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・ Operation Burnt Frost
・ Operation Bushmaster
・ Operation Buster–Jangle
・ Operation Bøllebank
・ Operation Büffel
・ Operation Bürkl
・ Operation C
・ Operation C.I.A.
・ Operation Caban
・ Operation Cabinda
・ Operation Cactus-Lilly
・ Operation Caesar
・ Operation Cage Action Plan
・ Operation Cajun Fury
・ Operation Calendar
Operation Camargue
・ Operation Camden (1969)
・ Operation Candytuft
・ Operation Cannonball
・ Operation Canopus Star
・ Operation Canuck
・ Operation Capital
・ Operation Caravan
・ Operation Care
・ Operation Caribbe
・ Operation Carpetbagger
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Operation Camargue : ウィキペディア英語版
Operation Camargue

Operation Camargue was one of the largest operations by the French Far East Expeditionary Corps and Vietnamese National Army in the First Indochina War. It took place from 28 July until 10 August 1953. French armored platoons, airborne units and troops delivered by landing craft to the coast of central Annam, modern-day Vietnam, attempted to sweep forces of the communist Viet Minh from the critical Route One.
The first landings took place in the early morning on 28 July, and reached the first objectives, an inland canal, without major incident. A secondary phase of mopping-up operations began in a "labyrinth of tiny villages" where French armored forces suffered a series of ambushes.〔Fall, 151.〕 Reinforced by paratroopers, the French and their Vietnamese allies tightened a net around the defending Viet Minh, but delays in the movement of French forces left gaps through which most of the Viet Minh guerillas, and many of the arms caches the operation was expected to seize, escaped. For the French, this validated the claim that it was impossible to operate tight ensnaring operations in Vietnam's jungle, due to the slow movement of their troops, and a foreknowledge by the enemy, which was difficult to prevent. From then on, the French focused on creating strong fortified positions, against which Viet Minh General Giáp could pit his forces, culminating in ''Opération Castor'' and the Battle of Dien Bien Phu.〔Fall, 171–173.〕
With the French forces withdrawn from the operation by the late summer of 1953, Viet Minh Regiment 95 re-infiltrated Route One and resumed ambushes of French convoys, retrieving weapons caches missed by the French forces. Regiment 95 occupied the area for the remainder of the First Indochina War and were still operating there as late as 1962 against the South Vietnamese Army during the Second Indochina, or Vietnam War.〔
==Background==
The First Indochina War had raged, as guerrilla warfare, since 19 December 1946. From 1949, it evolved into conventional warfare, due largely to aid from the communists of the People's Republic of China ("PRC") to the north.〔Chen Jian, 85–87.〕 Subsequently, the French strategy of occupying small, poorly defended outposts throughout Indochina, particularly along the Vietnamese-Chinese border, started failing.〔Giáp, 119.〕 Thanks to the terrain, popular support for August Revolution and support for decolonization from bordering China and the U.S.S.R., the Viet Minh had succeeded in turning a "clandestine guerrilla movement into a powerful conventional army",〔Windrow (2004), 41–42.〕 following asymmetric warfare theory laid by Mao Tse Tung, something which previously had never been encountered by the western colonial powers.〔Fall, 17.〕 In October 1952, fighting around the Red River Delta spread into the Thai Highlands, resulting in the Battle of Nà Sản, at which the Viet Minh were defeated. The French used the lessons learned at Nà Sản – strong ground bases, versatile air support, and a model based on the British Burma Campaign – as the basis for their new strategy. The Viet Minh, however, remained unbeatable in the highland regions of Vietnam,〔Windrow (2004), 121.〕 and the French "could not offset the fundamental disadvantages of a roadbound army facing a hill and forest army in a country which had few roads but a great many hills and forests".〔Windrow (2004), 129.〕
In May 1953, General Henri Navarre arrived to take command of the French forces, replacing General Raoul Salan. Navarre spoke of a new offensive spirit in Indochina – based on strong, fast-moving forces〔 – and the media quickly took Operation Camargue to be the "practical realization" of that.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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