French Indochina War (1945–1954) The British commander in Southeast Asia,
Lord Louis Mountbatten, sent 20,000 troops of the 20th Indian division to occupy
Saigon under General
Douglas Gracey who landed in southern Vietnam on 6 September 1945, disarming the Japanese and restoring order. They had to re-arm Japanese prisoners of war known as Gremlin force to keep order until more troops arrived. The British began to withdraw in December 1945, but this was not completed until June of the following year. The last British soldiers were killed in Vietnam in June 1946. Altogether 40 British and Indian troops were killed and over a hundred were wounded. Vietnamese casualties were 600. They were followed by French troops trying to re-establish their rule. In the north,
Chiang Kai-shek's
Kuomintang army
entered Vietnam from China, also to disarm the Japanese, followed by the forces of the non-Communist Vietnamese parties, such as
Việt Nam Quốc Dân Đảng and
Việt Nam Cách mệnh Đồng minh Hội. In January 1946, Vietnam had
its first National Assembly election (won by the Viet Minh in central and northern Vietnam), which drafted the first constitution, but the situation was still precarious: the French tried to regain power by force; some
Cochinchinese politicians formed a seceding government of the
Republic of Cochinchina (Nam Kỳ Quốc) while the non-Communist and Communist forces were engaging each other in sporadic battles.
Stalinists purged
Trotskyists. Religious sects, like the
Cao Đài and
Hòa Hảo, and resistance groups formed their own militias. Under the terms of the Accord between France and the
Democratic Republic of Vietnam on 6 March 1946: :1. The French Government recognizes the Vietnamese Republic as a
Free State having its own Government, its own Parliament, its own Army and its own Finances, forming part of the
Indochinese Federation and of the
French Union. As concerns the reuniting of the three "Annamite Regions"
Cochinchina,
Annam and
Tonkin the French Government pledges itself to ratify the decisions taken by the populations consulted by referendum. :2. The
Vietnamese Government declares itself ready to welcome amicably the
French Army when, conforming to international agreements, it relieves the Chinese troops. A
Supplementary Accord, attached to the present Preliminary Agreement, will establish the means by which the relief operations will be carried out. :3. The stipulations formulated above will immediately enter into force. Immediately after the exchange of signatures, each of the High Contracting Parties will take all measures necessary to stop hostilities in the field, to maintain the troops in their respective positions, and to create the favorable atmosphere necessary for the immediate opening of friendly and sincere negotiations. These negotiations will deal particularly with: ::a. diplomatic relations of Viet Nam with Foreign States ::b. the future law of Indochina ::c. French interests, economic and cultural, in Viet Nam. This
preliminary agreement was signed by M. Sainteny, Ho Chi Minh & Vu Hung Khanh at Hanoi on March 6, 1946. In December 1946 full-scale war broke out between the Viet Minh and France. Realizing that colonialism was coming to an end worldwide, France fashioned a semi-independent
State of Vietnam supported by Vietnamese anti-communists in March 1949,
Vietnam War (1954–75) – the South The
Geneva Conference of July 1954 ended the Indochina War in Vietnam and partitioned the country into two states at the
17th parallel pending unification on the basis of internationally supervised free elections. Before losing the North to communists, on 4 June 1954, France recognized full independence of the State of Vietnam within the
French Union.
