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Bình Xuyên

Binh Xuyen Force (Vietnamese: Bộ đội Bình Xuyên, Chữ Nôm: 平川部隊, IPA: [ɓɨ̂n swiəŋ]), often linked to its infamous leader, General Lê Văn Viễn (a.k.a. "Bảy Viễn"), was an independent military force within the Vietnamese National Army whose leaders once had lived outside the law and had sided with the Việt Minh. During its heyday, Bình Xuyên funded itself with organized crime activities in Saigon while effectively battling Communist forces.[1]

Binh Xuyen Force
Bộ đội Bình Xuyên
平川部隊
War standard.
Active1945–1960
Country Democratic Republic of Vietnam
Cochinchina
 South Vietnam
TypeMilitary
Nickname(s)Binh Xuyen Group
Binh Xuyen Force
Binh Xuyen Volunteer Police
Motto(s)Honor – Fatherland
ColoursRed, blue, yellow
EngagementsBattle of Saigon (1955)
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Dương Văn Dương
Huỳnh Văn Trọng
Dương Văn Hà
Võ Văn Môn
Lê Văn Viễn
Thái Hoàng Minh
Nguyễn Văn Hiểu

History edit

Formation edit

Bình Xuyên groups first emerged in the early 1920s as a loosely organized coalition of gangs and contract laborers about two hundred to three hundred strong. Bình Xuyên's early history consisted of cycles of kidnapping, piracy, pursuit, and occasionally imprisonment. One of the gang leaders was Ba Dương, a kingpin in the SaigonCholon area. His lieutenants included Huỳnh Văn Trí (a.k.a. Mười Trí), Dương Văn Hà (a.k.a. Năm Hà), Võ Văn Môn (a.k.a. Bảy Môn), and Lê Văn Viễn (a.k.a. Bảy Viễn).[2] Bình Xuyên's history is largely that of two separate groups: Ba Dương's troops (the Bộ Đội Bình Xuyên) and Bảy Viễn's Bình Xuyên.

1920s–1930s edit

From the 1920s to the mid-1930s, Nhà Bè was a haven for hundreds of armed gangs led by several leaders. Some were groups of gangsters picking on the helpless, while others robbed the rich, reportedly, to help the poor. Some of the well-known gangsters at the time included:

  • Trần Văn Dõi (a.k.a. Sau Dõi) was notorious for his protection services. In 1940, he bribed port officials for sole protection of a lumberyard used by a pro-Japanese shipbuilding company in South Vietnam.
  • Trần Văn Thọ (a.k.a. Sau Thọ)'s gang concentrated on kidnapping and extortion of rich families.
  • Đoàn Văn Ngọc (a.k.a. Ba Ngọc) and his brother, Đoàn Văn Gin (a.k.a. Ba Gin) operated brothels and provided protection to independent prostitutes in the Tân Thuận area.
  • Nguyễn Văn Mạnh (a.k.a. "Tám Mạnh"), a martial arts teacher, started the first organized crime unit in Saigon. In 1940, after joining the Communist Party, Mạnh ordered his gang to cease all criminal activities and concentrate on helping the party in an upcoming uprising. He later brought his gang to join Ba Dương's Bình Xuyên troops.[3]

Ba Dương's Bình Xuyên (1940–1946) edit

Dương Văn Dương (a.k.a. "Ba Dương") was born in 1900 to a family of poor peasants from Bến Tre. His mother remarried after his father's death and the family moved to Nhà Bè in the late 1920s, where Dương grew up to be a respected martial arts teacher.[4] In 1936, Dương started his criminal activities by providing protection services to the Tây Ninh-Phnom Penh bus station in Saigon. By 1940, he had become a kingpin of Cochinchina. In 1943, Dương joined the Communist party. In 1945, he stole weapons from the Japanese to arm his troops in order to fight the returning French forces. His Bộ Đội Ba Dương was reportedly one of the groups most feared by local French-trained militia. In 1945, the 2,000 armed men under different leaders in the Nhà Bè area elected Dương their commander. Together they chose to name the newly formed unit, the "Bình Xuyên Troops" (Vietnamese: Bộ Đội Bình Xuyên).[5]

From outlaws to revolutionaries edit

In late 1929, after the formation of the southern Communist committee, Ngô Gia Tự ordered Châu Văn Ký to infiltrate the ranks of workers and manual laborers in Nhà Bè. By 1940, Ký, with Nguyễn Văn Trân (a.k.a. Bảy Trân) enlisted gang leaders and their members, one of the most prominent was Tam Manh. After the botched southern uprising (Vietnamese: Khởi nghĩa Nam Kỳ), the French colonial authorities brutally suppressed all opposition groups.[6]

