French Armour in Vietnam 1945-54 uses a variety of photos from the
private collections of two French generals of the campaign, and full
color plates of rarely illustrated vehicles, to tell the complete story
of the tanks and armored fighting vehicles that the French employed in
their colonies in Indo-China.
The French, quick to realize the efficacy of armor to preserve their
sovereignty over Indo-China following the Great War, sent over their
Renault FT17 tanks in 1919. Together with a variety of armored cars,
these were the principal AFVs in Indo-China until World War II when the
Japanese occupied the region. After the war, French troops were equipped
with a motley collection of American and cast off British equipment
until the outbreak of war in Korea saw an increase in military aid. This
included large numbers of the M24 Chaffee Light Tank, along with
amphibious vehicles such as the M29C Weasel and LVT4 Buffalo, to conduct
operations in coastal and inland areas that the Viet Minh had previously
thought immune to attack.