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Dương Văn Minh

Dương Văn Minh (Vietnamese: [jɨəŋ van miŋ̟] ; 16 February 1916 – 6 August 2001), popularly known as Big Minh, was a South Vietnamese politician and a senior general in the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) and a politician during the presidency of Ngô Đình Diệm. In 1963, he became chief of a military junta after leading a coup in which Diệm was assassinated. Minh lasted only three months before being toppled by Nguyễn Khánh, but assumed power again as the fourth and last President of South Vietnam in April 1975, two days before surrendering to North Vietnamese forces. He earned his nickname "Big Minh", because he was approximately 1.83 m (6 ft) tall and weighed 90 kg (198 lb).[1]

Dương Văn Minh
Minh in 1964
4th President of South Vietnam
In office
28 April 1975 – 30 April 1975
Prime MinisterVũ Văn Mẫu
Vice PresidentNguyễn Văn Huyền
Preceded byTrần Văn Hương
Succeeded byNguyễn Hữu Thọ (as President of the Provisional Revolutionary Government of the Republic of South Vietnam)
1st Chairman of the Military Revolutionary Council
In office
29 August 1964 – 26 October 1964
Prime MinisterNguyễn Khánh
Preceded byNguyễn Khánh
Succeeded byPhan Khắc Sửu (as civilian head of state)
In office
8 February 1964 – 16 August 1964
Prime MinisterNguyễn Khánh
Preceded byNguyễn Khánh
Succeeded byNguyễn Khánh
In office
2 November 1963 – 30 January 1964
Prime MinisterNguyễn Ngọc Thơ
Preceded byNgô Đình Diệm (as President of South Vietnam)
Succeeded byNguyễn Khánh
Personal details
Born(1916-02-16)16 February 1916
Mỹ Tho Province, Cochinchina, French Indochina (now Tiền Giang province, Vietnam)
Died6 August 2001(2001-08-06) (aged 85)
Pasadena, California, US
Political partyIndependent
Other political
affiliations
Military
Children3
Relatives
EducationCollège Chasseloup-Laubat
NicknameBig Minh
Military service
AllegianceSouth Vietnam
Branch/service
Years of service1940–1964
RankGeneral (Đại Tướng)
CommandsHead of the Military Revolutionary Council (1963–1964)
Battles/wars

Born in Tiền Giang province in the Mekong Delta region of southern Vietnam, Minh joined the French Army at the start of World War II, and was captured and tortured by the Imperial Japanese, who invaded and seized French Indochina. After his release, he joined the French-backed Vietnamese National Army (VNA) and was imprisoned by the communist-dominated Viet Minh before breaking out. In 1955, when Vietnam was partitioned and the State of Vietnam controlled the southern half under Prime Minister Ngô Đình Diệm, Minh led the VNA in decisively defeating the Bình Xuyên paramilitary crime syndicate in street combat and dismantling the Hòa Hảo religious tradition's private army. This made him popular with the people and Diệm, but the latter later put him in a powerless position, regarding him as a threat.

In 1963, the authoritarian Diệm became increasingly unpopular due to the Buddhist crisis and the ARVN generals decided to launch a coup, which Minh eventually led. Diệm was assassinated on 2 November 1963 shortly after being deposed. Minh was accused of ordering an aide, Nguyễn Văn Nhung, to kill Diệm.[2][3] Minh then led a junta for three months, but he was an unsuccessful leader and was heavily criticized for being lethargic and uninterested. During his three months of rule, many civilian problems intensified and the communist Viet Cong made significant gains. Angered at not receiving his desired post, General Nguyễn Khánh led a group of similarly motivated officers in a January 1964 coup. Khánh allowed Minh to stay on as a token head of state in order to capitalize on Minh's public standing, but retained real power. After a power struggle, Khanh had Minh exiled. Minh stayed away before deciding to return and challenge General Nguyễn Văn Thiệu in the presidential election of 1971. When it became obvious that Thieu would rig the poll, Minh withdrew and did not return until 1972, keeping a low profile.

Minh then advocated a "third force", maintaining that Vietnam could be reunified without a military victory to a hardline communist or anti-communist government. However, this was not something that Thiệu agreed with. In April 1975, as South Vietnam was on the verge of being overrun, Thieu resigned. A week later, Minh was forcibly chosen by the legislature and became president on 28 April. Saigon fell two days later on 30 April, and Minh ordered a surrender to prevent bloody urban street fighting. Minh was spared the lengthy incarceration meted out to South Vietnamese military personnel and civil servants, and lived quietly until being allowed to emigrate to France in 1983. He later moved to California, where he died.

Early years edit

Minh was born on 16 February 1916 in Mỹ Tho Province in the Mekong Delta, to a wealthy landowner who served in a prominent position in the Finance Ministry of the French colonial administration.[4] He went to Saigon where he attended a top French colonial school, now Le Quy Don High School,[5] where King Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia also studied.[6] Unlike many of his classmates, Minh declined French citizenship and joined the Corps Indigène, the local component of the French colonial army.[5]

He began his military career in 1940,[4] and was one of only 50 Vietnamese officers to be commissioned when he graduated from the École Militaire in France.[7] During the 1940s, Imperial Japan invaded Indochina and seized control from France. Minh was captured and later had only a single tooth that remained from the torture he had suffered at the hands of the Kempeitai (Japanese military police). He always smiled displaying the single tooth, which he regarded as a symbol of his toughness.[7]

Vietnamese National Army/battles against Bình Xuyên and Hòa Hảo edit

Minh then transferred to the French-backed State of Vietnam's Vietnamese National Army in 1952.[4][5] In 1954, Minh was captured by the Việt Minh. He escaped after strangling a communist guard and fighting off a few others.[8]

In May 1955, he led VNA forces in the Battle of Saigon, when they dismantled the private army of the Bình Xuyên crime syndicate in urban warfare in the district of Chợ Lớn. With the Bình Xuyên vanquished, Diệm turned his attention to conquering the Hòa Hảo. As a result, a battle between Minh's VNA troops and Ba Cụt's men commenced in Cần Thơ on 5 June. Five Hòa Hảo battalions surrendered immediately; Ba Cụt and three remaining leaders had fled to the Cambodian border by the end of the month.[9][10] The soldiers of the three other leaders eventually surrendered in the face of Minh's onslaught, but Ba Cụt's men fought to the end.[9][10] Understanding that they could not defeat Minh's men in open conventional warfare, Ba Cụt's forces destroyed their own bases so that the VNA could not use their abandoned resources, and retreated into the jungle.[11] Ba Cụt's 3,000 men spent the rest of 1955 evading the 20,000 VNA troops commanded by Minh.[11] Ba Cụt was arrested by a patrol on 13 April 1956, and later executed,[9][12] and his remaining forces were defeated by Minh.[12][13]

The victories over the Hòa Hảo and the Bình Xuyên were the zenith of Minh's battlefield career. When Minh arrived at a military parade in his jeep before the reviewing stand after the victories, Diệm embraced him and kissed both cheeks.[7] He was particularly popular among the population of Saigon, having purged their city of the Bình Xuyên.[5] This earned him the respect of US officials and he was sent to the United States to study, despite his poor English, at the US Command and General Staff College at Leavenworth, Kansas.[6]

In November 1960, a coup attempt was made against Diệm. Minh, by this time disillusioned, did not come to Diệm's defense during the siege and instead stayed at his Saigon home. Diệm responded by appointing Minh to the post of Presidential Military Advisor, where he had no influence or troops to command in case the thought of coup ever crossed his mind.[14][15] According to historian Howard Jones, Minh was "in charge of three telephones", and remained in the post until Diệm's overthrow.[7]

Overthrow of Diệm edit

Minh and Trần Văn Đôn, the ARVN Chief of Staff who had no troops due to Diệm's suspicion of him,[16] went to observe the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO)'s military exercises in Thailand,[17] where they were informed about the regional disquiet over Diệm's policies toward Buddhists.[18]

Minh frequently railed against Diệm in his September meeting with Lodge, decrying the police state that was being created by the Cần Lao Party of the Ngô family.[19] Harkins reported that Minh "has done nothing but complain to me about the government and the way it is handled since I have been here". Harkins was skeptical about Minh's claims of widespread public disenchantment.[20]

During late-September, President Kennedy dispatched the McNamara Taylor mission to investigate the political and military situation in South Vietnam. This included investigating an ARVN coup. Minh expressed an interest in meeting McNamara and Taylor, so a game of doubles tennis was organized. McNamara watched on as Taylor played with Minh, giving "broad hints of our interest in other subjects which we gave him during breaks in the game".[21] Minh revealed nothing of his thoughts about a possible coup, leaving his guests bewildered. Minh later messaged Taylor with a complaint about a perceived lack of support from Washington for a coup.[21] Diệm became very unpopular during the Buddhist crisis of 1963; the US informed the Vietnamese generals (through the CIA) that it would not object if Diệm were to be overthrown. Minh was the second highest ranking general at the time, and he led the coup to overthrow Diệm on 1 November 1963.[22]

In the afternoon, Minh ordered his bodyguard, Nguyễn Văn Nhung, to arrest, and later execute, Colonel Lê Quang Tung, one of Diệm's closest and most faithful associates. The generals hated Tung, because, at Ngô Đình Nhu's instructions, he had disguised his men in regular army uniforms and framed the army for the Xá Lợi Pagoda raids several months earlier, in August.[23][24] At nightfall, Nhung took Tung and Major Lê Quảng Trịeu, his brother and deputy[25] and drove them to the edge of Tan Son Nhut Air Base. Forced to kneel over two freshly dug holes, the brothers were shot into their graves and buried.[23] In the early morning of 2 November, Diệm agreed to surrender. The ARVN officers had reportedly originally intended merely to exile Diệm and Nhu, having promised them safe passage".[26][27]

Minh and Đôn asked Colonel Lucien Conein to secure an American aircraft to take the brothers out of the country. Assistant Secretary of State Roger Hilsman recommended that if the generals decide to exile Diệm, he should also be sent outside Southeast Asia.[28] He went on to anticipate what he termed a "Götterdämmerung in the palace".[29]