On 24 September 1945, Lê Văn Khôi (a.k.a. "Bà Nho"), one of Ba Dương's lieutenants allegedly organized the massacre of 150 French and Eurasian civilians, including children, in Saigon without order from its leader.[7] While this decision would have been of little consequence in Tonkin or central Vietnam, where the Communist-dominated Việt Minh was strong enough to stand alone, in Cochin China, where the Bình Xuyên support was crucial, Ba Nho's action led to suppression from the returning French troops. The Cochin division of the Indochina Communist party (Vietnamese: Đông Dương Cộng sản Năm Bộ) was weakened by mass arrests and executions.[8] A decision was made by the southern communist committee to put Bà Nho on trial. Bà Nho was tricked by Nguyễn Binh into returning to Phuoc An where he was found guilty and sentenced to death. Bà Nho requested to be allowed to take his own life, which was granted.[9]

In September 1945, Southern Communist party leaders (Trần Văn Giàu, Nguyễn Văn Trân, et al.) put Ba Dương in charge of the guerrilla forces attacking southern Saigon, more commonly referred as Front number 4. For two months, Bình Xuyên troops relentlessly attacked and overran several French military facilities and posts. Dương's group eventually lost to the more disciplined and better-trained French Union troops.

On 20 November 1945, to avoid being decimated by French counter-attacks, Bình Xuyên troops withdrew to Rung Sac to regroup for future military operations. In the next few months, Bình Xuyên troops expanded their operations toward the west of South Vietnam (Zone 8). During these few months, they successfully took control of Gò Công, Mỹ Tho and Bến Tre, the last province being where they established their new base. Ba Dương, newly promoted by General Nguyễn Binh in September to Deputy Commander of Zone 7, died in an air attack on 16 February 1946.[10] Without Dương, his lieutenants began to disagree with each other on who would be the troops' new commander. Nguyễn Bình, who had unsuccessfully tried to kill Bình Xuyên's new strongman, Lê Văn Viễn (a.k.a. Bảy Viễn), would later step in to disband the Bình Xuyên in 1948.[citation needed]

Bình Xuyên divided edit

After Ba Dương's death, his lieutenants split into three groups:

  • Supporters of Ba Dương's half-brother, Dương Văn Hà (a.k.a. Năm Hà)
  • Backers for Lê Văn Viễn (a.k.a. Bảy Viễn) in his bid to become the new commander.
  • Those who remained neutral in the power struggle.

In April 1946, Military Zone 7 appointed Năm Hà as the Bình Xuyên's new commander. Bảy Viễn, upset with the decision, formed the Bình Xuyên Interzone with leaders and troops from 7 units. Despite the schism, Bình Xuyên remained united in the fight against the French. As Bảy Viễn's reputation grew, Nguyễn Binh gave the order to kill Viễn and suppressed his supporters. With two trusted companies, Viễn fought his way out of an assassination setup and surrendered to Savani, head of the Deuxième Bureau/SDECE in Cochinchina. In June 1948, Bảy Viễn became colonel in charge of the Bình Xuyên Auxiliary Forces, temporarily reporting to Trần Văn Hữu, Deputy Premier in the provisional government of Vietnam and Governor of Nam Phan.[11]

French officials in South Vietnam gave Viễn full control of Sài Gòn–Chợ Lớn under stipulation that he wipe out the city's Communist infrastructure. Bảy Viễn's knowledge of the Việt Minh and his desire to destroy Nguyễn Binh's troops in Saigon enabled him to destroy Communist forces in a very short time. The French colonial government rewarded Bình Xuyên's success by allowing Bảy Viễn to monopolize the trucking industry in South Vietnam and allowing the kingpin to operate as a warlord. Bảy Viễn was promoted to major general after the operation to clear Route 15.[12][13]

Partition of Vietnam and rise to power edit

In 1949, Emperor Bảo Đại became the head of state of the newly formed State of Vietnam. To solve the problem of having to spread the Vietnamese National Army too thin in the war against the Viet Minh, he decreed all non-communist military forces in the country as independent armies within the conventional army. Bảy Viễn was given the rank of major general of the Vietnamese National Army and his troops became the QDQG Bình Xuyên, which was a self-funded army with revenues from legally-run brothels and casinos; Bảy Viễn forcibly took control of the casinos from Macanese organized crime groups.[14][15]