Ngô Đình Diệm, a former mandarin with a strong Catholic and Confucian background, was selected as Premier of the State of Vietnam by
Bảo Đại. While Diệm was trying to settle the differences between the various armed militias in the South, Bảo Đại was persuaded to reduce his power. Diệm created a referendum in 1955 to depose Bảo Đại and declared himself president of the
Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam). The Republic of Vietnam (RVN) was proclaimed in Saigon on October 26, 1955. The United States began to provide military and economic aid to the RVN, training RVN personnel, and sending U.S. advisors to assist in building the infrastructure for the new government. Also in 1954,
Viet Minh forces took over North Vietnam according to the Geneva Accord. One million North Vietnamese civilians
emigrated to South Vietnam to avoid persecution from the imminent Communist regime. At the same time, Viet Minh armed forces from South Vietnam were also moving to North Vietnam, as dictated by the Geneva Accord. However, some high-ranking Viet Minh cadres secretly remained in the South to follow the local situation closely, and created a communist insurgency against the Southern government if necessary. The most important figure among those was
Lê Duẩn. The
Geneva Accord had promised elections to determine the government for a unified Vietnam. Neither the United States government nor Ngô Đình Diệm's State of Vietnam signed anything at the 1954 Geneva Conference. With respect to the question of reunification, the non-communist Vietnamese delegation objected strenuously to any division of Vietnam, but lost out when the French accepted the proposal of Viet Minh delegate
Phạm Văn Đồng, who proposed that Vietnam eventually be united by elections under the supervision of "local commissions". The United States countered with what became known as the "American Plan", with the support of South Vietnam and the United Kingdom. It provided for unification elections under the supervision of the
United Nations, but was rejected by the Soviet delegation. He repressed political opposition, arresting the famous writer Nguyễn Tường Tam, who committed suicide while awaiting trial in jail. Diệm also acted aggressively to remove Communist agents still remaining in the South. He formed the
Cần Lao Nhân Vị Party, mixing
Individualist philosophy with republican, anti-communist elements. Another controversial policy was the
Strategic Hamlet Program, which aimed to build fortified villages to remove and lock out Communists. However, it was in some ways ineffective as many covert communists were already part of the population and visually indistinguishable. It became unpopular as it limited the villagers' freedom and altered their traditional way of life. , 11 June 1963 Although Ngô Đình Diệm personally was respected for his nationalism, political stability and policies triggering rapid economic growth, he ran a nepotistic and authoritarian government. Elections were routinely rigged. His perceived pro-Catholic policies sparked protests from the Buddhist community
after demonstrators were killed on
Vesak, Buddha's birthday, in 1963 when they were protesting a ban on the
Buddhist flag. This incident sparked
mass protests calling for religious equality. The most famous case was of Venerable
Thích Quảng Đức, who burned himself to death to protest. The images of this event made worldwide headlines and brought extreme embarrassment for Diệm. The tension was not resolved, and on August 21, the
ARVN Special Forces loyal to his brother and chief adviser
Ngô Đình Nhu and commanded by
Lê Quang Tung raided Buddhist pagodas across the country, leaving a death toll estimated to range into the hundreds. In the United States, the Kennedy administration
became worried that the problems of Diệm's government were undermining the US's anti-Communist effort in Southeast Asia, and of Diệm's increasing resistance and non-cooperation with the American government. On November 1, 1963, with the planning and backing of the CIA and the Kennedy administration, South Vietnamese generals led by
Dương Văn Minh engineered a
coup d'état and overthrew Ngô Đình Diệm,
killing both him and his brother Nhu. (
see also Ngô Đình Cẩn) Between 1963 and 1965, South Vietnam was extremely unstable as no government could keep power for long. There were more coups, often more than one every year. The Communist-run Viet Cong expanded their operation and scored some significant military victories during this period. In 1965, US President
Lyndon Johnson sent troops to South Vietnam to secure the country and started to bomb North Vietnam, assuming that if South Vietnam fell to the Communists, other countries in the
Southeast Asia would follow, in accordance with the
domino theory. Other US allies, such as Australia, New Zealand, South Korea, Thailand, the Philippines, and Taiwan also sent troops to South Vietnam. Although the American-led troops succeeded in containing the advance of Communist forces, the presence of foreign troops, the widespread bombing over all of Vietnam, and the social vices that mushroomed around US bases upset the sense of national pride among many Vietnamese, North and South, causing some to become sympathetic to North Vietnam and the Viet Cong. In 1965, Air Marshal
Nguyễn Cao Kỳ and General
Nguyễn Văn Thiệu took power in a coup, and presided over a stable junta, and promised to hold elections under US pressure. In 1967, South Vietnam managed to conduct a National Assembly and Presidential election with Lt. General Nguyễn Văn Thiệu being elected to the Presidency, bringing the government to some level of stability.
Vietnam War (1954–75) – the North soldier in 1966 Between 1953 and 1956, the North Vietnamese government instituted various agrarian reforms, including "rent reduction" and "land reform", which resulted in significant political oppression. During the land reform, testimony from North Vietnamese witnesses suggested a ratio of one execution for every 160 village residents, which extrapolated nationwide would indicate nearly 100,000 executions. Because the campaign was concentrated mainly in the Red River Delta area, a lower estimate of 50,000 executions became widely accepted by scholars at the time. However, declassified documents from the Vietnamese and Hungarian archives indicate that the number of executions was much lower than reported at the time, although likely greater than 13,500. A Northern democratic literary movement called
Nhân văn-Giai phẩm (from the names of the two magazines which started the movement, based in Hanoi) developed, which attempted to encourage the democratization of the North and the free expression of thought. Intellectuals were thus lured into criticizing the leadership so they could be arrested later, and many were sent to hard labor camps (Gulags), following the model of the
Hundred Flowers Campaign in China. Freedom of speech, freedom of assembly and other basic civilian freedoms were soon revoked after the government's attempt of destroying the literary movement. A
cult of personality was also established around Ho Chi Minh, later extended nationwide after the Communist reunification of the Vietnam. During this period,
North Vietnam was a
socialist state with a centralized
command economy, an extensive security apparatus, a powerful propaganda machine that effectively rallied the people for the Party's causes, a superb intelligence system that infiltrated South Vietnam (spies such as
Phạm Ngọc Thảo climbed to high military government positions), and severe suppression of political opposition. Even some decorated veterans and famed Communist cadres, such as
Trần Đức Thảo, Nguyễn Hữu Đang,
Trần Dần,
Hoàng Minh Chính, were persecuted during the late 1950s Nhân Văn Giai Phẩm events and the 1960s Trial Against the Anti-Party Revisionists (Vụ Án Xét Lại Chống Đảng) for speaking their opinions. Nevertheless, this iron grip, together with consistent support from the Soviet Union and China, gave North Vietnam a militaristic advantage over South Vietnam. North Vietnamese leadership also had a steely determination to fight, even when facing massive casualties and destruction at their end. The young North Vietnamese were idealistically and innocently patriotic, ready to give the ultimate sacrifice for the "liberation of the South" and the "unification of the motherland". In 1960, at the Third Party Congress of the
Vietnamese Communist Party, renamed the Labor Party since 1951,
Lê Duẩn arrived from the South and strongly advocated the use of
revolutionary warfare to topple Diệm's government, unifying the country, and establish
communism nationwide. Despite some elements in the Party opposing the use of force, Lê Duẩn won the seat of
First Secretary of the Party. As Hồ Chí Minh was aging, Lê Duẩn virtually took the helm of war from him. The first step of his war plan was coordinating a rural uprising in the South (Đồng Khởi) and forming the
Viet Cong or National Front for the Liberation of South Vietnam (NLF) toward the end of 1960. The figurehead leader of the Viet Cong was
Nguyễn Hữu Thọ, a South Vietnamese lawyer, but the true leadership was the Communist Party hierarchy in South Vietnam. Arms, supplies, and troops came from North Vietnam into South Vietnam via a system of trails, named the
Ho Chi Minh trail, that branched into
Laos and
Cambodia before entering South Vietnam. At first, most foreign aid for North Vietnam came from China, as Lê Duẩn distanced Vietnam from the "
revisionist" policy of the Soviet Union under
Nikita Khrushchev. However, under
Leonid Brezhnev, the Soviet Union picked up the pace of aid and provided North Vietnam with heavy weapons, such as
T-54 tanks, artillery,
MIG fighter planes,
surface-to-air missiles etc.
The Tet Offensive and the end of the war In 1968, the Viet Cong launched a massive and surprise
Tết Offensive (known in South Vietnam as "Biến Cố Tết Mậu Thân" or in the North as "Cuộc Tổng Tấn Công và Nổi Dậy Tết Mậu Thân"), attacking almost all major cities in South Vietnam over the Vietnamese New Year (
Tết). The Viet Cong and North Vietnamese captured the city of
Huế, after which many mass graves were found. Many of the executed victims had relations with the South Vietnamese government or the US, or part of social groups that were considered enemies to the Viet Cong, like Catholics, business owners and intellectuals (
Thảm Sát Tết Mậu Thân). Over the course of the year the Viet Cong forces were pushed out of all cities in South Vietnam and nearly decimated. In subsequent major offensives in later years, North Vietnamese regulars with artillery and tanks took over the fighting. In the months following the Tet Offensive, an American unit massacred civilian villagers, suspected to be sheltering
Viet Cong guerillas, in the hamlet of
My Lai in Central Vietnam, causing an uproar in protest around the world. In 1969, Hồ Chí Minh died, leaving wishes that his body be cremated. However, the Communist Party embalmed his body for public display and built the Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum on
