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Long Tieng
Long Tieng
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Key Information

Long Tieng
Summary
Elevation AMSL3,215 ft / 980 m
Map
Interactive map of Long Tieng
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
5,000 1,524

Long Tieng (also spelled Long Chieng, Long Cheng, or Long Chen) is a town in Longchaeng district, Xaisomboun Province.[1] During the Laotian Civil War, it served as a military base for the Hmong Army, the airbase was operated by the Central Intelligence Agency of the United States.[2] During this time, it was also referred to as Lima Site 98 (LS 98) or Lima Site 20A (LS 20A).

At the height of its significance in the late 1960s, the "secret city" of Long Tieng maintained a population of 40,000 inhabitants, making it the second largest city in Laos at the time,[3] although it never appeared on maps throughout this period.

History

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Long Tieng (lower left) marked on a 1965 map

In 1962 the CIA first set up a headquarters for Major General Vang Pao in the Long Tieng valley, which at that time had almost no inhabitants.[4] By 1964 a 1260 m runway had been completed and by 1966 Long Cheng was one of the largest US installations on foreign soil.[1]

A RLAF T-28D at Long Tieng. On November 10, 1972 it ran into a C-123K on the runway.[5]

North Vietnamese forces began to threaten Long Tieng in late 1971, and came close enough to start shelling the area on December 31 at 15:30 local time. In early January, 19,000 North Vietnamese forces launched a four pronged attack on Long Tieng from all four cardinal directions, encircling the site, capturing several facilities and positions, and installing antiaircraft batteries. Despite subsequent claims of victory from communist forces, the 10,000 defenders of Long Tieng, a mixture of Hmong, Thai, and Lao, had not been overrun, and in mid-month reinforcements appeared in the form of CIA-led Thais and 1200 elite irregulars from southern Laos. After enduring a third to 50% casualties, these forces succeeded in taking back key positions by the end of the month.[6]

Description

[edit]
Long Tieng, 1973

Long Tieng was often described as "the most secret place on Earth". It was in a valley at 3,100 feet elevation, high enough to have chilly nights and cold fogs. It was surrounded by mountains and on the northwest side of the runway were karst outcrops several hundred feet high. In the shadow of the karst outcrops was "Sky" the CIA headquarters in Long Tieng. Jerry Daniels, a CIA officer codenamed "Hog," is said to have named Sky after his home state of Montana, known as "Big Sky Country".[7]: 53  Long Tieng was protected on three sides by limestone mountains.[8]: 131 

"What a place is Long Tieng," said USAID officer Jim Schill. "Tribal soldiers dressed in military garb standing next to traditionally dressed Hmong, with Thai mercenaries milling about. And the Americans here are mostly CIA operatives with goofy code names like Hog, Mr. Clean, and Junkyard. The town itself is not much. There's one paved road running through it and tin shacks on either side with eating shops, food stalls, and living quarters."[7]: 53–54 

During the Secret War, Long Tieng became the largest Hmong settlement in the world.[8]: 131  In the words of one author, Long Tieng "became a desultory metropolis, an unpaved, sewerless city of 30,000 where Hmong ran noodle stands, cobbled shoes, tailored clothes, repaired radios, ran military-jeep taxi services, and interpreted for American pilots and relief workers."[8]: 136 

Evacuation

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A C-130 Hercules at Long Tieng, May 1975.

On February 22, 1975, the final defensive outpost for Long Tieng was defeated, leading US Brigadier General Heinie Aderholt to begin planning an evacuation.[4] By May 1975, there were almost 50,000 guerillas and refugees living in and around the city. However, by then, the U.S. had withdrawn all its civilian and military personnel from Indochina, except for a few embassy personnel in Laos and CIA officer Jerry Daniels in Long Tieng. There were few resources for an evacuation. Daniels had only a single transport aircraft and Hmong pilot in Long Tieng to take evacuees to Udon Thani, Thailand. Aderholt located three additional American transport aircraft and pilots in Thailand. He had the planes "sheep dipped" to remove all markings identifying them as American-owned and sent them to Long Tieng.[9] On May 10, 1975, Vang Pao reluctantly followed the CIA's counsel and decided that he could no longer maintain Long Tieng against the opposing forces.[8]: 138  Between May 10 to May 14, 1975, US C-130s and C-46s airlifted people from the airbase to US bases in Thailand.[9] Between 1,000 and 3,000 Hmong were evacuated.[8]: 138  Crowds of civilians surrounded the flights on the runways, creating a chaotic atmosphere. Those evacuated were primarily Hmong military leaders and CIA employees.

