THE SITUATION IN SOUTH VIETNAM - 1967/11/27

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03031268
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Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 mar DIRECTORATE OF INTELLIGENCE /41 C Secret No Foreign Dissem Intelligence Report The Situation in South Vietnam (Weekly) Secret 27 November 1967 No. 0378/67 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Secret VIM Background Use Only WARNING This document contains information affecting the national defense of the United States, within the meaning of Title 18, sections 793 and 794, of the US Code, as amended. Its transmission or revelation of its contents to or receipt by an unauthorized person is prohibited by law, GROUP I EXCLUDED FROM AUTOMATIC DOWNGRADING AND DECLASSIFICATION Ste.eret' Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 mow No Fo iregn Dissem/Background Use 1y CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY Directorate of Intelligence THE SITUATION IN SOUTH VIETNAM (20 November - 26 November 1967) CONTENTS Section POLITICAL SITUATION Government appointments; Loc's difficulties; Legislative develop- ments; Loan resigns; Tran Van Huong on the new government; Possible moderate Buddhist political party. REVOLUTIONARY DEVELOPMENT II Viet Cong urban operations; Anti- infrastructure activity; Status of hamlets being worked by RD teams. ECONOMIC SITUATION III Prices; Currency and gold; Highways of commerce: Route 4; Routes 20 and I (Map) ANNEX: Weekly Retail Prices in Saigon (table) Saigon Free Market Gold and Currency Prices (graph) No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only SECRET Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 bhUBLE1 No Foreign Dissem/Background Use**Mly I. POLITICAL SITUATION The government has announced the ap- pointment of Nguyen Van Huong as secretary general in the president's office and has established a 19-man Central Revolutionary Development Council to oversee all aspects of the pacification effort. Prime Minister Loc is reportedly having some initial dif- ficulty in getting his job done ,because of what he claims are conflicting direc- tions from President Thieu and Vice Presi- dent Ky. Both houses of the legislature have established committees to intercede with the government on behalf of persons they regard as unjustly treated. The Demo- cratic Bloc in the lower house has issued a six-point proclamation dealing primarily with the need to preserve Vietnamese sover- eignty. An opposition grouping may be forming a third bloc in the lower house. Police Director Loan has again submitted his resignation, reportedly because of Nguyen Van Huong's appointment to the presi- dent's office. Former presidential can- didate Tran Van Huong has refused to accept the chairmanship of the new Inspectorate. The moderate Buddhist faction of Thich Tam Chau may be working on plans to estab- lish a Buddhist political party and begin publication of a daily newspaper. Government Appointments 1. On 25 November the government announced the appointment of Nguyen Van Huong, an adviser to President Thieu and his campaign manager during the election, as secretary general in the president's office. His duties in this position, as enumerated in the announcement and as Huong had earlier outlined for an embassy officer, will include administration of all agencies run directly by the president's office and liaison between that office and the prime minister's office, the legislature, and the various ministries. Huong will have the rank of minister. 2. Also announced was the formation under Prime Minister Loc of a Central Revolutionary Development Council to oversee all aspects of the pacification effort. The 19-man council, according to the announce- ment, will include most cabinet ministers and the five I-1 No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only SECRET Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 *we. EU KE !mid' No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only highest-ranking generals, presumably including Gen- eral Nguyen Duc Thang, deputy chief ot the Joint General Staff in charge ot the Revolutionary Develop- ment Cadre Directorate and the Regional and Popular Forces. Minister of Revolutionary Development Tri will be secretary general of the council. Corps-, special zone-, province-, city-, and district-level councils will also be established. Loc's Difficulties 3. Prime Minister Loc is apparently having some initial difficulty in getting his job done. Tran Quoc Buu, president of the Vietnamese Confederation of Labor, recently told that Loc complains that he is being hampered by conflicting directions and statements from President Thieu and Vice President Ky. Loc ascribes most ot his diffi- culties to a lack of cooraination between Thieu and Ky and claims he has to spend a great deal of time trying to avoid being caught in the middle. He addea that this is hardly any way to get a new government off the ground. 