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    Former South Vietnam leader Nguyen Cao Ky dies

    KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — Nguyen Cao Ky, the flamboyant former air force general who ruled South Vietnam with an iron fist for two years during the Vietnam War, died Saturday. He was 80.

    Ky died at a hospital in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, where he was being treated for a respiratory complication, his nephew in Southern California told The Associated Press.

    "He was in good health, but in the last couple of weeks he had been weak," Peter Phan said. He said Ky split his time between his home in California and Vietnam.

    One of Ky's daughters, a prominent Vietnamese-American entertainer, told the AP in an email message that she was flying from Los Angeles to Malaysia to find out the exact cause of death.

    One of his nation's most colorful leaders, Ky served as prime minister of U.S.-backed South Vietnam in the mid- 1960s. He had been commander of South Vietnam's air force when he assumed the post in 1965, the same year U.S. involvement in the war escalated.

    He was known as a playboy partial to purple scarves, chic nightclubs and beautiful women. In power during some of the war's most tumultuous times, he was a low-key but sometimes ruthless leader.

    "It's true that I did have absolute power when I was made premier," he said in a 1989 Associated Press interview. "You may recall there was no congressional body in South Vietnam at that time. For more than two years, my word was the absolute law."

    From 1967 to 1971, he was vice president under his frequent rival, Gen. Nguyen Van Thieu.

    When Thieu's government in Saigon fell to North Vietnamese troops in 1975, Ky fled by piloting a helicopter to a U.S. Navy ship. He and his family eventually settled in the United States, where he led a quiet life largely away from politics. He made headlines in 2004 when he made a controversial visit back to his homeland, praising the communists, his former enemies.

    Born in Son Tay province west of Hanoi in 1930, Ky grew up under French colonialist rule and became involved as a youth in the national liberation movement led by Ho Chi Minh.

    He left the movement, however, when he fell ill with malaria. He eventually enlisted in the army, where he trained as a pilot and rose through the ranks during the French fight against the insurgency. He was one of the roughly 1 million who fled south following France's defeat at Dien Bien Phu in 1954. The French withdrawal divided the country into the communist North and noncommunist South.

    Ky rose steadily in South Vietnam's fledgling air force and was chosen as prime minister by a junta of generals even though he had no political experience.

    He was able to end a disruptive cycle of coups and countercoups that followed the assassination of Ngo Dinh Diem, whose repressive regime was overthrown by military generals in 1963.

    But Ky proved overly optimistic about the U.S. prospects for victory.

    In a New York Times interview in 1966, Ky said U.S. air strikes would "very soon" force the North to request a cease fire and said of U.S. Senate war critics: "They know nothing about Vietnam. ... They just represent the minority."

    Saying he wanted to end corruption, Ky threatened to shoot merchants manipulating the country's rice market. A businessman convicted of war profiteering was executed by a firing squad in March 1966; Ky attended the trial's opening session.

    During a Buddhist-led uprising in Da Nang that same year, Ky moved troops in and suppressed the demonstrators. He then placed the country's leading Buddhist cleric and his most vocal critic, Thich Tri Quang, under house arrest.

    In his memoir, Ky said he did not regret taking action in Da Nang despite efforts by Americans to use diplomacy. By crushing the revolt, he said, he helped prolong South Vietnam's stability for a few more years, something he considered his biggest achievement.

    "While I served as prime minister, I gave no American cause to suppose that I was their puppet," Ky wrote in his 2002 book "Buddha's Child: My Fight to Save Vietnam."

    But when it came time for the country's presidential election in 1967, Ky yielded power to his longtime rival, Thieu, who at the time held the ceremonial post of chief of state. Ky served as Thieu's vice president until 1971, when he was briefly a rival candidate to Thieu's re-election as president.

    He went on to watch Thieu preside over the fall of Saigon. Thieu was forced to step down as North Vietnamese troops closed in. He eventually left the country and died in Boston in 2001 at age 78.

    "My biggest mistake was allowing the wrong man the opportunity to lead a guaranty of defeat," Ky said in his book. "For this I beg forgiveness of those who fled into exile, of those who remained, and from those then unborn."

    Author Neil Sheehan, who won a Pulitzer Prize for his book on Vietnam, "A Bright Shining Lie," told the AP in 1989 that Ky and Thieu were "corrupt Young Turks" who rose to power as U.S. involvement dramatically increased.

