Nguyen Ngoc Bich: Difference between revisions
Loc Vu-Quoc (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Pat Palmer (talk | contribs) m (Text replacement - "Vo Nguyen Giap" to "Vo Nguyen Giap") |
||
(221 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{subpages}} | {{subpages}} | ||
<!-- Please ignore (but don't delete) any formatting that you are not familiar with. Others will probably chime in to help you set things up. --> | <!-- Please ignore (but don't delete) any formatting that you are not familiar with. Others will probably chime in to help you set things up. --> | ||
<!-- | <!-- | ||
<span style="font-size:250%; color:blue">"HELLO"</span> | <span style="font-size:250%; color:blue">"HELLO"</span> | ||
[[User:Loc Vu-Quoc|Loc Vu-Quoc]] | |||
--> | --> | ||
[[File:Nguyen Ngoc Bich | By [[User:Loc Vu-Quoc|Loc Vu-Quoc]] ([https://archive.is/YUGPb Archive.is 2024.10.27]), [https://citizendium.org/wiki/index.php?title=Nguyen_Ngoc_Bich&action=history Edit history] ◉ | ||
Started at [https://citizendium.org/wiki/index.php?title=Nguyen_Ngoc_Bich&oldid=893049 08:10, 10 June 2023] | |||
== Introduction == | |||
[[File:Nguyen Ngoc Bich 1962.png|thumb|150px|left|Dr. Nguyen Ngoc Bich, 1962]] | |||
{{Infobox Person | {{Infobox Person | ||
| name = Nguyễn Ngọc Bích | | name = Nguyễn Ngọc Bích | ||
Line 12: | Line 15: | ||
| caption = As a student at [[École polytechnique]], 1931 | | caption = As a student at [[École polytechnique]], 1931 | ||
| birth_date = 18 May 1911 | | birth_date = 18 May 1911 | ||
| birth_place = [[Ben Tre]], [[Vietnam]] | | birth_place = [[Wikipedia:Ben Tre|Bến Tre]], [[Wikipedia:Vietnam|Vietnam]] | ||
| death_date = 4 Dec 1966 | | death_date = 4 Dec 1966 | ||
| death_place = [[Thu Duc]], [[Vietnam]] | | death_place = [[Wikipedia:Thu Duc|Thủ Đức]], [[Wikipedia:Vietnam|Vietnam]] | ||
| nationality = Vietnamese | | nationality = Vietnamese | ||
| citizenship = [[South Vietnam]] | | citizenship = [[South Vietnam]] | ||
Line 29: | Line 32: | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{TOC|right}} | {{TOC|right}} | ||
[[File:Nguyen Ngoc Bich 1931 Ecole Polytechnique 2.png|thumb|left|150px|Nguyen Ngoc Bich 1931, student at [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89cole_polytechnique École polytechnique].]] | |||
[[File:Nguyen_Ngoc_Bich_1933_X.png|150px|thumb|left|Nguyen Ngoc Bich, circa 1933, student at [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89cole_polytechnique École polytechnique].]] | |||
'''Nguyễn Ngọc Bích''' (1911–1966) is a hero of the | |||
Vietnamese resistance against the French colonists<ref name=Buttinger.1967b /><sup>:850. </sup> <sup>[[#Note links|NOTE]]</sup><span id="Note links jump"></span> <sup>[[#Primary sources, quotations|N.psq1]]</sup><span id="Primary sources, quotations jump1"></span> | |||
and revered as one of the most popular local heroes.<ref name=Cooper.1970/><sup>:122</sup> The [[commons:File:Nguyen Ngoc Bich Street.png|Nguyen-Ngoc-Bich street]] in the city of <!--[[Cần Thơ]][https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cần_Thơ Cần Thơ]-->[[Wikipedia:Cần Thơ|Cần Thơ]], [[Wikipedia:Vietnam|Vietnam]], was named after him to honor and commemorate his feats (of sabotaging bridges to slow down the colonial French-army advances) and heroism (being on the French most-wanted list,<ref name=Cooper.1970 /><sup>:122</sup> imprisoned, subjected to an "intensive and unpleasant interrogation"<ref name=Cooper.1970 /><sup>:122</sup> that left a mark on his forehead,<sup>[[#bich-injury|N.bi1]]</sup><span id="bich-injury jump1"></span> and exiled) during the <!--[[Indochinese revolution|First Indochina War]][https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Indochina_War First Indochina War]-->[[Wikipedia:First Indochina War|First Indochina War]]. | |||
A French-educated engineer and medical doctor, and an intellectual and politician, he proposed an alternative viewpoint to avoid the high-casualty, high-cost war between [[Wikipedia:North Vietnam|North Vietnam]] and [[Wikipedia:South_Vietnam|South Vietnam]].<ref name=Nguyen-Ngoc-Bich /> | |||
Upon graduating from the <!--[[École_polytechnique|École polytechnique]][https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89cole_polytechnique École polytechnique]--> [[Wikipedia:École_polytechnique|École polytechnique]] (engineering military school under the French Ministry of Armed Forces) and then from the <!--[[École des ponts ParisTech|École nationale des ponts et chaussées]][https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/École_des_ponts_ParisTech École nationale des ponts et chaussées]-->[[Wikipedia:École des ponts ParisTech|École nationale des ponts et chaussées]] (civil engineering) in France in 1935,<!--{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|2018}}--><ref name=NNC.2018/> Dr. [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] returned to Vietnam to work for the French colonial government. After World War II, in 1945, he joined the <!--[[Viet-Minh]][https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viet-Minh Viet-Minh]-->[[Wikipedia:Viet-Minh|Viet-Minh]],<sup>[[#Bich Viet Minh |N.bvm]]</sup><span id="Bich Viet Minh jump"></span> and became a senior commander in the Vietnamese resistance movement, and insisted on fighting for Vietnam's independence, not for communism. | |||
Suspecting<sup>[[#NNBich-betrayed|N.bs]]<span id="NNBich-betrayed jump"></span></sup> | |||
of being betrayed by the Communist faction<sup>[[#NNBich-betrayed|N.bs]]</sup><span id="NNBich-betrayed jump"></span> of the [[Wikipedia:Viet-Minh|Viet-Minh]] and apprehended by the French forces, [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] was saved from execution by a campaign for amnesty by his [[Wikipedia:École_polytechnique|École polytechnique]] classmates based in Vietnam, mostly high-level officers of the French army,<!--{{sfn|Tran-Thi-Lien|2002|p=299}}--><ref name=Tran-Thi-Lien /><sup>: 299</sup> and was subsequently exiled to France, where he founded with friends and managed the Vietnamese publishing house Minh Tan (in Paris), which published many important works for the Vietnamese literature,<sup>[[#Minh Tan|N.mbl]]</sup><span id="Minh Tan jump"></span> in particular, the ''Sino-Vietnamese Dictionary'', a key reference for many generations of writers and students for a standardized Vietnamese writing. To reprint this dictionary, [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] wrote a moving open letter to the dictionary author Dao Duy Anh, who could not be located due to war time, to ask for permission.<sup>[[#VQL Foreword |N.vqf]]</sup><span id="VQL Foreword jump"></span> | |||
In parallel, [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] studied medicine and became a medical doctor. He was highly regarded in Vietnamese politics, and was suggested by the French in 1954 as an alternative to [[Wikipedia:Ngo Dinh Diem|Ngo Dinh Diem]] as the sixth <!--[[Leaders_of_South_Vietnam#Prime_Ministers|prime minister]][https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leaders_of_South_Vietnam#Prime_Ministers prime minister]-->[[Wikipedia:Leaders_of_South_Vietnam#Prime_Ministers|prime minister]] of the [[Wikipedia:State of Vietnam|State of Vietnam]] under the former Emperor [[Wikipedia:Bao Dai|Bao Dai]] as Head of State,<!--{{efn|See Section [[#Intellectual and politician|Intellectual and politician]] and Langguth (2000).{{sfn|Langguth|2000|p=84}}}}--><ref name=Langguth.2000 /><sup>:84</sup> who selected [[Wikipedia:Ngo Dinh Diem|Ngo Dinh Diem]] as prime minister. While [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]]'s candidature for the 1961 presidential election in opposition to Diem was, however, declared invalid by the Saigon authorities at the last moment for "technical reasons",<!--{{sfn|Honey, P.J.|1962}}{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|2018}}--><ref name=Honey.1962 /><ref name=NNC.2018 />, he was "regarded by many as a possible successor to President [[Wikipedia:Ngo Dinh Diem|Ngo Dinh Diem]]".<ref name=Honey.1962 /> <sup>[[#Political influence|N.pi]]<span id="Political influence jump"></span>, [[#China Quarterly|N.tcq]]</sup><span id="China Quarterly jump"></span> | |||
A large majority of the information in this article came from the master document | |||
''Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography,''<!--{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|Vu-Quoc-Loc|2023}}--><ref name=NNC.VQL.2023/> which contains even more information, including primary-source evidence and photos, than presented here. Most images in the present article were uploaded for the first time at the time of the writing by the original writer.<sup>[[#Original writer |N.vql]]</sup><span id="Original writer jump"></span> | |||
Important historical events that affected [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]]'s adult life, together with those mentioned in his 1962 paper (e.g., failed agrarian reform, napalm bombs, famine, conquest for rice, etc.) are summarized, in particular the atmosphere in which [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] had lived for ten years working for the French colonialists (from 1935 to 1945), and the historical conditions that drove this French-educated engineer to become a | |||
"Francophile anticolonialist"<sup>[[#Francophile anticolonialists|N.fa1]]<span id="Francophile anticolonialists jump1"></span>, [[#Primary sources, quotations|N.psq2]]</sup><span id="Primary sources, quotations jump2"></span> and to join the [[Wikipedia:Viet-Minh|Viet-Minh]] in 1945<sup>[[#Bich Viet Minh |N.bvm]]</sup><span id="Bich Viet Minh jump"></span> (e.g., the French brutal repressions in 1940 and 1945, the power vacuum after the Japanese ''coup de force'' in 1945, [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho Chi Minh]]'s call for a general uprising from [[Wikipedia:vi:Chiến_khu_Tân_Trào|Tân Trào]], the 1945 [[Wikipedia:August Revolution|August Revolution]], the Black Sunday on 1945 Sep 2 in Saigon, etc.). The key principle is to summarize a historical event only when it was directly related to [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]]'s activities. | |||
Care is exercised in selecting references and quotations that complement, but not duplicate, other Wikipedia articles at the time of this writing. | |||
For example, the history and the general use of [[Wikipedia:napalm|napalm]] bombs, which [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] mentioned in his 1962 article, are not summarized. | |||
Regarding the French using American-made [[Wikipedia:napalm|napalm]] bombs in the [[Wikipedia:First Indochina War|First Indochina War]], | |||
well-known battles<sup>[[#Napalm battles|N.nb]]</sup><span id="Napalm battles jump"></span> are also not summarized. | |||
== First Indochina War == | |||
The broader historic events of [[Wikipedia:World War II|World War II]] and the [[Wikipedia:First Indochina War|First Indochina War]]---specifically, the short interwar period between end of the former and the beginning of the later—led to the context in which [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Nguyen Ngoc Bich]] fought the French colonists until he was captured. | |||
[[Wikipedia:Ellen Hammer|Ellen J. Hammer]] was the first American-born historian<sup>[[#Virginia Thompson |N.vt]]</sup><span id="Virginia Thompson jump"></span> with a deep knowledge of the French colonial rule in Indochina in the early 1950s during the [[Wikipedia:First Indochina War|First Indochina War]]. Dr. Hammer's<!--{{sfn|Pace|2001}}--><ref name=Pace.2001/> <sup>[[#Ellen Hammer |N.ejh]]</sup><span id="Ellen Hammer jump"></span> | |||
highly influential book titled ''The Struggle for Indochina''<!--{{sfn|Hammer|1954}}--><ref name="Hammer.1954"/> <sup>[[#Hammer (1954) |N.ehb]]</sup><span id="Hammer (1954) jump"></span> | |||
<!--{{em dash}}-->---published in 1954 well before the United States sent American troops to Vietnam in the 1960s<!--{{em dash}}-->---described the events, politics, and historic personalities leading to the [[Wikipedia:First Indochina War|First Indochina War]]. Her works were considered among the must-read books by respected historians on Vietnam history, as Osborne (1967)<!--{{sfn|Osborne|1967}}--><ref name="Osborne.1967"/> wrote: "Indeed, any serious student of Viet-Nam will have either read Devillers,<sup>[[#Devillers ref |N.pd]]</sup><span id="Devillers ref jump"></span> | |||
[[Wikipedia:Jean Lacouture|Lacouture]], [[Wikipedia:Bernard B. Fall|Fall]], [[Wikipedia:Ellen Hammer|Hamme]]r and Lancaster's<ref name=Lancaster.1961/> | |||
<sup>[[#Lancaster book |N.dlb]]</sup><span id="Lancaster book jump"></span> | |||
studies already, or will be better served by reading them first hand." To give a historical context within which [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] fought the French colonists, there is no better English source to begin than Dr. Hammer's Vietnam-history book. | |||
The American dilemma---(1) To help the French to re-establish its colony in Vietnam or (2) To help free the Vietnamese from the yoke of French colonialism---was described by Hammer as follows: | |||
<blockquote> | |||
{| cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 | |||
|- | |||
! width="100%" | American dilemma: Help the French or help the Vietnamese | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: justify;" | <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span> The United States has entangled itself in a war in a distant corner of Asia in which it resolutely does not want to participate and from which it equally resolutely cannot abstain. It has committed itself to the cause of France [ [[Wikipedia:French Indochina|French Indochina]] ] and of [[Wikipedia:Bao Dai|Bao Dai]], but enough of the old spirit of anticolonialism is left to make this a somewhat unsavory commitment: it cannot bring itself wholly to ignore the fact that the free world looks less than free to a people whose country is being fought over by a foreign army. Aware that a lasting peace can be built only on satisfaction of the national aspirations of the Indochinese, the United States must at the same time conciliate a France reluctant to abandon her colonial past. <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❞</span> | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: right;" | ---Ellen Hammer (1954), [https://archive.org/details/struggleforindoc0000hamm_h0h0/page/n6/mode/2up ''The struggle for Indochina''], [https://archive.org/details/struggleforindoc0000hamm_h0h0/page/n15/mode/2up?q=march+6+free+state Preface p. xii].<!--{{sfn|Hammer|1954|p=xii}}--><ref name=Hammer.1954/><sup>:xii</sup> | |||
|} | |||
</blockquote> | |||
The activities directly or indirectly affected Bich's life by four historic individuals are summarized. | |||
French General [[Wikipedia:de Gaulle|de Gaulle]], by his desire to reconquer Indochina as a French colony, was a main force that led to the First Indochina War, in which [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] fought. | |||
Ho Chi Minh, founder and leader of the [[Wikipedia:Viet-Minh|Viet-Minh]], called for the general uprising---against the French colonists and the Japanese occupiers---to which [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] responded. US President [[Wikipedia:FDR|Franklin Delano Roosevelt]] ardent anticolonialism could have prevented the two Indochina wars, and changed the course of history. US President [[Wikipedia:Harry Truman|Harry Truman]] was a reason that the [[Wikipedia:First Indochina War|First Indochina War]] is now called the "French-American" War in Vietnamese literature,<ref name="Lady.Borton.2020"/> and through his support for the French war effort supplied napalm bombs, which [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] mentioned in his 1962 paper. The US funded more than 30% of the war cost in 1952 under US President [[Wikipedia:Eisenhower|Eisenhouer]], and "nearly 80%" in 1954 under [[Wikipedia:Harry Truman|Truman]].<!--<sup>[[#French-war cost|Note]]</sup>--><sup>[[#French-war cost|N.fwc]]</sup><span id="French-war cost jump"></span> | |||
=== Charles de Gaulle === | |||
[[File:De-gaulle-radio.jpg|200px|thumb|left|Charles de Gaulle speaking on the BBC, 1941]] | |||
<!-- | |||
[[File:De Gaulle-OWI (cropped).jpg|thumb|120px|left|[[Wikipedia:de Gaulle|de Gaulle]] in 1942]] | |||
--> | |||
[[File:De Gaulle French Union 1944.png|thumb|150px|right|[[Wikipedia:de Gaulle|De Gaulle]]'s ambition to restore French rule over Indochina, 1944]] | |||
De Gaulle was a prime mover leading to the First Indochina War in which the French-educated [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] fought on the [[Wikipedia:Viet-Minh|Viet-Minh]] side against the French colonialists. | |||
At the beginning of [[Wikipedia:World War II|World War II]], in his historic four-minute call-to-arms broadcast from London on 1940 June 18, later known as ''L'Appel du 18 Juin'' in French history, the mostly then unknown<sup>[[#de Gaulle|N.cdg1]]</sup><span id="de Gaulle jump1"></span> General [[Wikipedia:de Gaulle|de Gaulle]] counted on the French Empire, with Indochina as the "Pearl of the Empire", rich in rubber, tin, coal, and rice,<ref name=Logevall.2012/><sup>:28</sup> to provide resources to fight the Axis, with the support of the British Empire and the powerful industry of the United States. | |||
Understanding that Indochina was under the menace of occupation by the Japanese, [[Wikipedia:de Gaulle|de Gaulle]] harbored the dream of wresting this colony back into the fold of the French Empire, writing in his memoirs "As I saw her move away into the mist, I swore to myself that I would one day bring her back."<ref name=Logevall.2012/><sup>:25</sup> <sup>[[#de Gaulle dream |N.dgd]]</sup><span id="de Gaulle dream jump"></span> | |||
<!--Since 1945 March, the month the Japanese toppled the French colonial government in Indochina, de Gaulle had been playing the cold-war card to threaten the Americans that France would fall into the sphere of influence of the USSR if the US did not support France to retake Indochina:<ref name=Marr.1995/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/vietnam1945quest0000marr/page/242/mode/2up?view=theater&q=%22On+the+13th%2C+General+Charles+de+Gaulle%22 243]</sup> | |||
<span style="background-color:yellow">HERE 24.10.8</span>--> | |||
On 1945 Mar 13, four days after the Japanese ''coup de force'' in Indochina (Mar 9), de Gaulle summoned US ambassador to France Jefferson Caffery<ref name=Caffery.1945/> to complain that the French army fighting in Indochina requested help from the US military authorities in China---headed by US General Wedemeyer<ref name=Patti.1981/> <ref name=Tonnesson.2007/><sup>:66</sup> who followed closely the instructions of US President Roosevelt<ref name=Tonnesson.2007/><sup>:67</sup>---but was told that "under instructions no aid could be sent."<ref name=Caffery.1945/> De Gaulle then played the Cold-War card, telling Caffery that France would fall into the sphere of influence of the USSR if the US did not support France to retake Indochina:<ref name=Marr.1995/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/vietnam1945quest0000marr/page/242/mode/2up?view=theater&q=%22On+the+13th%2C+General+Charles+de+Gaulle%22 243]</sup> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
{| cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 | |||
|- | |||
! width="100%" | De Gaulle to Caffery, 1945 March | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: justify;" | <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span> Do you [the US] want us [France] to become... one of the federated states under the Russian aegis? The Russians are advancing apace. . . When Germany falls they will be upon us. If the public here comes to realize that you are against us in Indochina there will be terrific disappointment and nobody knows to what that will lead. We do not want to become Communist; we do not want to fall into the Russian orbit; but I hope that you do not push us into it. <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❞</span> | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: right;" | --- De Gaulle to Jefferson Caffery, US Ambassador to France, 1945 March<ref name=Rotter.2007/><sup>:289</sup> | |||
|} | |||
</blockquote> | |||
[[File:1945 Aug 12 de Gaulle Truman White House.jpg|thumb|250px|right|US President [[Wikipedia:Harry Truman|Harry Truman]] and French General [[Wikipedia:de Gaulle|de Gaulle]], White House, 1945 Aug 12.]] | |||