4. Some of the difficulties described by Loc, while possibly symptomatic of tne personal conflict between Thieu and Ky, seem typical of those which might occur in starting any new large organization, and Loc is apparently finding it difficult to cope with them. Buu commented that, although he has known Loc for a long time and respects his intelligence, Loc is apt to panic under pressure. Buu also surmised from his meeting with Loc and from remarks allegedly attributed to him that the prime minister has no great respect for Ky and is similarly irritated with Thieu for what he calls Thieu's "dilettante" approach to the problems of running a government. Legislative Developments 5. The lower house "Committee to Intervene for the Release of Student Demonstrators" has elected as officers three men who have been quite outspoken in their criticism of the government. Committee chair- man Truc Vien, vice chairman Nguyen Dai Bang, and secretary Nguyen Trong Nho were instrumental in es- tablishing the committee, which intends to petition the government for the release of 17 students ar- rested and subsequently drafted for demonstrating against the presidential elections. 1-2 No Foreign Disarafyround Use Only Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Nrie .1JA._).K.E, No Foreign Dissem/Background UseMily 6. At the house session on 21 November Nho said that the committee had already sent a letter to the government proposing discussion of the stu- dent cases. He added that if Prime Minister Loc refuses to meet with the committee, he will be called before "us"--presumably the full house--to explain his actions. 7. The Senate on 18 November also established a committee to intervene with the government on simi- lar matters, but its committee appears less opposi- tion-centered than that of the lower house. The Senate committee will concern itself primarily with the cases of coup plotters arrested after the abor- tive coup of 19 February 1965. 8. The question first arose when Senator Tran Van Don submitted a petition, initiated by him and signed by 32 other senators, requesting that the case of former General Lam Van Phat be reviewed. Phat, sentenced to death in absentia for his part in the coup attempt, recently sent President Thieu a letter, through the temporary Senate chairman, "explaining the injustice done him." Following lengthy discus- sion of this and other requests for Senate interces- sion, the Senate decided that the cases of all 45 persons implicated in the abortive coup should be reviewed and, for this purpose, set up a "Special Committee to Con- sider Applications for Intervention." The committee is composed of two men from each of the Senate's six slates. 9. In another lower house development, the new Democratic Bloc has issued a six-point proclamation which appears to emphasize the need for preserving Viet- namese sovereignty. According tO a Saigon Post article of 22 November,the proclamation calls for so= revolu- tion, true national reconciliation, reform of both the educational system and the diplomatic service, the protection of Vietnamese sovereignty, and economic sovereignty. 10. In detailing each of the various points, the proclamation criticized what it called "the policy of unilateral determination of the course of the war and peace efforts." In addition, as a step toward achieving economic sovereignty, the proclamation called 1-3 No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only SECRET Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 6.EU.K.E1 No Foreign Dissem/Background Use*ly for a review of the "entire problem Of American aid." It is perhaps significant that this added voice in the recent clamor for sovereignty and against "American interference" in internal affairs is that of the Demo- cratic Bloc. The bloc is generally considered at least progovernment, if not government-sponsored. 11. A third bloc may be in the making in the lower house and could be the beginning of a concerted opposi- tion movement there. Au Truong Thanh, a former economy minister in the Ky cabinet who was disqualified as a presidential candidate, told a US Government official on 20 November that he and a few colleagues are attempt- ing to form a bloc of independent deputies. He mentioned Saigon deputies Nguyen Trong Nho and Ho Huu Tuong as participating in the establishment of the bloc. In view of Thanh's opposition activities and the professed antagonism of Nho and Tuong to the government, it would appear that the proposed bloc is intended as an opposition grouping to counterbalance the essentially progovernment Democratic and Farmer-Worker-Soldier blocs. Loan Resigns 12. Nguyen Van Huong's appointment as the presi- dent's secretary general has reportedly induced Police Director Loan to follow through on his earlier desire to resign. On 24 November, Loan submitted a written resigna- tion to Chu Ngoc Lien, an official in the Ministry of Interior, giving fatigue as his reason and request- ing reassignment to a troop command position. 13. Van Van Cua, who is the mayor of Saigon and Loan's brother-in-law, reportedly later told Lien, however, that the real reason behind the resignation was Loan's feeling that President Thieu had gone back on a promise in appointing Huong as his secretary general. According to Cua, Thieu had promised Loan and Vice President Ky that Huong would not be given any public position. Loan's objection to Huong is reportedly based on his membership in the Dai Viet Party. Tran Van Huong on the New Government 14. Former presidential candidate Tran Van Huong has turned down the government's offer of a position 1-4 No Foreign DisssIT/BalAvround Use Only Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Noe S.ELKEI: No Foreign Dissem/Background Use144enly at the head of the new Inspectorate and apparently intends to hold to his earlier announced decision to remain out of the new government. Both President Thieu and Vice President Ky had hoped to persuade Huong to accept the Inspectorate chairmanship, par- ticularly because corruption, which the new body has been set up especially to investigate, has been Huong's special interest and was one of his prime campaign issues. 