The United States Navy and the Vietnam Conflict: From military assistance to combat, 1959-1965Naval History Division, Department of the Navy, 1977 - Government publications |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 11
... increasing age of the ships , heavy operating schedules during periodic international crises , and lack of sufficient funds for overhauls and maintenance . In 1959 , 72 percent of the ships inspected by the Board of Inspection and ...
... increasing age of the ships , heavy operating schedules during periodic international crises , and lack of sufficient funds for overhauls and maintenance . In 1959 , 72 percent of the ships inspected by the Board of Inspection and ...
Page 18
... increase in Communist aggressiveness , highly visible measures were believed essential . In this vein , CINCPACFLT proposed the strengthening and forward deployment of U.S. limited war forces : It is obvious that the most important ...
... increase in Communist aggressiveness , highly visible measures were believed essential . In this vein , CINCPACFLT proposed the strengthening and forward deployment of U.S. limited war forces : It is obvious that the most important ...
Page 25
... increased the operational capacity of the Vientiane airfield by constructing a new , 6,560 - foot runway , taxiways , a ... increase . However , by the end of the year the project was shelved . At first enthusiastic about the plan to ...
... increased the operational capacity of the Vientiane airfield by constructing a new , 6,560 - foot runway , taxiways , a ... increase . However , by the end of the year the project was shelved . At first enthusiastic about the plan to ...
Page 26
... increasing in intensity and scope during July and August , U.S. policymakers became alarmed at the threat to the ... increase their involvement . " The Pacific Command anticipated the deterioration of the situation in Laos and the ...
... increasing in intensity and scope during July and August , U.S. policymakers became alarmed at the threat to the ... increase their involvement . " The Pacific Command anticipated the deterioration of the situation in Laos and the ...
Page 28
... increase in Laotian paramilitary forces in order to restore the country's internal security . CINCPAC also was authorized to expedite the dispatch to Laos of material and equipment , including small arms , clothing , communications ...
... increase in Laotian paramilitary forces in order to restore the country's internal security . CINCPAC also was authorized to expedite the dispatch to Laos of material and equipment , including small arms , clothing , communications ...
Contents
70 | |
88 | |
92 | |
105 | |
119 | |
130 | |
133 | |
141 | |
153 | |
164 | |
167 | |
174 | |
181 | |
186 | |
189 | |
195 | |
207 | |
219 | |
222 | |
226 | |
235 | |
244 | |
246 | |
256 | |
494 | |
535 | |
545 | |
623 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
action Admiral Burke Admiral Felt advisors Air Force aircraft airlift American amphibious antisubmarine Army Asian attack Battalion boats Captain carrier Chief of Naval Chiefs of Staff CINCPAC CINCPACFLT COM7FLT combat Command History Commander Seventh Fleet Communist COMUSMACV counterinsurgency CPFLT craft Danang deployed deployment destroyers enemy guerrilla guerrilla warfare Gulf of Siam helicopter infiltration insurgency junks Laotian logistic MAAG Maddox Marine Mekong memo for record Military Assistance mission msgs Naval Operations Navy's North officers Okinawa OP-60 to CNO Pacific Fleet Pathet Lao personnel President readiness Rear Admiral River Force Saigon Sea Force SECNAV Secretary of Defense Seventh Fleet ships South China Sea South Vietnam Southeast Asia Squadron Subic Subic Bay Task Force U.S. forces U.S. military U.S. Naval U.S. Pacific Fleet U.S.-V.N. Relations units Viet Cong Vietnamese Navy warfare
Popular passages
Page 330 - Treaty, the United States is, therefore, prepared, as the President determines, to take all necessary steps, including the use of armed force, to assist any member or protocol state of the Southeast Asia Collective Defense Treaty requesting assistance in defense of its freedom.
Page 61 - Their missile power will be the shield from behind which they will slowly, but surely, advance— through Sputnik diplomacy, limited brush-fire wars, indirect non-overt aggression, intimidation and subversion, internal revolution, increased prestige or influence, and the vicious blackmail of our allies.
Page 5 - Arthur J. Dommen, Conflict in Laos: The Politics of Neutralization (New York: Praeger, 1971) focuses on the involvement of Laos in the Indochina wars from 1945 to 1969.
Page 539 - York we set about arresting the progress of all vessels we saw, firing off guns to the right and left, to make every ship that was running in heave to, or wait until we had leisure to send a boat on board 'to see,' in our lingo, 'what she was made of.
Page 539 - ... or upon the decks of the shipping. All was noise and bustle. The carters were driving in every direction; and the sailors and labourers upon the wharfs, and on board the vessels, were moving their ponderous burthens from place to place.
Page 61 - We intend to re-examine and reorient our forces of all kinds— our tactics and our institutions here in this community. We intend to intensify our efforts for a struggle in many ways more difficult than war, where disappointment will often accompany us.
Page 61 - Too long we have fixed our eyes on traditional military needs, on armies prepared to cross borders or missiles poised for flight. Now it should be clear that this is no longer enough— that our security may be lost piece by piece, country by country, without the firing of a single missile or the crossing of a single border.
Page 594 - It was a scene never to be forgotten by any one who beheld it. The red glare from the eight burning vessels shone far and wide over the drifting ice of those savage seas ; the crackling of the fire as it made its devouring way through each doomed ship, fell on the still air like upbraiding voices.
Page 539 - Bales of cotton, wool, and merchandize ; barrels of pot-ash, rice, flour, and salt provisions ; hogsheads of sugar, chests of tea, puncheons of rum, and pipes of wine ; boxes, cases, packs and packages of all sizes and denominations, were strewed upon the wharfs and landing-places, or upon the decks of the shipping.