11/23/98 11:38
History of the NVA (PAVN)
The communist in Vietnam resembled many others among the
Vietnamese nationlist in that they took their creed from
abroad - in this case from Leninism. Ho Chi Minh over the
years built a disciplined and purposeful organization that
broke its nationalist opponents, outlasted the French and
Americans, and finally unified Indochina under its control.
Ho Chi Minh returned from the USSR in 1925 with Borodin's
mission to China in order to form a communist movement in
Indochina, called first the Revolutionary Youth League and
later in 1930 the Indochinese Communist Party. The party in
1930 led a peasant uprising in the central provinces of
Nghe An and Ha Tinh and created village "soviets" which
were soon crushed by the French military. The party
returned to clandestinity. It built a first guerilla base
in upland Cao Bang and Bac Son, participating in an
abortive-uprising in the fall of 1940. In May 1941 the
party formed a broad united front called the League for the
Indepedence of Vietnam (Vietnam Doc-Lap Dong-Minh Hoi, or
in short, the Viet Minh). (The term Viet Cong, the
contraction for Vietnamese communist, was later used by
opponents more with the implication of the southern arm of
the movement).
The party carefully refrained from challenging the
Japanese, and prepared for the day of Japan's defeat. After
the French were interned in March 1945 and the Japanese
conceded defeat on August 16, the party moved to seize the
opportunity. Armed Propaganda Teams demonstrated across the
country. On September 2, 1945, the Democratic Republic of
Vietnam was proclaimed and the flag of a five pointed
yellow star on a red field was hoisted. Ho Chi Minh became
the president of the Provisional People's Government.
The Viet Minh moved to mollify the Chinese occupiers, keep
out the French and destroy such native rivals as the VNQDD
and Trotskyites. The Viet Minh did well in consolidating
its position except in the south, where they faced the
opposition of the sects and the British and French forces.
In March 6, 1946, agreement, the French government,
"recognized the Republic of Vietnam as a free state which
has its own governmment, parliament, army, and finances and
which is part of the Indochinese Federation and the French
Union." (But a seperate French controlled Republic of
Cochinchina was proclaimed June 1, 1948, with a flag of
three horizontal blue stripes on yellow.) Although the
French even for a short while helped the Viet Minh combat
its nationlist rivals, French policy hardened, particularly
as carried out on the scene by Admiral d' Argenlieu. In
concert, the Viet Minh took a harsher line, for instance,
holding public ceremonies where citizens burned their
French diplomas and destroyed their French medals.
The communist army claims its official orgin in the first
"Platoon of National Salvation" formed in the 1940
uprising. In December 1944 Ho Chi Minh created the
"Vietnamese People's Propaganda Unit for National
Liberation," which became in September 1945, with the new
republic, the People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN). Under the
capable General Vo Nguyen Giap the PAVN was built quickly
using the concept of a people's war, arms of varied orgin,
and a balance of political indoctrination and military
professionalism. by 1946 it had about 100,000 men under
arms, plus 35,000 paramilitary, and it continued to expand
steadily thereafter. It fought with both great courage and
heavy casualties, taking at times beatings from the French
forces, but also securing major victories at Cao Bang in
1950, over Group Mobile 100 in 1953, and finally at Dien
Bien Phu in 1954. The divisions then consisted of the
304th, 308, 312th, 316th, and 320th, and the 351st Heavy
Division.
The Indochinese Communist Party, following recongnition by
Peking and Moscow of the DRV in 1950, abandoned its
clandestinity and changed its name to the Vietnam Workers
Party (Dan Lao-Dong Vietnam). with the partition of Vietnam
at the 17th parallel as a result of the Geneva agreements,
the DRV gained full territoral control of the north. As its
soldiers and cadre were "regrouped" to the north, the DRV
apparently abandoned its position in the south pending
unification of the country under an election to be held
according to the terms of the agreement. The election was
never held, Diem believing the communists would not
tolerate any true one. As the Diem government unexpectedly
reduced the chaos of the south and gained control, the
communist had to rethink their strategy for the south. They
initially, however, were preoccupied with building their
own system in the north, partly through the brutal purges
of the "land reform" program.
Starting in 1959 several thousand of the "regroupees"
southern cadre were again sent to the south and there began
again the effort to achieve "a general uprising". There was
then announced a purportedly seperate party for the south,
the People's Revolutionary Party (Dang Nhan-Dan Cach-Mang),
and a broader front organization the National Front for the
Liberation of South Vietnam-NLF (Mat-Tran Dan-Toc
Giai-Phong Mien-Nam). Control was retained in Hanoi and
discipline over the southerners ensured by the security
apparatus. The flag of the NLF was half red, half light
blue with a gold star in the center, close to that of the
DRV. In December 1963 the Ninth Conference of the Central
Executive Committee made the decision for a full effort to
take the south, and the Second Indochina War commenced in
earnest.
