King Sisavang Vong with French officials |
Since Laos was not considered very strategically important, the Japanese garrison was rather small and while the Japanese allowed the French colonial regime to remain in power, there was no love lost between the two sides. The Japanese leadership had stressed that this was a racial war, a pan-Asian movement to eradicate the ‘white skinned devils’ and the French never expected the peace to be indefinite. In those parts of Indochina where French colonial rule was most unpopular, this was a significant threat. The Japanese enjoyed forcing the French to bow and scrape to them and, in Vietnam for example, the locals liked seeing it as well and many Vietnamese began peppering their speech with Japanese phrases, a clear sign of who was really in charge. The French Governor-General of Indochina, Admiral Jean Decoux was not willing to do nothing while this was happening and to do what he could to strengthen the French position in areas where resistance had been the least active. French attitudes themselves had also changed with the establishment of the Vichy regime and this played a part as well.
Prince Phetsarath |
The Prince was a nationalist and opposed to the French colonial regime. He argued that by giving up territory to Thailand, the French had failed to protect Laos which meant that the protectorate treaty was invalidated and that Laos should align itself with Japan and oppose France. King Sisavang Vong, however, argued in turn that it hardly made sense to hold France responsible for this loss while allying with those that had actually taken Lao territory. The French had, he reasoned, at least tried to defend Laos whereas Japan had backed Thailand which had attacked them. This difference of opinion reached the boiling point in 1945 when, clearly losing the war, Japan launched a surprise attack on the French, seizing control of Indochina and then urging the leaders of Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam to declare independence and join the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere in solidarity with Japan. In Cambodia, King Norodom Sihanouk did so, proclaiming the independence of the Kingdom of Kampuchea and, likewise, in Annam the Emperor Bao Dai declared the independence of the Empire of Vietnam in cooperation with Japan. The Kingdom of Laos, however, was to be a different story. Despite the fact that, for the moment, the Japanese still held the upper hand, King Sisavang Vong refused to cooperate and plainly asserted that this era of Japanese dominance was a temporary anomaly and that he supported keeping faith with France and having Laos resume its place in the French colonial union when the war was over.
Prince Phetsarath |
Meanwhile, at the time of the Japanese takeover, the French in Laos had fled to the jungles and mountains to form a pro-Allied, anti-Japanese resistance. King Sisavang Vong supported this group and his son and heir, Crown Prince Savang Vatthana was the leader of the Lao insurgents who fought against the Japanese occupation, with the Free French, on the Allied side. These Franco-Lao forces were, like the faction of Prince Phetsarath, short of heavy weapons but they did receive some support from the Allies and were able to take control of several rural areas and hold them. French and British special forces infiltrated the region to aid in the fight but they still lacked the firepower for major offensive operations. Nonetheless, they were able to be a considerable problem for the Japanese whose authority was mostly confined to the urban areas where Lao Issara under Prince Phetsarath was struggling to run an effective government with nothing to work with. Eventually, they began to cooperate with the anti-French and anti-Japanese forces of the VietMinh, which posed as a nationalist group but was really led by the communists under the Vietnamese revolutionary Ho Chi Minh. This was also an example of how the Allies had very different agendas. The French and the British, anxious to maintain their empires, backed the pro-French forces of Crown Prince Savang Vatthana while the United States, which opposed the reestablishment of colonial empires, gave support to the VietMinh which opposed the French as well as the Japanese. It would take quite a few years but this American policy would ultimately prove detrimental to all and most costly to the United States itself.
King Sisavang Vong |
King Sisavang Vong still ended up presiding over the independence of the Kingdom of Laos. The French were quick to grant Laos complete autonomy within the French union in recognition of the King’s loyalty but later they agreed to complete independence in the hope that this would save Laos from the communist contagion that was infecting Vietnam. Like his one-time prime minister Prince Phetsarath, King Sisavang Vong died in 1959, perhaps not so beloved but certainly respected by his people who had greater affection for him as time went on and so many of his predictions were proven correct. He was succeeded by his son King Savang Vatthana who would preside over a civil war in his country fought by three factions, a conflict that spilled over from the communist struggle to dominate Vietnam. When the United States pulled out of the region the communists quickly took power across Indochina and in Laos the King was deposed, replaced by a socialist dictatorship subservient to Hanoi and would die years later in a communist concentration camp.
