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Phạm Văn Đổng

Phạm Văn Đổng (listen; October 25, 1919 – November 26, 2008) was a South Vietnamese general. A staunch nationalist and anti-communist, he was considered an ally to several Việt Nam Quốc Dân Đảng (Việt Quốc) factions, multiple Đại Việt groups, Việt Nam Cách Mạng Đồng Minh Hội (Việt Cách) high-ranking members, Duy Dân and Hòa Hảo leaders.

Phạm Văn Đổng
Official portrait as military governor of Saigon, 1965
Nickname(s)Tiger of the Delta
Born(1919-10-25)October 25, 1919
Sơn Tây, North Vietnam
DiedNovember 26, 2008(2008-11-26) (aged 89)
Philadelphia, USA
Buried
Fairfax Memorial Park, Fairfax, Virginia, U.S.
Allegiance State of Vietnam, Republic of Vietnam
Service/branchAFRVN Infantry, (Lục Quân Quân-lực VNCH)
Years of service1939–1967
Rank Major General (Thiếu Tướng)
Commands heldZône Sud, North Vietnam
55th BVN
2nd Mobile Group
Bui Chu Secteur
North Vietnam Light Battalions and Artillery Forces
Quang-Yen NCO Academy
Coastal Zone
3rd Field Division
III Corps – Deputy Commander
7th Division
Special Capital Military District
Saigon-Giadinh Military Governorship
Battles/warsWorld War II
First Indochina War
Vietnam War
AwardsOrder of the Dragon of Annam, Officer
National Order, Commander
Cross of Gallantry, 18 citations
Other workMinister of War Veterans
(1969–1974)

Early life and education edit

Phạm Văn Đổng was born October 25, 1919, in Quốc Oai district, Sơn Tây, Tonkin (now North Vietnam), when Vietnam was still part of French Indochina. He grew up in his father's village of Xuân Đỗ, Gia Lâm district (then part of Bắc Ninh Province) and went to school in Hà Nội where he earned the "Thành Chung" (Diplôme d'Etudes Primaires Superieures Indochinoises (DEPSI)) upon his graduation from Đỗ Hữu Vị School.

Generations of Đổng's family had taught at the Imperial Court. Phạm Văn Đổng himself had planned to become a teacher, so he enrolled at the École Normale d'Instituteurs. In 1939, he had to withdraw, as he did not have the money to bribe a court official, even though he had passed the required examinations. He then joined the French colonial army at the persuasion of his father's friend. It was a good decision as Đồng would later become one of the first Vietnamese officers to command French soldiers at the light division level (Groupement Mobile). Đổng was also one of the few ARVN officers to have been officers in the French Army and the only general officer who had begun his military career as a private.

Career summary edit

World War II edit

Five years after joining the army as an enlisted man, he was promoted to Officer of Materials for the 2nd Battalion of the 19th Colonial Infantry Regiment (Officier du Matériel, II/19e RMIC) stationed in Móng Cái. Here, he earned the trust of young Nùng, many of whom he later trained to be competent officers of the ARVN.

On March 9, 1945, as part of their coup d'état in French Indochina, Imperial Japanese Army forces in Tonkin attacked two battalions of the 19ème RMIC at Hà Cối. Two days later, the regiment commanding officer, Lieutenant Colonel Charles LeCocq, was killed in action while leading a counter-attack. His body would have been left behind were it not for the sharp-shooter Hoang Duc Phung who recovered it with Đổng's mortar support.

Two weeks later, Đổng and remnants of the 1er Territoire Militaire fought their way to Quảng Tây in South China where they joined General Marcel Alessandri who had been cooperating with the Chinese National Kuomintang Army (國民革命軍) in the fight against Japanese armies. There, Đổng attended a special officer class. During this period, he secretly made contacts with several Việt Quốc revolutionaries-in-exile most of whom would become his good friends and ardent supporters throughout his career in South Vietnam. At the end of 1945, Sous Lieutenant Đổng returned to Vietnam where he was assigned to Vạn Hoa.

The First Indochina War edit

In 1946, Đổng was transferred to the south where he participated in several major operations in Gò Công, Long Thành, and Thành Tuy Hạ. A year later, his successes against communist troops earned him a promotion to lieutenant. His abilities in organizing intelligence networks eventually landed him a position working for the Governor of North Vietnam, Nghiêm Xuân Thiện as Sous-Directeur des Etudes (Phó Sở Nghiên Cứu) where he reported to Captain Sylvain Trần Văn Minh.

In 1949, Lieutenant Đổng went back to the army as Chief of S-2 for the 2e BVN (Trưởng Phòng 2 của Bộ chỉ huy TĐ2 VN). In 1950, the State of Vietnam's Minister of Defense Phan Huy Quát, a Đại Việt leader, asked Đổng to join the Vietnamese National Army. A year later, after participating in the battle of Vĩnh Yên, he was appointed Commandant of the South Zone based in Nam Định.

Early 1952, Captain Đổng was appointed Commander of the 55th Vietnamese Battalion (55e BVN) stationed at the Nà Sản fire-base. In late November, using 3 battle-hardened divisions (308th, 316th and 320th) General Giap attacked Nà Sản with the intention of defeating the French Union forces to take control of northwest Tonkin. The 55e BVN fought valiantly against the enemy's relentless assaults. To put an end to the "human wave", Đổng ordered his artillery-support to level and to fire howitzers loaded with fragmentation shells directly at the enemy troops. His decision saved the battalion and earned him a promotion to Major.

By the end of the year, he took command of the 2e Groupe Mobile that participated in some of the hardest-fought battles to pacify the Red River Delta, especially in the Ninh Bình area during Operation Hautes Alpes in March 1953. In September 1953, he was appointed Commander of the Bùi Chu Secteur and concurrently Commander of the Forces of North Vietnam Light Battalions and Artillery. The latter position was very important, for he was in command of nineteen light infantry battalions (TĐKQ) and three artillery companies with the mission to pacify a military zone comprising seven provinces.

Prior to taking command of Bùi Chu, Đổng participated in Operation Tarentaise to take back areas under the Việt Minh's control. In October 1953, he commanded Operation Lê Lợi to attack enemy's strongholds in the area. The operation was successful, though the cost was high: one of Đổng light battalions at Quần Phương Hạ was completely destroyed by the Việt Minh's more seasoned independent regiments.

It was in Bùi Chu that Đổng, a Buddhist, would become an ally of Bishop Phạm Ngọc Chi, his diocese and Father Hoàng Quỳnh. In return, these Roman Catholics would become his staunch supporters in both North and South Vietnam.

In mid-1954, he was sent to South Korea to attend a special military training. Coming back to Vietnam shortly after the Geneva Convention that had partitioned the country into two, Đổng as Commander of the Quảng Yên Military Academy redeployed the academy resources and its personnel southward during Operation Passage to Freedom.

Vietnam War edit

From 1954 to the end of the 1st Republic edit

Đổng had done well as a military man. He had been recognized as a capable tactician by his superiors who continuously promoted him in the first 14 years of his military career. From a humble beginning as a plain soldier in 1939, he had steadily climbed the military ladder to the position of Lieutenant Colonel at the end of the First Indochina War.

After the partition of Vietnam into two countries, Head-of-State Bảo Đại brought his government south where power struggles among different groups would lead to a change in the country's political future. Early 1955, Prime Minister Ngô Đình Diệm consolidated his power over South Vietnam by forcing General Hinh to leave the country then by using the armed forces to defeat the Bình Xuyên, Hòa Hảo and Cao Đài forces. Then, in a rigged referendum on October 23, 1955, Diệm ousted Bảo Đại and founded the Republic. During this time, Đổng was the Coastal Zone Commander (Liên Khu Duyên Hải). After the referendum, Diệm celebrated his rise to power by promoting all senior officers. Even though he supported General Hinh, Đổng was promoted to colonel. He would remain in charge of the coastal zone until October 25, 1956, when President Diệm transferred him to Sông Mao (Bình Thuận) to command the 3rd Field Division, a unit made up entirely of Nùng soldiers. Lieutenant Colonel Đỗ Mậu, Đổng second-in-command who was Diệm's protégé and a Cần Lao party member, was promoted to replace him. Ironically, Mậu later would betray Diệm in 1963.

Colonel Đổng attracted Diệm's attention by refusing to let Cần Lao's cadres conduct political training sessions for his troops. Moreover, he also befriended and sheltered remnants of the Bình Xuyên and Hòa Hảo's defeated forces.

In March 1958, President Diệm seeing that the 3rd Field Division was loyal to none but Colonel Đổng, transferred Nùng soldiers to other units within the Army. In 1959, some of the Nùng soldiers left the army to join Father Nguyễn Lạc Hoá, a good friend of Đổng and a fervent anti-communist priest at the newly formed Sea Swallows enclave in Cà Mau. Đổng, who was self-taught in English, was sent to training at the United States Army Command and General Staff College in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.

When Đổng returned to Vietnam in 1959, he was appointed Deputy Commander of the III Corps. In this position, he was in charge of conducting campaigns against NVA and Viet Cong units within the Corps's territory. In December 1962, after an American general had advised Diệm to promote Đổng to general and after hearing other American advisers praised the colonel for his commanding skills, the president demoted Đổng to III Corps's Inspector General of Strategic Hamlets.

