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Võ Nguyên Giáp

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Võ Nguyên Giáp
Born25 August 1911
Lệ Thủy, Quảng Bình, French Indochina
Died4 October 2013
Hanoi, Vietnam
NationalityVietnamese
Political orientationMarxism–Leninism
Ho Chi Minh Thought


Võ Nguyên Giáp was a Vietnamese communist general and politician. He was involved in the wars against Japan, France, the United States.

Early life

Giáp was born in 1911 in an educated peasant family. His father died in prison in 1919 after participating a rebellion against the French. His older sister also died shortly after being released from prison. He joined the New Vietnam Revolutionary Party in 1924, where he became a communist. He was imprisoned for 13 months in 1930 and joined the Communist Party of Vietnam after being released. He studied law from 1933 to 1938 at Hanoi. He left for China in 1940 after French authorities banned the CPV.[1]

Military career

Second World War

In September 1940, fascist Japan occupied Vietnam. Giáp formed the Viet Minh army in 1942, which later became the People's Army of Vietnam. In August 1945, Japan surrendered, and Ho Chi Minh ordered the Viet Minh to begin a revolution against French colonial rule.[1]

Anti-French Resistance War

The Democratic Republic of Vietnam was founded in 1945 and declared war against France in December 1946. The Viet Minh received heavy weapons and military advisors from the People's Republic of China after the end of the Chinese Civil War. In 1953, the French established a base at Điện Biên Phủ near the border with Laos. Giáp and his troops carried artillery through the mountains and fired on the French, who had not known that the Vietnamese had heavy weapons. France surrendered on 7 May 1954.[1]

Resistance War against the United States

On 17 June 1954, the United States divided Vietnam along the 17th parallel and installed a puppet state in the south led by Japanese collaborator Bảo Đại. The Geneva Convention planned to elect a president for reunified Vietnam two years later, but the United States did not allow the election to take place because Ho Chi Minh would win. Giáp used the Ho Chi Minh Trail to supply communist forces in the south. By 1963, there were over 16,000 U.S. troops in Vietnam. The United States sent more troops after President Lyndon B. Johnson claimed that North Vietnamese forces attacked a U.S. navy cruiser in the Gulf of Tonkin.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Jack Smith (2013-10-12). "Remembering Gen. Giap" Liberation School. Archived from the original on 2020-09-22. Retrieved 2022-08-28.