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CHEESERIGHT, PAUL (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   110934


Involvement without engagement: the British advisory mission in South Vietnam, 16 September 1961-31 March 1965 / Cheeseright, Paul   Journal Article
Cheeseright, Paul Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract This is an account of the origins and history of the little-known British Advisory Mission in Vietnam (BRIAM), which sought to transfer to Vietnam the techniques used in the Malayan Emergency to isolate insurgents from the population at large, while at the same time winning the loyalty of that population. This article looks first at the situation in South Vietnam and second at how the US and the UK viewed that situation and what they were doing about it. The third section deals with what BRIAM itself tried to do in introducing the process labelled "strategic hamlets". The final section seeks to explain why the process failed.
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2
ID:   132346


Queen without a throne: Ursula graham bower and the Burma campaign / Cheeseright, Paul   Journal Article
Cheeseright, Paul Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract The climax of the battle of Kohima was in June 1944, 70 years ago. This article is about the part played in that victory by Ursula Graham Bower, an English woman subsequently honoured by the RSAA. She led a team of Naga tribesmen from North East India who acted as intelligence scouts, feeding the 14th Army with information about the Japanese, acting as guides for British units and providing a security network against spies. Graham Bower was effective because she had lived amongst the Nagas before the war and gained their trust. Inevitably she was glamourised in the media and hailed as the Jungle Queen or the Naga Queen, a Western beauty fighting against the Japanese. In reality, with the Nagas, she performed a intelligence role, not a fighting role, but it was a vital contribution to victory.
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