15. During a conversation with an embassy of- ficer on 24 November, however, Huong said he had re- fused the post because, "as long as there are people in this country who feel they are above the law," a body like the Inspectorate can do little more than go after corrupt officials at the lowest levels. Dis- trict and even province officials could be pursued, he said, but "their higher-ranking protectors" could not be touched. 16. Huong also confirmed earlier reports that he had been offered and had refused the prime minister- ship. He portrayed this position in the new govern- ment set-up as one wedged in among the president, the National Assembly, and the generals and indicated he would have been dissatisfied with being merely an executor of the president's policies. 17. Huong gives the new cabinet a life span of only six months, claiming it is merely a transitional body. As for his own future, he is apparently con- tent to remain out of public life; observing the politi- cal scene from a distance and occasionally consulting with younger political figures who often come to him for advice. Possible Moderate Buddhist Political Party 18. An unconfirmed article on 22 November in the Vietnamese-language newspaper Tu Do has reported pos- sible plans by the moderate Buddhigt faction of Thich Tam Chau to form a political party, which the paper is labelling a "Buddhist democratic party." Although the paper apparently has nothing more to go on than fragmentary reports and its own speculation, it cites as evidence "numerous meetings between venerables and (unnamed) pro-Buddhist political figures." The party, Tu Do claims, will be nationalist-oriented and will 1-5 No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only SECRET Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 V.11 No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only have the benefit of a wealth of "operating resources." Considerable money, rumored to be some seven million piasters, will also be available to the Tam Chau fac- tion for a daily newspaper the faction intends to publish, according to the article. 19. Tu Do speculates that these developments may signar�tEg beginning of a "general counteroffen- sive" by Tam Chau in the current moderate-militant dispute over the Buddhist charter. Although the creation of an officially recognized political party would give Tam Chau a definite advantage over his rival Thich Tri Quang and would enhance his position legally, the US Embassy is doubtful of Chau's prospects for success. The embassy points out that Chau does not have a reputation as an effective organizer and, more important, that most politically active Buddhist laymen have remained loyal to Tri Quang's faction. 1-6 No Foreign Dissem/Background SECRET Use Only Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Nme SECRET No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only II. REVOLUTIONARY DEVELOPMENT An apparently increasingly effec- tive Vietnamese National Police appear to have thwarted Viet Cong efforts to accelerate their urban operations. Al- though the Vietnamese Police have elim- inated a number of enemy urban cells, it is still difficult to determine how ex- tensive the enemy's urban organizations remain and how much economic and politi- cal support the enemy continues to de- rive from urban operations. South Viet- namese officials have still not accepted the Intelligence Coordination and Ex- ploitation (ICEX) concept; however, US officials believe that they will soon overcome their misgivings, and better coordinated and effective anti-infra- structure operations may result. Accord- ing to the Vietnamese Cadre Directorate, by 1 November 149 LE Doi Moi had been established by the RD teams. Rd teams are now establishing an additional 321 Le Doi Moi, along with 65 8E Cung Co and 57 aE Binh Dinh. As of 17 Novem- ber 25,765 persons had rallied to the government under the Chieu Hoi or "Open Arms" program. During the week of 11-17 November 217 persons rallied; this is 400 less than in the same period of 1966. Viet Cong Urban Operations 1. During the past year, an increasingly ef- fective Vietnamese National Police organization has apparently thwarted efforts by the Viet Cong to accelerate their urban operations. In this context, the term "urban areas" refers not only to the autonomous cities of Saigon, Hue, Da Nang, Cam Ranh, Da Lat, and Vung Tau, but also to other large cities such as Oui Nhon and Nha Tran. Over the past year the Vietnamese Security flervicc (VSS) No Foreign DisagzLBayround Use Only S EU R Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268_ Noe SECRET No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only have broken up a significant number of Communist cells in a number of these cities, including Sai- gon, Da Lat, Cam Ranh, and Nha Trang. Neverthe- less, it is still difficult to determine how ex- tensive an urban organization the enemy has and how much financial and economic support he continues to derive from urban operations. 