In September 1958, Brigadier General
John A. Heintges left the U.S. Army. In November, he flew to Laos to evaluate the Programs Evaluation Office, with a mandate to take charge of it. Heintges concluded that the staff of the PEO was too small, and seemed intent only on delivering equipment. There was a suspicion that some military aid to Laos was diverted for French use in the
Algerian War. Returning to Washington, DC, Heintges lobbied for a larger PEO. He pointed to the sad shape of the
Royal Lao Army as proof of need of U.S. military materiel and training. He was granted an increase in staff. Also, on 22 January 1959,
CINCPAC levied a requirement for 12
Special Forces Mobile Training Teams of eight men each; they were slated to start six months temporary duty in Laos on 1 April. General
Donald Blackburn was charged with command of the mission. He prepared his men by requiring tutoring in both French and Lao, and insisting that all hands read the nonfiction book
Street Without Joy, as well as the novel
The Ugly American, before departure. However, negotiations with the French government delayed things. It was finally decided that the French instructors in Laos under the Geneva treaty would continue to teach tactics, while the American trainers would teach technical subjects. On 24 July 1959, the Mobile Training Teams arrived in
Vientiane. Augmented by a control team 11 strong, the force was dubbed Project Hotfoot (Operation Hotfoot for security purposes); it was also known by the official but little-used title of the Laos Training Advisory Group. They were to work for the PEO as a training arm, teaching Lao soldiers the use of the
M1 Garand,
Browning Automatic Rifle,
M1 Carbine,
bazooka,
M18 recoilless rifle, and both 60mm and 81mm
mortars. The Green Berets were commanded on site by Lieutenant Colonel
Arthur D. Simons. ==Hotfoot at work==