Sihanouk Trail

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Sihanouk Trail
Cambodia
Cb-map.png
Cambodia
Type Logistical route
Site information
Controlled by People's Army of Vietnam
Site history
Built 1965–1966
In use 1966–1975
Battles/wars Operation Menu
Cambodian Incursion
Operation Patio
Operation Freedom Deal
Garrison information
Garrison 3,000–10,000

The Sihanouk Trail was a logistical supply system in Cambodia used by the People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN) and its National Front for the Liberation of South Vietnam (NLF, or Viet Cong) allies during the Vietnam War (1960–1975). Between 1966 and 1970, this system operated in the same manner and served the same purposes as the much better known Ho Chi Minh Trail (the Truong Son Road to the North Vietnamese) which ran through the southeastern portion of the Kingdom of Laos. The name is of American derivation, since the North Vietnamese considered the system integral to the supply route mentioned above. U.S. attempts to interdict this system began in 1969.

Sihanoukville connection (1966–1968)

Lua error in Module:Details at line 30: attempt to call field '_formatLink' (a nil value). Lua error in Module:Details at line 30: attempt to call field '_formatLink' (a nil value). Prince Norodom Sihanouk had ruled Cambodia adeptly since he had wrested independence from the French on 9 November 1953. He had accomplished this task by deft political maneuvering between both the left and the right to achieve what no other ruler or political group in Indochina had managed, a relatively bloodless transition to independence.[1] During the next ten years, while the conflicts in neighboring Laos and South Vietnam heated up, Sihanouk managed to sustain his delicate domestic political balance while at the same time maintaining his nation's neutrality (guaranteed by the 1954 Geneva Conference that ended the First Indochina War).[2]

This was no small accomplishment considering that Cambodia was wedged between its perennial enemies: Thailand to the west and the Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam) to the east, both of whom were increasingly supported by the United States (U.S)[3]

Sihanouk came to believe that communist triumph in Southeast Asia was inevitable and that Cambodia's military was incapable of defeating the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (North Vietnam), even with U.S. support. If Cambodia (and his rule) was to survive, he would have to make a bargain with the devil. On 10 April 1965 he broke off diplomatic relations with the U.S. and swung politically to the left.[4] To gain foreign support, both economic and political, Sihanouk turned to the People's Republic of China. One of the terms of the agreement between Sihanouk and Premier Zhou Enlai was that Cambodia would allow the use of its eastern border by the North Vietnamese in their effort to reunify the two Vietnams.[5]

In the earliest days of the Vietnam War, North Vietnam supplied the Viet Cong in the South by two methods. The first was to extend the Ho Chi Minh Trail southward into the tri-border region of Laos/Cambodia/South Vietnam. The Trail, a labyrinth of paths, roads, river transportation systems and way-stations, was constantly being expanded and improved. It served as a logistical jugular vein, for both men and material, for the North Vietnamese war effort against South Vietnam.[6] The second method was to transport supplies by sea.[7]

After direct American intervention in 1965, the increased presence of U.S. naval vessels in coastal waters Operation Market Time nullified the seaborne route. The alternative devised by Hanoi was ingenious. Following on the agreement between Sihanouk and the Chinese, an arrangement was also struck between the prince and the DRV government. In October military supplies were sailed directly from North Vietnam on communist-flagged (especially of the Eastern bloc) ships to the Cambodian port of Sihanoukville, where that nation's neutrality guaranteed their delivery. The supplies were unloaded and then transferred to trucks which transported them to the frontier zones that served as PAVN/NLF Base Areas.[8] These Base Areas also served as sanctuaries for PAVN/NLF troops, who simply crossed the border from South Vietnam and then rested, reinforced, and refitted for their next campaign in safety. None of this could have been accomplished without the acquiescence of Sihanouk.