Minh then went to Gia Long Palace, and Minh sent an armored personnel carrier to transport Diệm and Nhu, while the others prepared for the ceremonial and televised handover of power to the junta.[27] Minh arrived in full military ceremonial uniform to supervise the arrest of the Ngô brothers, only to find that they had escaped and humiliated him, having talked to him from a safe house. Minh was reported to be mortified when he realised that Diệm and Nhu had escaped in the middle of the night leaving the rebels to fight for an empty building.[7] However, Diệm's hideout was found and surrounded, and Minh sent General Mai Hữu Xuân, his deputy Colonel Nguyễn Văn Quan, his bodyguard Nguyễn Văn Nhung and Dương Hiếu Nghĩa to arrest both brothers.[30]

Nhung and Nghĩa sat with the brothers in the APC as the convoy headed off after the arrest. Before the convoy had departed for the church, Minh was reported to have gestured to Nhung, who was a contract killer and Minh's bodyguard,[4] with two right-hand fingers.[4] This was taken to be an order to kill both brothers. During the journey, the brothers were killed in the APC, with Nhung riddling their bodies with many bullets.[4] An investigation by Đôn later determined that Nghĩa and Nhung sprayed them with bullets before repeatedly stabbing them.[31] When the corpses arrived at military headquarters, the generals were shocked.[32] Đôn ordered another general to tell reporters that the brothers had died in an accident and went to confront Minh in his office.[32]

  • Đôn: Why are they dead?
  • Minh: And what does it matter that they are dead?[32]

Đôn later reported that Minh had answered his question in a "haughty" tone.[32] At this time, Xuân walked into Minh's office through the open door, unaware of Đôn's presence. Xuân snapped to attention and stated "Mission accomplie".[32]

Minh had his subordinates report that the Ngô brothers had committed suicide. Unclear and contradictory stories abounded on the exact method used by the brothers. Minh said "Due to an inadvertence, there was a gun inside the vehicle. It was with this gun that they committed suicide."[33] Conein soon realized that the generals' story was false.[34] Soon after, photos of the bloodied corpses of the brothers appeared in the media, discrediting the generals' lies.[35] Đôn's assertion that the assassinations were unplanned proved sufficient for Lodge, who told the State Department that "I am sure assassination was not at their direction."[36] Minh and Đôn reiterated their position in a meeting with Conein and Lodge a few days after the coup.[36]

Culpability regarding killings of Diệm and Nhu edit

The assassinations caused a split within the junta and repulsed world opinion. The killings damaged the public belief that the new regime would be an improvement over Diệm, throwing the generals into discord. Criticism over the killings caused the officers to battle one another for positions in the new government.[36] The responsibility for the assassinations has generally been laid at the doorstep of Minh. Conein asserted that "I have it on very good authority of very many people, that Big Minh gave the order",[37] as did William Colby, the director of the CIA's Far Eastern division. Đôn, however, was equally emphatic, saying "I can state without equivocation that this was done by General Dương Văn Minh and by him alone."[37] Lodge believed Xuân was at least partly culpable, asserting: "Diệm and Nhu had been assassinated, if not by Xuan personally, at least at his direction."[36] Some months after the event, Minh was reported to have privately told an American official that "We had no alternative. They had to be killed. Diệm could not be allowed to live because he was too much respected among simple, gullible people in the countryside, especially the Catholics and the refugees. We had to kill Nhu because he was so widely feared — and he had created organizations that were arms of his personal power."[37]

When Nguyễn Văn Thiệu became president, Minh blamed him for the assassinations. In 1971, Minh claimed that Thiệu had caused the deaths by hesitating and delaying the attack by his 5th Division on Gia Long Palace. Đôn was reported to have pressured Thiệu during the night of the siege, asking him on the phone "Why are you so slow in doing it? Do you need more troops? If you do, ask Đính to send more troops—and do it quickly because after taking the palace you will be made a general."[38] Thiệu denied responsibility and issued a statement: "Dương Văn Minh has to assume entire responsibility for the death of Ngô Đình Diệm."[37]

Trần Văn Hương, an opposition politician who was jailed by Diệm, and a future prime minister and president, gave a scathing analysis of the generals' action. He said "The top generals who decided to murder Diệm and his brother were scared to death. The generals knew very well that having no talent, no moral virtues, no political support whatsoever, they could not prevent a spectacular comeback of the president and Mr. Nhu if they were alive."[39]

Conein asserted that Minh's humiliation by Diệm and Nhu was a major motivation for ordering their executions. Conein reasoned that the brothers were doomed to death once they escaped from the palace, instead of surrendering and accepting the offer of safe exile. Having successfully stormed the palace, Minh had arrived at the presidential residence in full ceremonial military uniform "with a sedan and everything else". Conein described Minh as a "very proud man" who had lost face by turning up at the palace, ready to claim victory, only to find an empty building. He claimed that Diệm and Nhu would not have been killed if they were in the palace, because there were too many people present.[37]

American policy makers later came to believe that the coup and the murders of Diệm and his brother more deeply entrenched the United States in the war, by increasing its responsibility for what had occurred after the deposing of Diệm's administration.[4]

In the view of Stanley Karnow, a former journalist in Saigon for The Saturday Evening Post, ''Minh was not the main mover. But as the senior general, he was the man who crystallized the various factions who were all plotting against Diệm. Everybody and his brother had a plot.''[4]

Rule edit

Minh took over the government under a military junta on 6 November, which consisted of 12 generals. To give the regime a civilian veneer, Diệm's figurehead Vice President, Nguyễn Ngọc Thơ, was appointed Prime Minister of a provisional civilian government overseen by the Military Revolutionary Council (MRC).[40] Despite his nominally being the second most important person in the Diệm regime, Thơ was a figurehead with little influence, which lay with Diệm's brothers.[41] Diệm held Thơ in contempt and did not allow him to take part in policy decisions.[42] Tho entered into intensive bargaining with Minh on 2 November on the composition of the interim government. Thơ knew that the generals wanted to have him head a new government to provide continuity, and he used this as leverage in bargaining with them about the makeup of the cabinet. The Americans recognized Minh and immediately restored the aid programs and that had been cut to punish Diệm in the last days of his rule.[43]

With the fall of Diệm, various American sanctions that were imposed in response to the repression of the Buddhist crisis and Nhu's Special Forces' attacks on the Xá Lợi Pagoda, were lifted. The freeze on US economic aid, the suspension of the Commercial Import Program and various capital works initiatives were lifted, and Thơ and Minh were recognised.[43] The first order of the new regime was Provisional Constitutional Act No. 1, signed by Minh, formally suspending the 1956 constitution created by Diệm.[43] Minh was said to have preferred playing mah-jongg, playing tennis at the elite Cercle Sportif,[4] tending to his garden and giving tea parties to fighting the Viet Cong (VC) or running the country.[6] He was criticised for being lethargic and uninterested.[44] Stanley Karnow said "He was a model of lethargy, lacking both the skill and the inclination to govern". According to Karnow, Minh lamented to him that because of his role as the junta head, he "didn't have enough time to grow his orchids or play tennis".[4]

Saigon newspapers, which Minh had allowed to re-open following the end of Diệm's censorship, reported that the junta was paralysed because all twelve generals in the MRC had equal power. Each member had the power of veto, enabling them to stonewall policy decisions.[45] Thơ's civilian government was plagued by infighting. According to Thơ's assistant, Nguyễn Ngọc Huy, the presence of Generals Đôn and Đính in both the civilian cabinet and the MRC paralysed the governance process. Đính and Đôn were subordinate to Tho in the civilian government, but as members of the MRC they were superior to him. Whenever Thơ gave an order in the civilian hierarchy with which the generals disagreed, they would go to the MRC and make a counter-order.[46]

The press strongly attacked Thơ, accusing his civilian government of being "tools" of the MRC.[47] Thơ's acquiescence to and corruption under Diệm's presidency was also called into question, and he was accused of helping to repress the Buddhists by Diệm and Nhu. Tho claimed that he had countenanced the pagoda raids, claiming that he would have resigned were it not for Minh's pleas to stay. Minh defended Thơ's anti-Diệm credentials by declaring that Tho had taken part in the planning of the coup "from the very outset" and that he enjoyed the "full confidence" of the junta.[47]

On 1 January 1964, a 'Council of Notables' comprising sixty leading citizens met for the first time, having been selected by Colonel Phạm Ngọc Thảo for Minh's junta. Its job was to advise the military and civilian wings of the government with a view towards reforming human rights, the constitution and the legal system.[48] The council consisted almost entirely of professionals and academic leaders, with no representatives from the agricultural or labour movement. It soon became engaged in endless debate and never achieved its initial task of drafting a new constitution.[48]

Minh and Thơ halted Nhu's Strategic Hamlet Program. Nhu had trumpeted the program as the solution to South Vietnam's difficulties with VC insurgents, believing that the mass relocation of peasants into fortified villages would isolate the VC from their peasant support base. According to the junta, only 20% of the 8,600 existing strategic hamlets were under Saigon's control, with the rest having been taken over by the VC, contradicting Nhu's claims of widespread success. Those hamlets that were deemed to be tenable were consolidated, while the remainder were dismantled and their inhabitants returned to their ancestral land.[49]

Under Minh's rule, there was a large turnover of officials aligned with Diệm. Many were indiscriminately arrested without charge, most of whom were later released. Đính and the new national police chief General Mai Hữu Xuân were given control of the interior ministry and were accused of arresting people en masse, before releasing them in return for bribes and pledges of loyalty. The government was criticised for firing large numbers of district and provincial chiefs directly appointed by Diệm, causing a breakdown in law and order during the abrupt transition of power.[45]

The provisional government lacked direction in policy and planning, resulting in its quick collapse.[50] The number of rural attacks instigated by the VC surged in the wake of Diệm's deposal, due to the displacement of troops into urban areas for the coup. The increasingly free discussion generated from the surfacing of new and accurate data following the coup revealed that the military situation was far worse than what was reported by Diệm. The incidence of VC attacks continued to increase as it had done during the summer of 1963, the weapons loss ratio worsened and the rate of VC defections fell. The units that participated in the coup were returned to the field to guard against a possible major VC offensive in the countryside. The falsification of military statistics by Diệm's officials had led to miscalculations, which manifested themselves in military setbacks after Diệm's death.[43]

