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CHAPTER
1
Heritage
FROM ALL DIRECTIONS, FROM HANOI
AND FROM THE SURROUNDING countryside, several
hundred thousand Vietnamese converged on a large
square called the Place Puginier, next to the French
Governor’s palace. At that square, they had been
told, they could hear the man who had suddenly
claimed to be the leader of all Vietnam. Ho Chi Minh
arrived at the Place Puginier in a black American
automobile. He was supposed to speak to the throng
at 2:00 P.M., but he arrived several
minutes late because the streets of Hanoi were
jammed with pedestrians heading toward the square.
Having no dress clothes of his own, Ho was wearing a
faded khaki suit and a high-collared jacket that he
had borrowed from an acquaintance, and atop his head
was a pith helmet. Men in suits waved small red
flags with gold stars and a band played marches as
he headed towards a high wooden platform in the
center of the square. Just a few weeks earlier, the
Viet Minh had taken over the city from a Japanese
occupation force, which had largely stopped
functioning after the bombing of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki, but Viet Minh leaders still feared that
the Japanese might interfere with this momentous
event. For that reason, armed Viet Minh guards
hovered around the platform and the rest of the
square. At Ho’s invitation, several American
officers from the Office of Strategic Services were
standing near the platform, and two American P-38
Lightning fighters happened to fly over the
assemblage during the event, both of which created a
false impression that the United States government
was endorsing Ho Chi Minh.
Ho tailored the beginning of
his speech to the American officers standing right
in front of him. Quoting from the American
Declaration of Independence, Ho pronounced, “All men
are created equal. They are endowed by their creator
with certain unalienable rights; among these are
life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” He
then read from a proclamation that had inspired a
more radical set of men, the French Revolution’s
Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen:
“All men are born free and with equal rights, and
must always remain free and have equal rights.” Ho
proceeded to accuse the French colonialists of
violating these American and French principles in
all sorts of cruel ways. Asserting that his new
government represented “the entire Vietnamese
people,” he made no mention of his political
ideology, and the only political objective he
discussed was the formation of an independent
Vietnam. “The entire Vietnamese people,” he said in
conclusion, “are determined to mobilize all their
physical and mental strength, to sacrifice their
lives and property, in order to safeguard their
freedom and independence.”
According to many accounts,
the Place Puginier speech on September 2, 1945
proved that nationalism, not Marxist-Leninist
internationalism, was the locomotive that pulled Ho
Chi Minh’s revolution. Ho Chi Minh, it is argued,
was simply the latest in a long line of Vietnamese
nationalists who had resisted foreign aggressors.
Had it not been for American determination to
support the French colonialists and later to prop up
a weak non-Communist South Vietnam, the United
States and a unified Vietnam under Ho Chi Minh could
have been allies, with Ho’s Vietnam turning against
Communist China because of nationalist animosity
just as Yugoslavia had turned against the Soviet
Union. If only the Americans had understood the
history of Vietnam, the whole tragedy could have
been averted.
The fatal flaw in this line of
reasoning is that the history of Vietnam and the
history of Ho Chi Minh actually support the very
opposite conclusions. Ho Chi Minh was not, in
reality, the most recent of many nationalist heroes
who had combated foreign aggression. Driving out
foreign invaders was not the main chord of Vietnam’s
national song; infighting was the primary chord, and
aggression against the southern neighbors of Champa
and Cambodia rivaled the struggle against foreign
invasion for second place. For most of the thous-
and years that are known in the West as the first
millennium A.D., Vietnam belonged to
what later became China. On a dozen occasions during
that period, the residents of Vietnam attempted to
expel the ruling officials and soldiers by force of
arms, not out of xenophobia – many of the rebels had
been born in China or descended from Chinese
ancestors – but out of a desire for power or freedom
from the central authority. In every case except the
last one, the only rebel successes were but brief
flourishes that quickly perished along with the
perpetrators. The final revolt began in 939, under
the leadership of Ngo Quyen, and it ended with
Vietnam receiving vassal status from its massive
northern neighbor, which entailed the payment of
tributes to China in return for Vietnam’s autonomy.
