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(Cont'd)
7 August - 18 August
1966
By Captain Robert J.
O'Neill MID
I sat in a
small Hessian screen enclosure to which the Vietnamese were
brought one at a time. My two main aims were to find out
where the Viet Cong were in the vicinity of Binh Ba and to
examine the attitude of the villagers towards the South
Vietnamese Government, the Viet Cong and ourselves. I had
never been involved with this sort of work before, and the
only way which I knew to get information from the people was
to be pleasant to them, so I conducted each interrogation
accordingly. I used one of our Vietnamese native
interpreters when talking to the villagers, not only because
I did not speak Vietnamese, but because the interpreter
formed a social bridge between myself and the person to whom
I was talking. It seemed very important to get each
Vietnamese to relax as much as possible and a good
Vietnamese interpreter was able to do this far better then
any European. This consideration was important not only for
interrogation, but for general contact with Vietnamese
officials and civilians, for a good interpreter knew the
social form, he knew the local area, he could effect the
right sort of introduction at the commencement of a
conversation, he knew what humour to use, he could warn me
if I put a foot wrong and he could suggest something I might
do or say to the person to whom we were speaking which would
produce a favourable reaction. Vietnamese humour is subtle
and it is used in conversation to a greater extent than in
western society. The Vietnamese are very perceptive, and
those who are educated can express themselves well, not only
by speech but facial expression and gesture. And while most
of the Vietnamese were polite enough to make allowance for
the more reserved mode of the westerners, one obviously
cannot generate much warmth if people are always having to
make allowances. Thus a good interpreter was one of the most
important factors in building and maintaining an
intelligence system amongst the Vietnamese. I was fortunate
in having several good interpreters who had been supplied by
the South Vietnamese Army. Two of them, Sergeants' Bic and
Chinh, were very good at establishing effective and warm
personal relations with people and they were quite
indispensable to my work
The villagers
surprise me by the amount by which they were prepared to
tell concerning the Viet Cong. Quite probably several gave
me deliberately false information, but most of what they
told me was verified later. The Viet Cong had reduced their
activities in Binh Ba shortly after arrival of the Task
Force at Nui Dat. The guerillas based in the village had
gone into hiding in the jungle and larger units, such as the
main force battalions had not used the village for a few
months. However, the Viet Cong had not given up their
taxation on the people. The plantation workers were paid
around the fifth day of each month and the tax collectors
had usually appeared on the seventh. On the night before our
cordon had been placed around the village, a team of six
armed collectors had come into the village and had begun to
collect the August revenue and rice. Some of this team were
caught by the cordon and were apprehended by the provincial
security police at their interrogation in Ba Ria. This
coincidence of operations at Binh Ba deprived the Viet Cong
of nearly three hundred dollars (Australian) and one
thousand litres of rice.
During the
morning we met the French plantation manager, M. Pernes, and
his engineer, M. Moro. For their own protection, they were
required to come to the Battalion Headquarters for checking.
We did not suspect them of any friendly inclinations towards
the Viet Cong, but we felt that to have given them
preferential treatment in front of the villagers would have
labelled them too clearly as our assistants and this could
have resulted in a swift Viet Cong reprisal against them
before we were able to secure the village. They were an
interesting pair. Pernes had been born in China and had
spent most of his life in the Far East, particularly in
North Vietnam before 1954. Moro had been a sergeant in the
French Army and had decided to settle in Vietnam in the
nineteen-fifties. I wondered why they continued to accept
the apparent risks which they ran in attempting to continue
working in war torn Vietnam without any protection. In fact
the risks they ran were considerable, for they were always
at the mercy of some individual Viet Cong guerilla who might
have killed them without orders from the Viet Cong
headquarters whose policy was to allow the Frenchmen to go
about their businesses. Over fifty French employees of
S.I.P.H. had been killed by the Viet Cong. But they were
both waiting for better times to come and were riding out
what they hope would only be a few more difficult years.
