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Sam Adams - War of Numbers: An Intelligence Memoir of the Vietnam Wars Uncounted Enemy

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Sam Adams War of Numbers: An Intelligence Memoir of the Vietnam Wars Uncounted Enemy

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In vibrant, engaging prose, this memoir from inside the belly of US intelligence operations reveals what fundamentally went wrong for the US and its allies, and why the Vietnam War was never winnable. A cautionary tale about the perils of politicizing and manipulating honest intelligence.For political reasons, the Johnson and Nixon administrations wanted to control the narrative about US prospects in Vietnam. In 1965, low level CIA analyst Sam Adams was transferred from the Congo desk to Southeast Asia, where he was charged with assessing enemy morale and counting their ranks. Only the enemy strength estimate he came up with as the CIAs official head counter varied wildly from the official estimates being produced by military intelligence and released by the White House for consumption by Congress, the media, troops in the field and the American electorate. Adams findings pointed to the conclusion that the war was unwinnable, but when politicians and military leaders failed to release let alone acknowledge his findings, he knew the intelligence was being politicized and embarked on a one man crusade to hold those in power accountable and expose the truth.

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Copyright 1994 by Anne Adams Foreword Copyright 1994 by David Hackworth - photo 1
Copyright 1994 by Anne Adams Foreword Copyright 1994 by David Hackworth - photo 2

Copyright 1994 by Anne Adams

Foreword Copyright 1994 by David Hackworth

Introduction Copyright 2020 by John Prados

A LL R IGHTS R ESERVED

For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to:

Steerforth Press L.L.C., 31 Hanover Street, Suite 1

Lebanon, New Hampshire 03766

Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available from the Library of Congress

Ebook ISBN9781586422677

a_prh_5.5.0_c0_r0

To Colonel Gains B. Hawkins and to my sons, Clayton and Abraham

My dear Spencer, I should define tragedy as a theory killed by a fact.

Huxley

CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION

Somebody asked me why an intelligence story from the Vietnam War is of any interest today, in the time of Donald Trump. Apart from the fact that this is a classic spy story, there are very direct reasons why it remains relevant, and will continue to be so under future presidents. At this writing, 2019, the most important national security issues on Americas table include North Koreas nuclear capability, Russias intentions and its claims to a new generation of weapons, the realities of Saudi Arabias push for power and its relation to American policy, and the status of Irans militancy and military programs. On every one of these issues it is the job of the Central Intelligence Agency to gather and analyze information and, with respect to its findings and conclusions, to speak truth to power. On each of them, President Trump has already staked out a position.

Flash back to Vietnam. The size of the adversarys forces, formally known as the order of battle, was clearly among vital issues for prosecuting the war. Then, as now, the White House had its own point of view. The national security adviser even had a political program that hinged on, among other things, enforcing a certain interpretation of the order of battle figures. The issues with which intelligence professionals concern themselves change, but there are real obstacles in speaking truth to power, and that essential problem is always the same. The Vietnam order of battle dispute speaks directly to todays intelligence dilemmas, and to any situation in which the conclusions of intelligence analysts clash with the political or personal priorities of the president and his or her advisers.

Enter Sam Adams. Details of the fight he spearheaded over the enemy order of battle in Vietnam demonstrate in explicit detail the kinds of maneuvers to affect information that stand behind the authoritative-sounding term intelligence report. Sam joined the CIA in 1963, after a couple of years in banking and four in the navy. He had a degree in European history from Harvard and had graduated from prep school, son of a father whod held a seat on the New York Stock Exchange. He was also fourth cousin, seven times removed, of President John Quincy Adams. The CIA put Adams in its training program for espionage but then assigned him as an analyst in the Southern Africa Branch of its Office of Current Intelligence (OCI), working on the Congo, then a major hot spot for the United States in Africa. A few days after he went on duty a fresh rebellion broke out in the Congo. Sam made himself a go-to analyst on the Congo with predictions that U.S. diplomats rejected but which then took place as hed expected.

The Africa beat quieted in time, and Sam moved to the Southeast Asia Branch of OCI to report on the Vietnam War. In search of evidence he soon zeroed in on captured documents. In search of interpretation he looked at official statistics on the number of enemy guerrillas listed as defecting in given months. Sam discovered that defector numbers were much higher than estimates of enemy killed, and when looking at intelligence estimates for South Vietnamese provinces, he found that those rates of defection would have emptied the insurgent forces. This marked the beginning of what became a crusade to improve the accuracy of the intelligence.

Others at the CIA also believed that the militarys estimates of the adversary the order of battle, or OB were on the low side, but Sam led the way, systematically studying captured documents in which National Liberation Front cadres reported their own statistics. By 1967, Sam and cohorts believed that the enemys numbers could range higher than half a million double what the military carried on its OB. This dispute would be fought out among U.S. intelligence agencies that year, and ultimately CIA higher-ups caved in to military intransigence. The enemys early 1968 Tet Offensive revealed the low OB numbers as bogus. In fact, Sam and others identified guerrilla units from which fighters had been killed or captured that were not even listed in the order of battle. After Tet, however, U.S. military intelligence continued to resist revisions to its OB that increased enemy numbers.

This was more than a bureaucratic battle over reports. Soldiers and civilians died at the hands of an adversary more capable than intelligence assessed. Claims that enemy losses at Tet crippled the Liberation Front were critically dependent on what the OB numbers were. Sam decided that the CIA had failed to face its own responsibilities in the order of battle dispute. He filed a complaint with the agencys inspector general, whose office conducted an investigation. Sam dissented from the report, writing that the CIA is incapable of discussing intelligently several topics of current importance. Director Richard Helms, the agencys chief, took the unusual step of forming a panel to review the report and dissent, again rejecting Sams arguments. One after another Sams colleagues and superiors turned against him.

Sam stuck to his guns, never backing down. Over the last years of the Vietnam War he repeatedly criticized U.S. intelligence positions regarding the conflict. In 19691970, Sam dared to postulate a number for the spies the Liberation Front had undercover in the Saigon government and armed forces. In 1971 he showed that U.S. intelligence had underestimated the Khmer Rouge Cambodian communists in the same way it had failed on the Vietnamese enemy. In 1973, shortly after resigning from the agency, Sam lambasted the notorious Phoenix Program before the Senate Armed Services Committee, arguing that Phoenix had plunged the United States into a statistical game designed to conjure a picture of progress in the war. In 1975 he revealed the order of battle dispute, first in an article in Atlantic magazine, then in testimony before the House of Representatives.

Fast-forward to the early 1980s, when Sam served as a key consultant for CBS television in preparing The Uncounted Enemy, a documentary that exposed the militarys machinations in the order of battle dispute. The program so outraged General William C. Westmoreland, former U.S. troop commander in South Vietnam, that he sued CBS for defamation, leading to a highly controversial trial in which military figures, along with some of Sams former CIA colleagues, denounced him and his criticisms. Westmorelands case fell apart when military figures broke ranks with him and confirmed Sams position.

War of Numbers is Sams rejoinder. We are told that he started this book around the early 1980s, the time of The Uncounted Enemy and the Westmoreland v. CBS trial, both of which distracted him mightily. He did not finish in his lifetime, dying of a heart attack in 1988. His wife, Anne Adams, saw to it that Sams manuscript got published. The book provoked ire as had the man. Well received by the public, Adamss work would be panned by a number of his own comrades. George Allen, a close collaborator at the CIA, found that Adams took a rather narrow perspective. Conventionally minded analysts like Thomas Cubbage had little use for

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