Vietnam would remain a vassal of China for nearly
one thousand years.
From this point onward, in all
of the centuries to come, the very extensive
fighting within Vietnam consisted almost entirely of
one Vietnamese faction fighting another Vietnamese
faction. Vanity and cruelty often prevailed in these
contests, giving lie to the view of some in the West
that it was French colonialism that corrupted
Vietnamese politics. The infighting began just five
years after Vietnam obtained vassal status from
China. Upon Ngo Quyen’s death in 944, his
brother-in-law Duong Tam Kha and his son Xuong Van
went to war over the throne, leading to a succession
of usurpations. In 963, while observing his military
forces from a boat, King Xuong Van was felled by a
crossbowman hidden on the bank. His death plunged
Vietnam into a two-year period era of anarchy known
as the Period of the Twelve Warlords. Unity returned
to the land in 965 when the warlord Dinh Bo Linh put
down the other lords. But bloody rebellions would
plague his dynasty and all that followed it,
becoming more frequent when the king was incompetent
or inattentive to subversion. Knowing that deception
and treachery were constantly fermenting in the
hearts of their countrymen, the kings usually
delegated power to their family members, and for
this reason revolts normally failed unless they
involved members of the royal family audacious
enough to despoil the sanctity of kinship. On
occasion, however, the entire dynasty was supplanted
by feudal lords, in which case there was certain to
be considerable brutality, possibly involving
wholesale slaughter of the outgoing dynasty.
To support the view that Ho
Chi Minh could have become an Asian Tito, numerous
commentators have asserted that China and Vietnam
had been at war for much of Vietnam’s existence and
enemies for nearly all of it prior to the
mid-twentieth century, ensuring subsequent conflict.
The actual history of Vietnam, however, does not
bear out this claim. From the end of the tenth
century to the middle of the twentieth century, the
Chinese and the Vietnamese fought a mere three wars,
all of which the Vietnamese initiated. The first of
these wars, in 1075, began when the Vietnamese
raided China to prevent the Chinese from dominating
the buffer zone between Vietnam and China. The Song
Chinese sent an army into Vietnam to punish the
Vietnamese, and the army withdrew once the
Vietnamese apologized for what they had done. In the
two subsequent wars, in 1406 and 1789, the Chinese
came to Vietnam because one Vietnamese faction
invited them in to help fight another Vietnamese
faction. The very few uninvited attacks on Vietnam
during this thousand-year period were made not by
China but by Champa, by the Mongol empire of Kublai
Khan, and by France.
In general, amicability
characterized relations between China and Vietnam
during these thousand years. Having been a Chinese
province and a popular destination for Chinese
emigrants during the preceding thousand years,
Vietnam had thoroughly absorbed the customs, ideas,
and religions of China. From the time of its
independence through the middle of the twentieth
century, Vietnam remained a follower of China in the
realms of culture and politics. Although the
Vietnamese at times resented Chinese influence and
feared excessive Chinese meddling in Vietnam’s
affairs, as is typical when one nation dominates
another, these emotions were not strong enough to
either prevent collaboration or create serious
hostility. From the middle of the nineteenth century
to the middle of the twentieth century, the
Vietnamese and Chinese helped each other repeatedly
in times of need, much as the Americans during the
same period worked together with the British, who
had been their colonial masters much more recently.
Cooperation was especially close among Vietnamese
and Chinese of Communist persuasion.