In August 1963, Buddhist monks caused a political disturbance, commonly known as the Buddhist crisis. This turmoil led to the November 1st coup d'état that toppled Diệm's government. Shortly before the coup, President Diệm had the colonel held at Camp Lê Văn Duyệt out of suspicion that the latter was preparing to launch a coup to topple the government. Đổng was indeed one of the conspirators and his detention shifted the President's suspicion away from other senior officers, primarily General Đôn, head of a CIA-backed and funded group of plotters (CIA liaison officer Lucien Conein gave this group US$42,000). On November 2, General Dương Văn "Big" Minh, a Diệm's protégé, ordered his bodyguard Captain Nguyễn Văn Nhung and Major Dương Hiếu Nghĩa to torture and to kill the brothers Ngô Đình. Most Vietnamese senior officers suspected that general Minh took US Ambassador Lodge's suggestion of eliminating the brothers "to prevent any colonel from bring them back to power".

Several ARVN generals then assumed leadership of South Vietnam. Power struggles, some of which influenced by the monk Trí Quang, would lead to a period of instability in the whole country. Political stability only came in 1967 when Lieutenant General Nguyễn Văn Thiệu and Air Marshal Nguyễn Cao Kỳ were elected leaders of the 2nd Republic.

The turbulent years (1964–1967) edit

With the escalation of the Vietnam War and with the increased United States involvement, the role of the ARVN became more significant but was seen by the media in the West as insignificant. After the coup, Colonel Đổng served briefly as 7th Infantry Division Commander, during which time he earned the alias "Tiger of the Delta" for his twelve successful operations against Viet Cong and NVA troops. Late December 1963, he was abruptly relieved command of the division and was sent to Taiwan as military attaché.

Returning from Taiwan in May 1964, he was promoted to brigadier general by General Nguyễn Khánh. Late October 1964, he was promoted to major general. A month later on November 27, he was appointed military governor of Saigon (now Ho Chi Minh City) and concurrently as Special Capital Military District Commander (Tư Lệnh Biệt Khu Thủ đô). During this time, Đổng formed and funded his own armed group made up almost entirely of Nùng soldiers.

Being charged with keeping the capital safe in these troubled times, he had to deal with an enemy in South Vietnam, the Buddhist Struggle Movement led by two monks, Thích Trí Quang of the Ấn Quang group and Thích Tâm Châu of Việt Nam Quốc Tự (VNQT). Both of these monks wanted to topple the government of Vietnam, or at least to render it ineffective. Prime Minister Trần Văn Hương, a Buddhist, took a firm stand against the movement to prevent the country from anarchy. During this turmoil, PM Hương fully supported General Đổng when the latter effectively handled Buddhist protests and street agitations. Arrests were limited but well chosen and almost of detainees were proven to be Communists agents within the Ấn Quang group. At one time, Đổng deployed two battalions to disband a violent and armed mob from VNQT. Tâm Châu stopped his anti-government activities after a meeting with General Nguyễn Khánh, while Trí Quang continued to cause political unrest. Recent declassified CIA documents suggest that the Buddhist movement had been penetrated by Viet Cong agents. Tâm Châu himself published a White Paper in 1993 accusing Trí Quang of being a power-hunger man manipulated by North Vietnam and of harboring Communist agents. A declassified French Sûreté report showed that Trí Quang joined the Indochinese Communist Party in 1949, a fact that former SRV Deputy Prime Minister Tố Hữu proudly confirmed in 2000.

In January 1965, Trí Quang successfully pressured Head-of-State Nguyễn Khánh into dismissing P.M. Hương. A month later, Dr. Quát, a devout Buddhist and former Minister of Defense, was chosen to form a new government. Even without Hương to support his actions, the general did not hesitate in arresting communist agents, many of whom had disguised as monks in the Buddhist movement. His success in preventing Trí Quang from toppling the government led the Armed Forces Council (Hội Đồng Quân Lực) to name the general Uỷ Viên An-Ninh (Security Commissioner) in March, shortly after his friend Nguyễn Khánh was forced to resign and to leave the country.

Infuriated by the AFC's action, Trí Quang manipulated Quát, Thiệu and Kỳ into dismissing the general from his positions of military governor and Special Capital Military District Commander. A recent declassified CIA memo showed Thiệu as the one who requested general "Little" Minh, the Chief of General Staff, to investigate Đổng for protecting gambling operations, a claim that Minh disputed and refused to do as asked. The same memo showed Quát wanting to dismiss the general for being a troublemaker and Kỳ claiming Đổng as corrupted. All of their actions against the general came after Trí Quang's continuous accusation that Đổng was pro Catholics and perhaps even pro Diệm. The monk cited the general's unexplained actions toward some of Diệm's people as evidences, such as: protecting Lê Văn "White" Thái (Dr. Tuyến's assistant), or defending Trần Quốc Bửu (co-founder of the Cần Lao party) and Mã Tuyên (Head of the Triều Châu Chinese in Saigon).

For two years after the dismissal, Đổng remained in politics. He stayed in touch with two friends who had been exiled by Kỳ: Nguyễn Chánh Thi who sided with the monks during the Buddhist Crisis in Central Vietnam and Nguyễn Khánh who was too vocal against American intervention in Vietnamese affairs. During this period, he was sent to several special assignments abroad, most notably to Thailand where his friend and a former Diệm's supporter, general Thái Quang Hoàng was the Ambassador. In June 1967, Kỳ forced the general to retire.

The retirement did not stop Đổng from military and social affairs. He continued to keep in touch with ARVN general officers to learn of troops' morale and he mentored junior officers in tactics. He also continued to serve armed forces personnel by co-founding an association for ancient and current combatants, the Hiệp Hội Chiến Sĩ Tự Do. He worked with Australian Brigadier Ted Serong on a defense plan for the country in case the USA decided to stop all military aid. Closer to home, he continued to train his private army of Nùng soldiers.

From the height of a political career to exile edit

From 1969 to 1974, General Đổng served military personnel in a different capacity, Minister of War Veterans (equivalent to the US Secretary of Veterans Affairs). During this time, he worked with West Germany to get financial and medical support for disabled veterans. His relationship with German officials in Oberhausen resulted in military orphans or children of disabled veterans going there to further their education. Most of the students came from the seven ministry-sponsored Quốc Gia Nghĩa Tử schools. Minister Đổng's personal ties with Australian, Taiwanese and South Korean officials benefited Vietnamese veterans. During his tenure, Australia, Taiwan and South Korea provided much needed funding and training to disabled veterans at vocational facilities. His friendship with an American adviser Shelby Robert and his wife Miriam benefited the ministry as well. In April 1973, the Robert and the Gettysburg Presbyterian Church donated several wheelchairs and provided funding to train a Vietnamese doctor from the ministry. Later that year, the minister traveled to the United States and several western European countries to ask for financial assistance. The trip yielded good results: several US colleges provided the ministry with funding for its prosthetics center. In particular, Ohio State University sent professors to train teachers and to teach QGNT's students in three special courses: typing, accounting and home economics.

President Thiệu, in power since 1967, was becoming a dictator. By 1974, he had had thousands opposition persons arrested, and had increased the number of executions. Mass protest demonstrations led by opposition leaders in Saigon caused Thiệu to reorganize his cabinet in an attempt to quiet the opposition. He also used the occasion to get rid of potential threats to his power. Minister Đổng, with his own private army and considered by Thiệu as a potential threat, was dismissed from the cabinet in February 1974 and two months later imprisoned without trial on corruption charges. Government-run newspapers and television channels then launched a public humiliation campaign against the minister, accusing him of corruption and of plotting against the government. In June, a special committee acquitted the minister of all charges after hearing testimonies from the ministry's high-ranking staff. Still, Đổng was only released in July after Trần Quốc Bửu, head of the Tổng Liên Đoàn Lao Công (Confederation of Vietnamese Labor, the equivalent of the American AFL-CIO), and Father Hoàng Quỳnh of the Northern Catholics pressured Thiệu to do so.

After his release, General Đổng spent his time mentoring senior Army officers and advising civilian opposition leaders on tactics against President Thiệu. The Communist invasion in 1975 cut short of his attempt to return to political power.

During the Fall of Saigon, he and his family were able to escape on a US Air Force C130 that took them to Guam, and then onward to the United States where he was offered political asylum.

Personal life edit

In his spare time, Đổng wrote poems to relax under the pen name of Nùng Khánh Lâm. In 1944 while he was stationed in Móng Cái, he wrote poems to court a Nùng woman, Lê Thị Lý (1919–1992). They got married and eventually had five children. After coming to the United States and settling in Arlington County, Virginia, Đổng would occasionally serve as a translator on special projects for the Defense Department before retiring in 1982 to take care of his wife who had suffered from a stroke.

Two years after Lý died, Đổng remarried to Mỹ-Lan Trịnh, from whom he acquired three stepdaughters. In 1996, he and his new family moved to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania where he died of congestive heart failure on November 26, 2008. Major General Phạm Văn Đổng is survived by his second wife Mỹ-Lan, five children, three stepchildren, nine grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.

