Souphanouvong

Politician

Birthday July 13, 1909

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Palace Sisouvanna, Xieng Dong, Luang-Prabang, French Laos

DEATH DATE 1995, Vientiane, Laos (86 years old)

Nationality Laos

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1909

Prince Souphanouvong (13 July 1909 – 9 January 1995; ສຸພານຸວົງ), nicknamed the Red Prince, was along with his half-brother Prince Souvanna Phouma and Prince Boun Oum of Champasak, one of the "Three Princes" who represented respectively the communist (pro-Vietnam), neutralist and royalist political factions in Laos.

1937

After graduating in 1937, he returned to French Indochina and worked at the public works bureau in Nha Trang, where he was responsible for the construction of bridges and roads in central Vietnam and Laos.

1945

He worked as a civil engineer until 1945.

After the Japanese surrendered at the end of World War II, he contacted the Viet Minh to seek their support for Lao independence and against the French colonial rule.

In Hanoi, he also met with the leader of Viet Minh Ho Chi Minh, who greatly impressed him.

As a result, Souphanouvong joined the Indochinese communist movement and became one of the leaders of the Lao Issara national liberation movement.

He first served as its provincial chairman in Thakhek, then as foreign minister of the Lao Issara government and commander-in-chief of the Army for the Liberation and Defense of Laos (Armée de libération et de défense lao).

Unlike other members of the national liberation movement, Souphanouvong believed that Laos could only liberate itself from French rule in alliance with the Viet Minh and wanted Lao Issara and Việt Minh to unite in an Indochina-wide struggle against French rule.

On 1 November 1945, Souphanouvong signed a Mutual Assistance Agreement between Lao Issara and Viet Minh.

1946

During the battle of Thakhek on 21 March 1946, Souphanouvong and his forces were defeated by the French and as a result, he was wounded and fled across the Mekong River to Bangkok, Thailand.

There, like other Lao Issara leaders, he remained in exile for the next three years.

1949

In March 1949 he resigned as foreign minister of the government-in-exile after conflicts over the issue of continued cooperation with the Viet Minh.

In a conversation with a US diplomat in Bangkok in 1949, he described Laos as a "classless, Buddhist country in which communist theories had no basis."

He proposed an independent Laos, with American help, as a neutral buffer against the spread of communism in Asia.

It cannot be ruled out that Souphanouvong was actually so clueless, since the close circle of leaders of the Vietnamese and Laotian communists was extremely secretive and kept his Marxist-Leninist program strictly secret from outsiders, which probably included Souphanouvong.

Radical goals such as dispossession, class warfare and abolition of the monarchy would not have appealed to the vast majority of the Laotian population with their Buddhist beliefs.

However, all of Souphanouvong's statements was treated with caution, since according to two American contacts, he was a "perfect liar".

His pro-Vietnamese orientation was perhaps more decisive.

He had spent much of his adult life, studying and working in Vietnam, and was married to a Vietnamese woman.

As a result, he had more interactions with Vietnamese than with Laotians of his generation, and arguably a greater intellectual affinity with educated Vietnamese, whom he perceived as more dynamic, than with Lao elites, whom he described as apolitical and passive.

He is thus part of a tradition of many aristocrats in Lao history who sought the support of one of the two large neighbors - either Thailand or Vietnam - in order to gain or retain power.

1950

In August 1950, Souphanouvong convened the first congress of the Lao Freedom Front (Neo Lao Issara), more generally known as the Pathet Lao, which served as the vehicle for the communist challenge to French rule.

It emerged from the radical wing of the Lao Issara in 1950 after the split and was supported by North Vietnam.

On 13 August 1950, he was elected President of the Congress of the Lao Freedom Front, which met at the Viet Minh headquarters in Tuyen Quang, North Vietnam.

As a result, became famous under the name "The Red Prince".

However, the movement was led by the communist politician Kaysone Phomvihane and Souphanouvong was more of a figurehead in it.

Souphanouvong, at least initially, was not a committed communist.

He joined the Pathet Lao because of personal conflicts with the Lao Issara leadership.

1955

Souphanouvong joined the Lao People's Party (which later became the Lao People's Revolutionary Party) in 1955, but was not part of its leadership.

1956

However, he became chairman of the Lao Patriotic Front (Neo Lao Hak Sat), which was founded in 1956, and in which trade unions, women's and peasant associations were also represented.

1957

During the national unity government under his neutralist half-brother Souvanna Phouma, he was Minister for Planning, Reconstruction and Urban Development from 1957 to 1958.

1958

In May 1958, he was elected MP for Vientiane in the National Assembly of Laos with the highest number of votes among all candidates nationwide.

1959

However, the unity government collapsed and the new government under Prime Minister Phoui Sananikone had Souphanouvong and other representatives of the Pathet Lao arrested in July 1959.

1960

In May 1960, the group managed to escape to the headquarters of the pro-communist forces at Sam Neua in Houaphan province.

1962

Souphanouvong continued to advocate for Pathet Lao-neutralist cooperation and contributed to the negotiations that led to the International Agreement on the Neutrality of Laos, which was signed in Geneva in 1962.

1975

He was the President of Laos from December 1975 to October 1986.

Souphanouvong was born in Palace Sisouvanna, Xieng Dong, Luang-Prabang.

He was one of the sons of Prince Bounkhong, the last viceroy of Luang Prabang.

Unlike his half-brothers, Souvanna Phouma and Phetsarath Ratanavongsa, whose mothers were of royal birth, his mother was a commoner, Mom Kham Ouane.

He attended the Lycée Albert Sarraut in Hanoi and then studied civil engineering at the École nationale des ponts et chaussées in Paris, and worked at a port in Le Havre.