Nguyen Ngoc Loan was a police chief in
Saigon during the
Vietnam war. Perhaps he is most famous for being characterized as a heartless
killer in a photo taken by American photographer
Eddie Adams. The photo was taken during the
Tet offensive in
1968, and is perhaps the most well known photo from the
Vietnam War.
The picture shows Nguyen firing his pistol at point blank range into the head of a captured
Vietcong captain. As the picture was printed in
American newspapers, it only furthered the anti-war sentiment and many saw Nguyen as a murderer.
What those people didn't know was that the prisoner, Nguyen Van Lem, was in charge of the
Vietcong effort to assassinate Nguyen Ngoc Loan. Having been unsuccessful, Van Lem and his group did manage to break into the home of one of Nguyen Ngoc Loan's best friends, a Colonel in the National Police. They murdered the Colonel, then cut the throats of the Colonel's wife and their six children who were Nguyen Ngoc Loan's godchildren.
Upon hearing this news,
Nguyen Ngoc Loan felt the killing of Nguyen Van Lem was justified. After the killing, he remarked to
NBC cameraman Vo Su, saying "These guys kill a lot of our people, and I think
Buddha will forgive me."
However, the American people did not forgive him. After he was later wounded in another confrontation with the Vietcong, he was sent to an
Australian hospital where his right leg was amputated. There, the controversy was too great and he was sent to recuperate in Washington D.C. There, he was denounced publicly in congress and risked danger of being tried as a
war criminal. Eventually, the controversy died down and he was able to open a restaurant in
Virginia. However, people soon came to know who he was and business sharply declined.
Nguyen Ngoc Loan died on July 16, 1998. He was 67.