Moro's chief joy was big game hunting, but the advent of the
Viet Cong around Binh Ba had frightened away many of the
animals, including the odd tiger and elephant, and the Viet
Cong had forbidden movement into many of the best shooting
areas. The difficulties of travelling around the province
and they neighbouring rubber plantations, particularly those
near Xuan loc, meant that social life was almost
non-existent, except for the odd weekend drive to Saigon.
Consequently both men were glad to see us and we got along
with them very well. For our part, the presence of some
civilised people living a few miles up the road from our
base camp was perhaps the chief redeeming feature of
Nui Dat. We were careful
not to put pressure on the Frenchmen for intelligence, lest
they become associated any more then necessary in the minds
of the Viet Cong with our activities. there was much to be
said for keeping the French in a state of benevolent
neutrality.
The presence
of the Frenchmen was of paramount importance to the village
and this was appreciated by both sides, so a policy of
neutrality seemed feasible. However, as time passed, natural
affinities began to assert themselves and visits were
exchanged more frequently while the activities of the Viet
Cong in Binh Ba went into decline.
Another of
those who I interrogated during the morning was Father
Joseph. He was a dignified and gentle man, aged in his
mid-forties. He had been well educated in the north and
spoke French beautifully without the usual harsh accent of
Vietnamese French. His black robes and beret, his fine
smooth hands and rimless glasses lent him an air of
authority. His personality was definite, frank and open and
he appeared to be well aware of his authority even when
cycling, for if dignity is inversely related to speed,
mon Pere was the most dignified figure ever to mount a
bicycle. Father Joseph welcomed us to Binh Ba on behalf of
the Catholic population and asked that we stay in the
village permanently. He said that we would receive little
co-operation from the villagers if they felt that we were
going to withdraw in a few days' time and leave Binh Ba open
to the Viet Cong to return to control affairs. There had
been considerable discontent amongst the people under
Viet Cong rule, because of the constant imposition of taxes,
conscription and other 'voluntary' labours and the people
would welcome the return of the South Vietnamese Government
authority, provided that it was on a permanent basis and
that the Government could protect them from Viet Cong
terrorism.
We made a special effort to ensure that the people knew that
they would not be left alone to face the Viet Cong again.
The long term plan for the village was to station a company
of Vietnamese regional forces troops in the village, so one
company of the Fifth battalion was stationed at Binh Ba
together with a Vietnamese commando company until the
regional troops were available. Captains' Boxall and Bade
served in turn as advisors to the Vietnamese troops. The
company defending Binh Ba faced a particularly anxious time,
for there was a definite possibility that the Viet Cong
would seek to recover their loss of face by smashing the
Binh Ba company with a regimental attack. Of course support
was available from Nui Dat
in the event of a major attack, because the Binh Ba post was
just within 105 mm artillery
range and the squadron of APC's
at Nui Dat could have
driven reinforcements to Binh Ba in less than two hours.
Nonetheless, the garrison of Binh Ba would have to hold off
an attack against ten to one superiority in numbers until a
counter attack was launched, so the company could never
afford to relax its vigilance.
The provision
of this company out of our own resources placed a heavy
strain on the battalion, stretching our commitment by almost
another third, for there was still the same need to patrol
and defend the Nui Dat
base and to constantly improve the living conditions in
order to weather the monsoon which was due to continue until
November. However, the importance of Binh Ba was such that
it could not be allowed to slip back into Viet Cong Hands
and the additional load had to be accepted.
After I had
spoken to Father Joseph, I met several of the plantation
secretaries. These men were local Vietnamese, who had worked
their way up the promotional ladder and had occupied the
highest positions open to the Vietnamese in the S.I.P.H.
structure. These men had received a secondary education in
the plantation school and spoke French fluently. They were
in position of considerable authority over the other
plantation workers, their wages were much greater and they
lived in larger houses on the northern edge of the village.
These men were an interesting group. Their high positions
within a capitalist organization made them obvious targets
for Viet Cong propaganda, abuse and victimisation, yet their
natural ability and successful careers gave them a position
of leadership in a nationalist sense. They were clearly
aware of the two pressures acting on them and although they
appeared to be very co-operative outwardly and would discuss
Viet Cong activities which had occurred outside Binh Ba,
they would give no information about the Viet Cong within
the village.
