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THE PHOENIX PROGRAM

GLOSSARY

AA Air America: subsidiary airline of the Central Intelligence Agency which was active in Asia during the Vietnam War
Agroville (Khu Tru Mat): garrison community into which rural Vietnamese were forcefully relocated in order to isolate them from the Vietcong.
AID Agency for International Development: branch of the U.S. State Department responsible for advising the government of Vietnam, including the National Police
AIK Aid-in-Kind: nonmonetary aid
An Ninh The Vietcong's internal security and propaganda service
APC Accelerated pacification campaign: pacification program begun November 1968 to increase the number of villages rated "secure" under the Hamlet Evaluation System
APT Armed propaganda team: platoon-size unit composed of soldiers with both a combat and psychological-warfare mission
ARVN Army of the Republic of Vietnam
ASA Army Security Agency: branch of the National Security Agency working with the U.S. Army to locate the Vietcong through its radio communications
Biet Kich Commando
Cadre Nucleus of trained personnel around which a larger organization can be built
CAP Combined Action Patrol: platoon-size unit composed of U.S. Marines and Vietnamese Territorial Forces
CAS Controlled American source: an employee of the CIA
CD Civilian detainee: Vietnamese civilian detained by U.S. or Vietnamese military forces
CDEC Combined Document Exploitation Center: formed October 1966 to support allied military operations primarily through the translation of captured enemy documents
CG Census Grievance: CIA coven action program designed to obtain information on the VCI through static agents in villages, or mobile agents in armed propaganda teams
CI Counterintelligence: that aspect of intelligence devoted to destroying the effectiveness of enemy intelligence activities
CICV Combined Intelligence Center, Vietnam: created in 1965 to coordinate U.S. and South Vietnamese intelligence operations
CID Criminal Investigation Division: branch of the U.S. Army charged with investigating crimes committed by American soldiers
CIDG Civilian Irregular Defense Group: U.S. Special Forces-trained village and tribal security and reaction forces
CINCPAC Commander in Chief, Pacific: the U.S. military headquarters in Hawaii to which the commander of MACV reported
CIO Central Intelligence Organization: formed in 1961 to coordinate South Vietnamese foreign and domestic intelligence operations
CIS Combined Intelligence Staff: formed in November 1966 to manage the attack against the VCI in Saigon and its environs
CMDC Capital Military District Command: formed in June 1968 to coordinate military and pacification operations in Saigon and its environs
CMEC Combined Materiel Exploitation Center: formed in 1965 to coordinate intelligence gained from the analysis of captured enemy materiel
CORDS Civil Operations and Revolutionary Development Support: organization established in May 1967 under MACV, designed to coordinate U.S. military and civilian operations and advisory programs in South Vietnam
COSVN Central Office of South Vietnam: mobile headquarters of the South Vietnamese insurgency, created in 1962
CPDC Central Pacification and Development Council: formed in 1968 by William Colby, who was then chief of CORDS, as a liaison staff to the office of the prime minister of South Vietnam
CPHPO Central Phung Hoang Permanent Office: formed in July 1968 to manage the South Vietnamese attack against the VCI
CSC Combined Security Committee: formed in 1964 to protect U.S. government personnel and facilities in Saigon and its environs
CT Counterterrorist: mercenary soldier employed by the CIA to kill, capture, and/or terrorize the VCI
CT IV Cong Tac IV (also known as Counterterror IV): joint U.S.-South Vietnamese program begun in December 1966, designed to eliminate the VCI in Saigon and its environs
CTSC Combined Tactical Screening Center: formed by the U.S. Army in 1967 to distinguish prisoners of war from civilian detainees
Cuc Nghien Cuu Central Research Agency: North Vietnamese intelligence service
DAO Defense Attache Office: U.S. military headquarters that replaced MACV in 1973 after the cease-fire
DCI Director of Central Intelligence: U.S. official in charge of managing the affairs of the CIA
DEPCORDS Deputy to the MACV commander for Civil Operations and Revolutionary Development Support
DGNP Director General of the National Police: Vietnamese official in charge of the South Vietnamese police
DIOCC District Intelligence and Operations Coordination Center: office of the Phoenix adviser in each of South Vietnam's 250 districts
DMZ Demilitarized zone: stretch of land along the seventeenth parallel, created in 1954 to separate North and South Vietnam
DSA District senior adviser: senior CORDS official in each of South Vietnam's 250 districts
FI Foreign Intelligence: branch of the CIA charged with inserting agents within foreign governments
Free Fire Zone: Area in South Vietnam where U.S. military personnel had the authority to kill anyone they targeted
GAMO Group administrative mobile organization: French-advised and -outfitted combat unit composed of South Vietnamese soldiers
GCMA Composite airborne commando group: French-advised and -outfitted antiguerrilla unit composed mostly of Montagnards
GVN Government of Vietnam
