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Lâm Văn Phát

Major General Lâm Văn Phát (1920 – 30 October 1998) was a Vietnamese army officer. He is best known for leading two coup attempts against General Nguyễn Khánh in September 1964 and February 1965. Although both failed to result in his taking power, the latter caused enough instability that it forced Khánh to resign and go into exile.

Lâm Văn Phát
Born1920
Cần Thơ, French Indochina
Died30 October 1998(1998-10-30) (aged 77–78)
California, U.S.
Allegiance State of Vietnam
 South Vietnam
Service/branch Vietnamese National Army
 Army of the Republic of Vietnam
Years of service19??–1965
Rank Major General (Thiếu Tướng)
Commands held2nd Division (June 1961 – June 1963)
7th Division (December 1963 – February 1964)
III Corps (February 1964 – September 1964)
Battles/wars
Other workInterior Minister (removed September 1964)

A member of the Roman Catholic minority, Phát joined the French-backed Vietnamese National Army which became the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) after the Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam) was established. After having been sent to the U.S. for further training in 1958, Phát returned home to head the Civil Guard, a paramilitary force then mostly used to protect the ruling family of President Ngô Đình Diệm, rather than to counteract the communist Việt Cộng insurgency. Later commanding the 2nd Division, he was known for his loyalty to Diệm, who favored fellow Catholics. In 1963, Diệm knew some of the generals were about to launch a coup against him. He appointed Phát to command the 7th Division, located near the capital, Saigon, so he could help in the fighting, but the plotters successfully used delaying tactics so that the paperwork for the transfer of the division leadership could not occur before they proceeded to overthrow and execute Diệm. Despite Phát's pro-Diệm allegiance he was promoted to brigadier general and given command of the 7th Division.

After the January 1964 coup against Dương Văn Minh, Phát was made the commander of III Corps and also Interior Minister for a time until he was dismissed in September 1964. This prompted him to join Dương Văn Đức, another general relieved of command, in launching a coup attempt against Khánh on 13 September. They initially took over the capital without a fight, but Khánh escaped, and after having received endorsements from the U.S., defeated Phát and Đức. At the military trial that followed, charges were dropped. In February 1965, Phát joined with fellow Catholic, Diệm protégé and Khánh opponent Phạm Ngọc Thảo – actually a communist agent intent on maximizing infighting in South Vietnam – in another coup attempt. After the forces deadlocked, Phát met with Republic of Vietnam Air Force chief Nguyễn Cao Kỳ, insisting on Khánh's assassination. After the meeting concluded, the coup collapsed, but Khánh was forced from office the next day. Phát and Thảo went into hiding and were sentenced to death in absentia by Kỳ's military tribunal. Thảo was killed under mysterious circumstances, but Phát evaded capture for three years until surrendering. By this time Kỳ's power had been eclipsed by another Catholic, General Nguyễn Văn Thiệu, who freed Phát from prison.[citation needed]

Early military career

 
Ngô Đình Diệm, the President of South Vietnam from 1955 to 1963, gave preferential treatment to Roman Catholics. Phát was a Diệm loyalist.

The President of South Vietnam, Ngô Đình Diệm, heavily favored Catholics, and, as a result, Phát rose quickly up the ranks. Having started his career in the French-backed Vietnamese National Army of the State of Vietnam, Phát became a member of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam after the State of Vietnam became the Republic of Vietnam. In 1958, holding the rank of colonel, Phát was sent to Fort Leavenworth, Kansas for officer training.[1] Described as being tall for relatively short Vietnamese norms, Phát "spoke halting English".[1] After returning to Vietnam, he served as the head of the Civil Guard,[1] a paramilitary force that was mostly used at the time to protect the ruling family of President Ngô Đình Diệm rather than to counteract the communist Viet Cong insurgency.

Phát has been described as a "political Catholic",[1] a term for those who practiced or converted to the religion to curry favor with Diệm, who made most military and political appointments and promotions on the basis of religion.[2] Phát's habit of customarily being seen in public with a swagger stick and his reputation for autocratic leadership alienated most of his subordinate officers.[1] He grew his pinky fingernail to great length, a practice observed by mandarins during Vietnam's imperial era to denote their status. Some observers claimed that the mandarin style of his fingernail spread to his general behavior, decrying him as "haughty" and "hawklike".[1] U.S. military advisors regarded Phát as "mediocre".[3] As a colonel, he served as the commander of 2nd Division, located in central Vietnam from 8 June 1961 until 18 June 1963, when he was replaced by Colonel Trương Văn Chương.[4]

Overthrow of Diệm in 1963

By late 1963, Diệm knew a coup was brewing and that the 7th Division at Mỹ Tho outside Saigon might be involved. As it was close to the capital, it would play a crucial role in either attacking or defending Diệm, or blocking outlying units from entering the city. Diệm put Phát in command of the 7th Division on 31 October.[5] According to tradition, Phát had to pay the corps commander a courtesy visit before assuming control of the division. However, General Tôn Thất Đính, commander of the III Corps was part of the plot and deliberately refused to see Phát and told him to come back at 14:00 the following day, by which time the coup had already been scheduled to start. In the meantime, Đính had General Trần Văn Đôn sign a counter-order transferring command of the 7th Division to his deputy and co-conspirator Nguyễn Hữu Có.[5]

Có then trapped and arrested the 7th Division's officers on the day of the coup.[5][6] He then phoned General Huỳnh Văn Cao, further south in the Mekong Delta's largest town, Cần Thơ, where the IV Corps was headquartered. Có, a central Vietnamese, imitated Phát's southern accent and tricked Cao into thinking that nothing unusual was happening.[5] Phát's removal had thus stopped Cao from sending loyalists to Saigon to save Diệm,[7] who was captured and executed the following day.[8] Despite the fact that Đính saw Có as being more reliable for the purposes of staging the coup against Diệm, Minh promoted him to brigadier general immediately after the officers seized power.[1] As a brigadier general, he served as the commander of the 7th Division, from 2 December 1963 until 2 February 1964.[4]

