Massacre
at Hue
Submitted by: Kiet Nguyen
(Excerpt
from the Viet Cong Strategy of Terror, Douglas Pike,
p. 23-39)
The
city of Hue is one of the saddest cities of our earth,
not simply because of what happened there in February
1968, unthinkable as that was. It is a silent rebuke
to all of us, inheritors of 40 centuries of civilization,
who in our century have allowed collectivist politics-abstractions
all-to corrupt us into the worst of the modern sins,
indifference to inhumanity.
What happened in Hue should give pause to every remaining
civilized person on this planet. It should be inscribed,
so as not to be forgotten, along with the record of
other terrible visitations of man's inhumanity to
man which stud the history of the human race.
Hue is another demonstration of what man can bring
himself to do when he fixes no limits on political
action and pursues incautiously the dream of social
perfectibility.
What happened in Hue, physically, can be described
with a few quick statistics. A Communist force which
eventually reached 12,000 invaded the city the night
of the new moon marking the new lunar year, January
30, 1968. It stayed for 26 days and then was driven
out by military action.
In the wake of this Tet offensive, 5,800 Hue civilians
were dead or missing. It is now known that most of
them are dead. The bodies of most have since been
found in single and mass graves throughout Thua Thien
Province which surrounds this cultural capital of
Vietnam.
Such are the skeletal facts, the important statistics.
Such is what the incurious word knows any thing at
all about Hue, for this is what was written, modestly
by the word's press. Apparently it made no impact
on the world's mind or conscience. For there was no
agonized outcry. No demonstration at North Vietnamese
embassies around the world.
In a tone beyond bitterness, the people there will
tell you that the world does not know what happened
in Hue or, if it does, does not care
The
Battle
The
Battle of Hue was part of the Communist Winter-Spring
campaign of 1967-68. The entire campaign was divided
into three phases:
Phase I came in October, November, and December of
1967 and entailed "coordinated fighting methods,"
that is, fairly large, set-piece battles against important
fixed installations or allied concentrations. The
battles of Loc Ninh in Binh Long Province, Dak To
in Kontum Province, and Con Tien in Quang Tri Province,
all three in the mountainous interior of South Vietnam
near the Cambodian and Lao borders, were typical and,
in fact, major elements in Phase I.
Phase II came in January, February, and March of 1968
and involved great use of "independent fighting
methods," that is, large numbers of attacks by
fairly small units, simultaneously, over a vast geographic
area and using the most refined and advanced techniques
of guerrilla war. Whereas Phase I was fought chiefly
with North Vietnamese Regular (PAVN) troops (at that
time some 55,000 were in the South), Phase II was
fought mainly with Southern Communist (PLAF) troops.
The crescendo of Phase II was the Tet offensive in
which 70,000 troops attacked 32 of South Vietnam's
largest population centres, including the city of
Hue.
Phase III, in April, May, and June of 1968, originally
was to have combined the independent and coordinated
fighting methods, culminating in a great fixed battle
somewhere. This was what captured documents guardedly
referred to as the "second wave". Possibly
it was to have been Khe Sanh, the U.S. Marine base
in the far northern corner of South Vietnam. Or perhaps
it was to have been Hue. There was no second wave
chiefly because events in Phases I and II did not
develop as expected. Still, the war reached its bloodiest
tempo in eight years then, during the period from
the Battle of Hue in February until the lifting of
the siege of Khe Sanh in late summer.
American losses during those three months averaged
nearly 500 killed per week; the South Vietnamese (GVN)
losses were double that rate; and the PAVN-PLAF losses
were nearly eight times the American loss rate.
In the Winter-Spring Campaign, the Communists began
with about 195,000 PLAF main force and PAVN troops.
During the nine months they lost (killed or permanently
disabled) about 85,000 men.
The Winter-Spring Campaign was an all-out Communist
bid to break the back of the South Vietnamese armed
forces and drive the government, along with the Allied
forces, into defensive city enclaves. Strictly speaking,
the Battle of Hue was part of Phase I rather than
Phase II since it employed "co-ordinated fighting
methods" and involved North Vietnamese troops
rather than southern guerrillas. It was fought, on
the Communist side, largely by two veteran North Vietnamese
army divisions: The Fifth 324-B, augmented by main
forces battalions and some guerrilla units along with
some 150 local civilian commissars and cadres.