Ho Chi Minh was one in a long
line of Vietnamese leaders who used assistance from
abroad to fight their Vietnamese enemies. For most
of his career, his successes depended heavily upon
large-scale material aid and advice from the Soviet
Union and China. His struggles against French
colonialism constituted a civil war as well as a war
against a foreign power, for more Vietnamese than
Frenchmen would take up arms against the Viet Minh,
and when Ho’s nationalist rival Ngo Dinh Diem came
to power in southern Vietnam, the ensuing conflict
was purely a contest between two Vietnamese groups
that relied heavily on foreign assistance. If one
side in that conflict could be said to be less
dependent on foreigners than the other, it was not
the Communists, as Ho was much more deferential to
his foreign advisers than was Ngo Dinh Diem. Ho was
to follow the advice of the Chinese with a
submissiveness that Diem would never display in his
dealings with the Americans. Only Ho Chi Minh would
fill towns and villages with propaganda lauding his
foreign allies.
Foreign aid to warring
Vietnamese factions figured prominently in
Vietnamese history from the fourteenth century
onward. In 1369, the Vietnamese king perished
without leaving an heir, leading to a succession
crisis during which royals slaughtered one another
in great numbers. Among the victims was Nhat Le, the
first man to seize the throne. After Nhat Le’s
murder, his mother went to the country of Champa to
ask for help against the Vietnamese who had taken
the kingdom from her son, and, in 1371, the Chams
complied. Led by the famed Che Bong Nga, the Chams
entered the Red River Valley, tore the Vietnamese
army to shreds, and burned the palaces of Hanoi. In
1389, the Chams returned to Vietnam to assist
Vietnamese rebels, but just as they were about to
defeat the forces of the Vietnamese king, a Cham
traitor revealed the location of Che Bong Nga’s
ship, thereby enabling the Vietnamese to kill the
Cham hero and take his head. The Chams, deflated by
the death of their mighty leader, returned to their
homeland.
In the year 1400, the cunning
regent Ho Quy Ly orchestrated the strangling of the
young king and massacred huge numbers of his
supporters and their male relatives, from babies to
old men, in order to take over the throne. Surviving
members of the dynastic family appealed to the
Chinese for help, and finally, in 1406, Chinese
Emperor Yung Lo agreed to do so. He dispatched an
army known as the “Force the Barbarians to Submit
Army,” which, abetted by the ousted dynasty,
defeated Ho Quy Ly’s forces and drove him from
power. Possessed by an enormous appetite for
enlarging his domain, Yung Lo did not restore the
Vietnamese royal family to power but instead chose
to place Vietnam under the rule of his own Ming
dynasty. The Ming government in Vietnam, Chinese
though it was, enjoyed widespread favor among the
people of northern Vietnam. Further south, however,
a wealthy Vietnamese landowner named Le Loi formed a
powerful group of rebels. A fierce war followed
between the Ming and Le Loi’s forces, lasting nearly
a decade. It ended when Yung Lo’s successor decided
that Vietnam was not worth the trouble and agreed to
let Le Loi have all of Vietnam, returning it to
vassal status.
With the start of the early
sixteenth century came some of the worst infighting
in Vietnamese history, leading to the establishment
of two rival regimes, one in the north and one in
the south. North Vietnam and South Vietnam were to
engage intermittently in inconclusive wars for the
next two hundred years. The Nguyen family, which
took control of southern Vietnam in the latter part
of the sixteenth century, erected two huge walls
north of the plains of Quang Tri, running from the
sea all the way to the Annamite foothills. Located
near the seventeenth parallel, the walls sat very
close to the line that would divide North Vietnam
from South Vietnam following the Geneva Conference
of 1954. After an interval of peace, the North – now
led by the Trinh family – attacked the South,
beginning a series of wars spanning half a century.
Once again Vietnamese leaders sought foreign
assistance in order to fight their Vietnamese
rivals, with the Nguyen family receiving military
equipment and advice from the Portuguese, and the
Trinh family obtaining assistance from the Dutch,
who were competing with the Portuguese in the
scramble for colonies and trading privileges in the
Far East. Although the North had a far larger
population and army than the South, and although the
South expended much of its martial energy in the
conquest of lands belonging to Cambodia and Champa,
the Trinh were never able to vanquish the
Southerners.