2. As of mid-1967, there were numerous agent reports, derived from VSS sources, of an increased Viet Cong interest in strengthening their urban operations. This greater interest may have been to compensate for military and political losses in the countryside and/or to enable them to retain con- tact with people migrating from rural to urban areas. 3. Captured enemy documents and a few interro- gationreports suggest that the Communists' key con- cept in their urban activities continues to be the promotion of the "general uprising." However, the enemy's awareness of the situation in South Vietnam has apparently led him, despite his theoretical rhetoric, to adopt policies which best fit local situations. Prior to the September public announce- ment by the National Front for the Liberation of South Vietnam (NFLSV) of its new program, several agent reports alleged that the NFLSV was seeking to establish a "new front" advocating, under NFLSV guidance, a neutralist peace and a coalition gov- ernment. Any such Communist interest in a "new front," however, may be a supplement rather than an alternative to their concept of the "general up- rising." 4. Viet Cong documents and prisoner interroga- tions support the conclusion that the "struggle" movements of 1966 were not under Communist control. Communist documents tend to attribute their failures in this regard to poor communications and a lack of initiative at lower echelons. The documents imply, however, that the Communist Party is preparing for similar crises in the future and may, in such cir- cumstances, allow its agents greater initiative in creating and exploiting local unrest. 11-2 No Foreign Diss ET emiPackground Use Only SECR Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Nor o ix.J12, No Foreign Dissem/Background Usell6nly 5. Available information tends to confirm the Communists' continued interest in promoting an urban political organization and encouraging urban agitation. Although target groups within the cities remain the traditional ones--such as student groups, tradesmen and trade unions, and influential social organizations (such as friend- ship associations and reading clubs)--there are some indications that the Communists may in fact be trying to meld together a "new front" with a broader complexion, including individuals who have some anti-American feelings, are apathetic towards the political situation, or are physically or mentally exhausted from the 25-year prolonged con- flict. Propaganda directed at most of the latter is likely to be in low key, while party or� NFLSV members with "legal status" in government zones attempt, as in the past, to penetrate and gain prominent positions in target groups. 6. The Communist Party committees responsible for the larger cities in South Vietnam are appar- ently directly subordinate to the provincial com- mittees. For the most part, urban committees have their own staffs, organic communications, and mili- tary units--generally a unit with a combined recon- naissance, intelligence, and sapper capability. Almost all of the city committees are located in what the Communists term "safe areas" adjacent to or near the urban ,areas. In some instances as in Da Nang, the city committees may exercise jur- isdiction over a considerable portion of the coun- tryside surrounding the city. 7. The total enemy effort in the cities, how- ever, involves a myriad of agencies. Urban opera- tions may be conducted by the party committee di- rectly responsible for the city, or by certain staff elements at either province, region, or Cen- tral Office for South Vietnam (COSVN) levels. Cer- tain agencies in North Vietnam are also believed directly to control some operations in the urban areas of South Vietnam. Most of the operations of the higher level entities involve intelligence col- lection or financial operations. 11-3 No Foreign DissSECRETemLBackground Use Only Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Nor SECRET Noire No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only 8. In order to operate the organizational com- plex of legal and "illegal" agents and other types of urban operations from distant bases, an extensive and highly developed communication-liaison system is required. Commo-liaison systems are generally divided between those which handle written communica- tions and those used for conducting agent operations, and rigid compartmentalization is the rule throughout urban operations. The enemy utilizes the traditional techniques of tradecraft, including secret writing and recognition signals, apparently reinforced to some extent by clandestine radio communications. In general, one of the chief threats to the Commu- nists in their urban operations is the loss of lecal status by their operatives. 