Nguyen Chi Thanh
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Nguyen Chi Thanh | |
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1914-1967 | |
Nickname | Revolutionary alias, Xuan; Pen name, Truong Son |
Place of birth | Annam, French Indochina |
Place of death | Hanoi, Democratic Republic of Vietnam |
Allegiance | Democratic Republic of Vietnam |
Service/branch | People's Army of Vietnam |
Rank | General, Politburo member |
Commands held | COSVN |
Battles/wars | Vietnam War |
Awards | Resolution for Victory Order |
General Nguyễn Chí Thanh (1914 - July 7, 1967) was a North Vietnamese officer who was born in Thua Thien Province in Central Vietnam to a poor peasant family. He joined the Indochinese Communist Party in the mid-1930s and apparently spent most of the Second World War in a French prison. He worked for the Party in Central Vietnam until his rise to the Politburo in 1951. During the First Indochina War Thanh was made a general of the People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN). From 1965 until his death he served as the leading strategist and military commander of COSVN, the southern headquarters of communist military and political operations within the Republic of Vietnam. In late 1967, he presented plans for what was to become the Tet Offensive to the Politburo, but died of a heart attack shortly after receiving permission to implement his plan.