Overthrow by Nguyễn Khánh edit

General Nguyễn Khánh began to plot against the MRC after it was created. Khánh expected a large reward for his part in the coup, but the other generals regarded him as untrustworthy and excluded him from the MRC.[51] They further moved him to the command of the I Corps in the far north to keep him far away from Saigon.[52][53] Khánh later claimed that he had built up intelligence infrastructure to weed out the VC under Diệm, but that Minh's MRC had disbanded it and released VC prisoners.[54] Khánh was assisted by Generals Trần Thiện Khiêm, who controlled the forces around Saigon, Đỗ Mậu and Nguyễn Chánh Thi.[55] Khánh and his colleagues spread rumours to American officials that Minh and his colleagues were about to declare South Vietnam's neutrality and sign a peace deal to end the war with the North.[56][57]

Khánh overthrew Minh and his colleagues on 30 January 1964, in a bloodless coup, completely catching the MRC off guard.[58][59] Minh, Đôn and Lê Văn Kim woke up to find hostile forces surrounding their houses and thought it to be a quixotic stunt by some disgruntled young officers.[60]

Khánh used the coup to enact retribution against Minh, Đôn, Kim, Đính and Xuân. He had them arrested, claiming that they were part of a neutralist plot with the French. Khánh cited their service in the Vietnamese National Army in the early 1950s, under the French colonial administration as evidence, although he did as well.[61] Khánh also had Major Nhung, the bodyguard of Minh, shot, causing riots among parts of the population who feared that Khánh would wind back the clock to the Diệm era.[62][63] Khánh later persuaded Minh to remain as a figurehead head of state. This was partly due to pressure from American officials, who felt that the popular Minh would be a unifying and stabilising factor in the new regime. However, Khánh soon sidelined Minh.[64][65]

Minh reportedly resented the fact that he had been deposed by a younger officer whom he viewed as an unscrupulous upstart. He was also upset with the detention of his fellow generals and around 30 of his junior officers. The junior officers were set free when Minh demanded that Khánh release them in return for his service. In the meantime, Khánh could not substantiate his claims against the generals.[66]

Khánh presided over the trial,[61] which took place in May. Minh was perfunctorily accused of misusing a small amount of money, before being allowed to serve as an advisor on the trial panel.[65][66] The other generals were eventually asked by Khánh to "once you begin to serve again in the army, you do not take revenge on anybody".[61] The tribunal then "congratulated" the generals, but found that they were of "lax morality", unqualified to command due to a "lack of a clear political concept" and confined to desk jobs.[61] Khánh's actions left divisions among the officers of the ARVN. When Khánh was himself deposed in 1965, he handed over dossiers proving that Minh and the other generals were innocent.[67] Robert Shaplen said that "the case … continued to be one of Khánh's biggest embarrassments".[66]

August and September power struggle with Khánh edit

In August, Khánh drafted a new constitution, which would have augmented his personal power and hamstrung Minh of what authority he had left as well as ousting him from power. However, this only served to weaken Khánh as large urban demonstrations broke out, led by Buddhists, calling for an end to the state of emergency and the new constitution.[68] In response to claims that he was harking back to the Diệm era of Roman Catholic domination, Khánh made concessions to the Buddhists, sparking opposition from Khiêm and Thiệu, both Catholics. They then tried to remove him in favour of Minh, and they recruited many officers.[69] Khiêm and Thiệu sought out Taylor and sought a private endorsement to install Minh by staging a coup against Khánh, but the US ambassador did not want any more changes in leadership, fearing a corrosive effect on the government. This deterred Khiêm's group from staging a coup.[70]

The division among the generals came to a head at a meeting of the MRC on 26–27 August. Khánh and Khiêm blamed one another for the increasing unrest across the nation.[71] Thiệu and another Catholic, General Nguyễn Hữu Có, called for the replacement of Khánh with Minh, but the latter refused. Minh reportedly claimed that Khánh was the only one who would get financial assistance from Washington, so they supported him, prompting Khiêm to angrily say, "Obviously, Khánh is a puppet of the U.S. government, and we are tired of being told by the Americans how we should run our internal affairs".[71] Khánh said that he would resign, but no agreement over the leadership could be found,[71] and after more arguing between the senior officers, on 27 August they agreed that Khánh, Minh, and Khiêm would rule as a triumvirate for two months, until a new civilian government could be formed.[70] The trio then brought paratroopers into Saigon to end the rioting. However, the triumvirate did little due to their disunity. Khánh dominated the decision-making and sidelined Khiêm and Minh.[70]

On 13 September, Generals Lâm Văn Phát and Dương Văn Đức, both Roman Catholics demoted by Khánh after Buddhist pressure, launched a coup attempt with the support of Catholic elements. After a one-day stand-off the putsch failed.[72] During the coup, Minh had remained aloof from the proceedings, angering Khánh and keeping their long-running rivalry going. By the end of October, the Johnson administration became more supportive of Taylor's negative opinion of Minh and concluded that US interests would be optimized if Khánh prevailed in the power struggle. As a result, the Americans eventually paid for Minh to go on a "good will tour" so that he could be pushed off the political scene without embarrassment, while Khiêm was exiled to Washington as an ambassador after being implicated in the coup.[73]

A short while earlier in September, before Minh was sent overseas, the junta decided to create a semblance of civilian rule by creating the High National Council (HNC), an appointed advisory body that was to begin the transitional to constitutional rule. Khánh put Minh in charge of picking the 17 members of the group, and he filled it with figures sympathetic to him. They then made a resolution to recommend a model with a powerful head of state, which would likely be Minh. Khánh did not want his rival taking power, so he and the Americans convinced the HNC to dilute the power inherent in the position to make it unappealing to Minh.[74] The HNC then selected Phan Khắc Sửu as chief of state, and Sửu selected Trần Văn Hương as prime minister, although the junta remained the real power.[75] By the end of the year, Minh was back in Vietnam after his tour.[76]

Khánh prevails edit

Khánh and a group of younger officers decided to forcibly retire officers with more than 25 years of service, such as Minh and the other generals deposed in Khánh's January coup; nominally this was because they thought them to be lethargic and ineffective, but tacitly, and far more importantly, because they were potential rivals for power.[77] According to Khánh and the Young Turks, this older group was led by Minh and had been crafting plots with the Buddhists to regain power.[76][78]

Sửu's signature was required to pass the ruling, but he referred the matter to the HNC,[78] which turned down the request.[79] On 19 December, the generals dissolved the HNC; several of its members, other politicians and student leaders were arrested,[78][80] while Minh and the other older generals were arrested and flown to Pleiku, and later removed from the military.[76]

Exile edit

Minh went into exile in Bangkok, where he occupied himself with hobbies such as gardening and playing tennis.[5] He still had many American friends, especially among the CIA, who gave him support during this period and paid for his dental bills. The US ambassador, Ellsworth Bunker, was openly contemptuous of him and referred to him in public with obscenities. In return, he wrote a pro-war article for the respected Foreign Affairs quarterly in 1968, condemning the communists and rejecting a power-sharing agreement. This helped to end his exile, with the support of the United States.[6]

Minh opposed Thiệu, who as part of the so-called "Young Turks" had meanwhile ended the endless power struggles and coups alongside Nguyễn Cao Kỳ, Nguyễn Chánh Thi and Chung Tấn Cang, by finally outmaneuvering Khánh in 1965, had been governing as constitutional President since 1967 and was permanently supported by the United States. Minh was going to run against Thiệu in the 1971 election but he withdrew because it became obvious to him (and most other observers) that the election would be rigged, due to a series of restrictions against would-be opponents.[6] Thiệu was then the only candidate and retained power. Minh kept a low profile after this and was relatively politically inert.[5]

Minh was regarded as a potential leader of a "third force" which could come to a compromise with North Vietnam that would allow eventual reunification without a military takeover by one of the parties. The North Vietnamese government carefully avoided either endorsing or condemning Minh, whose brother, Dương Văn Nhut, was a one-star general in the People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN). In 1973, Minh proposed his own political program for Vietnam, which was a middle way between the proposals of Thiệu and the communists. Thiệu, however, reportedly opposed any compromise.[6]

Second presidency edit

On 21 April 1975, Thiệu handed over power to Vice President Trần Văn Hương and fled to Taiwan. Hương prepared for peace talks with North Vietnam. However, after his overtures were rejected, he resigned.[81] As the main attack on Saigon developed on 27 April 1975, in a joint sitting of the bicameral National Assembly, the presidency was unanimously handed over to Minh, who was sworn in the following day. The French government thought that Minh could broker a cease-fire and had advocated his ascension to power.[5] There was also an assumption that, as Minh had a reputation for indecision, the various groups thought that they could manipulate him for their own ends relatively easily.[6] It was widely known that Minh[82] had long-standing contacts with the communists,[6] and it was assumed that he would be able to establish a cease-fire and re-open negotiations.[83][84][85] This expectation was totally unrealistic, as the North Vietnamese were in an overwhelmingly dominant position on the battlefield and final victory was within reach, so they saw no need for power-sharing, regardless of any political changes in Saigon.[86]

On 28 April 1975, PAVN forces fought their way into the outskirts of the capital.[87] Later that afternoon, as Minh finished his acceptance speech, in which he called for an immediate cease-fire and peace talks,[6] a formation of five A-37s, captured from the Republic of Vietnam Air Force, bombed Tan Son Nhut Air Base.[88] As Biên Hòa fell, General Nguyễn Văn Toàn, the III Corps commander, fled to Saigon, saying that most of the top ARVN leadership had virtually resigned themselves to defeat.[89] The inauguration of Minh had served as a signal to South Vietnamese officers who would not compromise with the communists. They began to pack up and leave, or commit suicide to avoid capture.[90]