Awards and decorations edit

General Đổng earned the following personal Vietnamese and foreign decorations and awards (unit citations are not listed):

Vietnam Decorations edit

Foreign Decorations and Awards edit

References edit

Glossary edit

  • 1964–67 = This period of political unrest caused by Communist-manipulated, CIA-backed monks was also known as the "time of the generals". During this time, senior officers often formed groups with their own armies either to stage a coup d'état or to protect themselves from their rivals. Evidences can be seen in photographs or senior officers and their troops wearing non-regulated uniforms of various designs.
  • Armée Nationale Vietnamienne (ANV) = Quân đội Quốc gia Việt Nam (National Army of Vietnam) created in 1949 as the State of Vietnam's armed forces.
  • ARVN = Army of the Republic of Vietnam, often incorrectly used as a collective term to refer to all South Vietnamese armed forces.
  • Bình Xuyên connection = General Đổng's belief in sheltering nationalists-in-danger led to his friendship with several former members of the Bay Vien's Bình Xuyên (officially part of the QDQGVN under Head-of-State Bảo Đại). Lieutenant Lê Nhựt Quang, one of his earlier aides-de-camp, was the son of a Bình Xuyên member.
  • Bùi Chu Secteur = located in Bùi Chu province and heavily populated by Catholics, the secteur was one of the first French military territories returned to the ANV's control.
  • BVN = Bataillon Vietnamien. Officially formed in 1949 as part of the Army for the State of Vietnam, a typical battalion consisted of 829 men, armed with French weapons. Its officers could be either Vietnamese or French. BVNs were formed to replace French units. By 1954, there were 98 BVN's.
  • Bataillon Léger = Light Infantry Battalion or Tiểu-đoàn Khinh-quân, formed in 1953, consisted of 638 men, armed entirely with US weapons. Its officers were Vietnamese. TDKQs were formed to pacify territories. By July, 1954, there were 81 TDKQ's.
  • Corps = The Republic of Vietnam was divided into four tactical zones, each of which was a political as well as military jurisdiction.
  • Duy Dân = Đại Việt Duy Dân (Great Viet Populism Party) founded in 1942 by Nguyen Huu Thanh, codename Ngoc Tho (White Jade Rabbit) or more commonly known as XYZ Thai Dich Ly Dong A. The party found its support among Northern Vietnamese intellectuals who saw Ly Dong A's Populism as one of the best Vietnamese political theories. A wrote many doctrines and one of his best work is Huyet Hoa (Blood Flower). In 1946, after a failed armed revolt to overthrow Ho Chi Minh's government, A and his lieutenants were arrested and executed in Hòa Bình. During the Vietnam War, Professor Nguyễn Hữu Chỉnh, one of Duy Dân's top theorists, was one of General Đổng's political advisers.
  • Đỗ Hữu Vị school = One of the few schools the colonial government allowed to open for Vietnamese students in Tonkin. It was named after the fifth son of Đỗ Hữu Phương, Chợ Lớn's honorary mayor. Captain Vị, crippled after his plane had crashed in a 1914 mission, rejoined his former unit the 1st Foreign Legion Regiment. On July 9, 1916, Captain Vị, commander of the regiment's 7th company, died while leading an attack on German troops near Chancelier.
  • Field Division = Sư-đoàn Dã Chiến with 8,600 men was organized as a regular division for conventional warfare.
  • Groupe Mobile = Largest military unit in Indochina and equivalent to a brigade or a light infantry division, a GM had approximately 6,000 men. Besides the infantry troops, the unit had: 1 company of mortar and light artillery, 1 field battery battalion equipped with 105mm howitzers, 1 platoon of combat medics, 2 light armored companies and 2 amphibious forces.
  • GS-2 = A group of officers in the headquarters of a military unit (in Đổng's case, a battalion) that provide their commanders with information for planning, coordinating, and supervising operations. In Military Staff Organization, "2" is the military intelligence group.
  • Human Wave = Chiến Thuật Biển Người ("Sea of human" tactics) was a classic Communist offense used mostly by Chinese and Vietnamese from the 1940s to the 1980s. An assaulting force that outnumbered defending troops at least 4 to 1 stormed the position continuously, creating endless "waves of people". Heavy artillery pounding the position to rubble usually preceded the assault.
  • Liên Khu Duyên Hải = Military territory comprising four coastal provinces: Phú Yên, Khánh Hòa, Ninh Thuận and Bình Thuận
  • Light Infantry Division = Sư-đoàn Khinh Chiến with 5,245 men was organized to operate in difficult terrains.
  • Nà Sản fire-support base = General Salan's brainchild against Giáp's forces assaulting the T'ai territory and Upper Laos. Located in a valley 20 km south of Sơn La, the fortified fire-support base was a strategic point set up to cut off Viet Minh's troop movements and to defend northwest Tonkin. Na-San had an airstrip that could accommodate the Dakota airplanes, had 21 "rings" of outposts with a complicated trench system, enforced with barbed wires. Na-San had a defense force of 11 battalions (15,000 men) and 6 artillery batteries. In December 1952, Giáp's forces failed to capture Na-San after bloody battles that cost the Viet Minh close to 5,000 lives and 2,000 wounded prisoners. The French Union forces lost 2 battalions. In his autobiography, Salan credited the superior air-support for the French victory ("sans elle [l'aviation], Na San n'était pas possible et je perdais la bataille du Nord-Ouest" – "Without air-support, Nà Sản would not be possible and I would've lost the Northwest battle").
  • Ninh Bình = A province south of the Red River Delta. During the First Indochina War, Ninh Bình, a strategic position and the "rice basket of Tonkin", must be defended at all cost by the Franco-Vietnamese forces.
  • Nùng = North Vietnam's ethnic minority of mixed Chinese-T'ai-Vietnamese. They are Chinese-speaking but are classified separately from the urban ethnic Chinese or Hoa. Their language is Cantonese Chinese with some T'ai and Vietnamese vocabularies. Prior to the partition of Vietnam into two countries, the Nungs lived mainly in the northeast areas bordering China. They are known for being a fierce warrior race. For generations, they sided with the French colonial government in exchange for autonomy from the Vietnamese Imperial Court. During the Indochina and the Vietnam Wars, Nungs were on both sides of the conflicts. General Phạm Văn Đổng, a northern Vietnamese who had gained their respect, was considered as one of their own. Đổng spoke the language fluently, accepted their customs and married a Nung from Móng Cái. The actual highest-ranking Nung in the ARVN was Major General Chướng Dzếnh Quay, IV Corps Chief of Staff at the end of the war. On the communist side, Lieutenant General Lê Quang Đạo was the highest-ranking Nung known during the Indochina and Vietnam Wars.
  • Quảng Yên Military Academy (NCO) = Established in 1953 as a military educational institution that prepared candidates for service in the State of Vietnam Army's non-commissioned officer corps.
  • Quốc Gia Nghĩa Tử = Ward of the Nation was a brainchild of Lieutenant Colonel Trương Khuê Quan who modeled it after France's National Office of Wards of the Nation. This independent agency was formed in October 1963 to provide educational opportunities for war orphans and children of war invalids/disabled veterans. In 1967, the Ministry of War Veterans took over the agency but continued to let it run by an independent management committee. By the end of the Vietnam War, QGNT had seven schools and 4 dormitories with over 200 teachers and an administrative staff close to 300 persons (most of whom were military widows, war disabled veterans and family members of soldiers who had died during the war).
  • RMIC = Régiment Mixte d'Infanterie Coloniale (Mixed Colonial Infantry Regiment) consisted of 4 battalions.
  • Territoire Militaire = Part of the Tonkin division that had 5 military territories, one of which was the 1er Territoire Militaire based in Móng Cái.
  • Việt Cách = Việt Nam Cách Mạng Đồng Minh Hội (Vietnam Revolutionary Alliance Party) started out in Nanjing as a coalition force of Vietnamese revolutionaries living in China since the late 1930s. Its first governing body consisted of leaders from different parties. By 1944, infighting rendered Việt Cách ineffective and most members went back to their original parties. Those remained with the party rallied around Nguyễn Hải Thần. After World War II, party members led by Than and armed by Kuomintang returned to Vietnam where several of its leaders joined Ho Chi Minh's government. After Ho signed the modus vivendi allowing French troops to re-enter the country, Viet Minh attacked to eliminate all opposition groups (Viet Cach was one). Some of the surviving members went back to China while others remained behind to rally around Bảo Đại. During the Vietnam War, a Viet Cach leader of VNQDĐ's background Tạ Nguyên Hối was one of General Đổng's political advisers.
  • Zône = The State of Vietnam was divided into several military zones. In the early years of the country when the central government was new and when French colonial officials were still involved Vietnam's affairs, commanders (commandants) ran their zones any way they wanted to, some to the point of being warlords. The zones in Tonkin were: Northwest Autonomy Zone, Zone North, Zone West, Zone South, Zone Hanoi, Zone Hai Phong and Coastal Zone. Zone South (Zone Sud), the largest and most important, consisted of 3 provinces (Nam Định, Thái Bình and Ninh Bình), Phủ Lý capital town, 4 sectors and 2 quarters (north of south of Sông Đáy).