Nguyễn Khánh

He was then promoted and served as the commander of III Corps, which oversaw the region of the country surrounding Saigon from 2 February until 4 April 1964, when he was replaced by Lieutenant General Tran Ngoc Tam.[4] Phát's promotion coincided with a coup by General Nguyễn Khánh against the officers who removed Diệm. Many of these, such as Generals Trần Văn Đôn, Lê Văn Kim, Tôn Thất Đính and Mai Hữu Xuân were put under house arrest, opening up vacancies for other generals.[9][10]

Phát was regarded as a dour military tactician who persisted with his pre-devised battleplan once hostilities had commenced, refusing to change tactics even when difficulties arose. In one engagement in 1964 in Bến Tre Province in the Mekong Delta, Phát was blamed for the loss of an American helicopter in addition to heavy personnel losses after he proceeded with an attack despite advice to the contrary from his junior officers. U.S. military advisers who worked with Phát reportedly regarded him as competent, albeit dour and lacking in charisma.[1]

September 1964 coup attempt

In September 1964, Phát was dismissed as Interior Minister, while General Dương Văn Đức was about to be removed as IV Corps commander.[11] Both were removed partly due to pressure from Buddhist activists, who accused Khánh of accommodating too many Catholic pro-Diệm elements in leadership positions.[12] This came after Khánh attempted to augment his power in August by declaring a state of emergency and introducing a new constitution, which resulted in mass unrest and calls for civilian rule, forcing Khánh to make concessions in an attempt to dampen discontent.[13] Disgruntled, the pair tried to launch a coup attempt of their own in the pre-dawn hours of 13 September, using 10 army battalions they had recruited.[14] They gained the support of Colonel Lý Tòng Bá, head of the 7th Division's armored section.[3] The coup was supported by Catholic and Đại Việt elements.[15] Another member of the conspiracy was Colonel Phạm Ngọc Thảo, who, while ostensibly a Catholic, was actually a communist double agent trying to maximize infighting at every possible opportunity.[16][17] General Trần Thiện Khiêm, a member of the ruling triumvirate along with Khánh and Minh, but a rival of the dominant Khánh, was also believed to have supported the plot.[16]

Four battalions of rebel troops moved before dawn towards Saigon from the Mekong Delta, with armored personnel carriers and jeeps carrying machine guns. After cowing a police checkpoint on the edge of the capital, they put sentries in their place to seal off Saigon from incoming or outgoing traffic. They then captured communication facilities in the capital. As the rebel troops took over the city without any firing and sealed it off, Phát sat in a civilian vehicle and calmly said, "We'll be holding a press conference in town this afternoon at 4 pm"[3][18] Claiming to represent The Council for the Liberation of the Nation, Phát proclaimed the deposal of Khánh's "junta" over national radio, and accused Khánh of promoting conflict within the nation's military and political leadership. He promised to capture Khánh and pursue a policy of increased anti-communism,[19] stronger government and military.[20] Phát stated he would return to the crypto-fascist, Catholic integrist ideology of the Ngô family to lay the foundation for his junta.[12] According to historian George McTurnan Kahin, Phát's broadcast was "triumphant" and may have prompted senior officers who were neither part of the original conspiracy nor fully loyal to Khánh to conclude that Phát and Đức would not embrace them if they rallied to their side.[21]

There was little reaction from most of the military commanders.[12] Phát's rebels set up their command post in the Saigon home of General Dương Ngọc Lắm, a Diệm loyalist who had been removed from his post as Mayor of Saigon by Khánh.[9][19] In contrast to Phát's serene demeanour, his incoming troops prompted worshippers at the Roman Catholic cathedral attending mass to flee in panic. The Buddhists, however, made no overt reaction to a coup that would dent their rights. Air Force commander Kỳ had promised two weeks earlier to use his planes against any coup attempt, but there was no reaction early in the morning. Đức mistakenly thought Kỳ and his subordinates would join the coup, but later realized that he was mistaken. After he found out that he had been tricked into thinking that the plotters had great strength, he defected.[22] Several U.S. advisers were chased away by rebel officers who did not want interference in the coup. They thought the Americans would not approve of their actions, as both U.S. Ambassador Maxwell Taylor and President Lyndon Johnson had made optimistic comments about South Vietnam recently.[3]

Phát and Đức failed to apprehend Khánh, who had escaped the capital and flew to the central highlands resort town of Đà Lạt.[12] Their forces stormed Khánh's office and arrested his duty officers but could not find him.[3] There was then a lull in the power struggle. One Vietnamese official said that "All these preparations are the result of a big misunderstanding on both sides. I don't think either group will start anything, but both think the other will."[3]

American officials followed Khánh to encourage him to return to Saigon and reassert his control. The general refused to do so unless the Americans publicly announced their support for him to the nation. They then asked Khánh about his plans for the future, but felt that he was directionless. After talking to Phát and Đức, they concluded the same and decided to back the incumbent and publicly released a statement through the embassy to endorse Khánh.[12] The announcement helped to deter ARVN officers from joining Phát and Đức, who decided to give up, the former only temporarily, however.[11]

Kỳ then decided to make a show of force and sent jets to fly low over Saigon and finish off the rebel stand.[3] He also sent two C-47s to Vũng Tàu to pick up two companies of South Vietnamese marines who remained loyal to Khánh. Several more battalions of loyal infantry were transported into Saigon.[3] Phát withdrew with his forces to the Mỹ Tho base of the 7th Division.[23] In the early hours of 14 September, before dawn, Kỳ met senior coup leaders at Tân Sơn Nhất and told them to back down, which they did.[18]

After the coup collapsed, Kỳ held a press conference claiming that the senior officers involved in the stand-off "have agreed to rejoin their units to fight the Communists", naming Phát among them.[18] Kỳ claimed no further action would be taken against those involved with Phát and Đức's activities,[23] and that events in the capital were being misinterpreted by observers, as "there was no coup".[18] Despite the media event, Phát and Colonel Huỳnh Văn Tôn remained defiant after returning to the latter's 7th Division's headquarters in Mỹ Tho. Tôn was threatening to break away from the government.[24] On 16 September, Khánh had the plotters arrested; Phát returned to Saigon to turn himself in, the last to be taken into custody.[23] Three of the four corps commanders and six of the nine division commanders were removed for failing to move against Phát and Đức.[11]

 
Air Force Chief Kỳ was one of the leading figures in putting down Phát's coup attempt.