General Viễn made arrangements with Bảo Đại giving them control of their own affairs in return for their nominal support of the regime, just as he had done so with the French colonial government. In March 1955, the group joined the Cao Đài and Hòa Hảo in forming a "United Front of the National Forces."[16]

Demise edit

At the time of the short war in 1955 between the VNA Bình Xuyên and the regular VNA, Viễn had five regular infantry battalions and two battalions of Public Security Shock Troops (Vietnamese: Công an xung phong). Bình Xuyên's paramilitary forces were mostly wiped out by the VNA under the command of Dương Văn Minh in Operation Rung Sat in 1955. Bảy Viễn, the leader of the organization, was exiled to Paris after his unsuccessful attempt to take power from Prime Minister Ngô Đình Diệm in May 1955. Major Lê Paul, Bảy Viễn's son, was brutally killed after Dương Văn Minh (a.k.a. "Big Minh") failed to demand a ransom from Bảy Viễn.[17]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Quân Sử 4
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 February 2010. Retrieved 16 April 2010.
  3. ^ Bo Doi, chapter 1
  4. ^ Bo Doi, ibid.
  5. ^ Bo Doi, ibid.
  6. ^ Bo Doi, ibid.
  7. ^ Bo Doi, chapter 3: Phuoc An Headquarters and the Bà Nho Trial
  8. ^ Huỳnh Kim Khánh, "Background of the Vietnamese August Revolution", The Journal of Asia Studies, vol. 25, no. 4 (August 1971), pp. 771-772
  9. ^ Bo Doi, chapter 3
  10. ^ Bo Doi, chapter 4: Operation to the west (Vietnamese: Cuộc hành quân về miền Tây)
  11. ^ Bo Doi, chapter 7
  12. ^ Quân Sử 4, pp. 409-11
  13. ^ La guerre d'Indochine, pp. 364-72
  14. ^ Quân Sử 4, pp. 410-11
  15. ^ La guerre d'Indochine, pp. 354-62
  16. ^ Serguei A. Blagov - Caodaism: Vietnamese Traditionalism and Its Leap Into Modernity, 2001; " Phạm Công Tác was widely believed to be a mastermind, responsible for the formation of the "United Front of the National Forces"' in cooperation with the Hòa Hảo and Bình Xuyên."
  17. ^ Quân Sử 4, pp. 411-28.

Bibliography edit

  • AFRVN Military History Section J-5, Strategic Planning and Policy (1977) [1966]. Quân Sử 4: Quân lực Việt Nam Cộng Hòa trong giai-đoạn hình-thành: 1946-1955 [Military History Volume 4:AFRVN, the formation period, 1946-1955] (in Vietnamese). Taiwan: DaiNam Publishing. pp. 408–28. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • Ho Son Dai (2008). Bo Doi Binh Xuyen [Binh Xuyen Force] (in Vietnamese). HCM City.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Lucien Bodard (1977). La guerre d'Indochine [The Indochina War] (in French). Hachette. ISBN 2-246-55291-5.
  • Pierre Darcourt (1977). Bay Vien, le maitre de Cholon [Bay Vien, Cholon's Master] (in French). Hachette. ISBN 978-2-01-003449-7.
  • Huynh Kim Khanh, "Background of the Vietnamese August Revolution", The Journal of Asia Studies 25, no. 4 (August 1971)
  • Alfred W. McCoy (2003). The Politics of Heroin. Lawrence Hill Books. ISBN 1-55652-483-8.
  • Nguyên Hùng (2005). Bảy Viễn Thủ Lĩnh Bình Xuyên [Bay Vien, Binh Xuyen's Leader] (in Vietnamese). Cong An Nhan Dan Viet Nam - Vietnamese People's Public Security.
  • Simpson, Howard R. (August 1992). Tiger in the Barbed Wire: An American in Vietnam, 1952-1991. Brassey's Inc. ISBN 0-7881-5148-7.
  • Simpson, Howard R. (1998). Bush Hat, Black Tie: adventures of a foreign service officer. Brassey's Inc. ISBN 1-57488-154-X.
  • Truong Nhu Tang (1985). A Vietcong Memoir. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. p. 63. ISBN 0-15-193636-6.

