Item:
ONJR23SVR118

Original Rare Vietnam Special Forces “Operation White Star” MAAG-LAOS- Photo Album Grouping Attributed to 7th SFG Green Beret Sgt Gerald Naquin- Circa 1962

Item Description

Original Item: One of a Kind. Material relating to Special Forces operations during the CIA’s involvement assisting the Laotian Government against Communist Guerillas is rather difficult to find, and is a rather important chapter in America’s involvement in the War in Southeast Asia. The material is difficult to find, and this particular grouping was obtained directly from the veteran some years ago by an amateur historian.

The Special Forces served in a training and advisory role against Communist Lao Guerilla forces. By 1962, the peak of American involvement in Laos, the total of US Military personnel numbered only a mere 600. Sergeant First Class Gerald Naquin was one of those 600, serving as a Weapons Expert within one of the Special Forces Detachments, Team FTT-20 based out of Thakhek, Laos from February 9, 1961 to September 28, 1962. SFC Naquina as part of the 7th Special Forces Group, instructed Lao Irregular forces how to use US Supplied Weapons, such as the M1 Garand, M1 Carbine, M3 Grease Gun, 1919 Light Machine Gun, and M-1918A2 Browning Automatic Rifle. Of course, this was not Naquin’s only duty, as they often served as security, advisory roles, mentorship, lead patrols, and so forth.

The lot consists of a small souvenir Vietnam Photo Album with numerous Photographs of Naquin with Laotian Forces. In addition, copies of his unit assignments and rosters are included in the photo album as well. The album consists of 21 original unpublished photographs. The content ranges from fortifications around camp, instructing Laotian troops, inspections, ammo dumps, weapons, etc. In addition, Naquin’s original “Duck Hunter Pattern” Camouflage Special Forces Ascot is included , along with a 1964 Civilian Pocket Notebook, 1959 Department of the Army Field Fortification Manual, and 1956 Department of the Army Drill and Ceremonies Manual.

A great set from a little known portion of the Vietnam War! Ready for Display!

Operation White Star:
In the early 1960s the United States Army Special Forces was engaged in a secretive mission in the remote country of Laos in Southeast Asia. During this time we were in the midst of a Cold War with the Soviet Union, Red China, and other communist bloc nations. The perception (and reality) was that slowly but surely through communist revolutionary movements the countries of Southeast Asia (South Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, and Thailand) would fall to communism. Many referred to this as the ‘domino theory’. Operation White Star was a counterinsurgency effort to stem the growth of communism in Laos.

Special Forces teams, detachments of 10-15 men, were deployed to Laos to train and advise Lao military units and indigenous forces to resist communist infiltration and Lao communist guerrilla forces. The detachments deployed for varying periods of time – usually six months. The initial force, numbering over 100 men, deployed in 1959 to conduct a counterinsurgency mission. At the time the U.S. military was not authorized by international conventions to be in Laos so the deployment was secret. The name of the mission was codenamed Operation Hotfoot. Later, the mission’s name was changed to Operation White Star in early 1961. Operation Hotfoot was a secret mission while Operation White Star was not.

The White Star plan was for a Special Forces detachment (SFODA) to train and advise battalions of the Royal Laotian Army. Subsequent to the initial deployment, the some of the Special Forces detachments moved into the mountains, linked up with indigenous hill tribes, and formed units that could confront the Pathet Lao in their sanctuary areas and provide local security for the tribes. This fight would later involve combat with North Vietnamese conventional army units that used Laos as a transit path , training area, and sanctuary. By 1962 the number of Special Forces Soldiers in Laos would number over 600.

Operation White Star, having begun in 1959, would end in 1962 as a result of the Geneva Accords that established Laotian neutrality. The counterinsurgency effort was passed to the Central Intelligence Agency (utilizing many former and ‘on loan’) Special Forces Non-Commissioned Officers (NCOs). The CIA was instrumental in the support of General Vang Pao’s clandestine army. CIA continued its paramilitary program until the collapse of the Laotian government. Operation White Star was an early (and successful) example of small Special Forces teams entering a semi-permissive operational area and forming, training, equipping, and leading indigenous forces in a counterinsurgency environment.

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