Pag ightyla THE SUMMER DALY7 Tuesday, July 17, 197_ ' Vietnamese battlefield report SAIGON - The Vietnam battle- field is taking final, predictable shape. War has raged across it for three decades: and troops from six foreign nations have ganibled iith death here. The war is still on. The two cease-fire agreements signed in January and Jane if this year have only slowed it down tong enough for the United States to pull out entirely. THE FRENCH FOREIGN Le_ gion left 18 years earlier. The Australians, the New Zealanders, the Thais, and the South Koreans left more recently but without a backward glance or commitment. On the battlefield now, alone for the first time, are the Viet- namese. And also for the f i r s t time in three decades it is 'pos- sible to deduce the probable out- come on the battlefield if a poli- tical solution is delayed, and the war continues. Here is how the battlefield looks to both sides: THE SOUTH VIETNAMESE. The United States came to Viet- nam to win the war, but when it became too costly in men and money, tactics were changed and the concept of "Vietnamization" was introduced. The idea was to build the Saigon army into a Copy of the American one, as far 1s weaponry was concerned. The American strategy remained the snme until the cease-fire agree- ment in January: Win the -War. His "Vietn'smiz-stion" worked? The answer has to be no. First of all, Saigon has had to yield an enormous part of the coun- try to the Commnist side, as much as 25 per cent according to suime estimates. This lost ter- rain includes the sites of some of the most famous American battles - the la Drang Valley, Dak To, Khe Sanh, War Zone C. SECONDLY, "Vietnamization" never did fill the holes left by the departing allied troops. "I have not been able to fill up the vacuum left when the S o u t h Koreans went home," said t h e chief of coastal Khanh Hoa Pro- vince, Col. Ly Ba Pham. The 3rd U.S. Marine Division held Quang Tri Province until t h e Americans went home. N o w yellow-star Communist flags dot the hillsides there. The same flags fly in Kontum Province, Loc Ninh, and the other "holes" left behind when the al- lies went home. Vietnamization" never did work in weaponry, either. Saigon has one of the world's biggest air forces, but few planes that can do aerial combat with the Hanoi government's MIG21s. WHAT ABOUT the combat sold- iers? Last year the Saigon forces held Kontum and An Loc despite major Communist attacks, a n d fought back into Quang Tri City. But this was with the help of the whole U.S. Air Force arsenal. The South Vietnamese sold- ier has grown used to attacking with massive air support. Th e Communist soldier has grown used to fighting under those American bombs. Take away American planes and you have a much stronger Hanoi soldier and a much weaker Saigon one. HERE IS HOW THE Commun- ist side views the situation. The North Vietnamese are link- ing up territory captured inside South Vietnam via a road net- work estimated at 500 miles long. Truck traffic indicates a buildup of military equipment as mas- sive as that which pteceeded the major Communist offensive of last year. Free from American bombing for the first time since 1965, the 4 Centicore Bookshops, Inc. 336 Maynard, 663-1812 1229 S. University, 665-2604 ANN ARBOR'S MOST COMPLETE BOOKSTORES THE AMERICAN BOMBS~that levelled this village are no longer a factor in determining the outcome of fighting in South Vietnam. Communist side is laying in sur- face to air missiles around lengthened airstripes at K h e Sanh and the Asahau Valley, and building small towns. . THE OFFENSIVE last y e a r brought the Communist armies to within touching distance of the major population centers. Heavy guns are within range of Kontum City, Quang Tri and Hue, and possibly Da Nang. The environs of Saigon are within a day's march of Communist regiments in War Zones C and D. The whole Cambodian border along the populous Mekong Delta is in the hands of Communist troops, giving easy access to the population. What is likely to happen? What is the shape of the future? THE HOPE WAS that the cease- fire agreements would put an end to the fighting this year, that zones of control could be deter- mined, and that an orderly trans- ition would be made to a political settlement. At best the Communist side would like participation in a coalition government such as that in Laos; at worst, recognition by the Saigon government, and of- ficial acknowledgement of Com- munist control over occupied ter- ritory. The Communist side can be ex- pected to use military pressure to achieve any, or all, of its poli- tical objectives. It has all the options; Saigon can only defend. ONE COMMUNIST option is the renewal of the guerrilla war. The