Briefly the Battle of Hue consisted of these major
developments:
The initial Communist assault, chiefly by the 800th
and 802nd battalions, had the force and momentum to
carry it across Hue. By dawn of the first day the
Communists controlled all the city except the headquarters
of the First ARVN Division and the compound housing
American military advisors. The Vietnamese and Americans
moved up reinforcements with orders to reach the two
holdouts and strengthen them. The Communists moved
up another battalion, the 804th, with orders to intercept
the reinforcement forces. This failed, the two points
were reinforced and never again seriously threatened.
The battle then took on the aspects of a siege. The
Communists were in the Citadel and on the western
edge of the city. The Vietnamese and Americans on
the other three sides, including that portion of Hue
south of the river, determined to drive them out,
hoping initially to do so with artillery fire and
air strikes. But the Citadel was well built and soon
it became apparent that if the Communists' orders
were to hold, they could be expelled only by city
warfare, fighting house by house and block by block,
a slow and costly form of combat. The order was given.
By the third week of February the encirclement of
the Citadel was well under way and Vietnamese troops
and American Marines were advancing yard by yard through
the Citadel. On the morning of February 24, Vietnamese
First Division soldiers tore down the Communist flag
that had flown for 24 days over the outer wall and
hoisted their own. The battle was won, although sporadic
fighting would continue outside the city. Some 2,500
Communists died during the battle and another 2,500
would die as Communists elements were pursued beyond
Hue. Allied dead were set at 357.
The
Finds
In
the chaos that existed following the battle, the first
order of civilian business was emergency relief, in
the form of food shipments, prevention of epidemics,
emergency medical care, etc. Then came the home rebuilding
effort. Only later did Hue begin to tabulate its casualties.
No true post-attack census has yet been taken. In
March local officials reported that 1,900 civilians
were hospitalized with war wounds and they estimated
that some 5,800 persons were unaccounted for.
The first discovery of Communist victims came in the
Gia Hoi High School yard, on February 26 ; eventually
170 bodies were recovered.
In the next few months 18 additional grave sites were
found, the largest of which were Tang Quang Tu Pagoda
(67 victims), Bai Dau (77), Cho Thong area (an estimated
100), the imperial tombs area (201), Thien Ham (approximately
200), and Dong Gi (approximately 100). In all, almost
1,200 bodies were found in hastily dug, poorly concealed
graves.
At least half of these showed clear evidence of atrocity
killings: hands wired behind backs, rags stuffed in
mouths, bodies contorted but without wounds (indicating
burial alive). The other nearly 600 bore wound marks
but there was no way of determining whether they died
by firing squad or incidental to the battle.
The second major group of finds was discovered in
the first seven months of 1969 in Phu Thu district-the
Sand Dune Finds and Le Xa Tay-and Huong Thuy district-Xuan
Hoa-Van Duong-in late March and April. Additional
grave sites were found in Vinh Loc district in May
and in Nam Hoa district in July.
The largest of this group were the Sand Dune Finds
in the three sites of Vinh Luu, Le Xa Dong and Xuan
0 located in rolling, grasstufted sand dune country
near the South China Sea. Separated by salt-marsh
valleys, these dunes were ideal for graves. Over 800
bodies were uncovered in the dunes.
In the Sand Dune Find, the pattern had been to tie
victims together in groups of 10 or 20, line them
up in front of a trench dug by local corvee labour
and cut them down with submachine gun (a favourite
local souvenir is a spent Russian machine gun shell
taken from a grave). Frequently the dead were buried
in layers of three and four, which makes identification
particularly difficult.
In Nam Hoa district came the third, or Da Mai Creek
Find, which also has been called the Phu Cam death
march, made on September 19, 1969. Three Communist
defectors told intelligence officers of the 101st
Airborne Brigade that they had witnessed the killing
of several hundred people at Da Mai Creek, about 10
miles south of Hue, in February of 1968. The area
is wild, unpopulated, virtually inaccessible. The
Brigade sent in a search party, which reported that
the stream contained a large number of human bones.
By piecing together bits of information, it was determined
that this is what happened at Da Mai Creek: On the
fifth day of Tet in the Phu Cam section of Hue, where
some three-quarters of the City's 40,000 Roman Catholics
lived, a large number of people had taken sanctuary
from the battle in a local church, a common method
in Vietnam of escaping war. Many in the building were
not in fact Catholic.
