| |
For much of its history, Laos has been under the
thumb of its neighbors – at various times the
Cambodians, Burmese, Vietnamese, Chinese, and Siamese
(Thais). The result is that Laos has experienced great
difficulty in establishing a national
identity. |
| |
The earliest inhabitants of Laos were migrants from
southern China. From the 11th century onward, parts of
Laos fell under the Khmer Empire, and later under
Siamese influence from the Sukhothai dynasty. With the
fall of Sukhothai in 1345, the first kingdom of Laos
emerged under Fa Ngum, a Lao prince brought up in the
court of Angkor Wat. As the Khmer Empire crumbled, Fa
Ngum welded together a new empire, which he modestly
christened ‘Lan Xang’ – the Land of a Million Elephants.
Lan Xang covered the whole of present-day Laos plus most
of Issan (northeast Thailand). Fa Ngum declared himself
king of the realm in 1353. Fa Ngum was unable to subdue
the unruly highlanders of the northeast regions; these
remained independent of Lan Xang Rule. |
| |
Upon Fa Ngum’s marriage to a Cambodian princess, the
Khmer court gave the Lao king a sacred gold Buddha
called Pra Bang. Fa Ngum made Buddhism the state
religion, and Pra Bang became the protector of the Lao
kingdom. Nobility pledged allegiance to the king before
the statue. Named after Pra Bang was the city of Luang
Prabang, the cradle of Lao culture and the centre of the
Lao state for the next 200 years. |
| |
|
Monarchs of Lan Xang |
Fa Ngum’s son, Samsenthai, who reigned 1373-1416,
consolidated the royal administration, developing Luang
Prabang as a trading and religious center. His death was
followed by unrest under a swift succession of
lackluster monarchs. Luang Prabang came under increasing
threat from incursions by the Vietnamese and later the
Burmese. In 1563, King Settathirat declared Vientiane
the capital of Lan Xang, and built Wat Pra Keo to house
the Emerald Buddha, a gift from the king of Ceylon, as a
new talisman for the kingdom. Settathirat is revered as
one of the great Lao kings because he protected the
nation from foreign subjugation. When he disappeared in
1574 on a military campaign, the kingdom rapidly
declined and was subject to Burmese invasion. There was
a quick and lackluster succession of kings after
Settathirat. |
| |
King Souligna Vongsa, who ruled 1633-94, brought
stability and peace back to the kingdom – a period
regarded as Lan Xang’s golden age. |
| |
|
Siamese Satellite |
When Souligna Vongsa died in 1694 without an heir,
the leadership of Lan Xang was contested, and the nation
split into three kingdoms. The area around Vientiane was
taken over by Souligna’s nephew, supported by the
Annamites from northern Vietnam; Souligna’s grandson
controlled the area around Luang Prabang, while another
prince controlled the southern kingdom of Champassak,
with Thai backing. China, Burma, and Vietnam briefly
held sway over these kingdoms; bands of Chinese
marauders terrorized the north of the
country. |
| |
The power of Lan Xang waned; gradually, the Thais
extended their influence over most of Laos until it
became a Siamese satellite state. In the 1820s,
Vientiane’s king Anou rebelled against Siamese
interference and attacked the Thais. The Thai response
was to sack Vientiane in 1827, razing most of the
city. |
| |
|
Land of the Lotus-Eaters |
In the late 19th century, the king of Siam, seeking
to keep Thailand free of foreign domination, ceded a
large tract of territory – equivalent of what is now
Laos and Cambodia combined – to the French. A series of
treaties released more Lao territories to the French
between 1893 and 1907. Former Lao territories were thus
united again, although the three kingdoms founded in the
late 17th century remained in existence, and tribal
princes were able to increase their power by
collaborating with the French. The French gave the new
protectorate the name Laos, from les Laos, the
plural term for the people of Laos. |
| |
Laos was a low-key French protectorate, known as the
land of the lotus-eaters, where an indolent lifestyle
prevailed. It was too mountainous for plantations, there
was little in the way of mining, and the Mekong was not
suitable for commercial navigation. The French built
very few roads – the main colonial route constructed was
from Luang Prabang through Vientiane to Savannakhet and
the Cambodian frontier. The French built no
higher-education facilities; some half-hearted attempts
were made to cultivate rubber and coffee, but the main
export under the French was opium. Only a few hundred
French resided in Laos. They adopted a dissolute
lifestyle with Lao or Annamite consorts, and left the
running of the place to Vietnamese civil servants. The
king was allowed to remain in Luang Prabang, trade was
left to resident Vietnamese and Chinese, and the Lao
carried on farming as they had for hundreds of
years. |
| |
During the colonial period, administration, health
care, and education hardly made any impact or progress
at all. The only significant change for ordinary folk
was the presence of obnoxious tax collectors, a frequent
cause of uprisings. In the lowlands, revolts were
quickly put down, but in the highlands of Xieng Khuang
and the Bolovens Plateau, the French had trouble
deploying their heavy weaponry. Sometimes a remission of
taxes led to pacification. |
| |
The 50-year French sojourn in Laos came to an abrupt
end in March 1945, when the Japanese took control of the
government and interned the Vichy French. With the
surrender of Japan in August that year, the Lao Issara
(Free Laos) movement declared liberation from the French
in September, and set about establishing an alternative
government. The Lao Issara leader was Prince Phetsarath,
a nephew of the king. Other key players in the Lao
Issara were his half-brothers, Prince Souvanna Phouma
and Prince Souphanouvong. |
| |
King Sisavang Vong sided with the French, and the
movement for Lao independence was crushed, causing
Prince Phetsarath and Prince Souvanna Phouma to flee to
Thailand. King Sisavang Vong was crowned constitutional
monarch of all Laos in 1946. Meanwhile, the Lao Issara
dissolved, and a splinter group called the Pathet Lao
formed a new resistance group based in northeast Laos.
