John Paul Vann Explained

John Paul Vann
Birth Name:John Paul Tripp
Birth Date:2 July 1924
Birth Place:Norfolk, Virginia, U.S.
Death Place:Kon Tum, South Vietnam
Placeofburial:Arlington National Cemetery
Branch:United States Army Air Forces (1943–1947)
United States Army (1947–1963)
Serviceyears:1943–1963
Rank: Lieutenant Colonel
Battles:World War II
Korean War
Vietnam War
Awards:Army Distinguished Service Cross
Distinguished Flying Cross
Bronze Star Medal (2)
Army Commendation Medal (2)
Purple Heart

John Paul Vann (born John Paul Tripp; July 2, 1924 – June 9, 1972) was a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army, later retired, who became well known for his role in the Vietnam War. Although separated from the military before the Vietnam War reached its peak, he returned to service as a civilian under the auspices of the United States Agency for International Development and by the waning days of the war was the first American civilian to command troops in regular combat there. He received the Presidential Medal of Freedom and was the only civilian in Vietnam to receive the Distinguished Service Cross. He died on June 9, 1972, in a helicopter crash in Vietnam just after the Battle of Kontum.

Early life

Born John Paul Tripp in Norfolk, Virginia, on July 2, 1924, out of wedlock, to John Spry and Myrtle Lee Tripp. Vann's mother married Aaron Frank Vann, and Vann took his stepfather's surname; Vann had three half-siblings. In 1942, Aaron Vann officially adopted him. Although the Vann children grew up in near-poverty, Vann was able to attend boarding school at Ferrum College through the patronage of a wealthy member of his church. He graduated from its high school in 1941, and from its junior college program in 1943. With the onset of World War II, Vann sought to become an aviator/pilot.

Military career

In 1943, at the age of 18, Vann enlisted in the United States Army Air Force. He underwent pilot training, transferred to navigation school, and was commissioned as a second lieutenant in 1945.[1] However, the war ended before he could see action.[2]

Vann married Mary Jane Allen of Rochester, New York in October 1945, at the age of 21.[3] They had five children.[4]

When the Army Air Force separated from the Army in 1947 to form its own branch, the United States Air Force, Vann chose to remain in the Army and transferred to the infantry. He was assigned to Korea, and then Japan, as a logistics officer. When the Korean War began in June 1950, Vann coordinated the transportation of his 25th Infantry Division to Korea. Vann joined his unit, which was placed on the critical Pusan Perimeter until the amphibious Inchon landing relieved the beleaguered forces.

In late 1950, in the wake of China's entrance into the war and the retreat of allied forces, now-Captain Vann was given his first command, a Ranger company, the Eighth Army Ranger Company. He led the unit on reconnaissance missions behind enemy lines for three months, before a serious illness in one of his children resulted in his transfer back to the United States. While assigned to Rutgers University's ROTC program as an assistant professor of military science and tactics,[5] he received a Bachelor of Science degree with a concentration in economics and statistics in 1954.[3]

In 1954, Vann joined the 16th Infantry Regiment in Schweinfurt, Germany, becoming the head of the regiment's Heavy Mortar Company. A year later, he was promoted to major and transferred to Headquarters U.S. Army Europe at Heidelberg, where he returned to logistics work.

Vann returned to the U.S. to attend the Command and General Staff College (a prerequisite for further promotion) in 1957. During this period, he earned an Master of Business Administration degree from Syracuse University in 1959 and completed all course requirements for a PhD in public administration at the university's Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs. He was promoted to lieutenant colonel in 1961.[5] [3]

Vietnam War service

Vann was voluntarily assigned to South Vietnam in 1962 as an adviser to Colonel Huỳnh Văn Cao, commander of the ARVN IV Corps. In the thick of the anti-guerrilla war against the Viet Cong, Vann became concerned with the way in which the war was being prosecuted, in particular the disastrous Battle of Ap Bac. Directing the battle from a spotter plane overhead, he earned the Distinguished Flying Cross for his bravery in taking enemy fire. He attempted to draw public attention to the problems through press contacts such as New York Times reporter David Halberstam, directing much of his ire towards MACV commander General Paul D. Harkins. Vann completed his Vietnam assignment in March 1963 and left the Army within a few months, having completed 20 years of service.[3]

Civilian career

Vann accepted a job in Denver, Colorado with defense contractor Martin Marietta. Although he succeeded there for nearly two years, he missed Vietnam and angled to return.[3] Vann returned to Vietnam in March 1965 as an official of the Agency for International Development (AID).[6]

After an assignment as province senior adviser, Vann was made Deputy for Civil Operations and Rural Development Support (CORDS) in the Third Corps Tactical Zone of Vietnam, which consisted of the twelve provinces north and west of Saigon—the part of South Vietnam most important to the US. CORDS was an integrated group that consisted of USAID, U.S. Information Service, Central Intelligence Agency and State Department along with U.S. Army personnel to provide needed manpower. Among other undertakings, CORDS was responsible for the Phoenix Program, which involved neutralization of the Viet Cong infrastructure.

Vann served as Deputy for Civil Operations and Rural Development Support CORDS III (i.e., commander of all civilian and military advisers in the Third Corps Tactical Zone) until November 1968 when he was assigned to the same position in IV Corps, which consisted of the provinces south of Saigon in the Mekong Delta.