PAVN columns advanced into the city center encountering very little resistance.[91] Except in the Mekong Delta, where South Vietnamese military forces were still intact and aggressive,[92] the South Vietnamese military had virtually ceased to exist. Just before 05:00 on 30 April,[91] US Ambassador Graham Martin boarded a helicopter and departed and at 07:53 the last Marines were evacuated from the US Embassy's rooftop.[93] At 10:24,[91] being advised by General Nguyễn Hữu Hạnh, Minh went on Saigon Radio and ordered all South Vietnamese forces to cease fighting and later declared an unconditional surrender. He announced, "The Republic of Vietnam policy is the policy of peace and reconciliation, aimed at saving the blood of our people. We are here waiting for the Provisional Revolutionary Government to hand over the authority in order to stop useless bloodshed."[6]

According to General Nguyen Huu Hanh's interview from BBC, Minh did not want to evacuate the Saigon government to the Mekong Delta to continue military resistance. Hanh also stated Minh planned a peace to end the war.[94]

Around noon, a PAVN tank crashed through the gates of the Independence Palace.[91][95] When the PAVN troops entered the Independence Palace they found Minh and his cabinet sitting around the big oval table in the cabinet room, waiting for them. As they entered, Minh said "The revolution is here. You are here."[6] He added, "We have been waiting for you so that we could turn over the government." The ranking North Vietnamese officer, Colonel Bùi Văn Tùng replied, "There is no question of your transferring power. Your power has crumbled. You cannot give up what you do not have."[4] Later in the afternoon, he went on radio again and said, "I declare the Saigon government is completely dissolved at all levels."[6]

After his official surrender, he was summoned to report back. After a few days he was permitted to return to his villa, unlike almost all remaining military personnel and public servants,[5] who were sent to re-education camps, often for over a decade in the case of senior officers.[96] He lived there in seclusion for eight years, where he continued to raise birds and grow exotic orchids.[6] It was assumed that Hanoi had resolved that as Minh had not actively opposed them in the final years of the war, he would be allowed to live in peace as long as he remained quiet and did not engage in political activities.[5]

Life in exile edit

Minh was allowed to emigrate to France in 1983 and settled near Paris, and it was again assumed that the communists had permitted him to leave on the basis that he remain aloof from politics and history. In the late 1980s, there was speculation he would be allowed to return to Vietnam to live out his last years, but this did not happen.[5] In 1988, he emigrated to the US, and he lived in Pasadena, California with his daughter, Mai Duong. He later needed a wheelchair for mobility.[4] In exile, Minh kept his silence, did not talk about the events in Vietnam, and did not produce a memoir.[6]

Death edit

On 5 August 2001, Minh fell at his home in Pasadena, California. He was taken to Huntington Memorial Hospital in Pasadena, where he died the following night at the age of 85.[4][6] He was buried in Rose Hills Memorial Park in Whittier, California.[5] Minh's death was largely unmourned by overseas Vietnamese, who were still angry at him for ordering South Vietnamese soldiers to put their weapons down, and who saw him as the officer responsible for South Vietnam's fall.[6]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Dương Văn Minh profile
  2. ^ Robert Trando Letters of a Vietnamese Émigré −2010 Page 87 "We learned soon that President Diệm and his brother Nhu had been savagely butchered on the floor of the M-113 by Major Nhung, the aide of General Dương-Văn Minh. This man had the reputation of being a bloodthirsty monster, that every ..."
  3. ^ Phan Rang Chronicles: A British Surgeon in Vietnam Henry Hamilton – 2007 Page 38 "General Dương Văn Minh, who had assumed power, had the major shot."
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Butterfield, Fox (8 August 2001). "Duong Van Minh, 85, Saigon Plotter, Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 July 2010.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Stowe, Judy (9 August 2001). "General Duong Van Minh". The Independent. Retrieved 11 October 2009.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Oliver, Myrna (8 August 2001). "Duong Van Minh; Last President of S. Vietnam". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 11 October 2009.
  7. ^ a b c d e Jones, p. 418
  8. ^ Jones, p. 417
  9. ^ a b c Jacobs, pp. 99–100.
  10. ^ a b Lansdale, pg. 300
  11. ^ a b Moyar (2006), pp. 53–54
  12. ^ a b Doyle, pg. 131
  13. ^ Moyar (2006), pg. 65
  14. ^ Moyar, p. 114
  15. ^ Hammer, p. 126
  16. ^ Hammer, p. 147
  17. ^ Jones, p. 286
  18. ^ Jones, p. 247
  19. ^ Jones, p. 370.
  20. ^ Jones, p. 371
  21. ^ a b Jones, pg. 373
  22. ^ Tucker, pp. 288–292
  23. ^ a b Jones, p. 414
  24. ^ Hammer, p. 290.
  25. ^ Karnow, p. 321.
  26. ^ Hammer, p. 297
  27. ^ a b Jones, pp. 416–17
  28. ^ Hammer, p. 294
  29. ^ Hammer, p. 295
  30. ^ Hammer, pp. 297–98
  31. ^ Karnow, p. 326
  32. ^ a b c d e Jones, p. 429.
  33. ^ Jones, p. 425
  34. ^ Jones, p. 430
  35. ^ Jones, pp. 430–31
  36. ^ a b c d Jones, p. 436
  37. ^ a b c d e Jones, pg. 435
  38. ^ Hammer, pg. 299
  39. ^ Jones, pp. 435–36
  40. ^ Hammer, pp. 300–01.
  41. ^ Jones, pp. 99–100.
  42. ^ Buttinger, p. 954
  43. ^ a b c d . Pentagon Papers. pp. 266–76. Archived from the original on 24 April 2008. Retrieved 2 November 2007.
  44. ^ Shaplen, pgs. 221-24
  45. ^ a b Shaplen, p. 221
  46. ^ Jones, pg. 437
  47. ^ a b Shaplen, p. 223
  48. ^ a b Shaplen, p. 225
  49. ^ Shaplen, pg. 220
  50. ^ Shaplen, p. 213
  51. ^ Logevall, p. 161
  52. ^ Karnow, pp. 354–55
  53. ^ Shaplen, p. 230
  54. ^ Moyar (2006), p. 294
  55. ^ Shaplen, p. 321
  56. ^ Shaplen, p. 232
  57. ^ Logevall, p. 162
  58. ^ Karnow, pp. 352–54
  59. ^ Shaplen, pgs. 332-3
  60. ^ Langguth, pg. 278
  61. ^ a b c d Langguth, pp. 289–91.
  62. ^ Karnow, p. 354
  63. ^ Langguth, p. 279
  64. ^ Shaplen, pp. 236–37
  65. ^ a b Karnow, p. 355
  66. ^ a b c Shaplen, pgs. 244-5
  67. ^ Langguth, p. 347
  68. ^ Karnow, pp. 394–95
  69. ^ Moyar, p. 762
  70. ^ a b c Moyar (2006), p. 763
  71. ^ a b c Moyar (2006), p. 318
  72. ^ Kahin, pp. 229–32
  73. ^ Kahin, pg. 232
  74. ^ Moyar, p. 328
  75. ^ Moyar, pgs. 765-6
  76. ^ a b c Karnow, p. 398
  77. ^ Moyar (2004), p. 769
  78. ^ a b c "South Viet Nam: The U.S. v. the Generals". Time. 1 January 1965.
  79. ^ Moyar (2006), p. 344
  80. ^ Shaplen, p. 294
  81. ^ Willbanks, pgs. 264-70
  82. ^ Dougan and Fulghum, pp. 154–55
  83. ^ Isaacs, pp. 439, 432–33
  84. ^ Dougan and Fulghum, pgs. 102-3
  85. ^ Willbanks, pgs. 273-74
  86. ^ Dougan and Fulghum, pp. 142–43
  87. ^ Willbanks, p. 273
  88. ^ Willbanks, p. 274
  89. ^ Willbanks, p. 275.
  90. ^ Vien, p. 146
  91. ^ a b c d Willbanks, p. 276
  92. ^ Escape with Honor: My Last Hours in Vietnam by Francis Terry McNamara and Adrian Hill, p. 133
  93. ^ Dunham, George R (1990). U.S. Marines in Vietnam: The Bitter End, 1973–1975 (Marine Corps Vietnam Operational Historical Series). Marine Corps Association. p. 200. ISBN 9780160264559.
  94. ^ "The day the Vietnam War ended". 28 April 2005. Retrieved 26 January 2020.
  95. ^ Dougan and Fulghum, p. 175
  96. ^ Crossette, Barbara (18 December 1987). "HO CHI MINH CITY JOURNAL; 'Re-educated' 12 Years, An Ex-General Reflects". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 July 2010.

Sources edit

  • Buttinger, Joseph (1967). Vietnam: A Dragon Embattled. New York: Praeger Publishers.
  • Cao Văn Viên (1983). The Final Collapse. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Army Center of Military History.
  • Dougan, Clark; Fulghum, David; et al. (1985). The Fall of the South. Boston, Massachusetts: Boston Publishing Company. ISBN 0-939526-16-6.
  • Doyle, Edward; Lipsman, Samuel; Weiss, Stephen (1981). Passing the Torch. Boston, Massachusetts: Boston Publishing Company. ISBN 0-939526-01-8.
  • Hammer, Ellen J. (1987). A Death in November: America in Vietnam, 1963. New York: E. P. Dutton. ISBN 0-525-24210-4.
  • Isaacs, Arnold R. (1983). Without Honor: Defeat in Vietnam and Cambodia. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-3060-5.
  • Jacobs, Seth (2006). Cold War Mandarin: Ngo Dinh Diem and the Origins of America's War in Vietnam, 1950–1963. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 0-7425-4447-8.
  • Jones, Howard (2003). Death of a Generation: how the assassinations of Diem and JFK prolonged the Vietnam War. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-505286-2.
  • Kahin, George McT. (1986). Intervention: how America became involved in Vietnam. New York: Knopf. ISBN 0-394-54367-X.
  • Karnow, Stanley (1997). Vietnam: A history. New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-670-84218-4.
  • Langguth, A. J. (2000). Our Vietnam: the war, 1954–1975. New York: Simon & SchusterF0-684-81202-9.
  • Lansdale, Edward Geary (1991). In the Midst of Wars: An American's Mission to Southeast Asia. New York: Fordham University Press. ISBN 0-8232-1314-5.
  • Logevall, Fredrik (2006). "The French recognition of China and its implications for the Vietnam War". In Roberts, Priscilla (ed.). Behind the bamboo curtain: China, Vietnam, and the world beyond Asia. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-5502-7.
  • Moyar, Mark (2004). "Political Monks: The Militant Buddhist Movement during the Vietnam War". Modern Asian Studies. 38 (4). New York: Cambridge University Press: 749–784. doi:10.1017/s0026749x04001295. S2CID 145723264.
  • Moyar, Mark (2006). Triumph Forsaken: The Vietnam War, 1954–1965. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-86911-0.
  • Penniman, Howard R. (1972). Elections in South Vietnam. Washington, D.C.: American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research.
  • Shaplen, Robert (1966). The lost revolution: Vietnam 1945–1965. London: André Deutsch.
  • Tucker, Spencer C. (2000). Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 1-57607-040-9.
  • Willbanks, James H. (2004). Abandoning Vietnam: How America Left and South Vietnam Lost Its War. Lawrence, Kentucky: University of Kansas Press. ISBN 0-7006-1331-5.

