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    Battle Ready

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      Nha, Maj.

      Nha Be

      Night raids

      No-go decision

      Non-combatant Evacuation Operation (NEO)

      Nongovernmental organizations (NGOs)

      Nonlethal capability

      Non-state entities

      North-South competition

      North Vietnamese Army (NVA)

      NPA

      Oakley, Bob

      “Obligation to Speak the Truth” address

      Ogaden

      Ogata, Sadako

      Okinawa

      Olds, Sherry, Sgt.

      One-star generals

      Ong Dong Forest

      On-Site Inspection Agency (OSIA)

      Operation Billings

      Operation Desert Crossing (war game)

      Operation Desert Fox

      Operation Desert One

      Operation Desert Shield

      Operation Desert Storm

      Operation Desert Thunder

      Operation Desert Viper

      Operation Infinite Reach

      Operation Iraqi Freedom

      Operation Noble Response

      Operation Northern Watch

      Operation Patriot Defender

      Operation Pershing

      Operation Proven Force

      Operation Provide Comfort

      Operation Provide Hope

      Operation Provide Promise

      Operation Provide Relief

      Operation Resolute Response

      Operation Restore Hope

      Operation Safe Departure

      Operation Sharp Edge

      Operation Steel Box

      Operation United Shield

      Operations

      Operations Other Than War (OOTW)

      Oriental cultures

      Oslo Agreement

      Pacification programs

      Pacifiers

      Pakistan

      Pakistani Brigade

      Palestinian Authority

      Middle East peace negotiations

      statehood issue

      Papua New Guinea

      Patch Barracks

      Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK)

      Peacekeeping operations

      Peay, Binnie, Gen.

      Peres, Shimon

      Perry, William

      Persian Gulf

      Persian Gulf War. See Gulf War

      Peshmerga

      Philippines

      Physical training (PT)

      Pitsuwan, Surin

      Platoon Leaders Class (PLC)

      Poillion, Jake, Brig. Gen.

      Point defense systems

      Political adviser (POLAD)

      Political expediency

      Pope, Larry

      Potter, Dick, Brig. Gen.

      Powell, Colin

      President, U.S.

      Press briefings

      Private negotiations

      Profitt, Glenn, Brig. Gen.

      Project 100,000

      Psychological ops

      Pyle, Ernie

      Qatar

      Quadrennial Defense Review

      Quantico Basic School

      Quick Reaction Force

      Qui Nhon

      Racial tensions

      Radio Mogadishu

      Rajoub, Jabril

      Ralston, Joe, Gen.

      Redd, Scott, Vice Adm.

      Reduction in Force (RIF)

      Refugees

      Kurdish

      Somali

      Regime change

      Relief agencies

      Republican Guard (Iraq)

      Republic of Korea

      Ricciardone, Frank

      Rice, Condoleezza

      Rice, Susan

      Rifle platoon

      Riot control training

      Risk-taking

      River Assault Group (RAG)

      Rommel, Erwin

      Ross, Robin, Gen.

      Rotational units

      Rowe, Nick, Col.

      Rules of engagement

      Rung Sat (“Forest of Death”)

      Russia. See also Soviet Union conferences with NATO officers

      Saber, Lt. Gen.

      Saigon

      Salamat, Hashim

      Saleh, Ali Abdullah

      Samah, Aboo, Gen.

      Saudi Arabia

      Schlicher, Ron

      Schwarzkopf, Norman, Gen.

      Scud missiles

      SEALs

      Second Intifada

      Secretary of Defense

      Security Assistance

      Security Zone (Iraq)

      Seeds of Peace

      September

      Service Chiefs

      Shaheen, Mohamed, Gen.

      Shalikashvilli, John, Lt. Gen.

      Shantali, Umar

      Shaposhnikov, Marshal

      Sharif, Nawaz

      Sharon, Ariel

      Shebat, Gen.

      Sheehan, Jack, Capt.

      Shelton, Hugh, Gen.

      Shinn, David

      Ship-to-shore movement

      Shoup, David, Gen.

      Silver Team

      Simpson, Dan

      Slawinski, Rocky, Corp.

      Smith, Leighton “Snuffy,” Rear Adm.

      Solana, Javier

      Soldier’s Medal

      Solomon, Dick

      Somalia

      background

      Mogadishu

      Operation Restore Hope

      Operation United Shield

      people of

      under UN control

      Soviet Union

      and Africa

      and Cold War

      collapse of

      Spataro, Steve, Lt. Col.

      Special Operations

      courses

      developing joint capability in

      Special Operations Command (SOCENT)

      Spiegel, Steven

      Spotter planes

      Staff jobs

      State-against-state wars

      State Department, U.S.

      Stevens, Ted

      Strategic plan

      “Striking Ninth”

      Sultan, Prince Super-Blooper

      Super-technicals

      Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR)

      Sutarto, Gen.

      Tactical ops

      Talabani, Jalal

      Talbot, Strobe

      Taliban

      Tangney, Bill, Col.

