Phoenix Program

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Phoenix Program Page 57

by Douglas Valentine


  There is another disturbing connection in the La Penca bombing. On the night before the bomb went off, Oliver North’s liaison to the contras, Rob Owen, was meeting in San José, Costa Rica, with the CIA station chief, Joe Fernandez. Rob Owen is the brother of Dwight Owen, who was killed in an ambush by the same Vietcong outfit that was supplied by the villagers of My Lai.

  Consider also that Tom Polgar, former Saigon station chief, was chief investigator for the Senate Select Committee probing the Iran-contra affair. In the February 1986 issue of Legal Times, Donald Gregg is quoted as saying that Polgar “wanted to assure me that [the hearings] would not be a repeat of the Pike and Church investigations.” When George Bush was director of central intelligence in 1976, Gregg was his representative before the congressional committees that were investigating the CIA’s role in criminal activities, including the attempted assassinations of foreign leaders. At the time Gregg presented the committees with an ultimatum: Back off or face martial law. Polgar, it seems, likewise derailed another round of executive-legislative brinkmanship.

  In 1985 Tom Polgar was a consultant on George Bush’s Task Force on Combatting Terrorism, along with Oliver North and John Poindexter.

  What these “old Phoenix boys” all have in common is that they profit from antiterrorism by selling weapons and supplies to repressive governments and insurgent groups like the contras. Their legacy is a trail of ashes across the third world.

  And where can Phoenix be found today? Wherever governments of the left or the right use military and security forces to enforce their ideologies under the aegis of antiterrorism. Look for Phoenix wherever police checkpoints ring major cities, wherever paramilitary police units patrol in armored cars, and wherever military forces are conducting counterinsurgent operations. Look for Phoenix wherever emergency decrees are used to suspend due process, wherever dissidents are interned indefinitely in detention camps, and wherever dissidents are rounded up and deported. Look for Phoenix wherever security forces use informants to identify dissidents, wherever security forces keep files and computerized blacklists on dissidents, wherever security forces conduct secret investigations and surveillance on dissidents, wherever security forces, or thugs in their hire, harass and murder dissidents, and wherever such activities go unreported by the press.

  But most of all, look for Phoenix in the imaginations of ideologues obsessed with security, who seek to impose their way of thinking on everyone else.

  * Under Colonel Nicolas Carranza, who, according to the Center for National Security Studies, was recruited by the CIA in the late 1970’s at a cost of ninety thousand dollars a year.4

  * In 1983 Bush journeyed to El Salvador and arranged to have the most prominent death squad leaders sent to diplomatic posts abroad. By 1987 nine of eleven were back.

  APPENDIX

  Addendum 1: Psyops Comic Book: “Phung Hoang Campaign”

  The cartoon book titled Gia dinh ong Ba va Chien Dich Phung Hoang (Mr. Ba’s Family and the Phoenix Operation) reads as follows:

  Caption 2. Summary: Mr. Ba and his family are presently living in Phong Thanh village. This village is actually part of the nationalist territory but is still infiltrated by a number of Communist elements; therefore, Phoenix leaders have taken military action against them. They received enthusiastic cooperation from the villagers. As a result of this, and through accurate information provided by local people, many Communist cadres have been arrested. These circumstances help you follow the story of Mr. Ba’s family.

  Caption 3. The cruel Communists kill innocent people again!

  Caption 4. Following is the news: “This morning at nine A.M., a Lambretta was blown up by a Communist mine five kilometers outside Phung Hiep village. Two children were killed, three women wounded. The Communists continue to terrorize people!”

  Caption 5. “Hello, sister Tu!”

  “Why are you so late?”

  “Hello, brother and sister. I am sorry I am late. I left early this morning, but we had to stop at the bridge because it was destroyed by a Communist bomb. We had to wait for the bridge to be repaired by a military engineering unit.”

  Caption 6. “Mr. Ba, you are asked to pay farm tax to the Liberation Front!”

  Caption 7. “This year the crop is poor, but the Communists still collect taxes. It is a miserable situation. I have heard there is much security in Phung Phu village. There taxes are not collected by the Communists any more thanks to the Phoenix operation. I wonder why such an operation has not come to our village?”

  “Perhaps because nobody provides them with information! This afternoon the Phoenix operation agents posted a notice at the intersection. I will go and see it tomorrow.”

  Caption 8. “What is new, my friends?”

  “There are two dangerous Communist cadres hiding in our village.”

  Caption 9. Here are the two Communist cadres sought by the Phoenix Operation. The wanted poster says: “Dear compatriots, If you know the hiding place of the two above-named Communist cadres, please notify the national police or the armed forces. You will be rewarded, and your name will be kept secret.”

  Caption 10. The radio broadcast says, “Compatriots, please help your government by providing information indicating the hiding place of two Communists, Ba Luong and Hai Gon. You will be rewarded, and your name will be kept secret.”