Kỳ's role in putting down Phát and Đức's coup attempt gave him more leverage in Saigon's military politics. Indebted to Kỳ and his supporters for maintaining his hold on power, Khánh was now in a weaker position. Kỳ's group called on Khánh to remove "corrupt, dishonest and counterrevolutionary" officers, civil servants and exploitationists,[clarification needed] and threatened to remove him if he did not enact their proposed reforms.[22]

Phát and 19 others were put on trial in a military court; observers predicted that he would be the only one to face the death penalty. Phát's lawyers started by unsuccessfully moving for the charges against the conspirators to be dismissed, claiming the rebels had not been captured "red-handed". They were more successful in another demand, managing to persuade the five judges to allow witnesses to be called. The court agreed to their request to compel Khánh, Kỳ, and Deputy Prime Minister Nguyễn Xuân Oánh to appear before the hearing. The accused officers claimed they had only intended to make a show of force, rather than overthrow Khánh.[25] Asked why he had denounced Khánh as a "traitor" during a broadcast on national radio during the coup attempt, Phát claimed he had merely "gotten excited".[25]

Phát was asked about the collapse of his coup attempt and he discussed his visit to the American Embassy along with labor union leader Trần Quốc Bửu. Phát claimed his discussion with deputy ambassador U. Alexis Johnson was "not too important" and played down its impact, claiming that Johnson's limited usage of French had limited any talks he would have wanted to have. However, Bửu contradicted Phát, telling journalists the meeting with Johnson had lasted around 90 minutes.[25] One week later on 24 October, the charges were dropped,[26] because Khánh needed support for his fragile regime and wanted to have a counterweight against Kỳ and Thi.[21] Khánh sentenced Phát and Đức to two months of detention; their subordinates were given even shorter sentences.[26]

February 1965 coup attempt

In 1965, Phát was involved in another coup attempt against Khánh. Colonel Thảo and General Khiêm had both been sent by Khánh to Washington to keep them away from plotting. In late December 1964, Thảo was summoned back to Saigon by Khánh, who correctly thought he was plotting with Khiêm to launch another coup. Thảo, likewise, suspected Khánh was attempting to have him killed,[27][28] so he underground upon returning to Saigon,[27] and began plotting,[29] having been threatened with being charged for desertion.[27] Due to his Catholic background, Thảo was able to recruit Catholic pro-Diệm loyalists such as Phát.[30] Thảo was still successfully operating as a double agent.[17] By this stage, the Americans had fallen out with Khánh and were encouraging various Vietnamese officers to launch a coup, and the Thảo-led effort caught them out.[clarification needed][31]

Between January and February, Thảo began plotting his own counter-coup.[32] He consulted with Air Force Chief Kỳ and tried to convince him to join the coup, but Kỳ stated that he would remain neutral. Thảo believed Kỳ would not intervene against him.[33] Shortly before noon on 19 February, Thảo and Phát attacked, using some 50 tanks and a mixture of infantry battalions to seize control of the military headquarters, the post office and the radio station in Saigon. They surrounded Khánh's home as well as Gia Long Palace, the residence of head of state Phan Khắc Sửu.[32][34] At the same time Phát headed towards Tân Sơn Nhất to capture the country's military headquarters with an assortment of marines, paratroopers and special forces troops.[34]

At the same time, most of the senior officers had been in meetings with American officials at Tân Sơn Nhất since the early morning, and Khánh left at 12:30. The plotters had secured the cooperation of someone working inside the Joint General Staff headquarters. This collaborator was supposed to have closed the gate so that Khánh would be held up, but left them open.[35]

 
Generals Thi (left) and Thiệu (right) during the 1960s. Thi helped stop both of Phát's coup attempts. Thiệu later pardoned Phát after he had been sentenced to death.

Some of the other senior officers in the Armed Forces Council were not so lucky, and they were caught by Phát's troops inside headquarters, while other buildings of the military complex remained under junta control.[36] Khánh managed to escape to Vũng Tàu. His plane was just emerging from the hangar and lifted off just as rebel tanks were rolling in, attempting to block the runway and shut down the airport.[33][34][37] Phát's ground troops also missed capturing Kỳ, who fled through the streets in a sports car with his wife and mother-in-law.[38] Kỳ ended up at Tân Sơn Nhất, where he ran into Khánh; the pair flew off together to regroup.[36]

Thảo made a radio announcement stating that the sole objective of his military operation was to get rid of Khánh, whom he described as a "dictator".[32] He said he intended to recall Khiêm to Saigon to lead the Armed Forces Council in place of Khánh, while his supporters made pro-Diệm speeches. It was later concluded that the coup was again mostly by hard-core Diệm loyalists and Catholics.[39] This turned American officials against the coup as they feared that the plotters would lead a divisive regime that would inflame sectarian tensions and play into the hands of the communists, so they decided to look for officers to defeat Thảo and Phát.[40]