Bibliography edit

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  • Prochnau, William (1996). Once Upon a Distant War: David Halberstam, Neil Sheehan, Peter Arnett – Young War Correspondents and their early Vietnam Battles. New York: Random House. ISBN 0-679-77265-0.
  • Robert, Miriam Gibert (2000). Our Lives Together in the 20th Century. Pennsylvania: Self-published. pp. 250–252 General Dong's dismissal from the Cabinet and imprisonment without trial.
  • Sheehan, Neil (1992). After the war was over – Hanoi and Saigon (First ed.). New York: Random House. pp. 68–70 The author's friendship with Đổng who was unnamed in the book but is described as "one of my closest Vietnamese friends". ISBN 0-679-41391-X.
  • Simpson, Howard R. (August 1992). Tiger in the Barbed Wire: An American in Vietnam, 1952–1991. Brassey's Inc. ISBN 0-7881-5148-7.
  • Simpson, Howard R. (1998). Bush Hat, Black Tie: adventures of a foreign service officer. Brassey's Inc. p. 156 The author talks about his friendship with Đổng since Nà Sản and the latter's 1971 pessimistic prediction of South Vietnam's future. ISBN 1-57488-154-X.
  • AFRVN Military History Section, J-5, Strategic Planning and Policy. Quân Sử 4: Quân lực Việt Nam Cộng Hòa trong giai-đoạn hình-thành: 1946–1955 (reprinted from the 1972 edition in Taiwan, DaiNam Publishing, 1977) [AFRVN, the formation period, 1946–1955] (in Vietnamese). {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  • Lieutenant General Huỳnh Văn Cao (1998). Một Kiếp Người [A Life] (in Vietnamese). Chantilly, Virginia: Self-Published.
  • Hoàng Văn Đào (1967). Lịch Sử Đấu Tranh Cận Đại 1927–1954 Việt Nam Quốc Dân Đảng [A contemporary history of a Struggle 1927–1954, Viet Nam National People's Party] (in Vietnamese). Saigon, Viet-Nam: Tan Viet.
  • Lieutenant General Trần Văn Đôn (1989). Việt Nam Nhân Chứng [Vietnam, Witness] (in Vietnamese). Los Angeles: Xuan Thu Publishing.
  • Major General "Hoành-Linh" Đỗ Mậu (October 1986). Việt Nam Máu Lửa Quê Hương Tôi [Vietnam, "Blood and Fire of my country" My country's War and Casualties] (in Vietnamese). Mission Hills, California: Que Huong Publishing.
  • Liên Thành (2008). Biến Động miền Trung [Turmoil in Central region] (in Vietnamese). California: ARVN Rangers Federation.
  • Đoàn Thêm (1965). 1945–1964: Hai mươi nåm qua, việc từng ngày [1945–1964: Twenty years ago, a day-by-day account] (in Vietnamese). Saigon: Phạm-quang-Khai.
  • Đoàn Thêm (1968). 1965: Việc từng ngày [1965: A day-by-day account] (in Vietnamese). Saigon: Phạm-quang-Khai.
  • Đoàn Thêm (1969). 1966: Việc từng ngày [1966: A day-by-day account] (in Vietnamese). Saigon: Phạm-quang-Khai.
  • Đoàn Thêm (1969). 1967: Việc từng ngày [1967: A day-by-day account] (in Vietnamese). Saigon: Phạm-quang-Khai.
  • Đoàn Thêm (1970). 1968: Việc từng ngày [1968: A day-by-day account] (in Vietnamese). Saigon: Phạm-quang-Khai.
  • Đoàn Thêm (1972). 1969: Việc từng ngày [1969: A day-by-day account] (in Vietnamese). Saigon: Phạm-quang-Khai.

External links edit

News of his death:

  • Childs, Martin (March 16, 2009). "Pham Van Dong: South Vietnamese general who could not defend Saigon against the Communists". The Independent. Retrieved July 27, 2009.
  • Holley, Joe (December 8, 2008). "Pham Van Dong; Army General In Vietnam Praised for Bravery". The Washington Post. Retrieved September 23, 2009.
  • . Archived from the original on July 10, 2011. Retrieved November 16, 2009.
  • "Cựu Thiếu Tướng Phạm Văn Đỗng Từ Trần Tại Philadelphia" [Former Major General Pham van Dong died in Philadelphia]. Saigon Broadcasting Television Network (in Vietnamese). November 28, 2008. Retrieved September 23, 2009.
  • "PHẠM VĂN ĐỖNG – Condolences from the Association of Hai Ninh Combattants, Cadres, and Civil Servants". Nguoi-viet Online (in Vietnamese). December 8, 2008. Retrieved October 3, 2009.[permanent dead link]
  • . Take 2 tango (in Vietnamese). February 21, 2009. Archived from the original on January 28, 2016. Retrieved September 23, 2009.

General:

  • . www.generalhieu.com. Archived from the original on June 26, 2021. Retrieved September 23, 2009.
  • "List of French Infantry Regiments" (in French). Archived from the original on December 19, 2012. Retrieved October 16, 2009.
  • [French Order of Battle between 1940 and 1945] (in French). Archived from the original on October 30, 2013. Retrieved October 22, 2009.
  • "La longue marche vers la Chine" [The long march to China] (in French). Retrieved October 17, 2009.
  • "Order of Liberation recipient Charles Le Cocq" (in French). Retrieved October 20, 2009.
  • [The Bui Chu diocese] (in Vietnamese). Archived from the original on September 1, 2009. Retrieved September 27, 2009.
  • "Viet Minh Order of Battle, Northern Vietnam 1952–1954". Retrieved November 13, 2009.
  • Le Page, Jean-Marc (15 September 2007). "Le Tonkin, laboratoire de la "pacification" en Indochine" [Tonkin, a lab for the "pacification" process in Indochina?]. Revue Historique des Armées (in French) (248): 116–125. Retrieved November 13, 2009.
  • "Indochine:1954 L'operation "Auvergne" rapport du Sous-lieutenant JB David" [Operation Auvergne a report by Lieutenant JB David] (PDF) (in French). Retrieved November 14, 2009.[permanent dead link]
  • . Time. December 15, 1952. Archived from the original on January 8, 2012. Retrieved September 27, 2009.
  • [Quang Yen Province] (in Vietnamese). Archived from the original on April 18, 2009. Retrieved September 27, 2009.
  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 27, 2009. Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  • . Archived from the original on March 13, 2007. Retrieved October 22, 2009.
  • "Decoding Pham Xuan An chapter 10, Dong is mentioned as a senior army officer plotting a coup d'etat in 1963". Retrieved October 12, 2009. [dead link]
  • "Foreign Relations, 1961–1963, Volume I, Vietnam 1961, Dong is mentioned as part of "a small, powerful group military officers who can control sufficient forces are prepared to launch a coup against Diem government"". Retrieved November 30, 2009.
  • "Foreign Relations of the United States, 1964–1968, Volume I, Vietnam, 1964, Document 460=Telegram from the Embassy in Vietnam to the Department of State". Retrieved June 4, 2010.
  • . Time Magazine. December 13, 1963. Archived from the original on December 22, 2008. Retrieved October 11, 2009.
  • "Foreign Relations of the United States, 1964–1968, Volume II, Vietnam, January–June 1965, Document 148". US Department of States. February 20, 1965. Retrieved October 11, 2009.
  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 11, 2006. Retrieved October 12, 2009.
  • "Belief of General Pham Van Dong that tribal, Viet Cong, and Buddhist disorders will take place between 17 and 20 December 1964". Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  • "Situation appraisal of Buddhism as a political force". Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  • "VỀ VẤN ĐỀ CHIA RẼ GIỮA ẤN QUANG VỚI VIỆT NAM QUỐC TỰ" [About the Rift between An Quang and Viet Nam Quoc Tu – White Paper by Thich Tam Chau in 1993 on the 1964–1967 Buddhist Crisis] (in Vietnamese). Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  • Mark Moyar (October 6, 2004). "Cambridge Journals, Modern Asian Studies, Volume 38 Issue 04 – Abstract of Political Monks: The Militant Buddhist Movement during the Vietnam War – "The evidence also suggests that some of the militant Buddhist leaders were agents of the Vietnamese Communists"". Modern Asian Studies. 38 (4): 749–784. doi:10.1017/S0026749X04001295. S2CID 145723264. Retrieved June 3, 2011.
  • . Time Magazine. April 22, 1966. Archived from the original on March 25, 2011. Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  • . Time Magazine. December 25, 1964. Archived from the original on November 4, 2012. Retrieved October 10, 2009.
  • . Time Magazine. April 22, 1966. Archived from the original on January 27, 2008. Retrieved November 27, 2009.
  • "THE SITUATION IN SOUTH VIETNAM (8 APRIL-14 APRIL 1965) released date 4/14/1965". Retrieved October 11, 2009.
  • . Time Magazine. December 4, 1964. Archived from the original on July 15, 2010. Retrieved October 12, 2009.
  • . UMass Boston Digital Archives. Archived from the original on July 20, 2011. Retrieved October 17, 2009.
  • . UMass Boston Digital Archives. Archived from the original on July 20, 2011. Retrieved October 17, 2009.
  • "Vietnam: History". 2007. Retrieved October 12, 2009.
  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on May 27, 2010. Retrieved January 8, 2010.

