Battle of Muong Khoua
Battle of Muong Khoua | |||||||
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Part of the First Indochina War | |||||||
A Bearcat of the Aéronavale drops napalm on Việt Minh forces in the jungle. Air support formed a vital lifeline for the Muong Khoua garrison. | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Việt Minh | |||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Captain Teullier | |||||||
Strength | |||||||
300 to 315[1][2] | |||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
One battalion and supporting mortar detachment.[1][2] | ~310, four known survivors. | ||||||
Sources give the strength of the French force as 300 Laotians, and a “dozen” French. Four are known to have made it to a second French outpost.[1] |
The Battle of Muong Khoua took place between April 13 and May 18, 1953, in northern Laos during the French Indochina War. A garrison of a dozen French and 300 Laotian troops occupied a fortified outpost in the hills above the village of Muong Khoua, across the border from Điện Biên Phủ. Muong Khoua was among the last French outposts in northern Laos following the decision of the French High Command to string several isolated garrisons through the region in order to buy time to fortify the major Laotian cities against Việt Minh attack.
Many of these garrisons were given orders by radio to dig in and fight the approaching Việt Minh forces. Following the fall of a satellite strong point at Sop-Nao, the troops at Muong Khoua under Captain Teullier resisted a Việt Minh siege force for thirty-six days while supported by air-dropped supplies and air strikes. The small French force repelled several direct attacks and endured a series of artillery bombardments. Two of the three strong points of the outpost eventually fell in the early morning of May 18, and by midday the French force lay defeated.
Four soldiers—two French and two Laotian—reached another French position 50 miles (80 km) away after six days of travel through the jungle, however no one else escaped. The resistance of the French garrison became a popular rallying cry for French troops in Indochina as well serving as a precursor to French and Việt Minh strategies at the decisive Battle of Điện Biên Phủ the following year.[1]
Prelude
Việt Minh in Laos
In early 1953, the Việt Minh under Võ Nguyên Giáp commenced an invasion of Laos to exert additional pressure on Paris and on the French forces stationed in Indochina. In the area of Muong Khoua were the Việt Minh 312th, 308th, and 316th divisions, whose long supply lines were maintained by a veritable army of 200,000 porters.[2] The French command—headed then by Raoul Salan—ordered the establishment of a series of French outposts in northern Laos to resist the Việt Minh invading forces for as long as possible to buy time for the fortification of Luang Prabang and Vientiane, the capital cities of Laos. The King of Laos, Sisavang Vong, remained in Luang Prabang, which added greater impetus to French efforts.[1] The terrain of northern Laos, and the local climate, isolated many of the outposts with a night-time fog known as crachin, thick jungle, a lack of roads, and steep terrain. Each outpost was given a certain number of days to withstand Việt Minh forces, including Muong Khoua which was issued orders on April 13 to hold for fourteen days—until April 27.[1]
Muong Khoua, together with its satellite outpost Sop-Nao, was under the command of Captain Teullier, with the satellite outpost being overseen by Lieutenant Grézy. Muong Khoua was situated at the confluence of the rivers Nam Pak and Nam Hou, 40 miles (64 km) from Điện Biên Phủ, and approximately 100 miles (160 km) to the south-west of the Black River in Vietnam.[2] The outpost itself consisted of three separate strongholds, referred to as the Mousetrap, Pi and Alpha, situated on three hills to the west, south-south-east, and south-south-west of the confluence of the Nam Hou and Nam Pak. Each was roughly 220 yards (200 m) from the other, forming a triangle. The village of Muong Khoua itself lay at the western foot of the Mousetrap, protected from the river by a large sandbank, and straddling the road to Phong Saly, another French outpost 50 miles (80 km) to the north.[1]
Sop-Nao
Sop-Nao lay 30 miles (48 km) to the east of Muong Khoua, along the path of the Việt Minh advance, roughly 20 miles (32 km) south-west of Điện Biên Phủ and only a few miles from the Vietnam-Laos border, 75 miles (121 km) south of the T'ai Highlands. Grézy, in command of the Sop-Nao garrison, led a reinforced platoon. On the evening of April 3, a Viet Minh battalion entered Laos near Điện Biên Phủ and Na San and reached Sap-Nao.[1][2]