Phát was supposed to seize the second largest air force base in the country, located in the satellite city of Biên Hòa outside Saigon. This was to prevent Kỳ from mobilizing air power against them,[30][32] but this failed, as Kỳ had already flown there to take control after dropping Khánh off at Vũng Tàu. Phát could not challenge Kỳ's fighter planes, which were already patrolling the air above Biên Hòa by the time they arrived.[36] Kỳ flew a short distance southwest and circled Tân Sơn Nhất, threatening to bomb the rebels.[32][33] Kỳ had never trusted Thảo or Phát, and did not want them in power.[41] Most of the forces of the III and IV Corps surrounding the capital disliked both Khánh and the rebels, and took no action.[42] As nightfall came, it appeared that forces loyal to Khánh were strengthening as they began to move towards Saigon.[41]

At 20:00, Thảo and Phát met Kỳ in a meeting organized by the Americans, and insisted Khánh be removed from power. The coup collapsed when, between midnight and dawn, anti-coup forces swept into the city. Whether the rebels were defeated or a deal was struck with Kỳ to end the revolt in exchange for Khánh's removal is disputed.[32][43][44] According to the latter version, Thảo and Phát agreed to free the members of the Armed Forces Council whom they had arrested and to withdraw in exchange for Khánh's complete removal from power.[41] Thảo and Phát were given an appointment with the figurehead chief of state, Sửu, who was under the close control of the junta, to "order" him to sign a decree stripping Khánh of the leadership of the military.[41] Before fleeing, Phát changed into civilian clothes and made a broadcast stating "We have capitulated", before leaving with Colonel Tôn, who had also participated in his September 1964 coup attempt.[45] The Armed Forces Council then adopted a vote of no confidence in Khánh and forced him into exile, while Kỳ assumed control.[32][46]

Post-military life

Thảo and Phát were stripped of their ranks, but nothing was initially done as far as prosecuting or sentencing them for their involvement in the coup for the time being.[47] They went into hiding in Catholic villages and offered to surrender and support the government if they and their officers were granted amnesty.[48] However, this failed to materialize, and in May 1965, a military tribunal loyal to Kỳ sentenced both to death in absentia.[49]

In July 1965, Thảo was hunted down and is believed to have been executed in unclear circumstances.[49] Phát remained on the run for three years. During that time, Kỳ's power was eclipsed by General Nguyễn Văn Thiệu, a Catholic and a Diệmist, in a continuing power struggle. Thiệu became president in 1967 with Kỳ as his deputy, and over time began to work himself into a dominant position, removing his deputy's supporters in the military from positions of high power. In June 1968, Phát came out of hiding and surrendered himself to the authorities. He was pardoned by the Thiệu-dominated military court in August and released.[50] His last-known assignment was as Military Governor of Saigon from 28 to 30 April 1975, when Saigon fell, under General Dương Văn Minh.

Other

Little is known of Phát's personal life except that he was married and, according to The New York Times, believed to have been in his late 30s when he made his coup attempts, implying he was born in the mid-to-late 1920s.[1] He died in 1998.[where?][citation needed]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Challenger in Saigon: Lam Van Phat". The New York Times. 14 September 1964. p. 14.
  2. ^ Jacobs, pp. 85–95.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h "South Viet Nam: Continued Progress". Time. 18 September 1964.
  4. ^ a b c Tucker, pp. 526–33.
  5. ^ a b c d Halberstam, David (6 November 1963). "Coup in Saigon: A Detailed Account". The New York Times. Retrieved 29 October 2009.
  6. ^ Karnow, p. 321.
  7. ^ Moyar, p. 270.
  8. ^ Karnow, pp. 323–26.
  9. ^ a b Shaplen, pp. 228–40.
  10. ^ Kahin, pp. 198–204.
  11. ^ a b c Karnow, p. 396.
  12. ^ a b c d e Moyar, p. 327.
  13. ^ Moyar, pp. 315–20.
  14. ^ Moyar, p. 326.
  15. ^ Shaplen, p. 288.
  16. ^ a b Kahin, p. 231.
  17. ^ a b Karnow, pp. 39–40.
  18. ^ a b c d "Coup collapses in Saigon; Khanh forces in power; U.S. pledges full support". The New York Times. 14 September 1964. p. 1.
  19. ^ a b "Key posts taken". The New York Times. 13 September 1964. p. 1.
  20. ^ Grose, Peter (14 September 1964). "Coup Lasted 24 Hours". The New York Times. p. 14.
  21. ^ a b Kahin, p. 232.
  22. ^ a b "South Viet Nam: Remaking a Revolution". Time. 25 September 1964.
  23. ^ a b c "Khanh arrests 5 in coup attempt". The New York Times. 17 September 1964. p. 10.
  24. ^ "Dissident Said to Hold Out". The New York Times. 16 September 1964. p. 2.
  25. ^ a b c Langguth, Jack (16 October 1964). "Trial of officers starts in Saigon". The New York Times. p. 4.
  26. ^ a b Grose, Peter (25 October 1964). "Vietnam council chooses civilian as chief of state". The New York Times. p. 1.
  27. ^ a b c Shaplen, pp. 308–09.
  28. ^ Tang, pp. 56–57.
  29. ^ Tang, p. 57.
  30. ^ a b VanDeMark, p. 80.
  31. ^ Kahin, pp. 295–99.
  32. ^ a b c d e f g Shaplen, pp. 310–12.
  33. ^ a b c VanDeMark, p. 81.
  34. ^ a b c Moyar, p. 363.
  35. ^ Kahin, p. 514.
  36. ^ a b c Kahin, p. 300.
  37. ^ Tang, p. 363.
  38. ^ "South Viet Nam: A Trial for Patience". Time. 26 February 1965.
  39. ^ Kahin, pp. 299–300.
  40. ^ Kahin, p. 301.
  41. ^ a b c d Kahin, p. 302.
  42. ^ Moyar, pp. 363–64.
  43. ^ Moyar, p. 364.
  44. ^ VanDeMark, p. 82.
  45. ^ "Dissident General Yields". The New York Times. 20 February 1965. p. 2.
  46. ^ Langguth, pp. 346–47.
  47. ^ Kahin, p. 303.
  48. ^ Shaplen, pp. 321–22.
  49. ^ a b Shaplen, pp. 338–44.
  50. ^ "Saigon Frees General". The New York Times. 18 August 1968. p. 3.