  “Did you hear that on the radio?”

  “I knew it already. It is exactly the same as it has been posted on the wall at the intersection of the village.”

  Caption 11. “See, there are so many leaflets!”

  Caption 12. “Honey, what do they say in those leaflets?”

  “They are the same as those wall posters, as well as the announcements on the radio yesterday. The two Communists Ba Luong and Hai Gon are presently hiding in our village in order to collect taxes. I am determined to report to the Phoenix Operation Committee because I know their hiding place.”

  Caption 13. “Where are you going so early?”

  “I am going to the district headquarters to report about what happened last night.”

  Caption 14. “Dear Sir, the two Communists you want are hiding in my village. They are hiding in the house number 80/2 by my village boundaries. They only go out at night. If you succeed in arresting them, please keep my name secret!” “Thank you, Mr. Ba, your name will be kept secret.” (The Phoenix Operation provides security and prosperity to the people.)

  Caption 15. “Why are so many soldiers entering our village?”

  “Perhaps they are conducting a military operation against the Communists in hiding.”

  Caption 16. “The two Communists are very dangerous. We can only have peace and security when they are captured.”

  Caption 17. “Ladies, do you know that the two Communists are captured? From now on our village will be secure. There will be no more assassinations or tax collectors. The Phoenix operation is very effective!”

  Caption 18. “Mr. Ba, since the two Communists are captured, our village is at peace. Too bad they are in jail! If they returned to our side beforehand, it could have been better for them!”

  “They are obstinate indeed. Had they returned like Mr. Thanh from Long Dien village, they certainly would have enjoyed the government’s clemency. Mr. Thanh is now reunited with his family.”

  Caption 19. “Mr. Ba, you have some mail.”

  “I wonder who sends you this mail?”

  “Wait and see!”

  Caption 20. “What does the letter say?”

  “Dear Mr. Ba, Since you have helped the government by providing information and undermining the local structures of the Communists, you will be rewarded accordingly. You are invited to attend the coming meeting of the Phoenix Operation Committee to receive your award. Sincerely yours.”

  Caption 21. Poster says: “Mr. Nguyen Van Thanh, former guerrilla at Long Dien village, Gia Rai District, Bac Lieu Province, has returned to the national side. He therefore is allowed to be reunited with his family.”
/>   GLOSSARY

  AA

  Air America: subsidiary airline of the Central Intelligence Agency which was active in Asia during the Vietnam War

  Agroville

  (Khu Tru Mat): garrison community into which rural Vietnamese were forcefully relocated in order to isolate them from the Vietcong.

  AID

  Agency for International Development: branch of the U.S. State Department responsible for advising the government of Vietnam, including the National Police

  AIK

  Aid-in-Kind: nonmonetary aid

  An Ninh

  The Vietcong’s internal security and propaganda service

  APC

  Accelerated pacification campaign: pacification program begun November 1968 to increase the number of villages rated “secure” under the Hamlet Evaluation System

  APT

  Armed propaganda team: platoon-size unit composed of soldiers with both a combat and psychological warfare mission

  ARVN

  Army of the Republic of Vietnam

  ASA

  Army Security Agency: branch of the National Security Agency working with the U.S. Army to locate the Vietcong through its radio communications

  Biet Kich

  Commando

  Cadre

  Nucleus of trained personnel around which a larger organization can be built

  CAP

  Combined Action Patrol: platoon-size unit composed of U.S. Marines and Vietnamese Territorial Forces

  CAS

  Controlled American source: an employee of the CIA

  CD

  Civilian detainee: Vietnamese civilian detained by U.S. or Vietnamese military forces

  CDEC

  Combined Document Exploitation Center: formed October 1966 to support allied military operations primarily through the translation of captured enemy documents

  CG

  Census Grievance: CIA covert action program designed to obtain information on the VCI through static agents in villages, or mobile agents in armed propaganda teams

  CI

  Counterintelligence: that aspect of intelligence devoted to destroying the effectiveness of enemy intelligence activities

  CICV

  Combined Intelligence Center, Vietnam: created in 1965 to coordinate U.S. and South Vietnamese intelligence operations

  CID

  Criminal Investigation Division: branch of the U.S. Army charged with investigating crimes committed by American soldiers

  CIDG

  Civilian Irregular Defense Group: U.S. Special Forces-trained village and tribal security and reaction forces

  CINCPAC

  Commander in Chief, Pacific: the U.S. military headquarters in Hawaii to which the commander of MACV reported

  CIO

  Central Intelligence Organization: formed in 1961 to coordinate South Vietnamese foreign and domestic intelligence operations

  CIS

  Combined Intelligence Staff: formed in November 1966 to manage the attack against the VCI in Saigon and its environs

  CMDC

  Capital Military District Command: formed in June 1968 to coordinate military and pacification operations in Saigon and its environs