    Ky flatly denied the characterization, saying, "If I had stolen millions of dollars I could live like a king in this country, but obviously I don't live like a king. Believe me, I was a soldier fighting for freedom, not a politician interested in power and money."

    Ky made headlines in 2004 when, after 29 years in exile, he made a homecoming trip to Vietnam, dropping his vitriolic anti-communist rhetoric and calling for peace and reconciliation.

    His decision to return was angrily condemned by some Vietnamese immigrant activists, who said the visit bestowed legitimacy on a corrupt government.

    "What I'm trying to do now is help my country. I only have a duty to my country," Ky told the AP when he visited Hanoi. "I have my record. No one can say I'm not patriotic."

    Ky, who was married three times, is survived by six children and, according to his memoir, 14 grandchildren. He had five children by his first wife, a French woman. He and his second wife, a Vietnamese woman, had a daughter, Nguyen Cao Ky Duyen, a prominent Vietnamese-American entertainer. He met his third wife while living temporarily in Bangkok.

    Funeral plans were pending, according to family members.

    ___

    Daisy Nguyen reported from Los Angeles.

     

    142 comments

    • propaganda  •  8 mths ago
      He's a Hanoi Catholic and only empathetic to North Vietnamese people. This is what dictators do like, Hitler; he's only empathetic to his followers that can be brainwashed.

      Never trust a North Hanoi or Viet hue people, they are dog eating mam rouc stinking traitors. You can't trust sell-outs, they let Western people/missionaries buy their souls in a form of bribery to become Catholic and betrayed Buddhism. Yet today, these Catholic dog eaters still dare to come to TET festivals at our Temples to celebrate their betrayals.
      • propaganda 8 mths ago
        Why don't they go to their Catholic churches and donate money every Sunday to support their Vatican institutions, their donated monies needed for the biggest lawsuit in U.S history: the priests or should we called them "predators"?
    • jon  •  9 mths ago
      Ky saw an opportunity because he was just as crooked as the crooked Americans who profited and made money off the conflict.
    • Shadow  •  10 mths ago
      RIP--he pinned on my Vietnam Cross of Gallantry at Quang Ngai with Palm Leaf--the highest award the Vietnamese could give to non Viets. It was August '69--there were six Americans that received it that day......
      What it took to get it?? It wasn't a fun day...........
      You anti-Vietnam war people can kiss my......
      • butch.miner 10 mths ago
        thank you for your service
      • Charlie Tuna 10 mths ago
        Thank you for your service and RTLW!
      • domingo 10 mths ago
        This" thank you for your service" crap has got to go. We were drafted into the goddamn army and had no choice except jail. Don't be too proud. remember, F.T.A.
    • Lawrence  •  10 mths ago
      God Bless our real American heroes we lost in Vietnam. May they never be forgotten. Ladai Manoi.
      • A Yahoo! User 10 mths ago
        Bless war criminals? Their remains should be flushed, and that ridiculous monument torn down.
      • Daniel 10 mths ago
        Don B-must think you are high and mighty above others.
      • Lawrence 10 mths ago
        Life is a favor for the protected who will never know.
    • Dep Nguyen  •  10 mths ago
      He stupidly called the COMMUNISTS GOVERNMENT " BROTHERS". bother my fukkkin #$%$
      • propaganda 10 mths ago
        What do you expect? He's a North Hanoi Vietnamese Catholic. Everything they do is backstabbing and betrayal. Why in the world would you let these bac ky dog eating catholic lead a great country such as Saigon? Real Asians do not convert into Catholicism, it'll pollute and poison your root. Never follow the white men's ideology! Once a Buddhist will always be a Buddhist. You can burn our soul with fuel and you can destroy our Pagodas, but you will never oppress our right to follow our faith and the right to have our freedom.
    • The D  •  10 mths ago
      I really expected MORE comments than this...concerning the amount of us that still live POST Vietnam & ERA. Some of you are typical #$%$ with your Negative comments of us...regardless if your were Drafted or joined. I got smart and joined while I had the change of my own career field.Vietnam was a theater that was abundant in possibilities for corruption. American Officers and the Viets took Greed and opportunity is always apparent in a War Zone. Vietnam was especially venerable.I Served. Have often wondered what my Life would have been like if I had not had to go into Service. College maybe. I had the choice from my father, but he was a prick. So was my Step... So...IN-Service I Went.Hell with any of you that despise me and ppl like me. You just didn't have the balls.
      • hector 10 mths ago
        right On Bro...Vietnam 67-68
      • JC 10 mths ago
        MY HAT'S OFF TO YOU MAGNIFICENT BASTARDS OF THE VIETNAM WAR ERA!!! *SHAKES HANDS AT 90MPH AND SLAPS BACKS LIKE A SLEDGEHAMMER!!!!
      • JC 10 mths ago
        THOSE AT THE TOP WOULD NEVER KNOW WHAT DEATH LOOKS LIKE UNLESS THEY HAVE BEEN THERE GENERAL GEORGE S. PATTON
    • Miriam M  •  10 mths ago
      We knew him as Captain Midnight. He and his wife always wore those black flying suits.
      Another end of an era.
    • propaganda  •  10 mths ago
      Die in HELL you stinking Nguyen Kao Ky just like your other twin Nho Dinh Diem! Why is it that the South Vietnamese of Buddhist religion let these Bac ky North Hanoi Catholic dog eaters lead their country?????????