      Tanzania

      Technicals

      Tenet, George

      Terrorism

      Tet Offensive

      Theater Engagement Plans Tank

      3rd Marine Expeditionary Force (III MEF)

      Third world

      3-3-1 Strategy

      Thuy Quan Luc Chien (TQLC). See Vietnamese Marine Corps

      Tillet, Buddy, Lt. Col.

      Tonje, Gen.

      Tracey, Phil, Lt. Col.

      Trainor, Bernard E. “Mick”, Gen.

      Transportation Command, U.S. (TRANSCOM)

      Tri, Maj.

      “Triangle of Death” (Somalia)

      Trilateral Committee

      Troops

      Trost, Adm.

      Troublemakers

      Truman, Harry

      Tsadkan, Gen.

      Turkey

      U-2 flights

      Uganda

      Underground tunnel systems

      Unit cohesion

      United Nations

      Charter

      High Commissioner for Refugees

      Resolution 687

      Resolution 885

      rules of engagement

      Security Council

      in Somalia

      obstruction policy

      UNOSOM I

      UNOSOM II

      UNOSOM ends

      UNSCOM

      United Task Force (UNITAF)

      U.S. Army Europe (US-AREUR)

      USS Cole bombing

      Utility infielder

      VanRiper, Paul, Lt. Gen.

      Variable time fuse (VT)

      Vasko, Peter

      Vdovin, Andrei

      Vieques Island

      Vietcong

      booby traps set by
    r />
      as human beings

      underground tunnel systems of

      Vietnam

      Vietnamese Marine Corps (VNMC)

      battalion and company commanders

      casualties of

      departures of

      discipline in

      fieldcraft of

      night raids of

      operations of

      origins of

      tactics of

      Vietnamization

      Vietnam War

      legacy of

      Voung, Maj.

      Vung Tau

      VX (nerve agent)

      Waheed, Abdul, Gen.

      Walker, Nancy

      Ward, Bill, Lt.

      War fighting

      Warner, John

      Warsaw Pact nations

      Washington bureaucracy

      Weapons of mass destruction (WMD)

      Weapons platoon

      Weinberger, Caspar

      Weinberger Doctrine

      Wilhelm, Charlie

      Wilson, Woodrow

      Wiryono, Sastrohandoyo

      Wise Men

      World War One

      World War Two

      Yeltsin, Boris

      Yemen

      Yudhoyono, Susilo Bambang

      Yugoslavia

      Ze’evi, Rehavam

      Zinni, Christina

      Zinni, Debbie

      Zinni, Francesco

      Zinni, Tony, Gen.

      as advisers’ utility infielder

      as aide-de-camp to two generals

      on America and the world

      on challenges faced by military

      as CINC of CENTCOM putting out AOR fires

      commands 1st Marine Expeditionary Force

      as CO of H & S Company

      as CO of rifle Company D

      as CO of “Striking Ninth”

      as DCINC of CENTCOM

      as deputy director of Operations at EUCOM

      and Desert Crossing

      and Desert Fox

      and Desert Thunder

      and Desert Viper

      early years

      influences on

      on leadership

      leaves CENTCOM

      on military for twenty-first century

      “Obligation to Speak the Truth” address

      on Operation Billings

      and Operation Pershing

      and Operation Provide Comfort

      on Operation Provide Hope

      at Quantico Basic School

      retirement of

      Indonesia peace mission

      Middle East peace mission

      runs Infantry Training Center

      in Somalia

      Mogadishu

      Operation Restore Hope

      Operation United Shield

      return to

      staff duty at HQ

      testifies on post-Saddam reconstruction

      in Vietnam

      battle of the Bong Son Plain

      Binh Dinh Province (II CTZ)

      as CO of the Pacifiers

      life among Vietnam villagers

      medevaced from Que Son

      medevaced out

      pacification programs

      Rung Sat (“Forest of Death”)

      thoughts on the war

      Vietcong as human beings

      VNMC battalion/company commanders

      VNMC night raids

      1 In 2003, during and after the U.S. invasion of Iraq, it became clear that at that time the Iraqis actually possessed few, if any, WMD. The point of all their many games during the years of inspection now seems to have been to hide their ability to restart their WMD programs.

      2 His predecessors included Army General Norman Schwarzkopf, the Coalition commander during the First Gulf War; Marine General Joe Hoar, one of Zinni’s oldest friends; and Army General Binnie Peay. He was succeeded in 2000 by Army General Tommy Franks, the CENTCOM commander for the 2001 war in Afghanistan and the 2003 war in Iraq . . . distinguished company.

      3 Large zones of northern and southern Iraq were interdicted by the UN after the First Gulf War. The Iraqi military (with some exceptions) were not allowed to fly military aircraft or drive military vehicles in these zones.

      4 A single droplet on the skin is lethal. And enough could be loaded into a missile warhead to kill most of the population of Tel Aviv.

      5 Even though the UN resolution stated that UNSCOM would have unrestricted access to any facility they needed, the Iraqis had insisted on granting air access to only a single Iraqi site, the very inconvenient base at Habbaniyah. There had been protests, but it was a battle nobody wanted to fight.