Sources

lâm, văn, phát, major, general, 1920, october, 1998, vietnamese, army, officer, best, known, leading, coup, attempts, against, general, nguyễn, khánh, september, 1964, february, 1965, although, both, failed, result, taking, power, latter, caused, enough, insta. Major General Lam Văn Phat 1920 30 October 1998 was a Vietnamese army officer He is best known for leading two coup attempts against General Nguyễn Khanh in September 1964 and February 1965 Although both failed to result in his taking power the latter caused enough instability that it forced Khanh to resign and go into exile Lam Văn PhatBorn1920Cần Thơ French IndochinaDied30 October 1998 1998 10 30 aged 77 78 California U S AllegianceState of Vietnam South VietnamService wbr branchVietnamese National Army Army of the Republic of VietnamYears of service19 1965RankMajor General Thiếu Tướng Commands held2nd Division June 1961 June 1963 7th Division December 1963 February 1964 III Corps February 1964 September 1964 Battles warsVietnam War September 1964 South Vietnamese coup attempt February 1965 South Vietnamese coup attemptOther workInterior Minister removed September 1964 A member of the Roman Catholic minority Phat joined the French backed Vietnamese National Army which became the Army of the Republic of Vietnam ARVN after the Republic of Vietnam South Vietnam was established After having been sent to the U S for further training in 1958 Phat returned home to head the Civil Guard a paramilitary force then mostly used to protect the ruling family of President Ngo Đinh Diệm rather than to counteract the communist Việt Cộng insurgency Later commanding the 2nd Division he was known for his loyalty to Diệm who favored fellow Catholics In 1963 Diệm knew some of the generals were about to launch a coup against him He appointed Phat to command the 7th Division located near the capital Saigon so he could help in the fighting but the plotters successfully used delaying tactics so that the paperwork for the transfer of the division leadership could not occur before they proceeded to overthrow and execute Diệm Despite Phat s pro Diệm allegiance he was promoted to brigadier general and given command of the 7th Division After the January 1964 coup against Dương Văn Minh Phat was made the commander of III Corps and also Interior Minister for a time until he was dismissed in September 1964 This prompted him to join Dương Văn Đức another general relieved of command in launching a coup attempt against Khanh on 13 September They initially took over the capital without a fight but Khanh escaped and after having received endorsements from the U S defeated Phat and Đức At the military trial that followed charges were dropped In February 1965 Phat joined with fellow Catholic Diệm protege and Khanh opponent Phạm Ngọc Thảo actually a communist agent intent on maximizing infighting in South Vietnam in another coup attempt After the forces deadlocked Phat met with Republic of Vietnam Air Force chief Nguyễn Cao Kỳ insisting on Khanh s assassination After the meeting concluded the coup collapsed but Khanh was forced from office the next day Phat and Thảo went into hiding and were sentenced to death in absentia by Kỳ s military tribunal Thảo was killed under mysterious circumstances but Phat evaded capture for three years until surrendering By this time Kỳ s power had been eclipsed by another Catholic General Nguyễn Văn Thiệu who freed Phat from prison citation needed Contents 1 Early military career 2 Overthrow of Diệm in 1963 3 Nguyễn Khanh 3 1 September 1964 coup attempt 3 2 February 1965 coup attempt 4 Post military life 5 Other 6 References 7 SourcesEarly military career Edit Ngo Đinh Diệm the President of South Vietnam from 1955 to 1963 gave preferential treatment to Roman Catholics Phat was a Diệm loyalist The President of South Vietnam Ngo Đinh Diệm heavily favored Catholics and as a result Phat rose quickly up the ranks Having started his career in the French backed Vietnamese National Army of the State of Vietnam Phat became a member of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam after the State of Vietnam became the Republic of Vietnam In 1958 holding the rank of colonel Phat was sent to Fort Leavenworth Kansas for officer training 1 Described as being tall for relatively short Vietnamese norms Phat spoke halting English 1 After returning to Vietnam he served as the head of the Civil Guard 1 a paramilitary force that was mostly used at the time to protect the ruling family of President Ngo Đinh Diệm rather than to counteract the communist Viet Cong insurgency Phat has been described as a political Catholic 1 a term for those who practiced or converted to the religion to curry favor with Diệm who made most military and political appointments and promotions on the basis of religion 2 Phat s habit of customarily being seen in public with a swagger stick and his reputation for autocratic leadership alienated most of his subordinate officers 1 He grew his pinky fingernail to great length a practice observed by mandarins during Vietnam s imperial era to denote their status Some observers claimed that the mandarin style of his fingernail spread to his general behavior decrying him as haughty and hawklike 1 U S military advisors regarded Phat as mediocre 3 As a colonel he served as the commander of 2nd Division located in central Vietnam from 8 June 1961 until 18 June 1963 when he was replaced by Colonel Trương Văn Chương 4 Overthrow of Diệm in 1963 EditSee also 1963 South Vietnamese coup and Arrest and assassination of Ngo Đinh Diệm By late 1963 Diệm knew a coup was brewing and that the 7th Division at Mỹ Tho outside Saigon might be involved As it was close to the capital it would play a crucial role in either attacking or defending Diệm or blocking outlying units from entering the city Diệm put Phat in command of the 7th Division on 31 October 5 According to tradition Phat had to pay the corps commander a courtesy visit before assuming control of the division However General Ton Thất Đinh commander of the III Corps was part of the plot and deliberately refused to see Phat and told him to come back at 14 00 the following day by which time the coup had already been scheduled to start In the meantime Đinh had General Trần Văn Đon sign a counter order transferring command of the 7th Division to his deputy and co conspirator Nguyễn Hữu Co 5 Co then trapped and arrested the 7th Division s officers on the day of the coup 5 6 He then phoned General