"Within two weeks" of the death of US President [[Wikipedia:FDR|Franklin Delano Roosevelt]] on 1945 Apr 12, de Gaulle pressured [[Wikipedia:Harry Truman|Harry Truman]] on the Indochina issue, and his government launched "an intensive propaganda effort to mold world opinion in favor of the status quo (French control) in Indochina",<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:116</sup> and this after having approved the Japanese occupation of Indochina since 1940 September 22.<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:452</sup> By the time General [[Wikipedia:de Gaulle|de Gaulle]]<sup>[[#de Gaulle|N.cdg2]]</sup><span id="de Gaulle jump2"></span> came to the US in 1945 Aug (inset photo) <!--, after US President [[FDR|Franklin Delano Roosevelt]] had died on 1945 Apr 12,--> to campaign for US military aid from then US President [[Wikipedia:Harry Truman|Harry Truman]], the "French had been forced to drown several Vietnamese uprisings in blood. They had seen the colonial economy completely disrupted. They had been humiliated by the Germans in Europe and incarcerated by the Japanese in Indochina. Even to begin to reassert sovereignty in Indochina, the French were forced to go hat in hand to the Americans (see inset photo, [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:1945_Aug_12_de_Gaulle_Truman_White_House.jpg de Gaulle visited Truman]), British, and Chinese."<ref name=Marr.1984/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/vietnamesetradit0000marr/page/412/mode/2up?q=%22and+incarcerated+by+the+Japanese+in+Indochina%22&view=theater 413]</sup> | |||
To restore French rule over Indochina, on 1945 Jun 7, as Chairman of the French Provisional Government (formed in 1944 Aug after the liberation of Paris), General de Gaulle appointed General Leclerc to establish and to command the French Expeditionary Corps.<ref name=Tonnesson.1991/><sup>:321-2</sup> <sup>[[#Leclerc accepted assignment|N.laa]]</sup><span id="Leclerc accepted assignment jump"></span> Even though Eisenhower headquarters recommended against Leclerc’s appointment in favor of General Carpentier,<ref name=Vigneras.1957/><sup>:397</sup> they did not follow up with this objection since the focus was on defeating Japan, but did inform the French that it would take several months to equip the French divisions.<ref name=Tonnesson.1991/><sup>:322</sup> De Gaulle also appointed Admiral Thierry d’Argenlieu as High Commissioner of Indochina, the "French [[Wikipedia:Rasputin|Rasputin]]"<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:382</sup> <sup>[[#d'Argenlieu recall |N.dar]]</sup><span id="d'Argenlieu recall jump"></span> who later played a key role in sowing the seeds of the First Indochina War. | |||
[[File:Baodai2.jpg|thumb|150px|left|Emperor [[Wikipedia:Bao Dai|Bao Dai]]]] | |||
On 1945 Aug 20, just ten days before he abdicated on 1945 Aug 30,<sup>[[#Bao Dai abdication|N.bda]]</sup><span id="Bao Dai abdication jump"></span><!--{{efn|Under the pressure of the [[Viet Minh]],{{sfn|Patti|1980|pp=186-187}} [[Bao Dai]] had decided to abdicate on 1945 Aug 24,{{sfn|Patti|1980|pp=186-187}} and abdicated officially on 1945 Aug 30.{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=220}} [[Ho Chi Minh]] then appointed "Mr. Nguyen Vinh Thuy" ([[Bao Dai]]'s birth name) as "Supreme Counsellor"{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=220}} of the Provisional Government of Vietnam.{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=220}}}}--> Vietnam Emperor [[Wikipedia:Bao Dai|Bao Dai]] sent a moving plea to de Gaulle:<sup>[[#Bao Dai quote|N.bdq]]</sup><span id="Bao Dai quote jump"></span><!--{{efn|In the foreword by Devillers for Tønnesson's 2010 book ''Vietnam 1946''.{{sfn|Tønnesson|2010|pp=xiii-xiv}} }}--> | |||
<!-- | |||
{{cquote|''Hello.''}} can also use this style to have large double quotes, but no frame. | |||
{{Quote frame |quote=<span style="font-size:110%">{{resize|120%|{{font color|blue|❝}}}} I beg you to understand that the only means of safeguarding French interests and the spiritual influence of France in Indochina is to recognize the independence of Vietnam unreservedly and to renounce any idea of reestablishing French sovereignty or rule here in any form. . . . Even if you were to reestablish the French administration here, it would not be obeyed, and each village would be a nest of resistance. . . . We would be able to understand each other so easily and become friends if you would stop hoping to become our masters again.{{resize|120%|{{font color|blue|❞}}}}</span> |author=<span style="font-size:103%">[[Bao Dai]] |source=message to [[de Gaulle]] on 1945 Aug 20{{sfn|Tønnesson|2010|pp=xiii-xiv}}</span>}} | |||
--> | |||
<!--See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typographic_alignment --> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
{| cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 | |||
|- | |||
! width="100%" | Bao Dai to de Gaulle, 1945 Aug 20 | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: justify;" | <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span> I beg you to understand that the only means of safeguarding French interests and the spiritual influence of France in Indochina is to recognize the independence of Vietnam unreservedly and to renounce any idea of reestablishing French sovereignty or rule here in any form. . . . Even if you were to reestablish the French administration here, it would not be obeyed, and each village would be a nest of resistance. . . . We would be able to understand each other so easily and become friends if you would stop hoping to become our masters again. <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❞</span> | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: right;" | --- [[Wikipedia:Bao Dai|Bao Dai]], message to [[Wikipedia:de Gaulle|de Gaulle]] on 1945 Aug 20<ref name=Tonnesson.2010/><sup>:xiii–xiv</sup> | |||
|} | |||
</blockquote> | |||
[[File:1945 May Patti in Kunmiing.png|150px|thumb|right|[[Wikipedia:Office_of_Strategic_Services|OSS]] Maj. [[Wikipedia:Archimedes Patti|Archimedes Patti]] in [[Wikipedia:Kunming|Kunming]], 1945 May.]] | |||
Just a few days later on 1945 Aug 26 (or very shortly thereafter), [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho Chi Minh]] put the resistance in much stronger terms to US [[Wikipedia:Office_of_Strategic_Services|OSS]] Major [[Wikipedia:Archimedes Patti|Archimedes Patti]], who still remembered vividly after some 35 years:<sup>[[#HCM quote1|N.hcm1]]</sup><span id="HCM quote1 jump"></span><!--{{efn|From 1945 Aug 26 to 1980, when Patti published his book.{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=4}} }}--> | |||
[[File:Paul_Mus_(1902-1969),_expert_historian_on_Indochina,_Buddhism.jpg|thumb|left|[[Wikipedia:Paul Mus|Paul Mus]] (1902-1969)]] | |||
<!-- | |||
{{Quote frame |quote=<span style="font-size:110%">{{resize|120%|{{font color|blue|❝}}}} If the French intended to return to Viet Nam as imperialists to exploit, to maim and kill my people, [I] could assure them and the world that Viet Nam from north to south would be reduced to ashes, even if it meant the life of every man, woman, and child, and that [my] government's policy would be one of scorched earth to the end. {{resize|120%|{{font color|blue|❞}}}}</span> |author=<span style="font-size:103%">[[Ho Chi Minh]] to [[Archimedes Patti]] |source=''Why Viet Nam?'' 1980, p.4.{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=4}}</span>}} | |||
--> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
{| cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 | |||
|- | |||
! width="100%" | Ho Chi Minh to Archimedes Patti, 1945 Aug 26 | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: justify;" | <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span> If the French intended to return to Viet Nam as imperialists to exploit, to maim and kill my people, [I] could assure them and the world that Viet Nam from north to south would be reduced to ashes, even if it meant the life of every man, woman, and child, and that [my] government's policy would be one of scorched earth to the end. <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❞</span> | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: right;" | --- [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho Chi Minh]] to OSS Maj. [[Wikipedia:Archimedes Patti|Archimedes Patti]]<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:4</sup> | |||
|} | |||
</blockquote> | |||
The Southeast Asia and Buddhism expert [[Wikipedia:Paul Mus|Paul Mus]], who first met [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho Chi Minh]] in 1945, recounted that [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho Chi Minh]] said<ref name="NYT Paul Mus obituary"/><!--{{sfn|NYT Paul Mus obituary}}--> then:<sup>[[#Year of the Pig|N.ytp1]]</sup><span id="Year of the Pig jump1"></span><!--{{efn |name=Paul Mus interview|In his interview in the 1968 documentary ''[[In the Year of the Pig]],'' at the {{plain link|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0pibqRPi8Bo&t=13m56s|name=Youtube video time 13:56}}, Paul Mus recounted: "[[Ho Chi Minh]] said {{bracket|in 1945}}, 'I have no army.' That's not true now {{bracket|in 1968}}. 'I have no army.' 1945. 'I have no finance. I have no diplomacy. I have no public instruction. I have just hatred and I will not disarm it until you give me confidence in you.' Now this is the thing on which I would insist because it's still alive in his memory, as in mine. For every time [[Ho Chi Minh]] has trusted us, we betrayed him."}}--> | |||
<!-- | |||
{{Quote frame |quote=<span style="font-size:110%">{{resize|120%|{{font color|blue|❝}}}} I have no army, no diplomacy, no finances, no industry, no public works. All I have is hatred, and I will not disarm it until I feel I can trust you [the French].{{resize|120%|{{font color|blue|❞}}}}</span> |author=<span style="font-size:103%">[[Ho Chi Minh]] |source=according to [[Paul Mus]], the ''New York Times'' 1969 obituary{{sfn|NYT Paul Mus obituary}}</span>}} | |||
--> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
{| cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 | |||
|- | |||
! width="100%" | Ho Chi Minh to Paul Mus, 1945 | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: justify;" | <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span> I have no army, no diplomacy, no finances, no industry, no public works. All I have is hatred, and I will not disarm it until I feel I can trust you [the French]. <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❞</span> | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: right;" | --- [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho Chi Minh]], according to [[Wikipedia:Paul Mus|Paul Mus]], the ''New York Times'' 1969 obituary<ref name="NYT Paul Mus obituary"/> | |||
|} | |||
</blockquote> | |||
[[Wikipedia:Paul Mus|Paul Mus]] added "For every time [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho Chi Minh]] has trusted us, we betrayed him."<sup>[[#Year of the Pig|N.ytp2]]</sup><span id="Year of the Pig jump2"></span><!--{{efn|name=Paul Mus interview}}--> | |||
War broke out on [[#1945 Sep 23|1945 Sep 23]],<ref name=Logevall.2012/><sup>:115</sup> with [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] joining the [[Wikipedia:Viet Minh|Viet Minh]], an organization founded by Ho Chi Minh, to fight the French. | |||
=== Ho Chi Minh === | |||
[[File:Ho Chi Minh Declaration of Independence 1945 Sep 2.pdf|150px|thumb|left|[[Ho Chi Minh]] declaring Vietnam independence 1945 Sep 2.]] | |||
<!-- | |||
[[File:Ho Chi Minh 1946 and signature.jpg|150px|thumb|left|Ho Chi Minh in 1946, with dedication to his god-daughter and signature]] | |||
--> | |||
[[File:Ho Chi Minh, Giap, farewell to OSS team 1945.png|200px|thumb|right|[[Ho Chi Minh]] and Vo Nguyen Giap giving a farewell party to the US Army intelligence Deer Team<!--{{efn|name=OSS-HCM}}--> ([[Wikipedia:Office of Strategic Services|OSS]]),<sup>[[#HCM and OSS |N.hos]]</sup><span id="HCM and OSS jump"></span> 1945.]] | |||
For thirty years, from 1912 when [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho Chi Minh]] first visited Boston and New York City until about 1948-1949, Ho held out his hope that the US would provide military support for his anticolonialist resistance against the French.<ref name="Logevall.2012"/><sup>:xxii</sup><!--{{sfn|Logevall|2012|p=xxii}}--> | |||
Since that visit to the US in his early twenties, [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho]]---like Bich, a Francophile anticolonialist,<sup>[[#Francophile anticolonialists|N.fa2]]</sup><span id="Francophile anticolonialists jump2"></span> <sup>[[#Primary sources, quotations|N.psq3]]</sup><span id="Primary sources, quotations jump3"></span><!--{{efn|name=quotations-VQL}}--> who was both a communist and a nationalist<sup>[[#Ho communist nationalist|N.hcn]]</sup><span id="Ho communist nationalist jump"></span> <!--{{efn|"For many decades there would be a heated debate among diplomats, politicians and political scientists in every corner of the world as to whether [[Ho Chi Minh]] was a communist or a nationalist. The answer is that he was both."{{sfn|Tønnesson|1991|p=120}} }}--> ---developed a "lifelong admiration for Americans".<ref name=Langguth.2000/><sup>:55</sup><!--{{sfn|Langguth|2000|p=55}}--> <sup>[[#Ho admires Americans|N.haa]]</sup><span id="Ho admires Americans jump"></span><!--{{efn|As cited in Logevall (2012),{{sfn|Logevall|2012|p=721}} Note 22, p. 721.}}--> | |||
Seizing on the opportunity of the Japanese entering Tonkin in 1940 September<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:452</sup><!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=452}}--> to begin occupy Indochina (with French agreement)<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:452</sup><!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=452}}--> to rid Vietnam of French colonial yoke,<sup>[[#Ho insight revolution |N.hir]]</sup><span id="Ho insight revolution jump"></span><!--{{efn|Ho was convinced that with the Japanese occupation of Indochina and "with international events moving fast and Decoux's government isolated from metropolitan France, the potential for revolution in Vietnam was much enhanced."{{sfn|Logevall|2012|p=34}} }}--> [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho]] (who was in [[Wikipedia:Liuzhou|Liuzhou]], China) returned to the China-Vietnam border and began a "training program for cadres".<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:452</sup><!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=452}}--> Then on 1941 February 8,<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:524</sup><!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=524}}--> Ho crossed the border to enter Vietnam for the first time after 30 years away (from 1911 to 1941), and sheltered in cave Cốc Bó<ref name=Brocheux.2007/><sup>:73</sup><!--{{sfn|Brocheux|2007|p=73}}--> near the [[Wikipedia:vi:Pác_Bó|Pác Bó]] hamlet, in the Cao Bằng province, less than a mile from the Chinese border.<ref name="Logevall.2012"/><sup>:34</sup><!--{{sfn|Logevall|2012|p=34}}--> <sup>[[#Devillers incorrect info |N.dii]]</sup><span id="Devillers incorrect info jump"></span><!--{{efn|Devillers (1952) received incorrect information that Ho was in "Tsin Tsi" (Jingxi, Guangxi, China) as he wrote:{{sfn|Devillers|1952|p=97}} "En mai 1941, il réussit à convoquer à Tsin Tsi dans le Kwang Si, à 100 km environ au Nord de Cao Bang, un 'Congrès' (In May 1941, he succeeded in calling for a plenum at Jingxi in the Guangxi province, about 100 km north of the Cao Bang province)." }}--> There [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho]] convened a plenum in 1941 May, and founded the [[Wikipedia:Viet-Minh|Viet-Minh]], an anticolonialist organization that Bich joined in 1945.<sup>[[#Bich Viet Minh |N.bvm]]</sup><span id="Bich Viet Minh jump"></span> | |||
On 1941 Sep 8, two months after the total integration of Indochina into the Japanese military system, [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho]] (still known as Nguyen Ai Quoc at that time) in his call to arm to the people of Tonkin, announced the formation of the [[Wikipedia:Viet-Minh|Viet-Minh]] to "fight the French and Japanese fascism until the total liberation of Vietnam."<ref name=Devillers.1952/><sup>:97</sup> | |||
On 1941 Oct 25, the [[Wikipedia:Viet-Minh|Viet-Minh]] published its first manifesto: <!--"Unification of all social strata, of all revolutionary organizations, of all ethnic minorities. Alliance with all other oppressed peoples of Indochina. Collaboration with all French anti-fascist groups. One goal: the destruction of colonialism and imperialist fascism."<sup>[[#Viet Minh manifesto |N.vmm]]</sup><span id="Viet Minh manifesto jump"></span>--> <!--{{efn|"Union de toutes les couches sociales, de toutes les organisations révolutionnaires, de toutes les minorités ethniques. Alliance avec tous les autres peuples opprimés de l'Indochine. Collaboration avec tous les élements antifascistes français. Un but: la destruction du colonialisme et de l'impérialisme fascistes."{{sfn|Devillers|1952|p=97}}}}--> | |||
{| cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 | |||
|- | |||
! width="100%" | Viet Minh first manifesto, 1941 Oct 25 | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: justify;" | <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span> Unification of all social strata, of all revolutionary organizations, of all ethnic minorities. Alliance with all other oppressed peoples of Indochina. Collaboration with all French anti-fascist groups. One goal: the destruction of colonialism and imperialist fascism. <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❞</span> <sup>[[#Viet Minh manifesto |N.vmm]]</sup><span id="Viet Minh manifesto jump"></span> | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: right;" | | |||
|} | |||
[[File:General Chang Fa-Kwei (2nd from right) 1945.06.07.png|thumb|200px|left|<!--{{lang-de|[[:de:Zhang_Fakui|Gen. Chang Fa-kwei]]}}-->[[Wikipedia:de:Zhang_Fakui|Gen. Chang Fa-kwei]] (2nd from right), US Kwangsi Command Headquarters, 1945 Jun 7]] | |||
<!--[[File:Zhang Fakui.jpg|120px|thumb|right|[https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zhang_Fakui Gen. Zhang Fakui (in German)] {{lang-de|[[:de:Zhang_Fakui|Gen. Chang Fa-kwei]]}} in 1946.]]--> | |||
In 1942 August, [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho]] (named "Nguyen Ai Quoc" at that time) crossed the border into China with the intention of attracting the interest of the Allies in Chungking<ref name="Patti.1980"/><sup>:7</sup><!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=7}}--> (now [[Wikipedia:Chongqing|Chongqing]]) for the Vietnamese resistance movement, arrested by the Chinese on 1942 August 28 for being "French spy",<ref name="Patti.1980"/><sup>:525</sup><!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=525}}--> but the real reason was [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho]]'s political activities, viewed as "Communistic", instead of "nationalistic", by the Chinese ([[Wikipedia:Chiang Kai-shek|Chiang Kai-shek]]) and the Allies at Chungking (now [[Wikipedia:Chongqing|Chongqing]]).<ref name="Devillers.1952"/><sup>:103</sup><!--{{sfn|Devillers|1962|p=103}}--> <sup>[[#Notes on Vietnam history |N.vnh]]</sup><span id="Notes on Vietnam history jump"></span><!--{{efn|name=quotations-VQL|See quotations in ''Notes on Vietnam history''.{{sfn|Vu Quoc Loc|2023a}} }}--> Ho was detained for thirteen months, starting at the Tienpao prison,<ref name="Patti.1980"/><sup>:51</sup><!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=51}}--> <sup>[[#Ho Tienpao prison |N.htp]]</sup><span id="Ho Tienpao prison jump"></span><!--{{efn|Tienpao in the [[Wade-Giles]] transliteration is Tianbao in [[pinyin]].{{efn|name=analysis-VQL|See the analysis in ''Notes on Vietnam History''.{{sfn|Vu Quoc Loc|2023a}}}} }}--> moving through eighteen different prisons,<ref name="Logevall.2012"/><sup>:77</sup><!--{{sfn|Logevall|2012|p=77}}--> <sup>[[#Notes on Vietnam history |N.vnh2]]</sup><span id="Notes on Vietnam history jump2"></span><!--{{efn|name=quotations-VQL}}--> and ending up at Liuchow<ref name="Patti.1980"/><sup>:46</sup><!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=46}}--> (now [[Wikipedia:Liuzhou|Liuzhou]]), from where he was released on 1943 September 10, after changing his name from Nguyen Ai Quoc to [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho Chi Minh]].<ref name="Patti.1980"/><sup>:453</sup><!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=453}}--> At that time, the name "Nguyen Ai Quoc" was very popular, while hardly any one heard of the new name "[[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho Chi Minh]]".<sup>[[#Nguyen Ai Quoc |N.naq]]</sup><span id="Nguyen Ai Quoc jump"></span><!--{{efn|[[:vi:Hoàng_Quốc_Việt|Hoang Quoc Viet]] recounted in his [https://openvault.wgbh.org/catalog/V_F8F9FACD595E4A74BCA28655493A1743 1981 interview with the PBS]: "I was sent to the southern part of the country at one point to discuss things with our comrades there. The discussion was very heated and it was very difficult to iron things out. Then I happened to mention the name Ho Chi Minh. These people in the south asked me who Ho Chi Minh was. | |||