External links edit

  • , Asian Week, 17–23 August 2001
  • "Gen. Duong Van Minh Buried at Rose Hills", Los Angeles Times, 19 August 2001
  • "Duong Van Minh, 85, Saigon Plotter, Dies", The New York Times, 8 August 2001
Political offices
Preceded by Chairman of the Military Revolutionary Council
1963–1964
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the Republic of Vietnam
28 April 1975 – 30 April 1975
Succeeded byas Chairman of the Provisional Revolutionary Government

dương, văn, minh, this, vietnamese, name, surname, dương, often, simplified, duong, english, language, text, accordance, with, vietnamese, custom, this, person, should, referred, given, name, minh, vietnamese, jɨəŋ, miŋ, february, 1916, august, 2001, popularly. In this Vietnamese name the surname is Dương but is often simplified to Duong in English language text In accordance with Vietnamese custom this person should be referred to by the given name Minh Dương Văn Minh Vietnamese jɨeŋ van miŋ 16 February 1916 6 August 2001 popularly known as Big Minh was a South Vietnamese politician and a senior general in the Army of the Republic of Vietnam ARVN and a politician during the presidency of Ngo Đinh Diệm In 1963 he became chief of a military junta after leading a coup in which Diệm was assassinated Minh lasted only three months before being toppled by Nguyễn Khanh but assumed power again as the fourth and last President of South Vietnam in April 1975 two days before surrendering to North Vietnamese forces He earned his nickname Big Minh because he was approximately 1 83 m 6 ft tall and weighed 90 kg 198 lb 1 Dương Văn MinhMinh in 19644th President of South VietnamIn office 28 April 1975 30 April 1975Prime MinisterVũ Văn MẫuVice PresidentNguyễn Văn HuyềnPreceded byTrần Văn HươngSucceeded byNguyễn Hữu Thọ as President of the Provisional Revolutionary Government of the Republic of South Vietnam 1st Chairman of the Military Revolutionary CouncilIn office 29 August 1964 26 October 1964Prime MinisterNguyễn KhanhPreceded byNguyễn KhanhSucceeded byPhan Khắc Sửu as civilian head of state In office 8 February 1964 16 August 1964Prime MinisterNguyễn KhanhPreceded byNguyễn KhanhSucceeded byNguyễn KhanhIn office 2 November 1963 30 January 1964Prime MinisterNguyễn Ngọc ThơPreceded byNgo Đinh Diệm as President of South Vietnam Succeeded byNguyễn KhanhPersonal detailsBorn 1916 02 16 16 February 1916Mỹ Tho Province Cochinchina French Indochina now Tiền Giang province Vietnam Died6 August 2001 2001 08 06 aged 85 Pasadena California USPolitical partyIndependentOther politicalaffiliationsMilitaryChildren3RelativesDương Văn Nhựt brother EducationCollege Chasseloup LaubatNicknameBig MinhMilitary serviceAllegianceSouth VietnamBranch serviceVietnamese National ArmyArmy of the Republic of VietnamYears of service1940 1964RankGeneral Đại Tướng CommandsHead of the Military Revolutionary Council 1963 1964 Battles warsBattle for Saigon1963 South Vietnamese coupBorn in Tiền Giang province in the Mekong Delta region of southern Vietnam Minh joined the French Army at the start of World War II and was captured and tortured by the Imperial Japanese who invaded and seized French Indochina After his release he joined the French backed Vietnamese National Army VNA and was imprisoned by the communist dominated Viet Minh before breaking out In 1955 when Vietnam was partitioned and the State of Vietnam controlled the southern half under Prime Minister Ngo Đinh Diệm Minh led the VNA in decisively defeating the Binh Xuyen paramilitary crime syndicate in street combat and dismantling the Hoa Hảo religious tradition s private army This made him popular with the people and Diệm but the latter later put him in a powerless position regarding him as a threat In 1963 the authoritarian Diệm became increasingly unpopular due to the Buddhist crisis and the ARVN generals decided to launch a coup which Minh eventually led Diệm was assassinated on 2 November 1963 shortly after being deposed Minh was accused of ordering an aide Nguyễn Văn Nhung to kill Diệm 2 3 Minh then led a junta for three months but he was an unsuccessful leader and was heavily criticized for being lethargic and uninterested During his three months of rule many civilian problems intensified and the communist Viet Cong made significant gains Angered at not receiving his desired post General Nguyễn Khanh led a group of similarly motivated officers in a January 1964 coup Khanh allowed Minh to stay on as a token head of state in order to capitalize on Minh s public standing but retained real power After a power struggle Khanh had Minh exiled Minh stayed away before deciding to return and challenge General Nguyễn Văn Thiệu in the presidential election of 1971 When it became obvious that Thieu would rig the poll Minh withdrew and did not return until 1972 keeping a low profile Minh then advocated a third force maintaining that Vietnam could be reunified without a military victory to a hardline communist or anti communist government However this was not something that Thiệu agreed with In April 1975 as South Vietnam was on the verge of being overrun Thieu resigned A week later Minh was forcibly chosen by the legislature and became president on 28 April Saigon fell two days later on 30 April and Minh ordered a surrender to prevent bloody urban street fighting Minh was spared the lengthy incarceration meted out to South Vietnamese military personnel and civil servants and lived quietly until being allowed to emigrate to France in 1983 He later moved to California where he died Contents 1 Early years 2 Vietnamese National Army battles against Binh Xuyen and Hoa Hảo 3 Overthrow of Diệm 3 1 Culpability regarding killings of Diệm and Nhu 4 Rule 5 Overthrow by Nguyễn Khanh 6 August and September power struggle with Khanh 6 1 Khanh prevails 7 Exile 8 Second presidency 9 Life in exile 10 Death 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 Sources 12 External linksEarly years editMinh was born on 16 February 1916 in Mỹ Tho Province in the Mekong Delta to a wealthy landowner who served in a prominent position in the Finance Ministry of the French colonial administration 4 He went to Saigon where he attended a top French colonial school now Le Quy Don High School 5 where King Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia also studied 6 Unlike many of his classmates Minh declined French citizenship and joined the Corps Indigene the local component of the French colonial army 5 He began his military career in 1940 4 and was one of only 50 Vietnamese officers to be commissioned when he graduated from the Ecole Militaire in France 7 During the 1940s Imperial Japan invaded Indochina and seized control from France Minh was captured and later had only a single tooth that remained from the torture he had suffered at the hands of the Kempeitai Japanese military police He always smiled displaying the single tooth which he regarded as a symbol of his toughness 7 Vietnamese National Army battles against Binh Xuyen and Hoa Hảo editMinh then transferred to the French backed State of Vietnam s Vietnamese National Army in 1952 4 5 In 1954 Minh was captured by the Việt Minh He escaped after strangling a communist guard and fighting off a few others 8 In May 1955 he led VNA forces in the Battle of Saigon when they dismantled the private army of the Binh Xuyen crime syndicate in urban warfare in the district of Chợ Lớn With the Binh Xuyen vanquished Diệm turned his attention to conquering the Hoa Hảo As a result a battle between Minh s VNA troops and Ba Cụt s men commenced in Cần Thơ on 5 June Five Hoa Hảo battalions surrendered immediately Ba Cụt and three remaining leaders had fled to the Cambodian border by the end of the month 9 10 The soldiers of the three other leaders eventually surrendered in the face of Minh s onslaught but Ba Cụt s men fought to the end 9 10 Understanding that they could not defeat Minh s men in open conventional warfare Ba Cụt s forces destroyed their own bases so that the VNA could not use their abandoned resources and retreated into the jungle 11 Ba Cụt s 3 000 men spent the rest of 1955 evading the 20 000 VNA troops commanded by Minh 11 Ba Cụt was arrested by a patrol on 13 April 1956 and later executed 9 12 and his remaining forces were defeated by Minh 12 13 The victories over the Hoa Hảo and the Binh Xuyen were the zenith of Minh s battlefield career When Minh arrived at a military parade in his jeep before the reviewing stand after the victories Diệm embraced him and kissed both cheeks 7 He was particularly popular among the population of Saigon having purged their city of the Binh Xuyen 5 This earned him the respect of US officials and he was sent to the United States to study despite his poor English at the US Command and General Staff College at Leavenworth Kansas 6 In November 1960 a coup attempt was made against Diệm Minh by this time disillusioned did not come to Diệm s defense during the siege and instead stayed at his Saigon home Diệm responded by appointing Minh to the post of Presidential Military Advisor where he had no influence or troops to command in case the thought of coup ever crossed his mind 14 15 According to historian Howard Jones Minh was in charge of three telephones and remained in the post until Diệm s overthrow 7 Overthrow of Diệm editMain articles 1963 South Vietnamese coup Arrest and assassination of Ngo Đinh Diệm and Buddhist crisis Minh and Trần Văn Đon the ARVN Chief of Staff who had no troops due to Diệm s suspicion of him 16 went to observe the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization SEATO s military exercises in Thailand 17 where they were informed about the regional disquiet over Diệm s policies toward Buddhists 18 Minh frequently railed against Diệm in his September meeting with Lodge decrying the police state that was being created by the Cần Lao Party of the Ngo family 19 Harkins reported that Minh has done nothing but complain to me about the government and the way it is handled since I have been here Harkins was skeptical about Minh s claims of widespread public disenchantment 20 During late September President Kennedy dispatched the McNamara Taylor mission to investigate the political and military situation in South Vietnam This included investigating an ARVN coup Minh expressed an interest in meeting McNamara and Taylor so a game of doubles tennis was organized McNamara watched on as Taylor played with Minh giving broad hints of our interest in other subjects which we gave him during breaks in the game 21 Minh revealed nothing of his thoughts about a possible coup leaving his guests bewildered Minh later messaged Taylor with a complaint about a perceived lack of support from Washington for a coup 21 Diệm became very unpopular during the Buddhist crisis of 1963 the US informed the Vietnamese generals through the CIA that it would not object if Diệm were to be overthrown Minh was the second highest ranking general at the time and he led the coup to overthrow Diệm on 1 November 1963 22 In the afternoon Minh ordered his bodyguard Nguyễn Văn Nhung to arrest and later execute Colonel Le Quang Tung one of Diệm s closest and most faithful associates The generals hated Tung because at Ngo Đinh Nhu s instructions he had disguised his men in regular