One of the major problems faced by wiretap teams was that the VC/NVA units would daily send runners along the lines to check them. Two ASA engineers working at Vint Hill Farms Station came up with the LEFT TWIST system where a transmitter in the form of a pole was dropped from a helicopter. Actual results in the field in 1971 proved mixed, and future trials were cut short when the course of the war began to change. The drawdown of US combat forces led to fewer deployment opportunities for landline intercept and even- tually brought an end to the mission altogeth- er. Time had finally run out on ASA’s landline mission. However, lingering questions remained as to why lessons learned as far back as 1966 were continually ignored. The technological advances in the CIRCUS ACT program were achieved at a high cost giventhe numbers of casualties suffered by the installation teams and the limited amount of usable intelligence extracted.
On Oct 4, 2023, at 5:08 PM, Hubert Miller <[email protected]> wrote:This clipping is from a memoir in ‘Vietnam’ magazine, August 2013.I had never heard about this kind of wiretap in Vietnam before.Any comment, or identification of the equipment ?Tnx--Hue Miller,Newport, Oregon