HES Hamlet Evaluation System: computer system developed by the U.S. Defense Department in 1967 to measure trends in pacification
HIP Hamlet Informant program: CIA-funded program managed by CIA officers in liaison with the Special Branch of the South Vietnamese National Police in which secret agents were paid to identify VCI in hamlets
hooch: Dwelling occupied by rural Vietnamese
Hop Tac: Pacification Intensive Capital Area program, begun July 1964 to bring security to Saigon and its environs
HVRP High Values Rewards Program: bounty program proposed by the Phoenix Directorate in July 1971 to induce low- level VCI to turn in high-level VCI
ICEX Intelligence coordination and exploitation: original
name of the Phoenix program, formed in June 1967
IOCC Intelligence Operations and Coordination Center
IPA International Police Academy: school in the United States where the Agency for International Development through its Office of Public Safety trained policemen from foreign countries from 1963 to 1974
ISA International Security Affairs: office within the U.S. Defense Department responsible for supervising security assistance programs such as Phoenix in foreign countries, excluding NATO
JAG Judge Advocate General: chief prosecuting general within the U.S. armed forces
JGS Joint General Staff: command organization of the Republic of Vietnam Armed Forces
JI Personnel branch of the JGS or MACV
J2 Intelligence branch of the JGS or MACV
J3 Operations branch of the JGS or MACV
J4 Logistics branch of the JGS or MACV
JUSPAO Joint U .S. Public Affairs Office: formed in May 1965 under the office of the U.S. Information Agency in South Vietnam, to manage MACV psychological warfare operations and public relations
KKK Khmer Kampuchea Krom: Cambodian exiles trained by the CIA in South Vietnam
KMT Kuomintang: official ruling party of the Republic of China (Taiwan), formed by Dr. Sun Yat-sen in 1911
LLDB Luc Luong Duc Biet: South Vietnamese Special Forces
LRRP Long-range reconnaissance patrol: small team of U .S. soldiers sent to gather behind-the-lines intelligence on enemy troops
LST Landing Ship Transport: naval vessel in which troops are often quartered
MACV Military Assistance Command, Vietnam: arrived in Saigon in February 1962 as a unified command under the Commander in Chief, Pacific, managing the U.S. military effort in South Vietnam
MAAG Military Assistance and Advisory Group: arrived in South Vietnam in November 1955 to provide support and training to the Republic of Vietnam Armed Forces. Its function was absorbed by MACV in 1964.
MASA Military Assistance Security Adviser: U.S. military officer who manages a security assistance program in a foreign country
MAT Mobile advisory team: team of U.S. military personnel assigned to CORDS, charged with training and supporting the Territorial Security Forces of South Vietnam in a province or district
Mike Forces: Mobile strike force commands: corps-level units under the command of the 5th Special Forces
MOI Ministry of the Interior: branch of the GVN with authority over pacification, including Phung Hoang
MSS Military Security Service: counterintelligence branch of the Republic of Vietnam Armed Forces
MSUG Michigan State University Group: employees of Michigan State University contracted in 1954 to provide technical assistance to the GVN
NIC National Interrogation Center: CIA facility built in 1964 inside CIO headquarters in the naval shipyard in Saigon
NLF National Liberation Front: formed in 1960 by the various insurgent groups in South Vietnam
NPC National Police Command: organized in June 1971 to incorporate Phung Hoang within the existing National Police structure
NPCIS National Police Criminal Information System: computer system designed to track identified VCI
NPFF National Police Field Force: paramilitary branch of the National Police
NPIASS National Police Infrastructure Analysis Sub-Section: data bank containing biographical information on the VCI, used to plan countermeasures
NPIC National Police Interrogation Center: located at National Police headquarters on Vo Tanh Street in Saigon
NVA North Vietnamese Army
OCO Office of Civil Operations: formed in Saigon in November 1966 to manage U.S. pacification programs in South Vietnam
OSA Office of the Special Assistant: code name for the CIA station in Saigon
PA&E Pacific Architects and Engineers: private company that did construction work for the GVN
PAAS Pacification Attitude Analysis System: computer system designed to assess the political effects of CORDS pacification programs
PAT People's action team: CIA version of the standard Vietcong armed propaganda team
PCOC Phoenix Coordinators Orientation Course: begun November 1968 at Vung Tau's Seminary Camp to train Phoenix coordinators
PHMIS Phung Hoang Management Information System: computer system containing biographical and organizational data on the VCI, created January 1969
PHREEX Phung Hoang reexamination: study begun in 1971, designed to critique the Phoenix program
Phung Hoang: The mythological Vietnamese bird of conjugal love that appears in times of peace, pictured holding a flute and representing virtue, grace, and harmony. Also the name given to the South Vietnamese version of Phoenix
PIC Province Interrogation Center