army uniforms and framed the army for the Xa Lợi Pagoda raids several months earlier in August 23 24 At nightfall Nhung took Tung and Major Le Quảng Trịeu his brother and deputy 25 and drove them to the edge of Tan Son Nhut Air Base Forced to kneel over two freshly dug holes the brothers were shot into their graves and buried 23 In the early morning of 2 November Diệm agreed to surrender The ARVN officers had reportedly originally intended merely to exile Diệm and Nhu having promised them safe passage 26 27 Minh and Đon asked Colonel Lucien Conein to secure an American aircraft to take the brothers out of the country Assistant Secretary of State Roger Hilsman recommended that if the generals decide to exile Diệm he should also be sent outside Southeast Asia 28 He went on to anticipate what he termed a Gotterdammerung in the palace 29 Minh then went to Gia Long Palace and Minh sent an armored personnel carrier to transport Diệm and Nhu while the others prepared for the ceremonial and televised handover of power to the junta 27 Minh arrived in full military ceremonial uniform to supervise the arrest of the Ngo brothers only to find that they had escaped and humiliated him having talked to him from a safe house Minh was reported to be mortified when he realised that Diệm and Nhu had escaped in the middle of the night leaving the rebels to fight for an empty building 7 However Diệm s hideout was found and surrounded and Minh sent General Mai Hữu Xuan his deputy Colonel Nguyễn Văn Quan his bodyguard Nguyễn Văn Nhung and Dương Hiếu Nghĩa to arrest both brothers 30 Nhung and Nghĩa sat with the brothers in the APC as the convoy headed off after the arrest Before the convoy had departed for the church Minh was reported to have gestured to Nhung who was a contract killer and Minh s bodyguard 4 with two right hand fingers 4 This was taken to be an order to kill both brothers During the journey the brothers were killed in the APC with Nhung riddling their bodies with many bullets 4 An investigation by Đon later determined that Nghĩa and Nhung sprayed them with bullets before repeatedly stabbing them 31 When the corpses arrived at military headquarters the generals were shocked 32 Đon ordered another general to tell reporters that the brothers had died in an accident and went to confront Minh in his office 32 Đon Why are they dead Minh And what does it matter that they are dead 32 Đon later reported that Minh had answered his question in a haughty tone 32 At this time Xuan walked into Minh s office through the open door unaware of Đon s presence Xuan snapped to attention and stated Mission accomplie 32 Minh had his subordinates report that the Ngo brothers had committed suicide Unclear and contradictory stories abounded on the exact method used by the brothers Minh said Due to an inadvertence there was a gun inside the vehicle It was with this gun that they committed suicide 33 Conein soon realized that the generals story was false 34 Soon after photos of the bloodied corpses of the brothers appeared in the media discrediting the generals lies 35 Đon s assertion that the assassinations were unplanned proved sufficient for Lodge who told the State Department that I am sure assassination was not at their direction 36 Minh and Đon reiterated their position in a meeting with Conein and Lodge a few days after the coup 36 Culpability regarding killings of Diệm and Nhu edit The assassinations caused a split within the junta and repulsed world opinion The killings damaged the public belief that the new regime would be an improvement over Diệm throwing the generals into discord Criticism over the killings caused the officers to battle one another for positions in the new government 36 The responsibility for the assassinations has generally been laid at the doorstep of Minh Conein asserted that I have it on very good authority of very many people that Big Minh gave the order 37 as did William Colby the director of the CIA s Far Eastern division Đon however was equally emphatic saying I can state without equivocation that this was done by General Dương Văn Minh and by him alone 37 Lodge believed Xuan was at least partly culpable asserting Diệm and Nhu had been assassinated if not by Xuan personally at least at his direction 36 Some months after the event Minh was reported to have privately told an American official that We had no alternative They had to be killed Diệm could not be allowed to live because he was too much respected among simple gullible people in the countryside especially the Catholics and the refugees We had to kill Nhu because he was so widely feared and he had created organizations that were arms of his personal power 37 When Nguyễn Văn Thiệu became president Minh blamed him for the assassinations In 1971 Minh claimed that Thiệu had caused the deaths by hesitating and delaying the attack by his 5th Division on Gia Long Palace Đon was reported to have pressured Thiệu during the night of the siege asking him on the phone Why are you so slow in doing it Do you need more troops If you do ask Đinh to send more troops and do it quickly because after taking the palace you will be made a general 38 Thiệu denied responsibility and issued a statement Dương Văn Minh has to assume entire responsibility for the death of Ngo Đinh Diệm 37 Trần Văn Hương an opposition politician who was jailed by Diệm and a future prime minister and president gave a scathing analysis of the generals action He said The top generals who decided to murder Diệm and his brother were scared to death The generals knew very well that having no talent no moral virtues no political support whatsoever they could not prevent a spectacular comeback of the president and Mr Nhu if they were alive 39 Conein asserted that Minh s humiliation by Diệm and Nhu was a major motivation for ordering their executions Conein reasoned that the brothers were doomed to death once they escaped from the palace instead of surrendering and accepting the offer of safe exile Having successfully stormed the palace Minh had arrived at the presidential residence in full ceremonial military uniform with a sedan and everything else Conein described Minh as a very proud man who had lost face by turning up at the palace ready to claim victory only to find an empty building He claimed that Diệm and Nhu would not have been killed if they were in the palace because there were too many people present 37 American policy makers later came to believe that the coup and the murders of Diệm and his brother more deeply entrenched the United States in the war by increasing its responsibility for what had occurred after the deposing of Diệm s administration 4 In the view of Stanley Karnow a former journalist in Saigon for The Saturday Evening Post Minh was not the main mover But as the senior general he was the man who crystallized the various factions who were all plotting against Diệm Everybody and his brother had a plot 4 Rule editMinh took over the government under a military junta on 6 November which consisted of 12 generals To give the regime a civilian veneer Diệm s figurehead Vice President Nguyễn Ngọc Thơ was appointed Prime Minister of a provisional civilian government overseen by the Military Revolutionary Council MRC 40 Despite his nominally being the second most important person in the Diệm regime Thơ was a figurehead with little influence which lay with Diệm s brothers 41 Diệm held Thơ in contempt and did not allow him to take part in policy decisions 42 Tho entered into intensive bargaining with Minh on 2 November on the composition of the interim government Thơ knew that the generals wanted to have him head a new government to provide continuity and he used this as leverage in bargaining with them about the makeup of the cabinet The Americans recognized Minh and immediately restored the aid programs and that had been cut to punish Diệm in the last days of his rule 43 With the fall of Diệm various American sanctions that were imposed in response to the repression of the Buddhist crisis and Nhu s Special Forces attacks on the Xa Lợi Pagoda were lifted The freeze on US economic aid the suspension of the Commercial Import Program and various capital works initiatives were lifted and Thơ and Minh were recognised 43 The first order of the new regime was Provisional Constitutional Act No 1 signed by Minh formally suspending the 1956 constitution created by Diệm 43 Minh was said to have preferred playing mah jongg playing tennis at the elite Cercle Sportif 4 tending to his garden and giving tea parties to fighting the Viet Cong VC or running the country 6 He was criticised for being lethargic and uninterested 44 Stanley Karnow said He was a model of lethargy lacking both the skill and the inclination to govern According to Karnow Minh lamented to him that because of his role as the junta head he didn t have enough time to grow his orchids or play tennis 4 Saigon newspapers which Minh had allowed to re open following the end of Diệm s censorship reported that the junta was paralysed because all twelve generals in the MRC had equal power Each member had the power of veto enabling them to stonewall policy decisions 45 Thơ s civilian government was plagued by infighting According to Thơ s assistant Nguyễn Ngọc Huy the presence of Generals Đon and Đinh in both the civilian cabinet and the MRC paralysed the governance process Đinh and Đon were subordinate to Tho in the civilian government but as members of the MRC they were superior to him Whenever Thơ gave an order in the civilian hierarchy with which the generals disagreed they would go to the MRC and make a counter order 46 The press strongly attacked Thơ accusing his civilian government of being tools of the MRC 47 Thơ s acquiescence to and corruption under Diệm s presidency was also called into question and he was accused of helping to repress the Buddhists by Diệm and Nhu Tho claimed that he had countenanced the pagoda raids claiming that he would have resigned were it not for Minh s pleas to stay Minh defended Thơ s anti Diệm credentials by declaring that Tho had taken part in the planning of the coup from the very outset and that he enjoyed the full confidence of the junta 47 On 1 January 1964 a Council of Notables comprising sixty leading citizens met for the first time having been selected by Colonel Phạm Ngọc Thảo for Minh s junta Its job was to advise the military and civilian wings of the government with a view towards reforming human rights the constitution and the legal system 48 The council consisted almost entirely of professionals and academic leaders with no representatives from the agricultural or labour movement It soon became engaged in endless debate and never achieved its initial task of drafting a new constitution 48 Minh and Thơ halted Nhu s Strategic Hamlet Program Nhu had trumpeted the program as the solution to South Vietnam s difficulties with VC insurgents believing that the mass relocation of peasants into fortified villages would isolate the VC from their peasant support base According to the junta only 20 of the 8 600 existing strategic hamlets were under Saigon s control with the rest having been taken over by the VC contradicting Nhu s claims of widespread success Those hamlets that were deemed to be