International Control Commission

The International Control Commission (abbreviated ICC; French: Commission Internationale de Contrôle, or CIC), was an international force established in 1954. More formally called the International Commission for Supervision and Control, the organisation was actually organised as three separate but interconnected bodies, one for each territory within the former French Indochina, being treated as a single state having two temporary administrations: the ICSC for Vietnam; the ICSC for Laos; and the ICSC for Cambodia.

International Control Commission
International Commission for Supervision and Control
Commission Internationale de Contrôle
AbbreviationICC, CIC
SuccessorInternational Commission for Control and Supervision
Formation11 August 1954 (1954-08-11)
Dissolved15 June 1974 (1974-06-15)
Headquarters
  • Hanoi (ICSC Vietnam)
  • Vientiane (ICSC Laos)
  • Phnom Penh (ICSC Cambodia)
Coordinates21°01′42″N 105°51′15″E (ICSC Vietnam)
  1. Effectively ceased to exist on 29 January 1973 due to the formation of the International Commission of Control and Supervision.

It oversaw the implementation of the Geneva Accords that ended the First Indochina War and brought about the Partition of Vietnam. It monitored the observance of the ceasefires and noted any violations. The organization consisted of delegations of diplomats and military personnel from: Canada, Poland, and India, representing respectively the non-communist, communist, and non-aligned blocs. The ICC/ICSC started well, but the irreconcilable positions soon told, and the organisation became largely irrelevant in the face of an increasingly-active conflict. Nevertheless, it survived, as a communications link, until the Paris Accords were signed and it was reconvened as the International Commission for Control and Supervision.

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