The evacuation ended with the departure of Major General Vang Pao and Jerry Daniels.[9] Vang Pao told the people still on the tarmac "Farewell, my brothers, I can do nothing more for you, I would only be a torment for you," as he boarded a helicopter.[8]: 137  Tens of thousands of fighters and refugees were left behind.[1] The 10,000 or more Hmong clustered around the airfield expected more aircraft to return, but they soon realized that none would come. The shelling of Long Tieng began on the afternoon of May 14.[8]: 139  Many of the Hmong fighters and their families made their way overland to Thailand during the next several years, a dangerous journey that cost many of them their lives.[7]: 59–61 

The American pilots, all civilians, participating in the evacuation were Les Strouse, Allen Rich, Matt Hoff, Jack Knotts, and Dave Kouba.[7]: 55–59 

Accidents and incidents

[edit]

After 1975

[edit]

Long Tieng was incorporated into the restricted Xaisomboun Special Zone in 1994. This zone was dissolved on 13 January 2006 and Xaisomboun Province was created in 2013. The base is still maintained by the Laotian military.[1]

The area's history was documented in the 2008 film The Most Secret Place on Earth.[11][12]

Namesake

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A charter school in Saint Paul, Minnesota, home to many Hmong refugees, was named Long Tieng Academy, but it closed in 2012.[13]

See also

[edit]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Long Tieng, also spelled Long Cheng, is a remote valley airstrip in the highlands of central that functioned as the primary headquarters for Agency-supported Hmong military operations against communist and North Vietnamese forces during the from 1962 to 1975. Under the command of Hmong General , it served as the base for irregular forces interdicting supply lines along the , with logistical and air support provided by CIA proprietary airline Air America. At its peak in the late , Long Tieng sustained a population of approximately 40,000—mostly Hmong combatants, families, and refugees displaced by fighting—making it Laos's second-largest urban center and site of one of the world's most active airstrips, handling thousands of daily flights for combat, resupply, and evacuation. The base's strategic role enabled sustained that inflicted significant casualties on advancing communists, though at the cost of heavy Hmong losses exceeding 30,000 fighters. In May 1975, as forces overran the position amid the collapse of the Royal Lao Government, chaotic air evacuations via U.S. C-130 aircraft extracted thousands, marking the abrupt end of operations and precipitating widespread Hmong persecution under the new regime. Long Tieng's declassification in subsequent years exposed the scale of U.S. covert commitment, including by volunteer pilots, underscoring the causal link between secrecy and operational effectiveness in containing communist expansion without direct American ground involvement. Today, the largely abandoned site features decaying infrastructure amid , drawing limited focused on the Hmong diaspora’s wartime sacrifices.

Geography and Infrastructure

Location and Physical Features

Long Tieng is situated in Longchaeng District of , Laos, at coordinates 19°06′28″N 102°55′24″E. The site lies on the northeastern edge of the Xiangkhouang Plateau, a highland region characterized by undulating terrain at elevations averaging around 1,000 meters above . The surrounding landscape features rugged karst mountains rising several hundred feet, interspersed with dense jungle on steep slopes, providing a naturally isolated setting with limited overland routes—primarily a single access road. This contributed to heavy reliance on aerial for connectivity, while the area's position amid formations and forested highlands enhanced its seclusion. Long Tieng is proximate to the Plain of Jars archaeological site in neighboring Xiangkhouang Province, approximately 40 kilometers to the north, where thousands of megalithic stone jars are scattered across the plateau's valleys and foothills. The mountainous barriers offered inherent defensibility, with the elevated, encircled valley floor shielding against easy ground penetration. During the era, the region's strategic isolation and intense bombing—making parts of Xiangkhouang one of the most heavily targeted areas globally—left extensive , underscoring the terrain's role in protracted conflicts.

Airport and Military Facilities

The airfield at Long Tieng consisted of a runway initially built to approximately 4,000 feet (1,200 meters) in length, later extended to 5,000 feet (1,500 meters) using pierced steel planking (PSP) to accommodate larger aircraft including C-123 Providers, C-130 Hercules transports, and fighter types such as T-28 Trojans and A-1 Skyraiders. The surface was primarily dirt with PSP reinforcement, lacking permanent lighting or navigational aids, which restricted routine operations to daylight hours. Supporting infrastructure encompassed rudimentary hangars and maintenance areas, often utilizing open spaces or trailers for servicing due to the site's covert requirements. depots relied on prepositioned stored in 55-gallon drums, with hand-pumping for refueling, supplemented by storage at nearby forward sites. were constructed from repurposed crates and flattened barrels into basic hootches, providing shelter for personnel including Hmong fighters and U.S. advisors, with ventilation via fans owing to the site's . A small facility handled wounded evacuees, supported by assigned medical officers and medics. storage and other depots were integrated, with overall expansion occurring incrementally to support growing needs while maintaining amid surrounding terrain. At its peak, the complex housed over 40,000 inhabitants, including , refugees, and support staff, rendering it Laos's largest population center despite lacking formal urban status. Basic utilities comprised generator-provided electricity and limited water access, sufficient for operational sustainment but austere by conventional standards.

