Jump to content

McNamara Line

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from McNamara's Wall)
Operation McNamara Line
Part of the Vietnam War
Date1966–1968
Location
Result U.S. strategic failure
Belligerents
United States United States North Vietnam North Vietnam

The McNamara Line, an operational strategy employed by the United States in 1966–1968 during the Vietnam War, aimed to prevent infiltration of South Vietnam by NVA forces from North Vietnam and Laos. Physically, the McNamara Line ran across South Vietnam from Cửa Việt port to Route 9 and to the Laotian border along the Vietnamese Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) till Mường Phìn, Laos.[1] The eastern part included fortified field segments, with Khe Sanh as linchpin, along with stretches where roads and trails were guarded by high-tech acoustic and heat-detecting sensors on the ground and interdicted from the air.[2]: 349  Assorted types of mines, including so-called gravel mines, and troops at choke points backed sophisticated electronic surveillance. Named the barrier system by Robert McNamara (United States Secretary of Defense from 1961 to 1968), it was one of the key elements, along with gradual aerial bombing, of his war strategy in Vietnam.[3]: 508–509 

Barrier concept

[edit]

Various schemes had been proposed in the years before 1965 for a defensive line on the northern border of South Vietnam and in southeast Laos. These schemes had generally been rejected because of their requirements for large amounts of military personnel to be deployed in static positions and because any barrier in Laos would encourage the Vietnamese to deploy their forces deeper into Laotian territory.

In December 1965, Robert McNamara met twice with Carl Kaysen, a former Kennedy-era National Security Council staff member. Kaysen proposed an electronic barrier to limit infiltration from North Vietnam. McNamara embraced the idea and asked Kaysen to create a proposal. Starting in January, John McNaughton and a group of scientists in Cambridge, Massachusetts, including Kaysen and Roger Fisher created the proposal which was submitted to McNamara in March 1966, who then passed it to the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) for comments. The JCS response was that the proposal would still require an infeasible number of troops to be stationed along the barrier and would present difficult construction/logistical problems.

Also in late 1965 or early 1966, Jerry Wiesner and George Kistiakowsky persuaded McNamara to support a summer study program in Cambridge for the group of 47 prominent scientists and academics that made up the JASON advisory division of the Institute for Defense Analysis. The subject of the study was to find alternatives to the majorly unsuccessful gradual aerial bombing campaign in North Vietnam advocated by McNamara.[4] As Kaysen and the others involved in the Cambridge group were all members of JASON scientific advisory group, the anti-infiltration barrier ideas were included in the JASON agenda.

JASON study group

[edit]

The JASON study group meetings took place June 16–25, 1966 at Dana Hall in Wellesley, Massachusetts. The buildings were guarded day and night and attendees were given top secret security clearances. After the summer meetings, a report was produced over the course of July and August.[5]

The JASON report of August 1966 called the bombing campaign against North Vietnam a failure, saying that it had "no measurable direct effect on Hanoi's ability to mount and support military operations in the South".[5][6] Instead, advisors proposed as an alternative two defensive barriers. The first barrier would run from the coast some distance inland along the demilitarized zone and would seek to block the NVA infiltration through conventional means. The second barrier would run from the remote western areas of the border into Laos and would be a barrier of air interdiction, mine fields and electronic detection requiring minimal troops.[5] While the JCS report had estimated the construction of a barrier would take up to four years, the JASON report suggested the barrier could be in place with available resources within a year. That was important to McNamara since he hoped that by cutting the logistics lines between the North and the South he would have been able to press Hanoi into negotiations.[7]: 120–126 

Decision-making

[edit]

In September 1966, McNamara presented the JASON group report to the Joint Chiefs. It split on the proposal with the service chiefs being against it, and general Earle Wheeler, a chairman of JCS, being in support. The JCS then handed the report off to the Commander-in-Chief, Pacific (CINCPAC) Admiral Sharp, who wrote back that the barrier idea was impractical from a manpower and construction point of view. General William Westmoreland, who was commanding officer in Vietnam, was apprehensive of the idea and reportedly was even afraid that the barrier would go into history as Westmoreland's Folly.[3]: 177 

Despite all disagreements, on September 15, 1966, without waiting for the final judgment of the JCS, Secretary McNamara ordered that the proposal be implemented. Lieutenant General Alfred Starbird, director of the Defense Communications Agency, was appointed head of Task Force 728, which was to implement the project. Two days later, the JCS reported back favorably on the already-decided plan. Starbird had to complete the barrier by September 1967. In November 1966, McNamara officially recommended the barrier system to President Johnson for implementation. The construction budget was estimated as $1.5 billion, and $740 million was allocated for the annual operating costs.[3]: 129–130  The Practice Nine was adopted as the barrier project internal communication code name.