I told them that he was Nguyen Ai Quoc. They all stood up and clapped and said that as I was a representative sent by Ho Chi Minh then there was no need for any further discussion. This was because at that time there was a feud going on between the so called "Old Viet Minhs" and "New Viet Minhs". But when they heard from me that Ho Chi Minh was indeed Nguyen Ai Quoc, they were all overjoyed, saying that if Nguyen Ai Quoc had returned home to lead the movement then everything would be solved, that there should be unity and solidarity."}}--> | |||
[[File:Maj Gen Claire Chennault 1945.07.23.png|150px|thumb|right|Maj. Gen. [[Wikipedia:Claire Chennault|Claire Chennault]] on 1945 Jul 23, four months after he met [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho Chi Minh]] on 1945 Mar 29.]] | |||
[[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho Chi Minh]] returned to Vietnam in 1944 September, after obtaining the authorization from the Chinese authority, Gen. Chang Fa-Kwei (<!--[https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zhang_Fakui Zhang Fakui (German)]-->[[Wikipedia:de:Zhang Fakui|Zhang Fakui (German)]], <!--[https://vi.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tr%C6%B0%C6%A1ng_Ph%C3%A1t_Khu%C3%AA Trương Phát Khuê] (Vietnamese)-->[[Wikipedia:vi:Trương Phát Khuê|Trương Phát Khuê (Vietnamese)]]) <!--{{lang-de|[[:de:Zhang_Fakui|Gen. Chang Fa-kwei]]}} ([[:de:Zhang_Fakui|Zhang Fakui]], {{lang-vi|[[:vi:Trương_Phát_Khuê|Trương Phát Khuê]]}}){{emdash}}-->---who was under "severe pressure from the Japanese ''Ichigo'' offensive" to obtain intelligence in Indochina---and after submitting the "Outline of the Plan for the Activities of Entering Vietnam".<ref name="Tonnesson.1991"/><sup>:134</sup><!--{{sfn|Tønnesson|1991|p=134}}--> | |||
<sup>[[#Ho in Vietnam 1944 |N.hvn]]</sup><span id="Ho in Vietnam 1944 jump"></span> | |||
<!--{{efn|A French report at that time stated: "more than 200 political refugees had passed from China to Tonkin, most of them armed with pistols and daggers (''poiguards''), and that among them was a certain 'Nguyen Hai Quoc', who had crossed the border under the name of 'Ho Chi Minh'. Nguyen Hai Quoc, a man 'around sixty years old', was 'the probable leader' of the [[Wikipedia:Viet Minh|Viet Minh]]: 'Under Nguyen Hai Quoc's leadership, the new elements coming from Kwangsi have undertaken to reawaken the movement and bring back to their former activities the implacables who had taken refuge in the mountains'" {{sfn|Tønnesson|1991|pp=118, 208}} | |||
}}--> | |||
All three protagonists---the French [[Wikipedia:Vichy_France|Vichy]] colonialists, the Japanese occupiers, and the [[Wikipedia:Viet-Minh|Viet-Minh]]---were deceived by US war plan,<sup>[[#US war plan |N.uwp]]</sup><span id="US war plan jump"></span> | |||
<!--{{efn|"... to confuse the Japanese, possibly the French as well, concerning US | |||
intentions. Perhaps Roosevelt meant the plan seriously at first, and then changed | |||
it into a deceptive operation when he realized that it could not be carried out ... Indochina came to play a similar role in Roosevelt's war against Japan as Norway | |||
occupied in Churchill's war against Germany. For a long time, Churchill toyed with | |||
the idea of a Norwegian landing as a way of securing the transport route to Russia | |||
and bringing Sweden into the war. Then, when his generals and admirals adamantly | |||
refused to carry out the project, Norway instead became the focus of elaborate | |||
deception and diversion plans, aiming at inducing Hitler to keep as many troops as | |||
possible in an irrelevant theatre."{{sfn|Tønnesson|1991|pp=170, 220}} | |||
}}--> | |||
and expected a US invasion of Indochina.<sup>[[#US invasion of Indochina |N.uii]]</sup><span id="US invasion of Indochina jump"></span> | |||
<!--{{efn|The US was the only country among the Allies (British and Chinese) that could invade Indochina; see Chap. 4, Colliding Plans, in Tønnesson (1991).{{sfn|Tønnesson|1991|p=156}} | |||
}}--> | |||
Such expectation was the main reason<ref name="Tonnesson.1991"/><sup>:209</sup><!--{{sfn|Tønnesson|1991|p=209}}--> that, in 1945 February-March, during an "unusually cold month of February,"<ref name="Patti.1980"/><sup>:56</sup><!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=56}}--> | |||
<sup>[[#Cold February 1945 |N.cf45]]</sup><span id="Cold February 1945 jump"></span> | |||
<!--{{efn|"13-2-1945, Tết Nguyên Đán Ất-Dậu. Chưa bao giờ rét như thế này. Tại Hà Nội, buổi trưa, hàn thử biểu xuống tới 4 độ." It has never been that cold. The temperature went down to four degrees Celcius at noon in Hanoi on 1945 Feb 13, Tết, new year day, Lunar year Ất-Dậu.{{sfn|Đoàn-Thêm|1965|p=3}} | |||
}} --> | |||
[[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho]] once again crossed back into China, and walked from the [[Wikipedia:vi:Pác_Bó|Pác Bó]] hamlet to [[Wikipedia:Kunming|Kunming]] to meet<sup>[[#Walking to Kunming |N.wtk]]</sup><span id="Walking to Kunming jump"></span> | |||
<!--{{efn|It takes about two weeks to walk from [[:vi:Pác_Bó|Pác Bó]] to [[Kunming]] using likely the same road (among several others) undertaken by the invading Mongols in the thirteen century.{{sfn|Vu-Quoc-Loc|2023b}} | |||
}}--> | |||
(and to "make friends with"<ref name="Tonnesson.1991"/><sup>:210</sup><!--{{sfn|Tønnesson|1991|p=210}}-->) American [[Wikipedia:Office of Strategic Services|OSS]] and [[Wikipedia:Office of War Information|OWI]] (Office of War Information) officers to exchange intelligence.<sup>[[#Ho met OSS |N.hmo]]</sup><span id="Ho met OSS jump"></span> | |||
<!--{{efn|[[Ho Chi Minh|Ho]]'s "mission was probably to obtain information on the development of the war, try to gain Allied recognition for his league and perhaps also secure the [[Wikipedia:Viet Minh|Viet Minh]] a role in a forthcoming invasion". At the same time, [[:vi:Hoàng_Quốc_Việt|Hoang Quoc Viet]] carried out a similar mission in Kwangsi (now [[Guangxi]]) with the Chinese {{lang-de|[[:de:Zhang_Fakui|Gen. Chang Fa-kwei]]}}, who told him that "I hope we shall soon meet again in Hanoi".{{sfn|Tønnesson|1991|p=210}} See also the [https://openvault.wgbh.org/catalog/V_F8F9FACD595E4A74BCA28655493A1743 PBS interview with Hoang Quoc Viet in 1981]. | |||
}}--> | |||
<ref name="Tonnesson.1991"/><sup>:238</sup><!--{{sfn|Tønnesson|1991|p=238}}--> [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho]]'s report to the [[Wikipedia:Office_of_Strategic_Services|OSS]] mentioned the Japanese ''coup de force'' on the evening of 1945 March 9.<ref name="Tonnesson.1991"/><sup>:238</sup><!--{{sfn|Tønnesson|1991|p=238}}--> | |||
In [[Wikipedia:Kunming|Kunming]], [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho]] requested [[Wikipedia:Office_of_Strategic_Services|OSS]] Lt. Charles Fenn<sup>[[#Fenn helped Ho |N.fhh]]</sup><span id="Fenn helped Ho jump"></span> | |||
<!--{{efn|[[Office_of_Strategic_Services|OSS]] Lt. Charles Fenn helped "make Ho Chi Minh the undisputed leader of the [[Wikipedia:Viet Minh|Viet Minh]] in 1945".{{sfn|Bartholomew-Feis|2006|p=96}} | |||
}}--> | |||
to arrange for a meeting with Gen. [[Wikipedia:Claire Chennault|Claire Chennault]], commander of the Flying Tigers.<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:58</sup><!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=58}}--> In the meeting that occurred on 1945 Mar 29, [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho]] requested a portrait of [[Wikipedia:Claire Chennault|Chennault]], who signed across the bottom "Yours sincerely, Claire L. Chennault".<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:58</sup><!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=58}}--> [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho]] displayed the portrait of [[Wikipedia:Claire Chennault|Chennault]], along with those of [[Wikipedia:Lenin|Lenin]] and [[Wikipedia:Mao|Mao]], in his lodging at [[Wikipedia:vi:Chiến_khu_Tân_Trào|Tân Trào]] as "tangible evidence to convince skeptical Vietnamese nationalists that he had American support".<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:58</sup><!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=58}}--> As additional evidence, [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho]] also possessed six brand-new US Colt .45 pistols in original wrappings that he requested and got from Charles Fenn.<ref name="Fenn.1973"/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/hochiminhbiograp0000fenn/page/78/mode/2up?view=theater&q=pistols 79]</sup><!--{{sfn|Fenn|1973|p=79}}--> <ref name="Bartholomew-Feis.2006"/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/osshochiminhunex0000bart/page/158/mode/2up?q=%22pistols%22&view=theater 158]</sup><!--{{sfn|Bartholomew-Feis|2006|p=158}}--> This "seemingly insignificant quantity" of arms,<sup>[[#Ho gave pistols |N.hgp]]</sup><span id="Ho gave pistols jump"></span> | |||
<!--{{efn|That Ho gave the new pistols to his rivals, but not to his own people, testified to his political acumen in rallying his rivals to accept him as the top leader.{{sfn|Vu Quoc Loc|2023a}} | |||
}}--> | |||
together with "Chennault's autographed photograph" as evidence, convinced other factions of the primacy of the [[Wikipedia:Viet Minh|Viet Minh]]. [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho]]'s American-backing ruse worked.<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:58</sup><!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=58}}--> | |||
[[File:Ho Chi Minh, Bao Dai, Siphanouvong 1945.png|200px|thumb|left|[[Wikipedia:Souphanouvong|Souphanouvong]], [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho Chi Minh]], Vinh Thuy ([[Wikipedia:Bao Dai|Bao Dai]]), 1945 Sep 4]] | |||
In [[Wikipedia:Cochin China|Cochin China]] (the south),<sup>[[#Taberd Cochin China |N.tcc]]</sup><span id="Taberd Cochin China jump"></span> | |||
<!--{{efn|[[Jean-Louis Taberd]] was likely among the first to explain the meaning of "[[Cochin China]]" in his 1837 scientific article; see quotation in ''Notes on Vietnam History''.{{sfn|Vu Quoc Loc|2023a}} | |||
}}--> | |||
where Bich lived and worked, [https://indochine.uqam.ca/en/historical-dictionary/1464-trn-vn-giau-h-nam-hoang-trn-vn-19112010.html Tran Van Giau] ([[Wikipedia:vi:Trần_Văn_Giàu|Trần Văn Giàu]] in Vietnamese), a [[Wikipedia:Viet Minh|Viet Minh]] leader and "[[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho Chi Minh]]'s trusted friend",<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/whyvietnamprelud0000patt/page/186/mode/2up?view=theater&q=%22the+Allies+with+arms%2C+equipment+and+training%22 186]</sup><!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=186}}--> on 1945 Aug 22 used [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho]]'s ruse of "American backing for the [[Wikipedia:Viet Minh|Viet Minh]]", to convince other pro-Japanese nationalist groups (Phuc Quoc, Dai Viet, United National Front<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/whyvietnamprelud0000patt/page/524/mode/2up?view=theater&q=%22United+National+Front%22 524]</sup><!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=524}}-->) and religious sects ([[Wikipedia:Cao Dai|Cao Dai]], [[Wikipedia:Hoa Hao|Hoa Hao]]) that they would be outlawed by the invading Allies, and thus should accept the leadership of the [[Wikipedia:Viet Minh|Viet Minh]], which had strong support of "the Allies with arms, equipment and training".<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/whyvietnamprelud0000patt/page/186/mode/2up?view=theater&q=%22the+Allies+with+arms%2C+equipment+and+training%22 186]</sup><!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=186}}--> | |||
Fearing a US invasion with the French colonialists helping, the Japanese initiated operation Bright Moon (''Meigo sakusen''), leading to a ''coup de force'' on 1945 March 9 to neutralize the French forces and to remove the French colonial administration in Indochina<ref name="Tonnesson.2007"/><sup>:65</sup> (and thus the status of [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]]'s job in the French colonial government). | |||
{{Image|Leclerc convoy entered Hanoi 1947 Mar 18, French and Viet-Minh flags.JPG|right|200px|Leclerc's convoy entered Hanoi on 1946 Mar 18, flying both French and Viet-Minh flags.}} | |||
Two days later, on 1945 Mar 11, then Emperor Bao Dai abolished the "French-Annamite Treaty of Protectorate of 1884"<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:73</sup> that put Vietnam under French protectorate, and proclaimed Vietnam independence:<sup>[[#Notes on Vietnam history |N.vnh3]]</sup><span id="Notes on Vietnam history jump3"></span> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
{| cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 | |||
|- | |||
! width="100%" | Bao Dai's proclamation of Vietnam independence, 1945 Mar 11 | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: justify;" | <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span> In view of the world situation, and that of Asia in particular, the Government of Viet-Nam publicly proclaims that from this day forward, the protectorate treaty with France is abolished and that the Country resumes its rights to independence. | |||
<span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span> Viet-Nam will strive using its own means to develop itself to deserve the condition of an independent State and will follow the directives of the Greater East Asia Manifesto, considering itself as a member of the Greater East Asia, to contribute its resources to the common prosperity. Therefore, the Government of Viet-Nam trusts in the loyalty of Japan and is determined to collaborate with this country to achieve the aforementioned goal. <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❞</span> | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: right;" | --- Bao Dai, Hue, the 27th day of the 1st month of the 20th year Bao Dai (1945 Mar 11).<ref name=Devillers.1952/><sup>:125</sup> | |||
|} | |||
</blockquote> | |||
[[File:1946 Ho Chi Minh Leclerc Sainteny 2.png|thumb|200px|left|[[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho Chi Minh]], [[Wikipedia:Philippe_Leclerc_de_Hauteclocque|Leclerc]], [[Wikipedia:Jean Sainteny|Sainteny]], 1946 Mar 18.]] | |||
The resulting power vacuum<ref name="Tonnesson.2007"/><sup>:64</sup> following this ''coup de force'' changed the political situation, and provided a favorable setting for the [[Wikipedia:Viet Minh|Viet Minh]] takeover of the government.<ref name="Tonnesson.2007"/><sup>:73</sup> In 1945 April, [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho]] walked a perilous journey from [[Wikipedia:vi:Pác_Bó|Pác Bó]] to [[Wikipedia:vi:Chiến_khu_Tân_Trào|Tân Trào]], the [[Wikipedia:Viet Minh|Viet Minh]] headquarters in the Liberated Area. There, on 1945 August 16, [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho]] called for a general uprising to throw out the Japanese occupiers that ultimately led to the [[Wikipedia:August Revolution|August Revolution]].<sup>[[#Power vacuum to August Revolution |N.pvar]]</sup><span id="Power vacuum to August Revolution jump"></span> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
{| cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 | |||
|- | |||
! width="100%" | Power vacuum yielded a bloodless revolution, 1945 Mar 9 - Aug 26 | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: justify;" | <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span> In August and September 1945, the white-bearded Ho Chi Minh emerged as the winner of the Indochina game. All along he had expected Japan to be defeated, and he had consistently sought to tie his own movement to the United States and Nationalist China. In 1945 he was guilty of the same false assumptions as the Japanese. He expected an Allied invasion and prepared himself for assisting the invading forces. Instead he got a power vacuum and a sudden Japanese surrender. This provided him with an occasion more favorable for bloodless revolution than he could ever have imagined. He then proclaimed the republic that would later defeat both France and the United States. <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❞</span> | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: right;" | --- Tonnesson 2007, Franklin Roosevelt, Trusteeship and Indochina: A reassessment.<ref name=Tonnesson.2007/><sup>:73</sup> | |||
|} | |||
</blockquote> | |||
Even though being a son of a [[Cao Dai]] pope,<ref name="Tram-Huong.2003"/><!--{{sfn|Tram-Huong|2003}}--> <ref name="NNC.2018"/><!--{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|2018}}--> <ref name="NNC.2021"/> <sup>[[#Cao Dai |N.cd]]</sup><span id="Cao Dai jump"></span> [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] joined the [[Wikipedia:Viet Minh|Viet Minh]] in 1945,<sup>[[#Bich joined Viet Minh |N.bjvm]]</sup><span id="Bich joined Viet Minh jump"></span> | |||
<!--{{efn|See the quotation from a French doctoral thesis in ''Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography''.{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|Vu-Quoc-Loc|2023}} | |||
}}--> | |||
instead of the [[Wikipedia:Cao Dai|Cao Dai]] force. | |||
<!--{{Image|Ho Chi Minh and d'Argenlieu on Emile-Bertin 1945 Mar 24.JPG|right|350px|Add image caption here.}}--> | |||
[[File:Ho Chi Minh and d'Argenlieu on Emile-Bertin 1945 Mar 24.JPG|thumb|right|250px|Ho Chi Minh and d'Argenlieu on the French battleship ''Emile-Bertin'', 1946 Mar 24.]] | |||
Under the pressure of a "strong resolution calling for Bao Dai's abdication" by the "leftist students and faculty" in Hanoi around 1945 Aug 20<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:185-6</sup> and also by the Viet Minh,<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:186</sup> Bao Dai "voluntarily"<ref name=Tonnesson.2010/><sup>:12</sup> abdicated to become the "Supreme Advisor"<ref name=Devillers.1952/><sup>:143</sup> <sup>[[#Bao Dai abdication|N.bda2]]</sup><span id="Bao Dai abdication jump2"></span> to the new government of Ho Chi Minh, who "did not thus declare but ''confirm'' Vietnam's independence in his famous address to the people in Ba Dinh square in Hanoi"<ref name=Tonnesson.2010/><sup>:12</sup> on 1945 Sep 2.<sup>[[#HCM Vietnam Independence |N.hvi]]</sup><span id="HCM Vietnam Independence jump"></span> | |||
<!--<span style="background-color:yellow">24.5.27, TO BE WRITTEN, March 6 Accords, Ellen Hammer</span>. --> | |||
After the August Revolution in 1945, the French began to negotiate their return to Tonkin with both the Viet Minh and the Chinese army coming to disarm the defeated Japanese north of the 16th parallel. Ho Chi Minh was weary of the Chinese, who might stay in Vietnam permanently, signed the ''preliminary'' March 6 [1946] Accords<sup>[[#March 6 Accords |N.m6a1]]</sup><span id="March 6 Accords jump1"></span> <sup>[[#March 6 Accords jump3|N.m6a3]]</sup> with Jean Sainteny, "commissioner of the French Republic in Tonkin and North Annam [central Vietnam],"<ref name=Tonnesson.2010/><sup>:9</sup> to agree to let the French army under General Leclerc to enter Tonkin. On 1946 Mar 18, "General Leclerc led 1,200 troops and 220 vehicles,"<ref name=Marr.2007/><sup>:90</sup> bearing both French and Viet-Minh flags,<ref name=Devillers.1952/><sup>:238</sup> <sup>[[#Leclerc entered Hanoi |N.leh]]</sup><span id="Leclerc entered Hanoi jump"></span> "into Hanoi to the relief and delight of more than ten thousand French civilians who had gathered along Trang Tien Street to cheer and sing” the French national anthem.<ref name=Marr.2007/><sup>:90</sup> | |||
After his entry into Hanoi, "Leclerc quickly established cordial relations with Ho Chi Minh."<ref name="Gunn.2013"/> | |||
Then High Commissioner d'Argenlieu, the "abomination of Vietnam,"<sup>[[#d'Argenlieu recall |N.dar2]]</sup><span id="d'Argenlieu recall jump2"></span> insisted to meet Ho Chi Minh on the French battleship ''Emile-Bertin'', "bristling with guns" to impress on Ho French military power, in the Ha Long Bay on 1946 Mar 24, together with Gen. Leclerc and Jean Sainteny for a follow-up discussion stipulated by the preliminary March 6 Accords.<sup>[[#HCM Sainteny Catalina |N.hsc]]</sup><span id="HCM Sainteny Catalina jump"></span> The key issue was to find a venue for a conference leading to a permanent agreement. While d'Argenlieu wanted to have the conference in Dalat, Cochin China (south Vietnam), Ho together with Leclerc and Sainteny wanted to meet in Paris. | |||
<!--{{Image|Ho Chi Minh observing battle 1950 Sep.JPG|right|350px|Add image caption here.}}--> | |||
[[File:Ho Chi Minh observing battle 1950 Sep.JPG|thumb|left|250px|Ho Chi Minh observing a battlefield in 1950 Sep.]] | |||