Pre-War and Early History

Traditional Hmong Settlement

Long Tieng, located in the rugged highlands of Xieng Khouang Province, Laos, began as a modest Hmong village settled by ethnic Hmong clans originating from southern China. These migrations occurred primarily during the 19th century, as Hmong groups fled persecution and sought arable highlands away from lowland ethnic Lao control and Chinese imperial pressures. By the early 20th century, such settlements dotted Xieng Khouang, a province that hosted the densest Hmong populations in Laos due to its elevation and soil suitability for highland farming. The local economy relied on through swidden (slash-and-burn) cultivation, rotating fields to grow staple crops such as , , and on steep slopes. poppy cultivation emerged as a key in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, introduced via trade networks and valued for its portability and marketability, often exchanged for silver or goods in regional markets. This practice supplemented household needs but remained small-scale, with villages like Long Tieng lacking roads, permanent , or centralized markets, maintaining a dispersed, clan-based agrarian . Social organization centered on patrilineal clans, each maintaining distinct lineages, alliances, and territorial claims within the village environs. Shamanistic rituals, led by spiritual healers, governed , , and community rites, reinforcing cultural cohesion in isolation from lowland Buddhist influences. These structures emphasized and mobility, adapted to the mountainous terrain and periodic relocations for fertile land.

Initial Development in the 1960s

Following the 1962 Geneva Accords, which declared neutral and prohibited foreign military involvement, and North Vietnamese Army forces violated the agreement by maintaining combat positions and expanding infiltration routes, including the , with an estimated 7,000 North Vietnamese troops operating in by 1963. These breaches, occurring under both the Eisenhower and early Kennedy administrations, prompted the to initiate and expand covert assistance to Royal Lao Government forces and ethnic minorities to counter communist advances without overt intervention. The CIA's Operation Momentum, launched in late 1959 under paramilitary officer Bill Lair, focused on recruiting Hmong tribesmen from northern to form guerrilla units aimed at interdicting North Vietnamese supply lines along the . By early 1961, initial training began, with the first airdrop of arms to approximately 300 Hmong recruits at Pa Dong in , marking the start of systematic arming and organization of these irregular forces. CIA advisors, numbering nine by July 1961, coordinated ground efforts, while Air America pilots provided essential airlift and , deploying 16 UH-34 helicopters from in March 1961 to facilitate troop movements and resupply in rugged terrain. These operations transformed remote valleys like Long Tieng into forward bases, with early site selections emphasizing defensible locations near key infiltration routes. Infrastructure development accelerated from April 1961, including the construction of austere airstrips designated as Lima Sites for short aircraft, funded covertly through USAID programs to maintain . At Long Tieng, initial airstrip extensions enabled sustained logistics for Hmong operations, supporting the relocation of headquarters elements there by late 1963 amid growing threats from incursions.

Role in the Secret War (1960s–1975)

Establishment as CIA Headquarters

In 1962, the CIA established Long Tieng, a remote and previously almost uninhabited valley in north-central , as the headquarters for Hmong military leader Vang Pao's anti-communist forces, designating it Lima Site 20 Alternate (LS-20A) to distinguish it from the nearby primary site at Sam Thong (LS-20). This selection followed intensified North Vietnamese military incursions into after the July 1962 Geneva Declaration on neutrality, which nominally prohibited foreign intervention but failed to halt communist advances along infiltration routes like the . The base's strategic location in Xieng Khouang Province facilitated rapid mobilization of Hmong irregulars against insurgents, marking the onset of expanded CIA paramilitary involvement in the . By the mid-1960s, Long Tieng had solidified as the administrative and operational hub for U.S.-backed resistance efforts, coordinating CIA collection, paramilitary training, and supply distribution to Hmong units amid full-scale resumption of hostilities in 1964. A small cadre of CIA case officers, building on an initial team of nine assigned to Hmong operations in 1961, directed these activities from the site, overseeing the expansion of Vang Pao's forces to around 20,000 personnel by 1963 while integrating covert support mechanisms from bases like Udorn in . This evolution positioned Long Tieng as the nerve center for disrupting communist supply lines, with administrative oversight emphasizing decentralized command to adapt to the terrain's challenges and enemy threats. To preserve operational security under the constraints of ' declared neutrality, the U.S. government enforced stringent secrecy measures, including official denials of any American presence, code-named designations for all facilities, and prohibitions on media access or disclosure of activities. No formal acknowledgment of Long Tieng's role as a CIA occurred during the period, with operations shrouded to circumvent international oversight from bodies like the International Control Commission and to avoid escalation with or Soviet patrons of the . These protocols extended to limiting U.S. diplomatic reporting and relying on proprietary air assets for discreet resupply, ensuring the base's existence remained one of the most closely guarded secrets of the era.

