -1970 (Paperback)
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Loot Price R325
Discovery Miles 3 250
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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U.S. Marines as advisors have a long history, from Presley O'Bannon
atTripoli through Iraq and Afghanistan via Haiti, Dominican
Republic, Nicaragua, China, South Korea, Taiwan, Philippines, and
Vietnam. While most Marines think of the Vietnamese Marine Corps as
the primary advisory experience during that conflict, others served
with various other advisory programs with the U.S. Army, U.S. Navy,
U.S. Joint Special Operations, and U.S. Civil Operations and Rural
Development Support. One of these is the subject of this study:
Marine advisors with the Vietnamese Provincial Reconnaissance Units
(PRUs). This narrative is a combination of experience, research,
and reflection. While other journalistic or academic accounts have
been published, this is a narrative of participants. Many
historians consider the two most effective counterinsurgency
organizations employed during the Vietnam War to have been the PRU
and USMC Combined Action Platoons (CAP). In both cases, U.S.
Marines played a significant role in the success of these
innovative programs. It should be pointed out, however, that the
number of U.S. Marines assigned to these programs was small and the
bulk of the forces were locally recruited fighters. Both programs
used a small cadre of Marines providing leadership, training, and
combat support for large numbers of indigenous troops, and in so
doing, capitalized on the inherent strengths of each. The author
believes that both of these programs have applicability in any
counterinsurgency where U.S. forces are called upon to assist a
host government. Obviously, adjustments to these programs would
have to be made to take into account local conditions, but the core
concept of providing U.S. Marines to command or advise local
militia and special police units is one that has great promise for
success. With a clear understanding of why the PRUs and CAPs
worked, and with the necessary adjustments to take into account
local conditions, similar units can be created to defeat future
insurgencies. With this in mind, the author hopes that this work
will provide U.S. military planners with insights into creating and
managing units capable of defeating a well-organized and highly
motivated insurgent political infrastructure
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