      6 The system naming military operations always uses two terms, with the first term indicating the theater. Thus, “Desert———” indicates a CENTCOM operation.

      7 The advisers were assisted by a small team of Vietnamese Marines, a “cowboy,” a radio operator, and at times a driver: The cowboy looked out for the adviser’s security and basic needs. He cooked for him and took care of laundry and sleeping arrangements. The radio operator carried the radio, which was the adviser’s link to his own headquarters. Without it, he couldn’t do the job. It was his lifeline.

      8 In every other military except ours, the green beret is a symbol of Marine commandoes. The British Royal Marines wear green berets, for instance. Only in our system does the Special Forces wear that particular headgear (though berets in other shades have spread to other branches of service). The Marine Corps doesn’t have any of that.

      9 The NVA and VC also had versions of regional and district divisions that were to some extent aligned with those of the U.S. and South Vietnam.

      10 Whenever the Marines saw a croc, they’d open up fire at them. At first, Zinni thought they were killing them because they feared them. Later, he learned the skins were worth sixty dollars in Saigon. Bagging a croc was almost as good as bagging a VC.

      11 Since the VC often popped smoke when they heard or saw helos, it was important to confirm color to ensure you didn’t land in the wrong place.

      12 The Vietcong often dug trench lines behind the hedgerows that frequently bordered trails, leaving them there as ready-made ambush spots.

      13 U.S. assets went to U.S. units as the first priority.

      14 The same was true of the enemy. Something like eighty-five percent of contacts were initiated by the VC or NVA. They always tried to fight on their own terms and to refuse battle whenever it wasn’t to their advantage to engage.

      15 Clausewitz’s term for the key capability of a combatant. Without it, he loses.

      16 The senior adviser stayed with the battalion commander, but the junior adviser had to be out in the field where the fighting was.

      17 Later, I got chewed out again for “letting him go out toward the east,” but I explained again that I’d told him not to go out that way. Nothing more came of the incident.

      18 This fine U.S. Army captain was later killed in action.

      19 The rest of the Marine battalion caught up with us later the first day.

      20 Normally, a grenade can be lobbed about forty meters. Earlier during the Vietnam War, units had been equipped with the M-79 grenade launcher, which the troops called “the Blooper,” which lobbed a grenade about 150 meters. The Super-Blooper had an even greater range and a drum full of grenades that could be cranked out in a stream. This gave units the capability of covering with bursts of grenades an area between that covered by the 60-millimeter mortar and the M-79. It jammed often and was experimental when the Pacifiers got it. The flamethrower was a multishot—four cylinders in a boxlike frame.

      21 Kit Carson Scouts were former VC who’d come over to our side. After an indoctrination program, they were assigned to units operating in areas where they had operated as VC.

      22 The enemy didn’t have a code of conduct as Americans do; there was no “name, rank, serial number” kind of thing. It was simply assumed that everything they knew was compromised. Some VC and NVA proved to be open; others were harder to crack. Though Loi gave us a lot of information, we could te
    ll that he was having a hard time deciding where his actual loyalties lay; and there were times when his wavering proved to be tense-making.

      23 Any who survived were put in reeducation camps and not released for many years. When Zinni’s friend Hoa and his old battalion commander Tri were finally released, they were allowed to come to the States with their families.

      24 Zinni learned later that eighty-five American cars, mainly military police cars, were burned that night during the communist attacks on U.S. posts around Koza.

      25 Called MOSs—Military Occupation Specialties.

      26 DeCosta later took Zinni under his wing. “While you’re on this island,” he told Zinni, “you can be like all the other Marines and just go out to town and see it as one big bar. Or else you can begin to take in a whole other culture. I’d be glad to take you around and be your guide.” DeCosta took Zinni to places few other Americans ever knew—to geisha houses . . . real geisha houses, not houses of prostitution. He took him to historical sites. He introduced him to Okinawan families and his many Okinawan friends—many of them martial arts experts, who introduced Zinni to the nonphysical side to martial arts . . . its mental and “spiritual” aspects. Zinni of course found all this fascinating.

      27 Because of the post-Vietnam shortage of manpower, many units had been stood down in what was called “cadre status,” with no troops and just a few caretaker administrators to maintain unit records and equipment. As the months went by, the Marine Corps refilled their ranks.

      28 The Marine Corps had a Cold War commitment to deploy to Norway, above the Arctic Circle, in the event that the Cold War turned hot.

      29 In those days, Marine Special Operations meant something different from what it has come to mean today. These were operations in harsh environments like mountains, deserts, or the Arctic.

      30 The augmentation program made regular officers out of young reserve officers deciding to make the Marines a career. This was a very tough competition, given the few slots that were available.

      31 Interestingly, even the Army is now starting to abandon their heavy forces. Smart ordnance is making tanks obsolete.

      32 During the next years, the Marines demonstrated in several major European exercises that they could indeed successfully “mech up” and hold their own in a highly mechanized battle space.

     
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