Hmong Military Operations Under Vang Pao

, a Hmong general in the Royal Lao Army, commanded irregular forces that grew to an estimated 30,000 to 40,000 fighters by the late 1960s, drawing primarily from Hmong clans in northern . These units operated as mobile guerrilla groups, emphasizing hit-and-run ambushes, intelligence patrols, and defensive stands at chokepoints like mountain passes to interdict and North Vietnamese Army (NVA) movements along the . Lacking heavy weaponry or formal training, the fighters relied on small arms, mortars, and terrain familiarity to harass superior enemy columns, often tying down thousands of communist troops that might otherwise reinforce . Hmong operations under Vang Pao proved effective in stalling communist advances during key phases of the conflict, as seen in late 1968 offensives where guerrilla strikes recaptured lost ground and disrupted enemy despite overwhelming odds. Forces demonstrated notable tenacity in engagements against better-supplied foes, holding defensive lines through attrition tactics until U.S. air strikes could neutralize NVA concentrations, thereby preserving control over Military Region II's vital arteries. This combination of local knowledge and opportunistic warfare delayed consolidation for years, compelling to divert resources from southern fronts. The intensity of these ground actions imposed disproportionate losses on Hmong ranks, with military casualties exceeding 30,000 dead by war's end—a figure reflecting the full brunt of proxy borne by indigenous allies amid limited rotations or reinforcements. Entire villages contributed fighters, leading to generational depletion, yet the operations sustained non-communist resistance until the 1973 ceasefire eroded external backing.

CIA and Air America Support

The (CIA) directed covert aerial support for Hmong forces operating from Long Tieng through its proprietary airline, , which functioned under civilian guise via USAID contracts to maintain . pilots, including civilians, conducted resupply missions delivering rice, ammunition, fuel, and equipment to remote bases, sustaining operations amid challenging terrain and enemy interdiction. These flights, often low-level to evade detection, enabled Hmong irregulars to hold positions against North Vietnamese Army advances along infiltration routes. Complementing logistics, U.S. bombing campaigns from 1964 to 1973 dropped over 2 million tons of ordnance on , primarily targeting the to interdict communist logistics. Coordinated with CIA ground intelligence from Long Tieng, these operations—conducted by U.S. Air Force assets under programs like —disrupted enemy supply flows, forcing repeated trail repairs and delaying reinforcements despite official U.S. diplomatic denials of involvement. and other munitions were employed in roles, with T-28 pilots occasionally augmenting strikes. CIA advisors facilitated training programs that built an indigenous Hmong air capability, starting with Project Waterpump in 1964, which instructed Royal Lao and Hmong recruits on T-28 Trojan aircraft for ground attack and reconnaissance. By the late 1960s, Hmong pilots, such as ace Lee Lue, operated squadrons from Long Tieng, later transitioning to A-1 Skyraiders for heavier payloads, achieving tactical victories like halting numerically superior assaults through precise . This airpower multiplier compensated for Hmong ground forces' disadvantages in manpower and artillery, prolonging resistance in northern .