External Links on Medals:

  • [Orders and Medals of the RVN] (in Vietnamese). Archived from the original on January 6, 2008. Retrieved September 30, 2009.
  • Order of the Annam Dragon [fr], Retrieved September 30, 2009
  • Commemorative Medal for the Indochina Campaign [fr], Retrieved November 8, 2009
  • [ROC Order of Brilliant Star] (in Chinese). Archived from the original on December 27, 2007. Retrieved September 30, 2009.
  • [ROK Order of Military Merit (from the website of South Korea's Ministry of Public Administration and Security)] (in Korean). Archived from the original on May 25, 2008. Retrieved September 30, 2009.
  • . Archived from the original on July 26, 2010. Retrieved September 30, 2009.
  • [All the Civilian and Military Decorations] (in French). Archived from the original on July 23, 2009. Retrieved September 30, 2009.
  • . Archived from the original on January 28, 2016. Retrieved July 31, 2010.

phạm, văn, Đổng, confused, with, phạm, văn, Đồng, this, vietnamese, name, surname, pham, accordance, with, vietnamese, custom, this, person, should, referred, given, name, dong, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, ta. Not to be confused with Phạm Văn Đồng In this Vietnamese name the surname is Pham In accordance with Vietnamese custom this person should be referred to by the given name Dong This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article contains text that is written in a promotional tone Please help improve it by removing promotional language and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic text written from a neutral point of view March 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message This article includes a list of references related reading or external links but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations Please help improve this article by introducing more precise citations February 2013 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message Phạm Văn Đổng listen October 25 1919 November 26 2008 was a South Vietnamese general A staunch nationalist and anti communist he was considered an ally to several Việt Nam Quốc Dan Đảng Việt Quốc factions multiple Đại Việt groups Việt Nam Cach Mạng Đồng Minh Hội Việt Cach high ranking members Duy Dan and Hoa Hảo leaders Phạm Văn ĐổngOfficial portrait as military governor of Saigon 1965Nickname s Tiger of the DeltaBorn 1919 10 25 October 25 1919Sơn Tay North VietnamDiedNovember 26 2008 2008 11 26 aged 89 Philadelphia USABuriedFairfax Memorial Park Fairfax Virginia U S AllegianceState of Vietnam Republic of VietnamService wbr branchAFRVN Infantry Lục Quan Quan lực VNCH Years of service1939 1967RankMajor General Thiếu Tướng Commands heldZone Sud North Vietnam55th BVN2nd Mobile GroupBui Chu SecteurNorth Vietnam Light Battalions and Artillery ForcesQuang Yen NCO AcademyCoastal Zone3rd Field DivisionIII Corps Deputy Commander7th DivisionSpecial Capital Military DistrictSaigon Giadinh Military GovernorshipBattles warsWorld War IIFirst Indochina WarVietnam WarAwardsOrder of the Dragon of Annam OfficerNational Order CommanderCross of Gallantry 18 citationsOther workMinister of War Veterans 1969 1974 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career summary 2 1 World War II 2 2 The First Indochina War 2 3 Vietnam War 2 3 1 From 1954 to the end of the 1st Republic 2 3 2 The turbulent years 1964 1967 2 3 3 From the height of a political career to exile 3 Personal life 4 Awards and decorations 4 1 Vietnam Decorations 4 2 Foreign Decorations and Awards 5 References 5 1 Glossary 5 2 Bibliography 6 External linksEarly life and education editPhạm Văn Đổng was born October 25 1919 in Quốc Oai district Sơn Tay Tonkin now North Vietnam when Vietnam was still part of French Indochina He grew up in his father s village of Xuan Đỗ Gia Lam district then part of Bắc Ninh Province and went to school in Ha Nội where he earned the Thanh Chung Diplome d Etudes Primaires Superieures Indochinoises DEPSI upon his graduation from Đỗ Hữu Vị School Generations of Đổng s family had taught at the Imperial Court Phạm Văn Đổng himself had planned to become a teacher so he enrolled at the Ecole Normale d Instituteurs In 1939 he had to withdraw as he did not have the money to bribe a court official even though he had passed the required examinations He then joined the French colonial army at the persuasion of his father s friend It was a good decision as Đồng would later become one of the first Vietnamese officers to command French soldiers at the light division level Groupement Mobile Đổng was also one of the few ARVN officers to have been officers in the French Army and the only general officer who had begun his military career as a private Career summary editWorld War II edit Five years after joining the army as an enlisted man he was promoted to Officer of Materials for the 2nd Battalion of the 19th Colonial Infantry Regiment Officier du Materiel II 19e RMIC stationed in Mong Cai Here he earned the trust of young Nung many of whom he later trained to be competent officers of the ARVN On March 9 1945 as part of their coup d etat in French Indochina Imperial Japanese Army forces in Tonkin attacked two battalions of the 19eme RMIC at Ha Cối Two days later the regiment commanding officer Lieutenant Colonel Charles LeCocq was killed in action while leading a counter attack His body would have been left behind were it not for the sharp shooter Hoang Duc Phung who recovered it with Đổng s mortar support Two weeks later Đổng and remnants of the 1er Territoire Militaire fought their way to Quảng Tay in South China where they joined General Marcel Alessandri who had been cooperating with the Chinese National Kuomintang Army 國民革命軍 in the fight against Japanese armies There Đổng attended a special officer class During this period he secretly made contacts with several Việt Quốc revolutionaries in exile most of whom would become his good friends and ardent supporters throughout his career in South Vietnam At the end of 1945 Sous Lieutenant Đổng returned to Vietnam where he was assigned to Vạn Hoa The First Indochina War edit In 1946 Đổng was transferred to the south where he participated in several major operations in Go Cong Long Thanh and Thanh Tuy Hạ A year later his successes against communist troops earned him a promotion to lieutenant His abilities in organizing intelligence networks eventually landed him a position working for the Governor of North Vietnam Nghiem Xuan Thiện as Sous Directeur des Etudes Pho Sở Nghien Cứu where he reported to Captain Sylvain Trần Văn Minh In 1949 Lieutenant Đổng went back to the army as Chief of S 2 for the 2e BVN Trưởng Phong 2 của Bộ chỉ huy TĐ2 VN In 1950 the State of Vietnam s Minister of Defense Phan Huy Quat a Đại Việt leader asked Đổng to join the Vietnamese National Army A year later after participating in the battle of Vĩnh Yen he was appointed Commandant of the South Zone based in Nam Định Early 1952 Captain Đổng was appointed Commander of the 55th Vietnamese Battalion 55e BVN stationed at the Na Sản fire base In late November using 3 battle hardened divisions 308th 316th and 320th General Giap attacked Na Sản with the intention of defeating the French Union forces to take control of northwest Tonkin The 55e BVN fought valiantly against the enemy s relentless assaults To put an end to the human wave Đổng ordered his artillery support to level and to fire howitzers loaded with fragmentation shells directly at the enemy troops His decision saved the battalion and earned him a promotion to Major By the end of the year he took command of the 2e Groupe Mobile that participated in some of the hardest fought battles to pacify the Red River Delta especially in the Ninh Binh area during Operation Hautes Alpes in March 1953 In September 1953 he was appointed Commander of the Bui Chu Secteur and concurrently Commander of the Forces of North Vietnam Light Battalions and Artillery The latter position was very important for he was in command of nineteen light infantry battalions TĐKQ and three artillery companies with the mission to pacify a military zone comprising seven provinces Prior to taking command of Bui Chu Đổng participated in Operation Tarentaise to take back areas under the Việt Minh s control In October 1953 he commanded Operation Le Lợi to attack enemy s strongholds in the area The operation was successful though the cost was high one of Đổng light battalions at Quần Phương Hạ was completely destroyed by the Việt Minh s more seasoned independent regiments It was in Bui Chu that Đổng a Buddhist would become an ally of Bishop Phạm Ngọc Chi his diocese and Father Hoang Quỳnh In return these Roman Catholics would become his staunch supporters in both North and South Vietnam In mid 1954 he was sent to South Korea to attend a special military training Coming back to Vietnam shortly after the Geneva Convention that had partitioned the country into two Đổng as Commander of the Quảng Yen Military Academy redeployed the academy resources and its personnel southward during Operation Passage to Freedom Vietnam War edit From 1954 to the end of the 1st Republic edit Đổng had done well as a military man He had been recognized as a capable tactician by his superiors who continuously promoted him in the first 14 years of his military career From a humble beginning as a plain soldier in 1939 he had steadily climbed the military ladder to the position of Lieutenant Colonel at the end of the First Indochina War After the partition of Vietnam into two countries Head of State Bảo Đại brought his government south where power struggles among different groups would lead to a change in the country s political future Early 1955 Prime Minister Ngo Đinh Diệm consolidated his power over South Vietnam by forcing General Hinh to leave the country then by using the armed forces to defeat the Binh Xuyen Hoa Hảo and Cao Đai forces Then in a rigged referendum on October 23 1955 Diệm ousted Bảo Đại and founded the Republic During this time Đổng was the Coastal Zone Commander Lien Khu Duyen Hải After the referendum Diệm celebrated his rise to power by promoting all senior officers Even though he supported General Hinh Đổng was promoted to colonel He would remain in charge of the coastal zone until October 25 1956 when President Diệm transferred him to Song Mao Binh Thuận to command the 3rd Field Division a unit made up entirely of Nung soldiers Lieutenant Colonel Đỗ Mậu Đổng second in command who was Diệm s protege and a Cần Lao party member was promoted to replace him Ironically Mậu later would betray Diệm in 1963 Colonel Đổng attracted Diệm s attention by refusing to let Cần Lao s cadres conduct