Vietnam WORLD WAR II AND JAPANESE OCCUPATION
Ho Chi Minh, accompanied by Pham Van Dong, arriving in Paris, 1946
Courtesy New York Times, Paris Collection, National Archives
The signing of the Nazi-Soviet Non-Agression pact in August
1939, caused France immediately to ban the French Communist Party
and, soon afterwards, to declare illegal all Vietnamese political
parties including the ICP. The colonial authorities began a crack
down on communists, arresting an estimated 2,000 and closing down
all communist and radical journals. The party consequently was
forced to shift its activities to the countryside, where French
control was weaker--a move that was to benefit the communists in
the long run. In November the ICP Central Committee held its
Sixth Plenum with the goal of mapping out a new united front
strategy, the chief task of which was national liberation.
According to the new strategy, support would now be welcomed from
the middle class and even the landlord class, although the
foundation of the party continued to be the proletarian-peasant
alliance.
After the fall of France to the Nazis in June 1940, Japan
demanded that the French colonial government close the HanoiKunming railway to shipments of war-related goods to China. In an
agreement with the Vichy government in France in August, Japan
formally recognized French sovereignty in Indochina in return for
access to military facilities, transit rights, and the right to
station occupation troops in Tonkin. On September 22, however,
Japanese troops invaded from China, seizing the Vietnamese border
towns of Dong Dang and Lang Son. As the French retreated
southward, the Japanese encouraged Vietnamese troops to support
the invasion. The communists in the Bac Son district border area
moved to take advantage of the situation, organizing self-defense
units and establishing a revolutionary administration. The French
protested to the Japanese, however, and a cease-fire was arranged
whereby the French forces returned to their posts and promptly
put down all insurrection. Most of the communist forces in Tonkin
were able to retreat to the mountains. In similar short-lived
uprisings that took place in the Plain of Reeds area of
Cochinchina, however, the communist rebel forces had nowhere to
retreat and most were destroyed by the French.
Data as of December 1987
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