Ho Chi Minh Trail

During 1965 North Vietnamese forces had already begun construction of new supply routes to connect the segments of the Ho Chi Minh Trail that ran through southern Laos and into Cambodia. The following year, U.S. intelligence discovered that a new road (Route 110), coming up from Cambodia, was now linked to those in Laos. The discovery of Route 110 was the origin of the term "Sihanouk Trail", but it quickly came to encompass the entire Cambodian logistical system. The new PAVN overland logistical effort, and its seaborne corollary was now directed by PAVN Unit K-20, located in the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh. K-20 worked under the guise of a commercial company owned by local ethnic Vietnamese.[9]

Although the U.S. command in Saigon and the politicians in Washington became increasingly aware of this arrangement during 1966–1967, they declined to overtly interfere due to the political ramifications of conducting military operations against a neutral country and the wishes of Sihanouk. Washington still had hopes of reopening a dialog with Sihanouk, and refrained from any actions that might alienate him further.[10]

Covert operations, however, were another matter. One result of the increasing PAVN road building effort in Cambodia was that the U.S. also upped the ante against the trail system in Laos by launching the first B-52 Stratofortress strike against the logistical system on 12 December 1965.[11] In April 1967 the U.S. headquarters in Saigon finally received authorization to launch Daniel Boone, an intelligence gathering operation that conducted by the highly secret Military Assistance Command, Vietnam Studies and Observations Group or SOG.[12]

The reconnaissance teams that "hopped the fence" into Cambodia were under strict orders not to engage in combat and to covertly collect intelligence on the Base Areas and North Vietnamese activities. The result of this effort was Project Vesuvius, in which the American command collated the gathered intelligence on PAVN/NLF violations of Cambodian neutrality and presented it to Sihanouk in hopes of altering his position.[13] It was all to no avail.

By 1968 the Americans were well aware of the scope and scale of the Cambodian logistical effort, but still remained reluctant to overtly violate Cambodia's neutrality since the U.S. still hoped to persuade Sihanouk to come on board against the communists. It was also conscious that any overt action might escalate the conflict into the international arena, possibly directly involving the Soviets and/or Chinese.[citation needed]

Operation Menu (1969–1970)

Lua error in Module:Details at line 30: attempt to call field '_formatLink' (a nil value). With the election of President Richard M. Nixon in 1968 and the announcement of the new American policy of Vietnamization in 1969, America's relations with Cambodia began to change. The goal of the U.S. was now to buy time for their South Vietnamese allies (and to cover their own withdrawal). On 11 May 1969 Sihanouk welcomed a return to full diplomatic relations with the U.S.[14] On 18 March Nixon, already anticipating this development, ordered the bombing of the Cambodian sanctuaries by B-52s. On that date 48 bombers, under secret orders from the president, crossed into Cambodian airspace and delivered their payloads in Operation Breakfast.[15] During the next 14 months this operation was followed by Lunch, Snack, Dinner, Dessert, and Supper as American bombers flew 3,630 sorties and expended 100,000 tons of ordnance on the Base Areas in what came to be called Operation Menu.[16] During this time frame, the entire program was held as a closely guarded secret from Congress, the American people, and amazingly, from the Air Force itself.[17]

Prince Sihanouk was surprisingly acquiescent about the whole affair.[18] He was under pressure from the U.S. to reopen diplomatic ties and to act militarily against the sanctuaries; from the North Vietnamese, who now received 80 percent of their supplies for their southernmost operations through Sihanoukville; and from the fledgling Chinese-supported Khmer Rouge (approximately 4,000 men).[19] Sihanouk felt that this was a propitious moment to swing back to the right. By the summer he created a right-wing Government of National Salvation under General Lon Nol and he suspended DRV arms shipments through his ports.

It was however, too late. By December, the political balancing act that the prince had so adroitly conducted for two decades, collapsed around him. Sihanouk lost control of the government to the right.[20] Contrary to expectations, the American bombing effort had not pulverized the Base Areas and had only tended to drive PAVN and the NLF deeper into the Cambodian countryside. This series of events began to pose questions for Hanoi. The North Vietnamese had been willing to maintain the status quo in Cambodia as long as their supply lines and sanctuaries were secure. But with the expansion of the war across the border they might have to take further steps to maintain their position.

