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This recently declassified study from June 1965 outlines the role
of Headquarters USAF in aiding the South Vietnamese effort to
defeat the communist-led Viet Cong. The author begins by discussing
general U.S. policy leading to increased military and economic
assistance to South Vietnam. He then describes the principal USAF
deployments and augmentations, Air Force efforts to obtain a larger
military planning role, some facets of plans and operations, the
Air Force-Army divergencies over the use and control of air power
in combat training and in testing, defoliation activities, and USAF
support for the Vietnamese Air Force. The study ends with an
account of events leading to the overthrow of the Diem government
in Saigon late in 1963.
Written in 1959, this study is based chiefly on the raw materials
of historical vriting--messages and correspondence--and command and
unit reports on the operations available at that time. State
Department, JCS, Air Force, Army, Navy, and Marine Corps materials
were used in its preparation. This study is of special significance
in connection with planning and preparations for local wars and
incidents. In this operation the American forces experienced no
combat action, but the possibility of action was constant and the
deployment of forces to the objective area was of first importance.
To achieve a meaningful historical context for the military
operations, the political and diplomatic background has been
presented in some detail.
First published in 1968, this study reviews the political
background and top level discussions leading to the renewed bombing
campaign in early 1966, the restrictions still imposed on air
operations, and the positions taken on them by the military chiefs.
It discusses the various studies and events which led to the
president's decision to strike at North Vietnam's oil storage
facilities and the results of those mid-year attacks. It also
examines the increasing effectiveness of enemy air defenses and the
continuing assessments of the air campaign under way at year's end.
This recently declassified 1965 monograph covers generally the
so-called national guided missile program that slowly evolved
between the closing months of World War II and the beginning of the
Korean War. More particularly, the monograph treats the interplay
among the numerous national security agencies as it concerned
guided missiles. The guided missile was among the first weapon
systems to be subjected to the disadvantages as well as the
advantages of constant scrutiny and intervention at the
interservice level. Moreover, this condition was aggravated no
little by the interest, but not the forceful leadership, of a
number of joint and other national security agencies a niche or
more above the level of the services. In a sense, then, the guided
missile became the "guinea pig" from which grew the paradoxical
situation of both a centralization and proliferation of authority
and responsibility over weapon development and use.
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