HAS HANOI DECIDED ON OFFENSIVE?

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
LOC-HAK-453-2-18-7
Release Decision: 
RIFLIM
Original Classification: 
T
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
January 11, 2017
Document Release Date: 
December 10, 2009
Sequence Number: 
18
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
November 29, 1973
Content Type: 
MEMO
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon LOC-HAK-453-2-18-7.pdf75.8 KB
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No Objection to Declassification in Full 2009/12/10: LOC-HAK-453-2-18-7 MEMORANDUM NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCI TOP SECRET .,SENSITIVE/EYES ONLY MEMORANDUM FOR SECRETARY K.T. GER FROM: W. R. Smy SUBJECT: Has Hanoi Decided ?n.Offensive? I' have asked several Vietnam analysts why recetrt estimates have stated that Hanoi has not yet.decided'on.a dry season offensive. They replied as follows: There is no. eviden~ce in. North Vietnamese public. or intercepted material which suggests any tactical dispute or any uncertainty about whether to proceed. In- stead, the case for alleged indecision rests on two bases: first, that the North Vietnamese do not have quite enough troops in the Highlands and in the COSVN to provide a substantial reserve for a major offensive; second, the historical experience that the North Vietnamese often do not fully commit themselves to an offensive until they see how the first moves in a potential offensive have gone. The analysts also indicated that there is a measure of bureaucratic protection in the claim for indecision: it makes it easier for an analyst to argue that the North Vietnamese changed their mind after he had made his estimate. However, I was also told that if infiltration continues along present lines and ultimately goes as high as projected in one sensitive North Vietnamese intercept, Hanoi will have more than enough reserves to launch a major offensive. I was. also told that the new route structure is so good that Hanoi does not really need to commit its troops to the South as early as in the past. The only real question, according to the analysts, is the type of offensive. They doubt that Hanoi will repeat the 1968 or 1972 exercises, but may instead try for the kind of rolling offensive that,could "bloody'' South Vietnamese forces without generating enough steam to provoke American Congressional support for our involvement. Estimates differ: whether the North Vietnamese would really gain much from that kind of operation. An element of uncertainty, which you can judge better than I,, is whether Mowcow and Peking have really weighed in firmly. My impression has always been that neither felt free to do so and that the North Vietnamese ultimately heeded no counsel but their own. I am not sure if that still holds in the days of detente. NSA review completed TOP SECRET/SENSITIVE/EYES ONLY XGDS DECLAS - IMPDET BYAUTH - HAKI$SThTGER ON-FILE NSC RELEASE INSTRUCTIONS APPLY No Objection to Declassification in Full 2009/12/10 : LOC-HAK-453-2-18-7 November 29, 1973