Finding themselves surrounded by the Viet Minh, the French at Sop-Nao stood for six days while in radio contact with Teullier at the main strong point. The survivors, following authorisation from the French captain, retreated during the night of April 9/10 along a round-about route following the assumption by Grézy that the Viet Minh had laid ambushes along the most direct path. The French hacked a new path through the jungle until they reached Laotian tribesmen on April 11, who warned them of Viet Minh units following them. The French attempted to turn for Phong-Saly to the north and met an allied convoy travelling down the Nam Hou in canoes. The two forces combined and sailed down the river towards Muong Khoua.[1]
On April 12, the convoy ran into a Viet Minh ambush 600 yards (550 m) from the Muong Khoua strong point. Using a barrier of floating tree trunks, the Viet Minh attacked the convoy with machine guns and mortars, destroying the first canoe. The remaining French and Laotian troops returned fire and, with the assistance of forces from Muong Khoua who had heard the firing, routed the Viet Minh troops, who left behind 13 dead and four wounded. The French themselves suffered seven missing, one dead, and one wounded. The remainder joined the French at Muong Khoua, with the canoes and the convoy’s equipment incorporated into the defence. Meanwhile, the Viet Minh’s 910th Battalion of the 148th Regional Regiment of the 312th Division[2] and a heavy mortar company from the 316th Division drew near.[1]
Battle
Siege
While the French troops from Sop-Nao were making their way via canoe to the mother strong point, Teullier and his forces were feeling what one chronicler referred to as l'asphyxie par le vide (“choking-off by creating a void”), the result of a Viet Minh presence in the area. The local villagers no longer spoke to the French, when they had previously been communicative, and the population began leaving; both the farms and the markets were deserted. The French viewed this as an indicator of imminent enemy attack.[1] Furthermore, the thick jungle and steep slopes isolated the French strong points from all but river and airborne supply. The Viet Minh, on the other hand, were adequately supplied by over 200,000 porters, or coolies.[2] Referred to officially as a "relatively small" force,[3] the 300 Chasseurs Laotiens and "handful"[1] of French NCOs and two officers were equipped with three 81-mm and two 60-mm mortars and two machine guns. They were ordered on April 13 to hold for fourteen days by Colonel Boucher de Crévecoeur, who promised air support.[1]
At 23:00 hours that evening, April 13, mortar shells began landing on the slopes of position Alpha.[1][2] These bombardments would take place every night, and the Viet Minh launched their first direct assault, which failed and left Viet Minh 22 dead. This defeat prompted a reversion to previous tactics of slowly "gnawing away" at the French outpost, and Giap ordered the 312th to leave some forces behind to continue a siege while the remainder of the division moved on.[2] Meanwhile, overhead, French B-26s bombed Viet Minh positions, and cargo planes dropped supplies, Luciole (firefly) flares, and ammunition on the French positions.[4] This "air bridge" enabled the garrison to survive, and fourteen days later on April 27 it was still intact; the French High Command dropped a Legion of Honor for Teullier and several Croix de Guerres for his men. Teullier and a small group left the Mousetrap to deliver the relevant decorations to Pi and Alpha, although movement between the positions was extremely difficult.[1]
What was possible, however, was a small patrol through the village of Muong Khoua, which had been by now deserted. These French patrols served as an early warning system and an ambush for Viet Minh assaults during the crachin-dominated night. This pattern continued into May. Meanwhile, other French forces had liberated Xieng Khouang and reached a position 40 miles (64 km) from Muong Khoua.[4] On May 17, the French patrol deployed to the Muong Khoua village overheard barking dogs—one of which yelped—alerting the French to an impending Viet Minh attack. By 23:00, the Viet Minh were visible in the fog, and the patrol returned to the Mousetrap. Teullier issued an alert via radio.[4]
A bombardment from Soviet Russian 120-mm mortars, 57-mm recoilless rifles, and phosphorus grenades began at 00:30 on May 18. Teullier instructed his radio operator, Sergeant René Novak, to request air-dropped flares and air support, while mortar fire landed on Alpha and the Mousetrap, but not Pi, where Grézy was in command. Pi continued to support the other two areas of the outpost with its own mortar fire.[4]