In the late eighteenth
century, three brothers from the village of Tay Son
overthrew both the northern and southern monarchies
in an orgy of violence that included ritual
cannibalism and every other form of barbarity. The
Tay Son brothers cut Vietnam into three sections,
North, Center, and South, and ran them as separate
states. The deposed royal families called on the
Chinese for help in removing the Tay Son brothers,
prompting the Chinese emperor to send his troops
into Vietnam, the first time Chinese troops had been
deployed to Vietnam since 1406. With the assistance
of the Chinese, the old dynasties and their
supporters drove the Tay Son from the cities and
slaughtered many of their collaborators. But the
youngest and greatest of the Tay Son brothers,
Emperor Quang Trung, built a large army and, in
1789, threw the Chinese back into China while
smashing the former dynasties.
Soon thereafter, the former
southern king’s nephew, Nguyen Anh, stormed into
southern Vietnam and seized the commercial center of
Saigon and much else in southern Vietnam from the
Tay Son. Pigneau de Behaine, a French missionary,
persuaded French merchants, missionaries, and naval
officers to send Nguyen Anh two ships, a collection
of military hardware, and European military advisers
so that he could take northern Vietnam as well. From
bases in southern Vietnam, Nguyen Anh’s forces
marched northward into a war that was to last
thirteen years. Many of Nguyen Anh’s European
military advisers grew tired of him during the war
and quit. He was overly cautious, they complained,
and had no sense of urgency. But in 1802, Nguyen Anh
captured Hue and then Hanoi, putting an end to the
rule of the Tay Son. He promptly executed the
members of the Tay Son family and the families that
had supplied the Tay Son with generals. The deposed
Tay Son emperor, Nguyen Quang Toan, was forced to
watch while Nguyen Anh’s men urinated on his
parents’ disinterred bones, and then he had his
limbs tied to four elephants that were driven in
four directions until his body was torn into pieces.
Making Hue his capital, Nguyen
Anh proclaimed himself the Emperor Gia Long and
unified modern Vietnam, to include the Mekong Delta,
for the first time. Although both Ho Chi Minh and
Ngo Dinh Diem would later claim to be the rightful
ruler of all of Vietnam, which they said was a
single nation, Vietnam as a unified country had only
a very brief and troubled history. Prior to 1954,
North Vietnam and South Vietnam would be united for
just fifty-eight years, from 1802 to 1859 – a very
short period for an area with 2,700 years of
history. This unification period would be filled
with great tyranny, intrigue, and bloodletting among
the Vietnamese, not the sort of unification to merit
nostalgia. Nor was it the sort that would help the
people develop a strong identification with Vietnam
as a nation. For a much longer period, two hundred
years in length, the North and South had been
divided near the demarcation line established in
1954, and Northerners and Southerners had fought
numerous wars against each other during those two
centuries. Under the Tay Son and again under the
French, Vietnam was divided into North, Center, and
South, three regions that developed distinct
cultures and identities along with feelings of
superiority over the other two thirds. Much of
unified Vietnam, moreover, had not been Vietnamese
at all for most of Vietnam’s history. Until the
Vietnamese crushed the Chams in the fifteenth
century, ninety percent of what became South Vietnam
had belonged to either Champa or Cambodia.
Vietnamese settlers did not penetrate the lands at
the southern and western extremes of modern South
Vietnam until the 1700s, and not until 1757 did the
South Vietnamese kingdom reach the southernmost
point of the Mekong Delta. While the regions of
Vietnam shared the same language and were ad- jacent
grographically, they were not predestined to become
unified, any more than were the United States and
Canada, or Germany and Austria. Because of its
complicated history, Vietnam could legitimately be
considered to be one, two, or three countries.
