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Bỏ
qua
những
vấn đề
chính
trị,
xin
gửi đến
Quư
vị
và các
bạn
bài
viết thuộc
phương
diện
lịch
sử
của
ngày
chính
biến
27
tháng
2
năm
1962 của
2
phi
công
Phạm
Phú
Quốc
và
Nguyễn
Văn
Cử.
FLIGHT
OF
THE
REBELS
On
the
early
morning
of
Feb.
27,
1962,
two
VNAF
Skyraiders
took
off
from
Bien
Hoa
airbase
for
a
close
air
support
in
the
4th
tactical
corps,
but
instead
of
flying
straight
to
the
target
area,
both
aircraft
made
a
sharp
right
turn
to
Saigon
vicinity
and
bombed
the
Presidential
Independence
Palace.
In
an
attempt
to
assassinate
President
Ngo
Dinh
Diem,
the
two
young
First
Lt.
Pham
Phu
Quoc
and
Second
Lt.
Nguyen
Van
Cu
destroyed
the
left
wing
of
the
Presidential
Palace
by
dropping
their
500
lbs
bombs.
President
Ngo
Dinh
Diem
narrowly
escaped
the
air
raid.
Lt.
Nguyen
Van
Cu
flew
to
Cambodia
for
political
asylum
and
Lt.
Pham
Phu
Quoc
survived
a
crash-landing
in
Saigon
River.
It
is
necessary
to
remind
that
at
that
time
period,
President
Ngo
Dinh
Diem's
administration
had
been
criticized
for
his
authoritarianism
against
political
dissidents
and
for
the
tacit
policy
of
Buddhism
persecution;
not
counting
his
tight
grip
on
power
by
appointing
his
close
relatives
at
many
positions
throughout
the
upper
echelon
of
central
and
provincial
government.
In
that
political
atmosphere,
the
"renegade"
P.P.Quoc
endured
harsh
interrogation
while
in
incarceration.
On1st
November
of
1963,
the
Army
of
the
Republic
of
Vietnam
(ARVN)
launched
a
coup
d'etat
and
succeeded
in
overthrowing
Ngo
Dinh
Diem's
administration
and
paved
way
for
the
start
of
the
2nd
Republic
of
South
Vietnam.
Lt.
Pham
Phu
Quoc
was
then
reintegrated
into
the
Vietnamese
Air
Force
(VNAF)
and
later
rose
to
the
rank
of
Lt.
Colonel.
On a
bombing
mission
over
North
Vietnam,
Lt.
Colonel
P.P.
Quoc's
Skyraider
was
shot
down
when
he
tried
to
put
out
a
Communist
triple-A
position
near
Vinh
province.
The
enemy's
anti-aircraft
artillery
was
destroyed,
but
it
was
also
Pham
Phu
Quoc's
last
flight
on
April
19th
of
1965.
There
is a
well-known
song
"Huyen
Su
Ca
Mot
Nguoi
Mang
Ten
Quoc"
(Epic
song
of a
man
named
Quoc),
which
was
written
by
popular
songwriter
Pham
Duy
to
dedicate
to
P.P.Quoc's
services
and
his
sacrifice.
And
in
the
memories
of
most
Vietnamese
Southerners
who
lived
during
that
political
turmoil
of
that
time
frame,
Pham
Phu
Quoc
has
been
always
mourned
and
admired
for
his
patriotism.
Westerners
used
to
mock
a
fledging
democratic
nation
or a
third-world
country
as a
"Banana
Republic,"
for
one
of
its
characteristics
is
the
common
coup
d'etat,
in
which
the
military
Top
Brass
would
not
hesitate
to
takes
political
matter's
solution
into
their
own
hands.
But
the
Silver
Lining
of
that
dark
cloud
"Banana
Republic"
is
It
has
a
lot
of
unpredictable,
true
Patriots
who
serve
no
President,
no
administration,
but
the
country
only
and
those
Patriots
are
the
most
fearsome
foes
to
any
dictator,
tyrant,
Communist,
or
Socialist
in
this
modern
time.
During
the
Vietnam
War,
at a
time
the
Republic
of
South
Vietnam
seemed
to
be a
"Banana
Republic"
with
many
coup
d'etats
and
political
instability,
but
Pham
Phu
Quoc,
Nguyen
Van
Cu,
and
the
many
uncounted
junior
military
Officers
of
ARVN
were
her
magnificent
Silver
Lining.
The
two
young
pilots
took
off
for
a
daring
mission
as
the
rebels
but
they
flew
into
history
forever
as
the
Patriots.
SOUTH
VIETNAM
DURABLE
DIEM
At 7
a.m,
in
the
second-floor
study
of
Saigon's
yellow
stucco
Freedom
Palace,
South
Viet
Nam's
President
Ngo
Dinh
Diem
was
absorbed
in a
biography
of
George
Washington,
the
gift
of a
recent
U.S.
visitor.
At
the
sudden
roar
of
an
airplane
engine,
he
looked
up,
hurried
out
to
the
balcony
in
time
to
see
a
fighter
plane
swooping
toward
him
through
the
early
morning
overcast.
Scarcely
16
months
ago,
autocratic,
anti-Communist
President
Diem
had
narrowly
missed
being
overthrown
by
mutinous
paratroopers,
and
this
time
he
was
taking
no
chances.
With
the
agility
born
of
experience,
short,
stocky
Diem
dashed
down
the
stairs
of
the
palace's
east
wing
to a
cellar
fortified
against
such
emergencies,
flashed
word
by
telephone
to
his
military
commanders
just
as a
napalm
bomb
turned
the
west
wing
into
a
smoky
shambles.