PICC Province Intelligence Coordination Committee: established by decree in November 1964 to serve as the senior intelligence agency in each province, but never put into effect
PIOCC Province Intelligence and Operations Coordination Center: headquarters of the Phoenix adviser in each of South Vietnam's forty-four provinces
PIRL Potential intelligence recruitment lead: VCI removed from the Phoenix blacklist and approached to become an agent of the CIA
PM Paramilitary: branch of the CIA that obtains intelligence through unconventional warfare operations
POIC Province officer in charge: senior CIA officer in a province, supervising both police liaison and paramilitary operations
PP Political and Psychological: branch of the CIA that manages black propaganda and political liaison activities
PRG Provisional Revolutionary Government: formed in June 1969 by the NLF to negotiate the reunification of North and South Vietnam
PRP People's Revolutionary party: created in January 1962 as the southern branch of the Vietnamese Communist party
PRU Provincial Reconnaissance Units: mercenary forces under the control of the CIA in South Vietnam
PSA Province senior adviser: senior CORDS official in each of South Vietnam's forty-four provinces
PSC Province Security Committee: nonjudicial body charged with the disposition of captured VCI
PSD Public Safety Division: branch of CORDS responsible for advising the National Police
PSCD Pacification Security Coordination Division: CIA component of CORDS
PSDF People's self-defense forces: South Vietnamese civilian militia
psyops Psychological operations
psywar Psychological warfare
PTSD Post traumatic stress disorder: stress that continues after the traumatic event that caused it
RD Revolutionary Development: CIA program to build support for the GVN in the provinces of South Vietnam
RDC Revolutionary development cadre: South Vietnamese trained by the CIA at Vung Tau to persuade the citizens of South Vietnam to support the central government
RDC/O Revolutionary Development Cadre, Operations: CIA officer in charge of paramilitary operations in a province
RCD/P Revolutionary Development Cadre, Plans: CIA officer in charge of liaison with the Special Branch in a province
RF/PF Regional Forces and Popular Forces: a National Guard under the control of district and province chiefs
RMK/BRJ Raymond Morrison Knudson, Brown Root Jorgansen: private company that did construction work for the GVN
ROIC Region officer in charge: senior CIA officer in each of the four corps and Saigon
RVNAF Republic of Vietnam Armed Forces
S2 Sector intelligence adviser: senior MACV intelligence adviser to the South Vietnamese forces in a province
SACSA Special Assistant (to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff) for Counterinsurgency and Special Activities: office within the Joint Chiefs with responsibility for Phoenix policy
SARC Special airmobile resource control: method of interdicting VCI attempting to resupply armed Vietcong guerrillas
SAVA Special Assistant for Vietnamese Affairs: office in the CIA reporting directly to the Director of Central Intelligence on developments in South Vietnam
SCAG Saigon Capital Advisory Group
SEAL Sea-Air-Land: the U.S. Navy's Special Forces
SES Special Exploitation Service: formed in April 1964 as the JGS counterpart to SOG, renamed Strategic Technical Directorate in September 1987
SIDE Screening, interrogation, and detention of the enemy: ICEX program begun in September 1967 to resolve the problem of separating genuine VCI from innocent civilian detainees
SIFU Special Intelligence Force Units: small units formed in 1971 to replace PRU, composed of Special Branch and Field Police
SMIAT Special Military Intelligence Advisory Team: formed in 1965 to mount sophisticated operations against the VCI
SMM Saigon Military Mission: CIA office formed in 1954 to help the South Vietnamese conduct psychological warfare against the Vietminh
Snatch and snuff Kidnap and kill
SOG Special Operations Group: joint CIA-military organization formed in 1964 to conduct operations outside South Vietnam in support of MACV, but under the control of SACSA
SP Special Police: term used in reference to the CIA-advised and -funded Special Branch of South Vietnamese National Police
Trung-doi biet kich Nham dou: people's commando team, formed by Frank Scotton in 1964
USARV United States Army Republic of Vietnam: created July 1965 at Long Binh to control all logistical and administrative units of the U.S. Army in Vietnam
USIS United States Information Service: branch of the U.S. government responsible for conducting psychological operations overseas
TDY Temporary duty
TRAC Target Research and Analysis Section: created in January 1965 to develop targets for Strategic Air Command B-25s in support of MACV
VBI Vietnamese Bureau of Investigation: precursor organization to the Special Branch, also known as the Cong An
VC Vietcong: Vietnamese Communist
VCI Vietcong infrastructure: all Communist party members and NLF officers, plus Vietcong and NVA saboteurs and terrorists
VCS Vietcong suspect: Viemamese civilian suspected of being VCI
VIS Vietnamese Information Service: branch of the GVN responsible for conducting psychological operations in South Vietnam
VNQDD Vietnam Quoc Dan Dang: Vietnamese branch of the Kuomintang
VNTF Vietnam Task Force: office within ISA responsible for Vietnam

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