Misplaced Pages

Secretary of the Central Military Commission of the Communist Party of Vietnam

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
For the military head of the Communist Party of China, see Chairman of the Central Military Commission (China).
Secretary of the Central Military Commission
Bí thư Quân ủy Trung ương
Emblem of the Communist Party of Vietnam
Flag of the Communist Party of Vietnam
Incumbent
Tô Lâm
since 3 August 2024
Central Military Commission
Term lengthFive years
Inaugural holderVõ Nguyên Giáp
Formation1946; 78 years ago (1946)
DeputyDeputy Secretary
Politics of Vietnam
Ideology
Constitution
Communist Party
Legislative
  • Provincial People's Councils
Presidency
Executive
Fatherland Front
Military
Foreign relations


See also

flag Vietnam portal

icon Politics portal

The Secretary of the Central Military Commission of the Communist Party of Vietnam is the highest party official on military affairs in Vietnam, and politically the highest leader of the People's Army of Vietnam.

Officeholders

Secretary of the Central Military Commission (1946–48)

No.
Portrait Name
(birth–death)
Took office Left office Rank
Central Committee
1

Võ Nguyên Giáp
(1911–2013)
1946 October 1948 3 1st Central Committee
(1935–51)

Secretary of the General Military Commission (1952–61)

No.
Portrait Name
(birth–death)
Took office Left office Rank
Central Committee
1

Võ Nguyên Giáp
(1911–2013)
May 1952 January 1961 5 2nd Central Committee
(1951–60)
7 3rd Central Committee
(1960–76)

Secretary of the Central Military Commission (1961–84)

No.
Portrait Name
(birth–death)
Took office Left office Rank
Central Committee
1

Võ Nguyên Giáp
(1911–2013)
January 1961 1977 7 3rd Central Committee
(1960–76)
6 4th Central Committee
(1976–82)
2

Lê Duẩn
(1907–1986)
1977 December 1984 1 4th Central Committee
(1976–82)
5th Central Committee
(1982–86)

Central Military–Party Committee (1985–97)

No.
Portrait Name
(birth–death)
Took office Left office Rank
Central Committee
3 A young man, cropped from a group shot Văn Tiến Dũng
(1917–2002)
4 July 1985 1986 10 5th Central Committee
(1982–86)
6 5th Central Committee
(1982–82)
4 A middle-aged man wearing a V-necked white collarless shirt Trường Chinh
(1907–1988)
1986 18 December 1986 1 5th Central Committee
(1976–82)
5

Nguyễn Văn Linh
(1915–1998)
1987 27 June 1991 1 6th Central Committee
(1986–91)
6 Đỗ Mười
(1917–2018)
27 June 1991 26 December 1997 1 7th Central Committee
(1986–91)

Central Military Commission (1997–present)

No.
Portrait Name
(birth–death)
Took office Left office Rank
Central Committee
7 Lê Khả Phiêu
(1931–2020)
26 December 1997 22 April 2001 1 8th Central Committee (2001–06)
8 a man with greying black hair, wearing a suit and tie Nông Đức Mạnh
(1940–present)
22 April 2001 19 January 2011 1 9th Central Committee (2001–06)
1 10th Central Committee (2006–11)
9 Nguyễn Phú Trọng
(1944–2024)
19 January 2011 19 July 2024 1 11th Central Committee (2011–16)
1 12th Central Committee (2016–21)
1 13th Central Committee (2021–26)
10 Tô Lâm
(1957-)
3 August 2024 incumbent

Notes

1. These numbers are not official.
2. The Central Committee when it convenes for its first session after being elected by a National Party Congress elects the Politburo. According to David Koh, in interviews with several high-standing Vietnamese officials, the Politburo ranking is based upon the number of approval votes by the Central Committee. Lê Hồng Anh, the Minister of Public Security, was ranked 2nd in the 10th Politburo because he received the second-highest number of approval votes. Another example being Tô Huy Rứa of the 10th Politburo, he was ranked lowest because he received the lowest approval vote of the 10th Central Committee when he stood for election for a seat in the Politburo. This system was implemented at the 1st plenum of the 10th Central Committee. The Politburo ranking functioned as an official order of precedence before the 10th Party Congress, and some believe it still does.

References

  1. ^ Van & Cooper 1983, p. 69.
  2. Koh 2008, p. 666.

Bibliography

Communist Party of Vietnam
Central Committee
General Secretary
Permanent Member
Decision-making bodies
Apparatus
Steering committees
National meetings
National Congress
Leadership sittings
Elected by the
Central Committee
Politburo
Secretariat
Military Commission
Inspection Commission
Elected by
Congress
Central Committee
Wider organisation
Other organs
Ideology
Categories: