In 1941, Hồ Chí Minh returned to Vietnam to lead the
Việt Minh independence movement. Hồ and ICP founded a communist-led united front to oppose the Japanese. He oversaw many successful military actions against the
Vichy France and the Japanese occupation of Vietnam during
World War II, supported closely yet clandestinely by the United States
Office of Strategic Services and later against the French bid to reoccupy the country (1946–1954). He was jailed in China by Chiang Kai-shek's local authorities before being rescued by Chinese Communists. Following his release in 1943, he returned to Vietnam. It was during this time that he began regularly using the name Hồ Chí Minh, a Vietnamese name combining a common Vietnamese surname (Hồ,
胡) with a given name meaning "Bright spirit" or "Clear will" (from
Sino-Vietnamese 志 明: Chí meaning "will" or "spirit" and Minh meaning "bright"). The OSS agreed to this and later sent a military team of OSS members to train his men and Hồ Chí Minh himself was treated for malaria and dysentery by an OSS doctor. Following the
August Revolution organized by the Việt Minh, Hồ Chí Minh became Chairman of the Provisional Government (Premier of the
Democratic Republic of Vietnam) and issued a Proclamation of Independence of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam. Although he convinced former Emperor
Bảo Đại to abdicate, his government was not recognized by any country. He repeatedly petitioned President
Harry S. Truman for support for Vietnamese independence, citing the
Atlantic Charter, but Truman never responded. In 1946, future Israeli Prime Minister
David Ben-Gurion and Hồ Chí Minh became acquainted when they stayed at the same hotel in Paris. He suggested Ben-Gurion establish his Jewish state in Vietnam, under the name of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam. In
Saigon, with violence between rival Vietnamese factions and French forces increasing, the British commander, General Sir
Douglas Gracey, declared martial law. On 24 September, the Việt Minh leaders responded with a call for a general strike. In the same month, a force of 200,000 Chinese
National Revolutionary Army troops arrived in
Hanoi to accept the surrender of the Japanese occupiers in northern Indochina. Hồ Chí Minh made a compromise with their general,
Lu Han, to dissolve the Communist Party and to hold an election that would yield a coalition government. When Chiang forced the French to give the
French concessions in Shanghai back to China in exchange for withdrawing from northern Indochina, he had no choice but to sign an agreement with France on 6 March 1946 in which Vietnam would be recognized as an autonomous state in the Indochinese Federation and the
French Union. The agreement soon broke down. The purpose of the agreement, for both the French and Vietminh, was for Chiang's army to leave North Vietnam. Fighting broke out in the North soon after the Chinese left. Historian Professor Liam Kelley of the University of Hawaii at Manoa on his ''Le Minh Khai's Asian History Blog
challenged the authenticity of the alleged quote where Hồ Chí Minh said he "would rather smell French shit for five years than eat Chinese shit for a thousand," noting that Stanley Karnow provided no source for the extended quote attributed to him in his 1983 Vietnam: A History
and that the original quote was most likely forged by the Frenchman Paul Mus in his 1952 book Vietnam: Sociologie d'une Guerre''. Mus was a supporter of French colonialism in Vietnam and Hồ Chí Minh believed there was no danger of Chinese troops staying in Vietnam. The Vietnamese at the time were busy spreading anti-French propaganda as evidence of French atrocities in Vietnam emerged, while Hồ Chí Minh showed no qualms about accepting Chinese aid after 1949. In 1946, when he traveled outside of the country, his subordinates imprisoned 2,500 non-communist nationalists and forced 6,000 others to flee. Hundreds of political opponents were executed or exiled in July 1946, notably, members of the
Vietnamese Nationalist Party and
Đại Việt Nationalist Party after a failed attempt to raise a coup against the Viet Minh government. The Việt Minh then collaborated with French colonial forces to massacre supporters of rival Vietnamese nationalist movements in 1945–1946, and of the Trotskyists. All rival political parties were hereafter banned and local governments were purged to minimize opposition later on.
Trotskyism in Vietnam did not rival the Party outside of the major cities, but particularly in the South, in Saigon-Cochinchina, they had been a challenge. From the outset, they had called for armed resistance to a French restoration and an immediate transfer of industry to workers and land to peasants. The French Socialist leader
Daniel Guérin recalls that when in Paris in 1946 he asked Hồ Chí Minh about the fate of the Trotskyist leader
Tạ Thu Thâu, Hồ Chí Minh had replied, "with unfeigned emotion," that "'Thâu was a great patriot and we mourn him', but then a moment later added in a steady voice 'All those who do not follow the line which I have laid down will be broken.'" The Communists eventually suppressed all non-Communist parties, but they failed to secure a peace deal with France. In the final days of 1946, after a year of diplomatic failure and many concessions in agreements, such as the
Dalat and
Fontainebleau conferences, the Democratic Republic of Vietnam government found that war was inevitable. The
bombardment of Haiphong by the
French Navy only strengthened the belief that France had no intention of allowing an autonomous, independent state in Vietnam. The attack reportedly killed more than 6,000 Vietnamese civilians in Haiphong. French forces marched into Hanoi, now the capital city of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam. On 19 December 1946, after the Haiphong incident, Hồ Chí Minh declared war against the French, marking the beginning of the
First Indochina War. The Vietnam National Army, mostly armed with
machetes and
muskets immediately attacked. They assaulted the French positions, smoking them out with straw bundled with chili pepper, destroying armored vehicles with
"lunge mines" (a
hollow-charge warhead on the end of a pole, detonated by thrusting the charge against the side of a tank; typically a
suicide weapon) and
Molotov cocktails, holding off attackers by using
roadblocks,
landmines and gravel. After two months of fighting, the exhausted Việt Minh forces withdrew after
systematically destroying any valuable infrastructure. Hồ was mistakenly reported to be captured by a group of French soldiers, led by
Jean Étienne Valluy at Việt Bắc, during
Operation Léa. The person in question turned out to be a Việt Minh advisor who was killed trying to escape. According to journalist
Bernard Fall, Hồ decided to negotiate a truce after fighting the French for several years. When the French negotiators arrived at the meeting site, they found a mud hut with a thatched roof. Inside they found a long table with chairs. In one corner of the room, a silver ice bucket contained ice and a bottle of good champagne, indicating that Hồ expected the negotiations to succeed. One demand by the French was the return to French custody of several Japanese military officers (who had been helping the Vietnamese armed forces by training them in the use of weapons of Japanese origin) for them to stand trial for war crimes committed during World War II. Hồ Chí Minh replied that the Japanese officers were allies and friends whom he could not betray, therefore he walked out to seven more years of war. In February 1950, after the
Battle of Route Coloniale 4 successfully broke the French border blockade, he met with
Joseph Stalin and
Mao Zedong in Moscow after the Soviet Union recognized his government. They all agreed that China would be responsible for backing the Việt Minh. Mao Zedong's emissary to Moscow stated in August that China planned to train 60,000–70,000 Viet Minh shortly. The road to the outside world was open for Việt Minh forces to receive additional supplies which would allow them to escalate the fight against the French regime throughout Indochina. At the outset of the conflict, Hồ reportedly told a French visitor: "You can kill ten of my men for every one I kill of yours. But even at those odds, you will lose and I will win". In 1954, the First Indochina War came to an end after the decisive
Battle of Dien Bien Phu, where more than 10,000 French soldiers surrendered to the Viet Minh. The subsequent
Geneva Accords peace process partitioned North Vietnam at the 17th parallel. Arthur Dommen estimates that the Việt Minh killed between 100,000 and 150,000 civilians during the war. Benjamin Valentino estimates that the French were responsible for 60,000–250,000 civilian deaths. ==Leadership of North Vietnam==