tenable were consolidated while the remainder were dismantled and their inhabitants returned to their ancestral land 49 Under Minh s rule there was a large turnover of officials aligned with Diệm Many were indiscriminately arrested without charge most of whom were later released Đinh and the new national police chief General Mai Hữu Xuan were given control of the interior ministry and were accused of arresting people en masse before releasing them in return for bribes and pledges of loyalty The government was criticised for firing large numbers of district and provincial chiefs directly appointed by Diệm causing a breakdown in law and order during the abrupt transition of power 45 The provisional government lacked direction in policy and planning resulting in its quick collapse 50 The number of rural attacks instigated by the VC surged in the wake of Diệm s deposal due to the displacement of troops into urban areas for the coup The increasingly free discussion generated from the surfacing of new and accurate data following the coup revealed that the military situation was far worse than what was reported by Diệm The incidence of VC attacks continued to increase as it had done during the summer of 1963 the weapons loss ratio worsened and the rate of VC defections fell The units that participated in the coup were returned to the field to guard against a possible major VC offensive in the countryside The falsification of military statistics by Diệm s officials had led to miscalculations which manifested themselves in military setbacks after Diệm s death 43 Overthrow by Nguyễn Khanh editMain article January 1964 South Vietnamese coup General Nguyễn Khanh began to plot against the MRC after it was created Khanh expected a large reward for his part in the coup but the other generals regarded him as untrustworthy and excluded him from the MRC 51 They further moved him to the command of the I Corps in the far north to keep him far away from Saigon 52 53 Khanh later claimed that he had built up intelligence infrastructure to weed out the VC under Diệm but that Minh s MRC had disbanded it and released VC prisoners 54 Khanh was assisted by Generals Trần Thiện Khiem who controlled the forces around Saigon Đỗ Mậu and Nguyễn Chanh Thi 55 Khanh and his colleagues spread rumours to American officials that Minh and his colleagues were about to declare South Vietnam s neutrality and sign a peace deal to end the war with the North 56 57 Khanh overthrew Minh and his colleagues on 30 January 1964 in a bloodless coup completely catching the MRC off guard 58 59 Minh Đon and Le Văn Kim woke up to find hostile forces surrounding their houses and thought it to be a quixotic stunt by some disgruntled young officers 60 Khanh used the coup to enact retribution against Minh Đon Kim Đinh and Xuan He had them arrested claiming that they were part of a neutralist plot with the French Khanh cited their service in the Vietnamese National Army in the early 1950s under the French colonial administration as evidence although he did as well 61 Khanh also had Major Nhung the bodyguard of Minh shot causing riots among parts of the population who feared that Khanh would wind back the clock to the Diệm era 62 63 Khanh later persuaded Minh to remain as a figurehead head of state This was partly due to pressure from American officials who felt that the popular Minh would be a unifying and stabilising factor in the new regime However Khanh soon sidelined Minh 64 65 Minh reportedly resented the fact that he had been deposed by a younger officer whom he viewed as an unscrupulous upstart He was also upset with the detention of his fellow generals and around 30 of his junior officers The junior officers were set free when Minh demanded that Khanh release them in return for his service In the meantime Khanh could not substantiate his claims against the generals 66 Khanh presided over the trial 61 which took place in May Minh was perfunctorily accused of misusing a small amount of money before being allowed to serve as an advisor on the trial panel 65 66 The other generals were eventually asked by Khanh to once you begin to serve again in the army you do not take revenge on anybody 61 The tribunal then congratulated the generals but found that they were of lax morality unqualified to command due to a lack of a clear political concept and confined to desk jobs 61 Khanh s actions left divisions among the officers of the ARVN When Khanh was himself deposed in 1965 he handed over dossiers proving that Minh and the other generals were innocent 67 Robert Shaplen said that the case continued to be one of Khanh s biggest embarrassments 66 August and September power struggle with Khanh editMain article September 1964 South Vietnamese coup attempt In August Khanh drafted a new constitution which would have augmented his personal power and hamstrung Minh of what authority he had left as well as ousting him from power However this only served to weaken Khanh as large urban demonstrations broke out led by Buddhists calling for an end to the state of emergency and the new constitution 68 In response to claims that he was harking back to the Diệm era of Roman Catholic domination Khanh made concessions to the Buddhists sparking opposition from Khiem and Thiệu both Catholics They then tried to remove him in favour of Minh and they recruited many officers 69 Khiem and Thiệu sought out Taylor and sought a private endorsement to install Minh by staging a coup against Khanh but the US ambassador did not want any more changes in leadership fearing a corrosive effect on the government This deterred Khiem s group from staging a coup 70 The division among the generals came to a head at a meeting of the MRC on 26 27 August Khanh and Khiem blamed one another for the increasing unrest across the nation 71 Thiệu and another Catholic General Nguyễn Hữu Co called for the replacement of Khanh with Minh but the latter refused Minh reportedly claimed that Khanh was the only one who would get financial assistance from Washington so they supported him prompting Khiem to angrily say Obviously Khanh is a puppet of the U S government and we are tired of being told by the Americans how we should run our internal affairs 71 Khanh said that he would resign but no agreement over the leadership could be found 71 and after more arguing between the senior officers on 27 August they agreed that Khanh Minh and Khiem would rule as a triumvirate for two months until a new civilian government could be formed 70 The trio then brought paratroopers into Saigon to end the rioting However the triumvirate did little due to their disunity Khanh dominated the decision making and sidelined Khiem and Minh 70 On 13 September Generals Lam Văn Phat and Dương Văn Đức both Roman Catholics demoted by Khanh after Buddhist pressure launched a coup attempt with the support of Catholic elements After a one day stand off the putsch failed 72 During the coup Minh had remained aloof from the proceedings angering Khanh and keeping their long running rivalry going By the end of October the Johnson administration became more supportive of Taylor s negative opinion of Minh and concluded that US interests would be optimized if Khanh prevailed in the power struggle As a result the Americans eventually paid for Minh to go on a good will tour so that he could be pushed off the political scene without embarrassment while Khiem was exiled to Washington as an ambassador after being implicated in the coup 73 A short while earlier in September before Minh was sent overseas the junta decided to create a semblance of civilian rule by creating the High National Council HNC an appointed advisory body that was to begin the transitional to constitutional rule Khanh put Minh in charge of picking the 17 members of the group and he filled it with figures sympathetic to him They then made a resolution to recommend a model with a powerful head of state which would likely be Minh Khanh did not want his rival taking power so he and the Americans convinced the HNC to dilute the power inherent in the position to make it unappealing to Minh 74 The HNC then selected Phan Khắc Sửu as chief of state and Sửu selected Trần Văn Hương as prime minister although the junta remained the real power 75 By the end of the year Minh was back in Vietnam after his tour 76 Khanh prevails edit Main article December 1964 South Vietnamese coup Khanh and a group of younger officers decided to forcibly retire officers with more than 25 years of service such as Minh and the other generals deposed in Khanh s January coup nominally this was because they thought them to be lethargic and ineffective but tacitly and far more importantly because they were potential rivals for power 77 According to Khanh and the Young Turks this older group was led by Minh and had been crafting plots with the Buddhists to regain power 76 78 Sửu s signature was required to pass the ruling but he referred the matter to the HNC 78 which turned down the request 79 On 19 December the generals dissolved the HNC several of its members other politicians and student leaders were arrested 78 80 while Minh and the other older generals were arrested and flown to Pleiku and later removed from the military 76 Exile editMinh went into exile in Bangkok where he occupied himself with hobbies such as gardening and playing tennis 5 He still had many American friends especially among the CIA who gave him support during this period and paid for his dental bills The US ambassador Ellsworth Bunker was openly contemptuous of him and referred to him in public with obscenities In return he wrote a pro war article for the respected Foreign Affairs quarterly in 1968 condemning the communists and rejecting a power sharing agreement This helped to end his exile with the support of the United States 6 Minh opposed Thiệu who as part of the so called Young Turks had meanwhile ended the endless power struggles and coups alongside Nguyễn Cao Kỳ Nguyễn Chanh Thi and Chung Tấn Cang by finally outmaneuvering Khanh in 1965 had been governing as constitutional President since 1967 and was permanently supported by the United States Minh was going to run against Thiệu in the 1971 election but he withdrew because it became obvious to him and most other observers that the election would be rigged due to a series of restrictions against would be opponents 6 Thiệu was then the only candidate and retained power Minh kept a low profile after this and was relatively politically inert 5 Minh was regarded as a potential leader of a third force which could come to a compromise with North Vietnam that would allow eventual reunification without a military takeover by one of the parties The North Vietnamese government carefully avoided either endorsing or condemning Minh whose brother Dương Văn Nhut was a one star general in the People s Army of Vietnam PAVN In 1973 Minh proposed his own political program for Vietnam which was a middle way between the proposals of Thiệu and the communists Thiệu however reportedly opposed any compromise 6 Second presidency editOn 21 April 1975 Thiệu handed over power to Vice President Trần Văn Hương and fled to Taiwan Hương prepared for peace talks with North Vietnam However after his overtures were rejected he resigned 