Lê Duẩn

Former

Birthday April 7, 1907

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Quảng Trị Province, Annam Protectorate, French Indochina

DEATH DATE 1986-7-10, Hanoi, Vietnam (79 years old)

Nationality China

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1907

Lê Duẩn (7 April 1907 – 10 July 1986) was a Vietnamese communist politician.

Lê Duẩn was born as Lê Văn Nhuận in Bich La village, Triệu Đông, Triệu Phong, Quảng Trị Province on 7 April 1907 (although some sources cite 1908) to a poor family with 5 children.

Locals from his generation say that Duan's parents were metal scrap collectors and blacksmiths.

The son of a railway clerk, he became active in revolutionary politics as a young man.

1920

He first came in contact with revolutionary thoughts in the 1920s through his work as a railway clerk.

He received a French colonial education before working as a clerk for the Vietnam Railway Company in Hanoi during the 1920s.

Through his job, he came into contact with several communist activists.

In this period, he educated himself to a Marxist.

1928

Lê Duẩn became a member of the Vietnamese Revolutionary Youth League in 1928.

1930

Lê Duẩn was a founding member of the Indochina Communist Party (the future Communist Party of Vietnam) in 1930.

He cofounded the Indochina Communist Party in 1930.

Lê Duẩn was imprisoned the next year.

1931

He was imprisoned in 1931 and released in 1937.

1937

From 1937 to 1939, he climbed the party ladder.

1939

He was rearrested in 1939, this time for fomenting an uprising in the South.

1945

Lê Duẩn was released from jail following the successful Communist-led August Revolution of August 1945.

1946

During the First Indochina War (1946-1954), Lê Duẩn was an active revolutionary leader in South Vietnam.

1950

He rose in the party hierarchy in the late 1950s and became General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Vietnam (VCP) at the 3rd National Congress in 1960.

He continued Hồ Chí Minh's policy of ruling through collective leadership.

During the 1950s Lê Duẩn became increasingly aggressive towards South Vietnam and called for reunification through war.

By the mid-to-late 1950s Lê Duẩn had become the second-most powerful policy-maker within the Party, eclipsing former party First Secretary Trường Chinh.

1951

He headed the Central Office of South Vietnam, a Party organ, from 1951 until 1954.

1955

Throughout the Vietnam War of 1955 to 1975, Lê Duẩn took an aggressive posture, seeing attack as the key to victory.

1960

From the mid-1960s (when Hồ's health was failing) until his own death in 1986, he was the top decision-maker in Vietnam.

He was born into a lower-class family in Quảng Trị Province, in the Annam Protectorate of French Indochina as Lê Văn Nhuận.

Little is known about his family and childhood.

By 1960 he was officially the second-most powerful Party member, after Party chairman Hồ.

Throughout the 1960s Hồ's health declined and Lê Duẩn assumed more of his responsibilities.

He became the General Secretary in 1960, officially becoming the main personality in the party after Hồ Chí Minh.

After Hồ's death, Lê Duẩn took over the leadership of North Vietnam.

1969

On 2 September 1969 Hồ died and Lê Duẩn became the most powerful figure in the North.

1976

When South Vietnam was reunited with North Vietnam in 1976 and the party was restructured, Lê Duẩn became General Secretary of the Party.

Lê Duẩn and his associates were overly optimistic about the future.

The Second Five-Year Plan (1976–1980) failed and left the Vietnamese economy in crisis.

1978

From then on, Vietnam maintained a closer alliance with the Soviet Union and joined Comecon in 1978.

1979

He endorsed the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia of December 1978, aiming to overthrow the Chinese-backed Khmer Rouge regime of Democratic Kampuchea on 7 January 1979.

This had a serious impact on relations between Vietnam and China, with Vietnam responding with the deportation of ethnic Chinese and China carrying out a heavy-loss punitive expedition against Vietnam in 1979.

1986

Lê remained General Secretary until his death in 1986.

He died in Hanoi; his successor was initially Trường Chinh.

Lê Duẩn was also known as Lê Dung, and was known in public as "anh Ba" (third brother).