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page Assignment
 
What factors enabled the Vietminh forces to
triumph over the French at Dien Bien Phu?
 Background
 
Dien Bien Phu, the climactic battle between
French and Vietnamese Communist forces (called the Vietminh) after World
War Two, took place at the town of Dien Biên in northwestern Vietnam.
The defeat of over twenty-thousand French troops on 7 May 1954 after a fifty-five
day siege of the camp led directly to the division of Vietnam into two
countries.
 
The French defeat led immediately to the surrender
of French claims in Indochina.  While the siege was taking place,
representatives of France, the Soviet Union, Great Britain, the United States
and several Asian nations met at Geneva to discuss ways to end the fighting.
The conferees decided to divide what had been called French Indochina into
three nations:  Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam (with Vietnam temporarily
divided at the 17th parallel into northern and southern administrative districts
pending unification elections scheduled for July 1956). In its final statement,
the conference recognized the sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity
of Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam. The election mandated by the Geneva Conference
was never held, in part because it was accurately feared that the
nationalist-Communist leader, Ho Chi Minh, would come to power.  Thus,
north of the 17th parallel a new Communist government led by Ho Chi Minh
came into existence, while in the south a semi-democratic regime increasingly
relied on U.S. support.
 Timeline
 
  
    2 March 1946, Ho Chi Minh was
    elected president of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (France recognized
    an autonomous North Vietnam within French-controlled
    Indochina).
  
    23 November 1946, French navy
    bombarded port of Haiphong in order to stop the flow of arms into the
    city.
  
    28 December 1946, French imposed
    martial law in Indochina.
  
    19 May 1947, Vietminh troops attacked
    Saigon.
  
    10 September, 1947 Ho Chi Minh
    refused French peace terms.
  
    9 October 1947, French troops
    attacked Tonkin.
  
    7 February 1950, Western powers
    formally recognized the French-supported regime of Bao Dai in Vietnam (a
    week after USSR recognized Ho in the north.).
  
    by 1951 open war between French
    and Vietminh had spread to all of Indochina (10 April 1953 Vietminh invaded
    Laos.).
  
    29 November 1953, French airborne
    troops captured Dien Bien Phu.
  
    14 March 1954, Vietminh besieged
    Dien Bien Phu.  The base was well-fortified and defended by crack troops,
    but it could only be reached by air.
  
    7 May 1954, Dien base captured,
    nearly 20,000 French killed or captured.
  
    20 June 1954, armistice agreed
    in Indochina.
  
    July 1954, cease-fire in Geneva
    provided for the basic division of the country and internationally supervised
    elections to decide on reunification. Vietminh to withdraw from Cambodia
    and Laos.
 WWW sites
 
Short biographies of
Ho
Chi Minh and
Giap
(1912-) are available.
 
A reasonably good introduction to the conflict
in Indochina is in the
The Pentagon
Papers, Chapter 1, "Background to the Conflict,
1940-50".  The
Wars for Vietnam have
been made into an impressive site by a student at Vassar College. A picture
exhibition of the First Indochina War is very
useful.
 
There are a series of the key texts that determined
the future for Indochina after World War II:
 
  Some other links:
    28 November 1943, Roosevelt and
    Stalin discussed the future of
    French Rule in
    Indochina at the Teheran Conference
  
    24 January 1944, Roosevelt sent
    a Memorandum
    to Cordell Hull, Secretary of State, on the issue of French control of
    Indochina
  
    23 February 1945, in a press
    conference Roosevelt publically addressed the issue of
    French Rule in
    Indochina
  
    15 March 1945, Roosevelt held
    a series of conversations with Charles Taussig on
    French Rule in
    Indochina
  
    August 1945, Bao Dai, emperor
    of Annam,
    abdicated
  
    2 September 1945,
    Declaration of
    Independence of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (note how the text
    began with a quote from the American declaration of
    independence).
  
    March 1946,
    Agreement
    on the Independence of Vietnam in which the French Government recognized
    the Republic of Vietnam as a free state, forming part of the Indochinese
    Federation and the French Union. With regard to the unification of the three
    Ky (Nam Ky, or Cochin China, Trung Ky, or Annam, and Bac Ky, or Tonkin),
    the French Government undertook to follow the decisions of the people consulted
    by referendum.
  
    7 February 1950, the United States
    recognized Vietnam,
    Laos and Cambodia and accorded diplomatic recognition to those
    governments.
  
    8 May 1950, the United States
    agreed to extend
    Military and Economic
    Aid to the area.
  
    24 May 1950, the American Chargé
    d'Affaires at Saigon wrote about the
    Economic aid
    program.
  
    28 January 1951, President Truman
    and the French Prime Minister Plevan held top secret conversations on the
    Far East in the
    Cabinet Room
    of the White House
  
    29 January 1951, a
    Memorandum of the
    Conversation, by the Assistant Chief of the Policy Reports Staff (Barnes)
    was drafted.
  
    30 January 1951, President Truman
    and the French Prime Minister held a
    second top secret
    meeting on Indochina.
  
    20 July 1954,
    Agreement on
    the Cessation of  Hostilities in Vietnam (The Geneva Accords), which
    theoretically ended the war between French Union forces and the Vietminh
    in Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam, which were to become fully independent, with
    Vietnam partitioned near the 17th parallel into two states pending reunification
    through "free elections" to be held by 20 July 1956. The United States and
    Vietnam were not signatories to these agreements. See also U.S.  Secretary of State John Foster Dulles on the fall of Dien Bien Phu (May 7th,  1954)
    21 July 1956, The American Secretary
    of State, John Foster Dulles, provided
    the
    American
    Response to the Geneva Declarations.
  
    3 November 1954, the White House
    issued a statement explaining the purpose of the
    Mission of the
    Special U.S. Representative in Vietnam.
 Recommended Books
 
On France's war in Indo-China, see:  Philippe
Franchini, Les guerres d'Indochine (1988); J. Dalloz, War in IndoChina,
1945-1954 (?) and Ellen Hammer's The Struggle for Indochina
1945-1955 (1966).
 
On the battle, in particular, see:  John
Nordell, Jr., The Undetected Enemy:  French and American Miscalculations
in Dien Bien Phu, 1953 (1995); Howard Simpson, Dien Bien Phu: 
The Epic Battle America Forgot (1994); Peter Batty, Battle for Dien
Bien Phu [videorecording] (1991); Jacques Dalloz, Dien Bien Phu
(1991); Denise Artaud and Lawrence Kaplan, eds., Diên Biên
Phu:  l'Alliance atlantique et la défense du Sud- Est asiatique
(1989); Melanie Billings-Yun, Decision against War:  Eisenhower and
Dien Bien Phu, 1954 (1988); Alain Ruscio, Dien Bien Phu:  la
fin d'une illusion (1986); Erwan Bergot, Les 170 jours de Diên
Biên Phu (1981); Peter Poole, Dien Bien Phu, 1954:  The
Battle That Ended the First Indochina War (1972); Bernard Fall, Hell
in a Very Small Place:  The Siege of Dien Bien Phu (1966).
 Related Events
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