In 1957 the PAVN had been systematically modernized on the
Soviet model. Previously officers were designated by
function, such as battalion commander, and had no rank and
wore no insignia. Following a 1958 law, ranks were
established and insignia and epaulets worn. The PAVN
soldiers and units sent to the south, in order to maintain
the pretense of a separate southern movement, used the
functional rank designations of the People's Liberation
Armed Force of South Vietnam (PLAF) and their more modest
insignia and decorations. Military operations in central
Vietnam, however, were controlled directly from the north,
and that area was divided into four tactical zones: the CMA
Front, Military Region Tri Thien Hue, Military Region 5
below on the coast, and the B-3 Front inland. Military
operations further south were controlled by the Central
Office for South Vietnam (COSVN), located usually on the
Cambodian border directly north of Saigon.
After the "Special war" of 1961-63 against the strategic
hamlet program and the shaky ARVN, the communist forces
then challenged in "armed struggle" the entering American
units. Local guerilla and regional forces were intended to
provide a "seething quality in the coordinated struggle",
while the main forces carried out "annihilating blows" that
would cause "turning points in the war." Put on the
defensive by the hard pressing American units, the
communists husbanded their forces for a major offensive
during Tet 1968. They achieved the desired surprize in
attack, and impetus to the anti-war movement in the US, but
the southern communist units were so heavily blooded that
thereafter the southern communists had little role in the
war. The PLAF divisions, the 3rd, 5th and 9th, were largely
thereafter staffed by PAVN soldiers infiltrated down the
impressive road supply network from the north. The DRV did
not acknowledge its direct involvement in the war in the
south, and unit designations were camouflaged.
A COSVN directive of early 1971 called for continuing
attacks to achieve "piecemeal" victories and to defeat
pacification and Viernamization. While achieving on the
ground no real victories against the US forces, the
communists kept the blood flowing and the bulk of their
forces safe in Cambodia. They caused the Americans, just
like the French, to grow tired of the political burden and
to abandon the war. In January 1973 there were some 220,000
PAVN troops in the south comprising 15 infantry divisions
and many independent infantry, sapper, artillery, armor,
anti-aircraft regiments, the rear service and other units.
Five divisions (304, 312, 320B, 324B and 325) were north of
the Hai Van Pass in MR- I and two were south (711 and 2nd).
In MR-2 there were three divisions (3rd, 1oth, and 320); in
MR-3 two (7th and 9th); and in MR-4 three (1st, 5th and
6th). Other divisions were in the north and Laos.
In the 1973 Paris accord the US gained its prisoners back,
but did not get the communist to withdraw their forces from
the south. The DRV got the US out of Vietnam, but did not
get the US to pull down Thieu and the Republic of Vietnam
as it left. But the Provisional Revolutionary Government of
the Republic of South Vietnam (PRG) did gain status from
its participation in the talks. With President Nixon's
political collapse, US pledges of continued support for the
Republic of Vietnam proved false. The spurious peace
disappeared. By 1975 the PAVN was better armed by the
Soviets and Chinese than the ARVN was by the US. It also
had far more maneuverable battalions. In the major
offensive of 1975 the ARVN fell apart and "unification" was
achieved. It was a victory of the main force PAVN units,
manifested in the Saigon victory parade in May which
featured bemedaled. brass bands, tanks, SAM missiles, and
only a few southern guerillas.
Victory was also celebrated by the elevation of the name of
the state to the Socialist Republic of Vietnam and the
party to the Vietnam Communist Party (Dang Cong-San
Vietnam). The PRG disappeared with the formal unification
of the country.
The aftermath was disappointing to the communist. Hanoi
could manage war, but not peace, and certainly not an
economy. The attractions of the rich south, moreover,
corrupted veteran cadra; the southerners were resentful of
northern control; and a major border war developed with the
vicious Khmer Rouge. This was complicated by a deepening
quarrel with China, which was angered over Vietnam's proud
and ungrateful attitude and deepening ties with the USSR.
The PAVN was expanded to some 33 infantry, 12 economic
construction, and 6 engineer divisions. In January 1978 it
blitzkrieged Democratic Kampuchea but had to leave there
for the protection of its client state the 5th, 302nd,
307th, 309th, and part of the 950th divisions. The border
war of February-March 1978 with China was a standoff,
although the Vietnamese second line border units fought
well. The SRV was the most formidable military power of
Southeast Asia, but also isolated, impoverished, and
heavily dependent on Soviet aid.
Later, tiring of the quagmire in Cambodia and of the
economic and diplomatic costs of its intervention there,
Hanoi reluctantly and gradually pulled its forces out,
leaving the problem to the United Nations. with the
distressing collapse of communism in East Europe and the
Soviet Union, Hanoi cautiously mended its relations with
Beijing. They remained divided over the rancor of history
and competing territorial claims on the border and the
South China Sea. But they shared interest as two of the
only four remaining communist states. Moreover, the SRV,
just as the PRC, was proceeding with economic
liberalization, while resisting political liberalization.
As feared by its SEA neighbors, the international
community, and even the US.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This document is taken from two sources "The Orders and
Medals of The Communist Governments of Indochina" John
Sylvester Jr.
And the official document published by the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam's Institute of Orders (Vien Huan Chuong).
A History of the Democratic/socialist Republic of Vietnam, and
Marxist Unification.