
The K5 Plan began on the 19th July 1984[5]. It became a gigantic effort
that included clearing long patches of tropical forest by felling a
great number of trees, as well as slashing and uprooting tall
vegetation. The purpose was to leave a continuous broad open space all
along the Thai border that would be watched and mined.
In practice the K5 fence consisted of a roughly 700 km-long, 500 m-wide
swath of land along the border with Thailand, where antitank and
antipersonnel mines were buried to a density of about 3,000 mines per
kilometre of frontage.[6]
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