The Viá»Ât Minh (, ), officially the League for Independence of Vietnam ( or , ; ), was a communist-led national independence coalition formed at Pác Bó by Ho Chi Minh on 19 May 1941. Also known as the Viá»Ât Minh Front (), it was established by the Indochinese Communist Party (ICP) as a united front to achieve Vietnamese independence, the first step in a communist revolutionary project. With the collapse of Japanese authority at the close of World War II, the front moved swiftly to proclaim the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRV), the predecessor of today's Socialist Republic of Vietnam.
The ICP presented the Viet Minh as a broad-based coalition comprising various political groups. Accommodation of noncommunists, including the colonial-trained bureaucracy and officials of the Empire of Vietnam, initially helped bring the Viet Minh to power in 1945, but it also blunted the communist core's ability to implement radical socioeconomic policies. After 1950, with the recognition and assistance of communist China and the Soviet Union, the party purged remaining bourgeois elements.
Following the Japanese occupation, the Viá»Ât Minh opposed Japan with support from the Republic of China, and later from the US Office of Strategic Services. After World War II, the Viá»Ât Minh established the Democratic Republic of Vietnam and opposed the re-occupation of Vietnam by the French Union, resulting in the First Indochina War. It also opposed non-communist Vietnamese nationalists, such as the Viá»Ât Nam Quá»Âc Dân ÃÂảng, during the civil conflicts, and later opposed the State of Vietnam as well as its successor, the Republic of Vietnam. Until 1948, this organization advocated putting aside the issue of class struggle and dictatorship of the proletariat to focus on gaining sovereignty for Vietnam. However, the organization's stance changed after being recognized by communist China and the Soviet Union in January 1950.
The political leader of Viá»Ât Minh was Ho Chi Minh. The military leadership was under the command of Võ Nguyên Giáp. Other founders were Lê Duẩn and Phạm VÃÂn ÃÂá»Âng.
The Viá»Ât Nam ÃÂá»Âc láºÂp ÃÂá»Âng minh is not to be confused with the Viá»Ât Nam Cách má»Ânh ÃÂá»Âng minh Há»Âi (League for the Vietnamese Revolution, abbreviated as Viá»Ât Cách) which was founded by Nguyá» n Hải Thần. Viá»Ât Cách later briefly joined the Vietnamese National Coalition in 1946.
Today, the Vietnam Fatherland Front â a socio-political coalition led by the Communist Party of Vietnam forming the Vietnamese government â is recognized as the modern incarnation of the Viá»Ât Minh front in current Vietnamese politics.
The League for Independence of Vietnam (Viet Minh) was founded on 19 May 1941 in Pác Bó, Cao Bằng province (in northern Vietnam). Ho Chi Minh was the founder and his Indochinese Communist Party was the main leadership organization within Viet Minh.
Ho Chi Minh was the highest leader. Nguyá» n Lðáng Bằng was appointed as the Direct of the General Department (from 1941 to 1951). Hoàng VÃÂn Thụ was appointed as the Secretary of the General Department (from 1941 to 1943 when he was captured by colonial French), and then took over the position (from 1943 to 1951).
Nguyen Luong Bang, Hoang Van Thu and Hoang Quoc Viet were members of the Communist Party.
At the national level, Viet Minh is governed by the General Department (Tá»Âng bá»Â). Further down there were executive committees in provinces and cities; and executive commissions in communes.
However, due to political turmoil and civil unrest at the time, plus conflicts with Japanese and French forces, the Viet Minh's General Department was not completely elected. Hence the details about members of the General Department were very scarce and not fully understood.
Viet Minh established strongholds in northern and central Vietnam. But in southern Vietnam, Viet Minh faced many challengers such as Cao ÃÂài, Hòa Hảo (religious sects) and Bình Xuyên (armed group).
The founding and core members of Viet Minh were the communists. Other non-communists also joined the front.
Even though many opposite parties fought against Viet Minh, many of their members joined Viet Minh and worked with the government of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam.
The majority of Buddhists supported Viet Minh. The majority of Catholics, Cao ÃÂài, and Hòa Hảo initially supported the Viet Minh but later split into proâÂÂViet Minh, proâÂÂState of Vietnam, and neutral factions.
Viet Minh established many youth wing, woman wing and military wing. They aimed to draw supports from people of different backgrounds, classes, races, genders and religions.
