Search results
The campaign was carried out by the armed forces of South Vietnam between 8 February and 25 March 1971, during the Vietnam War. The United States provided logistical, aerial and artillery support for the operation, but its ground forces were prohibited by law from entering Laotian territory.
18 sie 2014 · Sander was a U.S. Army helicopter pilot during a little-known battle of the Vietnam War, code-named Operation Lam Son 719, that took place in early 1971, in which South Vietnamese forces, back by U.S. airpower, attacked routes used by the North Vietnamese to infiltrate Laos.
By January 1971, American ground and air forces had attacked and bombed People’s Army of Vietnam (PAVN) supply lines for seven years in an attempt to halt the flow of logistical support to PAVN and Vietnamese Communist (Viet Cong/VC) forces.
invasion and occupation were successful. On 8 December 1970, General Creighton Abrams (COMUSMACV) called a special meeting as a countermeasure after intelligence informed him of a build-up of North Vietnam troops in Laos. General Abrams only called six of his officers to attend the top secret meeting.
27 wrz 2021 · Lam Son 719 was organized to stop the flow of men and supplies down the Ho Chi Minh Trail in southern Laos. The job of the 101st Airborne’s helicopter force, numbering over 600 machines, was to support the South Vietnamese ARVN forces operating in Laos.
raid into Laos, code-named LAM SON 719, is the subject of Robert Sander’s recent book Invasion of Laos, 1971. Despite the term “invasion” in the book’s title, LAM SON 719 was designed as a cross-border raid on the town of Tchepone It was here communist mili-tary supplies were shifted from trucks to porters, bicycles, and pack animals The
By 8 February 1971, when the ARVN crossed the Laotian border, the North Vietnamese, by their own account, had massed some 60,000 troops in the Route 9-Southern Laos front.