By 01:10 hours, the western flank of the Mousetrap had fallen to Viet Minh bombardment. By 01:30, the garrison was informed that weather conditions prevented air support, and by 02:30 the Viet Minh forces launched successive assault waves which overran Teullier and his men, including attacks which flanked the position using the nearby sandbanks.[4] At the same time, Alpha was overrun by Viet Minh forces, and by 03:50 no more firing was heard from the Mousetrap. Alpha survived the remainder of the night and was seen fighting by French aircraft at 09:00 that morning. C-47 transport aircraft returned to resume supply drops, however by 12:00 the Tricolor and the Laotian flag had been removed from Pi’s command bunker.[4]
Survivors
"Like Christ off the Cross" was an expression which became current in Indochina to describe survivors from those harrowing retreats through the jungle. And usually that is exactly what they looked like: worn down to skeletons from hunger and dysentery, sunken eyes, the typical tropical pallor ... their emaciated faces curtained by shaggy beards, and their skins covered with festering sores, from heat rash to leech bites and jungle rot.
On May 22, four days after the fall of the Muong Khoua garrison, three of its soldiers—the garrison radio operator Novak and two Laotians—reached the only remaining French outpost in northern Laos, Phong Saly. Bernard Fall recorded in Street Without Joy: "he was only twenty-five years old, but he looked fifty; he kept on walking like an automaton to the centre of the post before he was stopped by some of the men staring at him as at a ghost."[5] Novak and the two other soldiers had spent the four days moving through the jungle of Laos following the defeat of their unit. Two days later, Sergeant Pierre Blondeau also arrived at the outpost. His account detailed 57 hours spent hiding from the Viet Minh before a three-day march without food or navigational aids and then encountering native tribesmen who provided food and a pony, with which he reached the French forces.[5]
Aftermath
The Vietnamese and French media had awarded considerable attention to the conflict, and newspapers worldwide had covered the battle.[1] Bernard Fall made note of the significance of the battle as "epic" in both his 1961 Street Without Joy and 1967 Hell in a Very Small Place.[1][6] The British newspaper The Times began covering the conflict on April 23, reporting the retreat from Sop Nao to Muong Khoua. However, despite correctly identifying half of the Viet Minh attacking force, it rated the garrison at the mother strong point as numbering 1,000.[7] The battle received scant attention before the garrison fell,[3] however after that garrison was defeated the coverage remained positive at the thought of French survivors and speculative on the future of the French military presence and new commander, Henri Navarre.[8] The French High Command released an assessment of the defeat at Muong Khoua in Communique No. 14, stating "During the night of May 17 to 18, the post of Muong Khoua, which had victoriously resisted since the beginning of the Viet Minh offensive, succumbed under the overwhelming mass of assailants."[9]
In January 1954, Muong Khoua was re-occupied by Laotian forces, which were subsequently overrun once more by the 316th Division of the Viet Minh. The Laotian commander, who lived in the village itself with his wife, was killed in his home before the attack. Battalions of the French Foreign Legion and Laotian forces suffered losses covering the retreat of garrison survivors.[10] The area of Muong Khoua later became a critical supply route across Dien Bien Phu for the Viet Minh and by 1963 was the site of a construction project for the proposed Route 19.[11]
The French would use the lessons learned at Muong Khoua and those of the 1952 Battle of Na San in their defence plans at Điện Biên Phủ, while the Viet Minh in turn would employ similar tactics of encirclement and strangulation there.[12] The importance of an air bridge to maintain supply lines, strong artillery support to stave off human-wave Viet Minh attacks, and the need for isolated emplacements to mutually support each other, were also important tactics taken on board by the French from both conflicts.[4][13] The disappearance of local civiliain populations previously friendly towards the French, which served as a precursor to Viet Minh attack, was also remembered by the Điện Biên Phủ troops.[4][13] For the Viet Minh, their abilities to isolated and smother individual strongpoints while maintaining hidden artillery and support weapon emplacements out of the reach of French airstrikes and artillery were honed at both battles, as were their practicies of using human-wave attacks.[4][13][14]
References
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.16 1.17 Fall 1994, pp. 116–130.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 Davidson 1991, pp. 150–156.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 "Outpost Overrun By Viet-Minh". The Times. May 5, 1953. pp. 5; Issue 52613; col C.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 Fall 1994, pp. 122–127.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Fall 1994, p. 116.