political training sessions for his troops Moreover he also befriended and sheltered remnants of the Binh Xuyen and Hoa Hảo s defeated forces In March 1958 President Diệm seeing that the 3rd Field Division was loyal to none but Colonel Đổng transferred Nung soldiers to other units within the Army In 1959 some of the Nung soldiers left the army to join Father Nguyễn Lạc Hoa a good friend of Đổng and a fervent anti communist priest at the newly formed Sea Swallows enclave in Ca Mau Đổng who was self taught in English was sent to training at the United States Army Command and General Staff College in Fort Leavenworth Kansas When Đổng returned to Vietnam in 1959 he was appointed Deputy Commander of the III Corps In this position he was in charge of conducting campaigns against NVA and Viet Cong units within the Corps s territory In December 1962 after an American general had advised Diệm to promote Đổng to general and after hearing other American advisers praised the colonel for his commanding skills the president demoted Đổng to III Corps s Inspector General of Strategic Hamlets In August 1963 Buddhist monks caused a political disturbance commonly known as the Buddhist crisis This turmoil led to the November 1st coup d etat that toppled Diệm s government Shortly before the coup President Diệm had the colonel held at Camp Le Văn Duyệt out of suspicion that the latter was preparing to launch a coup to topple the government Đổng was indeed one of the conspirators and his detention shifted the President s suspicion away from other senior officers primarily General Đon head of a CIA backed and funded group of plotters CIA liaison officer Lucien Conein gave this group US 42 000 On November 2 General Dương Văn Big Minh a Diệm s protege ordered his bodyguard Captain Nguyễn Văn Nhung and Major Dương Hiếu Nghĩa to torture and to kill the brothers Ngo Đinh Most Vietnamese senior officers suspected that general Minh took US Ambassador Lodge s suggestion of eliminating the brothers to prevent any colonel from bring them back to power Several ARVN generals then assumed leadership of South Vietnam Power struggles some of which influenced by the monk Tri Quang would lead to a period of instability in the whole country Political stability only came in 1967 when Lieutenant General Nguyễn Văn Thiệu and Air Marshal Nguyễn Cao Kỳ were elected leaders of the 2nd Republic The turbulent years 1964 1967 edit With the escalation of the Vietnam War and with the increased United States involvement the role of the ARVN became more significant but was seen by the media in the West as insignificant After the coup Colonel Đổng served briefly as 7th Infantry Division Commander during which time he earned the alias Tiger of the Delta for his twelve successful operations against Viet Cong and NVA troops Late December 1963 he was abruptly relieved command of the division and was sent to Taiwan as military attache Returning from Taiwan in May 1964 he was promoted to brigadier general by General Nguyễn Khanh Late October 1964 he was promoted to major general A month later on November 27 he was appointed military governor of Saigon now Ho Chi Minh City and concurrently as Special Capital Military District Commander Tư Lệnh Biệt Khu Thủ đo During this time Đổng formed and funded his own armed group made up almost entirely of Nung soldiers Being charged with keeping the capital safe in these troubled times he had to deal with an enemy in South Vietnam the Buddhist Struggle Movement led by two monks Thich Tri Quang of the Ấn Quang group and Thich Tam Chau of Việt Nam Quốc Tự VNQT Both of these monks wanted to topple the government of Vietnam or at least to render it ineffective Prime Minister Trần Văn Hương a Buddhist took a firm stand against the movement to prevent the country from anarchy During this turmoil PM Hương fully supported General Đổng when the latter effectively handled Buddhist protests and street agitations Arrests were limited but well chosen and almost of detainees were proven to be Communists agents within the Ấn Quang group At one time Đổng deployed two battalions to disband a violent and armed mob from VNQT Tam Chau stopped his anti government activities after a meeting with General Nguyễn Khanh while Tri Quang continued to cause political unrest Recent declassified CIA documents suggest that the Buddhist movement had been penetrated by Viet Cong agents Tam Chau himself published a White Paper in 1993 accusing Tri Quang of being a power hunger man manipulated by North Vietnam and of harboring Communist agents A declassified French Surete report showed that Tri Quang joined the Indochinese Communist Party in 1949 a fact that former SRV Deputy Prime Minister Tố Hữu proudly confirmed in 2000 In January 1965 Tri Quang successfully pressured Head of State Nguyễn Khanh into dismissing P M Hương A month later Dr Quat a devout Buddhist and former Minister of Defense was chosen to form a new government Even without Hương to support his actions the general did not hesitate in arresting communist agents many of whom had disguised as monks in the Buddhist movement His success in preventing Tri Quang from toppling the government led the Armed Forces Council Hội Đồng Quan Lực to name the general Uỷ Vien An Ninh Security Commissioner in March shortly after his friend Nguyễn Khanh was forced to resign and to leave the country Infuriated by the AFC s action Tri Quang manipulated Quat Thiệu and Kỳ into dismissing the general from his positions of military governor and Special Capital Military District Commander A recent declassified CIA memo showed Thiệu as the one who requested general Little Minh the Chief of General Staff to investigate Đổng for protecting gambling operations a claim that Minh disputed and refused to do as asked The same memo showed Quat wanting to dismiss the general for being a troublemaker and Kỳ claiming Đổng as corrupted All of their actions against the general came after Tri Quang s continuous accusation that Đổng was pro Catholics and perhaps even pro Diệm The monk cited the general s unexplained actions toward some of Diệm s people as evidences such as protecting Le Văn White Thai Dr Tuyến s assistant or defending Trần Quốc Bửu co founder of the Cần Lao party and Ma Tuyen Head of the Triều Chau Chinese in Saigon For two years after the dismissal Đổng remained in politics He stayed in touch with two friends who had been exiled by Kỳ Nguyễn Chanh Thi who sided with the monks during the Buddhist Crisis in Central Vietnam and Nguyễn Khanh who was too vocal against American intervention in Vietnamese affairs During this period he was sent to several special assignments abroad most notably to Thailand where his friend and a former Diệm s supporter general Thai Quang Hoang was the Ambassador In June 1967 Kỳ forced the general to retire The retirement did not stop Đổng from military and social affairs He continued to keep in touch with ARVN general officers to learn of troops morale and he mentored junior officers in tactics He also continued to serve armed forces personnel by co founding an association for ancient and current combatants the Hiệp Hội Chiến Sĩ Tự Do He worked with Australian Brigadier Ted Serong on a defense plan for the country in case the USA decided to stop all military aid Closer to home he continued to train his private army of Nung soldiers From the height of a political career to exile edit From 1969 to 1974 General Đổng served military personnel in a different capacity Minister of War Veterans equivalent to the US Secretary of Veterans Affairs During this time he worked with West Germany to get financial and medical support for disabled veterans His relationship with German officials in Oberhausen resulted in military orphans or children of disabled veterans going there to further their education Most of the students came from the seven ministry sponsored Quốc Gia Nghĩa Tử schools Minister Đổng s personal ties with Australian Taiwanese and South Korean officials benefited Vietnamese veterans During his tenure Australia Taiwan and South Korea provided much needed funding and training to disabled veterans at vocational facilities His friendship with an American adviser Shelby Robert and his wife Miriam benefited the ministry as well In April 1973 the Robert and the Gettysburg Presbyterian Church donated several wheelchairs and provided funding to train a Vietnamese doctor from the ministry Later that year the minister traveled to the United States and several western European countries to ask for financial assistance The trip yielded good results several US colleges provided the ministry with funding for its prosthetics center In particular Ohio State University sent professors to train teachers and to teach QGNT s students in three special courses typing accounting and home economics President Thiệu in power since 1967 was becoming a dictator By 1974 he had had thousands opposition persons arrested and had increased the number of executions Mass protest demonstrations led by opposition leaders in Saigon caused Thiệu to reorganize his cabinet in an attempt to quiet the opposition He also used the occasion to get rid of potential threats to his power Minister Đổng with his own private army and considered by Thiệu as a potential threat was dismissed from the cabinet in February 1974 and two months later imprisoned without trial on corruption charges Government run newspapers and television channels then launched a public humiliation campaign against the minister accusing him of corruption and of plotting against the government In June a special committee acquitted the minister of all charges after hearing testimonies from the ministry s high ranking staff Still Đổng was only released in July after Trần Quốc Bửu head of the Tổng Lien Đoan Lao Cong Confederation of Vietnamese Labor the equivalent of the American AFL CIO and Father Hoang Quỳnh of the Northern Catholics pressured Thiệu to do so After his release General Đổng spent his time mentoring senior Army officers and advising civilian opposition leaders on tactics against President Thiệu The Communist invasion in 1975 cut short of his attempt to return to political power During the Fall of Saigon he and his family were able to escape on a US Air Force C130 that took them to Guam and then onward to the United States where he was offered political asylum Personal life editIn his spare time Đổng wrote poems to relax under the pen name of Nung Khanh Lam In 1944 while he was stationed in Mong Cai he wrote poems to court a Nung woman Le Thị Ly 1919 1992 They got married and eventually had five children After coming to the United States and settling in Arlington