Newsreel edit

  • Indochina: Saigon after the combats (rushes) French news archives, ORTF, 10 May 1955

External links edit

  • Origins of the Insurgency in South Vietnam, 1954-1960 20 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine The Pentagon Papers, Gravel Edition, Boston: Beacon Press, 1971
  • - a brief history of Bình Xuyên
  • "Insignias of Vietnam's armies" (PDF). Retrieved 21 April 2010.

bình, xuyên, district, vĩnh, phúc, province, district, this, article, relies, largely, entirely, single, source, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, citations, additional, sources, find, sources, news, ne. For the district in Vĩnh Phuc Province see Binh Xuyen District This article relies largely or entirely on a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources Find sources Binh Xuyen news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2011 Binh Xuyen Force Vietnamese Bộ đội Binh Xuyen Chữ Nom 平川部隊 IPA ɓɨ n swieŋ often linked to its infamous leader General Le Văn Viễn a k a Bảy Viễn was an independent military force within the Vietnamese National Army whose leaders once had lived outside the law and had sided with the Việt Minh During its heyday Binh Xuyen funded itself with organized crime activities in Saigon while effectively battling Communist forces 1 Binh Xuyen ForceBộ đội Binh Xuyen平川部隊War standard Active1945 1960CountryDemocratic Republic of Vietnam Cochinchina South VietnamTypeMilitaryNickname s Binh Xuyen GroupBinh Xuyen ForceBinh Xuyen Volunteer PoliceMotto s Honor FatherlandColoursRed blue yellowEngagementsBattle of Saigon 1955 CommandersNotablecommandersDương Văn DươngHuỳnh Văn TrọngDương Văn HaVo Văn MonLe Văn ViễnThai Hoang MinhNguyễn Văn Hiểu Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation 1 2 1920s 1930s 1 3 Ba Dương s Binh Xuyen 1940 1946 1 4 From outlaws to revolutionaries 1 5 Binh Xuyen divided 1 6 Partition of Vietnam and rise to power 1 7 Demise 2 See also 3 References 4 Bibliography 5 Newsreel 6 External linksHistory editFormation edit Binh Xuyen groups first emerged in the early 1920s as a loosely organized coalition of gangs and contract laborers about two hundred to three hundred strong Binh Xuyen s early history consisted of cycles of kidnapping piracy pursuit and occasionally imprisonment One of the gang leaders was Ba Dương a kingpin in the Saigon Cholon area His lieutenants included Huỳnh Văn Tri a k a Mười Tri Dương Văn Ha a k a Năm Ha Vo Văn Mon a k a Bảy Mon and Le Văn Viễn a k a Bảy Viễn 2 Binh Xuyen s history is largely that of two separate groups Ba Dương s troops the Bộ Đội Binh Xuyen and Bảy Viễn s Binh Xuyen 1920s 1930s edit From the 1920s to the mid 1930s Nha Be was a haven for hundreds of armed gangs led by several leaders Some were groups of gangsters picking on the helpless while others robbed the rich reportedly to help the poor Some of the well known gangsters at the time included Trần Văn Doi a k a Sau Doi was notorious for his protection services In 1940 he bribed port officials for sole protection of a lumberyard used by a pro Japanese shipbuilding company in South Vietnam Trần Văn Thọ a k a Sau Thọ s gang concentrated on kidnapping and extortion of rich families Đoan Văn Ngọc a k a Ba Ngọc and his brother Đoan Văn Gin a k a Ba Gin operated brothels and provided protection to independent prostitutes in the Tan Thuận area Nguyễn Văn Mạnh a k a Tam Mạnh a martial arts teacher started the first organized crime unit in Saigon In 1940 after joining the Communist Party Mạnh ordered his gang to cease all criminal activities and concentrate on helping the party in an upcoming uprising He later brought his gang to join Ba Dương s Binh Xuyen troops 3 Ba Dương s Binh Xuyen 1940 1946 edit Dương Văn Dương a k a Ba Dương was born in 1900 to a family of poor peasants from Bến Tre His mother remarried after his father s death and the family moved to Nha Be in the late 1920s where Dương grew up to be a respected martial arts teacher 4 In 1936 Dương started his criminal activities by providing protection services to the Tay Ninh Phnom Penh bus station in Saigon By 1940 he had become a kingpin of Cochinchina In 1943 Dương joined the Communist party In 1945 he stole weapons from the Japanese to arm his troops in order to fight the returning French forces His Bộ Đội Ba Dương was reportedly one of the groups most feared by local French trained militia In 1945 the 2 000 armed men under different leaders