The
sudden collapse of Saigon in April 1975 set the stage for a new and
uncertain chapter in the evolution of Vietnamese society. The Hanoi
government had to confront directly what communists have long called
the struggle between the two paths of socialism and capitalism. At
issue was Hanoi's ability to translate its wartime success and
socialist revolutionary experience into postwar rehabilitation and
reconstruction, now that it controlled the South territorially. Foremost among the regime's imperatives was that of restoring order and stability to the war-torn South. The critical question, however, was whether or not the northern conquerors could inspire the southern population to embrace communism. Initially, Hanoi appeared sanguine; the two zones had more similarities than dissimilarities, and the dissimilarities were expected to be eliminated as the South caught up with the North in socialist organization. The December 1975 Vietnam Courier, an official government publication, portrayed Vietnam as two distinct, incongruent societies. The South was reported to continue to suffer from what communists consider the neo-colonialist influences and feudal ideology of the United States, while the North was considered to serve as a progressive environment for growing numbers of a new kind of socialist human being, imbued with patriotism, proletarian internationalism, and socialist virtues. The class of social exploiter had been eliminated in the North, leaving the classes of workers collectivized peasant, and socialist intellectual, the last consisting of various groups. In contrast, the South was divided into a working class, peasantry, petit bourgeois, capitalist--or comprador--class, and the remnant of a feudal landlord class. In
September 1976, Premier Pham Van Dong declared that his compatriots,
North and South, were "translating the revolutionary heroism they [had]
displayed in fighting into creative labor in the acquisition of wealth
and strength." In the South particularly, the old society was
undergoing active changes as the result of "stirring revolutionary
movements" by the workers, peasants, youth, women, intellectuals, and
other groups. In agriculture alone, "millions of people" participated
in bringing hundreds of thousands more hectares under cultivation and
in building or dredging thousands of kilometers of canals and ditches. From all indications, however, these changes occurred more through coercion than volition. In Dong's own words, the party had initiated "various policies aimed at eliminating the comprador capitalists as a class and doing away with all vestiges of feudal exploitation." These policies radically realigned the power elite so that the ruling machine was controlled collectively by the putative vanguard of the working class--the party--and by the senior cadres of the party who were mostly from the North. In its quest for a new socialist order in the South, Hanoi relied on other techniques apart from socialist economic transformation and socialist education. These included thought reform, population resettlement, and internal exile, as well as surveillance and mass mobilization. Party-sponsored "study sessions" were obligatory for all adults. For the former elite of the Saigon regime, a more rigorous form of indoctrination was used; hundreds of thousands of former military officers, bureaucrats, politicians, religious and labor leaders, scholars, intellectuals, and lawyers, as well as critics of the new regime were ordered to "reeducation camps" for varying periods. In mid1985 , the Hanoi government conceded that it still held about 10,000 inmates in the reeducation camps, but the actual number was believed to be at least 40,000. In 1982 there were about 120,000 Vietnamese in these camps. According to a knowledgeable American observer, the inmates faced hard labor, but only rarely torture or execution.
Population resettlement or redistribution, although heralded on
economic grounds, turned out to be another instrument of social control
in disguise. It was a means of defusing tensions in congested cities,
which were burdened with unemployed and socially dislocated people even
after most of the rural refugees had been repatriated to their native
villages. These refugees had swelled the urban population to 45 percent
of the southern total in 1975 (up from 33 percent in 1970). The
authorities sought to address the problem of urban congestion by
relocating many of the metropolitan jobless in the new economic zones
hastily set up in virgin lands, often malaria-infested jungles, as part
of a broader effort to boost agricultural output. In 1975 and 1976
alone, more than 600,000 people were moved from Ho Chi Minh City to
these zones, in most instances, reportedly, against their will. Because
of the barely tolerable living conditions in the new settlements, a
considerable number of people escaped or bribed their way back to the
city. The new economic zones came to be widely perceived as places of
internal exile. In fact, the authorities were said to have used the
threat of exile to such places against those who refused to obey party
instructions or to participate in the activities of the mass
organizations. Surveillance was a familiar tool of the regime, which was bent on purging all class enemies. Counterrevolutionaries, real and suspected, were summarily interned in reform camps or forced labor camps that were set up separately from the new economic zones in several border areas and other undeveloped regions. The Hanoi government has claimed that not a single political execution took place in the South after 1975, even in cases of grave war crimes. Generally, the foreign press corroborated this claim by reporting in 1975 that there seemed to be no overt indication of the blood bath that many Western observers had predicted would occur in the wake of the communist takeover. Some Western observers, however, have estimated that as many as 65,000 South Vietnamese may have been executed. In
March 1982, the Vietnamese Communist Party (VCP) convened its Fifth
National Party Congress to assess its achievements since 1976 and to
outline its major tasks for the 1980s. The congress was revealing if
only because of its somber admission that revolutionary optimism was no
substitute for common sense. Despite rigid social controls and mass
mobilization, the party fell far short of its original expectations for
socialist transition. According to the party's assessment, from 1976
through 1980 shortcomings and errors occurred in establishing
transition goals and in implementing the party line. The congress, however, reaffirmed the correctness of the party line concerning socialist transition, and directed that it be implemented with due allowances for different regional circumstances. The task was admittedly formidable. In a realistic appraisal of the regime's difficulties, Nhan Dan, the party's daily organ, warned in June 1982 that the crux of the problem lay in the regime itself, the shortcomings of which included lack of party discipline and corruption of party and state functionaries. In 1987 the goal of establishing a new society remained elusive, and Vietnam languished in the first stage of the party's planned period of transition to socialism. Mai Chi Tho, mayor of Ho Chi Minh City and deputy head of its party branch, had told visiting Western reporters as early as April 1985 that socialist transition, as officially envisioned, would probably continue until the year 2000.
In the estimation of the party, Vietnamese society had succumbed to a
new form of sociopolitical elitism that was just as undesirable as the
much-condemned elitism of the old society. Landlords and comprador
capitalists may have disappeared but in their places were party cadres
and state functionaries who were no less status-conscious and
self-seeking. The Sixth National Party Congress in December 1986 found
it necessary to issue a stern warning against opportunism,
individualism, personal gain, corruption, and a desire for special
prerogatives and privileges. A report to the congress urged the party
to intensify class struggle in order to combat the corrupt practices
engaged in by those who had "lost their class consciousness." Official
efforts to purify the ranks of the working class, peasantry, and
socialist intellectuals, however, failed to strike a responsive chord.
In fact, the proceedings of the Sixth Congress left the inescapable
impression that the regime was barely surviving the struggle between
socialism and capitalism and that an early emergence of a communist
class structure was unlikely. As ideally envisioned, the socialist sector was expected to provide 70 percent of household income and the "household economy," or the privately controlled resources of the home, was to make up the balance. In September 1986 cadres and workers were earning their living mainly through moonlighting and, according to a Vietnamese source, remained on "the state rolls only to preserve their political prestige and to receive some ration stamps and coupons." The source further disclosed that the society's lack of class consciousness was reflected in the party's membership, among whom only about 10 percent were identified as from the working class. |
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