In May 1946, Ho Chi Minh boarded an airplane for France.<sup>[[#Ho in France 1946 |N.hif]]</sup><span id="Ho in France 1946 jump"></span> The conference at Fontainebleau, outside of Paris, failed to reach an agreement. The main disagreements, "nearly insoluble fundamental differences of viewpoint,"<ref name=Sainteny.1972/><sup>:84</sup> centered around the unification of the three regions, called the "three Ky," namely Tonkin (north), Annam (central), Cochin China (south Vietnam), and the independence of Vietnam, to which France only wanted to give an "autonomy".<ref name=Sainteny.1972/><sup>:84</sup> On 1946 August 1, D'Argenlieu undercut the Fontaineblau negotiation by calling for a "federation" conference in Dalat, giving the autonomy status to Cochin China, thus preempted the unification of the "three Ky."<ref name=Sainteny.1972/><sup>:84</sup> Ho told Sainteny: | |||
<blockquote> | |||
{| cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 | |||
|- | |||
! width="100%" | Ho Chi Minh to Jean Sainteny, 1946 September | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: justify;" | <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span> Then if we must fight, we will fight. You will kill ten of my men while we will kill one of yours. But you will be the ones to end up exhausted. And in the long run, I will win! <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❞</span> | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: right;" | --- Sainteny 1972, ''Ho Chi Minh and His Vietnam''.<ref name=Sainteny.1972/><sup>:66, 89</sup> | |||
|} | |||
</blockquote> | |||
CBS reporter [[Wikipedia:David Schoenbrun|David Schoenbrun]] interviewed [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho Chi Minh]] on 1946 Sep 11, the same day that a telegram was dispatched from the High Commissioner d'Argenlieu to the French Indochina Committee on the arrest of [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] on 1946 Aug 25.:<sup>[[#NNC.VQL.2023 |N.bb]]</sup><span id="NNC.VQL.2023 jump"></span> | |||
<!--{{efn|See ''Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography''.{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|Vu-Quoc-Loc|2023}}. | |||
}}--> | |||
<!-- | |||
{{Quote frame | |||
|quote=<p><span style="font-size:110%">{{resize|120%|{{font color|blue|❝}}}} President Ho, how can you possibly fight a war against the modern French army? You have nothing. You've just told me, what a poor country you are. You don't even have a bank, let alone an army, and guns, and modern weapons, the French planes, tanks, napalm. How can you fight the French?</span> | |||
</p> | |||
<p><span style="font-size:110%"> | |||
{{resize|120%|{{font color|blue|❝}}}}And he [Ho] said: Oh we have a lot of things that can match the French weapons. Tanks are no good in swamps. And we have swamps in which the French tanks will sink. And we have another secret weapon, it's nationalism. And don't think that a small ragged band cannot fight against a modern army. It will be a war between an elephant and a tiger. If the tiger ever stands still the elephant will crush him and pierce him with his mighty tusks. But the tiger of Indochina is not going to stand still. We're going to hide in our jungles by day and steal out by night. And the tiger will jump on the back of the elephant and tear huge chunks out of his flesh and then jump back into the jungle. And after a while the mighty elephant will bleed to death.{{resize|120%|{{font color|blue|❞}}}}</span></p> |author=<span style="font-size:103%">CBS reporter [[David Schoenbrun]] |source=Youtube video [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XWY9KbIXpdI&t=190s French involvement in Vietnam & Dien Bien Phu - 1962, time 3:10].{{sfn|Giniger|1984}}</span>}} | |||
--> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
{| cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 | |||
|- | |||
! width="100%" | CBS Schoenbrun interviewed Ho Chi Minh, 1946 Sep 11 | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: justify;" | <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span> President Ho, how can you possibly fight a war against the modern French army? You have nothing. You've just told me, what a poor country you are. You don't even have a bank, let alone an army, and guns, and modern weapons, the French planes, tanks, napalm. How can you fight the French? | |||
<span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span> And he [Ho] said: Oh we have a lot of things that can match the French weapons. Tanks are no good in swamps. And we have swamps in which the French tanks will sink. And we have another secret weapon, it's nationalism. And don't think that a small ragged band cannot fight against a modern army. It will be a war between an elephant and a tiger. If the tiger ever stands still the elephant will crush him and pierce him with his mighty tusks. But the tiger of Indochina is not going to stand still. We're going to hide in our jungles by day and steal out by night. And the tiger will jump on the back of the elephant and tear huge chunks out of his flesh and then jump back into the jungle. And after a while the mighty elephant will bleed to death. <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❞</span> | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: right;" | --- CBS reporter [[Wikipedia:David Schoenbrun|David Schoenbrun]], Youtube video [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XWY9KbIXpdI&t=190s ''French involvement in Vietnam & Dien Bien Phu - 1962'', time 3:10].<ref name="Giniger.1984"/> | |||
|} | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<!--<span style="background-color:yellow">24.5.27, Bich wrote about the French use of American-made [[napalm]] bombs in his 1962 paper. TO BE WRITTEN</span>--> | |||
[[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] wrote about the French use of American-made napalm bombs; see Section [[#Napalm bombs|Napalm bombs]]. | |||
[[File: | === Franklin D. Roosevelt === | ||
' | [[File:FDR 1944 Portrait.jpg|150px|thumb|left|[[Franklin D. Roosevelt]], circa 1944]] | ||
<!--<span style="background-color:yellow">I AM HERE Updated 2024.07.21 - Started before 2023.12.30.</span>--> | |||
If [[Wikipedia:Franklin D. Roosevelt|Franklin D. Roosevelt]] ([[Wikipedia:Franklin D. Roosevelt|FDR]]) had lived beyond 1945 Apr 12, when he died, he "would have tried to keep France from forcibly reclaiming control of Indochina, and might well have succeeded, thereby changing the flow of history,"<ref name="Logevall.2012"/><sup>:710</sup> meaning the [[Wikipedia:First Indochina War|First Indochina War]] with more than half a million deaths,<sup>[[#French War casualties |N.fwc]]</sup><span id="French War casualties jump"></span> <!--<span style="background-color:yellow">I AM HERE 2024.07.21.</span>--> and the [[Wikipedia:Second Indochina War|Second Indochina War]] with more than three million deaths,<sup>[[#American War casualties |N.awc]]</sup><span id="American War casualties jump"></span> would be avoided; then [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] would not join the [[Wikipedia:Viet Minh|Viet Minh]] to fight the French colonialists. | |||
FDR blamed European empires for wars: "European colonialism had helped bring on both the First World War and the current one, he was convinced, and the continued existence of empires would in all likelihood result in future conflagrations."<ref name=Logevall.2012></ref><sup>:46</sup> "What is more, like Wilson, he [FDR] emerged from World War I convinced that the scramble for empire not only had set the European powers against one another and created the conditions that led to war, but also worked against securing a negotiated settlement during the fighting."<ref name=Logevall.2012></ref><sup>:47</sup> | |||
In WWII, FDR believed that "France had ceased to exist," despite having the strongest army in Europe, <ref name=Logevall.2012></ref><sup>:27</sup> and thought that European countries (France and Germany) could not live together peacefully: Both FDR and his Secretary of State Cordell Hull "believed that Franco-German disputes lay at the root of much of Europe's inability to maintain the peace".<ref name=Logevall.2012></ref><sup>:44</sup> | |||
[[File:Atlantic Charter FDR-Churchill.jpg|200px|thumb|right|Roosevelt and Churchill, The Atlantic Charter conference, 1941]] | |||
Moreover, de Gaulle's Indochina cause was hampered as FDR disliked de Gaulle's pomposity, egotism, and "his serene confidence that he represented the destiny of the French people."<ref name=Logevall.2012></ref><sup>:44</sup> "In social interaction, de Gaulle was as austere and pompous as FDR was relaxed and jovial."<ref name=Logevall.2012></ref><sup>:44</sup> | |||
<!--"That de Gaulle shared Vichy's desire to preserve the French Empire only enhanced Roosevelt's disdain."--> | |||
That both de Gaulle and the Vichy government wanted to preserve the French Empire further “enhanced Roosevelt’s disdain" for de Gaulle.<ref name=Logevall.2012></ref><sup>:46</sup> | |||
Cordell Hull was convinced that "de Gaulle was a fascist and an enemy of the United States."<ref name=Logevall.2012></ref><sup>:45</sup> | |||
By the time of Pearl Harbor, FDR had become a "committed anticolonialist,"<ref name=Logevall.2012></ref><sup>:46</sup> who wanted "complete independence for all or almost all European colonies",<ref name="Logevall.2012"/><sup>:74</sup><!--{{sfn|Logevall|2012|p=74}}--> as evidenced by his speech in March 1941: | |||
<blockquote> | |||
{| cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 | |||
|- | |||
! width="100%" | | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: justify;" | <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span> There has never been, there isn't now, and there never will be, any race of people on earth fit to serve as masters over their fellow men.… We believe that any nationality, no matter how small, has the inherent right to its own nationhood. <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❞</span> | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: right;" | ---[[Wikipedia:Franklin D. Roosevelt|Franklin D. Roosevelt]], address to White House Correspondents' Association, March 1941.<ref name="Logevall.2012"/><sup>:72</sup><!--{{sfn|Logevall|2012|p=72}}--> | |||
|} | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<!--"Even before the start of World War II, FDR had reached the conclusion that, for good or ill, complete independence was foreordained for all or almost all the European colonies." Logevall 2012 p.74--> | |||
"Roosevelt went out of his way to single out France in Indochina and often cited French rule there as a flagrant example of onerous and exploitative colonialism."<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:51</sup> | |||
[[Wikipedia:FDR|Roosevelt]]'s anti-colonialist speech was subsequently encoded in the third point of [[Wikipedia:The Atlantic Charter|The Atlantic Charter]],<sup>[[#Complete Atlantic Charter |N.cac]]</sup><span id="Complete Atlantic Charter jump"></span> | |||
<!--{{efn|See the [https://www.fdrlibrary.org/atlantic-charter complete Atlantic Charter] from the [[FDR]] Presidential Library and Museum.}}--> | |||
which Churchill was reluctant to agree to, worrying that it would affect the British colonies:<sup>[[#Churchill, Atlantic Charter |N.chac]]</sup><span id="Churchill, Atlantic Charter jump"></span> | |||
<!-- | |||
{{Quote frame |quote=<span style="font-size:110%">{{resize|120%|{{font color|blue|❝}}}} Third, they{{efn|"They" here means [[FDR]] and [[Churchill]] and their respective governments.{{sfn|FRUS-Atlantic|1941}}}} respect the right of all peoples to choose the form of government under which they will live; and they wish to see sovereign rights and self-government restored to those who have been forcibly deprived of them;{{resize|120%|{{font color|blue|❞}}}}</span> |author=<span style="font-size:103%">[[Franklin D. Roosevelt]] and [[Winston Churchill]] |source=[[The Atlantic Charter]], August 14, 1941.{{sfn|FRUS-Atlantic|1941}}</span>}} | |||
--> | |||
{| cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 | |||
|- | |||
! width="100%" | The Atlantic Charter, 1941 | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: justify;" | <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span> Third, they<sup>[[#They in Atlantic Charter |N.tac]]</sup><span id="They in Atlantic Charter jump"></span><!--{{efn|"They" here means [[FDR]] and [[Churchill]] and their respective governments.{{sfn|FRUS-Atlantic|1941}} }}--> respect the right of all peoples to choose the form of government under which they will live; and they wish to see sovereign rights and self-government restored to those who have been forcibly deprived of them; <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❞</span> | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: right;" | ---[[Wikipedia:Franklin D. Roosevelt|Franklin D. Roosevelt]] and [[Wikipedia:Winston Churchill|Winston Churchill]], [[Wikipedia:The Atlantic Charter|The Atlantic Charter]], August 14, 1941.<ref name="FRUS-Atlantic.1941"/><!--{{sfn|FRUS-Atlantic|1941}}--> | |||
|} | |||
[[File:Hurley Chiang Kai-Shek Chennault Wedemeyer 1945.png|thumb|200px|left|US ambassador Hurley, Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek, Gen. Claire Chennault, Gen. Albert Wedemeyer, 1945]] | |||
[[Wikipedia:The Atlantic Charter|The Atlantic Charter]] inspired Third-World countries from Algeria to Vietnam in their fight for independence,<ref name=FRUS-Atlantic.1941/> as Ho Chi Minh often referred to [[Wikipedia:The Atlantic Charter|The Atlantic Charter]] in his letters to US government officials: “the carrying out of the Atlantic and San Francisco Charters implies the eradication of imperialism and all forms of colonial oppression,” wrote Ho Chi Minh to US Secretary of State James F. Byrnes in the [[Wikipedia:Harry S. Truman|Harry S. Truman]] administration on 1945 Oct 22.<ref name="Ho to Byrnes.1945"/><sup>:2</sup> <sup>[[#Ho Atlantic Charter |N.hac]]</sup><span id="Ho Atlantic Charter jump"></span> | |||
One of Roosevelt's great war aims was to liberate the Indochinese, whom he dismissed as "a people of small stature," from the French colonialism.<ref name=Tonnesson.1991></ref><sup>:1</sup> | |||
FDR envisioned a new world order in which the "four policemen," i.e., the US, the USSR, Great Britain and China, would maintain peace in the world. He discussed this concept with Stalin in Tehran in 1943.<ref name=Tonnesson.2007/><sup>:60</sup> But failing to build up China as a great power, FDR encountered difficulties with his vision for Indochina.<ref name=Tonnesson.2007/><sup>:60</sup> | |||
Yet, despite the "accepted wisdom" of historians prior to 2007 that (1) "Roosevelt abandoned or watered down his Indochina policy before he died," and (2) "the Truman administration built upon Roosevelt’s policy revision by endorsing the French return to Indochina," a 2007 argument was presented that "Roosevelt, though he was under pressure to abandon his policy, did not yield before he died."<ref name=Tonnesson.2007/><sup>:60</sup> | |||
[[File:FDR on 1945 Apr 11, the day before he died.jpg|thumb|150px|right|FDR on 1945 Apr 11,<sup>[[#Before FDR died |N.brd]]</sup><span id="Before FDR died jump"></span> the day before he died.<sup>[[#FDR died |N.frd]]</sup><span id="FDR died jump"></span>]] | |||
Even though US intelligence (through "intercepted Japanese diplomatic messages"<ref name=Tonnesson.2007/><sup>:65</sup>) knew about the Japanese's concern of a US invasion and their plan to topple the French colonial government in Indochina since as early as 1945 Feb 11, none of this information was passed on to de Gaulle.<ref name=Tonnesson.2007/><sup>:65</sup> | |||
On 1945 Mar 8, the day before the Japanese coup de force, Roosevelt ordered Lt Gen. [[Wikipedia:Albert C. Wedemeyer|Albert C. Wedemeyer]]---US commander of the China Theater, which included "mainland China, Manchuria, and Indochina, plus all the offshore islands, except Taiwan," and who began his assignment at the end of 1944 Oct<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:14</sup> --- "not to hand over supplies---any supplies at all---to French forces operating in Asia."<ref name=Tonnesson.2007/><sup>:66</sup> | |||
"By fuelling French and Japanese expectations of a US invasion, Roosevelt, [[Wikipedia:Albert C. Wedemeyer|Wedemeyer]] and the [[Wikipedia:Office_of_Strategic_Services|OSS]] prompted a Franco-Japanese confrontation [i.e., the Japanese ''coup de force'' on 1945 March 9], which in turn paved the way for revolution,"<!--{{sfn|Tønnesson|1991|p=220}}--><ref name=Tonnesson.1991></ref><sup>:220</sup> i.e., the [[Wikipedia:August Revolution|August Revolution]] in 1945, the year [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] joined the Viet Minh to fight the French. | |||
On 1945 Mar 23, FDR "wanted to know what Wedemeyer could do to arm local resistance groups opposed to French rule."<ref name=Tonnesson.2007/><sup>:67</sup> Wedemeyer wrote in a cable in 1945 May: "When talking to the President on my last visit he explained the United States policy for FIC [French Indochina] and told me that I must watch carefully to prevent British and French political activities in the area and that I should give only such support to the British and French as would be required in direct operations against | |||
the Japanese."<ref name=Tonnesson.2007/><sup>:67</sup> | |||
Wedemeyer "continued | |||
to carry out Roosevelt’s directives on Indochina well after the President’s death,"<ref name=Tonnesson.1991/><sup>:18</sup> and squabbled with Lord Mountbatten, head of South-East Asia Command (SEAC), over "which commander held responsibility for military operations in Indochina."<ref name=Logevall.2012/><sup>:88</sup> | |||
Mountbatten, the Supremo, asked Gen. Leclerc, who left Paris on 1945 Aug 17 on his way to reconquer Indochina under the order of de Gaulle, to first come to Kandy, Sri Lanka, SEAC headquarters.<ref name=Devillers.1952></ref><sup>:152</sup> When Leclerc arrived on 1945 Aug 22, Mountbatten told him, "If Roosevelt had lived, you would not go to Indochina."<ref name=Devillers.1952></ref><sup>:153</sup> <sup>[[#Mountbatten to Leclerc |N.mtl]]</sup><span id="Mountbatten to Leclerc jump"></span> | |||
=== Harry S. Truman === | |||
[[File:Harry S. Truman.jpg|150px|thumb|left|[[Harry S. Truman]], circa 1945]] | |||
Truman reversed Roosevelt’s commitment to free Indochina of French colonialism, allowing the French to reconquer Cochin-china with the help of the British, leading to The First Indochina War, with [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] fighting the French. | |||
Roosevelt had selected Truman as his Vice President because Truman was more moderate than the previous left-leaning VP Henry Wallace.<ref name=OBrien.2024/> But Roosevelt kept Truman in the dark about foreign policies,<sup>[[#Truman foreign policy |N.tfp]]</sup><span id="Truman foreign policy jump"></span> met Truman only six times, and only one time alone without aides. Truman did not have experience in international relations, and was kept so, particularly about the important Yalta Conference in 1945 February, where Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin discussed the new world order.<ref name=OBrien.2024/> | |||
[[File:Potsdam Truman Churchill Stalin 1945 Jul 17.png|thumb|200px|right|Potsdam Truman Churchill Stalin 1945 Jul 17]] | |||
After the secretive FDR (who "never wrote down, and rarely discussed, a concrete vision for the postwar world"<ref name=OBrien.2024/>) died, "U.S. policy fell into the hands of Truman, who had no idea what Roosevelt had really wanted to achieve or how he had planned to achieve it. Over the coming three years, Truman would take this ignorance, combined with Stalin’s strategic overreach and blundering, and create the Cold War that Roosevelt had always been keen to avoid."<ref name=OBrien.2024/> | |||
To maintain the appearance of continuing Roosevelt’s policy regarding Indochina, as Truman "did not want to convey the impression that his [Indochina] policy was at odds with Roosevelt’s,"<ref name=Tonnesson.2007/><sup>:70</sup> it took Truman close to two months, from the death of Roosevelt on 1945 Apr 12, until 1945 Jun 7 (the date of the telegram from Acting Secretary of State Joseph Grew, on behalf of Truman, to US Ambassador Patrick Hurley),<ref name=Tonnesson.2007/><sup>:72</sup> <sup>[[#US Ambassador Hurley |N.uah]]</sup><span id="US Ambassador Hurley jump"></span> to provide American officials in the Far East (US Ambassador Patrick Hurley and Gen Wedemeyer, US commander of China Theater) with "less than clear" policy regarding Indochina, "portraying change as continuity" of Roosevelt's policy of not letting the French reconquer Indochina as a colony.<ref name=Tonnesson.2007/><sup>:71</sup> | |||
[[File:Potsdam Stalin Truman Gromyko Byrnes Molotov 1945 Jul 18.png|thumb|200px|left|Potsdam Stalin Truman Gromyko Byrnes Molotov 1945 Jul 18]] | |||
Truman's ("less than clear") US policy is described by Grew as follows: "It is the President's intention at some appropriate time to ask that the French Government give some positive indication of its intentions in regard to the establishment of civil liberties and increasing measures of self-government in Indo-China before formulating further declarations of policy in this respect."<ref name=Tonnesson.2007/><sup>:71</sup> | |||