To complicate matters further,
much of Vietnam was inhabited by people who were not
considered to be Vietnamese by either themselves or
by the ethnic Vietnamese who dominated the affairs
of prosperous lowland Vietnam. After the annexation
of the Mekong Delta, the ethnic Vietnamese were fond
of saying that Vietnam was two rice baskets at the
ends of a carrying pole, with the Mekong Delta in
the south complementing the Red River Delta in the
north. This assertion betrayed the contempt of the
ethnic Vietnamese for the country’s ethnic
minorities, for the analogy was apt only if Vietnam
were considered to be merely the two deltas and the
coastal lowland areas in between them, where
virtually all of the ethnic Vietnamese lived. The
lowland strip along the central coast was indeed
narrow like a pole, but to its west the central
highlands extended for hundreds of miles, making
them comparable in breadth to the Mekong Delta.
Comprising two-thirds of the land mass of southern
Vietnam, the highlands were home to tribes from a
wide range of ethnic groups. Most of them lived in
humble villages on the vast Kontum and Darlac
plateaus or in the steep mountains of the Annamite
chain, a huge spur of the Himalayan massif running
from China’s southern frontier down the Southeast
Asian peninsula.
By the time Gia Long had
established dominion over all of the Vietnamese
territories, Vietnam was on a collision course with
France. Out of deference to his French benefactors,
Gia Long allowed French and Spanish missionaries to
convert many Vietnamese to Catholicism – by the
1820s, they had built the Catholic population of
Vietnam to 300,000. But Gia Long’s successors turned
against the missionaries because of their ties to
ravenous European governments and their support for
opposition groups in a period of great civil strife.
During the twenty-year reign of Gia Long’s immediate
successor, Minh Mang, no less than two hundred
different uprisings against the emperor took place,
with the opposition particularly strong in southern
Vietnam, which remained very resistant to northern
authority. At the end of a failed rebellion in 1833,
the emperor’s forces captured a French missionary
with the rebels and, in public, they burned him with
red hot pincers, hung him on a cross, and slowly
sliced off his chest muscles, buttocks, and other
body parts until he died. Emperor Thieu Tri, who
came to power in 1840, killed several more
missionaries, hundreds of Vietnamese Catholic
priests, and thousands of their followers.
The persecution of
missionaries and their converts, together with a
desire to amass colonies at a time when European
countries were racing to expand their empires,
caused Emperor Napoleon III to send French forces to
Vietnam at the end of 1857, beginning a twenty-five
year conflict in which the next Vietnamese emperor,
Tu Duc, attempted to fend off French attacks as well
as several hundred internal revolts of various
kinds. On August 25, 1883, Vietnam surrendered its
independence to France. As the Tay Son had done, the
French carved Vietnam into three parts – Tonkin in
the north, Annam in the center, and Cochinchina in
the south. The Chinese, at the urging of the
Vietnamese, tried to contest France’s colonization
of Vietnam by sending their own soldiers to fight
the French, but after two years of costly warfare
the Chinese relented and agreed to peace on French
terms. China officially relinquished its status as
protector of Tonkin, bringing to an end the payment
of tribute from Vietnam to China. In the next few
years, some Vietnamese elites organized further
resistance to their new rulers, but most of the
prominent and talented Vietnamese decided to
cooperate with the French, and a large number of
them eagerly absorbed not only the science and
technology that gave the French the tools of power
but also the ideas that animated them. To maintain
their hold on Vietnam, the French colonialists would
always rely more heavily on Vietnamese manpower than
on their own.
Two strong anti-colonial
groups that emerged during the 1920s attempted to
throw the French out by force of arms in 1930. The
Vietnam Nationalist Party, modeled after China’s
Kuomintang, incited a mutiny among Vietnamese
soldiers in the colonial army, but the French
quickly destroyed the mutineers and much of the
party. The tattered remnants of the Vietnam
Nationalist Party had to hobble into China. The
second group was the Vietnamese Communist Party, led
by the man who was to become known as Ho Chi Minh.