A Communist political commissar arrived at the church
and ordered out about 400 people, some by name and
some apparently because of their appearance (prosperous
looking and middle-aged businessmen, for example).
He said they were going to the "liberated area"
for three days of indoctrination, after which each
could return home.
They were marched nine kilometres south to a pagoda
where the Communists had established a headquarters.
There 20 were called out from the group, assembled
before a drumhead court, tried, found guilty, executed
and buried in the pagoda yard. The remainder were
taken across the river and turned over to a local
Communist unit in an exchange that even involved banding
the political commissar a receipt. It is probable
that the commissar intended that their prisoners should
be re-educated and returned, but with the turnover,
matters passed from his control.
During the next several days, exactly how many is
not known, both captive and captor wandered the countryside.
At some point the local Communists decided to eliminate
witnesses: Their captives were led through six kilometres
of some of the most rugged terrain in Central Vietnam,
to Da Mai Creek. There they were shot or brained and
their bodies left to wash in the running stream.
The 101st Airborne Brigade burial detail found it
impossible to reach the creek overland, roads being
non-existent or impassable. The creek's foliage is
what in Vietnam is called double-canopy, that is,
two layers, one consisting of brush and trees close
to the ground, and the second of tall trees whose
branches spread out high above. Beneath is permanent
twilight. Brigade engineers spent two days blasting
a hole through the double-canopy by exploding dynamite
dangled on long wires beneath their hovering helicopters.
This cleared a landing pad for helicopter hearses.
Quite clearly this was a spot where death could be
easily hidden even without burial.
The Da Mai Creek bed, for nearly a hundred yards up
the ravine, yielded skulls, skeletons and pieces of
human bones. The dead had been left above ground (for
the animists among them, this meant their souls would
wander the lonely earth forever, since such is the
fate of the unburied dead), and 20 months in the running
stream had left bones clean and white.
Local authorities later released a list of 428 names
of persons whom they said had been positively identified
from the creek bed remains. The Communists' rationale
for their excesses was elimination of "traitors
to the revolution." The list of 428 victims breaks
down as follows: 25 per cent military: two officers,
the rest NCO's and enlisted men; 25 per cent students;
50 per cent civil servants, village and hamlet officials,
service personnel of various categories, and ordinary
workers.
The fourth or Phu Thu Salt Flat Finds came in November,
1969, near the fishing village of Luong Vien some
ten miles east of Hue, another desolate region. Government
troops early in the month began an intensive effort
to clear the area of remnants of the local Communist
organization. People of Luong Vien, population 700,
who had remained silent in the presence of troops
for 20 months apparently felt secure enough from Communist
revenge to break silence and lead officials to the
find. Based on descriptions from villagers whose memories
are not always clear, local officials estimate the
number of bodies at Phu Thu to be at least 300 and
possibly 1,000.
The story remains uncompleted. If the estimates by
Hue officials are even approximately correct, nearly
2,000 people are still missing. Re-capitulation of
the dead and missing
After the battle, the GVN's total estimated civilian
casualties resulting from Battle of Hue 7600 Wounded
(hospitalized or outpatients) with injures attributable
to warfare -1900 subtotal 5700 Estimated civilian
deaths due to accident of battle -844 subtotal 4756
First finds-bodies discovered immediately post battle,
1968 -1173 subtotal 3583 Second finds, including Sand
Dune finds, March-July, 1969 (est.) -809 subtotal
2774 Third find, Da Mai Creek find (Nam Hoa district)
September, 1969 -428 subtotal 2346 Fourth Finds-Phu
Thu Salt Flat find, November, 1969 (est.) -300 subtotal
2046 Miscellaneous finds during 1969 (approximate)
-100
TOTAL YET UNACCOUNTED FOR 1946
[1]
SEATO: South East Asia Organization. [2] PAVN: People's
Army of Vietnam, soldiers of North Vietnam Army serving
in the South, number currently 105,000. [3] PLAF:
People's Liberation Armed Force, Formerly called the
National Liberation Front Army.
Communist
Rationale
The
killing in Hue that added up to the Hue Massacre far
exceeded in numbers any atrocity by the Communists
previously in South Vietnam. The difference was not
only one in degree but one in kind. The character
of the terror that emerges from an examination of
Hue is quite distinct from Communist terror acts elsewhere,
frequent or brutal as they may have been.
