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Griffin Daily News
RELIEVES THE ACHES
OF COLDS AND FLU
BUFFERIN
PKG. OF SI 29
100
20
Wednesday, March 4, 1970
What It’s Like
Fighting
'Secret War’
EDITORS NOTE: Robert
Kaylor, a paratroop veteran,
has covered both the Vietnam
War and the “secret war” in
Laos. In the following dispatch
he examines in detail the role
of the U.S. adviser in Laos.
UPI-New York
By ROBERT KAYLOR
VIENTIANE, Laos (UPI)—It
was early morning. A sandy
haired young man in faded blue
jeans and a sports shirt sat on
a bench in the Air America
terminal, waiting for his flight.
He looked almost like the guy
next door back in the United
States. The only giveaway were
his short haircut and his green
and black jungle boots like the
ones worn by U. S. combat
troops in Vietnam.
He said he was headed for
the airfield at Long Cheng,
forward headquarters of the
“clandestine army” of Maj.
Gen. Vang Pao, and from there
back to his job in the hills of
north Laos.
The American declined to say
just what that job was. When
his plane was ready to leave he
said goodby, picked up a
military B 4 suitcase, and left.
Say Nothing Changed
That encounter took place
some months back, before the
current Communist offensive in
Laos. Lao military sources say
that nothing has changed in the
intervening months, and that
there are other Americans like
the one at the terminal.
They are part of a complicat
ed infrastructure that has been
built to prop up a Laotian
defense establishment that Lao
and American officials agree
would long ago have collapsed
without their help.
Part of the infrastructure is
visible on the surface in the
capital of Vientiane. Part of it,
like the American in blue jeans
and jungle boots, normally is
not visible in a country that is
technically neutral and where
U.S. military involvement is not
openly admitted.
Os a total of about 830
persons that the U.S. mission
acknowledges as employed by
the U.S. government in Laos,
about 80 or so are military
personnel, working for the U.S.
Army and Air force attache
offices at the American Embas
sy here.
Much Larger Force
But military sources in the
Thailand-Laos region say there
is an American advisory,
training and support system
going far beyond these num
bers. It cuts across the border
between Thailand and Laos.
Some of its members have
civilian status and some are
military on tours of temporary
duty in Laos.
In Laos, the hub of the
system is at Long Cheng, where
Vang Pao’s army of Lao and
Thai mountain tribesemen is
known to be administered and
supervised by the Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA), an
organization with a passion for
secrecy.
In Thailand, the system
works out of several centers.
Among them are the U.S.
airbase at Udorn, about 50
miles from Vientiane; an
airbase at Nakorn Phanom just
across the Mekong River from
Laos, and a military complex
north of Bangkok at Lopburi,
headquarters for U.S. Green
Berets in Thailand.
Military sources say the U.S.
advisers are in a support and
training role that meets the
Nixon administration’s guide
line of no ground troops in
Laos.
U.S. Officer Killed
But casualties do occur. An
American officer was trapped
at Moung Soui northwest of the
Plain of Jars last year when it
was overrun by North Vietna
mese soldiers and was killed,
according to reliable sources.
In addition to the ground ,
advisory efforts, military sour
ces say there is also a sizeable
U.S. Air Force contingent
operating in northern Laos on <
temporary duty status from
Thailand.
These airmen support the
U.S. air war in Laos, manning '
radar stations which pick out
targets and run surveillance on
North Vietnam and providing
liaison between the Lao and
U.S. air support.
In addition, there are the
officially acknowledged civilian ,
contract airlines, Air America
Inc., and Continental Air
Services, which support Lao
military forces. Air America a
flies unmarked H 34 helicopters
which haul troops and ammuni
tion and bring wounded out
from battlefields. «