Coup and incursion (1970)

Lua error in Module:Details at line 30: attempt to call field '_formatLink' (a nil value). Lua error in Module:Details at line 30: attempt to call field '_formatLink' (a nil value). On 18 March 1970, taking advantage of a visit by Sihanouk to Moscow and Beijing, the prince was deposed by the National Assembly, who promptly announced the creation of the Khmer Republic. The real power, however, fell into the hands of Lon Nol.[21] The general promptly issued an ultimatum to the North Vietnamese, ordering them out of the country, but the only real result was that the Cambodian Army led a bloody pogrom against ethnic Vietnamese in the eastern provinces.[22]

Sihanouk, furious with the course of events, quickly assumed leadership, in absentia, of the National United Front of Kampuchea (FUNK), a government in exile that was quickly recognized and supported by the North Vietnamese, the Viet Cong, the Laotian Pathet Lao, and the Khmer Rouge.[23] In the wake of the coup that toppled Sihanouk, the Lon Nol government turned over captured documents to the U.S. disclosing the full extent of his participation in the infiltration effort. Between December 1966 and April 1969, Unit K-20 had facilitated the infiltration of 29,000 tons of cargo into Cambodia.[24] With his acquiescence, the unit had purchased 55,000 tons of rice annually from the government and another 100,000 tons directly from Cambodian farmers.[25] Under Lon Nol (and with American assistance), the Cambodian Army was enlarged and reorganized in to FANK (Forces Armees Nationales Khmeres) and then launched into offensives against PAVN. Hanoi responded by launching Campaign X, an operation to widen the buffer zones around its lines of communication.[26] Using economy of force, as few as 10,000 PAVN troops routed FANK forces in western and northeastern Cambodia, taking or threatening 16 of the country's 19 provincial capitals and interdicting, for various periods, all road and rail links to the capital.[27] They also kept a wary eye on U.S. and South Vietnamese forces, which they fully expected would take advantage of the situation.

President Nixon was more than willing to seize the advantage offered by the ousting of Sihanouk and the opportunity to strike the border sanctuaries as a means of buying time for both the U.S. and South Vietnam.[28] On 29 April, the first bombings of Operation Patio took place. Like Menu, these tactical airstrikes were held in close secrecy.[29] Although they were initially an anti-infiltration measure, they quickly expanded as targets deeper in Cambodia became the norm. The program was quickly superseded by Operation Freedom Deal, the overt support of FANK troops by B-52 and tactical airstrikes by American and South Vietnamese aircraft.[30]

On 29 April a South Vietnamese armored task force crossed the Cambodian border into the area known as the Parrot's Beak, northwest of Saigon. The following day a multi-division U.S./South Vietnamese force rolled over the border and into the area known as the Fishhook, north of Saigon and opposite Binh Long Province.[31] With the exception of heavy fighting at the town of Snoul, PAVN/NLF resistance was light since most of the North Vietnamese had been withdrawn from the border regions for operations against FANK.[32] In quick succession, all of the border sanctuaries were struck, to one degree or another, by U.S. or South Vietnamese forces.

Washington and the American command in Saigon considered the operation a great success, both as a test of the new American policy of Vietnamization and in setting back any communist offensives planned against the Saigon area during the next year.[33] The logistical haul overrun and captured by the allied forces in the Base Areas was indeed impressive. 20,000 individual and 2,500 crew-served weapons; 7,000 tons of rice; 1,800 tons of munitions; 140,000 rockets and artillery shells; 435 vehicles; 29 tons of communications equipment; 55 tons of medical supplies; and 199,552 anti-aircraft rounds.[34] The incursion was, however, limited in its scale and scope. Nixon had limited the depth of penetration by U.S. forces to 35 kilometers and placed a 30 June deadline for the withdrawal of American troops to South Vietnam.

Many observers were more circumspect. As early as October 1969 (and possibly anticipating the loss of their Cambodian routes) PAVN had begun what was "probably their largest and most intense logistical effort of the whole war" by constructing and expanding their routes into northwestern Cambodia.[35] The CIA estimated that the replacement of the supplies lost during the incursion would only take 75 days to achieve.[36] As far as the long-term repercussions, there were three, all detrimental to the American cause: the loss of American political support by the Nixon administration, which would eventually lead to the fall of South Vietnam in 1975; the beginning of outright support of the Khmer Rouge by the North Vietnamese (who despised and distrusted their Chinese-supported comrades); and the spreading of general war throughout Southeast Asia.

Road to the abyss (1971–1975)

Lua error in Module:Details at line 30: attempt to call field '_formatLink' (a nil value). Lua error in Module:Details at line 30: attempt to call field '_formatLink' (a nil value). As had occurred at the end of the 1968 Tet Offensive, the North Vietnamese logistical network was improved and expanded in the wake of the incursion. Due to the loss of its Cambodian port access, Hanoi established the 470th Transportation Group to control and coordinate its Cambodian supply operations.[37] PAVN had already begun this expansion in 1968 by the building of a new "Liberation Route" from Laos into Cambodia.