Ba Đình Square in Hà Nội, in the style of
Lenin's Mausoleum in Moscow. Although the Tết Offensive was a catastrophic military defeat for the Việt Cộng, it was a stunning political victory as it led many Americans to view the war as unwinnable. U.S. President
Richard Nixon entered office with a pledge to end the war "with honor." He normalized
US relations with China in 1972 and entered into
détente with the USSR. Nixon thus forged a new strategy to deal with the Communist Bloc, taking advantage of the rift between China and the Soviet Union. A costly war in Vietnam begun to appear less effective for the cause of Communist containment. Nixon proposed "
Vietnamization" of the war, with South Vietnamese troops taking charge of the fighting, yet still receiving American aid and, if necessary, air and naval support. The new strategy started to show some effects: in 1970, troops from the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (
ARVN) successfully conducted raids against North Vietnamese bases in Cambodia (
Cambodian Campaign); in 1971, the ARVN made an incursion into Southern Laos to cut off the
Ho Chi Minh trail in
Operation Lam Son 719, but the operation failed as most high positions captured by ARVN forces were recaptured by North Vietnamese artillery; in 1972, the ARVN successfully held the town of
An Lộc against massive attacks from North Vietnamese regulars and recaptured the town of Quảng Trị near the
demilitarised zone (DMZ) in the center of the country during the
Easter Offensive. At the same time, Nixon was pressing both Hanoi and Saigon to sign the
Paris Peace Agreement of 1973, for American military forces to withdraw from Vietnam. The pressure on Hanoi materialized with the
Christmas Bombings in 1972. In South Vietnam, Nguyễn Văn Thiệu vocally opposed any accord with the Communists, but was threatened with withdrawal of American aid. Despite the peace treaty, the North violated the treaty and continued the war as had been envisioned by Lê Duẩn and the South still tried to recapture lost territories. In the U.S., Nixon resigned after the
Watergate scandal. South Vietnam was seen as losing a strong backer. Under U.S. President
Gerald Ford, the Democratic-controlled Congress became less willing to provide military support to South Vietnam. In 1974, South Vietnam also fought and lost the
Battle of Hoàng Sa, in defending the islands against the invading Chinese over the control of the
Paracel Islands in the
South China Sea. Neither North Vietnam nor the U.S. were involved. In early 1975, North Vietnamese military led by General
Văn Tiến Dũng launched a massive attack against the
Central Highland province of
Buôn Mê Thuột. South Vietnamese troops had anticipated attack against the neighboring province of Pleiku, and were caught off guard. President Nguyễn Văn Thiệu ordered the moving of all troops from the Central Highland to the coastal areas, as with shrinking American aid, South Vietnamese forces could not afford to spread too thin. However, due to lack of experience and logistics for such a large troop movement in such a short time, the whole South Vietnamese 2nd Corps got bogged down on narrow mountain roads, flooded with thousands of civilian refugees, and was decimated by ambushes along the way. The South Vietnamese First Corps near the
DMZ was cut off, received conflicting orders from Saigon on whether to fight or to retreat, and eventually collapsed. Many civilians tried to flee to Saigon via land, air, and sea routes, suffering massive casualties along the way. In early April 1975, South Vietnam set up a last-ditch defense line at
Xuân Lộc, under commander
Lê Minh Đảo. North Vietnamese troops failed to penetrate the line and had to make a detour, which the South Vietnamese failed to stop due to lack of troops. President Nguyễn văn Thiệu resigned. Power fell to Dương Văn Minh.
Dương Văn Minh had led the coup against Diệm in 1963. By the mid-1970s, he had leaned toward the "Third Party" (Thành Phần Thứ Ba), South Vietnamese elites who favored dialogues and cooperation with the North. Communist infiltrators in the South tried to work out political deals to let Dương Văn Minh ascend to the Presidency, with the hope that he would prevent a last stand, a destructive battle for Saigon. Although many South Vietnamese units were ready to defend Saigon, and the ARVN 4th Corps was still intact in the Mekong Delta, Dương Văn Minh ordered a
surrender on April 30, 1975, sparing Saigon from destruction. Nevertheless, the reputation of the North Vietnamese army towards perceived traitors preceded them, and hundreds of thousands of South Vietnamese fled the country by all means: airplanes, helicopters, ships, fishing boats, and barges. Most were picked up by the U.S.
Seventh Fleet in the
South China Sea or landed in Thailand. The seaborne refugees came to be known as "
boat people". In a famous case, a South Vietnamese pilot, with his wife and children aboard a small
Cessna plane, landed safely without a
tailhook on the
aircraft carrier . This mass exodus of (mostly South) Vietnamese political refugees continued into the 1980s as refugees fled from persecution, political oppression and economic collapse caused by the new Communist regime. ==Socialist Republic (1976–1991)==