Huỳnh Văn Cao further south in the Mekong Delta s largest town Cần Thơ where the IV Corps was headquartered Co a central Vietnamese imitated Phat s southern accent and tricked Cao into thinking that nothing unusual was happening 5 Phat s removal had thus stopped Cao from sending loyalists to Saigon to save Diệm 7 who was captured and executed the following day 8 Despite the fact that Đinh saw Co as being more reliable for the purposes of staging the coup against Diệm Minh promoted him to brigadier general immediately after the officers seized power 1 As a brigadier general he served as the commander of the 7th Division from 2 December 1963 until 2 February 1964 4 Nguyễn Khanh EditSee also January 1964 South Vietnamese coup and Nguyễn Khanh He was then promoted and served as the commander of III Corps which oversaw the region of the country surrounding Saigon from 2 February until 4 April 1964 when he was replaced by Lieutenant General Tran Ngoc Tam 4 Phat s promotion coincided with a coup by General Nguyễn Khanh against the officers who removed Diệm Many of these such as Generals Trần Văn Đon Le Văn Kim Ton Thất Đinh and Mai Hữu Xuan were put under house arrest opening up vacancies for other generals 9 10 Phat was regarded as a dour military tactician who persisted with his pre devised battleplan once hostilities had commenced refusing to change tactics even when difficulties arose In one engagement in 1964 in Bến Tre Province in the Mekong Delta Phat was blamed for the loss of an American helicopter in addition to heavy personnel losses after he proceeded with an attack despite advice to the contrary from his junior officers U S military advisers who worked with Phat reportedly regarded him as competent albeit dour and lacking in charisma 1 September 1964 coup attempt Edit Main article September 1964 South Vietnamese coup attempt In September 1964 Phat was dismissed as Interior Minister while General Dương Văn Đức was about to be removed as IV Corps commander 11 Both were removed partly due to pressure from Buddhist activists who accused Khanh of accommodating too many Catholic pro Diệm elements in leadership positions 12 This came after Khanh attempted to augment his power in August by declaring a state of emergency and introducing a new constitution which resulted in mass unrest and calls for civilian rule forcing Khanh to make concessions in an attempt to dampen discontent 13 Disgruntled the pair tried to launch a coup attempt of their own in the pre dawn hours of 13 September using 10 army battalions they had recruited 14 They gained the support of Colonel Ly Tong Ba head of the 7th Division s armored section 3 The coup was supported by Catholic and Đại Việt elements 15 Another member of the conspiracy was Colonel Phạm Ngọc Thảo who while ostensibly a Catholic was actually a communist double agent trying to maximize infighting at every possible opportunity 16 17 General Trần Thiện Khiem a member of the ruling triumvirate along with Khanh and Minh but a rival of the dominant Khanh was also believed to have supported the plot 16 Four battalions of rebel troops moved before dawn towards Saigon from the Mekong Delta with armored personnel carriers and jeeps carrying machine guns After cowing a police checkpoint on the edge of the capital they put sentries in their place to seal off Saigon from incoming or outgoing traffic They then captured communication facilities in the capital As the rebel troops took over the city without any firing and sealed it off Phat sat in a civilian vehicle and calmly said We ll be holding a press conference in town this afternoon at 4 pm 3 18 Claiming to represent The Council for the Liberation of the Nation Phat proclaimed the deposal of Khanh s junta over national radio and accused Khanh of promoting conflict within the nation s military and political leadership He promised to capture Khanh and pursue a policy of increased anti communism 19 stronger government and military 20 Phat stated he would return to the crypto fascist Catholic integrist ideology of the Ngo family to lay the foundation for his junta 12 According to historian George McTurnan Kahin Phat s broadcast was triumphant and may have prompted senior officers who were neither part of the original conspiracy nor fully loyal to Khanh to conclude that Phat and Đức would not embrace them if they rallied to their side 21 There was little reaction from most of the military commanders 12 Phat s rebels set up their command post in the Saigon home of General Dương Ngọc Lắm a Diệm loyalist who had been removed from his post as Mayor of Saigon by Khanh 9 19 In contrast to Phat s serene demeanour his incoming troops prompted worshippers at the Roman Catholic cathedral attending mass to flee in panic The Buddhists however made no overt reaction to a coup that would dent their rights Air Force commander Kỳ had promised two weeks earlier to use his planes against any coup attempt but there was no reaction early in the morning Đức mistakenly thought Kỳ and his subordinates would join the coup but later realized that he was mistaken After he found out that he had been tricked into thinking that the plotters had great strength he defected 22 Several U S advisers were chased away by rebel officers who did not want interference in the coup They thought the Americans would not approve of their actions as both U S Ambassador Maxwell Taylor and President Lyndon Johnson had made optimistic comments about South Vietnam recently 3 Phat and Đức failed to apprehend Khanh who had escaped the capital and flew to the central highlands resort town of Đa Lạt 12 Their forces stormed Khanh s office and arrested his duty officers but could not find him 3 There was then a lull in the power struggle One Vietnamese official said that All these preparations are the result of a big misunderstanding on both sides I don t think either group will start anything but both think the other will 3 American officials followed Khanh to encourage him to return to Saigon and reassert his control The general refused to do so unless the Americans publicly announced their support for him to the nation They then asked Khanh about his plans for the future but felt that he was directionless After talking to Phat and Đức they concluded the same and decided to back the incumbent and publicly released a statement through the embassy to endorse Khanh 12 The announcement helped to deter ARVN officers from joining Phat and Đức who decided to give up the former only