- ↑ Fall 1967, p. 73
- ↑ "Hillmen Become Irregulars". The Times. April 23, 1953. pp. 8; Issue 52603; col A.
- ↑ "More Viet-Minh Attacks In Indo-China". The Times. May 21, 1953. pp. 8; Issue 52627; col A.
- ↑ Fall 1994, p. 127.
- ↑ Fall, Bernard B. (October 1956). "Indochina. The Last Year of the War: The Navarre Plan". Military Review (in last year). Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. Retrieved 2009-07-30.
- ↑ Langland, pp. 638–640.
- ↑ Windrow 2004, p. 340.
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 13.2 Fall 1994, pp. 129–130.
- ↑ Windrow 2004, p. 109.
Further reading
- Chaliand, Gérard. (1982). Guerrilla Strategies: An Historical Anthology from the Long March to Afghanistan, Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-04443-6
- Chen Jian. (1993). "China and the First Indo-China War, 1950–54", The China Quarterly, No. 133. (Mar., 1993), pp. 85–110. London: School of Oriental and African Studies. OCLC 4668986568
- Cogan, Charles G. (2000). "L'attitude des États-Unis à l'égard de la guerre d'Indochine" in Vaïsse, Maurice Armée française dans la guerre d'Indochine (1946–1954) Bruxelles: Complexe. pp. 51–88. ISBN 2870278101.
- Davidson, Phillip B. (1991). Vietnam At War, New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-506792-4.
- Dunstan, Simon. (2004). Vietnam Tracks: Armor in Battle 1945–75, Osprey Publishing. ISBN 1-84176-833-2
- Fall, Bernard B. (1994). Street Without Joy, Stackpole Books. ISBN 0-8117-1700-3
- Fall, Bernard B. (1967). Hell in a Very Small Place. Lippincott. ISBN 0-306-81157-X.
- Fall, Bernard B. (October 1956). "Indochina. The Last Year of the War: The Navarre Plan". Military Review. Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. OCLC 37904438
- Fall, Bernard B. (1961). Street Without Joy. The Stackpole Company. ISBN 0-8117-3236-3.
- Giap, Vo Nguyen. (1971). The Military Art of People's War, New York: Modern Reader. ISBN 0-85345-193-1
- Humphries, James. F. (1999). Through the Valley: Vietnam, 1967–1968, Lynne Rienner Publishers. ISBN 1-55587-821-0
- Langland, Stanley G. "The Laos Factor in the Vietnam Equation". International Affairs (Blackwell Publishing) Volume 45 (No. 4). OCLC 5135184459
- Paxton, Robert. O. (2001). Vichy France, Old Guard and New Order, New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231124690
- Thi, Lam Quang. (2002). The Twenty-Five Year Century: A South Vietnamese General Remembers the Indochina War to the Fall of Saigon, University of North Texas. ISBN 1-57441-143-8
- Vaïsse, Maurice (editor). (2000). L'Armée française dans la guerre d'Indochine (1946–1954). Editions Complexe, Paris. ISBN 978-2-87027-810-9
- Windrow, Martin. (1998). The French Indochina War, 1946–1954, Osprey. ISBN 1-85532-789-9
- Windrow, Martin. (2004). The Last Valley. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ISBN 0-306-81386-6