The Pathet Lao were led by Prince Souphanouvong and
backed by the Vietminh of North Vietnam. Prince Souvanna
Phouma returned to Vientiane and joined the newly formed
Royal Lao Government. |
| |
The French granted full sovereignty to Laos in 1953,
but the Pathet Lao regarded the royalist government as
Western-dominated. When in 1954 the French made a last
stand at Dien Bien Phu, it ended badly, with a stunning
defeat. The weary French started a withdrawal from
Indochina; at this point, the US started supplying the
Royal Lao Government with arms. |
| |
|
Civil War Skirmishes |
The US-backed Royal Lao Government ruled over a
divided country from 1951 to 1954. The Geneva Conference
of July 1954 granted full independence to Laos but did
not settle the issue of who would rule. Prince Souvanna
Phouma, a neutralist, operated from Vientiane; in the
south, right-wing, pro-US Prince Boun Oum of Champassak
dominated the Pakse area. In the far north, Prince
Souphanouvong led the leftist resistance movement, the
Pathet Lao, drawing support from North Vietnam.
|
| |
In 1959, the Lao king died and was succeeded by his
son, Sisavang Vatthana. Over the next few years there
were a number of unsuccessful attempts to set up a
coalition government to bring royalists and communists
together. Souvanna Phouma became Prime Minister in 1956
and tried to integrate his half-brother’s Pathet Lao
forces into a coalition government. That government was
toppled in 1958. Fighting broke out between the Royal
Lao Army and the Pathet Lao in 1960; in 1961, a neutral
independent government was set up under Prince Souvanna
Phouma, based in Vientiane. A second attempt at a
coalition government floundered in 1962 due to the
widening war in Vietnam. The neutralists later joined
forces with the Pathet Lao to oppose forces backed by
the US and Thailand. |
| |
|
The Dirty War |
For the next decade, Laos was plagued by civil war,
coups, countercoups, and chaos, and was dragged headlong
into the Vietnam War. Laos became a pawn of the
superpowers, with Hmong tribesmen trained by CIA agents,
Thai mercenaries fighting for the Royal Lao government,
and the Pathet Lao receiving help from the Chinese, the
Russians, and the Vietminh. |
| |
During the Vietnam War, Laos was effectively
partitioned into four spheres of influence: the Chinese
in the north, the Vietnamese along the Ho Chi Minh Trail
in the east, the Thais in western areas controlled by
the US-backed Royal Lao Government, and the Khmer Rouge
operating from parts of the south. Because of the Ho Chi
Minh Trail, Laos was subjected to saturation bombing by
aerial raids launched from Thailand and from within
Laos. In this undeclared dirty war, the tonnage of bombs
dropped by US bombers on the northern Lao provinces of
Xieng Khuang, Sam Neua, the Phong Saly between 1964 and
1973 exceeded the entire tonnage dropped over Europe by
all sides during WWII. It is estimated that US forces
flew almost 600,000 sorties – the equivalent of one
bombing run every eight minutes around the clock for
nine years. This air assault was shrouded in secrecy,
since under the terms of the Geneva Accord of 1962 no
foreign personnel were supposed to operate on Laotian
territory. The Vietminh and the Chinese also violated
Laos’ neutrality with infantry divisions deployed in the
north. In the early days of the bombing, American pilots
dressed in civilian clothing flew old planes with Royal
Lao markings; Thai and Hmong pilots were also trained to
fly missions. |
| |
So confusing did the number of Laotian coups become
that the Americans were unsure which Phoumi, Phuouma,
Phoui, Souvanna, or Souvanou was in power at any given
time. American journalist Malcolm Browne described this
bewildering era thus: |
| |
So confusing did the number of Laotian coups become
that the Americans were unsure which Phoumi, Phuouma,
Phoui, Souvanna, or Souvanou was in power at any given
time. American journalist Malcolm Browne described this
bewildering era thus: |
| |
|
Pathet Lao Victory |
In 1973, as the US began its strategic withdrawal
from Vietnam, the Pathet Lao gained the upper hand,
controlling most of the country’s provinces. In 1975,
with the fall of Saigon and Phnom Penh, opposition to
the Pathet Lao crumbled. The Pathet Lao took Pakse,
Champassak, Savannakhet, and finally Vientiane without
opposition, establishing the Lao People’s Democratic
Republic (Lao PDR). |
| |
|
|
|
|