Born in 1890 in the province of Nghe An, Ho was the
son of a well-to-do mandarin. During his teenage
years, Ho attended the Lycée Quoc Hoc in Hue, the
best high school available to Vietnamese boys, a
school that would also educate the future Communist
Party leaders Vo Nguyen Giap and Pham Van Dong, as
well as the two anti-Communists who would ultimately
cause Ho Chi Minh the greatest grief, Ngo Dinh Diem
and Ngo Dinh Nhu. Ho Chi Minh left Vietnam in 1912
to work aboard a French ocean liner, beginning a
long period of life abroad. Following World War I,
he settled in Paris and joined the French Socialist
Party. Many years later, Ho would explain that he
did not understand the party’s ideology or platform
at the time and he joined simply because they “had
shown their sympathy toward me, toward the struggle
of the oppressed peoples.” French leftists deemed
Ho’s oratorical skills and appearance unimpressive,
but they liked his emotional intensity, which they
said could be seen in his dark, flashing eyes.
The French Socialist party
would be the stepping stone that took Ho to the
Communism of Marx and Lenin. Coming from a country
wrapped in authoritarian and communitarian
traditions, Ho was not repelled by the lack of
democracy and individualism in Soviet Communism, as
many of the French Socialists were repelled. Ho
later said that he went from being a Socialist to a
Communist upon reading Lenin’s “Theses on the
National and Colonial Questions.” He recounted,
In those Theses,
there were political terms that were difficult to
understand. But by reading them again and again,
finally I was able to grasp the essential part. What
emotion, enthusiasm, enlightenment and confidence
they communicated to me! I wept for joy. Sitting by
myself in my room, I would shout as if I were
addressing large crowds: ‘Dear martyr compatriots!
This is what we need, this is our path to our
liberation!’ Since then, I had entire confidence in
Lenin.
What was in those
inspirational Theses? Lenin’s Theses laid out a
strategy for revolution in colonial and non-European
countries, a subject neglected in previous Communist
treatises. The struggle against colonialism, Lenin
maintained in the Theses, was a key component of
Communism’s quest to end the enslavement of the
world’s people by a small number of Western
capitalists. According to Lenin’s treatise, the
proletariat would first collaborate with the native
bourgeoisie to destroy the colonial powers, then the
dictatorship of the proletariat would eradicate the
bourgeoisie along with “bourgeois prejudices” such
as national and racial animosities, and would also
destroy the “medieval influences of the clergy, the
christian missions, and similar elements” and the
“petty bourgeois pacifist confusion of the ideas and
the policy of internationalism.” Lenin called for
“the closest union between all national and colonial
liberation movements and Soviet Russia,” and
demanded “the subordination of the interests of the
proletarian struggle in one nation to the interests
of that struggle on an international scale.”
Ho Chi Minh was a nationalist
in the sense that he had a special affection for
Vietnam’s people and favored Vietnamese unification
and independence, but, from his reading of Lenin’s
Theses onward, he firmly adhered to the Leninist
principle that Communist nations should subordinate
their interests to those of the international
Communist movement. The peoples of the world had to
set aside national prejudices, he believed, and they
needed to work together as partners to spread the
global revolution, themes that he was discussing in
his writings as early as 1922. In Ho’s opinion,
Yugoslavia or an Asian Yugoslavia or any other
entity that destroyed Communist unity for the sake
of national interests or hatreds was despicable.
Like the Soviets, Ho derided those who put
nationalism ahead of Communism as “bourgeois
nationalists” or “chauvinistic nationalists.” When
the feud between Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union
began in the late 1940s, Ho and his fellow
Vietnamese Communists would bitterly denounce Tito
for putting national concerns before those of
international Communism. They would also praise the
Soviets for obliterating the Hungarian Communist
regime of Imre Nagy when it tried to leave the
Warsaw Pact for nationalistic reasons. In the 1960s,
after the conflicts between the Soviets and the
Chinese had shattered the unity of the international
Communist bloc, Ho Chi Minh would try to gather up
the pieces and put it back together.