The Kingdom of Laos emerged from World War II more unscathed than others. They came away as an independent monarchy still on very friendly terms with the former colonial power and enjoying a, sadly temporary, period of unity and peace. The two dominant royal figures of the period, the King and Prince Phetsarath, though for a time on opposite sides, were both good men who wanted the best for their country and they were ultimately reconciled. Laos was unique in that they had gained more than others from the colonial period and so looked at the war in a different way than, for example, many of their neighbors in Vietnam. Unlike Laos, Vietnam had been a united and well established independent country before the French arrived and so while the outbreak of war caused many Vietnamese to see it in terms of what they could gain, many in Laos, and certainly the King, saw it in terms of what they could lose. The misfortune of Laos was that they were at the mercy of powers far removed and beyond their control. The King was correct in judging the period of Japanese power to be only temporary but ultimately the fate of Laos would depend on the fate of the anti-communist forces fighting in Vietnam, first the French and later the Americans. They came away from World War II as a united, independent kingdom and that kingdom, while today only a memory, remains the precious dream of the Lao exile community and all those opposed to the existing communist dictatorship.
Where are you? We miss you!
ReplyDeleteWe? You have a frog in your pocket? Kidding aside, I didn't think anyone had noticed. Explaining seems unnecessary at this point.
DeleteWell I for one sir have found much wisdom and even comfort in these days from what you have written and what you have believed. Before discovering you and your readers, I thought I was quite alone. I am not, and neither are you. I am humbly requesting that you carry on the good fight, in your manner and way, so as to help strengthen, enlighten, and encourage us who read your work to carry on our good fight. Thank you and God Bless
DeleteAlthough I have been patiently awaiting further content on this blog, my pocket tortoise has been especially impatient. Please come back. We do miss your posts!
DeleteWell....I miss you! I hope that counts for something. I hope you are well!
ReplyDeleteI really do enjoy reading your histories you put on here.
Any chance of you returning? Hope all is well.
ReplyDeleteI check in every day. I share what I learn with our middle schoolers. You are responsible for some very inspiring conversations! I hope you are well!
ReplyDeleteI hope you are well.
ReplyDeleteBe assurd, I noticed your absence! I hope you are doing fine and one day will return - just like our king...
ReplyDeleteSlightly OT here but it would be remiss of me not to mention of HM Queen Elizabeth II's latest milestone of becoming the longest reigning Queen in recorded history, surpassing her Great-Great-Grandmother HIM Queen Victoria.
ReplyDeleteHope you are OK! I, for one, miss your interesting posts!
ReplyDeleteI hope you're not abandoning this wonderful blog you've had going and that you're doing ok. The blog has been awfully quiet for a long time. In any case God bless you.
ReplyDeleteI agree, but in any case God bless.
DeleteYes, I do wish you the best. However, we need a voice like yours at this difficult time for our civilization.
DeleteAgree with Ponocrates. Since you've left the blog, the world have gone more mad than ever (seriously). I wish to read again your wonderful articles and I hope you are healthy and everything is OK. I do read your posts in Twitter, I must say this makes me feel better.God bless you.
DeleteReally miss you. Hope everything is fine.
ReplyDeleteHey, Is everything fine, you haven't posted in a while...
ReplyDeleteMissing your posts. Please come back.
ReplyDeleteAre you ever coming back?
ReplyDeleteCome back soon. It would be great to see some new posts. Hope all is going well!
ReplyDeleteIndeed there are very few blogs like this one and it would be a shame to lose you.
ReplyDeleteGood sir, I would be greatly joy-filled if you were to post a Politically Incorrect Truth on Francoist Spain on your Youtube channel.
ReplyDeleteIn fact I would greatly enjoy it if more video content like that series were posted.
Thank you and may we live to see an end to this era of cultural destruction.
Well, you are either a cherished blogger who is now dead, or you're not.
ReplyDeleteYour blog has been one of the best I have ever had the opportunity to read. I have been reading here since I was teenager. Your words are truly inspiring. Even if you should not return Im going to archive your blog. You let us know that we weren't crazy and in fact there are others who share our views. God Bless You for your hard work on this blog.
ReplyDeleteBeen awhile since you've posted. Hope you are doing well😊
ReplyDeleteMM,thank you for making such an awesome blog and I hope you come back sone!
ReplyDeleteFrom a romanian mad monarchist
P.S
Could you please do a monarch profile on king Carol the first of Romania?
I am also a Romanian mad monarchist, and who also hopes that MM will eventually return to this blog as I am also a lover of history and politics so naturally I love this blog as it combines history, politics, and supports Monarchism.
DeleteP.S.
I noticed that this blog has two entries on Romania, so if it helps you may find something on King Carol I there.
By the way, just as friendly question:
Who do you think was a better King, Carol I or Ferdinand I?
Carol I was better,because he always did his duty to his country even when it was against him.I also admire him for his courage as he personaly took commaned of his own troops on the battlefield against the turks.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteA blessed and happy Christmas to you! It would be a wonderful 2016 if you returned with new posts! I miss them!
ReplyDeleteA blessed and happy Christmas to you! It would make a wonderful 2016 if you returned!
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeletehope you return, you converted me to being a die-hard monarchist and colonialist even though I am an American and have no Monarch of my own to support
ReplyDelete