This
behaviour was also displayed by the third level of village
society, the rubber tappers, factory workers, wood cutters,
and peasant farmers. Quite clearly they did not like the
Viet Cong, for they were prepared to give information about
affairs which did not have a direct bearing about
individuals living in the village, but few gave specific
information on happenings within the village. Some of them
asked us to remain permanently in the village and it was
apparent that whatever propaganda the Viet Cong had directed
against us had not been very effective. I was surprised at
these attitudes, Because I had expected to encounter a
marked degree of hostility and a general conviction the Viet
Cong were the right side to support, for the latter had
enjoyed several of local power when they were able to make
the Government look impotent and indifferent to the fate of
the villages. The attitudes of the people of Binh Ba had a
profound effect on my approach to the Viet Cong because they
had shown me that the Viet Cong had not been any more
successful when in authority than the Government and hence
there were good grounds for hoping that a stronger
Government in the material sense would be successful against
the Viet Cong in the long term
While the
provincial authorities were conducting their interrogations
in Ba Ria over a period of three days, the members of the
battalion were concentrating on meeting people around the
village to establish a good image. We, as an operational
battalion, could do little by ourselves by way of a civil
aid programme except the provision of medical attention and
the holding of discussions with several of the more
prominent villagers to see what were the best avenues for
the provision of more permanent aid under the control of the
Task Force Civil Affairs team. In fact Binh Ba was not badly
off for the essentials of life because S.I.P.H. ran their
plantations with a keen social welfare policy. They provided
a school and paid for teachers when they could be obtained,
an S.I.P.H. doctor flew into Binh Ba every Friday to
supervise the village dispensary and to treat serious cases
which the medical orderly had not been able to handle, and
the plantation authorities saw that the standard of housing
was kept fairly high.
However,
there was one matter of relative urgency where we could take
some action. Route 2 had been closed to all traffic between
Binh Ba and Hoa Long since our arrival, because the road ran
through the Task Force base for nearly two miles. Until we
were properly established in a firm defensive position and
could spare the troops to maintain rigid control over all
Vietnamese who desired to use the road, it had had to remain
closed. Because the people to the north of
Nui Dat had been cut off
from the Ba Ria market they had been dependant either on
their own village markets for commerce or on trade with the
more distant Xuan Loc to the north. This state of affairs
had to be ended as soon as possible and the occasion of
restoration of Government control to Binh Ba was clearly a
good opportunity, for we knew that Binh Ba under the
protection of one of our companies, there could be no large
enemy force which could either come down the road from the
north, or occupy part of the road in the vicinity of
Nui Dat. So a special
road clearance operation was carried out to prepare the road
for reopening to the people on Saturday, August 13th,
ensuring that the Viet Cong did not retaliate with booby
traps, mines or ambushes.
We
anticipated that a great number of people from all of the
northern villages such as Binh Gia, Ngai Giao, and La Van
would swell the numbers from Binh Ba and it seemed sensible
to provide as much assistance to the people with our trucks
as we could. When the time came for the Vietnamese to board
the first truck for Ba Ria, one soldier had been detailed to
climb on the tail board first in order to help the small
villagers up. The assistance was useless, for the man
disappeared under a flood of seventy Vietnamese who poured
onto the vehicle in a torrent, sweeping him to the rear and
making his extrication a matter of extreme difficulty.
During the first day the trucks moved some fifteen hundred
people to Ba Ria.