The was previously formed by Há» Há»Âc Lãm in Nanjing, China, at some point between August 1935 and early 1936, when Vietnamese nationalist parties formed an anti-imperialist united front. This organization soon lapsed into inactivity, only to be taken over by Ho Chi Minh and the ICP in 1941. During World War II, Japan occupied French Indochina. As well as fighting the French in the battles of Khai Phat and Na Ngan, the Viá»Ât Minh started a military campaign against the Japanese. For instance, a raid at Tam Dao internment camp in Tonkin on 19 July 1945 saw 500 Viet Minh kill fifty Japanese soldiers and officials, freeing French civilian captives and escorting them to the Chinese border. The Viet Minh also fought the Japanese 21st Division in Thái Nguyên, and regularly raided rice storehouses to alleviate the ongoing famine.
As of the end of 1944, the Viá»Ât Minh claimed a membership of 500,000, of which 200,000 were in Tonkin, 150,000 in Annam, and 150,000 in Cochinchina. After the Japanese coup d'état in French Indochina, the Viet Minh and ICP prolifically expanded their activities. They formed national salvation associations (cuu quoc hoi) that, in Quảng Ngãi province alone, enlisted 100,000 peasants by mid-1945. This was backed by the Vanguard Youth (Thanh Nien Tien Phong) in Cochinchina, which expanded to 200,000 by early summer. In the northern provinces of Viá»Ât Bắc, their armed forces seized control, after which they distributed lands to the poor, abolished the corvée, established quá»Âc ngữ classes, local village militias, and declared universal suffrage and democratic freedoms.
Due to their opposition to the Japanese, the Viá»Ât Minh received funding from the United States, the Soviet Union and the Republic of China. After the August Revolution's takeover of nationalist organizations and Emperor Bảo ÃÂại's abdication to the Viá»Ât Minh, Ho Chi Minh declared Vietnam's independence by proclaiming the establishment of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam on 2 September 1945.
Within days, the Chinese Kuomintang (Nationalist) Army arrived in Vietnam to supervise the repatriation of the Imperial Japanese Army in the North. In the South, Franco-British armies had attacked the Viet Minh since 23 September 1945. The Democratic Republic of Vietnam therefore existed only in theory and effectively controlled no territory. A few months later, the Chinese, Vietnamese and French came to a three-way understanding. The French gave up certain rights in China, the Viá»Ât Minh agreed to the return of the French in exchange for promises of independence within the French Union, and the Chinese agreed to leave. Negotiations between the French and Viá»Ât Minh broke down quickly in December 1946. What followed was nearly ten years of war against France. This was known as the First Indochina War or, to the Vietnamese, "the French War". The Viet Minh had also been in conflict with the nationalists and Trotskyists since August 1945.
The Viá»Ât Minh, who were short on modern military knowledge, created a military school in Quảng Ngãi province in June 1946. More than 400 Vietnamese were trained by Japanese defectors in this school. These soldiers were considered to be students of the Japanese. Later, some of them fought as generals against the Republic of Vietnam in the Vietnam War or, to the Vietnamese communists, "the American War". Young insurgents of the Viá»Ât Minh also received training in the use of modern firearms by some foreign volunteers, such as Stefan Kubiak.
French General Jean ÃÂtienne Valluy quickly pushed the Viá»Ât Minh out of Hanoi. His French infantry with armored units went through Hanoi, fighting small battles against isolated Viá»Ât Minh groups. The French encircled the Viá»Ât Minh base, Viá»Ât Bắc, in late 1947, they caused great damage to the Viet Minh but failed to decisively defeat the Viá»Ât Minh forces, and retreated soon after. According to the communists, the campaign was a Viá»Ât Minh "victory" over the well-equipped French force. While the war with the Viet Minh was ongoing, France decided to seek an alternative political solution by negotiating with the anti-communist nationalists led by former emperor Bao Dai, leading to the establishment of the unified and "independent" State of Vietnam within the French Union in June 1949. However, the new state remained indirectly controlled by France and was only gradually given power. The United States recognized the new country in February 1950 to help the French fight communism (but opposed colonialism) and opposed the Viet Minh's government that got recognized by the USSR and communist China in January.
The Viá»Ât Minh continued fighting lonely against the French until 1950 when they got a massive and important help from the Chinese communists, and later the border of China and Vietnam was linked together as a result of the campaign called Chiến dá»Âch Biên giá»Âi ("Borderland Campaign"/Battle of Route Coloniale 4) that year. The newly communist People's Republic of China gave the Viá»Ât Minh both sheltered bases and heavy weapons with which to fight the French. With the additional weapons, the Viá»Ât Minh were able to take control over many rural areas of the country. Soon after that, they began to advance towards the French-occupied areas.
On 7 March 1951, Viet Minh and National United League of Vietnam (Há»Âi Liên Viá»Ât) merged to form the Vietnamese United Front (Mặt tráºÂn Liên Viá»Ât). Nonetheless, people continued to call the new front as Viet Minh. In late 1953, the Viet Minh began a land reform that turned out to be a disaster.