Under the threat of the Cold War with the Soviet Union, Truman did not want to “have a conflict with France and Britain”<ref name=Tonnesson.2007/><sup>:70</sup> over the insistence of these countries to reconquer their lost colonies, effectively abandoning Roosevelt’s trusteeship plan for Indochina. Hurley and Wedemeyer "continued to operate in the shadow of FDR."<ref name=Tonnesson.2007/><sup>:70</sup> | |||
[[File:Wedemeyer in China 1945 b.png|thumb|right|150px|US Gen. [[Wikipedia:Albert C. Wedemeyer|Albert C. Wedemeyer]], China, 1945]] | |||
As a result, "lacking clear directives from Truman, US military and intelligence agencies remained uncertain of their government's Indochina policy. Some of them therefore continued to apply Roosevelt's anti-French policy."<ref name=Tonnesson.1991/><sup>:19</sup> | |||
<!-- | <!-- | ||
<span | Under US President [[Wikipedia:Franklin D. Roosevelt|Franklin D. Roosevelt]], the US policy was to remove the French colonists from Indochina,<ref name=Fall.1966/><sup>:57</sup> <sup>[[#NNC-VQL-more-details |N.bq1]]</sup><span id="NNC-VQL-more-details jump1"></span> as the | ||
--> | --> | ||
French official [[Wikipedia:Jean Sainteny|Jean Sainteny]] lamented that he was "face to face with a deliberate Allied maneuver to evict the French from Indochina and that at the present time the Allied attitude is more harmful than that of the [[Wikipedia:Viet-Minh|Viet-Minh]]."<!--{{sfn|Fall|1966|p=68–69}}--><ref name=Fall.1966/><sup>:68-69</sup> <sup>[[#NNC-VQL-more-details |N.bq2]]</sup><span id="NNC-VQL-more-details jump2"></span> | |||
<!--{{efn|name=NNC-VQL-more-details|See more detailed quotations in ''Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography''{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|Vu-Quoc-Loc|2023}}}}--> | |||
<!--Bernard. B. Fall (1966), The Two Viet-Nams: A political and military analysis, Praeger, New York. p.57--> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
{| cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 | |||
|- | |||
! width="100%" | | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: justify;" | <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span> General Wedemeyer's orders not to aid the French came directly from the War Department. Apparently it was American policy then that French Indochina would not be returned to the French. The American government was interested in seeing the French forcibly ejected from Indochina so the problem of postwar separation from their colony would be easier. . . . While American transports in China avoided Indochina, the British flew aerial supply missions for the French all the way from Calcutta, dropping tommy guns, grenades and mortars. <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❞</span> | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: right;" | ---Bernard B. Fall (1966), [https://archive.org/details/twovietnams0000unse/page/n7/mode/2up ''The Two Viet-Nams: A political and military analysis''], p.57.<!--{{sfn|Fall|1966|p=57}}--><ref name=Fall.1966/><sup>:57</sup> | |||
|} | |||
</blockquote> | |||
Three months after Roosevelt's death, at the Potsdam Conference in 1945 July, the US adopted a neutral stance regarding the French return to Indochina: "The United States would not obstruct the restoration of French sovereignty, but neither would it give active backing,"<ref name=Lawrence.2007b/><sup>:112</sup> contrary to what the British had hoped for, which was "active American support of French aims" of reconquering Indochina.<ref name=Lawrence.2007b/><sup>:111</sup> Still, the partition of Indochina, with the Chinese in the north of the 16th parallel, and the British in the south, represented a "significant British victory," since London now had "an opportunity to reinstall a French military and administrative presence below the sixteenth parallel, a foothold that France could presumably exploit to recover the rest of the country from Chinese control."<ref name=Lawrence.2007b/><sup>:112</sup> | |||
<!--{{Image|OSS Deer Team Vietnam-American Army.jpg|center|650px|"Vietnam-America troops," 1945 Aug 16.}}--> | |||
[[File:OSS Deer Team Vietnam-American Army.jpg|thumb|650px|center|The Deer Team and the Viet Minh, the "Vietnam-America troops,"<sup>[[#Vietnam-America troops |N.vat]]</sup><span id="Vietnam-America troops jump"></span> 1945 Aug 16, on their way to attack a Japanese garrison at Thai Nguyen before reaching Hanoi.]] | |||
On the other hand, if the US had let the British control the whole of Indochina, the French would "most likely have been able to oust Ho Chi Minh's revolutionary government from Hanoi in the fall of 1945, thus immediately provoking general warfare."<ref name=Tonnesson.2010/><sup>:23</sup> | |||
It was "the presence of a large Chinese army that allowed the Viet Minh to establish itself as the leading force in the new republic, with a legitimate claim to representing the southern part of the nation as well,"<ref name=Tonnesson.2010/><sup>:23</sup> where [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] had joined the Viet Minh to fight the French. | |||
<!-- | <!-- | ||
<gallery caption="French napalm bombs in First Indochina War" mode=packed widths="260" heights="250"> | |||
File:French_plane_dropped_napalm_bomb_on_Vietminh_force.png|[https://www.militaryfactory.com/aircraft/french-indochina-war-aircraft.php French plane] pulling up after a dive to drop [[napalm]] bombs on [[Vietminh]] force ambushing a French battalion. The white streak below the plane, clearly visible against the dark background of trees further behind, was the [[napalm]] bomb that was just dropped. 1953 December. | |||
File:French indochina napalm 1953-12 1.png|French [[napalm]] bomb exploded over [[Vietminh]] force. 1953 December. This image during the (French) [[First Indochina War]], conjuring up the destruction of the [[napalm]] on the human flesh,<ref name=Tong.2018/> <sup>[[#Napalm girl |N.ng1]]</sup><span id="Napalm girl jump1"></span> | |||
portended what was to come more than ten years later during the (American) [[Second Indochina War]]. | |||
</gallery> | |||
--> | |||
<!--[[File:1stIndochinaWar001.jpg|150px|thumb|French Marine commandos wade ashore off the Annam coast in July 1950]]--> | |||
<gallery caption="Déjà Vu: 'Americans had different dreams from the French, but followed the same footsteps.' Bernard B. Fall" mode=packed widths="260" heights="250"> | |||
File:1stIndochinaWar001.jpg|French Marines wading ashore off the coast of Annam (Central Vietnam) in July 1950, using US-supplied ships, weapons, equipment. Quote by Bernard Fall in gallery title.<!--{{sfn|Logevall|2012|p=702}}--><ref name=Logevall.2012/><sup>:702</sup> | |||
File:Marines Da Nang Vietnam 1965.04.30.png|US Marines wading ashore in Da Nang, Central Vietnam, on 1965 Apr 30, exactly 10 years before the fall of Saigon on 1975 Apr 30. | |||
</gallery> | |||
=== War began === | |||
Two camps of historians chose two different dates for the start of the First Indochina War: Either 1945 Sep 23, or more than a year later, 1946 Dec 19. Of these two dates, 1945 Sep 23 is more relevant to [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] since he had been captured on 1946 Aug 25,<ref name=NNC.VQL.2023/> before 1946 Dec 19. | |||
==== 1945 Sep 23 ==== | |||
The First Indochina War started on 1945 September 23 with the brutal repression of the Vietnamese by some 1,400 French soldiers, who had been imprisoned by the Japanese, then freed and re-armed by British General Gracey, and who went on a rampage, beating, lynching any Vietnamese they saw on the street.<!--{{sfn|Logevall|2012|p=115}}--><ref name=Logevall.2012/><sup>:115</sup> | |||
French war correspondent Germaine Krull, who arrived in Saigon on 1945 Sep 12 with the British Gurkhas soldiers and a small group of French soldiers,<sup>[[#British-French arrived |N.bfa]]</sup><span id="British-French arrived jump"></span> was likely the first to mark the start of the First Indochina War on this date, as she described in her "most graphic, vivid, and absorbing" report<sup>[[#Moffat memo on Krull |N.mok]]</sup><span id="Moffat memo on Krull jump"></span> what she had witnessed "with her own eyes": | |||
<blockquote> | |||
{| cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 | |||
|- | |||
! width="100%" | | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: justify;" | <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span> It is impossible to describe this day, which marked the beginning of the war in Indo-China. I saw everything with my own eyes - Annamites [Vietnamese] tied up, some of them tortured, drunken officers and soldiers with smoking guns. On the Rue Catinat, I saw soldiers driving before them a group of Annamites bound, slave-fashion, to a long rope. Women spat in their faces. They were on the verge of being lynched. | |||
In more distant sections I saw French soldiers come out of Annamite houses with stolen shoes and shirts… From time to time, an Annamite dwelling would burst into flame. Women and children were fleeing. That night, French soldiers strolled on the Rue Catinat, a gun on one arm, a woman on the other. I have never been so deeply ashamed as on that day of September 23rd. When I returned to the hotel, the faces of the English were expressionless and conversations stopped as I went by. I remember the horror and shame I had felt in June of 1940 when Vichy was established, but never in my life had I felt such utter sadness and degradation as on this night. | |||
That night I realized only too well what a serious mistake we had made and how grave the consequences would be. It was the beginning of a ruthless war. Instead of regaining our prestige we had lost it forever, and worse still, we had lost the trust of the few remaining Annamites who believed in us. We had showed them that the new France was even more to be feared than the old one. | |||
<span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❞</span> | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: right;" | ---Germaine Krull (1945), ''Diary of Saigon, following the Allied occupation in September 1945''.<ref name=Krull.1945/><sup>:19</sup> | |||
|} | |||
</blockquote> | |||
This date, 1945 Sep 23, "would go down in history: [[Wikipedia:vi:Trần_Văn_Giàu|Trần Văn Giàu]], | |||
a key communist leader of the southern Viet Minh, announced that | |||
"the war of Resistance has begun!" Vietnam's armed struggle against | |||
the French had started. It would last nine more years."<ref name=McHale.2021/><sup>:45</sup> Giau issued the following call for armed struggle to throw out the French, addressing to his Vietnamese compatriots, including those who were working for the French colons like [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]]: | |||
<blockquote> | <blockquote> | ||
{| cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 | |||
|- | |||
! width="100%" | | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: justify;" | <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span>Compatriots of the South! | |||
People of Saigon! | |||
Workers, farmers, youth, self-defense, militia, soldiers! | |||
Last night, the French colonialists occupied our government headquarters in the center of Saigon. | |||
Thus, France began to invade our country once again. | |||
<!--{{Image|1945 Sep 2 Independence of Death.JPG|right|350px|Add image caption here.}}--> | |||
[[File:1945 Sep 2 Independence of Death.JPG|thumb|right|350px|Demonstration with banner "Vietnam Independent, Independence or Death," 1945 August.]] | |||
On September 2,<sup>[[#Vietnam Indepence Day |N.vid]]</sup><span id="Vietnam Indepence Day jump"></span> our compatriots swore to sacrifice their last drop of blood to protect the independence of the Fatherland: | |||
"Independence or death!" | |||
Today, the Resistance Committee calls on: | |||
All compatriots, old, young, men, and women, take up arms and rush to fight off the invaders. | |||
Anyone who does not have a duty assigned by the Resistance Committee must immediately leave the city. Those who remain must: | |||
– Not work, not serve as soldiers for the French. | |||
<br> | |||
– Not show the way, not inform the French. | |||
<br> | |||
– Not sell food to the French. | |||
<br> | |||
– Find the French colonialists and destroy them. | |||
<br> | |||
– Burn all French offices, vehicles, ships, warehouses, and factories. | |||
Saigon occupied by the French must become a Saigon without electricity, without water, without markets, without shops. | |||
Fellow countrymen! | |||
From this moment on, our top priority is to destroy the French invaders and their henchmen. | |||
Fellow soldiers, militiamen, and self-defense members! Hold your weapons firmly in your hands, charge forward to drive out the French colonialists, and save the country. | |||
The resistance war has begun! | |||
Morning of September 23, 1945 | |||
<br> | |||
Chairman of the Southern Resistance Committee | |||
<br> | |||
TRAN VAN GIAU | |||
<span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❞</span> | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: right;" | ---Trần Văn Giàu 2011, [https://www.diendan.org/tai-lieu/hoi-ky-t-v-giau/hk-tvg-xvii HỒI KÝ TRẦN VĂN GIÀU (XVII)] [Memoirs of Tran Van Giau, Vol.17], [https://www.diendan.org/ diendan.org]. [https://web.archive.org/web/20230327082251/https://www.diendan.org/tai-lieu/hoi-ky-t-v-giau/hk-tvg-xvii/ Internet Archive 2023.03.27] | |||
|} | |||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
"Thus began, it could be argued, the Vietnamese war of liberation against France. It would take several more months before the struggle would extend to the entire south, and more than a year before it also engulfed Hanoi and the north, which is why historians typically date the start of the war as late 1946 [Dec 19].<!--{{sfn|Tønnesson|2010|p=xii}}--><ref name=Tonnesson.2010/><sup>:xii</sup> But this date, September 23, 1945, may be as plausible a start date as any."<ref name=Logevall.2012/><sup>:115</sup> | |||
=== Resistance === | |||
[[File:Cai Rang bridge today.png|thumb|right|250px|Cai Rang bridge, Can Tho, 2024. Nguyen Ngoc Bich sabotaged this bridge during the First Indochina War.]] | |||
After graduating in 1935 from the [[Wikipedia:École des ponts ParisTech|École nationale des ponts et chaussées]], a civil engineering school, Nguyen Ngoc Bich returned home to work as a civil engineer for the colonial government at the [[Wikipedia:Soc Trang|Soc-Trang]] Irrigation Department until the Japanese coup d'état in Viet Nam (1945 Sep 03). Bich then joined the Resistance in the Soc-Trang base area and was appointed Deputy Commander of the [[Wikipedia:9th_Military_Region_(Vietnam_People's_Army)|Military Zone 9]] (<!--{{plain link|url=https://vi.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qu%C3%A2n_khu_9,_Qu%C3%A2n_%C4%91%E1%BB%99i_nh%C3%A2n_d%C3%A2n_Vi%E1%BB%87t_Nam|name=vi}}-->[https://vi.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qu%C3%A2n_khu_9,_Qu%C3%A2n_%C4%91%E1%BB%99i_nh%C3%A2n_d%C3%A2n_Vi%E1%BB%87t_Nam vi]), established on 1945 Dec 10, and included the provinces of Cần Thơ, Sóc Trăng, Rạch Giá, together with six other provinces. Bich sabotaged many bridges that were notoriously difficult to destroy such as [https://www.google.com/maps/place/C%E1%BA%A7u+C%C3%A1i+R%C4%83ng,+Ninh+Ki%E1%BB%81u,+C%E1%BA%A7n+Th%C6%A1,+Vietnam/@10.0075615,105.7499666,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x31a089ba70b1c3b5:0xbddcccf9f6fadd75!8m2!3d10.0075615!4d105.7499666!16s%2Fg%2F1jkxqlp4t Cai-Rang Bridge]<!--{{plain link|url=https://www.google.com/maps/place/C%E1%BA%A7u+C%C3%A1i+R%C4%83ng,+Ninh+Ki%E1%BB%81u,+C%E1%BA%A7n+Th%C6%A1,+Vietnam/@10.0075615,105.7499666,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x31a089ba70b1c3b5:0xbddcccf9f6fadd75!8m2!3d10.0075615!4d105.7499666!16s%2Fg%2F1jkxqlp4t|name=Cai-Rang bridge}}--> in [[Wikipedia:Can Tho|Can Tho]] | |||
<!--{{em dash}}-->--- | |||
where a street was named to honor his feats<!--{{sfn|CTDN|2019}}--><ref name="CTDN.2019"/> <sup>[[#NNB street |N.nnbs]]</sup><span id="NNB street jump"></span> | |||
<!--{{efn|A street in Can Tho is named Nguyen Ngoc Bich to commemorate him blowing up the {{plain link|url=https://www.google.com/maps/place/C%E1%BA%A7u+C%C3%A1i+R%C4%83ng,+Ninh+Ki%E1%BB%81u,+C%E1%BA%A7n+Th%C6%A1,+Vietnam/@10.0075615,105.7499666,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x31a089ba70b1c3b5:0xbddcccf9f6fadd75!8m2!3d10.0075615!4d105.7499666!16s%2Fg%2F1jkxqlp4t|name=Cai-Rang bridge}} in this city to stop the French troops advance in 1945–46.<ref name="CTDN.2019"/> The short biography in Vietnamese, together with an English translation, in this street-naming plan is provided in the document ''Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography,''<ref name=NNC.VQL.2023/> | |||
}}--> | |||
<!--{{em dash}}-->--- | |||
<!--{{plain link|url=https://www.google.com/maps/place/C%E1%BA%A7u+Nhu+Gia,+M%E1%BB%B9+Xuy%C3%AAn,+S%C3%B3c+Tr%C4%83ng,+Vietnam/@9.5026064,105.8508548,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x31a1ab6d2c09bbf7:0x4c0acc20832a1059!8m2!3d9.5026064!4d105.8530435!16s%2Fg%2F1v41xyrv|name=Nhu-Gia Bridge}}-->[https://www.google.com/maps/place/C%E1%BA%A7u+Nhu+Gia,+M%E1%BB%B9+Xuy%C3%AAn,+S%C3%B3c+Tr%C4%83ng,+Vietnam/@9.5026064,105.8508548,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x31a1ab6d2c09bbf7:0x4c0acc20832a1059!8m2!3d9.5026064!4d105.8530435!16s%2Fg%2F1v41xyrv Nhu-Gia Bridge] in [[Wikipedia:Soc Trang|Soc Trang]], etc., blocking the advance of French forces directed by General Valluy and General Nyo, who were under the general command of General [[Wikipedia:Philippe_Leclerc_de_Hauteclocque|Philippe Leclerc]], commander of the [[Wikipedia:French Far East Expeditionary Corps|French Far East Expeditionary Corps]] (''Corps expéditionnaire français en Extrême-Orient'', CEFEO). | |||
Between 1946 March 6, when the March 6 Accords were signed,<sup>[[#March 6 Accords |N.m6a3]]</sup><span id="March 6 Accords jump3"></span> and 1946 December 19, when most historians used as the date that started the First Indochina War, in Cochinchina, the military situation did not favor the Vietnamese. | |||
<blockquote> | |||
{| cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 | |||
|- | |||
! width="100%" | | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: justify;" | <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span> Outside Saigon the various nationalist resistance groups, weakened though they were by the months of warfare with the British and French, still controlled large sections of the Cochin Chinese countryside. Ho Chi Minh proposed to General Leclerc the sending of mixed Franco-Vietnamese commissions to establish peace in Cochin China after the signing of the March 6 accord, but the General saw no reason for this in what was supposed to be French territory. When Ho sent his own emissaries to the south, they were arrested by the French who continued to regard Cochin China as a French colony, claiming a free hand there until the referendum could be held. This led to difficult local problems, as in the case of the Vietnamese emissary sent by one Vietnamese zone commander [Nguyen Ngoc Bich] to discuss a cease-fire with the local French commanding officer. The emissary was unceremoniously informed that the French expected complete capitulation—the surrender of arms and prisoners—and that this was an ultimatum. They had until the 31st of March to comply; if they failed to do so, the fighting would begin again. Before the Vietnamese left French headquarters, the French officer took his name and it was soon public knowledge that the French had put a price on his head as well as on that of his commander, Nguyen Ngoc Bich. In this particular region of Cochin China fighting resumed by the end of the month. <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❞</span> | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: right;" | ---Ellen Hammer (1954), [https://archive.org/details/struggleforindoc0000hamm_h0h0/page/n5/mode/2up ''The struggle for Indochina''], [https://archive.org/details/struggleforindoc0000hamm_h0h0/page/157/mode/2up?q=march+6+free+state pp. 157–158].<!--{{sfn|Hammer|1954}}--><ref name=Hammer.1954/> | |||
|} | |||
</blockquote> | |||
Chester L. Cooper was an American diplomat and a key negotiator in many critical agreements in the 1950s and '60s, beginning with his involvement in the Geneva Conference on Indochina in 1954.<!--{{sfn|Fox|2005}}--><ref name="Fox.2005"/> | |||
In his 2005 memoir ''In the Shadows of History: 50 Years Behind the Scenes of Cold War Diplomacy'', "he recounted his association with a constellation of historic figures that included [[Wikipedia:John F. Kennedy|John F. Kennedy]], [[Wikipedia:Lyndon B. Johnson|Lyndon B. Johnson]], [[Wikipedia:Nikita S. Khrushchev|Nikita S. Khrushchev]] and [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho Chi Minh]]".<!--{{sfn|Fox|2005}}--><ref name="Fox.2005"/> <sup>[[#Chester Cooper |N.clc]]</sup><span id="Chester Cooper jump"></span> | |||