County Virginia Đổng would occasionally serve as a translator on special projects for the Defense Department before retiring in 1982 to take care of his wife who had suffered from a stroke Two years after Ly died Đổng remarried to Mỹ Lan Trịnh from whom he acquired three stepdaughters In 1996 he and his new family moved to Philadelphia Pennsylvania where he died of congestive heart failure on November 26 2008 Major General Phạm Văn Đổng is survived by his second wife Mỹ Lan five children three stepchildren nine grandchildren and three great grandchildren Awards and decorations editGeneral Đổng earned the following personal Vietnamese and foreign decorations and awards unit citations are not listed Vietnam Decorations edit nbsp Officer of the Imperial Order of the Dragon of Annam nbsp Commander of the National Order of Vietnam nbsp Army Distinguished Service Order First Class nbsp Gallantry Cross with 18 citations Palms amp Gold Stars nbsp Chuong My Merit Medal First Class nbsp Ethnic Development Medal First Class Foreign Decorations and Awards edit nbsp France nbsp Knight of the Legion of Honour nbsp Officier of the National Order of Merit nbsp Croix de Guerre with Bronze Star nbsp Croix de guerre des Theatres d Operations Exterieures avec 2 palmes d argent et 4 citations de bronze nbsp Volunteer Combatant s Cross nbsp Colonial Medal nbsp Honour medal for courage and devotion nbsp 1939 1945 Commemorative war Medal nbsp Indochina Campaign Commemorative Medal nbsp Taiwan nbsp Order of Blue Sky and White Sun with Grand Cordon nbsp Order of Brilliant Star 1st Class nbsp South Korea nbsp Order of Military Merit Eulji Medal nbsp Order of Service Merit 2nd Class nbsp Thailand nbsp Commander of the Order of the White ElephantReferences editGlossary edit 1964 67 This period of political unrest caused by Communist manipulated CIA backed monks was also known as the time of the generals During this time senior officers often formed groups with their own armies either to stage a coup d etat or to protect themselves from their rivals Evidences can be seen in photographs or senior officers and their troops wearing non regulated uniforms of various designs Armee Nationale Vietnamienne ANV Quan đội Quốc gia Việt Nam National Army of Vietnam created in 1949 as the State of Vietnam s armed forces ARVN Army of the Republic of Vietnam often incorrectly used as a collective term to refer to all South Vietnamese armed forces Binh Xuyen connection General Đổng s belief in sheltering nationalists in danger led to his friendship with several former members of the Bay Vien s Binh Xuyen officially part of the QDQGVN under Head of State Bảo Đại Lieutenant Le Nhựt Quang one of his earlier aides de camp was the son of a Binh Xuyen member Bui Chu Secteur located in Bui Chu province and heavily populated by Catholics the secteur was one of the first French military territories returned to the ANV s control BVN Bataillon Vietnamien Officially formed in 1949 as part of the Army for the State of Vietnam a typical battalion consisted of 829 men armed with French weapons Its officers could be either Vietnamese or French BVNs were formed to replace French units By 1954 there were 98 BVN s Bataillon Leger Light Infantry Battalion or Tiểu đoan Khinh quan formed in 1953 consisted of 638 men armed entirely with US weapons Its officers were Vietnamese TDKQs were formed to pacify territories By July 1954 there were 81 TDKQ s Corps The Republic of Vietnam was divided into four tactical zones each of which was a political as well as military jurisdiction Duy Dan Đại Việt Duy Dan Great Viet Populism Party founded in 1942 by Nguyen Huu Thanh codename Ngoc Tho White Jade Rabbit or more commonly known as XYZ Thai Dich Ly Dong A The party found its support among Northern Vietnamese intellectuals who saw Ly Dong A s Populism as one of the best Vietnamese political theories A wrote many doctrines and one of his best work is Huyet Hoa Blood Flower In 1946 after a failed armed revolt to overthrow Ho Chi Minh s government A and his lieutenants were arrested and executed in Hoa Binh During the Vietnam War Professor Nguyễn Hữu Chỉnh one of Duy Dan s top theorists was one of General Đổng s political advisers Đỗ Hữu Vị school One of the few schools the colonial government allowed to open for Vietnamese students in Tonkin It was named after the fifth son of Đỗ Hữu Phương Chợ Lớn s honorary mayor Captain Vị crippled after his plane had crashed in a 1914 mission rejoined his former unit the 1st Foreign Legion Regiment On July 9 1916 Captain Vị commander of the regiment s 7th company died while leading an attack on German troops near Chancelier Field Division Sư đoan Da Chiến with 8 600 men was organized as a regular division for conventional warfare Groupe Mobile Largest military unit in Indochina and equivalent to a brigade or a light infantry division a GM had approximately 6 000 men Besides the infantry troops the unit had 1 company of mortar and light artillery 1 field battery battalion equipped with 105mm howitzers 1 platoon of combat medics 2 light armored companies and 2 amphibious forces GS 2 A group of officers in the headquarters of a military unit in Đổng s case a battalion that provide their commanders with information for planning coordinating and supervising operations In Military Staff Organization 2 is the military intelligence group Human Wave Chiến Thuật Biển Người Sea of human tactics was a classic Communist offense used mostly by Chinese and Vietnamese from the 1940s to the 1980s An assaulting force that outnumbered defending troops at least 4 to 1 stormed the position continuously creating endless waves of people Heavy artillery pounding the position to rubble usually preceded the assault Lien Khu Duyen Hải Military territory comprising four coastal provinces Phu Yen Khanh Hoa Ninh Thuận and Binh Thuận Light Infantry Division Sư đoan Khinh Chiến with 5 245 men was organized to operate in difficult terrains Na Sản fire support base General Salan s brainchild against Giap s forces assaulting the T ai territory and Upper Laos Located in a valley 20 km south of Sơn La the fortified fire support base was a strategic point set up to cut off Viet Minh s troop movements and to defend northwest Tonkin Na San had an airstrip that could accommodate the Dakota airplanes had 21 rings of outposts with a complicated trench system enforced with barbed wires Na San had a defense force of 11 battalions 15 000 men and 6 artillery batteries In December 1952 Giap s forces failed to capture Na San after bloody battles that cost the Viet Minh close to 5 000 lives and 2 000 wounded prisoners The French Union forces lost 2 battalions In his autobiography Salan credited the superior air support for the French victory sans elle l aviation Na San n etait pas possible et je perdais la bataille du Nord Ouest Without air support Na Sản would not be possible and I would ve lost the Northwest battle Ninh Binh A province south of the Red River Delta During the First Indochina War Ninh Binh a strategic position and the rice basket of Tonkin must be defended at all cost by the Franco Vietnamese forces Nung North Vietnam s ethnic minority of mixed Chinese T ai Vietnamese They are Chinese speaking but are classified separately from the urban ethnic Chinese or Hoa Their language is Cantonese Chinese with some T ai and Vietnamese vocabularies Prior to the partition of Vietnam into two countries the Nungs lived mainly in the northeast areas bordering China They are known for being a fierce warrior race For generations they sided with the French colonial government in exchange for autonomy from the Vietnamese Imperial Court During the Indochina and the Vietnam Wars Nungs were on both sides of the conflicts General Phạm Văn Đổng a northern Vietnamese who had gained their respect was considered as one of their own Đổng spoke the language fluently accepted their customs and married a Nung from Mong Cai The actual highest ranking Nung in the ARVN was Major General Chướng Dzếnh Quay IV Corps Chief of Staff at the end of the war On the communist side Lieutenant General Le Quang Đạo was the highest ranking Nung known during the Indochina and Vietnam Wars Quảng Yen Military Academy NCO Established in 1953 as a military educational institution that prepared candidates for service in the State of Vietnam Army s non commissioned officer corps Quốc Gia Nghĩa Tử Ward of the Nation was a brainchild of Lieutenant Colonel Trương Khue Quan who modeled it after France s National Office of Wards of the Nation This independent agency was formed in October 1963 to provide educational opportunities for war orphans and children of war invalids disabled veterans In 1967 the Ministry of War Veterans took over the agency but continued to let it run by an independent management committee By the end of the Vietnam War QGNT had seven schools and 4 dormitories with over 200 teachers and an administrative staff close to 300 persons most of whom were military widows war disabled veterans and family members of soldiers who had died during the war RMIC Regiment Mixte d Infanterie Coloniale Mixed Colonial Infantry Regiment consisted of 4 battalions Territoire Militaire Part of the Tonkin division that had 5 military territories one of which was the 1er Territoire Militaire based in Mong Cai Việt Cach Việt Nam Cach Mạng Đồng Minh Hội Vietnam Revolutionary Alliance Party started out in Nanjing as a coalition force of Vietnamese revolutionaries living in China since the late 1930s Its first governing body consisted of leaders from different parties By 1944 infighting rendered Việt Cach ineffective and most members went back to their original parties Those remained with the party rallied around Nguyễn Hải Thần After World War II party members led by Than and armed by Kuomintang returned to Vietnam where several of its leaders joined Ho Chi Minh s government After Ho signed the modus vivendi allowing French troops to re enter the country Viet Minh attacked to eliminate all opposition groups Viet Cach was one Some of the surviving members went back to China while others remained behind to rally around Bảo Đại During the Vietnam War a Viet Cach leader of VNQDĐ s background Tạ Nguyen Hối was one of General Đổng s political advisers Zone The State of Vietnam was divided into several military zones In the early years of the country when the central government was new and when French colonial officials were still involved Vietnam s affairs commanders commandants ran their zones any way they wanted to some to the point of being warlords The zones in Tonkin were Northwest Autonomy Zone Zone North Zone West Zone South Zone Hanoi Zone