enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Lao People's Armed Forces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lao_People's_Armed_Forces

    Together with the Lao People's Revolutionary Party and the government, the Lao People's Army (LPA) is the third pillar of state machinery, and as such is expected to suppress political and civil unrest and similar national emergencies faced by the government in Vientiane.

  3. Lao People's Liberation Army Air Force - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lao_People's_Liberation...

    The present-day LPLAAF is descended from the Aviation Laotienne, which was established by the French and later became the Royal Lao Air Force. Pathet Lao guerrilla forces began to operate a few aircraft from 1960, as did another rebel group led by Kong Le. Kong Le forces were later re-incorporated into the Royal Lao Air Force.

  4. Weapons of the Laotian Civil War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weapons_of_the_Laotian...

    The Laotian Civil War was a military conflict of the Cold War in Asia that pitted the guerrilla forces of the Marxist-oriented Pathet Lao against the armed and security forces of the Kingdom of Laos (French: Royaume du Laos), led by the conservative Royal Lao Government, between 1960 and 1975. Main combatants comprised:

  5. Operation Millpond - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Millpond

    Operation Millpond, which operated from 13 March 1961 through August 1961, was an American covert operation designed to introduce air power into the Laotian Civil War.A force of 16 B26s, 16 Sikorsky H-34s, and other materiel were hastily shipped in from Okinawa and held ready to operate from the Kingdom of Thailand.

  6. Military history of Laos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_history_of_Laos

    The MAAG was withdrawn in 1962 under the terms of the Geneva Agreement, which was supposed to neutralize Laos. Because the North Vietnamese did not respect the withdrawal requirement, the United States stepped up military aid to the Lao Government, but avoided sending ground troops into Laos, which would have violated the agreement. [3]

  7. Royal Lao Armed Forces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Lao_Armed_Forces

    To meet the threat represented by the Pathet Lao insurgency, the Laotian Armed Forces depended on a small French military training mission (Mission Militaire Française près du Gouvernment Royale du Laos or MMF-GRL), [30] headed by a general officer, an exceptional arrangement permitted under the 1955 Geneva Accords, as well as covert ...

  8. Military ranks of the Lao People's Armed Forces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_ranks_of_the_Lao...

    The following tables present the ranks of the Lao People's Armed Forces, which, as a former French dominion, follow a rank system similar to those used by the French Armed Forces. The design closely follows the Soviet pattern, with two important exceptions: 1) senior officers have a broad coloured stripe instead of two narrow stripes used in ...

  9. Auto Defense Choc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auto_Defense_Choc

    Although the French lost the First Indochina War, they were bound by the 1954 Geneva Agreement to provide the newly independent Kingdom of Laos with a trained military. [1] As part of the Lao military establishment the French raised a paramilitary force, the AD Corps, in 1955. They disbanded it in 1958, only to reconstitute it the following year.