The terror in Hue was not a morale building act-the
quick blow deep into the enemy's lair which proves
enemy vulnerability and the guerrilla's omnipotence
and which is quite different from gunning down civilians
in areas under guerrilla control. Nor was it terror
to advertise the cause. Nor to disorient and psychologically
isolate the individual, since the vast majority of
the killings were done secretly. Nor, beyond the blacklist
killings, was it terror to eliminate opposing forces.
Hue did not follow the pattern of terror to provoke
governmental over-response since it resulted in only
what might have been anticipated-government assistance.
There were elements of each objective, true, but none
serves to explain the widespread and diverse pattern
of death meted out by the Communists.
What is offered here is a hypothesis which will suggest
logic and system behind what appears to be simple,
random slaughter. Before dealing with it, let us consider
three facts which constantly reassert themselves to
a Hue visitor seeking to discover what exactly happened
there and, more importantly, exactly why it happened.
All three fly in the face of common sense and contradict
to a degree what has been written. Yet, in talking
to all sources-province chief, police chief, American
advisor, eye witness, captured prisoner, hoi chanh
(defector) or those few who miraculously escaped a
death scene-the three facts emerge again and again.
The first fact, and perhaps the most important, is
that despite contrary appearances virtually no Communist
killing was due to rage, frustration, or panic during
the Communist withdrawal at the end. Such explanations
are frequently heard, but they fail to hold up under
scrutiny. Quite the contrary, to trace back any single
killing is to discover that almost without exception
it was the result of a decision rational and justifiable
in the Communist mind. In fact, most killings were,
from the Communist calculation, imperative.
The second fact is that, as far as can be determined,
virtually all killings were done by local Communist
cadres and not by the ARVN troops or Northerners or
other outside Communists. Some 12,000 ARVN troops
fought the battle of Hue and killed civilians in the
process but this was incidental to their military
effort. Most of the 150 Communist civilian cadres
operating within the city were local, that is from
the Thua Thien province area. They were the ones who
issued the death orders.
Whether they acted on instructions from higher headquarters
(and the Communist organizational system is such that
one must assume they did), and, if so, what exactly
those orders were, no one yet knows for sure.
The third fact is that beyond "example"
executions of prominent "tyrants", most
of the killings were done secretly with extraordinary
effort made to hide the bodies. Most outsiders have
a mental picture of Hue as a place of public executions
and prominent mass burial mounds of fresh-turned earth.
Only in the early days were there well-publicized
executions and these were relatively few. The burial
sites in the city were easily discovered because it
is difficult to create a graveyard in a densely populated
area without someone noticing it. All the other finds
were well hidden, all in terrain lending itself to
concealment, probably the reason the sites were chosen
in the first place.
A body in the sand dunes is as difficult to find as
a seashell pushed deep into a sandy beach over which
a wave has washed. Da Mai Creek is in the remotest
part of the province and must have required great
exertion by the Communists to lead their victims there.
Had not the three hoi chanh led searchers to the wild
uninhabited spot the bodies might well remain undiscovered
to this day. A visit to all sites leaves one with
the impression that the Communists made a major effort
to hide their deeds.
The hypothesis offered here connects and fixes in
time the Communist assessment of their prospects for
staying in Hue with the kind of death order issued.
It seems clear from sifting evidence that they had
no single unchanging assessment with regard to themselves
and their future in Hue, but rather that changing
situations during the course of the battle altered
their prospects and their intentions.
It also seems equally clear from the evidence that
there was no single Communist policy on death orders;
instead the kind of death order issued changed during
the course of the battle. The correlation between
these two is high and divides into three phases. The
hypothesis therefore is that as Communist plans during
the Battle of Hue changed so did the nature of the
death orders issued. This conclusion is based on overt
Communist statements, testimony by prisoners1 and
hoi chanh, accounts of eyewitnesses, captured documents
and the internal logic of the Communist situation.
Thinking in Phase I was well expressed in a Communist
Party of South Vietnam (PRP) resolution issued to
cadres on the eve of the offensive:
Be sure that the liberated ... cities are successfully
consolidated. Quickly activate armed and political
units, establish administrative organs at all echelons,
promote (civilian) defence and combat support activities,
get the people to establish an air defence system
and generally motivate them to be ready to act against
the enemy when he counterattacks..."
