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2RHPZ
07-01-2004, 06:08 AM
Lt. Col. Lucien E. Conein

From Aiding French Resistance To Plotting In Vietnam, Conein Led A Life Of 'Pulp Adventure'

By Bethanne Kelly Patrick
Military.com

In 1971, retired Army Lt. Col. Lucien Conein declined an offer to join the "plumbers" who bungled the Watergate burglary. "If I'd been involved, we would have done it right," he later said.

He may have been correct. Conein was an intelligence agent whose career spanned five decades, four government agencies, numerous countries, and countless covert operations. Colleagues called him "Lulu," "Luigi" and often "lieutenant colonel," but very few people knew very much about him. His 1998 Bastille Day funeral was thought by many of his colleagues to signal the end of an era. Conein's "swashbuckling soldier of fortune" persona, as Stanley Karnow characterized it, was seen by some as a loose cannon -- yet he had a reputation for being a thorough professional.

The Paris-born Conein grew up in Kansas City, brought there to be raised by his World War I-bride aunt, but retained his French citizenship. At the outbreak of World War II, he joined the French Army. But after the 1940 fall of France, he returned to the U.S. and joined the Army, landing an assignment with the Office of Strategic Services. As one of the "Jedburghs" -- an elite unit named after its training camp in Scotland -- he parachuted into Nazi-occupied France to deliver arms to French resistance forces. When the European theater closed, Conein was sent to the Pacific conducting raids against Japanese-held installations in North Vietnam. He was awarded the Legion of Honor for his negotiations with Ho Chi Minh in Hanoi, which resulted in the release of several interned French residents.

Keeping his military rank and position as cover, Conein was transferred to the Central Intelligence Agency when it formed in 1947. Whether infiltrating Eastern Europe with saboteurs, training paramilitary forces in Iran, or burying coffins filled with weapons caches near Saigon, he was, in David Halberstam's words, "someone sprung to life from a pulp adventure." But he remained "the indispensable man" for Henry Cabot Lodge, President Kennedy's ambassador to Vietnam, who appointed Conein as his liaison with the generals plotting to assassinate President Ngo Dinh Diem in 1963.

Unhappy with the huge military disaster Vietnam became, Conein retired from the CIA in 1968 and, from 1973-1984, ran secret operations for the Drug Enforcement Agency.

"I cannot allow the passing of Conein without noting that whether his stories were true or not is immaterial; they should have been," a colleague said when Conein died.

JJHH
09-29-2005, 11:23 AM
Take a look at this book from my collection. It's a 1942 commando hand to hand combat book used by the OSS in the 40's.

See who's name is written in the inside..

http://img154.imageshack.us/img154/6916/p10100525jq.th.jpg (http://img154.imageshack.us/my.php?image=p10100525jq.jpg)

http://img184.imageshack.us/img184/5640/p10100546rn.th.jpg (http://img184.imageshack.us/my.php?image=p10100546rn.jpg)

Backwoodshunter
09-30-2005, 10:12 AM
A very impressive man

JJHH
09-30-2005, 11:48 AM
He sure was, I still find it hard to believe that I have a manual that was once his..

Brookes
09-30-2005, 02:51 PM
He sure was, I still find it hard to believe that I have a manual that was once his..

so whats the story behind you getting his manual??

JJHH
10-01-2005, 12:29 PM
I purchased it from another collector for $15 (who probably didn't know Conein)! I didn't even know that a name was written in the manual, not until I opened it! I'm a lucky basterd.

Three pictures from Lucien Conein which I found on the internet:

http://img350.imageshack.us/img350/5131/3pictureslucieneconein9rd.th.jpg (http://img350.imageshack.us/my.php?image=3pictureslucieneconein9rd.jpg)

wiking
10-01-2005, 05:39 PM
I purchased it from another collector for $15 (who probably didn't know Conein)! I didn't even know that a name was written in the manual, not until I opened it! I'm a lucky basterd.

Three pictures from Lucien Conein which I found on the internet:

http://img350.imageshack.us/img350/5131/3pictureslucieneconein9rd.th.jpg (http://img350.imageshack.us/my.php?image=3pictureslucieneconein9rd.jpg)

Lucky bastard!

I got a hold of "Disiplnær reglement for Hæren og Flaaten" (diciplinary rules for the army and fleet) printed for the Royal Norwegian Navy in London in 1943 the other day, but mine didn't have any famous names in it :(

Won an internet auction for the Norwegian Korea Medal yesterday.

2RHPZ
10-01-2005, 05:58 PM
I purchased it from another collector for $15 (who probably didn't know Conein)! I didn't even know that a name was written in the manual, not until I opened it! I'm a lucky basterd.

Three pictures from Lucien Conein which I found on the internet:

http://img350.imageshack.us/img350/5131/3pictureslucieneconein9rd.th.jpg (http://img350.imageshack.us/my.php?image=3pictureslucieneconein9rd.jpg)

Cool...

JJHH
10-02-2005, 07:43 AM
I've been looking for info on Conein a long time. The most interesting info I found (most of the Jedburgh files are still classified) was about his Jedburgh team:

Jedburgh Team Composition

Team: Mark

Members:

Capt LE Conein (US), Codename : Intrepide,
Lt J Thevenet (FR), Codename :Sympathetique
Sgt JJ Carpenter (US), Codename: Leste

I don't know the exact date when he was dropped behind enemy lines in France, but I've been able to pinpoint his exact drop zone (see the map below) in the South of France. He probably was shipped to Algiers (all the Jedburgh teams who were to land in the South of France went to Algiers) from which he departed by plane heading for his drop zone.

Until now I haven't found any report after action report from Coneins Jedburgh mission. I hope to find it one day..


Jedburgh teams in France, June-September 1944:

http://img205.imageshack.us/img205/651/jedburghdropzones3fw.th.jpg (http://img205.imageshack.us/my.php?image=jedburghdropzones3fw.jpg)

Atlantic Friend
10-12-2005, 09:14 AM
The French Resistance ??

But, but...I thought it was all a myth and a lie told by us unhygienic collaborating weasels ! ;-)

More seriously, this officer really led a rich and fulfilling life. If it hadn't been for him and a generation like him, our present would be bleak and our future non-existent.

JJHH
10-16-2005, 08:57 AM
2 bad he didn't write a book or something..

djon
10-18-2005, 02:49 AM
great article ...great man