Viet Cong (Việt Cộng)
Vietnamese. ‘Viet Community’
Name of the political organization in
Vietnam, known in English as the
National Liberation Front. The organization had its own army, i.e.
the People's Liberation Armed Forces of South Vietnam, fighting the
South Vietnamese government, which was supported by the United
States. It had operatives in South Vietnam and in
Cambodia,
both guerrilla and regular army units, either volunteers recruited
in the South or attached to the People's Army of Vietnam, i.e. the
regular North Vietnamese army, as well as the activation of southern
Viet Minh cadres who had stayed
behind in South Vietnam after the 1954 resettlement, yet all under a
single command structure set up in 1958. Those who received military
training in Hanoi were sent to the South along the Ho Chi Minh
Trail, a cross-border logistical supply route that ran from the
North to the South through
Laos
and Cambodia, in order to
bring about an insurgency in the South. After the unification of
Vietnam in 1976, the organization merged with the Vietnamese
Fatherland Front. In wartime, the Viet Cong, skilled at guerrilla
warfare and often referred to by western soldiers as the VC, became
known for their
punji stick
traps (fig.)
and their use of
extensive underground tunnel systems, which were of enormous
strategic importance and crucial to the VC war effort. Some of their
tunnels were built as a hiding place and shelter against enemy
attacks, and had facilities such as a kitchen, a washing room, a
health station, and a toilet. The often small-sized entrances,
allowed easy and quick access to the local Vietnamese, they were
more difficult to enter by the larger westerner soldiers. Enter, the
so-called tunnel rat, i.e. volunteer western infantrymen, generally
but not exclusively of smaller stature, that were deployed on
underground search and destroy missions. These missions were
extremely dangerous as, besides VC fighters laying in wait, the
tunnels often had booby traps, as well as possible dangerous
creatures, such as venomous
snakes,
scorpions
and
spiders, as well as
bats,
living in them (fig.),
if not placed there by the VC as additional ward. To disguise their
whereabouts, entrances to the tunnels were often camouflaged and
underground kitchens had a subterranean
bamboo
pipe system that would divert
the smoke hundreds of meters away from its origin, emerging
elsewhere in a field or forest, ideally under some smouldering burned leaves
(fig.) or
a pile of manure, thus avoiding immediate detection by the enemy. Today, many of these VC
tunnels are a major tourist attraction, including the Cu Chi tunnel
complex (map
- fig.)
near Ho Chi Minh City; the
Bach Ma
tunnels (map
-
fig.),
between the Hai Van Pass (fig.) and the city of Hue;
and the Vinh Moc tunnel complex (map
- fig.)
in Quang Tri.
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