![]() (Theories on General Hieu's death) To this date, General Hieu's death is still shrouded in mystery. As a result, it has generated many theories, one more plausible than the other: suicide, accidental pistol discharge, assassination conspiracy triggered by military, personal and/or collective revenge, or political motivations. These theories, no matter how far-fetched, are assembled here with the sole intention of putting them into one place for easy review. The pain-taking task of analyzing, synthesizing, and evaluating for the purpose of reaching a conclusion to determine who was the culprit is left to the discretion of the readers. General Hieu's himself 1. Colonel Nguyen Khuyen wrote: "I was preparing to have dinner with some friends who had come down from Saigon to visit me, when the Security Office called to let me know that General Hieu killed himself with a pistol in his office. I was dazed and surprised because it was just unbelievable. I just departed with him 15 minutes ago, after the meeting. I found him to be jovial as usual, there was no sign whatsoever of a despondent man." 2. A UPI's reporter dispatched: "The deputy commander of South Vietnamese troops defending the Saigon area was found shot to death Tuesday night following an argument with his superior over tactics. Military sources said he apparently committed suicide. The sources said Maj. Gen. Nguyen Van Hieu was found with a bullet wound in his mouth at his III Corps office at the edge of Bien Hoa airbase, 14 miles northeast of Saigon." 3. Alan Dawson wrote: "The deputy commander of the III Corps area around Saigon, two-star General Nguyen Van Hieu, was dead. The story was he had committed suicide at his Bien Hoa office after arguing with his boss, three-star General Nguyen Van Toan, about defense of the capital area." (55 Days - The Fall of South Vietnam, 1975) 4. John Prados wrote: "In 1975 Hieu was deputy commander of the ARVN military region which included Saigon; he committed suicide when the collapse of South Vietnam became apparent." (The Hidden History of the Vietnam War, 1995) Nobody: it was just an unfortunate self-inflicted accident 1. Colonel Nguyen Khuyen wrote: "According to Lieutenant Colonel Quyen, Head of the Military Police unit of the 3rd Corps, this was a self-inflicted death caused by the happy trigger of a pistol. There was no proof that General Hieu was assassinated or killed himself. I agreed to this observation stated by the Military Police because based on information we had on General Hieu, he liked to play with pistols. He had won championship in pistol shooting. Not too long prior to that, somebody gave him as a gift a pistol, of a rare type. He cherished this pistol but what bothered him was that it was trigger happy. He had given it to be repaired by the Supply Command unit 3 times in the past. This information was provided to me by Colonel Khang, Head of the Supply Command unit." 2. General Nguyen Van Toan wrote: "A surprise happened on (which day I don't recall), I was returning from an airborne operation When I got the news of Major General Hieu's death in his office. I immediately flew to Major General Hieu's office and saw he had died from a pistol bullet piercing through his eye and exiting the top of his head, causing him to die right at his desk. Hieu's death was caused by an involuntary discharge of a pistol." 3. General Hoang Xuan Lam wrote: "The Major General died due to a pistol accident at the 3rd Corps Headquarters after he had presided over an operational meeting." 4. General Lam Quang Thi said: "After our graduation, I had the opportunities to meet frequently with Hieu when we were both Major serving at Corps I: he as Chief of G3 General Staff, and I as Chief of Artillery Unit. Every weekend, we practiced pistol shooting. He was much better than me because he put much efforts in grooving his pistol to gain quickness. Maybe that was what later on caused his death?" Corrupt Generals Ring 1. In Blind Design (1995) General Hoang Van Lac included the names of Generals Nguyen Van Thieu, Dang Van Quang, Tran Thien Khiem, Cao Van Vien and Dong Van Khuyen among the corrupted generals ring that had General Hieu killed:
2. Pham Le Hiep wrote:
3. Ky Phong wrote:
4. In the end of March 1975, when Thieu was heavily pressured from different sides into resigning his Presidency, and his replacement would be Vice President Tran Van Huong, the corrupted generals in power - which also included Thieu - were fearful that their fate might end up like General Nguyen Van Vy's, in the Military Savings Fund's affair in 1971, because they knew for certain that Huong would assign General Hieu to be the next Chairman of Joint General Staff. At that point, the thick pile of dossiers pertaining to high-ranking officers' corruption that Thieu had stuffed away would be eventually reopened. Therefore, they had to find a way to pre-empt General Hieu's action. General Nguyen Van Toan or General Dong Van Khuyen Pham Le Hiep wrote:
General Tran Thien Khiem Pham Le Hiep wrote:
General Nguyen Van Toan 1. When the UPI's reporter and Alan Dawson stated that General Hieu, Deputy Commander died after a heated argument on tactics with General Toan, the 3rd Corps Commanding General, both certainly hinted that General Toan himself shot or had ordered General Hieu shot. 2. Denis Warner wrote in Certain History - How Hanoi won the war (1978): "According to General Dung, his murderer was the Thieu loyalist and Hieu's immediate superior, the commander of Military Region 3, General Nguyen Van Toan." 3. Hoang Khoi Phong wrote in Day N+...: "General Toan's lackeys have already dispatched General Hieu, another honest General, to his final resting destination in company of General Thanh." 4. The majority in the military circle pointed to General Toan as the one who pulled the trigger on General Hieu. 5. The former 3rd (Tran Hung Dao) Class of the Dalat Military Academy, in a class reunion in California, confronted General Toan on this issue. General Toan's response was he did not do it. 6. General Toan wrote in his letter addressed to General Hieu's brother: "A surprise happened on (which day I don't recall), I was returning from an airborne operation When I got the news of Major General Hieu's death in his office." 7. General Ly Tong Ba told General Hieu's brother that General Toan could not have been the one who shot his brother because at the occurence of General Hieu's death in his office, General Toan was having a meeting with him in another room in the 3rd Corps Headquarters. 8. Captain Do Duc, General Toan's attache, testified: that day, General Toan remained in his office all day long; he left the office and went home around 5:30 p.m; a moment later, General Hieu's was found dead. 9. Colonel Le Van Trang said that in a trip to California, he was told by Lieutenant Colonel Quyen that, in his own opinion, it was General Toan who had shot General Hieu. President Nguyen Van Thieu 1. The UPI reporter wrote: "It was not known whether Hieu's death was connected with the Tuesday morning bombing of the Presidential palace of Nguyen Van Thieu." 2. Denis Warner wrote in Certain History - How Hanoi won the war (1978):
3. General Pham Van Dong said: "Vice President Tran Van Huong had instructed General Hieu to investigate President Thieu's corruption. When Thieu assigned General Toan III Corps Commander, he gave order to General Toan to kill General Hieu." 4. It was well known that President Thieu was dead scared of a coup d'etat. General Vinh Loc wrote that President Thieu who was even fearful of his own reflection and shadow trembled at the thought of Paratroopers and Armor units attempting a coup. General Tran Van Don said that Thieu was fearful that if a coup occurred he would be killed like President Diem. General Le Quang Luong recounted how Thieu split the Paratroopers Division into three pieces when he pulled it out of the 1st Corps, because he was afraid of the possibility of a coup. If Thieu was willing to sacrifice the men of this most elite troops unit, if he was ready to give up a whole nation in exchange of the safeguard of his President's seat, then why would he hesitate to dispense of General Hieu's life once he suspected that General Hieu's might be fomenting a coup against him. "General Tran Van Don described Thieu as "méchant" (lapsing at that point into French), a word that has a meaning somewhere between nasty and evil (The Fall of South Vietnam. Statements by Vietnamese Military and Civilian Leaders, by Stephen T. Hosmer, Brian M. Jenkins, and Konard Kellen). 5. At the occasion of a national assembly of former political prisoners in California, one person approached General Toan and inquired his opinion concerning the death of General Hieu, who often brushed with dead amidst battlefields but then died by an involuntary discharge of his pistol, General Toan responded, "President Thieu is now dead, let bygones be bygones."
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