guerrilla "people's war" or- ganized by the Viet Cong almost overwhelmed the government in 1965. That is what brought Amer- ican troops in. The Viet Cong were nearly put out of business because the entry of American troops into the war tipped the balance against them. North Vietnam sent down not only infantry divisions to fight the Americans, but thousands of replacements for dead V i e t Cong guerrillas. One reason for the decline of the Viet Cong was that the Saigon government extended its control over the population and gave every farmer a gun and told him to point it at the Viet Cong. THAT WAS ALL very well while the government's control in the countryside was firm. Now control is weaker because of the near-proximity of Communist troops. Already in Chuong Thien Province in the Mekong Delta guerrillas are being recruited from all the hamlets, according to a defector. In effect the Com- munists are now telling the farm- ers to point their gtns at the government. How effective can this guerrilla regeneration be? Knowledgeable Americans point out that while the South Vietnamese regular army is loyal to Saigon, the lo- cal militiamen whe number in the hundreds of thousands, are loyal to the hamlets where they were born. Some fought for the Viet Cong before the government in Saigon extended its control in the late 1960s. Presumably +hey could fight for the VC again if govern- ment control erodes. Another Communst option is this, the long-term indoctrination of selected South Vietnamese who -are taken North. Such people re- turning to South Vietnam in the late 1950ycreated the Viei Cong insurgency. NOW FROM every province in the country there have been re- ports of young people fram 12 to 18 years of age, either kidnaped or willingly leaving home, going North. In Binh Thuan on the coast 90 young persons were tak- en in April and May. The Communist side is alreadev repopulating Quang ri with some of the more than 20,000 pe(i- ple it took North after overrun- ning the province in 'he 1972 of- fensive. There is a third option: Ano- ther full-scale Communist offen- sive, launched from scure base HAIRSTYLING As You Like it! NEW TRENDS FOR 1973 TRIMS-SHAGS AND RAZOR CUTS SHOPS - 611 E. UNIVERSITY 615 E. LIBERTY Dascola Barbers areas against Tay Ninh, An Loc, Konturn, Pleiku, Binh Dinh Pro- vince, Hue and selected Mekong Delta targets. While anyttoiig in happen in Vietnam and often' does, knowledgeable Americans and Vietnamese see the Cnmmun- ists using a combination of ell their options. FIRSTLY, THEY will continue to strengthen their territory with roadbuilding and resettlement. They will attempt to build the Viet Cong back into a powerful military force. And they can launch the occasional "mini of- fensive" that will help demoralize the Saigon army and grab more terrain. If all this were to fail, then the Communists coud take t h e long-term viewpoint, methodically building up a reinvigorated cadre from those Southerners now be- ing taken North, and sending them down South some day to start the whole thing over again. This last possibility - failure- seems the most unlikely. "The main purpose of the North Viet- namese these past few years has been to oust the foreigner," said Khanh Hoa Province Chief Col. Pham. "Now they have us all alone." HOW MIGHT AMERICA fit in- to this somber future? Less and less as the days go by, it seems. Apparent American disinterest in the course of the war effort has led to a breakoff in the close U.S. adviser relationships t h at were built up over a decade. The Saigon high command has retreated into secrecy, and t h e few American military men left are finding it near impossible to maintainsan accurate accouting of what is going on in the field. With U.S. military advisers completely out of the countryside the American officers and civil- ians attached to the small Amer- ican defense establishment in Sai- gon often have to resort to wak- ing up Vietnamese generals from their siestas, or coralling them during tennis matches, to plead for information about what big actions are going on. THIS SUDDEN huge informa- tion gap could be disastrous in the event of another major Com- munist offensive. U.S. officials would have great difficulty in judging the accuracy of Vietnam- ese reports and the United States no longer has intelligence sources of its, own to verify targets and Communist troop movements. PETERs AIENETT is the As- sociated Press' chief corres- pondent in Vietnam, tIe has won a Pulitzer Prize fur his coverage of the sear, Drunk drivers add color to our highways. Nothing adds color to our high- ways like a car crash. And drunk drivers are involved in at least 800,000crashes a year. 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