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Nguyen Van Thieu

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 President Nguyen Van Thieu
President Nguyen Van Thieu

Nguyen Van Thieu, (April 5, 1923September 29, 2001) was a former General and President of South Vietnam.

Biography

The son of a small landowner, as a patriotic teenager he joined the Viet Minh, led by Hồ Chí Minh to liberate Vietnam from French colonialism. He abandoned them after they moved into the Soviet sphere of influence and embraced Communism.

In 1949, he was educated at the National Military Academy in the former Imperial Capital Hue. He was commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant from the first officer candidates' course of the Vietnam National Army which had been created by Emperor Bảo Đại.

Thieu was an Army lieutenant-colonel when the Republic of Vietnam was founded and it recovered full sovereignty after the withdrawal of French forces in 1955, following the 1954 Geneva Agreement.

Political career

President Nguyen Van Thieu visiting a South Vietnamese Children Orphanage, for children whose parents were killed by North Vietnamese Communists
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President Nguyen Van Thieu visiting a South Vietnamese Children Orphanage, for children whose parents were killed by North Vietnamese Communists

President Nguyen Van Thieu sits in on drums for an impromptu musical session during dedication ceremonies for a rehabilitation center built by South Korean army troops.
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President Nguyen Van Thieu sits in on drums for an impromptu musical session during dedication ceremonies for a rehabilitation center built by South Korean army troops.

President Nguyen Van Thieu and U.S. President Richard Nixon meet with reporters after announcing the beginning of American troop withdrawals from Vietnam. Thieu felt betrayed by the United States and its earlier commitment to fully eradicate Communist aggression from South Vietnam.
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President Nguyen Van Thieu and U.S. President Richard Nixon meet with reporters after announcing the beginning of American troop withdrawals from Vietnam. Thieu felt betrayed by the United States and its earlier commitment to fully eradicate Communist aggression from South Vietnam.

He served as South Vietnam's ceremonial head of state in Prime Minister Nguyen Cao Ky's government from 196567.

In September 3, 1967, he ran successfully for the new executive presidency of South Vietnam earning 38% of the vote and held that position until the Fall of Saigon, South Vietnam's capital, became imminent in 1975.

Thieu's regime was accused of being far more corrupt than the regime of his predecessor. Unlike Ky, Thieu created a political party and greatly centralized political power in the executive branch at the expense of the elected congress. Close allies were placed in key ministerial and military posts in order to prevent threats to the president's leadership from emerging.

In 1971, Thieu ran for re-election, but his rumoured reputation for corruption made his political opponents believe the race would be fixed, and declined to run. As the only candidate, Thieu was thus easily re-elected.

In January 1975, North Vietnam invaded South Vietnam at the city of Da Nang. Nguyen Van Thieu notified President Ford that the North Vietnam had violated the 1973 Paris Peace Accords and asked for 500 million dollars of Aid, but the U.S. Congress would not abide by the 1973 Paris Peace Accords that Henry Kissinger signed as the Secretary of State. The angered Nguyen Van Thieu stated "But the United States did not keep its word. Is an American's word reliable these days?", "The United States did not keep its promise to help us fight for freedom and it was in the same fight that the United States lost 50,000 of its young men."

The North called this the "Ho Chi Minh Campaign". All resistance crumbled. General Cao Van Vien, ARVN chief of staff, ordered his men to fight to the death, then quickly fled the country. The ARVN tried to defend Xuan Loc, their last chance before Saigon. Even according to the Communists, these men fought very well, but it was not enough.

Just prior to the Communist victory, Nguyen Van Thieu resigned and left for Taiwan, quickly handing power to his readily available Vice President Tran Van Huong, who took over on April 21, 1975, nine days before South Vietnam unconditionally surrendered to the North Vietnamese on April 30, 1975.

Life in Exile

Thieu emigrated to Taiwan, later he settled in Surrey, Great Britain. Finally he took up residence in Newton, Massachusetts, in the United States, where he died in 2001.

Quotes

External links

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