The opening
of the road was of particular importance to the people of
Binh Gia for their access to Ba Ria had been severely
restricted by the Viet Cong for some years. Denial of market
facilities for wholesale transactions had forced up the cost
of living in Binh Gia and had reduced the availability of
goods, particularly foodstuffs, so the reopening of the road
was greeted with great jubilation. We paid liaison visits to
Binh Gia from Binh Ba by helicopter to explain the control
arrangements for the road and to make permanent contact with
the village leaders. This link proved particularly valuable
for intelligence of Viet Cong movement around Binh Gia, and
so our range of surveillance was extended by many miles for
the remainder of our time at
Nui Dat. Two weeks after the opening of the road we were
surprised to see two truck loads of Vietnamese in their best
array drive up to Battalion Headquarters at
Nui Dat. We were asked
to receive a deputation of thanks from Binh Gila, presented
by the entire village council. They presented the battalion
with gifts of baskets of limes, bunches of bananas, and
several live chickens which Colonel Warr had to hold by
their trussed feet at the presentation ceremony. The
councillors stopped and talked to us for an hour about the
new possibilities in store for the people of Binh Gia now
that their isolation had been broken and the danger of their
falling under Viet Cong control had receded.
As a result
of the eviction of the Viet Cong from Binh Ba, we were able
to follow up the cordon of Duc My with some attempt at
personal contact with the assistance of the people. The need
for civil aid was much greater than Binh Ba because the
administration of S.I.P.H. did not extend to Duc My,
although many of the Montagnards worked on the plantation.
The acceptance of us by the people of Duc My was also
surprising. As the battalion civil affairs officer I went
down to Duc My with an interpreter shortly after we had
arrived at Binh Ba in order to tell the villagers that we
had come to stay and that we would help with any problems,
such as urgent medical assistance for seriously ill people,
transport to hospital in Ba Ria or anything else urgent they
cared to request. When the interpreter announced our
intentions of permanence in the area the Montagnards broke
into a wild burst of clapping. After the talk I was invited
into several of the houses to drink tea, eat bananas and
have children presented to me. It seemed incredible that a
few weeks beforehand I had been creeping around these houses
in the depths of night.
Before the
battalion was due to return from Binh Ba, an intelligence
report was received that an important local Viet Cong
headquarters was located to the east of the Gallia
plantation. Because the battalion was close by, we were
given the task of searching the area in which the
headquarters was supposed to have been located. Although we
spent several days on the search, no headquarters location
or any trace of Viet Cong occupation was discovered. While
we were engaged on this search, The first Viet Cong on the
Nui Dat base was made.
In the early hours of the morning of August 17th a barrage
of mortar bombs and 75 mm. artillery shells fell on the area
around the Task Force Headquarters. Fortunately few
casualties were suffered, but the attack had obviously been
mounted by a considerable force, it would have been unwise
from the point of view of our future safety to have allowed
the Viet Cong to have moved so close to the base without
causing them some heavy loss. However, the Task Force
Commander, Brigadier Jackson, was not in a position to
respond with force for only one of the two battalions were
in the base. Consequently the Fifth Battalion was ordered
to return to Nui Dat as
speedily as possible with due respect to the completion of
the search for the Viet Cong headquarters. The battalion
returned to the base on the following day, just after
departure of D Company of the Sixth Battalion for a search
of the area from which the mortars had fired onto the Task
Force base. D Company of the Fifth Battalion was placed on
standby should assistance had been required by the Sixth
Battalion and the remainder of the battalion had held itself
in readiness for instant action to either repel a heavy
attack or go in pursuit of the withdrawing enemy.
After we
arrived back at Nui Dat
we received notification from Colonel Dat that the cordon of
Binh Ba had netted a great number of Viet Cong cadre and
guerillas based in the village. Some of these Viet Cong had
been caught while visiting their families for a short
period. The cordon had taken them completely by surprise, so
all precautions taken had been effective. Also apprehended
were Viet Cong sympathisers who had been giving material aid
in unusually large amounts. In all, nearly seventy Viet Cong
had been captured without the loss of a single man to the
battalion. Two thousand people had been brought back under
Government control and road access between the centre of the
northern district of Phuoc Tuy, Duc Thanh, and Ba Ria had
been re-established. This paved the way for the extension of
Government control over another ten thousand people and
extended our intelligence net by seven miles. We concluded
that we would be unlikely to make such gains as easily
again. Binh Ba had been the most significant of the local
fruits to be gathered and we now had to be sure that we did
not over extend ourselves and allow the Viet Cong to win
their way back.
End
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