9. Of particular relevance in Communist urban operations are the activities of the terrorists. In the past year this threat has not apparently mater- ialized to the extent the allies feared or the Viet Cong hoped. It appears that the urban sapper units still favor large, dramatic attacks and are constantly preparing for them, although they have been hindered in their ability to carry them out. According to a recently captured sapper unit commander, much of the shooting and grenade tossing in Saigon is the work of minor cadres, not of the urban sapper units.* 10. The suggestion that some terrorism in Sai- gon is done randomly is somewhat borne out by the statements of Phung Ngoc Anh, a female terrorist captured in the abortive assassination attempt on the press attache of the Chinese Nationalist Embassy. *In the 25 September 1967 edition of the Situa- tion in South Vietnam (Weekly), it was suggested that with the roll-up of the Viet Cong Special Action Unit 69 in Saigon, 80 percent of the Viet Cong threat to the city may have been neutralized. Further analyses by US officials indicates that although the Viet Cong capacity for terrorism in Saigon has been seriously affected, it is not now believed that 80 percent of the threat has been neutralized. The Viet Cong Unit 69 was, however, re- sponsible for 29 terrorist incidents between 1 March 1965 and 10 July 1967 which killed 58 persons and injured 274. 11-4 No Foreign DissemLaAhiground Use Only SEC R Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 1111.' 0 124 %.__A IN.J124 vogo, No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only 11. Anh's unit, the Viet Cong Armed Propaganda Unit of the Confederation of Liberation Trade Unions (Chinese Resident Team), carried out a series of as- sassinations and attempted assassinations in Saigon between February and September 1967. Other than one ethnic Vietnamese, all of the unit's personnel--about 15--were Vietnamese of Chinese extraction. Among their victims were several Vietnamese polidemen of Chinese descent, apparently all "fingered" in advance, and several Americans. Anh's statements made it clear that although her unit appears to have had the mission of assassinating three Americans a month, the US victims were unknown, random individuals who happened to be spotted alone in areas considered suitable for a hasty withdrawal. In addition, interrogation of Anh has not produced any evidence to indicate that the members of the unit were anything other than Viet Cong or that there was any Chinese Communist influence in the recruiting, training, or direction of the unit. 12. Although the use of urban operations to purchase medicines and other supplies is well docu- mented, allegations of large-scale financial support from the cities remain only allegations, and perhaps exaggerated ones. While the degree of blackmail which may be done by the enemy in urban areas cannot be ascertained, a few documents and interrogation reports suggest that urban operations are supported from the countryside rather than vice versa. For example, the activities of the Da Lat and Nha Trang municipal committees appear to be restricted by shortages of money, and--according to interrogation reports--neither the efforts to the Saigon Market Party Committee or the Saigon Intellectual Proselyt- ing Committee have produced any significant funds. Anti-infrastructure Activity 13. The Vietnamese government has still not accepted ICEX--the acronym for the intelligence co- ordination and exploitation program initiated by CORDS officials as a means of neutralizing the Com- munist infrastructure. The US ICEX structure has, however, been established in all corps and provinces. 11-5 No Foreign Disssekrariground Use Only Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Nour %rad SECRET No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only ICEX is designed to coordinate, integrate, and im- prove the existing anti-infrastructure programs of the various US components at all levels, and elim- inate organizational duplication and competition for funds, resources, and intelligence assets. (The Situation in South Vietnam (Weekly) of 9 October dis- cussed the ICEX concept and the US organization for its implementation.) 14. Since the burden of the anti-infrastructure effort rests with the Vietnamese, US officials hoped that the example set by the US ICEX reorganization would lead the Vietnamese to do the same; but the Vietnamese, at least at the Saigon level, have been somewhat reluctant to implement an ICEX-type program. Some of the Vietnamese "foot-dragging" may have come from theirpreoccupation with the recent elections and the political uncertainties inherent in every change of government in South Vietnam. However, the initial reaction of government security officials to the program was disappointing. It is possible that the Vietnamese were piqued at not having been included in the ICEX planning conferences. 15. US officials have been working to over- come Vietnamese apprehensions and have been reassur- ing the National Police in particular that neither their organizational integrity or modus operendi is threatened. The National Police are now appar- ently participating more extensively in the District Operations and Intelligence Coordination Centers (DOICC) and seem to feel that such participation is to their advantage. CORDS officials in Saigon be- lieve that earlier Vietnamese misgivings and misun- derstandings concerning ICEX and the DOICCs is be- ing overcome. 