Operational Details and Challenges

Logistics and Air Operations

Logistics at Long Tieng relied almost exclusively on operations due to the rugged terrain and lack of reliable road networks, with serving as the primary carrier for supplies and personnel sustainment from the early through 1975. Daily flights originated from bases in , such as Udorn and Takhli, transporting essential commodities including as the staple foodstuff, , fuel drums, and medical supplies to support Hmong forces and CIA personnel. C-123 Providers and C-130 conducted routine shuttle runs, with C-123s delivering up to 12,000 pounds of per and C-130s handling 30,000 to 40,000 pounds of mixed cargo including via landings on the site's asphalt strip after December 1965. These operations peaked in intensity during major campaigns, facilitating the movement of thousands of personnel and refugees over the conflict's duration, though exact daily figures varied with operational demands. Short take-off and landing (STOL) aircraft were critical for accessing forward operating bases and rough terrain sites beyond Long Tieng's main strip, extending logistical reach into enemy-held areas. Pilatus PC-6 Porters, Helio Couriers, and C-7 Caribous performed liaison, supply drops, and troop insertions at over 400 constructed Lima Sites, with around 40 in active use by 1962. Helicopters such as UH-34s and UH-1s supplemented fixed-wing efforts for immediate medevacuations, transporting wounded Hmong fighters to facilities like Sam Thong hospital and enabling rapid personnel shifts of up to several hundred per day at operational peaks. By summer 1970, Air America's Laos fleet included two dozen twin-engine transports, two dozen STOL aircraft, and over 30 helicopters dedicated to these sustainment tasks. Operations faced persistent challenges from seasonal monsoons and enemy threats, which disrupted routines and increased risks. The wet season from May to November brought heavy rains, fog, and mud, limiting helicopter effectiveness and forcing reliance on weather-tolerant platforms while occasionally grounding larger transports. North Vietnamese and forces employed small arms fire and mobile anti-aircraft artillery (37mm to 100mm), resulting in frequent hits on incoming flights, though pilots mitigated these through low-altitude tactics, fighter escorts, and expertise honed on outdated maps and short strips. Overall, these air logistics formed the backbone of Long Tieng's endurance, delivering 46 million pounds of foodstuffs across in 1970 alone to counter supply shortages in isolated positions.

Accidents and Incidents

On July 23, 1970, a Douglas C-47B-40-DK (registration XW-TDC) operated by Xieng Khouang Air Transport crashed during landing at Long Tieng's airfield amid inclement weather conditions. The aircraft veered off the runway after touchdown, lost its undercarriage, and was destroyed beyond repair, though no fatalities occurred among the crew and passengers. Earlier that year, on April 10, 1970, a U.S. Air Force Lockheed C-130A (56-0510) struck the northwestern slope of the mountain range at approximately 7,500 feet while on approach to Long Tieng, resulting in the loss of the aircraft loaded with fuel and ammunition; all crew members perished. Similarly, an Pilatus PC-6/C-H2 Turbo Porter (N196X) crashed near the airfield on August 19, 1969, killing all 13 occupants in an incident attributed to operational demands in rugged terrain. These mishaps exemplified the inherent risks of high-tempo air operations at Long Tieng, where pilots navigated short, elevated runways amid frequent monsoonal weather, fog-shrouded karst mountains, and anti-aircraft threats in contested airspace, without the benefit of modern navigation aids or extended infrastructure. In a post-war incident linked to the site's lingering aviation role, a Lao Aviation Yakovlev Yak-40 (RDPL-34001) crashed into jungle terrain near Long Tieng on May 25, 1998, during heavy rain while en route from Vientiane to Xiangkhouang, killing all 26 aboard, including a Vietnamese military delegation. The accident underscored persistent hazards from the region's topography and meteorology, even decades after the airfield's primary military use ceased.

Fall and Evacuation in 1975

Military Collapse and Pathet Lao Advance

By early 1975, Hmong irregular forces at Long Tieng, which had peaked at around 30,000-40,000 fighters during the and early , were severely depleted due to protracted losses, high desertion rates, internal corruption, and dependency on opium production and trade for funding and logistics. These issues were exacerbated by unsuccessful major offensives, such as the 1972 efforts under Operations Thao La and , which aimed to disrupt North Vietnamese supply lines along the but failed to achieve lasting territorial gains or halt communist momentum. Tactical overextension from defending dispersed outposts across northern further strained resources, leaving defenders numbering in the low tens of thousands amid morale collapse. Following the fall of Saigon on April 30, 1975, forces, bolstered by North Vietnamese Army (NVA) units, intensified their offensives across , rapidly overrunning Royal Lao Government positions in the Plaine des Jarres region and surrounding areas. From March onward, communist advances captured key outlying positions near Long Tieng, including Muang Soui and other defensive perimeters, encircling the base and severing supply routes despite residual air support from U.S.-contracted assets. Hmong defenders, facing numerically superior forces equipped with heavy artillery and tanks, mounted desperate counterattacks but could not prevent the progressive isolation of Long Tieng by early May. On May 10, 1975, General initiated the withdrawal of key command staff via helicopter amid the encroaching threat, though he remained to coordinate defenses until the final days. The base fell to artillery shelling and ground assault on May 14, 1975, effectively ending organized resistance from this central hub of anti-communist operations. U.S. intervention was negligible, constrained by the 1973 that prohibited direct military involvement in and by post-Watergate congressional restrictions on foreign aid, which had already slashed support to the Royal Lao Government and its allies. This withdrawal reflected broader American disengagement from Indochina, prioritizing domestic political recovery over sustained covert commitments.

