The National Front for the Liberation of Southern Vietnam (Vietnamese Mặt Trận Dân Tộc Giải Phóng Miền Nam), also known as the Viet Cong, VC, or the National Liberation Front (NLF), was an insurgent (partisan) organization fighting the Republic of Vietnam during the Vietnam War. The NLF was funded, equipped and staffed by both South Vietnamese and the army of North Vietnam.
Its military organization was known as the People's Liberation Armed Forces (PLAF). The PLAF were, according to the official history of the (North) Vietnamese Army, strictly subordinated to the general staff in Hanoi. Their name "Viet Cong", (VC) came from the Vietnamese term for Vietnamese Communist (Việt Nam Cộng Sản). American forces typically referred to members of the NLF as "Charlie," which comes from the US Armed Forces' phonetic alphabet's pronunciation of VC ("Victor Charlie").
American soldiers and the South Vietnam government typically referred to their guerrilla opponents as the Viet Cong or VC.
The VC organization grew out of the Viet Minh organization. By the time the Viet Cong began fighting the ARVN, the insurgency had a national infrastructure in the country. Rather than having to create "liberated zones" as in a classic insurgency, the VC were in control of such zones at the start of the war. The US/ARVN response - involving big-unit, conventional warfare and counter-insurgency was ineffective in part because it was fighting an insurgency with an infrastructure that in many areas was already 20 years old. The long western border of South Vietnam and the weakness of its reflected the People's War approach of Vo Nguyen Giap, who modified the writings of Mao for his purposes. But in truth, the People's War approach was abandoned after the Tet Offensive in favor of small-unit conventional warfare led by the army of North Vietnam.
In 1969, the VC formed a Provisional Revolutionary Government - PRG which after the fall of Saigon in 1975 claimed to represent South Vietnam. The provisional government never ruled any territory or exercised the functions of a government. Its principal role was to sign the instruments of unification with North Vietnam forming the Socialist Republic of Vietnam in 1976. No non-communists were allowed to take part in the transitory PRG governement. VC "minister of justice" Truong Nhu Tang describes how cadres from the north took over the work of his ministry within days of the take-over.
The Tết Offensive is sometimes portrayed as a crushing failure for the US, a military giant humiliated by the NLF. This analysis, however, speaks more to the largely-unanticipated psychological effect the Offensive had on the American public, rather than any military success. The NLF and North Vietnamese had clearly stated goals in launching the Offensive, including a mass uprising of the South Vietnamese citizenry in support of the NLF. These goals were not achieved, but the US military, media and public were all caught very much off guard by the offensive, thanks largely to Westmoreland's rather faulty prognostications. Walter Cronkite, for example, famously stated on February 27, 1968, that the US was "now mired in a stalemate" in Vietnam. The idea that Vietnam could not be won, and instead should be resolved via "disengagement with honor", animated both the Johnson and Nixon administrations and led to the latter's process of "Vietnamizing" the war. Some academics have pointed out that regardless of the ultimate military success of the US at the end of the Tet offensive, the offensive had shown that three years into the war US intelligence was inept in not being able to even detect a national uprising, that the scale of the offensive showed that the insurgency had not been defeated by the introduction of hundreds of thousands of soldiers from the US, and that those supporting the war could not credibly describe a strategy for victory. Rather than offering a hope for success, many supporters of the war fell back on patriotic arguments and the idea that the war had to continue on in its current form forever because a lack of success was better than an admission of failure.
In 1969, the NLF formed the Provisional Revolutionary Government which operated until the end of the Vietnam War. But it was a powerless front organization that no real authority and no other function than propaganda. When the North Vietnamese army captured Saigon in 1975, the NLF and the PRG were set up as a legal front as part of the process of unification. The PRG never functioned as a real government in South Vietnam. After the fall of Saigon, administration was organized by the North Vietnamese Army. The country was unified under the leadership of the Communist Party of Vietnam as the Socialist Republic of Vietnam in 1976.
Irregular military | Rebellions in Asia | Vietnam War
Front Nacional d'Alliberament del Vietnam | Nationale Front für die Befreiung Südvietnams | Frente Vietnamita de Liberación Nacional | Front National pour la Libération du Viêt Nam | Viet Cong | וייטקונג | Dél-Vietnami Nemzeti Felszabadítási Front | Vietcong | 南ベトナム解放民族戦線 | Front National de Liberté (Vietnam) | Vietcong | Vietcong | Вијет Конг | Vietkong | FNL | Mặt trận Dân tộc Giải phóng miền Nam Việt Nam | 越南南方民族解放陣線
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"National Front for the Liberation of Vietnam".
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