In a
west
wing
apartment,
meanwhile,
Diem's
brother
and
sister-in-law,
Braintruster
Nhu
(still
clad
in
pajamas)
and
Presidential
Hostess
Mme.
Nhu,
snatched
three
of
their
children
(a
fourth
was
away
from
home)
and
bolted
for
the
basement.
In
the
scramble,
Mme.
Nhu
fell
down
the
steps,
bruising
her
arms,
legs
and
forehead.
Also
to
the
bunker
rushed
another
brother.
Archbishop
Thuc,
in
Saigon
for
medical
treatment.
Tanks
&
Pistols.
Roused
by
the
sound
of
aircraft
engines,
residents
of
the
city
climbed
to
their
rooftops
to
see
what
was
happening.
Two
AD6
Skyraider
fighter-bombers
of
the
South
Vietnamese
air
force
were
lazily
circling
the
spacious
palace
grounds,
gracefully
power-gliding
below
the
500-ft.
ceiling
to
drop
bombs,
fire
rockets,
strafe
the
building.
Then
they
pulled
up
sharply
into
the
heavy
clouds
before
zooming
down
for
another
pass.
"With
that
weather,"
said
a
U.S.
Air
Force
officer,
"they
did
a
hell
of a
job."
For
about
30
minutes
the
planes
were
unmolested
as
they
attacked
the
palace
with
four
bombs,
eight
rockets
and
cannon
fire.
Meanwhile,
loyal
ground
troops,
anticipating
a
full-scale
revolution,
hastily
ringed
the
palace
grounds
with
tanks.
Minesweepers
patrolled
the
Saigon
River.
Then
two
loyal
pilots
from
the
Bienhoa
air
base,
twelve
miles
north
of
Saigon,
gave
chase,
but
on
the
ground
in
Saigon
no
one
knew
if
the
new
arrivals
were
friends
or
foes.
Antiaircraft
fire
from
tanks,
minesweepers,
and
even
policemen's
pistols
was
indiscriminate.
Despite
the
confusion,
most
of
the
people
went
about
their
business
with
conventional
apathy.
Pretty
girls
in
billowing
silk
gracefully
pedaled
their
bicycles,
and
motorists
stopped
for
red
lights.
Finally,
a
shot
from
a
minesweeper
downed
one
of
the
rebel
planes,
and
as
the
pilot
crash-landed
in
the
Saigon
River,
the
other
plane
fled
toward
the
Cambodian
border
about
40
miles
away.
The
downed
pilot
was
picked
up
by
naval
craft,
quickly
asked:
"Did
I
kill
that
filthy
character?"
His
identity
proved
surprising:
Lieut.
Pham
Phu
Quoc,
a
French-trained
flying
ace
in
the
South
Vietnamese
air
force
who
recently
was
congratulated
by
President
Diem
for
flying
hundreds
of
sorties
against
the
Communist
Viet
Cong.
In
fact,
he
and
the
second
aerial
rebel
were
due
to
fly
an
anti-Red
mission
that
morning,
headed
for
the
Saigon
palace
instead.
Lieut.
Quoc's
fellow
attacker
was
2nd
Lieut.
Nguyen
Van
Cu,
a
less
experienced
fighter
pilot
with
more
obvious
reasons
for
discontent:
his
father,
an
ex-member
of
an
outlawed
political
party
opposed
to
Diem,
as
well
as
the
Communists,
had
been
briefly
jailed
a
few
years
ago
for
"antigovernment
activities."
Cu,
who
was
granted
political
asylum
in
Cambodia,
said
his
assassination
mission
was
aimed
less
at
President
Diem
than
at
his
family
and
supporters,
"who
are
hated
by
the
army
and
the
population."
Just
in
Case.
Whatever
the
intention,
the
mission
failed.
Known
fatalities
in
the
assault
were
a
servant
inside
the
palace,
two
other
Vietnamese,
and
U.S.
Contractor
Sydney
Ambrose,
59,
of
Portland,
Ore.,
who
climbed
to a
shaky,
asbestos-covered
apartment-house
roof
to
watch
the
fireworks,
fell
through
and
died
in a
hospital.
Also
hospitalized
with
abrasions
was
Mme.
Nhu,
who,
reported
one
visitor,
"cried
like
a
baby."
Diem's
regime
seemed
unruffled
by
the
surprise
attack,
wrote
it
off
as
the
"isolated
act"
it
appeared
to
be.
But
just
to
make
sure,
the
National
Assembly
leaders
laid
the
groundwork
for
a
possible
wholesale
roundup
of
dissidents
by
urging
Diem
to
"take
drastic
measures
against
irresponsible
elements."
The
President
himself
came
through
the
assassination
attempt
with
courage
and
coolness.
Within
two
hours,
he
was
on
the
radio
with
a
brief
recorded
speech
to
thank
"divine
protection"
for
his
escape.
Then
he
paid
a
hospital
visit
to
soldiers
wounded
in
the
battle,
reassured
the
mutinous
pilots'
fellow
officers
that
they
would
bear
no
share
of
the
blame.
President
Kennedy
immediately
sent
a
message
that
denounced
the
attack
as a
"destructive
and
vicious
act,"
expressed
relief
that
Diem
was
"safe
and
unharmed."
The
quick
U.S.
reaction
was
intended
to
show
that
any
hidden
sympathizers
of
the
mutinous
pilots
could
expect
no
backing
from
Washington.
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