Throughout his life, Ho Chi
Minh greatly admired the leaders of China and the
Soviet Union, in whose countries he had lived for
many years. He would work for the Comintern – the
Soviet organization charged with promoting
Marxist-Leninist revolution around the world – and
for the Chinese Communist Army. As the leader of the
Viet Minh during their war against the French, he
would follow Chinese advice as if he had been given
orders, and he would invite Chinese soldiers into
Vietnam on several occasions.
The only piece of direct
evidence employed in arguing that Ho Chi Minh
disliked the Chinese and other foreigners was a
comment he reportedly made in 1946 while defending
his decision to let the French Army into northern
Vietnam: “It is better to sniff French shit for a
little while than to eat Chinese shit all our
lives.” This bit of evidence is badly flawed. When
Ho allegedly made this comment, China was largely
under the control of the Chinese Nationalists, who
were fervent anti-Communists and who were actively
promoting Vietnamese Communism’s most powerful
rival, the Vietnam Nationalist Party. Ho Chi Minh
detested the Chinese Nationalists and wanted to be
free of their influence, but this hatred did not
translate into hatred of the Chinese in general,
anymore than Harry Truman’s animosity toward the
Nazis translated into hatred of the Germans in
general. The evidence available overwhelmingly
indicates that Ho Chi Minh generally liked the
Chinese as a people. Even if Ho had been referring
to all Chinese, it easily could have been an attempt
to trick his Western adversaries into thinking that
there were not strong ties between the Vietnamese
and Chinese Communists.
Further evidence of Ho’s
commitment to Communism came from his single-minded
and unswerving dedication to one objective: the
imposition of Communist government on Vietnam and
the rest of the world. Ho’s long career as a
practitioner of Marxism-Leninism started in 1920,
when he became a founding member of the French
Communist Party. Three years later, the Soviets
summoned him to Moscow to learn Leninist
organizational methods and work for the Comintern.
When Lenin died, in January of 1924, Ho waited in
line to see the corpse for so long that his fingers
and nose became frostbitten. In a tribute to Lenin,
Ho wrote that the Asian peoples “see in Lenin the
personification of universal brotherhood. They feel
veneration for him which is akin to filial piety.”
At the end of 1924, the Soviets transported Ho to
Canton via the Trans-Siberian Express. Carrying
orders to organize Vietnamese émigrés and other
Asians into revolutionary groups, Ho was to work
under the guidance and financial auspices of the
Comintern. In Canton, he started a Communist
organization called Viet Nam Thanh Nien Cach Mang
Hoi, meaning Revolutionary Youth League. In
conformity with Lenin’s theories, Ho sought
temporary alliances with non-Communist Vietnamese.
As he wrote in the Revolutionary Youth League’s
journal, “we must destroy the
counterrevolutionary elements,” but only “after
having kicked the French out of our borders.” Ho
enrolled some of his most gifted followers in a
Chinese military academy, including several who
would later become his top generals.
In early 1930, the Comintern
sent Ho to Hong Kong, where he welded two factions
of Vietnamese Communists into a single new
organization called the Vietnamese Communist Party,
subordinate to the Far Eastern Bureau of the
Comintern in Shanghai. On the day that he founded
the Vietnamese Communist Party, Ho made the party’s
ideological alignment quite clear, asserting that
the party belonged to a “revolutionary camp” led by
the Soviet Union and supported by “the oppressed
colonies and the exploited working class throughout
the world.” The stated goal of the Vietnamese
Communist Party was to “overthrow French
imperialism, feudalism, and the reactionary
Vietnamese capitalist class,” all of which belonged
to the “counterrevolutionary camp of international
capitalism and imperialism whose general staff is
the League of Nations.” |