81 As the main attack on Saigon developed on 27 April 1975 in a joint sitting of the bicameral National Assembly the presidency was unanimously handed over to Minh who was sworn in the following day The French government thought that Minh could broker a cease fire and had advocated his ascension to power 5 There was also an assumption that as Minh had a reputation for indecision the various groups thought that they could manipulate him for their own ends relatively easily 6 It was widely known that Minh 82 had long standing contacts with the communists 6 and it was assumed that he would be able to establish a cease fire and re open negotiations 83 84 85 This expectation was totally unrealistic as the North Vietnamese were in an overwhelmingly dominant position on the battlefield and final victory was within reach so they saw no need for power sharing regardless of any political changes in Saigon 86 On 28 April 1975 PAVN forces fought their way into the outskirts of the capital 87 Later that afternoon as Minh finished his acceptance speech in which he called for an immediate cease fire and peace talks 6 a formation of five A 37s captured from the Republic of Vietnam Air Force bombed Tan Son Nhut Air Base 88 As Bien Hoa fell General Nguyễn Văn Toan the III Corps commander fled to Saigon saying that most of the top ARVN leadership had virtually resigned themselves to defeat 89 The inauguration of Minh had served as a signal to South Vietnamese officers who would not compromise with the communists They began to pack up and leave or commit suicide to avoid capture 90 PAVN columns advanced into the city center encountering very little resistance 91 Except in the Mekong Delta where South Vietnamese military forces were still intact and aggressive 92 the South Vietnamese military had virtually ceased to exist Just before 05 00 on 30 April 91 US Ambassador Graham Martin boarded a helicopter and departed and at 07 53 the last Marines were evacuated from the US Embassy s rooftop 93 At 10 24 91 being advised by General Nguyễn Hữu Hạnh Minh went on Saigon Radio and ordered all South Vietnamese forces to cease fighting and later declared an unconditional surrender He announced The Republic of Vietnam policy is the policy of peace and reconciliation aimed at saving the blood of our people We are here waiting for the Provisional Revolutionary Government to hand over the authority in order to stop useless bloodshed 6 According to General Nguyen Huu Hanh s interview from BBC Minh did not want to evacuate the Saigon government to the Mekong Delta to continue military resistance Hanh also stated Minh planned a peace to end the war 94 Around noon a PAVN tank crashed through the gates of the Independence Palace 91 95 When the PAVN troops entered the Independence Palace they found Minh and his cabinet sitting around the big oval table in the cabinet room waiting for them As they entered Minh said The revolution is here You are here 6 He added We have been waiting for you so that we could turn over the government The ranking North Vietnamese officer Colonel Bui Văn Tung replied There is no question of your transferring power Your power has crumbled You cannot give up what you do not have 4 Later in the afternoon he went on radio again and said I declare the Saigon government is completely dissolved at all levels 6 After his official surrender he was summoned to report back After a few days he was permitted to return to his villa unlike almost all remaining military personnel and public servants 5 who were sent to re education camps often for over a decade in the case of senior officers 96 He lived there in seclusion for eight years where he continued to raise birds and grow exotic orchids 6 It was assumed that Hanoi had resolved that as Minh had not actively opposed them in the final years of the war he would be allowed to live in peace as long as he remained quiet and did not engage in political activities 5 Life in exile editMinh was allowed to emigrate to France in 1983 and settled near Paris and it was again assumed that the communists had permitted him to leave on the basis that he remain aloof from politics and history In the late 1980s there was speculation he would be allowed to return to Vietnam to live out his last years but this did not happen 5 In 1988 he emigrated to the US and he lived in Pasadena California with his daughter Mai Duong He later needed a wheelchair for mobility 4 In exile Minh kept his silence did not talk about the events in Vietnam and did not produce a memoir 6 Death editOn 5 August 2001 Minh fell at his home in Pasadena California He was taken to Huntington Memorial Hospital in Pasadena where he died the following night at the age of 85 4 6 He was buried in Rose Hills Memorial Park in Whittier California 5 Minh s death was largely unmourned by overseas Vietnamese who were still angry at him for ordering South Vietnamese soldiers to put their weapons down and who saw him as the officer responsible for South Vietnam s fall 6 References editCitations edit Dương Văn Minh profile Robert Trando Letters of a Vietnamese Emigre 2010 Page 87 We learned soon that President Diệm and his brother Nhu had been savagely butchered on the floor of the M 113 by Major Nhung the aide of General Dương Văn Minh This man had the reputation of being a bloodthirsty monster that every Phan Rang Chronicles A British Surgeon in Vietnam Henry Hamilton 2007 Page 38 General Dương Văn Minh who had assumed power had the major shot a b c d e f g h i j k l m Butterfield Fox 8 August 2001 Duong Van Minh 85 Saigon Plotter Dies The New York Times Retrieved 14 July 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k Stowe Judy 9 August 2001 General Duong Van Minh The Independent Retrieved 11 October 2009 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Oliver Myrna 8 August 2001 Duong Van Minh Last President of S Vietnam Los Angeles Times Retrieved 11 October 2009 a b c d e Jones p 418 Jones p 417 a b c Jacobs pp 99 100 a b Lansdale pg 300 a b Moyar 2006 pp 53 54 a b Doyle pg 131 Moyar 2006 pg 65 Moyar p 114 Hammer p 126 Hammer p 147 Jones p 286 Jones p 247 Jones p 370 Jones p 371 a b Jones pg 373 Tucker pp 288 292 a b Jones p 414 Hammer p 290 Karnow p 321 Hammer p 297 a b Jones pp 416 17 Hammer p 294 Hammer p 295 Hammer pp 297 98 Karnow p 326 a b c d e Jones p 429 Jones p 425 Jones p 430 Jones pp 430 31 a b c d Jones p 436 a b c d e Jones pg 435 Hammer pg 299 Jones pp 435 36 Hammer pp 300 01 Jones pp 99 100 Buttinger p 954 a b c d The Overthrow of Ngo Dinh Diem May November 1963 Pentagon Papers pp 266 76 Archived from the original on 24 April 2008 Retrieved 2 November 2007 Shaplen pgs 221 24 a b Shaplen p 221 Jones pg 437 a b Shaplen p 223 a b Shaplen p 225 Shaplen pg 220 Shaplen p 213 Logevall p 161 Karnow pp 354 55 Shaplen p 230 Moyar 2006 p 294 Shaplen p 321 Shaplen p 232 Logevall p 162 Karnow pp 352 54 Shaplen pgs 332 3 Langguth pg 278 a b c d Langguth pp 289 91 Karnow p 354 Langguth p 279 Shaplen pp 236 37 a b Karnow p 355 a b c Shaplen pgs 244 5 Langguth p 347 Karnow pp 394 95 Moyar p 762 a b c Moyar 2006 p 763 a b c Moyar 2006 p 318 Kahin pp 229 32 Kahin pg 232 Moyar p 328 Moyar pgs 765 6 a b c Karnow p 398 Moyar 2004 p 769 a b c South Viet Nam The U S v the Generals Time 1 January 1965 Moyar 2006 p 344 Shaplen p 294 Willbanks pgs 264 70 Dougan and Fulghum pp 154 55 Isaacs pp 439 432 33 Dougan and Fulghum pgs 102 3 Willbanks pgs 273 74 Dougan and Fulghum pp 142 43 Willbanks p 273 Willbanks p 274 Willbanks p 275 Vien p 146 a b c d Willbanks p 276 Escape with Honor My Last Hours in Vietnam by Francis Terry McNamara and Adrian Hill p 133 Dunham George R 1990 U S Marines in Vietnam The Bitter End 1973 1975 Marine Corps Vietnam Operational Historical Series Marine Corps Association p 200 ISBN 9780160264559 The day the Vietnam War ended 28 April 2005 Retrieved 26 January 2020 Dougan and Fulghum p 175 Crossette Barbara 18 December 1987 HO CHI MINH CITY JOURNAL Re educated 12 Years An Ex General Reflects The New York Times Retrieved 14 July 2010 Sources edit Buttinger Joseph 1967 Vietnam A Dragon Embattled New York Praeger Publishers Cao Văn Vien 1983 The Final Collapse Washington D C U S Army Center of Military History Dougan Clark Fulghum David et al 1985 The Fall of the South Boston Massachusetts Boston Publishing Company ISBN 0 939526 16 6 Doyle Edward Lipsman Samuel Weiss Stephen 1981 Passing the Torch Boston Massachusetts Boston Publishing Company ISBN 0 939526 01 8 Hammer Ellen J 1987 A Death in November America in Vietnam 1963 New York E P Dutton ISBN 0 525 24210 4 Isaacs Arnold R 1983 Without Honor Defeat in Vietnam and Cambodia Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 3060 5 Jacobs Seth 2006 Cold War Mandarin Ngo Dinh Diem and the Origins of America s War in Vietnam 1950 1963 Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 0 7425 4447 8 Jones Howard 2003 Death of a Generation how the assassinations of Diem and JFK prolonged the Vietnam War New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 505286 2 Kahin George McT 1986 Intervention how America became involved in Vietnam New York Knopf ISBN 0 394 54367 X Karnow Stanley 1997 Vietnam A history New York Penguin Books ISBN 0 670 84218 4 Langguth A J 2000 Our Vietnam the war 1954 1975 New York Simon amp SchusterF0 684 81202 9 Lansdale Edward Geary 1991 In the Midst of Wars An American s Mission to Southeast Asia New York Fordham University Press ISBN 0 8232 1314 5 Logevall Fredrik 2006 The French recognition of China and its implications for the Vietnam War In Roberts Priscilla ed Behind the bamboo curtain China Vietnam and the world beyond Asia Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 5502 7 Moyar Mark 2004 Political Monks The Militant Buddhist Movement during the Vietnam War Modern Asian Studies 38 4 New York Cambridge University Press 749 784 doi 10 1017 s0026749x04001295 S2CID 145723264 Moyar Mark 2006 Triumph Forsaken The Vietnam War 1954 1965 New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 86911 0 Penniman Howard R 1972 Elections in South Vietnam Washington D C American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research Shaplen Robert 1966 The lost revolution Vietnam 1945 1965 London Andre Deutsch Tucker Spencer C 2000 Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO ISBN 1 57607 040 9 Willbanks James H 2004 Abandoning Vietnam How America Left and South Vietnam Lost Its War Lawrence Kentucky University of Kansas Press ISBN 0 7006 1331 5 External links edit nbsp Vietnam portal nbsp Biography portal nbsp Politics portal General Duong Van Minh Dies at 86 Asian Week 17 23 August 2001 Gen Duong Van Minh Buried at Rose Hills Los Angeles Times 19 August 2001 Duong Van Minh 85 Saigon Plotter Dies The New York Times 8 August 2001Political officesPreceded byNgo Đinh Diệm Chairman of the Military Revolutionary Council1963 1964 Succeeded byNguyễn KhanhPreceded byTrần Văn Hương President of the Republic of Vietnam28 April 1975 30 April 1975 Succeeded byHuỳnh Tấn Phatas Chairman of the Provisional Revolutionary Government Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dương Văn Minh amp oldid 1217461585, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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