LGT: Hôm nay ngày 16- 3- 2016, chủ diễn đàn Ba Cây Trúc lại đưa bài của viết của Nguyên Nguyên, một thành viên của cái gọi là "lực lượng cư sĩ chấn hưng phật giáo" do tên Thục Vũ cầm đầu. Thực ra bài viết này, văn phong và ngôn từ sử dụng là của Thục Vũ, kẻ chuyên núp váy phụ nữ để viết bài tâng bốc thằng phản quốc ngưu chân cong Quảng Độ và cái "giáo hội" thổ tả có danh xưng GHPGVNTN.

The Report from Gen. William Westmoreland to President Lyndon B. Johnson ( LBJ )

William Childs Westmoreland (March 26, 1914 – July 18, 2005) was a http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Army general, who commanded U.S. military operations in the Vietnam War at its peak (1964–68), including during the Tet Offensive. He adopted a strategy of attrition against the Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese army. He later served as U.S. Army chief of staff from 1968 to 1972.


WASHINGTON - In a special report to President Johnson, Westmoreland has urged support of Thieu's action as a necessary security measure because of Tri Quang's recent anti-government activities.
The President was informed Tri Quang provided the in-city bases from which the Viet Cong had hoped to turn their recent Saigon and Hue attacks into a general popular uprising.
Best evidence of the Communist alliance with Tri Quang, according t o Westmoreland was the location of headquarters of the Viet Cong attack on Saigon in An Quang pagoda, long famed as the seat of the militant Buddhist's operations.
South Vietnamese troops capturing the pagoda, in the heart of Saigon's crowded Chinese district, found all the equipment needed for a fullscale Communist command post.
Prisoners taken in the fighting around the pagoda, Westmoreland revealed, described its function as the nerve center for the Saigon attack.
They confirmed, he stated, the command post was set up several weeks in advance of the offensive and while Tri Quang was in the pagoda. Large amounts of Soviet - made weapons also were stored in a building behind the main temple before the attack
South Vietnamese officials said the command post, staffed by a Viet Cong organization with the code-name "d - 214,Hanoi unit" was headed by a North Vietnamese major general, a friend of Tri Quang from the time both served with the Viet Minh against the French.
According to Westmoreland's report, the clandestine help from Tri Quang's followers in Hue is one reason why the Communists were able to hold out so long.
There, as in Saigon, the pagoda of Tri Quang's militant Buddhists was the central coordinating point of the Viet Cong attacks and their stubborn defense of the city. More than 100 U.S. Marines lost their lives in recapturing the walled city.
THE FIFTH COLUMN
Another U.S. intelligence estimate states Tri Quang helped plan the Buddhist role in the Communist attacks and then went into hiding after he saw the Viet Cong-North Vietnamese offensive was not strong enough to topple the Thieu government.
In preparation for the Tet assault, the report points out, Tri Quang and his militant Buddhists waged a prolonged drive for popular support.
Tri Quang, for instance, in December and January dispatched a team of speakers on a nationwide tour protesting government policy. The Viet Cong at the same time let it be known they planned an assault on major cities and promised to replace the Thieu government with a coalition including the militant Buddhists.
Once the new coalition wasformed, according to one captured document, Tri Quang was to be sent to the United Nations to demand immediate withdrawal of U.S. forces from South Vietnam. So far, President Johnson has kept hands off.
In discussing the arrest of Tri Quang with Congressional leaders recently, the President took the position it is strictly an internal matter for the South Vietnamese government to handle.
"One of President Kennedy's biggest mistakes in Vietnam," the President told the legislative leaders, "was to let U.S. officials get too deeply involved in Tri Quang's effort to overthrow the late President Diem. We are still paying for that blunder."
Tri Quang's supporters in Saigon now are trying a new approach. They are urging U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker to intervene on behalf of the militant Buddhist by discreetly advising the Thieu government of the possible damage to its image.