The new route turned west from Muong May, at the southern end of Laos, and paralleled the Kong River into Cambodia. Eventually, this network extended past Siem Prang and reached the Mekong River near Stung Treng.[38] The next step was the seizure of the town of Kratie, in east central Cambodia, on 5 May. The 470th cleared the population out of the Mekong River town and turned it into its administrative headquarters. PAVN Base Areas to the east were fed by Kratie while men and supplies headed for the Mekong Delta region of South Vietnam were now circled westward, around Phanom Penh, through the foothills of the Cardamom Mountains and then east again to cross the border.[39]

File:SihnT.jpg
Sihanouk Trail Connections to HCMT.

On 20 August 1971, Lon Nol (now president) launched Operation Chenla II in an effort to open communications between Phnom Penh and the nation's second largest city, Kompong Thom.[27] The two cities had been isolated from another for more than a year by the Khmer Rouge. FANK was initially successful, but the insurgents (backed by PAVN regulars) launched a counteroffensive and annihilated the government forces.[40] By the end of the year the government was facing approximately 40,000 insurgents, who had taken on most of the ground fighting against the government.

By 1972 FANK was decimated, the road and rail networks were smashed, and inflation was rampant. The rice harvest plunged from 3.8 million tons in 1969 to 493,000 tons in 1973.[41] Popular support for the war against the North Vietnamese and the insurgents had completely evaporated. The Americans, negotiating with the North Vietnamese, had proposed an Indochina-wide cease fire as part of the final settlement of the conflict in South Vietnam.[42] By that time, however, Hanoi could make no commitment on behalf of its Cambodian allies.

On 28 January 1973, the day the Paris Peace Accord took effect, Lon Nol announced a unilateral cease-fire, which the Khmer Rouge promptly ignored, claiming that it was "a deception engineered by the U.S. imperialists and their allies."[43] In April, Phnom Penh itself was saved from capture only by a massive bombing effort conducted by U.S. aircraft.[44]

This was the end of U.S. air support, the last American aircraft departing Cambodian airspace on 15 August. From the beginning of Operation Breakfast the U.S. Air Force had dropped 539,129 tons of ordnance on Cambodia, 257,465 tons of which had been dropped during the last six months of the operation.[45] During 1974, Cambodia continued to collapse. More than half of the population had become refugees and malnutrition and disease stalked a nation that had once been the best fed in Southeast Asia.

On New Year's Day 1975 the Khmer Rouge launched their final offensive against the forces of Lon Nol. Neither the agony of the Cambodian people nor the resignation of Lon Nol could halt or slow the Khmer Rouge advance.[46] By 17 April, Phnom Penh had fallen and the nation slid into darkness. In the new Year Zero, the Khmer Rouge, under the leadership of Pol Pot, began its descent into mass murder and auto-genocide.