in the Nha Be area elected Dương their commander Together they chose to name the newly formed unit the Binh Xuyen Troops Vietnamese Bộ Đội Binh Xuyen 5 From outlaws to revolutionaries edit In late 1929 after the formation of the southern Communist committee Ngo Gia Tự ordered Chau Văn Ky to infiltrate the ranks of workers and manual laborers in Nha Be By 1940 Ky with Nguyễn Văn Tran a k a Bảy Tran enlisted gang leaders and their members one of the most prominent was Tam Manh After the botched southern uprising Vietnamese Khởi nghĩa Nam Kỳ the French colonial authorities brutally suppressed all opposition groups 6 On 24 September 1945 Le Văn Khoi a k a Ba Nho one of Ba Dương s lieutenants allegedly organized the massacre of 150 French and Eurasian civilians including children in Saigon without order from its leader 7 While this decision would have been of little consequence in Tonkin or central Vietnam where the Communist dominated Việt Minh was strong enough to stand alone in Cochin China where the Binh Xuyen support was crucial Ba Nho s action led to suppression from the returning French troops The Cochin division of the Indochina Communist party Vietnamese Đong Dương Cộng sản Năm Bộ was weakened by mass arrests and executions 8 A decision was made by the southern communist committee to put Ba Nho on trial Ba Nho was tricked by Nguyễn Binh into returning to Phuoc An where he was found guilty and sentenced to death Ba Nho requested to be allowed to take his own life which was granted 9 In September 1945 Southern Communist party leaders Trần Văn Giau Nguyễn Văn Tran et al put Ba Dương in charge of the guerrilla forces attacking southern Saigon more commonly referred as Front number 4 For two months Binh Xuyen troops relentlessly attacked and overran several French military facilities and posts Dương s group eventually lost to the more disciplined and better trained French Union troops On 20 November 1945 to avoid being decimated by French counter attacks Binh Xuyen troops withdrew to Rung Sac to regroup for future military operations In the next few months Binh Xuyen troops expanded their operations toward the west of South Vietnam Zone 8 During these few months they successfully took control of Go Cong Mỹ Tho and Bến Tre the last province being where they established their new base Ba Dương newly promoted by General Nguyễn Binh in September to Deputy Commander of Zone 7 died in an air attack on 16 February 1946 10 Without Dương his lieutenants began to disagree with each other on who would be the troops new commander Nguyễn Binh who had unsuccessfully tried to kill Binh Xuyen s new strongman Le Văn Viễn a k a Bảy Viễn would later step in to disband the Binh Xuyen in 1948 citation needed Binh Xuyen divided edit After Ba Dương s death his lieutenants split into three groups Supporters of Ba Dương s half brother Dương Văn Ha a k a Năm Ha Backers for Le Văn Viễn a k a Bảy Viễn in his bid to become the new commander Those who remained neutral in the power struggle In April 1946 Military Zone 7 appointed Năm Ha as the Binh Xuyen s new commander Bảy Viễn upset with the decision formed the Binh Xuyen Interzone with leaders and troops from 7 units Despite the schism Binh Xuyen remained united in the fight against the French As Bảy Viễn s reputation grew Nguyễn Binh gave the order to kill Viễn and suppressed his supporters With two trusted companies Viễn fought his way out of an assassination setup and surrendered to Savani head of the Deuxieme Bureau SDECE in Cochinchina In June 1948 Bảy Viễn became colonel in charge of the Binh Xuyen Auxiliary Forces temporarily reporting to Trần Văn Hữu Deputy Premier in the provisional government of Vietnam and Governor of Nam Phan 11 French officials in South Vietnam gave Viễn full control of Sai Gon Chợ Lớn under stipulation that he wipe out the city s Communist infrastructure Bảy Viễn s knowledge of the Việt Minh and his desire to destroy Nguyễn Binh s troops in Saigon enabled him to destroy Communist forces in a very short time The French colonial government rewarded Binh Xuyen s success by allowing Bảy Viễn to monopolize the trucking industry in South Vietnam and allowing the kingpin to operate as a warlord Bảy Viễn was promoted to major general after the operation to clear Route 15 12 13 Partition of Vietnam and rise to power edit In 1949 Emperor Bảo Đại became the head of state of the newly formed State of Vietnam To solve the problem of