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Republic of Vietnam Military Forces

Republic of Vietnam Military Forces
'Quân lực Việt Nam Cộng hòa'
Flag of the Republic of Vietnam Military Forces.svg
War Flag.
Flag of the RVNMF.svg
Flag of RVNMF
Founded 30 December 1955
Disbanded 30 April 1975
Service branches Army of the Republic of Vietnam
Republic of Vietnam Air Force
Republic of Vietnam Navy
Headquarters Saigon
Leadership
Commander-in-Chief Ngo Dinh Diem (1955 - 1963), Nguyen Van Thieu (1967 - 1975)
Commander Unknown
Manpower
Active personnel 586,838
Deployed personnel 1,000,000 in 1972
Industry
Foreign suppliers  United States
 Australia
 China
 France
 Iran
 Japan
 New Zealand
 Philippines
 South Korea
 Spain
 Thailand
Related articles
History Military history of Vietnam
Ranks Ranks and insignia of the Republic of Vietnam

The Republic of Vietnam Military Forces or RVNMF (Vietnamese: Quân lực Việt Nam Cộng hòa – QLVNCH), were the official armed defense forces of the Republic of Vietnam (RVN), a state that existed from 1955 to 1975 in the southern half of what is now the Socialist Republic of Vietnam. The QLVNCH was responsible for the defense of South Vietnam since its independence from France in October 1955.

The QLVNCH was formally established on December 30, 1955 by the Strongman and republican first President of the Republic of Vietnam (known simply as ‘South Vietnam’) Ngo Dinh Diem, which he declared on October 26 that year after winning a rigged referendum for either making South Vietnam a constitutional monarchy, or a presidential republic. Created out from ex-French Union Army colonial Indochinese auxiliary units (French: Supplétifs), gathered earlier on July 1951 into the French-led Vietnamese National Army – VNA (Vietnamese: Quân Đội Quốc Gia Việt Nam – QĐQGVN), Armée Nationale Vietnamiènne (ANV) in French, the armed forces of the new state consisted in the mid-1950s of ground, air, and naval branches of service, respectively:

Their roles were defined as follows: to protect the sovereignty of the free Vietnamese nation and that of the Republic; to maintain the political and social order and the rule of law by providing internal security; to defend the newly independent Republic of Vietnam from external (and internal) threats; and ultimately, to help reunify Vietnam – divided since the Geneva Accords in July 1955 into two transitional states, one at the north ruled by Ho Chi Minh’s Marxist Lao Dong Party regime and the other in the south under Diem’s anti-communist government.


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