Ba Cây Trúc và cái gọi là Ban Biên Tập không thể nào nói là không biết cái giáo hội thổ tả PGVNTN này đã gây ra bao hệ luỵ cho Dân Tộc và Tổ Quốc Việt Nam suốt chiều dài của thập niên 60's mà đỉnh điểm là cái chết tang thương VỊ QUỐC VONG THÂN của Tổng Thống Ngô Đình Diệm cùng các bào đệ và cộng sự của Người, cũng như sự sụp đổ hoàn toàn nền Đệ Nhất Việt Nam Cộng Hoà, dẫn đến ngày Quốc Hận 30-04-1975 như thế nào. Có phải Lê Hùng và nhóm Ba Cây Trúc lại đang đi theo con đường của Phó Đoan Nông Thôn có 5 mặt con với thằng Trung Tá An Ninh VGCS Trần Đăng Sơn trong việc chạy tội phản quốc của lũ gọi là PGVNTN và gián tiếp lên án Chính Phủ của Cụ Diệm là "đàn áp tôn giáo"!?
Núp dưới chiêu bài "Tôn Vinh Cụ Diệm", một mặt thì để hình Cụ Diệm ở một chỗ thấp nhất, kém trang trọng nhất trong trang web Ba Cây Trúc, một mặt đưa những bài viết đánh bóng PGVNTN và chạy tội cho những thằng như Đôn Hậu, Huyền Quang, Trí Quang, Quảng Độ, đó chính là hình thức "treo đầu dê bán thịt chó" của Lê Hùng và phe nhóm trong cái gọi là "ban biên tập" của Ba Cây Trúc vậy!!! Vì thế từ hôm nay chúng tôi mở lại hồ sơ của Lê Hùng và lũ Ba Cây Trúc để cống hiến quý độc giả những bài viết và phân tích của CKV về Lê Hùng và website Ba Cây Trúc!!!
Kính mong quý bạn đọc và thân hữu website Chính Khí Việt cùng theo dõi.
ĐỌC BÁO XƯA 205
DOCUMENTS REVIEW 205
XIN ĐƯỢC CỐNG HIẾN CÁC GÓP NHẶT NÀY CỦA TÔI ĐỂ CẤT TIẾNG NÓI CHO SỰ THẬT
DOCUMENTS REVIEW 205

XIN ĐƯỢC CỐNG HIẾN CÁC GÓP NHẶT NÀY CỦA TÔI ĐỂ CẤT TIẾNG NÓI CHO SỰ THẬT
CHÂN THÀNH CẢM TẠ NHỮNG AI ĐÃ GIÀNH THỜI GIAN ĐỂ ĐỌC CÁC TÀI LIỆU NÀY
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The Report from Gen. William Westmoreland to President Lyndon B. Johnson ( LBJ )

William Childs Westmoreland (March 26, 1914 – July 18, 2005) was a http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Army general, who commanded U.S. military operations in the Vietnam War at its peak (1964–68), including during the Tet Offensive. He adopted a strategy of attrition against the Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese army. He later served as U.S. Army chief of staff from 1968 to 1972.


WASHINGTON - In a special report to President Johnson, Westmoreland has urged support of Thieu's action as a necessary security measure because of Tri Quang's recent anti-government activities.
The President was informed Tri Quang provided the in-city bases from which the Viet Cong had hoped to turn their recent Saigon and Hue attacks into a general popular uprising.
Best evidence of the Communist alliance with Tri Quang, according t o Westmoreland was the location of headquarters of the Viet Cong attack on Saigon in An Quang pagoda, long famed as the seat of the militant Buddhist's operations.
South Vietnamese troops capturing the pagoda, in the heart of Saigon's crowded Chinese district, found all the equipment needed for a fullscale Communist command post.
Prisoners taken in the fighting around the pagoda, Westmoreland revealed, described its function as the nerve center for the Saigon attack.
They confirmed, he stated, the command post was set up several weeks in advance of the offensive and while Tri Quang was in the pagoda. Large amounts of Soviet - made weapons also were stored in a building behind the main temple before the attack
South Vietnamese officials said the command post, staffed by a Viet Cong organization with the code-name "d - 214,Hanoi unit" was headed by a North Vietnamese major general, a friend of Tri Quang from the time both served with the Viet Minh against the French.
According to Westmoreland's report, the clandestine help from Tri Quang's followers in Hue is one reason why the Communists were able to hold out so long.
There, as in Saigon, the pagoda of Tri Quang's militant Buddhists was the central coordinating point of the Viet Cong attacks and their stubborn defense of the city. More than 100 U.S. Marines lost their lives in recapturing the walled city.
THE FIFTH COLUMN
Another U.S. intelligence estimate states Tri Quang helped plan the Buddhist role in the Communist attacks and then went into hiding after he saw the Viet Cong-North Vietnamese offensive was not strong enough to topple the Thieu government.
In preparation for the Tet assault, the report points out, Tri Quang and his militant Buddhists waged a prolonged drive for popular support.
Tri Quang, for instance, in December and January dispatched a team of speakers on a nationwide tour protesting government policy. The Viet Cong at the same time let it be known they planned an assault on major cities and promised to replace the Thieu government with a coalition including the militant Buddhists.
Once the new coalition wasformed, according to one captured document, Tri Quang was to be sent to the United Nations to demand immediate withdrawal of U.S. forces from South Vietnam. So far, President Johnson has kept hands off.
In discussing the arrest of Tri Quang with Congressional leaders recently, the President took the position it is strictly an internal matter for the South Vietnamese government to handle.
"One of President Kennedy's biggest mistakes in Vietnam," the President told the legislative leaders, "was to let U.S. officials get too deeply involved in Tri Quang's effort to overthrow the late President Diem. We are still paying for that blunder."
Tri Quang's supporters in Saigon now are trying a new approach. They are urging U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker to intervene on behalf of the militant Buddhist by discreetly advising the Thieu government of the possible damage to its image.


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