This was the limited view at the start - held momentarily.
Subsequent developments in Hue were reported in different
terms. Hanoi Radio on February 4 said: "After
one hour's fighting the Revolutionary Armed Forces
occupied the residence of the puppet provincial governor
(in Hue), the prison and the offices of the puppet
administration... The Revolutionary Armed Forces punished
most cruel agents of the enemy and seized control
of the streets... rounded up and punished dozen of
cruel agents and caused the enemy organs of control
and oppression to crumble...
During the brief stay in Hue, the civilian cadres,
accompanied by execution squads, were to round up
and execute key individuals whose elimination would
greatly weaken the government's administrative apparatus
following Communist withdrawal. This was the blacklist
period, the time of the drumhead court. Cadres with
lists of names and addresses on clipboards appeared
and called into kangaroo court various "enemies
of the Revolution."
Their trials were public, usually in the court-yard
of a temporary Communist headquarters. The trials
lasted about ten minutes each and there are no known
not-guilty verdicts. Punishment, invariably execution,
was meted out immediately. Bodies were either hastily
buried or turned over to relatives. Singled out for
this treatment were civil servants, especially those
involved in security or police affairs, military officers
and some non-commissioned officers, plus selected
non-official but natural leaders of the community,
chiefly educators and religionists.
With the exception of a particularly venomous attack
on Hue intellectuals, the Phase I pattern was standard
operating procedure for Communists in Vietnam. It
was the sort of thing that had been going on systematically
in the villages for ten years. Permanent blacklists,
prepared by zonal or inter-zone party headquarters
have long existed for use throughout the country,
whenever an opportunity presents itself.
However, not all the people named in the lists used
in Hue were liquidated. There were a large number
of people who obviously were listed, who stayed in
the city throughout the battle, but escaped. Throughout
the 24-day period the Communist cadres were busy hunting
down persons on their blacklists, but after a few
days their major efforts were turned into a new channel.
Hue:
Phase II
In
the first few days, the Tet offensive affairs progressed
so well for the Communists in Hue (although not to
the south, where party chiefs received some rather
grim evaluations from cadres in the midst of the offensive
in the Mekong Delta) that for a brief euphoric moment
they believed they could hold the city. Probably the
assessment that the Communists were in Hue to stay
was not shared at the higher echelons, but it was
widespread in Hue and at the Thua Thien provincial
level. One intercepted Communist message, apparently
written on February 2, exhorted cadres in Hue to hold
fast, declaring; "A new era, a real revolutionary
period has begun (because of our Hue victories) and
we need only to make swift assault (in Hue) to secure
our target and gain total victory."
The Hanoi official party newspaper, Nhan Dan, echoed
the theme:
"Like a thunderbolt, a general offensive has
been hurled against the U.S. and the puppets... The
U.S.-puppet machine has been duly punished. The puppet
administrative organs... have suddenly collapsed.
The Thieu-Ky administration cannot escape from complete
collapse. The puppet troops have become extremely
weak and cannot avoid being completely exterminated."
Of course, some of this verbiage is simply exhortation
to the faithful, and, as is always the case in reading
Communist output, it is most difficult to distinguish
between belief and wish. But testimony from prisoners
and hoi chanh, as well as intercepted battle messages,
indicate that both rank and file and cadres believed
for a few days they were permanently in Hue, and they
acted accordingly.
Among their acts was to extend the death order and
launch what in effect was a period of social reconstruction,
Communist style. Orders went out, apparently from
the provincial level of the party, to round up what
one prisoner termed "social negatives,"
that is, those individuals or members of groups who
represented potential danger or liability in the new
social order. This was quite impersonal, not a blacklist
of names but a blacklist of titles and positions held
in the old society, directed not against people as
such but against "social units."
As seen earlier in North Vietnam and in Communist
China, the Communists were seeking to break up the
local social order by eliminating leaders and key
figures in religious organizations (Buddhist bonzes,
Catholic priests), political parties (four members
of the Central Committee of Vietnam), social movements
such as women's organizations and youth groups, including
what otherwise would be totally inexplicable, the
execution of pro-Communist student leaders from middle
and upper class families.
In consonance with this, killing in some instances
was done by family unit. In one well-documented case
during this period a squad with a death order entered
the home of a prominent community leader and shot
him, his wife, his married son and daughter-in-law,
his young unmarried daughter, a male and female servant
and their baby. The family cat was strangled; the
family dog was clubbed to death; the goldfish scooped
out of the fish-bowl and tossed on the floor. When
the Communists left, no life remained in the house.
