Kong Le

Kong Le
Le in 1960
Born6 March 1934
Laos
Died17 January 2014(2014-01-17) (aged 79)
Paris, France
Allegiance Kingdom of Laos
Service / branch Royal Lao Army
Years of service1951–17 October 1966
RankCaptain (later self-proclaimed Major General)
Commands2ème bataillon de parachutistes (Parachute Battalion 2); Forces Armées Neutralistes (Neutralist Armed Forces)
Battles / wars

Captain Kong Le (Lao: ກອງແລ; 6 March 1934[1] – 17 January 2014[2]) was a Laotian paratrooper in the Royal Lao Army. He led the premier unit of the Royal Lao Army, 2ème bataillon de parachutistes (2nd Parachute Battalion), which campaigned relentlessly during 1959 and 1960. The idealistic young American-trained Lao Theung officer became known worldwide when on 10 August 1960 he and his mutinous paratroopers overthrew the Royal Lao Government in a coup d'état. He declared he aimed at an end to government corruption; to the shock of American officials, he declared U.S. policies were responsible for the ongoing fraud.

Once ousted by the U.S.-backed 14 December 1960 countercoup by General Phoumi Nosavan, Kong Le and his paras retreated to the strategic Plain of Jars, gathering recruits to the neutralist cause along the way. Once established on the Plain as the Forces Armées Neutralistes (Neutral Armed Forces), this third side in the Laotian Civil War would begin to splinter as neutralists began to favor either the Communist or Royalist forces. In April 1963, the Patriotic Neutralists broke off to ally themselves with the communist Pathet Lao, while Kong Le engineered a rapprochement with the Royalists for FAN.

Over the next couple of years, FAN's battle performance in support of the Royalists was poor; especially striking was their inability to overcome a Vietnamese communist stronghold overlooking the FAN main base at Muang Soui's all-weather airfield. As Kong Le's subordinates became increasingly dissatisfied, and FAN units began to mutiny, he was forced to leave Laos on 17 October 1966.

He would remain in exile in Indonesia, Hong Kong, the United States, and France. He died in the latter on 17 January 2014.

  1. ^ Stuart-Fox, p. 167.
  2. ^ "ອະດີດ ນາຍພົນກອງແລ ເຖິງແກ່ ມໍລະນະກຳ ທີ່ປະເທດ ຝຣັ່ງ". Voice of America Lao News. 23 January 2014.