  CMEC

  Combined Materiel Exploitation Center: formed in 1965 to coordinate intelligence gained from the analysis of captured enemy materiel

  CORDS

  Civil Operations and Revolutionary Development Support: organization established in May 1967 under MACV, designed to coordinate U.S. military and civilian operations and advisory programs in South Vietnam

  COSVN

  Central Office of South Vietnam: mobile headquarters of the South Vietnamese insurgency, created in 1962

  CPDC

  Central Pacification and Development Council: formed in 1968 by William Colby, who was then chief of CORDS, as a liaison staff to the office of the prime minister of South Vietnam

  CPHPO

  Central Phung Hoang Permanent Office: formed in July 1968 to manage the South Vietnamese attack against the VCI

  CSC

  Combined Security Committee: formed in 1964 to protect U.S. government personnel and facilities in Saigon and its environs

  CT

  Counterterrorist: mercenary soldier employed by the CIA to kill, capture, and/or terrorize the VCI

  CTIV

  Cong Tac IV (also known as Counterterror IV): joint U.S.-South Vietnamese program begun in December 1966, designed to eliminate the VCI in Saigon and its environs

  CTSC

  Combined Tactical Screening Center: formed by the U.S. Army in 1967 to distinguish prisoners of war from civilian detainees

  Cuc Nghien Cuu

  Central Research Agency: North Vietnamese intelligence service

  DAO

  Defense Attaché Office: U.S. military headquarters that replaced MACV in 1973 after the cease-fire

  DCI

  Director of Central Intelligence: U.S. official in charge of managing the affairs of the CIA

  DEPCORDS

  Deputy to the MACV commander for Civil Operations and Revolutionary Development Support

  DGNP

  Director General of the National Police: Vietnamese official in charge of the South Vietnamese police

  DIOCC

  District Intelligence and Operations Coordination Center: office of the Phoenix adviser in each of South Vietnam’s 250 districts

  DMZ

  Demilitarized zone: stretch of land along the seventeenth parallel, created in 1954 to separate North and South Vietnam

  DSA

  District senior adviser: senior CORDS official in each of South Vietnam’s 250 districts

  FI

  Foreign Intelligence: branch of the CIA charged with inserting agents within foreign governments

  Free Fire Zone:

  Area in South Vietnam where U.S. military personnel had the authority to kill anyone they targeted

  GAMO

  Group administrative mobile organization: French-advised and -outfitted combat unit composed of South Vietnamese soldiers

  GCMA

  Composite airborne commando group: French-advised and -outfitted antiguerrilla unit composed mostly of Montagnards

  GVN

  Government of Vietnam

  HES

  Hamlet Evaluation System: computer system developed by the U.S. Defense Department in 1967 to measure trends in pacification

  HIP

  Hamlet Informant program: CIA-funded program managed by CIA officers in liaison with the Special Branch of the South Vietnamese National Police in which secret agents were paid to identify VCI in hamlets

  hooch:

  Dwelling occupied by rural Vietnamese

  Hop Tac:

  Pacification Intensive Capital Area program, begun July 1964 to bring security to Saigon and its environs

  HVRP

  High Values Rewards Program: bounty program proposed by the Phoenix Directorate in July 1971 to induce low-level VCI to turn in high-level VCI

  ICEX

  Intelligence coordination and exploitation: original name of the Phoenix program, formed in June 1967

  IOCC

  Intelligence Operations and Coordination Center

  IPA

  International Police Academy: school in the United States where the Agency for International Development through its Office of Public Safety trained policemen from foreign countries from 1963 to 1974

  ISA

  International Security Affairs: office within the U.S. Defense Department responsible for supervising security asistance programs such as Phoenix in foreign countries, excluding NATO

  JAG

  Judge Advocate General: chief prosecuting general within the U.S. armed forces

  JGS

  Joint General Staff: command organization of the Republic of Vietnam Armed Forces

  Jl

  Personnel branch of the JGS or MACV

  J2

  Intelligence branch of the JGS or MACV
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br />   J3

  Operations branch of the JGS or MACV

  J4

  Logistics branch of the JGS or MACV

  JUSPAO

  Joint U.S Public Affairs Office: formed in May 1965 under the office of the U.S. Information Agency in South Vietnam, to manage MACV psychological warfare operations and public relations

  KKK

  Khmer Kampuchea Krom: Cambodian exiles trained by the CIA in South Vietnam

  KMT

  Kuomintang: official ruling party of the Republic of China (Taiwan), formed by Dr. Sun Yat-sen in 1911

  LLDB

  Luc Luong Duc Biet: South Vietnamese Special Forces

  LRRP

  Long-range reconnaissance patrol: small team of U.S. soldiers sent to gather behind-the-lines intelligence on enemy troops

  LST

  Landing Ship Transport: naval vessel in which troops are often quartered

 

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