A "social unit" had been eliminated.
Phase II also saw an intensive effort to eliminate
intellectuals, who are perhaps more numerous in Hue
than elsewhere in Vietnam. Surviving Hue intellectuals
explain this in terms of a long-standing Communist
hatred of Hue intellectuals, who were anti-Communist
in the worst or most insulting manner: they refused
to take Communism seriously. Hue intellectuals have
always been contemptuous of Communist ideology, brushing
it aside as a latecomer to the history of ideas and
not a very significant one at that.
Hue, being a bastion of traditionalism, with its intellectuals
steeped in Confucian learning intertwined with Buddhism,
did not, even in the fermenting years of the 1920s,
and 1930s, debate the merits of Communism. Hue ignored
it. The intellectuals in the university, for example,
in a year's course in political thought dispense with
Marxism-Leninism in a half hour lecture, painting
it as a set of shallow barbarian political slogans
with none of the depth and time-tested reality of
Confucian learning, nor any of the splendor and soaring
humanism of Buddhist thought.
Since the Communist, especially the Communist from
Hue, takes his dogma seriously, he can become demoniac
when dismissed by a Confucian as a philosophic ignoramus,
or by a Buddhist as a trivial materialist. Or, worse
than being dismissed, ignored through the years. So
with the righteousness of a true believer, he sought
to strike back and eliminate this challenge of indifference.
Hue intellectuals now say the hunt-down in their ranks
has taught them a hard lesson, to take Communism seriously,
if not as an idea, at least as a force loose in their
world.
The killings in Phase II perhaps accounted for 2,000
of the missing. But the worst was not yet over.
Hue:
Phase III
Inevitably,
and as the leadership in Hanoi must have assumed all
along, considering the forces ranged against it, the
battle in Hue turned against the Communists. An intercepted
PAVN radio message from the Citadel, February 22,
asked for permission to withdraw. Back came the reply:
permission refused, attack on the 23rd. That attack
was made, a last, futile one. On the 24th the Citadel
was taken.
That expulsion was inevitable was apparent to the
Communists for at least the preceding week. It was
then that Phase III began, the cover-the-traces period.
Probably the entire civilian underground apparat in
Hue had exposed itself during Phase II. Those without
suspicion rose to proclaim their identity. Typical
is the case of one Hue resident who described his
surprise on learning that his next door neighbour
was the leader of a phuong (which made him 10th to
15th ranking Communist civilian in the city), saying
in wonder, "I'd known him for 18 years and never
thought he was the least interested in politics."
Such a cadre could not go underground again unless
there was no one around who remembered him.
Hence Phase III, elimination of witnesses.
Probably the largest number of killings came during
this period and for this reason. Those taken for political
indoctrination probably were slated to be returned.
But they were local people as were their captors;
names and faces were familiar. So, as the end approached
they became not just a burden but a positive danger.
Such undoubtedly was the case with the group taken
from the church at Phu Cam. Or of the 15 high school
students whose bodies were found as part of the Phu
Thu Salt Flat find.
Categorization in a hypothesis such as this is, of
course, gross and at best only illustrative. Things
are not that neat in real life. For example, throughout
the entire time the blacklist hunt went on. Also,
there was revenge killing by the Communists in the
name of the party, the so-called "revolutionary
justice." And undoubtedly there were personal
vendettas, old scores settled by individual party
members.
The official Communist view of the killing in Hue
was contained in a book written and published in Hanoi:
"Actively combining their efforts with those
of the PLAF and population, other self-defence and
armed units of the city (of Hue) arrested and called
to surrender the surviving functionaries of the puppet
administration and officers and men of the puppet
army who were skulking. Die-hard cruel agents were
punished."
The Communist line on the Hue killings later at
the Paris talks was that it was not the work of Communists
but of "dissident local political parties".
However, it should be noted that Hanoi's Liberation
Radio April 26, 1968, criticized the effort in Hue
to recover bodies, saying the victims were only "hooligan
lackeys who had incurred blood debts of the Hue compatriots
and who were annihilated by the Southern armed forces
and people in early Spring." This propaganda
line however was soon dropped in favour of the line
that it really was local political groups fighting
each other.