      Knock on wood !!!!!
    • propaganda  •  10 mths ago
      A North Hanoi Vietnamese will NEVER make a good leader and SHOULD never lead the South Saigon Vietnamese people, especially if he's a Catholic!
    • propaganda  •  10 mths ago
      Any North Bac Ky Hanoi Vietnamese Catholic will NEVER make a good leader nor they should ever lead the South Saigon people. History repeats itself e.g Nho Dinh Diem ( a North Bac ky Catholic Vietnamese). I have no respect for these North Vietnamese so called " leaders". They are all alike, a dictator and a Catholic.

      South Vietnamese Saigon Nationalist.
      You can burn us with fuel, you can destroy our pagoda but you will never oppress us!
      Once a Buddhist will always a Buddhist.
      Real Asians will never betray their own.
    • I'M A BLACK CHINESE _ ...  •  10 mths ago
      His daughter Ky duyen , the host / emcee for those stupid PARIS BY NIGHT videos should be slap . The bi-otch have no shame ....
    • I'M A BLACK CHINESE _ ...  •  10 mths ago
      If you love your country then you should die for your country especially during a war . This man RAN while his country fell .... A coward in my eyes not a hero ....
    • ABC  •  10 mths ago
      He fled in a helicopter while his people rot under the communists. Coward!
      Then 30 years later, he embraced the commies for some extra dollars. Traitor!
    • Marc  •  10 mths ago
      He was just as brutal a dictator as Ho, but in Cold War politics, being anti-commie made him our good guy. It's such a pity that 54,000 American died defending his pathetic excuse of a country that his own people couldn't, or wouldn't, defend. (Full disclosure- my Vietnam War era service was like that of former President Clinton and former VP Cheney.)
    • WONG  •  10 mths ago
      Hope the commies will entomb and put him next to their blood thristy leader: ho chi minh!!!
    • George  •  10 mths ago
      Hi. Time sure flies. I met Mr. Ky long ago. I was a federal government employee in charge of one of the 4 mobile trailers set up at Camp Pendleton (Calif.) to 'process' all the Vietnamese refugees after the fall of Saigon. I was there at the beginning and helped set up procedures. Mr. Ky came thru my trailer like a regular person. My Vietnamese interpreters were the ones who told me who he really was. He was a personable, very tall, likeable man. No affectations, no arrogance. I'm glad to hear he lived a long, full life.
    • Bob D.  •  10 mths ago
      He was absolutely not a politician, good or bad.
      Two times, he stole other soldiers' wives
      He betrayed the south Vietnamese badly
    • judy  •  10 mths ago
      My hubby is a VietNamVet I dont care who he is or what his politics were RIP with the rest! No one can seem to explain why we were there or what we gained! All VietNam survivors are heros in my eyes! God Bless them Al!!!!
    • Dave Kulick  •  10 mths ago
      For those unfamiliar with the Vietnamese community. The reason Ky came back and praised the communist VN becaused he was isolated oversea by expatriate Vietnamese politicians and their followers. He was old, missed his birthplace, longed for the old glories, discarded from the political world, ignored by his own people. Ever saw him invited to any event pst 25 years ? Like other typical politicians, the Vietnamese with positions in US governments have lots of interests of serving themselves, and consequently, their political parties, not Vietnam or the US. The only winner, the ever increasingly corrupted Vietnamese communists.
    • Jack S  •  10 mths ago
      Why all the hate from the uneducated and unknowing? Most Vietnamese people are kind and generous, I am a vet from that war and harbor no ill towards them. RIP Ky
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