Vann was highly respected by a large segment of officers and civilians who were involved in the broader political aspects of the war because he favored small units performing aggressive patrolling instead of grandiose engagements by large units. Unlike many US soldiers, he was respectful toward the ARVN soldiers notwithstanding their low morale and was committed to training and strengthening their morale and commitment. He encouraged his personnel to engage themselves in Vietnamese society as much as possible and he constantly briefed that the Vietnam War must be envisaged as a long war at a lower level of engagement rather than a short war at a big-unit, high level of engagement.

On one of his trips back to the U.S. in December 1967, Vann was asked by Walt Rostow, an advocate of more troops and Johnson administration National Security Advisor, whether the U.S. would be over the worst of the war in six months: "Oh hell no, Mr. Rostow", replied Vann, "I'm a born optimist. I think we can hold out longer than that." Vann's wit and iconoclasm did not endear him to many military and civilian careerists but he was a hero to many young civilian and military officers who understood the limits of conventional warfare in the irregular environment of Vietnam.

After his assignment to IV Corps, Vann was assigned as the senior American advisor in II Corps Military Region in the early 1970s when American involvement in the war was winding down and troops were being withdrawn. For that reason, his new job put him in charge of all United States personnel in his region, where he advised the ARVN (Army of the Republic of Vietnam) commander to the region and became the first American civilian to command U.S. regular troops in combat. His position was the equivalent in responsibilities of a major general in the US Army.

Death

Three days after the Battle of Kontum, Vann was killed when his helicopter crashed into a grove of trees near a village cemetery. He was 47 years old. He was buried on June 16, 1972, in Section 11 of Arlington National Cemetery. His funeral was attended by General William Westmoreland, Major General Edward Lansdale, Lieutenant Colonel Lucien Conein, Senator Edward Kennedy, and Daniel Ellsberg.

Legacy

On June 18, President Richard Nixon posthumously awarded Vann the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian citation, for his ten years of service in South Vietnam.[7] For his actions from April 23–24, 1972, Vann, ineligible for the Medal of Honor as a civilian, was also awarded (posthumously) the Distinguished Service Cross,[8] the only civilian so honored since World War II.

Neil Sheehan wrote a Pulitzer Prize-winning Vietnam history and biography of Vann, A Bright Shining Lie: John Paul Vann and America in Vietnam, in which Sheehan also examines two of Vann's alleged career-stunting incidents involving morals charges during his service in West Germany and at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, and how these possibly affected Vann's future actions and resulting career path both in and after Vietnam.[1] In 1998, HBO made the film A Bright Shining Lie, adapted from the book, with Bill Paxton playing the role of Vann.[9]

Quotes

Dates of rank

See also

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: John Paul Vann: Man and Legend. Kross. Peter. 2007-02-20. HistoryNet. en-US. 2019-10-04. Vann was credited with rescuing more than 50 wounded and was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross, the only civilian to be so honored since World War II..
  2. News: An American Soldier in Vietnam. Sheehan. Neil. 1988-06-13. New Yorker. 2019-10-04. en. 0028-792X. He had been trained to kill Germans and Japanese in the Second World War, although the war had ended before he could see combat..
  3. Book: Sheehan, Neil . A Bright Shining Lie: John Paul Vann and America in Vietnam . 1988 . Random House . 1988 . 9780394484471 . New York . Neil Sheehan.
  4. Web site: Trapped By Vietnam : Before He Could Tell the Tale of a Soldier and a War, Neil Sheehan First Had to Battle His Own Emotions. Mehren. Elizabeth. 1988-10-12. Los Angeles Times. en-US. 2019-10-04. He had five children by his wife, Mary Jane, and though they were divorced at the time he was killed in a helicopter accident in Vietnam, at the funeral she placed a rose on the coffin and told the man inside she loved him..
  5. News: Career Approached Legend. Montgomery. Paul L.. 1972-06-10. The New York Times. 2019-10-02. en-US. 0362-4331.
  6. News: The Man Who Was the War. Steel. Ronald. 1988-09-25. The New York Times. 2019-10-02. en-US. 0362-4331.
  7. News: An American Soldier in Vietnam. Sheehan. Neil. 1988-06-13. 2019-10-04. en. 0028-792X. He was buried at Arlington & honored by Pres. Nixon, with the posthumous award of the Presidential Medal of Freedom..
  8. Web site: Distinguished Service Cross Recipients, Vietnam War, 1956–1975 . Department of Defense.
  9. News: HBO's 'Shining Lie' Draws Early Complaints. Lyman. Rick. 1998-05-20. The New York Times. 2019-10-04. en-US. 0362-4331. If anything, Vann was even more intense than the way he is portrayed in the film by Bill Paxton.
  10. Book: Sheehan, Neil. A Bright Shining Lie: John Paul Vann and America in Vietnam. Random House. 1988. 524. 978-0679724148.
  11. Book: Halberstam, David. The Making of a Quagmire: America and Vietnam During the Kennedy Era. Rowman & Littlefield. 2008. 95. 978-0742560086.
  12. Book: Lewy, Guenter. America in Vietnam. Oxford University Press. 1980. 118. 978-0195023916.
  13. Book: Sorley, Lewis . A Better War . Harcourt Brace . 1999. 9780547417455.
  14. Book: Karnow, Stanley . Vietnam: A History . Penguin . 1991 . 9780140145335 . 277 .
  15. Book: McKenna, Thomas . Kontum: The Battle to Save South Vietnam. University Press of Kentucky . 2015 . 9780813165820 . 236 .
  16. Book: Sheehan, Neil. A Bright Shining Lie: John Paul Vann and America in Vietnam . Random House . 1988 . 492 .
  17. Official Register of Commissioned Officers of the United States Army. Various editions from 1950 to 1962.