Saturday, June 28, 2025

 Under the new structure, the MAAG assigned between fifty 

and seventy advisers to each Vietnamese corps: ten advisers at the 

corps’ headquarters, twenty at the corps’ regimental training area, 

ten to twenty with the corps’ logistic command, and nine advisers 

with each of the corps’ infantry divisions. The typical division 

advisory detachment consisted of a senior adviser (colonel or 

lieutenant colonel) and five majors or captains acting as advisers 

in the areas of artillery, signals, ordnance, engineering, and staff. 

Rounding out the division advisory team were three regimental 

advisers (lieutenant colonels or majors), each of whom advised 

one of the division’s three infantry regiments.

 By the fall of 1961, despite the reorganization of the MAAG 

and the increase in American advisory support, the situation in 

39

Vietnam continued to deteriorate. Communist attacks were up 

and government casualties, despite some isolated tactical victo

ries, were on the rise, with 477 dead in September and 539 killed 

in October. The provincial capital of Kontum Province had been 

overrun the night of 1–2 September by one thousand Communist 

f

 ighters—two battalions of khaki-clad, well-armed soldiers that 

just a few days before had infiltrated into the South from Laos. 

Viet Cong agents in the garrison opened the gates and the enemy 

easily penetrated the security positions without firing a shot. They 

mauled a Civil Guard relief force and ambushed the 1st Battalion, 

40th Infantry, quick reaction force as it tried to reach Kontum the 

following day. It was not until late on 4 September that two battal

ions arrived from the general reserve in Saigon, over two hundred 

miles away. Only then was the government able to retake the city. 

By that time the Communists had disappeared, only to strike more 

outposts in Darlac, Quang Nam, Quang Ngai, Phuoc Vinh, and 

along the Laotian border. 

A rattled Diem, aware now of the extent of the danger, asked 

for a bilateral defense treaty with the United States and requested 

combat troops to assist him, a position he had refused to take for 

many years. However, Washington was not ready to take these steps. 

Instead, the MAAG recommended that the United States provide 

additional radios to facilitate coordination between Vietnamese 

units, a critical capability for units in far-flung counterinsurgency 

operations or those conducting rapid reaction operations. In 

addition, the United States sent a special U.S. Air Force unit, the 

4400th Combat Crew Training Squadron (nicknamed Jungle Jim), 

under the code name Farm Gate. Although the squadron’s initial 

mission was to train the South Vietnamese Air Force, American 

pilots quickly began flying combat missions, always being careful 

to take along a South Vietnamese passenger to maintain the 

f

 iction that the planes were merely on training missions. Finally, 

President Kennedy sent an interagency team led by his personal 

military adviser, General Maxwell D. Taylor, to take a fresh look at 

the situation in Vietnam.

 General Taylor, accompanied by Walt Rostow of the National

===

https://web.archive.org/web/20130120010553/http://www.history.army.mil/html/books/076/76-1/CMH_Pub_76-1.pdf