Chronology

[edit]

On January 13, 1967, President Johnson authorized the construction, and it was assigned the highest national priority.

Cover name changes

[edit]

In June 1967, an existence of Practice Nine was leaked to the press. The project was then renamed as Illinois City and in September it was called Project Dye Marker. Further, it was also referred to as SPOS (Strong-point-obstacle-system), with two different components, Dump Truck (anti-vehicle) and Mud River (anti-personnel), which were collectively referred to as Muscle Shoals.[3]: 130  On September 13, 1967, the project's Dye Marker name was switched to Muscle Shoals, and in June 1968 it was changed again, this time to Igloo White.[8]: 139 

Project Dye Marker was partially constructed by the American forces in 1967-1968 along the eastern portion of the demilitarized zone. An effective anti-infiltration barrier, running across South Vietnam deep into Laos, was a grand vision of the US Secretary of Defence Robert McNamara, who feared that escalation of bombing can bring greater Chinese involvement,[9] and a vital component of his operational strategy. It was an enormous multimillion project, which was nicknamed in the media as the Great Wall of Vietnam,[10] McNamara's Wall, McNamara Barrier,[11] Electric Fence, and Alarm Belt.[12]

1967

[edit]

USMC Engineers in early 1967 were ordered to bulldoze a strip to at least 500 meters wide from Gio Linh westward to Con Thien. This became known by the Marines as The Trace. Construction began in the summer 1967[3]: 178  and was announced on September 7, 1967.[13] Construction was carried by the 3rd Marine Division. First, the 11th Engineers started to work on bulldozing the so-called Trace, a path 600 meter wide and 11 kilometers long that was stripped of trees, brush and villages if needed. The backbone of the strong-point system were fortified bases Alpha 2 at Gio Linh on the east, Alpha 4 at Con Thien on the west, and Alpha 3 in between.[14] 7,578 American marines had been deployed in support of Dye Marker strong point/obstacle system by 1 November 1967. In addition, 4,080 American troops have been involved in the air-supported anti-infiltration part of Dye Marker.[15]: 4 

The Dye Marker defensive line project stretched along the demilitarized zone starting from the South China Sea, and had a total length of 76 kilometers (47 miles). Some parts of the defensive line were manned and equipped with the bunkers, outposts, reinforcing and fire support bases, surrounded by concertina wire. Other segments were under constant radar, motion and acoustic surveillance, and secured by trip wires, mine fields, and barbed-wire entanglements. The airborne receiving equipment carried by EC-121R's relayed the signals and triggered artillery and bombers responses.[8][16]

The plans that were leaked to the media called for an inexpensive barbed wire fence with watch towers, and they were presented to the public as a trivial measure, while the electronic part was highly classified. In reality, the strong-point part of the anti-infiltration system in Quang Tri Province, Vietnam was reinforced with electronic sensors and gravel mines to stop the flow of North Vietnamese troops and supplies through the demilitarized zone during the decisive years of the Vietnam War.[12]

1968

[edit]

At the beginning of 1968, the western end of the barrier region stretching from Khe Sanh through the special forces camp at Lang Vei was attacked by the multiple North Vietnamese troops. The special forces camp at Lang Vei was overrun and Khe Sanh was placed under a limited siege. The Battle of Khe Sanh lasted for 77 days. Robert McNamara, a major proponent of the barrier strategy, left the Defense Department on February 29, 1968. In July 1968, General Abrams, the US commander in South Vietnam, ordered Khe Sanh and the surrounding area to be abandoned. The base was dismantled and all the infrastructure along Route 9 toward Laos, including roads and bridges, was systematically destroyed.

On October 29, 1968, all construction work on the physical barrier along the demilitarized zone on South Vietnam's side was ceased. The physical infrastructure created for the barrier was converted into a series of strong-points and support bases for the new strategy of mobile operations. This marked the end of the McNamara Line as an operational strategy. However, the barrier concept was reduced to an aerial, sensor-based electronic interdiction program which was then continued as Operation Igloo White.[17]

Significance of the barrier strategy

[edit]

In his memoirs, Robert McNamara insisted that the barrier, or the system, as he chose to call it, was able to cut to a degree an infiltration rate of the NVA to South Vietnam.[18][19] However, constructed segments turned out to be inefficient in stopping the NVA despite being costly to build and maintain. In March 1969, most of the strong points of the barrier manned by troops were abandoned. A system of sensors to provide surveillance of the truck routes coming from Laos was a success, but its counterpart for the foot trails was never deployed. Many special munitions ordered for the barrier turned out to be ineffective or simply failed. In 1969, Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird testified in Congress that goals set for the anti-infiltration barrier were not met despite high cost.[3]: 509 

