Phạm Văn Đổng: Difference between revisions
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==Personal life== |
==Personal life== |
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In 1944, Dong married Le Thi Ly, with whom he had five children. She died in 1992, and Dong remarried to My-Lan Trinh, who he acquired three stepdaughters from. Dong died on November 26, 2008 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. |
In 1944, Dong married Le Thi Ly,a Nung ethnic minority, with whom he had five children. |
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She died in 1992, and Dong remarried to My-Lan Trinh, who he acquired three stepdaughters from. Dong died on November 26, 2008 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. |
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==Awards== |
==Awards== |
Revision as of 20:46, 23 September 2009
Pham Van Dong (1919 - 2009) was a South Vietnamese general from Son Tay. As military governor of Saigon, he was part of the resistance against the North Vietnamese when Saigon fell on 30 April 1975.
Early life and education
Pham Van Dong was born in 1919 in Son Tay, Vietnam to an Imperial Court Teacher, when the country was still part of the French empire, and grew up in Hanoi.
Generations of Dong's family had taught at the Imperial Court. Pham Van Dong himself had planned to become a teacher, and enrolled at the École Normale d’Instituteurs. In 1938, however, he had to withdraw to join the French colonial army. The reason was that he did not have the money to bribe a Court officail even though he had passed the required examinations.
Military career
He would later become the first ever Vietnamese officer to command French soldiers, and also one of the few ARVN officers to have been officers in the French army. During the Second World War, Dong fought against Japan.
In 1944, he was promoted to Officer of Marterials for the 19th Colonial Infantry Division (Officier du matériel de 19è Bataillon de Marche de L’Infanterie Coloniale) based in Mong Cay. This was the place where he earned the trust of many Nung young men, quite a few of whom he trained to be competent officers who would later served in the Armed Forces of the Republic of Vietnam.
In 1952, Lieutenant Colonel Dong was appointed Commander of the 55th Vietnamese Battalion (55e BVN)stationed at the Nasan Line. At the end of 1952, he was promoted to Commander of the 2nd Mobile Group (2e Groupe Mobile). In 1953, he was appointed Commander of the Bui Chu Section 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 19 light infantry battalions and 2 artillery companies with the mission to pacify a military zone that comprised of 7 provinces.
In 1954, prior to Vietnam's division into North and South, Dong was appointed Commander of the Quang Yen Military Academy, where he redeployed the academy and its personnel to southern Vietnam during Operation Passage to Freedom. He was then promoted to Commander of of the Coastal Interzone (Phan Khu Duyen Hai), a post he held until 1956 when he became the Commander of the 3rd Field Division in 1956. He held this post until 1958.
Dong, who was self-taught English, attended the United States Army Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, in 1958. He returned to Vietnam in 1959 and was appointed Deputy Commander of South Vietnam’s III Corps.
After the coup d’état in 1963 that toppled the government of Ngo Dinh Diem, several ARVN generals assumed leadership of South Vietnam. With the beginnings of the Vietnam War, however, and with increased United States involvement, the role of the ARVN became more significant but was wrongly seen by the media in the West as insignificant. During that time, he served briefly as Commander of the 7th Infantry Division before being sent to Taiwan as a military attache.
Returning from Taiwan in 1964, he was promoted to Brigadier General and later Major General, and served as military governor of Saigon (now Ho Chi Minh City) and as Commander of the Special Capital Zone. Dong was regarded highly as an ally by the Americans and well respected by many junior officers.
From 1969 to 1974, he served military personnel in a different capacity, Minister of War Veterans (equivalent to the US Secretary of Veterans Affairs).
During the Fall of Saigon, he and his family were able to escape on a United States Air Force C-130 Hercules that took them to Guam, and then onward to the United States.
Personal life
In 1944, Dong married Le Thi Ly,a Nung ethnic minority, with whom he had five children.
She died in 1992, and Dong remarried to My-Lan Trinh, who he acquired three stepdaughters from. Dong died on November 26, 2008 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Awards
His numerous decorations included:
Tuong Trung Long Tinh huy-chuong (Officier de l’Ordre du Dragon d’Annam); De tam dang Bao quoc huan-chuong (Commander of the National Order; Chevalier de la Legion d’honneur; Chuong my boi tinh de nhat hang (Chuong my medal, 1st class); De tu dang Bao quoc huan-chuong (Officer of the National Order); Luc-quan huan-chuong de nhat hang (Army Distinguished Service Order, 1st class) Anh-dung boi tinh (Gallantry Cross, with 18 citations); Croix de guerre 1939-1945 avec palme de bronze (citation a l'ordre de l'Armee); Croix de guerre des TOE avec 2 palmes d’argent et 4 citations de bronze; Croix du combattant; Medaille coloniale avec barrette Extreme Orient; Medaille d'honneur pour actes de courage et de devouement; Medaille commemorative de la guerre 1939-1945 Medaille commemorative de la Campagne d'Indochine; Chevalier de l’Ordre du merite du Territoire autonome Nung; Croix d'officier de l’Ordre du merite civil de la Federation T’ai; Phat Trien Sac Toc Boi Tinh de nhat hang (Ethnic Development Service medal, 1st class); Commander of the Most Exalted Order of the White Elephant, Thailand; Order of the Brilliant Star, 1st Class, Republic of China; Geun Mu Gong Ro Medal, 2nd Class, Republic of Korea; Euil Ji Order of Military Merit, Republic of Korea.
References
- 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.