<!--{{efn|A summary of an obituary for Chester L. Cooper is in the document ''Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography''.<ref name=NNC.VQL.2023/> | |||
}}--> | |||
Dr. Cooper | |||
<sup>[[#Dr. Cooper |N.dcc]]</sup><span id="Dr. Cooper jump"></span> | |||
<!--{{efn|Chester L. Cooper undertook his doctoral study in urban land economics, and after an interruption due to WWII, received his PhD in 1960.<ref name=Colman.2012/> | |||
}}--> | |||
<!--{{em dash}}-->--- | |||
who acquired a deep knowledge of Vietnam history from his years in Asia, from 1941 to 1954, first working for the [[Wikipedia:Office of Strategic Services|Office of Strategic Services]]<sup>[[#HCM and OSS |N.hos]]</sup><span id="HCM and OSS jump"></span> | |||
<!--{{efn|name=OSS-HCM|For the relationship between the OSS and Ho Chi Minh during WWII, see [[Wikipedia:OSS Deer Team|OSS Deer Team]].}}--> | |||
in China, then for the [[Wikipedia:CIA|CIA]] in 1947, and subsequently became head of the Far East staff of the [[Wikipedia:National_Intelligence_Council|Office of National Estimates]] in 1950<!--{{sfn|Colman|2012}}--><ref name=Colman.2012/><!--{{em dash}}-->---devoted some three to four pages to describe Dr. Bich in his Vietnam-history book [https://archive.org/details/lostcrusadeameri00coop/mode/2up ''The Lost Crusade: America in Vietnam''], in particular some aspects of Bich's resistance activities: | |||
[[File:HD-SN-99-02042.JPEG|150px|thumb|left|A [[Viet_Minh|Viet-Minh]] suspect captured by a French-Foreign-Legion patrol in 1954.]] | |||
<blockquote> | |||
{| cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 | |||
|- | |||
! width="100%" | | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: justify;" | <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span> As commander of the Viet Minh forces in the Delta during the late 40s, Bich became one of the most popular local heroes. During 1946 the Viet Minh hierarchy became concerned that Bich might pose a threat to the aims of the Viet Minh in the southern part of Vietnam, and by the end of that year Ho apparently decided that Bich had served his purpose in the Delta. He was "invited" to move North to become a member of the Viet Minh political and military headquarters in Hanoi. Bich was reluctant to leave his command, not only because of his desire to continue the fight against the French, but also because he felt uneasy about leaving his base of power. Nonetheless, he made his way north via the nationalist underground to Hanoi. | |||
A day or two before Bich was to report to the Viet Minh headquarters, the French discovered his hiding place near Hanoi. Since he was on the French "most wanted" list, he was subjected to an intensive and unpleasant interrogation. <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❞</span> | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: right;" | ---Chester L. Cooper (1970), [https://archive.org/details/lostcrusadeameri00coop/page/n5/mode/2up ''The Lost Crusade: America in Vietnam''], [https://archive.org/details/lostcrusadeameri00coop/page/122/mode/2up?q=ngoc+bich p. 122].<!--{{sfn|Cooper|1970}}--><ref name=Cooper.1970/> | |||
|} | |||
</blockquote> | |||
[[File:Vietnamese_refugees_board_LST_516_during_Operation_Passage_to_Freedom,_October_1954_(030630-N-0000X-001).jpg|150px|thumb|right|Vietnamese refugees boarding the US Navy ship LST 516 during Operation Passage to Freedom, October 1954. The cloth banner hung above the ship number 516 reads: "Your Passage to Freedom" with a Vietnamese translation below.]] | |||
[[Wikipedia:Joseph Buttinger|Joseph A. Buttinger]] was an ardent advocate for refugees of persecution, and a "renowned authority on Vietnam and the American war" in that country.<!--{{sfn|Lambert|1992}}--><ref name=Lambert.1992/> | |||
In 1940, he helped founded the [[Wikipedia:International Rescue Committee|International Rescue Committee]], "a nonprofit organization aiding refugees of political, religious and racial persecution", and while "working with refugees in Vietnam in the 1950s, he became immersed in the history, culture, and politics of that nation".<!--{{sfn|Lambert|1992}}--><ref name=Lambert.1992/> His scholarship was in high demand during the Vietnam War. | |||
The New York Times described his | |||
his two-volume Vietnam-history book, ''Vietnam: A Dragon Embattled'',<ref name=Buttinger.1967a/><ref name=Buttinger.1967b/> | |||
<sup>[[#Buttinger-review |N.jbr1]]</sup><span id="Buttinger-review jump1"></span> | |||
<!--{{efn|name=fn2-Buttinger-review|Osborne (1967), a Vietnam scholar, provided a critical review<ref name="Osborne.1967"/> of [[Wikipedia:Joseph Buttinger|Joseph Buttinger]]'s two-volume book.<ref name=Buttinger.1967a/><ref name=Buttinger.1967b/> A recent [https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/7760244 summary] of [[Wikipedia:Joseph Buttinger|Joseph Buttinger]]'s book was provided by Stefania Dzhanamova on 2021 Aug 11 on Goodreads. | |||
}}--> | |||
as "a monumental work" that "marks a strategic breakthrough in the serious study of Vietnamese politics in America" and as "the most thorough, informative and, over all, the most impressive book on Vietnam yet published in America".<!--{{sfn|Lambert|1992}}--><ref name=Lambert.1992/> | |||
[[Wikipedia:Joseph Buttinger|Joseph Buttinger]] wrote in [https://archive.org/details/vietnamdragonemb02butt/page/n5/mode/2up ''Vietnam: A Dragon Embattled'', Vol. 2]<!--{{efn|name=fn-NNB-hero}}--> | |||
<!--on [https://archive.org/details/vietnamdragonemb02butt/page/850/mode/2up?q=ngoc+bich p. 850],--> | |||
that Dr. Bich was "the resistance hero" whom "Diem had no success" to convince to join his cabinet: | |||
<blockquote> | |||
{| cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 | |||
|- | |||
! width="100%" | | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: justify;" | <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span> Diem left Paris for Saigon on June 24, accompanied by his brother Luyen, by Tran Chanh Thanh, and by Nguyen Van Thoai, a relative of the Ngo family and the only prominent exile willing to join Diem's Cabinet. With others, such as the resistance hero Nguyen Ngoc Bich, Diem had no success. He tried unsuccessfully to win Nguyen Manh Ha, a Catholic who had been Ho Chi Minh's first Minister of Economics but who had parted with the Vietminh in December, 1946. These men, and others too, rejected Diem's concept of government, which clearly aimed at a one-man rule. Nor did they share Diem's illusions about the chances of preventing a Geneva settlement favorable to the Vietminh. Diem apparently believed that the National Army, no longer fighting under the French but for an independent government, would quickly become effective and reduce the gains made by the Vietminh. <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❞</span> | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: right;" | ---[[Wikipedia:Joseph Buttinger|Joseph Buttinger]] (1967), [https://archive.org/details/vietnamdragonemb02butt/page/n5/mode/2up ''Vietnam: A Dragon Embattled'', Vol.2], [https://archive.org/details/vietnamdragonemb02butt/page/850/mode/2up?q=ngoc+bich p. 850].<!--{{sfn|Buttinger|1967b|p=850|ps=, Vol. 2.}}{{efn|name=fn-NNB-hero}}{{efn|name=fn2-Buttinger-review}}--><sup>[[#Buttinger-review |N.jbr2]]</sup><span id="Buttinger-review jump2"></span> | |||
|} | |||
</blockquote> | |||
That Nguyen Ngoc Bich was being hunted by the French colonists was described in [[Wikipedia:Joseph Buttinger|Joseph Buttinger]]'s book:<ref name=Buttinger.1967a/><sup>:641</sup> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
{| cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 | |||
|- | |||
! width="100%" | | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: justify;" | <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❝</span> [Note] 9. Miss Hammer cites the case of an emissary sent by Nguyen Ngoc Bich. The French took down his name when he came to their headquarters to negotiate a cease-fire, and "it was soon public knowledge that the French had put a price on his head as well as on that of his commander, Nguyen Ngoc Bich" (ibid., p. 158). <span style="font-size:150%; color:blue">❞</span> | |||
|- | |||
| style="padding: 0 1.5em; text-align: right;" | ---[[Wikipedia:Joseph Buttinger|Joseph Buttinger]] (1967), [https://archive.org/details/vietnamdragonemb01butt/page/n5/mode/2up ''Vietnam: A Dragon Embattled'', Vol.1], [https://archive.org/details/vietnamdragonemb01butt/page/640/mode/2up?q=ngoc+bich p. 641].<sup>[[#NNB-hero-2 |N.pbh]]</sup><span id="NNB-hero-2 jump"></span> | |||
|} | |||
</blockquote> | |||
=== Napalm bombs === | |||
<gallery caption="French use of American-made napalm bombs" mode=packed heights="300"> | |||
File:French_plane_dropped_napalm_bomb_on_Vietminh_force.png|French plane pulling up after a dive to drop Napalm bombs on Vietminh force ambushing a French battalion. The white streak below the plane, clearly visible against the dark background of trees further behind, was the Napalm bomb that was just dropped. 1953 December. | |||
File:French indochina napalm 1953-12 1.png|French Napalm bomb exploded over Vietminh force. 1953 December. This image during the (French) [[Wikipedia:First Indochina War|First Indochina War]], conjuring up the horrific destruction of the Napalm on the human flesh,<!--{{sfn|Tong|2018}}--><ref name=Tong.2018/> <sup>[[#Napalm girl |N.ng2]]</sup><span id="Napalm girl jump2"></span> portended what was to come more than ten years later during the (American) [[Wikipedia:Second Indochina War|Second Indochina War]] with even more deadly advanced Napalm technology. | |||
</gallery> | |||
<!-- | |||
[[File:French_plane_dropped_napalm_bomb_on_Vietminh_force.png|200px|thumb|center|French plane pulling up after a dive to drop Napalm bombs on Vietminh force ambushing a French battalion. The white streak below the plane, clearly visible against the dark background of trees further behind, was the Napalm bomb that was just dropped. 1953 December.]] | |||
[[File:French indochina napalm 1953-12 1.png|200px|thumb|center|French Napalm bomb exploded over Vietminh force. 1953 December. This image during the (French) [[Wikipedia:First Indochina War|First Indochina War]], conjuring up the horrific destruction of the Napalm on the human flesh,{{sfn|Tong|2018}} portended what was to come more than ten years later during the (American) [[Wikipedia:Second Indochina War|Second Indochina War]] with even more deadly advanced Napalm technology.]] | |||
--> | --> | ||
On the French use of American-made napalm bombs, [[Wikipedia:Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] wrote | |||
that the [[Wikipedia:Viet Minh|Viet Minh]] stopped following the advice of Chinese tacticians in launching large-scale mass attacks once many of their soldiers died by French napalm bombs. They switched from the costlier manufacturing of arms to the less expensive manufacturing of hand grenades, which can be used against light battalions to seize their arms.<ref name=Nguyen-Ngoc-Bich/> | |||
== Publications == | |||
* {{citation |last=Nguyen-Ngoc-Bich |title=Vietnam—An Independent Viewpoint |journal=[[Wikipedia:The China Quarterly|The China Quarterly]] |volume=9 |date=March 1962 |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/article/abs/vietnaman-independent-viewpoint/91FC9BBCE8F39A365B303AC4118BEBC6 |url-access=subscription |access-date=18 Feb 2023}}, pp. 105–111. See also the contents of [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/volume/0FB8E56075A0E2649EB01EC2BFB9ABFB Volume 9], which included the articles of many experts on Vietnam history and politics such as [[Wikipedia:Bernard_B._Fall|Bernard B. Fall]], [[Wikipedia:Hoang_Van_Chi|Hoang Van Chi]], Phillipe Devillers (see, e.g., his classic 1952 book ''Histoire du Viet-Nam'' in Section [[#References|References]] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=French_Cochinchina&oldid=1203174341#cite_note-43 French French Cochinchina, Ref. 42]), [[Wikipedia:P._J._Honey|P. J. Honey]]<!--(see, e.g., his [https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/2300EAC28055ADB13CD8B21AF51F3BBE/S0305741000025340a.pdf/lenfer_communiste_au_nord_vietnam_by_gerard_tongas_paris_les_nouvelles_editions_debresse_1961_463_pp_18_new_francs.pdf review of Tongas' ''Enfer Communiste'']), William Kaye (see, e.g., [https://www.jstor.org/stable/651693 A Bowl of Rice Divided: The Economy of North Vietnam, 1962])-->, Gérard Tongas (see, e.g, [https://www.abebooks.com/Jai-v%C3%A9cu-lEnfer-Communiste-Nord-Viet-Nam/31061452118/bd ''J'ai vécu dans l'Enfer Communiste au Nord Viet-Nam''], Debresse, Paris, 1961, [https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/2300EAC28055ADB13CD8B21AF51F3BBE/S0305741000025340a.pdf/lenfer_communiste_au_nord_vietnam_by_gerard_tongas_paris_les_nouvelles_editions_debresse_1961_463_pp_18_new_francs.pdf reviewed]] by [[Wikipedia:P._J._Honey|P. J. Honey]]), among others. | |||
=== '''Bich's 1962 paper, summary''' === | |||
In 1962, Dr. Bich laid out an argument to avoid the subversion war by North Vietnam to conquer rice from South Vietnam to solve its famine problem due to low yields in agricultural production using archaic methods and due to the failed agrarian reform. His main points were (1) South Vietnam should have a truly liberal democratic government, (2) the South should establish commercial relations with the North to help solve the said famine problem, (3) the South should maintain a non-aligned neutrality that would prevent interference from the North, (4) the South would peacefully negotiate with the North toward a progressive reunification. Below is a more detailed summary of his article, looking back from more than 60 years later. As a result, past tense is used in this summary to describe long-past events, instead of the sometimes present tense used in the original article.<!--{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|Vu-Quoc-Loc|2023}}--> The full article translated into French is available in the document <!--[[c:Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A biography|Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A biography]]-->''Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography.''<sup>[[#NNC.VQL.2023 |N.bb2]]</sup><span id="NNC.VQL.2023 jump2"> | |||
==== Vietnam, China, and USSR ==== | |||
Contrary to the belief of the Western world (that the Vietnamese generally disliked, and had an inferiority complex against, the Chinese), the Vietnamese tended to be too proud of their history and victories against the Chinese and Mongol invaders over the centuries. | |||
Aware of the Chinese historical "fierce expansionism", an important question for North and South Vietnam was how to safeguard the future of Vietnam as a whole country. | |||
While South Vietnam tried to forcibly assimilate Chinese immigrants and their descendants, North Vietnam adopted a "more subtle attitude", moving from "fears" during the Chiang Kai-shek era to "solidarity and friendship" after the communist had won in 1949. | |||
The Geneva agreements, while satisfying for China, left the North Vietnamese to be content with the prospect of reunifying with South Vietnam upon an election. After the failure of the agrarian reform, there was a concern of the presence of many Chinese soldiers and civilians in North Vietnam. To keep Chinese economic aid flowing, Ho Chi Minh initially maintained a balance between Peking (Beijing) and Moscow, but subsequently tilted toward Moscow after Peking admitted that it could not help carry out a semi-heavy industrialization. In September 1960, Le Duan, then Secretary-General of the Party, put forward a three-point program: (1) Support Moscow in any Sino-Soviet dispute, (2) Five-year plan (1961–1965) to socialize North Vietnam, (3) Progressive and peaceful reunification of the two Vietnams. | |||
==== Le Duan: Reconquer the South ==== | |||
With the nomination of Le Duan—who led the struggle for independence in South Vietnam for a long time and knew the South more than anyone else—as First Secretary of the Party, North Vietnam began to undertake the reconquest of the South, with the first step being to eliminate the Ngo Dinh Diem regime and the American influence in the South. There were deeper motives. | |||
==== Communist pragmatism ==== | |||
"The most striking feature of the Vietnamese Communist leadership was its outstanding spirit of realism, even pragmatism." They continuously and critically reexamined facts so that a lesson could be drawn for every action and every happening to avoid past mistakes. By doing so, they tended to imitate or to repeat past actions that were proven successful, and lacked imagination and open-mindedness to create new solutions to tackle new challenges. | |||
<!-- | <!-- | ||
[[File:French_plane_dropped_napalm_bomb_on_Vietminh_force.png|550px|thumb|center|French plane pulling up after a dive to drop Napalm bombs on Vietminh force ambushing a French battalion. The white streak below the plane, clearly visible against the dark background of trees further behind, was the Napalm bomb that was just dropped. 1953 December.]] | |||
[[File:French indochina napalm 1953-12 1.png|550px|thumb|center|French Napalm bomb exploded over Vietminh force. 1953 December. This image during the (French) [[First Indochina War]], conjuring up the horrific destruction of the Napalm on the human flesh,{{sfn|Tong|2018}} portended what was to come more than ten years later during the (American) [[Second Indochina War]] with even more deadly advanced Napalm technology.]] | |||
--> | --> | ||
{{quotation | For example, they stopped following the advice of Chinese tacticians in launching large-scale mass attacks once many of their soldiers died by French napalm bombs. They switched from the costlier manufacturing of arms to the less expensive manufacturing of hand grenades, which can be used against light battalions to seize their arms. They bred dogs, instead of pigs, as a source of meat since dogs produced two litters of young each year, while pigs produced only one. | ||
|" | |||
| | ==== Rapid industrialization ==== | ||
}} | A deeper motive to swing closer to Moscow was to develop a rapid industrialization to raise the standard of living to avoid complaints about dictatorship and restriction of freedom, and also the "dreaded spectre of becoming a mere satellite state". | ||
The targets of the Five-Year Plan were "extremely optimistic". In the old French Indochina, "great leaps forward" in economics were achieved in some sectors, such as a 400% increase in plantation area, 150% increase in the number of workers in industrial establishments, in spite of World War I. Now, there was an abundance of labor due to high unemployment. The planned industrial projects could be completed if foreign aid maintained the same rhythm and agricultural production was adequate. | |||
==== Agricultural risk of failure ==== | |||
It was doubtful, however, that the target of growing agricultural production by 61% over five years could be achieved due to low yields resulting from the archaic methods of cultivation, the old system of sub-letting land, the difficulty of cultivating new land, the discontent among the peasants, and the disastrous agrarian reforms and its consequence. Hunger had become endemic, and China could not come to the rescue because of her own problems. Rice had to be smuggled from the South to the North. | |||
<!--[[File:Famine_in_Vietnam,_1945_(3).jpg|250px|thumb|right|The great Vietnamese famine 1944–1945.]]--> | |||
The five-year plan ran a "grave risk of failure" due to lack of food to feed the people in North Vietnam, without an increase in rice supply from South Vietnam, not to mention other unpredictable factors such as floods, droughts, bad weather, etc. | |||
The success of the Five-Year Plan would be a primary condition to maintain some independence from Peking, which would exert a greater influence than from Moscow in the case of "necessary and inevitable war", and the North being a satellite of China "would constitute a most serious menace for the South, particularly in time of any major crisis". | |||
==== Famine, conquest of rice ==== | |||
[[File:Famine_in_Vietnam,_1945_(3).jpg|250px|thumb|right|The great Vietnamese famine 1944–1945.]] The reconquest of the South entrusted to Le Duan could then be understood as "a struggle unleashed simply for the purpose of conquering rice", without which the five-year plan most certainly would fail. For many Southerners, their reaction against the Diem regime, rather than the love for Communism, enabled this subversion war to continue. The enormous economic benefit that North Vietnam would harvest from the national reunification was the primary reason for the war. | |||