Evacuation Operations and Casualties

As the forces advanced on in early May 1975, evacuation operations commenced hastily using helicopters and U.S. Air Force C-130 aircraft to extract key personnel and select Hmong allies. General , along with his family and a small cadre of leaders, departed on aboard a , marking the effective abandonment of the base. Approximately 2,000 to 2,500 individuals, primarily Hmong soldiers, their families, and American operatives, were airlifted to safety in between May 10 and 15, though capacity constraints prevented broader rescue efforts amid the surging refugee crowds gathering on the airstrip. The operations faced severe coordination challenges, exacerbated by U.S. policy priorities shifting from the fall of Saigon on to emerging crises like the , which diverted resources and attention from . Thai authorities initially restricted border crossings, compelling many evacuees to navigate treacherous overland routes or await permissions for camps. Chaos ensued with thousands of Hmong clamoring for boarding, leading to stampedes and opportunistic Pathet Lao shelling, though precise figures for evacuation-specific deaths remain elusive due to the disorder. Casualties during the final collapse were substantial, with estimates indicating hundreds to thousands of Hmong killed in ground skirmishes, captures, or the perilous flight from advancing communist forces in the immediate aftermath. The majority of Long Tieng's estimated 30,000 residents were , many perishing from combat wounds, exposure, or execution as they dispersed into the jungle toward the River or Thai border. These losses underscored the limitations of the , which prioritized high-value assets over mass exodus, contributing to a humanitarian bottleneck that overwhelmed subsequent escape attempts.

Immediate Humanitarian Crisis

Following the U.S.-orchestrated evacuation from Long Tieng on May 14, 1975, forces rapidly advanced into the Plain of Jars region, executing remaining Hmong military personnel and civilians suspected of collaboration with American and Royal Lao forces. Reports from Hmong survivors document immediate reprisals, including arrests, rapes, and mass killings in villages adjacent to the former base, with communist troops sparing only those who publicly affirmed loyalty to the new regime. Forced relocations commenced, herding thousands of Hmong into rudimentary camps or dispersing them under threat of death, while many razed settlements were left abandoned as evidence of targeted destruction. Survivors who evaded initial sweeps fled to isolated mountain redoubts, where small resistance pockets mounted brief defenses before fragmenting under superior numbers and artillery. The abrupt halt of CIA-supplied air drops severed and pipelines, triggering acute as highland agriculture collapsed amid displacement and seasonal monsoons. epidemics, including and , proliferated in unsanitary makeshift encampments lacking clean water or treatment, claiming lives at rates exacerbated by . These events, corroborated by contemporaneous refugee testimonies collected at Thai border crossings, reveal a pattern of systematic ethnic targeting that belied Pathet Lao broadcasts promising national reconciliation and amnesty for former adversaries. Over 100,000 Hmong initiated perilous treks toward in the ensuing months, with thousands perishing en route from starvation, exposure, or Pathet Lao ambushes before reaching safety.

Post-1975 Era

Communist Takeover and Infrastructure Decay

Following the Pathet Lao's capture of Long Tieng in May 1975, amid the collapse of Hmong defenses and the U.S.-backed evacuation of key personnel, the site was swiftly demilitarized as communist forces prioritized neutralizing former anti-communist strongholds. The airfield, previously supporting thousands of daily flights during the Secret War, ceased military operations entirely, with remaining aircraft and equipment either destroyed or seized. As troops advanced, Hmong evacuees and remnants looted facilities in a chaotic exodus, stripping , hangars, and administrative buildings of usable materials, which accelerated initial abandonment and structural vulnerability. The communists repurposed the expansive for rudimentary civilian functions, such as occasional and later informal gatherings, but without sustained upkeep, it quickly reverted to partial agricultural use by local farmers and tilling adjacent fields. Long Tieng's integration into the Lao People's Democratic Republic's socialist system from late 1975 onward enforced collectivization policies, dissolving Hmong communal autonomy and targeting opium cultivation remnants that had economically underpinned the pre-war enclave. These measures, aligned with broader agrarian reforms from 1975 to 1979, prioritized state-controlled production over individual or ethnic-specific practices, leading to depopulation as Hmong survivors dispersed or fled. Neglect under the cash-strapped , exacerbated by national economic contraction and redirected resources toward ideological consolidation, prompted swift deterioration: runways cracked from unchecked vegetation overgrowth, and metal structures rusted amid tropical exposure, with reports confirming visible decay within years of the . This early infrastructural decline reflected systemic underinvestment in non-strategic rural sites, verifiable through declassified assessments of Laos's post-revolutionary conditions.