having to spread the Vietnamese National Army too thin in the war against the Viet Minh he decreed all non communist military forces in the country as independent armies within the conventional army Bảy Viễn was given the rank of major general of the Vietnamese National Army and his troops became the QDQG Binh Xuyen which was a self funded army with revenues from legally run brothels and casinos Bảy Viễn forcibly took control of the casinos from Macanese organized crime groups 14 15 General Viễn made arrangements with Bảo Đại giving them control of their own affairs in return for their nominal support of the regime just as he had done so with the French colonial government In March 1955 the group joined the Cao Đai and Hoa Hảo in forming a United Front of the National Forces 16 Demise edit At the time of the short war in 1955 between the VNA Binh Xuyen and the regular VNA Viễn had five regular infantry battalions and two battalions of Public Security Shock Troops Vietnamese Cong an xung phong Binh Xuyen s paramilitary forces were mostly wiped out by the VNA under the command of Dương Văn Minh in Operation Rung Sat in 1955 Bảy Viễn the leader of the organization was exiled to Paris after his unsuccessful attempt to take power from Prime Minister Ngo Đinh Diệm in May 1955 Major Le Paul Bảy Viễn s son was brutally killed after Dương Văn Minh a k a Big Minh failed to demand a ransom from Bảy Viễn 17 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Binh Xuyen Force Hoa Hảo Cao ĐaiReferences edit Quan Sử 4 VN thu quan Archived from the original on 3 February 2010 Retrieved 16 April 2010 Bo Doi chapter 1 Bo Doi ibid Bo Doi ibid Bo Doi ibid Bo Doi chapter 3 Phuoc An Headquarters and the Ba Nho Trial Huỳnh Kim Khanh Background of the Vietnamese August Revolution The Journal of Asia Studies vol 25 no 4 August 1971 pp 771 772 Bo Doi chapter 3 Bo Doi chapter 4 Operation to the west Vietnamese Cuộc hanh quan về miền Tay Bo Doi chapter 7 Quan Sử 4 pp 409 11 La guerre d Indochine pp 364 72 Quan Sử 4 pp 410 11 La guerre d Indochine pp 354 62 Serguei A Blagov Caodaism Vietnamese Traditionalism and Its Leap Into Modernity 2001 Phạm Cong Tac was widely believed to be a mastermind responsible for the formation of the United Front of the National Forces in cooperation with the Hoa Hảo and Binh Xuyen Quan Sử 4 pp 411 28 Bibliography editAFRVN Military History Section J 5 Strategic Planning and Policy 1977 1966 Quan Sử 4 Quan lực Việt Nam Cộng Hoa trong giai đoạn hinh thanh 1946 1955 Military History Volume 4 AFRVN the formation period 1946 1955 in Vietnamese Taiwan DaiNam Publishing pp 408 28 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Ho Son Dai 2008 Bo Doi Binh Xuyen Binh Xuyen Force in Vietnamese HCM City a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Lucien Bodard 1977 La guerre d Indochine The Indochina War in French Hachette ISBN 2 246 55291 5 Pierre Darcourt 1977 Bay Vien le maitre de Cholon Bay Vien Cholon s Master in French Hachette ISBN 978 2 01 003449 7 Huynh Kim Khanh Background of the Vietnamese August Revolution The Journal of Asia Studies 25 no 4 August 1971 Alfred W McCoy 2003 The Politics of Heroin Lawrence Hill Books ISBN 1 55652 483 8 Nguyen Hung 2005 Bảy Viễn Thủ Lĩnh Binh Xuyen Bay Vien Binh Xuyen s Leader in Vietnamese Cong An Nhan Dan Viet Nam Vietnamese People s Public Security Simpson Howard R August 1992 Tiger in the Barbed Wire An American in Vietnam 1952 1991 Brassey s Inc ISBN 0 7881 5148 7 Simpson Howard R 1998 Bush Hat Black Tie adventures of a foreign service officer Brassey s Inc ISBN 1 57488 154 X Truong Nhu Tang 1985 A Vietcong Memoir Harcourt Brace Jovanovich p 63 ISBN 0 15 193636 6 Newsreel editIndochina Saigon after the combats rushes French news archives ORTF 10 May 1955External links editOrigins of the Insurgency in South Vietnam 1954 1960 Archived 20 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine The Pentagon Papers Gravel Edition Boston Beacon Press 1971 Bến Tre Province website Biography of General Dương Văn Dương Sects Drugs and Warrior Monks Auxiliary Forces of the French in Vietnam 1945 1954 Bộ Đội Binh Xuyen a brief history of Binh Xuyen The Binh Xuyen Order and Opium in Saigon Insignias of Vietnam s armies PDF Retrieved 21 April 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Binh Xuyen amp oldid 1180210109, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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