Notes

  1. McAlister Brown, Gordon Hardy, and Arnold R. Isaacs, Pawns of War Boston, Boston Publishing Company, 1987, pp. 21–24.
  2. Doyle, Lipsman and Weiss, pp. 79–84.
  3. The Thais, for example had been allies of the Japanese during the Second World War and had attempted to annex two of Cambodia's northwestern provinces. In 1956 Thai forces had occupied the sacred temple of Preah Vihear in the Dangkrek Mountains. South Vietnam had once been an integral part of the Khmer empire, and North Vietnam's Ho Chi Minh had promised to establish communist hegemony over Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos. Under the provisions of the SEATO Treaty, the "umbrella of protection" offered by the Americans only covered communist aggression, not that of the Thais, for example.
  4. Karnow, pp. 590–591. This move was not without reason. For some interesting views of the CIA's efforts to create opposition elements see Prados (1996), pp. 298–300.
  5. Lipsman and Doyle, p. 127.
  6. The only work on the system remains John Prados', The Blood Road: The Ho Chi Minh Trail and the Vietnam War, New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1998.
  7. Estimates of this seaborne traffic ran as high as 70 percent. It was carried out due to the higher volume of material that could be transported by sea, as opposed to the overland route. Prados, p. 296.
  8. Shawcross, p. 64.
  9. Victory in Vietnam, p. 465, fn 24.
  10. Brown, Hardy, and Isaacs, pp. 83–88. See also Nolan, p. 70.
  11. Van Staaveren, p. 133.
  12. Command History 1967, Appendix E, p. 14.
  13. Command History 1968, Annex F, pp. 100–101.
  14. Lipsman and Doyle, p. 140.
  15. Shawcross, pp. 19–29.
  16. Morocco, pp. 10–13.
  17. Shawcross, pp. 29–30. See also Morocco, pp. 13–14.
  18. Shawcross, pp. 93–94.
  19. Isaacs, Hardy, and Brown, p. 89. Numbers for Khmer Rouge, Shawcross, p. 73.
  20. Isaacs, Hardy and Brown, p. 90.
  21. Shawcross, pp. 112–117.
  22. Lipsman and Doyle, pp. 144–146.
  23. Karnow, pp. 605–606.
  24. Nalty, p. 138. See also Victory in Vietnam, pp. 339–340, and Snepp, pp. 19–20.
  25. Shaw, pp. 10–11.
  26. Isaacs, Hardy and Brown, p. 94. Interestingly, John Shaw, in his The Cambodian Campaign refers to Campaign X only in the context of military actions in South Vietnam. It is symptomatic of many American sources (as it was to the American leadership at the time) that Cambodia was only relevant insofar as it affected the conflict in South Vietnam.
  27. 27.0 27.1 Isaacs, Hardy and Brown, p. 98.
  28. Tilford, pp. 194–198.
  29. Morocco, p. 82.
  30. Morocco, pp. 84–85.
  31. The most detailed accounts of the incursion are John M. Shaw and Brig. Gen. Tran Dinh Tho, The Cambodian Incursion. Washington DC: U.S. Army Center of Military History, 1980.
  32. Shaw, pp. 64–65.
  33. Lipsman and Doyle, pp. 177–178.
  34. Shaw, pp. 162–163.
  35. Gilster, p. 20.
  36. Isaacs, Hardy and Brown, p. 96.
  37. Prados, p. 191.
  38. Nalty, p. 193.
  39. Shawcross, p. 247.
  40. Shawcross, pp. 202–204.
  41. Isaacs, Hardy and Brown, p. 99.
  42. Lipsman and Weiss, pp. 12–13.
  43. Isaacs, Hardy and Brown, p. 99. For information on proposed negotiations between Sihanouk and the U.S., see Shawcross, pp. 280–287. See also Snepp, pp. 97, 123.
  44. Morocco, p. 172.
  45. Shawcross p. 297.
  46. Shawcross, pp. 334–364.

References

Unpublished government documents

  • U.S. Military Assistance Command, Vietnam Command History 1967, Appendix E. Saigon, 1968.
  • U.S. Military Assistance Command, Vietnam Command History 1968, Appendix F. Saigon, 1969.

Published government documents

Secondary sources

  • Brown, McAlister, Gordon, Hardy, and Arnold Isaacs, Pawns of War. Boston: Boston Publishing Company, 1987.
  • Doyle, Edward, Samuel Lipsman, and Stephen Weiss, Passing the Torch. Boston: Boston Publishing Company, 1981.
  • Karnow, Stanley, Vietnam: A History. New York, Viking Press, 1983.
  • Kissinger, Henry A., White House Years.
  • Lipsman, Samuel and Edward Doyle, Fighting for Time, Boston: Boston Publishing Company, 1983.
  • Lipsman, Samuel and Stephen Weiss, The False Peace, 1972–1974. Boston: Boston Publishing Company, 1985.
  • Morocco, John, Rain of Fire. Boston: Boston Publishing Company, 1985.
  • Nolan, Keith W., Into Cambodia. Novato CA: Presidio Press, 1990.
  • Prados, John, The Blood Road: The Ho Chi Minh Trail and the Vietnam War. New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1998.
  • Prados, John, President's Secret Wars, New York: Elephant Paperbacks, 1996.
  • Shaw, John H., The Cambodian Campaign. Lawrence KS: University of Kansas Press, 2005.
  • Shawcross, William, Sideshow: Kissinger, Nixon and the Destruction of Cambodia. New York: Washington Square Books, 1979.
  • Snepp, Frank, Decent Interval. New York: Random House, 1977.