An official account of the Vietnam War, published in the Secretaries of Defense Historical Series, stated that the interdiction significance of the barrier remained contentious.[3]: 536  At the same time, it reserved harsh words for McNamara's inability to listen to the opponents and called the so-called McNamara Line:[3]: 178 

...a metaphor for the secretary's arbitrary, highly personal, and aggressive management style that bypassed normal procedures and sometimes ignored experts to get things done. He had adopted an idea from civilian academics, forced a reluctant military to implement it, opted for technology over experience, launched the project quickly and with minimum coordination, rejected informed criticism, insisted available forces sufficed for the effort, and poured millions of dollars into a system that proceeded by fits and starts.

The strategic intention of the Dye Marker plan, as well as the whole McNamara Line, was to curb the infiltration of South Vietnam by the NVA forces. This would have potentially in McNamara's opinion enabled the scaling back of the American bombing of North Vietnam and potentially created an opportunity for negotiations with Hanoi.[3]

The defensive barrier system was also criticized at the time of its inception for keeping American troops in static positions while facing mobile enemy forces.[15] After the Tet Offensive, the criticism intensified, and Senator Stuart Symington (D-Missouri) called the barrier a "billion dollar Maginot line concept".[20]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Hàng rào điện tử 2 tỷ USD McNamara năm xưa". VNExpress. 2014-04-30. Retrieved 2022-12-17.
  2. ^ Gibson, James William. The Perfect War: Technowar in Vietnam. Boston: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1986.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Drea, Edward J. McNamara, Clifford, and the Burdens of Vietnam, 1965–1969. Archived 2013-10-29 at the Wayback Machine Washington, D.C.: Historical Office, Office of the Secretary of Defense, 2011
  4. ^ Van Staaveren, Jacob. Gradual Failure: The Air War Over North Vietnam, 1965–1966. Washington, D.C.: Air Force History and Museums Program, 2002.
  5. ^ a b c Institute for Defense Analysis, JASON Division, "Air-Supported Anti-Infiltration Barrier," Study S-255, August 1966.
  6. ^ "Viet Bombing Held Failure". St. Petersburg Times. July 3, 1971.
  7. ^ Gravel, Mike, Noam Chomsky, and Howard Zinn. The Pentagon Papers: The Senator Gravel Edition. Boston, Mass: Beacon Press, 1971–1972, Vol. 4.
  8. ^ a b Sikora, Jack, and Larry Westin. Batcats: The United States Air Force 553rd Reconnaissance Wing in Southeast Asia. Lincoln, NE: IUniverse, Inc, 2003.
  9. ^ Memorundum: Evaluation of Alternative Programs for Bombing North Vietnam. Central Intelligence Agency, 1 June 1967. PDF Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ The Great Wall of Vietnam[permanent dead link], Science Digest, April 1968.
  11. ^ McNamara Barrier May Be Expanded. The Boston Globe, Oct 14, 1968, p. 7.
  12. ^ a b "Nation: Alarm Belt", Time Magazine, Friday, September 15, 1967.
  13. ^ Wilson, George C. (September 7, 1967). "U.S. Will Construct Barrier Across DMZ". International Herald Tribune. Retrieved October 4, 2020.
  14. ^ Alpha Bases Along the DMZ Archived 2013-08-26 at the Wayback Machine Companion website to DMZ DIARY by Jeff Kelly
  15. ^ a b Memo for Mr. Rostow from Gen E. G. Wheeler from Aqust 30, 1967. Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine Declassified on Feb. 24, 1983. The Vietnam Center and Archive at Texas Tech University.
  16. ^ Wilson, George, C. Yanks Mull Further Work on McNamara Red Barrier. The Spokesman-Review, October 14, 1968, p. 1.
  17. ^ Edgar C. Dolman, Jr., et al., Tools of War. Boston: Boston Publishing Company, 1984, p. 151.
  18. ^ McNamara, Robert S. Blundering into Disaster: Surviving the First Century of the Nuclear Age. New York: Pantheon Books, 1986.
  19. ^ McNamara, Robert S, James G. Blight, and Robert Brigham. Argument Without End: In Search of Answers to the Vietnam Tragedy. New York: Public Affairs, 1999.
  20. ^ North Viet Infiltration a Mystery: Pentagon Mum on DMZ Setup. The Spokesman-Review, May 9, 1968, p. 1.

Further reading

[edit]

Documents

[edit]

Books and articles

[edit]
[edit]