Later the United Front changed into the current Vietnam Fatherland Front (Mặt tráºÂn Tá» quá»Âc Viá»Ât Nam) on 10 September 1955.
Following their defeat at the Battle of ÃÂiá»Ân Biên Phá»§, the French began negotiations to end the conflict. As a result of peace accords worked out at the Geneva Conference in Geneva, Switzerland, Vietnam was divided into North Vietnam and South Vietnam at the 17th Parallel with the French army retreating to the South and the Viet Minh army retreating to the North as a temporary measure until unifying elections could take place in 1956. Transfer of civil administration of North Vietnam to the Viet Minh was given on 11 October 1954. Ho Chi Minh was appointed Prime Minister of North Vietnam, which would be run as a socialist state. Ngo Dinh Diem, who was previously appointed Prime Minister of South Vietnam by Emperor Bảo ÃÂại, eventually assumed control of South Vietnam.
The Geneva Accords promised elections in 1956 to determine a national government for a united Vietnam. Neither the United States government nor Ngô ÃÂình Diá»Âm's State of Vietnam signed anything at the 1954 Geneva Conference. With respect to the question of reunification, the non-communist Vietnamese delegation objected strenuously to any division of Vietnam, but lost out when the French accepted the proposal of Viá»Ât Minh delegate Phạm VÃÂn ÃÂá»Âng, who proposed that Vietnam eventually be united by elections under the supervision of "local commissions". The United States countered with what became known as the "American Plan", with the support of South Vietnam and the United Kingdom. It provided for unification elections under the supervision of the United Nations, but was rejected by the Soviet delegation. From his home in France, Vietnamese Emperor Bảo ÃÂại appointed Ngô ÃÂình Diá»Âm as Prime Minister of South Vietnam. With United States support in rigging the referendum of 1955 using secret Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) funding, Diá»Âm removed the Emperor and declared himself the president of the Republic of Vietnam. A year later, the republic's constitution was promulgated.
The United States believed Ho Chi Minh would win the nationwide election proposed at the Geneva Accords. In a secret memorandum, Director of CIA Allen Dulles acknowledged that "The evidence [shows] that a majority of the people of Vietnam supported the Viet Minh rebels." Diem refused to hold the elections by citing that the South had not signed and were not bound to the Geneva Accords and that it was impossible to hold free elections in the communist North. Vietnam wide elections never happened and Viá»Ât Minh cadres in South Vietnam secretly kept by the communists launched an insurgency against the government. North Vietnam also occupied portions of Laos to assist in supplying the insurgents known as the National Liberation Front (Viet Cong) in South Vietnam. As part of the global Cold War, the war gradually escalated into the Second Indochina War, called the "Resistance War against America" by Vietnamese communists and commonly known as the "Vietnam War" internationally.
The Khmer Viá»Ât Minh were the 3,000 to 5,000 Cambodian communist cadres, left-wing members of the Khmer Issarak movement regrouped in the United Issarak Front after 1950, most of whom lived in exile in North Vietnam after the 1954 Geneva Conference. Khmer Issarak and United Issarak Front were under leadership of Son Ngoc Minh, Tou Samouth, Sieu Heng, etc. It was a derogatory term used by Norodom Sihanouk, dismissing the Cambodian leftists who had been organizing pro-independence agitations in alliance with the Vietnamese. Sihanouk's public criticism and mockery of the Khmer Issarak had the damaging effect of increasing the power of the hardline, anti-Vietnamese, but also anti-monarchist, members of the Communist Party of Kampuchea (CPK), led by Pol Pot.
The Khmer Issarak and United Issarak Front were instrumental in the foundation of the Cambodian Salvation Front (FUNSK) in 1978. The FUNSK invaded Cambodia along with the Vietnamese Army and overthrew the Democratic Kampuchea Pol Pot state. Many of the Khmer Viá»Ât Minh had married Vietnamese women during their long exile in Vietnam.
Lao Issara (Free Laos) was a political and military organization of Laotian communists, led by Phetsarath, Souphanouvong, Kaysone Phomvihane, Phoumi Vongvichit. Lao Issara received training and support from Viá»Ât Minh. Under French intervention, Lao Issara was split into non-communists and communists. Laotian non-communists under leadership of Pretsarath later established the Kingdom of Laos which was part of the French Union.
However Laotian communists rejected the French offer and fought side by side with Vietnamese communists during the First Indochina War. In 1950, Lao Issara was renamed to Pathet Lao (Laos Nation) under leadership of Souphanouvong, Kaysone Phomvihane, Phoumi Vongvichit, etc.