Hmong Persecution and Resistance

After the Pathet Lao's victory in 1975, the new communist regime in Laos initiated reprisals against the Hmong ethnic group, whom they branded as traitors for their collaboration with U.S. forces during the Secret War. Hmong villages were subjected to aerial bombings and ground assaults, with the regime reportedly vowing to eradicate them "to the last root" in a campaign of ethnic cleansing. Hmong refugees consistently reported chemical attacks, including the deployment of a substance known as "yellow rain," which U.S. investigations attributed to toxin-laced aerosols used by Soviet- or Vietnamese-backed forces against Hmong guerrillas and civilians in the late 1970s and early 1980s. The abrupt U.S. withdrawal of support following the 1973 Paris Accords and 1975 evacuation left Hmong fighters without resupply or air cover, enabling unchecked Pathet Lao vengeance against communities associated with the anti-communist alliance. Surviving remnants of CIA-trained Hmong forces, numbering in the thousands, regrouped into guerrilla bands that mounted persistent low-level resistance against the Lao People's Democratic Republic through the . These groups, later known as the Chao Fa, operated from remote bases, conducting ambushes and to counter forced relocations and assimilation policies imposed by the government. documented ongoing armed conflict with Hmong rebels, including the disappearance or execution of those who surrendered under government amnesties, contradicting official narratives of peaceful reintegration. By the late 1970s, discussions between and over cross-border guerrilla incursions led to temporary suspensions of hostilities, but sporadic operations continued into the 1990s. The triggered mass exoduses, with approximately 44,000 Hmong reaching refugee camps in by December 1975, and numbers swelling to nearly 49,000 by March 1980 amid intensified reprisals. An estimated 30,000 Hmong perished from combat, starvation, or execution while attempting to flee communist-controlled areas during this period. Refugee testimonies and reports, including those from , highlight patterns of village massacres—such as attacks on unarmed women and children—and systematic denial of and , undermining claims of voluntary assimilation or ethnic harmony under communist rule. These events underscore the causal role of unopposed regime consolidation in perpetuating Hmong victimization, as prior U.S. alliances marked entire clans for elimination without external deterrence.

Contemporary Status and Legacy

Current Physical Condition and Preservation Efforts

The former airbase at Long Tieng stands in a state of advanced decay, with collapsed buildings, overgrown encroaching on wartime structures, and the remnants of CIA-era markings faded amid jungle reclamation. The large complex, operational during the conflict, now lies in ruins, exemplifying the site's infrastructural neglect without systematic restoration. Imagery from September 2025 depicts these deteriorated features, underscoring minimal intervention by Lao authorities, who have prioritized little beyond basic access for limited tourism. Unexploded ordnance (UXO) continues to pose severe hazards across the area, as Laos remains the most heavily bombed country per capita from U.S. aerial campaigns in the 1960s and 1970s. Nationwide clearance efforts in the 2020s, largely funded by U.S. aid exceeding $355 million since 1995, have destroyed over 155,600 UXO items and cleared more than 108 million square meters of land through fiscal years 2021–2023, though specific demining at Long Tieng ties into broader provincial operations rather than site-targeted preservation. In the first half of 2025 alone, Lao authorities reported clearing over 35,000 UXO items, including cluster munitions, amid ongoing risks to locals and visitors. Formal preservation remains informal and ad hoc, reliant on local guides facilitating access while international programs focus on hazard mitigation over historical conservation.