16. From a total of ten in July 1967, the num- ber of DOICCs wholly or partly operational now stands at 53. These are 14 in I Corps, seven in II Corps, 28 in III Corps, and four in IV Corps. At present, 115 DOICCs are programmed for activation during 1968-- 20 each in I and II Corps, 53 in III Corps, and 22 in IV Corps. This projection possibly may be 11-6 No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only SECRET Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 1111Or 1J.LIA-11�...0 1 Amy" No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only revised upward during 1968. In addition to the es- tablishment of the DOICCs, CORDS officials are striv- ing to upgrade the capabilities and the utilization of the Provincial Interrogation Centers--subject to National Police policies--and to revive the Vietnam- ese Provincial Intelligence Coordination Committees (PICC). 17. US officials feel that the US ICEX organiza- tional phase is now largely completed, and that as DOICCs continue to be established and US military per- sonnel continue to be assigned for ICEX augmentation, the US can now move into the operational phase. Aside from completing negotiations with the GVN, emphasis will be given by US officials to guidance, support, reporting, the review of field operations, and to the monitoring of the progress of the construction and utilization of the new provincial prisoner screening and detention facilities. 18. Problems still exist and must be overcome before the ICEX program can function effectively. Although ICEX was envisioned as a structure that would derive its support from existing programs, this has not turned out to be the case. The US management and coordination structure, both now and as it continues to grow at district, province, and corps levels, will require additional resources, personnel, funding, vehicles, and communications. The key to the success of ICEX, however, still re- mains with the Vietnamese. The creation of Viet- namese ICEX staffs, in addition to the hoped for reactivation of the PICC and continued expansion of the DOICCs, could further drain the already limited Vietnamese pool of qualified manpower and may not add substantially to the Vietnamese anti-infrastruc- ture efforts. Status of Hamlets Being Worked by RD Teams 19. Statistics derived from the Vietnamese Revolutionary Development Cadre Directorate indi- cate that as of 18 November 437 RD teams were work- ing in RD hamlets throughout South Vietnam. Of these, 321 teams are constructing A..2 Doi Moi ("Real III -7 No Foreign DisssegrAground Use Only Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 NorLI llak�J J. No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only New Life Hamlets"), 65 are at work in AR Curl?. Co (Consolidated Hamlets), and 57 are estEElishing LE Binh Dinh (Pacified Hamlets). 20. According to the Vietnamese Cadre Direct- orate, 149 LE Doi Moi had been completed by the RD teams as of 1 November. CORDS reported that as of 30 September, 265 teams--58 percent of the teams eligible for movement--had completed their move to the Phase II hamlets. The difference between the number of completed .T.T. Doi Moi and the number of teams reported to have moved is presumably accounted for by the teams which in their Phase I hamlets es- tablished Cung Co and LE Binh Dinh. 21. The Vietnamese RD Cadre Directorate still aspires to complete the 1967 goal of 1,137 hamlets however, the 1967 program will not end until 'at least 31 January 1968. In addition there are 38 RD teams, composed of only 20 workers each, in 38 villages of An GiangProvince. These Community De- velopment teams are expected to stay in their pres- ent villages for the remainder of this year. Of the approximately 35 civil-military teams operating in South Vietnam, at least 12 have established Ap Binh Dinh--all in Binh Dinh Province--and have moved to Phase II hamlets. 22. US advisers have been concerned with the RD Cadre Directorate's recent actions in forming new RD teams with the recent Vung Tau graduates rather than filling in understrength teams. The Vietnamese effort is apparently aimed at establish- ing 550 RD teams by 1 January. The Cadre Director- ate has, however, assured CORDS that the first Vung Tau class that graduates in 1968 will be used as fillers and replacements for the existing teams. II-8 No Foreign Dissnatiftground Use Only Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 M1.!,UK11, 1%we No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only III. ECONOMIC SITUATION The USAID retail price index for Sai- gon was virtually unchanged during the week ending 13 November, although the price of rice increased for the first time since early September. Free market dollar and gold rates rose slightly in response to rumors that a larger piaster banknote would be issued. Route 4 is the most important commercial route in Vietnam and is now used, rather than waterways, for transporting most goods to Saigon from the delta. Route 20 north of Saigon has become increasingly important to commerce since the closure of Route 1 along the coast. Prices 1. The USAID retail price index for Saigon was virtually unchanged during the week ending 13 November, although the price of rice rose for the first time since early September when the first deliveries of the new crop began to arrive. This increase, attributed to an attempt by provincial rice merchants to hold up shipments in anticipation of higher official rice prices, was offset by declines in the prices of chicken, shrimp, and most vegetables. Inadequate deliveries of charcoal and firewook resulted in higher prices for these items, but prices of all other nonfood products were unchanged. (A table of weekly retail prices in Saigon is included in the Annex.) 