North Vietnam was fighting to secure rice, and thus the war was, from the purely national point of view, a legitimate one. Ngo Dinh Diem on the other hand refused to provide aid to alleviate the famine in the North. | |||
==== North-South relation ==== | |||
The Vietnamese people had for a long time a desire to have a liberal, truly democratic government. and had proven that in the end they would rise time and again to thwart the yoke imposed on them by any foreign power. | |||
To avoid such internal war for rice from becoming a proxy war for Moscow, there should be a liberal regime in Saigon that allowed for establishing commercial relations with Hanoi and for a call to stop the fighting. Moreover, a non-aligned political neutrality would prevent interference by North Vietnam in the affairs of South Vietnam. | |||
==== Reunification negotiation ==== | |||
A peaceful and progressive reunification of the two Vietnams could only be achieved through negotiation at a table, and not by arm struggle in the jungle. The South would hope to live side by side peacefully with the North to collaborate in building the common Vietnamese nation, as the alternative would make "reunification" a propaganda that concealed the desire to conquer. | |||
== Notes == | |||
<!--{{notelist}}--> | |||
<div style="font-size:80%; background-color:lightyellow; border:1px outset black; padding:10px;"> | |||
<span id="Note links"></span> | |||
(↑ [[#Note links jump|NOTE]]) <i>How to create the Note jump-to and jump-back links:</i> | |||
The Note link-labels, such as <sup>[[#Bao Dai abdication|N.bda]]</sup> in superscript, are unique identifiers for the corresponding Notes, with "N" standing for "Note", followed by a period and three or four characters summarizing the Note contents, e.g., "bda" for "Bao Dai abdication," which is the title (in italics) of the Note (jump-to) link <sup>[[#Bao Dai abdication|N.bda]]</sup>. In front of each Note, the uparrow ↑ preceeding a Note (jump-back) link such as (↑ [[#Bao Dai abdication jump|N.bda]]) indicates the link to jump back UP to the main text where the jump-to link <sup>[[#Bao Dai abdication|N.bda]]</sup> appears. | |||
The target of the jump-back link (↑ [[#Bao Dai abdication jump|N.bda]]) is the HTML ''[[Wikipedia:HTML element#Anchor |anchor]]'' with the code <code><nowiki><span id="Bao Dai abdication jump"></span></nowiki></code> having the anchor name being "Bao Dai abdication jump", without an [[Wikipedia:Anchor text|Anchor_text]] (or link text, or link label) inside. The code <code><nowiki>[[#Bao Dai abdication jump|N.bda]]</nowiki></code> creates the jump-back link (see [[Wikipedia:Help:Link|Help:Link]]) with label "[[#Bao Dai abdication jump|N.bda]]" to jump back UP to the main text where the anchor with anchor name "Bao Dai abdication jump" was embedded. | |||
</div> | |||
<!-- | |||
=== NEW Notes not yet reorganized === | |||
=== Notes reorganized === | |||
--> | |||
<span id="Alliance transposition"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Alliance transposition jump |N.atr]]) <i>Alliance transposition:</i> A surprising alliance transposition happened, with rightist resistance fighters turned to the Japanese (just like the French turned to the British), whereas the leftist resistance fighters turned to China and America (just like the French turned to the USSR) ["On pent ainsi, et bien que de tels rapprochements soient très arbitraires, exprimer en termes européens la situation indochinoise : contre l'impérialisme présent (qui est ici la France), les « résistants » de droite (Caodaistes, Hoa Hao, Phuc Quoc, etc.) regardent vers le Japon (comme les nôtres vers les Anglo-Saxons), tandis que les « résistants » de gauche se tournent vers la Chine et l'Amérique, comme les nôtres le faisaient vers l'U.R.S.S. La transposition étonne, mais elle est, à notre avis, exacte."]<ref name=Devillers.1952/><sup>:99</sup> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#American War casualties |N.awc]]</sup><span id="American War casualties jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="American War casualties"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#American War casualties jump |N.awc]]) <i>American War casualties:</i> The [[Wikipedia:Second Indochina War|Second Indochina War]] or the [[Wikipedia:Vietnam War|Vietnam War]], known as the "American War" in Vietnamese literature, led to a "staggering number of deaths, especially among Vietnamese (between three and four million Vietnamese lost their lives), and the utter destruction of much of the country of Vietnam and large portions of Laos and Cambodia."<ref name=Logevall.2001/><sup>:85</sup> "In 1995 Vietnam released its official estimate of the number of people killed during the Vietnam War: as many as 2,000,000 civilians on both sides and some 1,100,000 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong fighters. The U.S. military has estimated that between 200,000 and 250,000 South Vietnamese soldiers died. The Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., lists more than 58,300 names of members of the U.S. armed forces who were killed or went missing in action. Among other countries that fought for South Vietnam, South Korea had more than 4,000 dead, Thailand about 350, Australia more than 500, and New Zealand some three dozen."<ref name=Britannica.VWC/> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Point 4 Atlantic Charter |N.p4a]]</sup><span id="Point 4 Atlantic Charter jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="Point 4 Atlantic Charter"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Point 4 Atlantic Charter jump |N.p4a]]) <i>Atlantic Charter, Point 4:</i> "Fourth; they will endeavor, with due respect to their existing obligations, to further the enjoyment by all states, great or small, victor or vanquished, of access on equal terms, to the trade and to the raw materials of the world which are needed for their economic prosperity;"<sup>[[#Complete Atlantic Charter |N.cac2]]</sup><span id="Complete Atlantic Charter jump2"></span> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Bao Dai abdication|N.bda]]</sup><span id="Bao Dai abdication jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="Bao Dai abdication"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Bao Dai abdication jump|N.bda]], [[#Bao Dai abdication jump2|N.bda2]]) <i>Bao Dai abdication:</i> Under the pressure of the [[Wikipedia:Viet Minh|Viet Minh]],<!--{sfn|Patti|1980|pp=186-187}}--><ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:186-187</sup> [[Wikipedia:Bao Dai|Bao Dai]] had decided to abdicate on 1945 Aug 24,<!--{sfn|Patti|1980|pp=186-187}}--><ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:186-187</sup> composed the Imperial Rescript of abdication dated and signed on 1945 Aug 25,<ref name=Devillers.1952/><sup>:140</sup> and abdicated officially on 1945 Aug 30.<!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=220}}--><ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:220</sup> [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho Chi Minh]] then appointed "Mr. Nguyen Vinh Thuy" ([[Wikipedia:Bao Dai|Bao Dai]]'s birth name) as "Supreme Counsellor"<!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=220}}--><ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:220</sup> of the Provisional Government of Vietnam.<!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=220}}--><ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:220</sup> On 1945 Oct 22, Ho Chi Minh sent a letter to the US Secretary of State James F. Byrnes,<ref name="Ho to Byrnes.1945"/><sup>:2</sup> and attached the [[Wikipedia:c:File:1945 Aug 22 Bao Dai abdication p1.jpg|Imperial Rescript of Bao Dai's abdication]] together with [[Wikipedia:c:File:1945 Aug 22 Bao Dai abdication p2.jpg|Bao Dai's message to his royal clan about his abdication]], both of which were an English translation with no date, but with the recorded date as 1945 Aug 22 in the US National Archives and Records Administration (NARA). The date of 1945 Aug 25 for the [[Wikipedia:c:File:1945 Aug 22 Bao Dai abdication p1.jpg|Imperial Rescript of Bao Dai's abdication]] and [[Wikipedia:c:File:1945 Aug 22 Bao Dai abdication p2.jpg|Bao Dai's message to his royal clan about his abdication]], as recorded by historian Devillers (1952)<ref name=Devillers.1952/><sup>:140</sup> is likely more reliable and correct. | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Bao Dai quote|N.bdq]]</sup><span id="Bao Dai quote jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="Bao Dai quote"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Bao Dai quote jump|N.bdq]]) <i>Bao Dai quote:</i> In the foreword by Devillers for Tønnesson's 2010 book ''Vietnam 1946''.<ref name=Tonnesson.2010/><sup>:xiii-xiv</sup><!--{{sfn|Tønnesson|2010|pp=xiii-xiv}}--> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Before FDR died |N.brd]]</sup><span id="Before FDR died jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="Before FDR died"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Before FDR died jump|N.brd]]) <i>Before FDR died:</i> Churchill had been resisting to bother FDR regarding Indochina, but relented under the urge of the British Foreign Office, and dispatched on 1945 Apr 11, the day before FDR died, a "strongly worded telegram," stating "It would look very bad in history if we failed to support isolated French forces in their resistance to the Japanese to the best of our ability, or, if we excluded the French from participation in our councils as regards Indo-China."<ref name=Tonnesson.2007/><sup>:67-68</sup> | |||
<span id="NNBich-betrayed"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#NNBich-betrayed jump|N.bs]]) <i>Betrayal suspicion:</i> On the betrayal suspicion, Chester Cooper <!--{{citation |last=Cooper |first=Chester L. |year=1970 |title=The Lost Crusade: America in Vietnam |publisher=Dood, Mead & Company, New York |url=https://archive.org/details/lostcrusadeameri00coop/page/n5/mode/2up |url-access=registration |access-date=7 Mar 2023}}, p.123,--> wrote in 1970:<ref name=Cooper.1970/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/lostcrusadeameri00coop/page/122/mode/2up?q=%22Whether+the+Viet+Minh+had+actually+betrayed+him%22&view=theater 123]</sup> "Whether the [[Wikipedia:Viet Minh|Viet Minh]] had actually betrayed him to French agents is not known for certain, but [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] always suspected that this was how he had been discovered," whereas the assertion that [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]] "was betrayed by his Communist colleagues to the French" was written in the short biography that accompanied [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]]'s 1962 article, in {{citation |editor=Honey, P.J. |title=Special Issue on Vietnam |journal=[[The China Quarterly]] |volume=9 |date=March 1962 |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/volume/0FB8E56075A0E2649EB01EC2BFB9ABFB |url-access=subscription |access-date=18 Feb 2023}}. [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/volume/0FB8E56075A0E2649EB01EC2BFB9ABFB Volume 9]. See the [[#China Quarterly|Note on ''The China Quarterly'']]<span id="China Quarterly jump2"></span>. | |||
<!--:Back to [[#NNBich-betrayed jump|Note]].--> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#NNC.VQL.2023 |N.bb]]</sup><span id="NNC.VQL.2023 jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="NNC.VQL.2023"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#NNC.VQL.2023 jump |N.bb]]) <i>Bich biography:</i> See primary sources and extensive quotations from secondary sources (history books and articles) in ''Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography''.<ref name="NNC.VQL.2023"/><!--{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|Vu-Quoc-Loc|2023}}--> | |||
<!-- | |||
<sup>[[#NNB-hero-2 |N.pbh]]</sup><span id="NNB-hero-2 jump"></span> | |||
{{efn|name=fn-NNB-hero-2| | |||
--> | |||
<span id="NNB-hero-2"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#NNB-hero-2 jump|N.pbh]]) <i>Bich's head price:</i> See [[Wikipedia:Joseph Buttinger|Joseph Buttinger]]'s book, Vol. 1<ref name=Buttinger.1967a/> <sup>[[#Buttinger-review |N.jbr3]]</sup><span id="Buttinger-review jump3"></span> | |||
<span id="bich-injury"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#bich-injury jump1|N.bi1]], [[#bich-injury jump2|N.bi2]]) <i>Bich's injury:</i> A photo showing the injury mark on the forefront of Dr. Bich as a result of this "intensive and unpleasant interrogation" can be found in ''Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography.''<ref name=NNC.VQL.2023/> | |||
<!--:Back to [[#bich-injury-jump|Note]].--> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Bich joined Viet Minh |N.bjvm]]</sup><span id="Bich joined Viet Minh jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="Bich joined Viet Minh"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Bich joined Viet Minh jump |N.bjvm]]) <i>Bich joined Viet Minh:</i> See the quotation from a French doctoral thesis in ''Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography''.<ref name="NNC.VQL.2023"/><!--{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|Vu-Quoc-Loc|2023}}--> | |||
<span id="NNB street"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#NNB street jump |N.nnbs]]) <i>Bich street:</i> A street in Can Tho is named Nguyen Ngoc Bich to commemorate him blowing up the <!--{{plain link|url=https://www.google.com/maps/place/C%E1%BA%A7u+C%C3%A1i+R%C4%83ng,+Ninh+Ki%E1%BB%81u,+C%E1%BA%A7n+Th%C6%A1,+Vietnam/@10.0075615,105.7499666,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x31a089ba70b1c3b5:0xbddcccf9f6fadd75!8m2!3d10.0075615!4d105.7499666!16s%2Fg%2F1jkxqlp4t|name=Cai-Rang Bridge}}-->[https://www.google.com/maps/place/C%E1%BA%A7u+C%C3%A1i+R%C4%83ng,+Ninh+Ki%E1%BB%81u,+C%E1%BA%A7n+Th%C6%A1,+Vietnam/@10.0075615,105.7499666,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m6!3m5!1s0x31a089ba70b1c3b5:0xbddcccf9f6fadd75!8m2!3d10.0075615!4d105.7499666!16s%2Fg%2F1jkxqlp4t Cai-Rang Bridge] in this city to stop the French troops advance in 1945–46.<ref name="CTDN.2019"/> The short biography in Vietnamese, together with an English translation, in this street-naming plan is provided in the document ''Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography,''<ref name=NNC.VQL.2023/> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Bich Viet Minh |N.bvm]]</sup><span id="Bich Viet Minh jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="Bich Viet Minh"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Bich Viet Minh jump |N.bvm]]) <i>Bich Viet Minh:</i> The Viet Minh is "nationalist front organization with many non-communist members, but under communist domination, most clearly at the level of the top leadership."<ref name=Tonnesson.2010/><sup>:23</sup> That Bich joined the Viet Minh in 1945 was mentioned in a French PhD dissertation with page image provided in ''Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911-1966): A Biography.''<ref name=NNC.VQL.2023/> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#British-French arrived |N.bfa]]</sup><span id="British-French arrived jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="British-French arrived"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#British-French arrived jump |N.bvm]]) <i>British-French arrived:</i> "Depuis le 12 septembre [1945] en effet,par petits paquets, les troupes alliées arrivent par avion : une compagnie française du 5ème RIC, un bataillon gurkha de la 20ème division indienne du général Douglas D. Gracey, que Mountbatten a désignée pour opérer le désarmement des Japonais en Indochine du Sud."<ref name=Devillers.1952/><sup>:156</sup> | |||
<!-- | |||
<sup>[[#Buttinger-review |N.jbr]]</sup><span id="Buttinger-review jump"></span> | |||
{{efn|name=fn2-Buttinger-review| | |||
--> | |||
<span id="Buttinger-review"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Buttinger-review jump1 |N.jbr1]], [[#Buttinger-review jump2 |N.jbr2]], [[#Buttinger-review jump3 |N.jbr3]]) <i>Buttinger review:</i> Osborne (1967), a Vietnam scholar, provided a critical review<ref name="Osborne.1967"/> of [[Wikipedia:Joseph Buttinger|Joseph Buttinger]]'s two-volume book.<ref name=Buttinger.1967a/><ref name=Buttinger.1967b/> A recent [https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/7760244 summary] of [[Wikipedia:Joseph Buttinger|Joseph Buttinger]]'s book was provided by Stefania Dzhanamova on 2021 Aug 11 on Goodreads. | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Cao Dai |N.cd]]</sup><span id="Cao Dai jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="Cao Dai"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Cao Dai jump |N.cd]]) <i>Cao Dai:</i> "Appealing largely to the uneducated and essentially superstitious masses, the Cao Dai mushroomed in size to over five hundred thousand by 1930, giving the French authorities cause for concern. A schism took place in 1933 when Pham Cong Tac, one of the original founders, organized a secret sect known as Pham Mon to exploit political objectives. With the death of Pope Le Van Trung in 1936, Tac seized control of the temple at Tay Ninh and proclaimed himself 'interim Pope.' From this point on the Cao Dai split into several distinct sects but retained in all of them a rigid rightist political philosophy, conservative in nature and vehemently anticommunist and promonarchical."<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/whyvietnamprelud0000patt/page/500/mode/2up?view=theater&q=%22rigid+rightist+political+philosophy%22 501]</sup> <ref name=Tonnesson.1991/><sup>:97</sup> | |||
: At first, the French colonialists tolerated the Cao Dai, prefering religious sects over Communists, allowing it to be practiced in Cochinchina (south Vietnam), but not in Annam (central Vietnam) and Tonkin (north Vietnam).<ref name=Tonnesson.1991/><sup>:98</sup> "In 1940-41, the French altitude changed in Cochinchina loo, since it was realized that the new religion had turned into a pro-Japanese force.<ref name=Buttinger.1967a/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/vietnamdragonemb01butt/page/252/mode/2up?q=%22Cao+Dai%22&view=theater 252]</sup> Citing messages from above, Caodaist priests predicted the certain victory of the Axis."<ref name=Tonnesson.1991/><sup>:98</sup> | |||
: In the Spring of 1941, the Caodaistes found themselves in serious difficulty with the French administration, and sought help and protection from the Japanese, who were not in a position to provide. As a result, the Caodaistes were crushed by the French, with Cao Dai leaders sent into exile. By December of 1941, the "famed" ''Kempeitai,'' the Japanese political police modeled after the Gestapo, came to Indochina, and provided help and protection to the Caodaistes and other nationalist factions.<ref name=Devillers.1952/><sup>:89-90</sup> (In Devillers (1952)<ref name=Devillers.1952/><sup>:90</sup>, ''"Kempeitai"'' was translated into French as "Gendarmerie" and "police politique", whereas in Patti (1980)<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:41</sup>, ''"kempeitai"'' was translated as "security police".) | |||
: After the Japanese ''coup de force'' on 1945 Mar 9, being pro-Japanese,<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/whyvietnamprelud0000patt/page/76/mode/2up?view=theater&q=%22rising+sun+armband%22 76]</sup> <ref name=Tonnesson.1991/><sup>:103,373</sup> the Cao Dai sect along with other pro-Japanese groups<sup>[[#Alliance transposition|N.atr]]</sup><span id="Alliance transposition jump"></span> in the United National Front (Mặt Trận Quốc Gia Thống Nhứt),<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/whyvietnamprelud0000patt/page/524/mode/2up?view=theater&q=%22United+National+Front%22 524]</sup> established on 1945 Aug 14,<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/whyvietnamprelud0000patt/page/554/mode/2up?view=theater&q=%22United+National+Front%22 554]</sup> were convinced by Tran Van Giau, a Viet Minh leader in Cochinchina---and later "a prominent Vietnamese historian who organized the 1945 revolution in Saigon and the whole of Cochinchina (Nam Ky)"<ref name=Tonnesson.1991/><sup>:21</sup>---that they all would be "outlawed"<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/whyvietnamprelud0000patt/page/186/mode/2up?view=theater&q=%22outlawed%22 186]</sup> by the invading Allied, agreed to an alliance under the leadership of the Viet Minh.<ref name=Tonnesson.1985/> <ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/whyvietnamprelud0000patt/page/524/mode/2up?view=theater&q=%22United+National+Front%22 524]</sup> | |||