Hai Phong and Coastal Zone Zone South Zone Sud the largest and most important consisted of 3 provinces Nam Định Thai Binh and Ninh Binh Phủ Ly capital town 4 sectors and 2 quarters north of south of Song Đay Bibliography edit Dufour Nicolas October 1999 NASAN La victoire oubliee 1952 1953 Nasan the forgotten victory 1952 1953 in French Economica ISBN 2 7178 3940 2 Dommen Arthur J 2001 The Indochina Experience of the French and the Americans Nationalism and Communism in Cambodia Laos and Vietnam Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 33854 9 Colonel Frank Foster John Sylvester 1998 The Decorations amp Medals of the Republic of Vietnam amp Her Allies 1950 1975 First ed South Carolina MOA Press ISBN 1 884452 16 7 Halberstam David 1989 The Making of a Quagmire The classic account of the United States in Vietnam New York Ballantine Books ISBN 0 345 35777 9 Hoang van Dao Huynh Khue 2008 Viet Nam Quoc Dan Dang a contemporary history of a National Struggle 1927 1954 Pittsburgh RoseDog Books ISBN 978 1434991362 Moyar Mark October 2006 Triumph Forsaken The Vietnam War 1954 1965 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 86911 0 Prochnau William 1996 Once Upon a Distant War David Halberstam Neil Sheehan Peter Arnett Young War Correspondents and their early Vietnam Battles New York Random House ISBN 0 679 77265 0 Robert Miriam Gibert 2000 Our Lives Together in the 20th Century Pennsylvania Self published pp 250 252 General Dong s dismissal from the Cabinet and imprisonment without trial Sheehan Neil 1992 After the war was over Hanoi and Saigon First ed New York Random House pp 68 70 The author s friendship with Đổng who was unnamed in the book but is described as one of my closest Vietnamese friends ISBN 0 679 41391 X Simpson Howard R August 1992 Tiger in the Barbed Wire An American in Vietnam 1952 1991 Brassey s Inc ISBN 0 7881 5148 7 Simpson Howard R 1998 Bush Hat Black Tie adventures of a foreign service officer Brassey s Inc p 156 The author talks about his friendship with Đổng since Na Sản and the latter s 1971 pessimistic prediction of South Vietnam s future ISBN 1 57488 154 X AFRVN Military History Section J 5 Strategic Planning and Policy Quan Sử 4 Quan lực Việt Nam Cộng Hoa trong giai đoạn hinh thanh 1946 1955 reprinted from the 1972 edition in Taiwan DaiNam Publishing 1977 AFRVN the formation period 1946 1955 in Vietnamese a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Lieutenant General Huỳnh Văn Cao 1998 Một Kiếp Người A Life in Vietnamese Chantilly Virginia Self Published Hoang Văn Đao 1967 Lịch Sử Đấu Tranh Cận Đại 1927 1954 Việt Nam Quốc Dan Đảng A contemporary history of a Struggle 1927 1954 Viet Nam National People s Party in Vietnamese Saigon Viet Nam Tan Viet Lieutenant General Trần Văn Đon 1989 Việt Nam Nhan Chứng Vietnam Witness in Vietnamese Los Angeles Xuan Thu Publishing Major General Hoanh Linh Đỗ Mậu October 1986 Việt Nam Mau Lửa Que Hương Toi Vietnam Blood and Fire of my country My country s War and Casualties in Vietnamese Mission Hills California Que Huong Publishing Lien Thanh 2008 Biến Động miền Trung Turmoil in Central region in Vietnamese California ARVN Rangers Federation Đoan Them 1965 1945 1964 Hai mươi nam qua việc từng ngay 1945 1964 Twenty years ago a day by day account in Vietnamese Saigon Phạm quang Khai Đoan Them 1968 1965 Việc từng ngay 1965 A day by day account in Vietnamese Saigon Phạm quang Khai Đoan Them 1969 1966 Việc từng ngay 1966 A day by day account in Vietnamese Saigon Phạm quang Khai Đoan Them 1969 1967 Việc từng ngay 1967 A day by day account in Vietnamese Saigon Phạm quang Khai Đoan Them 1970 1968 Việc từng ngay 1968 A day by day account in Vietnamese Saigon Phạm quang Khai Đoan Them 1972 1969 Việc từng ngay 1969 A day by day account in Vietnamese Saigon Phạm quang Khai External links editNews of his death Childs Martin March 16 2009 Pham Van Dong South Vietnamese general who could not defend Saigon against the Communists The Independent Retrieved July 27 2009 Holley Joe December 8 2008 Pham Van Dong Army General In Vietnam Praised for Bravery The Washington Post Retrieved September 23 2009 Obituary from Fairfax Memorial Funeral Home Archived from the original on July 10 2011 Retrieved November 16 2009 Cựu Thiếu Tướng Phạm Văn Đỗng Từ Trần Tại Philadelphia Former Major General Pham van Dong died in Philadelphia Saigon Broadcasting Television Network in Vietnamese November 28 2008 Retrieved September 23 2009 PHẠM VĂN ĐỖNG Condolences from the Association of Hai Ninh Combattants Cadres and Civil Servants Nguoi viet Online in Vietnamese December 8 2008 Retrieved October 3 2009 permanent dead link Gia dinh thieu tuong pham van dong cam ta Take 2 tango in Vietnamese February 21 2009 Archived from the original on January 28 2016 Retrieved September 23 2009 General ARVN Generals www generalhieu com Archived from the original on June 26 2021 Retrieved September 23 2009 List of French Infantry Regiments in French Archived from the original on December 19 2012 Retrieved October 16 2009 Ordre de bataille francais en Indochine entre 1940 et 1945 French Order of Battle between 1940 and 1945 in French Archived from the original on October 30 2013 Retrieved October 22 2009 La longue marche vers la Chine The long march to China in French Retrieved October 17 2009 Order of Liberation recipient Charles Le Cocq in French Retrieved October 20 2009 Giao Phận Bui Chu The Bui Chu diocese in Vietnamese Archived from the original on September 1 2009 Retrieved September 27 2009 Viet Minh Order of Battle Northern Vietnam 1952 1954 Retrieved November 13 2009 Le Page Jean Marc 15 September 2007 Le Tonkin laboratoire de la pacification en Indochine Tonkin a lab for the pacification process in Indochina Revue Historique des Armees in French 248 116 125 Retrieved November 13 2009 Indochine 1954 L operation Auvergne rapport du Sous lieutenant JB David Operation Auvergne a report by Lieutenant JB David PDF in French Retrieved November 14 2009 permanent dead link BATTLE OF INDO CHINA Siege of Nasan Time December 15 1952 Archived from the original on January 8 2012 Retrieved September 27 2009 Quảng Yen Quang Yen Province in Vietnamese Archived from the original on April 18 2009 Retrieved September 27 2009 A Brief Overview of the Vietnam National Army and the Republic of Vietnam Armed Forces 1952 1975 PDF Archived from the original PDF on March 27 2009 Retrieved October 10 2009 History of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam Archived from the original on March 13 2007 Retrieved October 22 2009 Decoding Pham Xuan An chapter 10 Dong is mentioned as a senior army officer plotting a coup d etat in 1963 Retrieved October 12 2009 dead link Foreign Relations 1961 1963 Volume I Vietnam 1961 Dong is mentioned as part of a small powerful group military officers who can control sufficient forces are prepared to launch a coup against Diem government Retrieved November 30 2009 Foreign Relations of the United States 1964 1968 Volume I Vietnam 1964 Document 460 Telegram from the Embassy in Vietnam to the Department of State Retrieved June 4 2010 South Viet Nam End of the Glow Time Magazine December 13 1963 Archived from the original on December 22 2008 Retrieved October 11 2009 Foreign Relations of the United States 1964 1968 Volume II Vietnam January June 1965 Document 148 US Department of States February 20 1965 Retrieved October 11 2009 Units in the Armed Forces of the Republic of Vietnam PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 11 2006 Retrieved October 12 2009 Belief of General Pham Van Dong that tribal Viet Cong and Buddhist disorders will take place between 17 and 20 December 1964 Retrieved October 10 2009 Situation appraisal of Buddhism as a political force Retrieved October 10 2009 VỀ VẤN ĐỀ CHIA RẼ GIỮA ẤN QUANG VỚI VIỆT NAM QUỐC TỰ About the Rift between An Quang and Viet Nam Quoc Tu White Paper by Thich Tam Chau in 1993 on the 1964 1967 Buddhist Crisis in Vietnamese Retrieved October 10 2009 Mark Moyar October 6 2004 Cambridge Journals Modern Asian Studies Volume 38 Issue 04 Abstract of Political Monks The Militant Buddhist Movement during the Vietnam War The evidence also suggests that some of the militant Buddhist leaders were agents of the Vietnamese Communists Modern Asian Studies 38 4 749 784 doi 10 1017 S0026749X04001295 S2CID 145723264 Retrieved June 3 2011 Politician from the Pagoda Time Magazine April 22 1966 Archived from the original on March 25 2011 Retrieved October 10 2009 Catholic Exodus Time Magazine December 25 1964 Archived from the original on November 4 2012 Retrieved October 10 2009 A talk with Thich Tri Quang Time Magazine April 22 1966 Archived from the original on January 27 2008 Retrieved November 27 2009 THE SITUATION IN SOUTH VIETNAM 8 APRIL 14 APRIL 1965 released date 4 14 1965 Retrieved October 11 2009 South Viet Nam Reprise from the Pagodas Time Magazine December 4 1964 Archived from the original on July 15 2010 Retrieved October 12 2009 Tran van Huong and Saigon military governor Pham van Dong UMass Boston Digital Archives Archived from the original on July 20 2011 Retrieved October 17 2009 Tran van Huong discussing with Military Governor Pham van Dong UMass Boston Digital Archives Archived from the original on July 20 2011 Retrieved October 17 2009 Vietnam History 2007 Retrieved October 12 2009 CIA and Rural Pacification in South Vietnam PDF Archived from the original PDF on May 27 2010 Retrieved January 8 2010 External Links on Medals Huan amp Huy Chương VNCH Orders and Medals of the RVN in Vietnamese Archived from the original on January 6 2008 Retrieved September 30 2009 Order of the Annam Dragon fr Retrieved September 30 2009 Commemorative Medal for the Indochina Campaign fr Retrieved November 8 2009 景星勳章 ROC Order of Brilliant Star in Chinese Archived from the original on December 27 2007 Retrieved September 30 2009 무공훈장 ROK Order of Military Merit from the website of South Korea s Ministry of Public Administration and Security in Korean Archived from the original on May 25 2008 Retrieved September 30 2009 Royal Thai Orders and Decorations from the website of Thailand s secretariat of the Cabinet Archived from the original on July 26 2010 Retrieved September 30 2009 Toutes les Decorations Civiles et Militaires All the Civilian and Military Decorations in French Archived from the original on July 23 2009 Retrieved September 30 2009 US Medals website Archived from the original on January 28 2016 Retrieved July 31 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Phạm Văn Đổng amp oldid 1224676382, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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