temporarily however 11 Kỳ then decided to make a show of force and sent jets to fly low over Saigon and finish off the rebel stand 3 He also sent two C 47s to Vũng Tau to pick up two companies of South Vietnamese marines who remained loyal to Khanh Several more battalions of loyal infantry were transported into Saigon 3 Phat withdrew with his forces to the Mỹ Tho base of the 7th Division 23 In the early hours of 14 September before dawn Kỳ met senior coup leaders at Tan Sơn Nhất and told them to back down which they did 18 After the coup collapsed Kỳ held a press conference claiming that the senior officers involved in the stand off have agreed to rejoin their units to fight the Communists naming Phat among them 18 Kỳ claimed no further action would be taken against those involved with Phat and Đức s activities 23 and that events in the capital were being misinterpreted by observers as there was no coup 18 Despite the media event Phat and Colonel Huỳnh Văn Ton remained defiant after returning to the latter s 7th Division s headquarters in Mỹ Tho Ton was threatening to break away from the government 24 On 16 September Khanh had the plotters arrested Phat returned to Saigon to turn himself in the last to be taken into custody 23 Three of the four corps commanders and six of the nine division commanders were removed for failing to move against Phat and Đức 11 Air Force Chief Kỳ was one of the leading figures in putting down Phat s coup attempt Kỳ s role in putting down Phat and Đức s coup attempt gave him more leverage in Saigon s military politics Indebted to Kỳ and his supporters for maintaining his hold on power Khanh was now in a weaker position Kỳ s group called on Khanh to remove corrupt dishonest and counterrevolutionary officers civil servants and exploitationists clarification needed and threatened to remove him if he did not enact their proposed reforms 22 Phat and 19 others were put on trial in a military court observers predicted that he would be the only one to face the death penalty Phat s lawyers started by unsuccessfully moving for the charges against the conspirators to be dismissed claiming the rebels had not been captured red handed They were more successful in another demand managing to persuade the five judges to allow witnesses to be called The court agreed to their request to compel Khanh Kỳ and Deputy Prime Minister Nguyễn Xuan Oanh to appear before the hearing The accused officers claimed they had only intended to make a show of force rather than overthrow Khanh 25 Asked why he had denounced Khanh as a traitor during a broadcast on national radio during the coup attempt Phat claimed he had merely gotten excited 25 Phat was asked about the collapse of his coup attempt and he discussed his visit to the American Embassy along with labor union leader Trần Quốc Bửu Phat claimed his discussion with deputy ambassador U Alexis Johnson was not too important and played down its impact claiming that Johnson s limited usage of French had limited any talks he would have wanted to have However Bửu contradicted Phat telling journalists the meeting with Johnson had lasted around 90 minutes 25 One week later on 24 October the charges were dropped 26 because Khanh needed support for his fragile regime and wanted to have a counterweight against Kỳ and Thi 21 Khanh sentenced Phat and Đức to two months of detention their subordinates were given even shorter sentences 26 February 1965 coup attempt Edit Main article 1965 South Vietnamese coup attempt In 1965 Phat was involved in another coup attempt against Khanh Colonel Thảo and General Khiem had both been sent by Khanh to Washington to keep them away from plotting In late December 1964 Thảo was summoned back to Saigon by Khanh who correctly thought he was plotting with Khiem to launch another coup Thảo likewise suspected Khanh was attempting to have him killed 27 28 so he underground upon returning to Saigon 27 and began plotting 29 having been threatened with being charged for desertion 27 Due to his Catholic background Thảo was able to recruit Catholic pro Diệm loyalists such as Phat 30 Thảo was still successfully operating as a double agent 17 By this stage the Americans had fallen out with Khanh and were encouraging various Vietnamese officers to launch a coup and the Thảo led effort caught them out clarification needed 31 Between January and February Thảo began plotting his own counter coup 32 He consulted with Air Force Chief Kỳ and tried to convince him to join the coup but Kỳ stated that he would remain neutral Thảo believed Kỳ would not intervene against him 33 Shortly before noon on 19 February Thảo and Phat attacked using some 50 tanks and a mixture of infantry battalions to seize control of the military headquarters the post office and the radio station in Saigon They surrounded Khanh s home as well as Gia Long Palace the residence of head of state Phan Khắc Sửu 32 34 At the same time Phat headed towards Tan Sơn Nhất to capture the country s military headquarters with an assortment of marines paratroopers and special forces troops 34 At the same time most of the senior officers had been in meetings with American officials at Tan Sơn Nhất since the early morning and Khanh left at 12 30 The plotters had secured the cooperation of someone working inside the Joint General Staff headquarters This collaborator was supposed to have closed the gate so that Khanh would be held up but left them open 35 Generals Thi left and Thiệu right during the 1960s Thi helped stop both of Phat s coup attempts Thiệu later pardoned Phat after he had been sentenced to death Some of the other senior officers in the Armed Forces Council were not so lucky and they were caught by Phat s troops inside headquarters while other buildings of the military complex remained under junta control 36 Khanh managed to escape to Vũng Tau His plane was just emerging from the hangar and lifted off just as rebel tanks were rolling in attempting to block the runway and shut down the airport 33 34 37 Phat s ground troops also missed capturing Kỳ who fled through the streets in a sports car with his wife and mother in law 38 Kỳ ended up at Tan Sơn Nhất where he ran into Khanh the pair flew off together to regroup 36 Thảo made a radio announcement stating that the sole objective of his military operation was to get rid of Khanh whom he described as a dictator 32 He said he intended to recall Khiem to Saigon to lead the Armed Forces Council in place of Khanh while his supporters made pro