2. Prices of US-financed imports rose about two percent during the week ending 14 November, partly in response to widespread rumors of an increase in customs duties and the possible issuance of a larger paister banknote. The price of wire rods rose five percent, mainly because of low arrivals. The only decline was registered in the price of cement. No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only SECRET Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 003031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Ausie THAILAND 11/111 1,111 QUI. 6875911-67 CIA .1) NORTH .1 VIETNAM CAMBODIA ANG T 1114 THI (,� QUANG NAM CONf4DEVfirl. QUANG TIN QUANG \. NGAI KONTUM = ePleiku PLEIKU BINH 'DI DARLAC PI-IU BON PH YEN KHAN HOA ()HANG DUG LJOC LorAG LAM GONG L.) '7414 Nha Trang TUYEN a Lat DI NINH THU Phan Rang PhanThiet Quan Long SOUTH VIETNAM MILES 190 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 SECRET *we No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only Currency and Gold 3. Free market dollar and gold rates rose slightly on 13 November as a result of the rumors mentioned above, particularly those concerning the issuance of a 1,000-piaster note. The highest bank- note now in circulation is the 500-piaster note. The prices of green dollars and gold leaf rose one piaster each to 156 and 202 piasters per dollar. The rate for MPC (scrip) was unchanged at 115 piasters per dollar. (A graph on monthly and weekly currency and gold prices is included in the Annex.) Highways of Commerce: Route 4 4. A series of reports by Vietnamese and US of- ficials show that most commodities moving to Saigon from the delta are now transported by road, rather than water, and that the condition of the roads has deteriorated rapidly in recent years from Viet Cong mining and heavy traffic. Route 4 running from Sai- gon through eight provinces to Quan Long (Ca Mau) in An Xuyen Province, a distance of about 217 miles, is the most important commercial route in Vietnam. Dur- ing the first nine months of 1967 three fourths of the delta rice delivered to Saigon was transported by road and all of this was trucked at least part of the way on Route 4. Most fish and pork delivered to Saigon are also trucked via Route 4. Shipment by barge formerly was the most economic way to transport foodstuffs, but delta waterways are now to insecure and many barge owners have moved their equipment to the Saigon port area where they can make more money. Rice and cement clinker are the major items still transported to Saigon by barge, but barges must now wait for convoys which travel only three of four times a month. 5. Under normal conditions a trip covering the length of Route 4 from Quan Long to Saigon takes nine to 11 hours, but this may be extended into days de- pending on enemy activities and the weather. The normal trip often involves extended waiting periods at several one-way bridges and the Mekong River ferries No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only SECRET Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 SECRET No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only at My Thuan and the Trans-Bassac River ferries at Can Tho. The hard surface portion of the road varies from about 15 to 43 feet wide, but many stretches have been heavily cratered by mines. Route 4 has been attacked frequently during the past few months with obvious effects on deliveries to the Saigon re- tail market. Prior to the presidential inauguration on 31 October, VC mining of a section of the highway combined with heavy rain was the main cause of a six percent increase in food prices in the capital that week. In the section from My Thuan to My Tho the enemy has cratered the road with more than 100 mines and blown up a 168-foot reinforced concrete bridge. This destruction closed the road for only two days, but the continued cratering has slowed traffic con- siderably. 6. If truckers learn in advance that a section of the road has been closed, they can either drive to the break in the road and transship their goods to a truck on the other side or delay shipment until repairs are made. Fish are the most vulnerable to delays because they are shipped live in water con- tainers. On a normal day the trucker loses up to 20 percent of his fish, and if he must wait over- night, the loss can be as much as 70 percent. With a two-day delay, he delivers dead fish. In addition to the cost of delays, there are costs incurred at the many resource checkpoints along the way and at the ferries, where a bribe shortens the waiting per- iod. One rice trucker reported payments to 36 dif- ferent parties on a round trip between Saigon and Vinh Loi (Bac Lieu). Routes 20 and 1 7. A second important commercial highway is Route 20 running from about 44 miles east of Saigon north to Da Lat. With the closing of Route 1 in Long Khanh and Binh Tuy provinces, and the railroad, which