Recent Hmong American Visits and Commemorations

In 2025, coinciding with the 50th anniversary of Long Tieng's fall to communist forces on May 14, 1975, have increasingly visited the site to reflect on their families' roles in the Secret War and the ensuing exodus. These returns, often organized around the anniversary, allow first- and second-generation refugees to revisit the CIA-operated base in Laos's Xiangkhouang Province, where Hmong forces once numbered over 30,000 fighters allied with U.S. operations. Long Tieng's partial reopening to civilians in recent years has facilitated these pilgrimages, enabling members to trace personal histories amid the site's overgrown airstrip and abandoned structures. Reports detail emotional encounters, such as Hmong visitors from confronting the ruins where their parents fought or fled, promoting dialogue on wartime sacrifices to younger generations unfamiliar with the conflict's details. These visits underscore a cultural reconnection, with participants documenting sites via photography and oral histories to preserve narratives suppressed under Laos's communist regime. Specialized guided tours targeting Secret War remnants, including Long Tieng's lima sites and historical trails, have supported Hmong-led groups while navigating the area's remoteness and poor infrastructure. Such itineraries, spanning 6 to 9 days from or , generate modest economic activity for local guides and transport providers, though the site's elevation over 3,000 feet and limited roads constrain larger-scale tourism. Commemorative events tied to these trips emphasize reverence, avoiding disruption to risks that persist from the era's bombings.

Strategic and Cultural Significance

Long Tieng functioned as the central hub for CIA-backed Hmong irregular forces during the , enabling operations that diverted substantial North Vietnamese Army (NVA) resources from the and theater. By April 1970, Hmong units operating from the base had contributed to tying down approximately 67,000 NVA troops across , as these forces were compelled to maintain defensive postures and interdictions rather than advance unhindered. This engagement, supported by air operations including T-28 strikes and B-52 bombings, delayed major communist offensives for years, with Hmong forces under General recapturing key terrain like the Plaine des Jarres in Operation About Face in 1969 and defending against division-sized assaults. Declassified evaluations highlight how these efforts extended non-communist resistance in until 1975, preventing an earlier consolidation of Hanoi-aligned control. In Hmong collective memory, Long Tieng embodies agency in resisting communist expansion, with revered as a pivotal leader who mobilized ethnic militias against and NVA incursions, fostering a narrative of amid external alliances. This legacy manifests in U.S. Hmong diaspora communities through cultural artifacts, including monuments erected in locales like Fresno and Chico honoring Vang Pao's role in anti-communist campaigns originating from Long Tieng. By 2016, at least three such memorials had been dedicated, serving as sites for annual commemorations that reinforce Hmong identity tied to the base's defense efforts from the 1960s onward. These elements underscore Long Tieng's position as a enduring symbol of Hmong martial contributions to containment strategies in .

Debates on U.S. Involvement and Abandonment

The U.S.-Hmong alliance during the Secret War is defended by proponents as a pragmatic response to Soviet- and North Vietnamese-backed aggression, which violated Laos's declared neutrality under the 1962 Geneva Accords far earlier and more extensively than U.S. actions. Hmong irregular forces, numbering up to 30,000 at peak, conducted ambushes and interdictions along the , harassing North Vietnamese logistics and tying down enemy divisions that might otherwise have accelerated communist advances into or beyond, thereby averting a broader regional . Critics labeling this "imperialism" often overlook the causal chain of expansionism, which predated and provoked U.S. involvement, as evidenced by communist incursions into eastern Laos by the early 1960s. Opponents of U.S. covert operations argue they breached Laos's and the framework by introducing foreign-directed forces and air support, escalating without public accountability and contributing to civilian hardships from crossfire and defoliation. However, U.S. officials countered that such measures were necessitated by repeated communist violations of the accords, including the stationing of North Vietnamese Army units in , rendering strict neutrality untenable under doctrine. While the secrecy of CIA-led efforts from Long Tieng preserved amid domestic anti-war sentiment, it fueled retrospective debates over whether overt intervention might have yielded better outcomes or exposed the ethical costs sooner. The abrupt U.S. withdrawal in 1975, following the Paris Accords and , sparked intense controversy over abandonment, with Hmong leaders viewing their forces as betrayed allies after suffering approximately 12,000 combat deaths in U.S. service, only to face reprisals that killed tens of thousands more in the ensuing years. This post-war persecution, involving forced relocations, executions, and famine-inducing policies, has been termed a by Hmong advocates, resulting in over 100,000 civilian deaths and mass displacement, outcomes enabled by the sudden cessation of air support and evacuation limited to roughly 3,000 individuals. Perspectives diverge on the Hmong's role: some portray them as heroic proxies whose resilience prolonged resistance against , crediting U.S. aid with preventing immediate collapse; others depict them as exploited pawns in a proxy conflict, recruited via promises of protection that evaporated under congressional cuts and executive fatigue. Mainstream narratives, often shaped by academic and media sources skeptical of interventions, have disproportionately emphasized U.S. overreach while minimizing communist atrocities, though declassified records affirm the alliance's role in disrupting enemy supply lines despite ultimate strategic setbacks.

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