Diệm speeches It was later concluded that the coup was again mostly by hard core Diệm loyalists and Catholics 39 This turned American officials against the coup as they feared that the plotters would lead a divisive regime that would inflame sectarian tensions and play into the hands of the communists so they decided to look for officers to defeat Thảo and Phat 40 Phat was supposed to seize the second largest air force base in the country located in the satellite city of Bien Hoa outside Saigon This was to prevent Kỳ from mobilizing air power against them 30 32 but this failed as Kỳ had already flown there to take control after dropping Khanh off at Vũng Tau Phat could not challenge Kỳ s fighter planes which were already patrolling the air above Bien Hoa by the time they arrived 36 Kỳ flew a short distance southwest and circled Tan Sơn Nhất threatening to bomb the rebels 32 33 Kỳ had never trusted Thảo or Phat and did not want them in power 41 Most of the forces of the III and IV Corps surrounding the capital disliked both Khanh and the rebels and took no action 42 As nightfall came it appeared that forces loyal to Khanh were strengthening as they began to move towards Saigon 41 At 20 00 Thảo and Phat met Kỳ in a meeting organized by the Americans and insisted Khanh be removed from power The coup collapsed when between midnight and dawn anti coup forces swept into the city Whether the rebels were defeated or a deal was struck with Kỳ to end the revolt in exchange for Khanh s removal is disputed 32 43 44 According to the latter version Thảo and Phat agreed to free the members of the Armed Forces Council whom they had arrested and to withdraw in exchange for Khanh s complete removal from power 41 Thảo and Phat were given an appointment with the figurehead chief of state Sửu who was under the close control of the junta to order him to sign a decree stripping Khanh of the leadership of the military 41 Before fleeing Phat changed into civilian clothes and made a broadcast stating We have capitulated before leaving with Colonel Ton who had also participated in his September 1964 coup attempt 45 The Armed Forces Council then adopted a vote of no confidence in Khanh and forced him into exile while Kỳ assumed control 32 46 Post military life EditThảo and Phat were stripped of their ranks but nothing was initially done as far as prosecuting or sentencing them for their involvement in the coup for the time being 47 They went into hiding in Catholic villages and offered to surrender and support the government if they and their officers were granted amnesty 48 However this failed to materialize and in May 1965 a military tribunal loyal to Kỳ sentenced both to death in absentia 49 In July 1965 Thảo was hunted down and is believed to have been executed in unclear circumstances 49 Phat remained on the run for three years During that time Kỳ s power was eclipsed by General Nguyễn Văn Thiệu a Catholic and a Diệmist in a continuing power struggle Thiệu became president in 1967 with Kỳ as his deputy and over time began to work himself into a dominant position removing his deputy s supporters in the military from positions of high power In June 1968 Phat came out of hiding and surrendered himself to the authorities He was pardoned by the Thiệu dominated military court in August and released 50 His last known assignment was as Military Governor of Saigon from 28 to 30 April 1975 when Saigon fell under General Dương Văn Minh Other EditLittle is known of Phat s personal life except that he was married and according to The New York Times believed to have been in his late 30s when he made his coup attempts implying he was born in the mid to late 1920s 1 He died in 1998 where citation needed References Edit a b c d e f g h i Challenger in Saigon Lam Van Phat The New York Times 14 September 1964 p 14 Jacobs pp 85 95 a b c d e f g h South Viet Nam Continued Progress Time 18 September 1964 a b c Tucker pp 526 33 a b c d Halberstam David 6 November 1963 Coup in Saigon A Detailed Account The New York Times Retrieved 29 October 2009 Karnow p 321 Moyar p 270 Karnow pp 323 26 a b Shaplen pp 228 40 Kahin pp 198 204 a b c Karnow p 396 a b c d e Moyar p 327 Moyar pp 315 20 Moyar p 326 Shaplen p 288 a b Kahin p 231 a b Karnow pp 39 40 a b c d Coup collapses in Saigon Khanh forces in power U S pledges full support The New York Times 14 September 1964 p 1 a b Key posts taken The New York Times 13 September 1964 p 1 Grose Peter 14 September 1964 Coup Lasted 24 Hours The New York Times p 14 a b Kahin p 232 a b South Viet Nam Remaking a Revolution Time 25 September 1964 a b c Khanh arrests 5 in coup attempt The New York Times 17 September 1964 p 10 Dissident Said to Hold Out The New York Times 16 September 1964 p 2 a b c Langguth Jack 16 October 1964 Trial of officers starts in Saigon The New York Times p 4 a b Grose Peter 25 October 1964 Vietnam council chooses civilian as chief of state The New York Times p 1 a b c Shaplen pp 308 09 Tang pp 56 57 Tang p 57 a b VanDeMark p 80 Kahin pp 295 99 a b c d e f g Shaplen pp 310 12 a b c VanDeMark p 81 a b c Moyar p 363 Kahin p 514 a b c Kahin p 300 Tang p 363 South Viet Nam A Trial for Patience Time 26 February 1965 Kahin pp 299 300 Kahin p 301 a b c d Kahin p 302 Moyar pp 363 64 Moyar p 364 VanDeMark p 82 Dissident General Yields The New York Times 20 February 1965 p 2 Langguth pp 346 47 Kahin p 303 Shaplen pp 321 22 a b Shaplen pp 338 44 Saigon Frees General The New York Times 18 August 1968 p 3 Sources EditJacobs 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 Schuster ISBN 0 684 81202 9 Moyar Mark 2006 Triumph Forsaken The Vietnam War 1954 1965 New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 86911 0 Shaplen Robert 1966 The Lost Revolution Vietnam 1945 1965 London Andre Deutsch OCLC 460367485 Truong Nhu Tang 1986 Journal of a Vietcong London Cape ISBN 0 224 02819 7 Tucker Spencer C ed 2000 Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War A Political Social and Military History Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO ISBN 1 57607 040 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first has generic name help VanDeMark Brian 1995 Into the Quagmire Lyndon Johnson and the Escalation of the Vietnam War New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 509650 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lam Văn Phat amp oldid 1128575079, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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