parallels Route 1 up the coast, Route 20 has become a major route for goods being transported from Saigon to Phan Rang, Nha Trang, and Pleiku. Accord- ing to an embassy report, security has improved No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only SECRET Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 L) Li AINALli No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only considerably along the road in recent months, and since July, the VC have not maintained regular fixed tax points on the road. The highway, however, now carries far more traffic than it was designed to take and maintenance is poor. 8. Route 20 begins at a junction with Route 1 east of Saigon and runs about 143 miles to Da Lat, a mountain resort in Tuyen Duc Province. It is a hard-surface road averaging 14 feet in width, but weather, traffic, and lack of repair have resulted in several stretches of mud and potholes. There are many bridges and culverts on Route 20, but most could be easily repaired within a few hours except for one bridge, not yet damaged, over rapids in the La Nga River. MACV originally scheduled complete repair and expansion of the road for 1968, but there are no funds available and other routes have higher military priority. With no military assistance and province officials claiming inability to keep up ne- cessary repairs, Route 20 probably will slowly de- teriorate. 9. Route 20 is open to traffic with few serious delays, except in rainy weather, but the normal run- ning time from Saigon to Da Lat is still ten to 12 hours, or about double what it was five years ago. The security of the road constantly changes, but in Long Khanh Province the South Vietnamese Army and local forces provide reasonably security with a series of strongpoints along the road. The stretch between Bao Loc and the Lan Dong-Tuyen Duc border, however, is insecure, and the enemy can interdict the highway for short periods when they choose. 10. No thorough check is made on the amounts and types of cargo transported on Route 20, but one survey showed that about 200 vehicles use the road each day. It is known that more than 100 metric tons of vegetables are trucked daily from the vege- table growing center of Da Lat to Saigon and that other products such as fish, salt, and nuoc nam are trucked through Da Lat from the coast. If travel time is normal, the vegetables arrive in marketable III-4 No Foreign Dissaneniffround Use Only Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 N., SECRET *IS No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only condition, but when two days are required, as often happens, about half the load spoils and both farmers and consumers suffer. Traffic in the other direction carries consumer goods for the civilian population from Saigon to Da Lat and frequently on to Phan Rang, Nha Trang, and Pleiku. Each day some 20 tons of bananas and pineapples are trucked from the Saigon area and then flown out to US installations in mili- tary planes. 11. The closing of Route 1 has been a particular hardship for the economy of Phan Thiet on the coast in Binh Thuan Province. Phan Thiet used to be about 125 miles and six hours from Saigon by road, but is now about 24 hours away by water. The area's current major industries are fish, nuoc mam, and salt, but an embassy officer who toured the area believes that with adequate security and the opening of the road, there would be a renewal of lumbering, the develop- ment of vegetable production, and possibly the expan- sion of rice production. The fishermen of Phan Thiet have suffered heavy losses in transporting their pro- duct to Saigon because refrigeration is inadequate for the length of time now required for the trip. There has been talk of acquiring boats with cold storage facilities, but apparently the fishermen's real preference is for a return to the old pattern of commerce using Route 1. 111-5 No Foreign Dissem/Background Use Only SECRET Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 003031268 TABLE Weekly Retail Prices in Saigon 21 13 Jun 1966 I/ 3 Jan 1967 23 Oct 1967 30 Oct 1967 6 Nov 1967 13 NOV 1967 Index for all Items 173 225 290 304 300 301 Index for Food Items 190 2_44:324 345 22L 22L c/ Of Which: (In Piasters) Rice-Soc Nau (100 kg.) 1,250 1,700 2,300 2,300 2,250 2,350 Pork Bellies (1 kg.) 90 130 200 230 220 220 Fish-Ca Tre (1 kg.) 130 150 220 270 260 260 Nuoc Mam (jar) 70 90 150 150 150 150 Index for Nonfood Items 140 195 228 230 233 Of Which: (In Piasters) Firewood (cu. meter) 360 560 500 520 530 560 Cigarettes (pack) 10 14 14 14 14 14 White Calico (meter) 27 33 45 46 46 46 Kerosene (liter) 7.8 10.5 9 9 9 9 a. Data are from USAID sources. For all indexes 1 January 1965 = 100. b. Price level just prior to the 18 June devaluation. c. Preliminary. Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 003031268 Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 Saigon Free Market Gold and Currency Prices -500 - PIASTERS PER US DOLLAR 202 �156 115 1966 1967 GOLD: Basis gold leaf worth $35 per troy ounce US $10 GREEN -- US $10 MPC Military Payment Certificates (scrip). Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268 SEP OCT NOV 1967 68754 1-67 Secret Secret Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268,lio r�iv Approved for Release: 2018/06/28 C03031268