Ted Serong

Ted Serong

Francis Philip Serong DSO, OBE (1915-2002) was a distinguished officer of the Australian Army.

Serong was a "quiet, deep thinker, brilliant tactician, very brave in the field and a good leader", according to one of Australia's most respected soldiers, General Sir Francis Hassett. Those were among the qualities that led to this unassuming Australian Army officer winning international recognition for his innovative counter-insurgency and jungle warfare tactics.

His techniques and strategies were honed during his long service in the Vietnam War from August 1962 to April 1975. Initially, he made his mark as the inspirational commanding officer of the Australian Army instructors' team, known officially as the Australian Army Training Team Vietnam (AATTV), which was there to assist in the training of South Vietnam's armed forces.

Serong had considerable scope in raising the 30-strong training group, enabling him to attract similar highly motivated souls. Apart from his own ability, what Hassett termed his "remarkable success" in this role owed much to the calibre of his men, who became the most highly decorated Australian unit to serve in Vietnam. They won four Victoria Crosses and a Presidential Unit Citation (United States), while Serong was awarded the Distinguished Service Order (DSO) and several American and South Vietnamese decorations to add to the OBE he had received in the 1962 Queen's Birthday Honours.

In Vietnam, as well as heading the Australian training team, Serong was appointed senior adviser on counterinsurgency to the commander of the U.S. Military Assistance Command, Vietnam, serving under General Paul D. Harkins and then General William Westmoreland. These links, forged with the US military, were to determine his future career path. When his command of the AATTV ended in 1965, he was seconded to the US State Department, essentially under the auspices of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), to become senior adviser to South Vietnam's Police Field Force to develop paramilitary security, civil action and political operations.

That began his separation from the Australian Army, before he left formally in 1968 with the rank of brigadier. He was later to say of that decision, that his "relationship with the Australian Army, by and large, was a very happy one", adding, "I left it because I found a way of being of more service to the country outside it than in it. It was a matter of staying in the wagon and trying to steer it or getting out and pushing, so I got out and pushed."

He stayed on in Vietnam, where various roles came his way. He was a security and intelligence adviser to the South Vietnamese government for some years as well as preparing strategic analyses for the Rand Organisation, the Hudson Institute and other US corporations. During those Vietnam years he was also a consultant to The Pentagon and to the policy planners of three American presidents - John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon. He was one of the last to leave, flying out in the final airlift by the US embassy helicopter on April 29, 1975, the day before the fall of Saigon.

Serong became a hawk on the prosecution of the war in Vietnam, believing a victory for the US and South Vietnamese forces would help prevent the new independent countries of South-East Asia falling under the communist orbit. The hoped-for victory did not eventuate, nor did communism engulf the so-called "domino" countries. But what had been gained, in Serong's view, was time for the threatened nations to strengthen their political and economic structures, enhancing their ability to deal with any insurgencies.

The path that took Serong from the periphery of power to its centre began in the Melbourne suburb of Abbotsford. Francis Philip Serong was the first son of William and Mabel Serong. He grew up in a family with a strong allegiance to the Catholic faith and permeated with a military background, through his father's work as a supervisor of weapons standards for the Defence Department.

The Serong children breathed in tales of the Empire, derring-do and military exploits. But it was the intellectual and religious ideas absorbed through the teaching of the Christian Brothers, after Serong won a scholarship to St Kevin's College, that put final shape to the man and his world view. Thus, a centrepiece of his life, like that of his lifelong friend Bob Santamaria, was to be the struggle against expansionist communism.

Before leaving St Kevin's, Serong set his sights on the Royal Military College, Duntroon. Failing to gain admission through the normal route, he joined the Citizens Military Force which afforded him entry when he passed an examination open only to servicemen. From there he never looked back. He graduated from Duntroon in 1937, served first with the artillery, then with an armoured regiment until, switching to the infantry, he saw combat as a staff and regimental officer with the 6th Division in New Guinea, 1942-45.

That was where he became interested in the challenges of jungle fighting and where he came under the eye of Colonel Reg Pollard, 6th Division's senior staff officer. Pollard noted the young man's adaptability and originality of mind, marking him as a future prospect for special assignments.

After the war, Pollard, along with another 6th Division staff officer,Brigadier Charles Spry, of ASIO fame, were able, in the words of Serong's biographer, Anne Blair, "to smooth his path to his postwar assignment of reorienting army training to jungle warfare" and later in his security work in Vietnam.

With the rank of colonel, Serong was given command in 1955 of the reopened Jungle Warfare Training Centre at Canungra, in south-eastern Queensland. That was where his techniques and strategies first attracted attention. Though not everyone agrees, the courses he helped to develop and teach there were credited with contributing to the success of operations carried out by Australian troops in Malaysia, Borneo and later Vietnam. By 1957 his expertise was sufficient for the Burmese government to select him over candidates from Israel, America and Yugoslavia as counterinsurgency instructor to the Burmese armed forces. This led to a second appointment in Burma as strategic adviser to the armed forces from 1960 to 1962.

Then came the challenge of Vietnam when Pollard, now knighted and a lieutenant-general, as Chief of the General Staff selected Serong to lead the Australian Army instructors' team. From the Vietnam struggle, with which he was thereafter invariably identified, Serong emerged as one of the world's foremost authorities on counterinsurgency and counterguerilla warfare. In Vietnam, Serong had found scope for the fullest expression of his talents, particularly as a strategic planner.

Serong found it hard to settle back into life in suburban Melbourne after the Vietnam years. Having been separated from wife and family for so long, it was difficult to pick up those threads again. All, including his wife, Kathleen, had developed independent lives.

His later years in Australia were devoted largely to advancing nationalist causes, particularly those on the right of the political spectrum. He appeared on anti-communist platforms, both in Australia and abroad. His connection as patron of a citizens' militia group called Ausi Freedom Scouts (Australians United for Survival and Freedom) After the mass shootings at Port Arthur in 1996, Serong contended that Martin Bryant could not have been the shooter.

But his main concern was Australia's defence. He wrote extensively on defence issues, coming down strongly in favour of a forward-defence strategy. Another theme he pushed was the development of the Australian interior as part of a national defence plan. Though the extent of his achievements is not so well known in Australia, he was undoubtedly a major Cold War figure, who fought for what he believed in with skill and determination.

In his later years, Serong suffered from heart disease; he is survived by his wife, Kathleen, three daughters, Julie, Elise and Rosemary, and three sons, Michael, Richard and Anthony.

References

*http://www.vietnam.ttu.edu/vietnamcenter/events/1996_Symposium/96papers/tenyears.htm
*http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2002/11/11/1036308630203.html
*http://www.newsweekly.com.au/articles/2002oct19_obit.html


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