Phou Pha Thi

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Phou Pha Thi
Elevation 1,786 m (5,860 ft)[ 1]
Location
Location Laos
Range Annam Highlands

Phou Pha Thi (Phathi) is a "Sacred Mountain" in Laos "believed…inhabited by great “phi”, or spirits"[ 1] and used for the clandestine Lima Site 85 military installation during the Vietnam War. The installation was defeated in the March 10–11, 1968, Battle of Lima Site 85 and from 1994-2004, searches for USAF remains were successfully conducted at the mountain. The mountain is "100 miles south of Dien Bien Phu, 160 miles west of Hanoi, and just 25 miles from the PL capital of Samneua".[1] The site had been used as a military site by French colonialist until seized by the North Vietnamese in 1962,[ 1] and the Hmong "Secret Army" recaptured the area and a Central Intelligence Agency airstrip was built by 1966.

Description

"Pha-thi mountain...runs from north of the Huoi-san stream to south of the Nam-het River, a distance of about 7,000 meters. It is the highest peak in the region. ... All four sides of the karst are sheer cliffs that are between 50 and 200 meters high... From about mid-way between the base and the summit of the mountain, the sides were formed by 75° to 80° cliffs, and in some spots 85° to 90° cliffs." "The peak of Pha-thi mountain is at least 3-4 kilometers from the surrounding peaks... To the north and northeast is the 1392 meters high Phu-hin-he ridge. To the south [of Phu-hin-he ridge] is the 1148 meter [Phou Huoi] Kha-moun [ridge]. To the east are the 1425 meter Phu-bao ridge, the 1223 meter Phu-hin-sa ridge, and the 1442 meter Phu-den-dinh ridge. To the south and southeast are the 1586 meter Phu-huoi-hao ridge and the 1225 meter Phu-huoi-na ridge. To the west and southwest are high points 1443, 1088, 1052, 1148, and 1007" (Do Chi Ben, 1996).[2]

References

  1. Linder, James C (2004 as Chapter 4 of Inside CIA: Lessons in Intelligence by Dr. Sharad Chauhan) [original year of Top Secret manuscript tbd]. "The Fall of Lima Site 85". S.B. Nangia. ISBN 81-7648-660-4. Retrieved 2012-10-17. "helipad, a 20-minute walk down the ridge from the radar vans on the peak" 
  2. Destatte, Robert L (edited 1998--translated 1997 from 1996 Vietnamese original) (transcript at LimaSite85.us). Raid on the TACAN Site Atop Pha-Thi Mountain by a Military Region Sapper Team on 11 March 1968 (Report). http://limasite85.us/do_chi_ben.htm. Retrieved October 2012.


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