: After the Japanese officially surrendered on 1945 Sep 2, the same day that Ho Chi Minh declared Vietnam Independence, General Leclerc (on 1945 Oct 5)<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/whyvietnamprelud0000patt/page/454/mode/2up?view=theater&q=%22Leclerc%22 454]</sup> and the French 5th Régiment d'Infanterie Colonial (RIC,<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/whyvietnamprelud0000patt/page/n15/mode/2up?view=theater&q=%22RIC%22 xv]</sup> Colonial Infantry Regiment, on 1945 Oct 3)<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/whyvietnamprelud0000patt/page/454/mode/2up?view=theater&q=%22Leclerc%22 454]</sup> were brought back to Cochinchina with the help of the British. The advance units of British troops, the 20th Indian Division, and of the French 5th RIC were flown into Saigon on 1945 Sep 12.<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/whyvietnamprelud0000patt/page/454/mode/2up?view=theater&q=%22Gracey%22 455]</sup> | |||
: "The contentious character of the nationalist movement in the south facilitated Leclerc's 'pacification campaign' at the end of 1945 and the beginning of 1946. He took on the armies of the Hoa Hao, the Cao Dai, and the Viet Minh one after the other. At first, he seemed to score a resounding military success. Many Caodaists rallied to the French. By March, Leclerc estimated that his troops controlled, not just the cities, but also 80 percent of the villages. Politically, however, France had confronted and alienated much of the population, and when the Viet Minh reorganized its forces and started to cooperate more systematically with the religious sects, guerrilla activity resurfaced in most of the areas the French thought they had pacified."<ref name=Tonnesson.2010/><sup>:74</sup> | |||
: On 1946 Apr 10, Nguyen Binh, the equivalent of Vo Nguyen Giap in the south,<ref name=Tonnesson.2010/><sup>:75</sup> formed the Unified National Front (Mặt Trận Quốc Gia Liên Hiệp, "Front National Unifié"),<ref name=Devillers.1952/><sup>:253</sup> composed of the Cao Dai and the same former pro-Japanese groups that were in the United National Front, established less than one year before on 1945 Aug 14, as mentioned above. | |||
: The side switching of these groups prompted Ho Chi Minh to describe the pro-Japanese politicians as "weathercocks who were pro-French yesterday, pro-Jap today, and pro someone else tomorrow."<ref name=Tonnesson.1991/><sup>:105</sup> | |||
<span id="Chester Cooper"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Chester Cooper jump |N.clc]]) <i>Chester Cooper:</i> A summary of an obituary<ref name=Fox.2005/> for Chester L. Cooper is in the document ''Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography''.<ref name=NNC.VQL.2023/> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Dr. Cooper |N.dcc]]</sup><span id="Dr. Cooper jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="Dr. Cooper"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Dr. Cooper jump |N.dcc]]) <i>Cooper, PhD:</i> Chester L. Cooper undertook his doctoral study in urban land economics, and after an interruption due to WWII, received his PhD in 1960.<ref name=Colman.2012/> | |||
<span id="China Quarterly"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#China Quarterly jump|N.tcq]]) <i>China Quarterly:</i> The [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/article/editorial/5958FFC9348ED8A5B69E462E3B72B806 Editorial] of [[Wikipedia:The China Quarterly|The China Quarterly]], [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/volume/0FB8E56075A0E2649EB01EC2BFB9ABFB Volume 9], reads: "Five of our articles are by specialists who have observed the Hanoi regime from a distance. M. Tongas and Mr. [[Wikipedia:Hoang_Van_Chi|Hoang Van Chi]] are writing on the basis of personal experience. Dr. Bich presents an independent view of the whole Vietnamese situation." This China Quarterly issue contained the articles written by several well-known intellectuals on Vietnam history and politics such as [[Wikipedia:Bernard_B._Fall|Bernard B. Fall]], [[Wikipedia:Hoang_Van_Chi|Hoang Van Chi]], Phillipe Devillers (See [https://indomemoires.hypotheses.org/21651 Philippe Devillers (1920–2016), un secret nommé Viêt-Nam, Mémoires d'Indochine], [https://web.archive.org/web/20220629093316/https://indomemoires.hypotheses.org/21651 Internet archived 2022.06.29]), [[Wikipedia:P._J._Honey|P. J. Honey]], William Kaye (see e.g., [https://www.jstor.org/stable/651693 A Bowl of Rice Divided: The Economy of North Vietnam, 1962]), Gerard Tongas, among others. See the [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/article/editorial/5958FFC9348ED8A5B69E462E3B72B806 Editorial] and the [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/article/abs/contributors/DFA1B1B34B49325008EAB9EB582BF0DE brief introduction of the contributors]. | |||
<!--:Back to [[#China Quarterly jump|Note 1]], [[#China Quarterly jump2|Note 2]].--> | |||
<!--:Back to [[#China Quarterly jump|Note 1]], [[#China Quarterly jump2|Note 2]].--> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Churchill, Atlantic Charter |N.chac]]</sup><span id="Churchill, Atlantic Charter jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="Churchill, Atlantic Charter"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Churchill, Atlantic Charter jump |N.chac]]) <i>Churchill, Atlantic Charter:</i> "Both Churchill and many members of his Cabinet were alarmed by the third point of the Charter, which mentions the rights of all peoples to choose their own government. Churchill was concerned that this clause acknowledged the right of colonial subjects to agitate for decolonization, including those in Great Britain’s empire." Churchill wanted to "bind the United States closer to Great Britain," warned his cabinet on 1941 Aug 11 "that it would be “imprudent” to raise unnecessary difficulties. The Cabinet followed Churchill’s recommendation and approved the Charter."<ref name="FRUS-Atlantic.1941"/><!--{{sfn|FRUS-Atlantic|1941}}--> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Cold February 1945 |N.cf45]]</sup><span id="Cold February 1945 jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="Cold February 1945"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Cold February 1945 jump |N.cf45]]) <i>Cold February 1945:</i> It has never been that cold. The temperature went down to four degrees Celcius at noon in Hanoi on 1945 Feb 13, Tết, new year day, Lunar year Ất-Dậu ("13-2-1945, Tết Nguyên Đán Ất-Dậu. Chưa bao giờ rét như thế này. Tại Hà Nội, buổi trưa, hàn thử biểu xuống tới 4 độ"<ref name=Doan-Them.1965/><sup>:3</sup><!--{{sfn|Đoàn-Thêm|1965|p=3}}-->). | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Complete Atlantic Charter |N.cac]]</sup><span id="Complete Atlantic Charter jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="Complete Atlantic Charter"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Complete Atlantic Charter jump |N.cac]], [[#Complete Atlantic Charter jump2 |N.cac2]]) <i>Complete Atlantic Charter:</i> See the [https://www.fdrlibrary.org/atlantic-charter complete Atlantic Charter] from the [[FDR]] Presidential Library and Museum. | |||
<!--<sup>[[#d'Argenlieu recall |N.dar]]</sup><span id="d'Argenlieu recall jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="d'Argenlieu recall"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#d'Argenlieu recall jump |N.dar]], [[#d'Argenlieu recall jump2 |N.dar2]]) <i>D'Argenlieu recalled:</i> D'Argenlieu was recalled back to France because of the intense dislike that he caused among the Vietnamese and among the Socialists and Communists in France,<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/whyvietnamprelud0000patt/page/394/mode/2up?view=theater&q=%22abomination+of+Viet+Nam%22 394]</sup> who gave him the nickname "The Bloody Monk,"<ref name=Logevall.2012/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/embersofwarfallo0000loge/page/162/mode/2up?q=%22bloody+monk%22&view=theater 163]</sup> who was "widely believed to have sparked the war with his aggressive actions in 1946, in clear violation of the March 6 Accords [1946] and without informing Paris, [by recognizing] the autonomous 'Republic of Cochin China' in the name of France."<ref name=Logevall.2012/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/embersofwarfallo0000loge/page/136/mode/2up?q=%22of+the+March+6+Accords%22%22&view=theater 137],[https://archive.org/details/embersofwarfallo0000loge/page/180/mode/2up?q=%22of+the+March+6+Accords%22%22&view=theater 180],[https://archive.org/details/embersofwarfallo0000loge/page/188/mode/2up?q=%22sparked+the+war+with+his+aggressive%22&view=theater 189]</sup> Such recognition went against the stipulation of a referendum for the unification of the three regions ("Kỳ", i.e., Cochinchina, Annam, Tonkin) in the March 6 Accords.<sup>[[#March 6 Accords |N.m6a2]]</sup><span id="March 6 Accords jump2"></span> D'Argenlieu was also known as the "abomination of Vietnam,"<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/whyvietnamprelud0000patt/page/394/mode/2up?view=theater&q=%22abomination+of+Viet+Nam%22 394]</sup> whom Bao Dai was averse to have any dealings with. | |||
<span id="de Gaulle"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#de Gaulle jump1|N.cdg1]], [[#de Gaulle jump2|N.cdg2]]) <i>De Gaulle:</i> The permanent undersecretary at the British Foreign Office knew only that de Gaulle had a 'head like a pineapple and hips like a woman's', whereas the counselor at the US embassy in Paris and most of de Gaulle compatriots never heard of him.<ref name=Logevall.2012/><sup>:24</sup> By Aug 1946, [[Wikipedia:de Gaulle|de Gaulle]] had resigned from the presidency of the French Provisional Government on 1946 Jan 20.<ref name="de Gaulle web"/> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#de Gaulle dream |N.dgd]]</sup><span id="de Gaulle dream jump1"></span>--> | |||
<span id="de Gaulle dream"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#de Gaulle dream jump |N.dgd]]) <i>De Gaulle's dream:</i> In 1940-41, in exchange for retaining control over Indochina and Thailand, both the French and the Thai agreed to let the Japanese Navy, Air Force, and Army use, for their military conquest, the harbors, air fields, and terrain in Indochina and Thailand.<ref name=Tonnesson.1991/><sup>:81</sup> Meanwhile, in exile in London, De Gaulle later wrote in his war memoirs: "À moi-même, menant une bien petite barque sur l'océan de la guerre, L'Indochine apparaissait alors comme un grand navire désemparé que je ne pourrais secourir avant d'avoir longuement réuni les moyens du sauvetage. Le voyant s'éloigner dans la brume, je me jurais à moi-même de le ramener un jour." Ch. de Gaulle, Mémoires de guerre, Tome I, L'appel. 1940-42. p. 137.<ref name=Tonnesson.1991/><sup>:81(n3)</sup> | |||
<span id="Devillers ref"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Devillers ref jump |N.pd]]) <i>(Philippe) Devillers:</i> See <!--[[w:French_Cochinchina#cite_note-41|French Cochinchina, Ref. 40]] | |||
--> [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=French_Cochinchina&oldid=1247806900#cite_note-43 French Cochinchina, version 03:16, 26 September 2024, Ref.42]: Philippe Devillers, ''Histoire du Viêt-Nam de 1940 à 1952'', Seuil, 1952, and [https://indomemoires.hypotheses.org/21651 Philippe Devillers (1920–2016), un secret nommé Viêt-Nam, Mémoires d'Indochine], [https://web.archive.org/web/20220629093316/https://indomemoires.hypotheses.org/21651 Internet archived 2022.06.29]. | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Devillers incorrect info |N.dii]]</sup><span id="Devillers incorrect info jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="Devillers incorrect info"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Devillers incorrect info jump |N.dii]]) <i>Devillers incorrect info:</i> Devillers (1952) received incorrect information that Ho was in "Tsin Tsi" (Jingxi, Guangxi, China) as he wrote:<ref name=Devillers.1952/><sup>:97</sup><!--{{sfn|Devillers|1952|p=97}}--> "En mai 1941, il réussit à convoquer à Tsin Tsi dans le Kwang Si, à 100 km environ au Nord de Cao Bang, un 'Congrès' (In May 1941, he succeeded in calling for a plenum at Jingxi in the Guangxi province, about 100 km north of the Cao Bang province)." | |||
<!--<sup>[[#FDR died |N.frd]]</sup><span id="FDR died jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="FDR died"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#FDR died jump |N.frd]]) <i>FDR died:</i> "Then, on April 12, as Roosevelt was once again on vacation---at his compound in Warm Springs, Georgia---he complained of a headache, slumped back in his chair, and died."<ref name=OBrien.2024/> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Fenn helped Ho |N.fhh]]</sup><span id="Fenn helped Ho jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="Fenn helped Ho"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Fenn helped Ho jump |N.fhh]]) <i>Fenn helped Ho:</i> [[Wikipedia:Office_of_Strategic_Services|OSS]] Lt. Charles Fenn helped "make Ho Chi Minh the undisputed leader of the Viet Minh in 1945".<ref name="Bartholomew-Feis.2006"/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/osshochiminhunex0000bart/page/96/mode/2up?q=%22make+Ho+Chi+Minh+the%22&view=theater 96]</sup><!--{{sfn|Bartholomew-Feis|2006|p=96}}--> | |||
<span id="Francophile anticolonialists"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Francophile anticolonialists jump1|N.fa1]], [[#Francophile anticolonialists jump2|N.fa2]]) <i>Francophile anticolonialists:</i> "French teachings and models over Confucian ones. Some of these teachings were, to say the least, unhelpful to the colonial enterprise. Voltaire's condemnation of tyranny, Rousseau's embrace of popular sovereignty, and Victor Hugo's advocacy of liberty and defense of workers' uprisings turned some Vietnamese into that curious creature found also elsewhere in the empire: the Francophile anticolonialist."<ref name=Logevall.2012/><sup>:9</sup> | |||
<!--: Back to [[#Francophile anticolonialists jump|Note]].--> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#French War casualties |N.fwc]]</sup><span id="French War casualties jump"</span>--> | |||
<span id="French War casualties"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#French War casualties jump |N.fwc]]) <i>French War casualties:</i> The [[Wikipedia:First Indochina War|First Indochina War]], known as the "French-American War" in Vietnamese literature, resulted in "500,000 on the side of the DRV ([[Wikipedia:Democratic Republic of Vietnam|Democratic Republic of Vietnam]]) and 100,000 for the French."<ref name=Tonnesson.2010/><sup>:261(n3)</sup> See also detailed statistics and sources at [https://sites.tufts.edu/atrocityendings/2015/08/07/indochina-1st-indochina-war/ First Indochina War: Mass Atrocity Endings], Posted on August 7, 2015 by [https://sites.tufts.edu/atrocityendings/author/worldpeacefoundation/ World Peace Foundation]; [https://web.archive.org/web/20240606132735/https://sites.tufts.edu/atrocityendings/2015/08/07/indochina-1st-indochina-war/ Internet Archive 2024.06.06]. | |||
<span id="French-war cost"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#French-war cost jump|N.fwc]]) <i>French-war cost:</i> PBS ''US Involvement in Vietnam'' Video time 0:11 to 0:32:<ref name="PBS US involvement in Vietnam"/> "In 1952, General Dwight Eisenhower was elected President, in part because he promised to take a tougher stance on communism. That year, American taxpayers were footing more than 30% of the bill for the French war in Vietnam (also called the "French-American" war<ref name="Lady.Borton.2020"/>). Within two years, that number would rise to nearly 80%." To be more precise, the "U.S. aid to the French military effort mounted from $130 million in 1950 to $800 million in 1953."<ref name="Deconde.2002"/><sup>:597</sup> The "United States became France's largest patron, ultimately funding 78 percent of the French war effort in Indochina,"reported historian L.H.T. Nguyen based on the Vietnamese document "Tong ket cuoc khang chien chong thuc dan Phap," Hanoi: Chinh Tri Quoc Gia, 1996.<ref name="Lawrence.2007"/><sup>:46</sup> | |||
<!--:Back to [[#French-war cost jump|Note]] [[#French-war cost jump|N.fwc]].--> | |||
<span id="Hammer (1954)"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Hammer (1954) jump |N.ehb]]) <i>Hammer (1954):</i> [[Wikipedia:Ellen Hammer|Ellen Hammer]]'s 1954 book ''The Struggle for Indochina''<!--{{sfn|Hammer|1954}}--><ref name="Hammer.1954"/> was "A superb study of the French effort to hold on to Indochina."<ref name="Gettleman.1967"/> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#US Ambassador Hurley |N.uah]]</sup><span id="US Ambassador Hurley jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="US Ambassador Hurley"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#US Ambassador Hurley jump |N.uah]]) <i>Hurley, US Ambassador:</i> Patrick Hurley was identified as "Major Gen. Patrick J. Hurley,"<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:13</sup> a “personal representative” in China for Roosevelt,<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:15</sup> and then “Ambassador Hurley” by 1945 Mar 9.<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:63</sup> Until around 1944 Nov 1-17, the US Ambassador to China was Clarence E. Gauss,<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:15</sup>who resigned, and Gen. Hurley was appointed as US Ambassador.<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:453</sup> Thus, Patrick Hurley was correctly referred to as Roosevelt’s "ambassador to China" when Truman was president, after Roosevelt had died:<ref name=Tonnesson.2007/><sup>:66</sup> "On [1945] March 8, the day before the Japanese struck against the French, Roosevelt gave separate audiences in the White House to his ambassador to China, Patrick Hurley; the commander of the China theatre forces, General Albert C. Wedemeyer; and Admiral William F. Halsey, who had raided the Indochina coast on January 12." | |||
<span id="Ellen Hammer"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Ellen Hammer jump |N.ejh]]) <i>(Ellen J.) Hammer</i> received her PhD from Columbia University, where she specialized in international relations, with a dissertation on public law and government.<ref name=Pace.2001/> A summary of an obituary for Ellen J. Hammer is in the document ''Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography''.<!--{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|Vu-Quoc-Loc|2023}}--><ref name=NNC.VQL.2023/> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#HCM quote1|N.hcm1]]</sup><span id="HCM quote1 jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="HCM quote1"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#HCM quote1 jump|N.hcm1]]) <i>HCM quote1:</i> From 1945 Aug 26 to 1980, when Patti published his book.<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:4</sup><!--{{sfn|Patti|1980|p=4}}--> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#HCM and OSS |N.hos]]</sup><span id="HCM and OSS jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="HCM and OSS"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#HCM and OSS jump |N.hos]]) <i>HCM and OSS:</i> For the relationship between the OSS and Ho Chi Minh during WWII, see the article [[Wikipedia:OSS Deer Team|OSS Deer Team]] and the book <i>The OSS and Ho Chi Minh</i>.<ref name="Bartholomew-Feis.2006"/> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Ho admires Americans|N.haa]]</sup><span id="Ho admires Americans jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="Ho admires Americans"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Ho admires Americans jump|N.haa]]) <i>Ho admires Americans:</i> As cited in Logevall (2012),<ref name=Logevall.2012/><sup>:[https://archive.org/details/embersofwarfallo0000loge/page/720/mode/2up?q=%22lifelong+admiration%22&view=theater 721]</sup><!--{{sfn|Logevall|2012|p=721}}--> Note 22, p. [https://archive.org/details/embersofwarfallo0000loge/page/720/mode/2up?q=%22lifelong+admiration%22&view=theater 721]: "Former New York Times Saigon correspondent A. J. Langguth, in his fine history of the American war, refers to Ho Chi Minh's 'lifelong admiration for Americans.' "<ref name=Langguth.2000/><sup>:55</sup> <!--Our Vietnam: The War, 1954-1975 (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2000), 55.--> | |||
<span id="Ho Atlantic Charter"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Ho Atlantic Charter jump |N.hac]]) <i>Ho and Atlantic Charter:</i> In his letter to the US Chairman of Foreign Affairs Association, Ho referred to the Atlantic Charter several times, twice on [[Wikipedia:c:File:1945_Oct_22_Ho_Chi_Minh_letter_to_US_Chairman_Foreign_Affairs_Association_p1.jpg|Page 1]] alone: (1) " As a signatory power of the Atlantic and San-Francisco Charters, the United States of America have to be well informed on the real state of affairs", (2) "These principles of international justice and equality of status have been clearly expressed and solemnly proclaimed in point 3 and 4<sup>[[#Point 4 Atlantic Charter |N.p4a]]</sup><span id="Point 4 Atlantic Charter jump"></span> of the Atlantic Charter and subsequently reiterated in the San Francisco Charter".<ref name="Ho to Chairman Foreign Affairs.1945"/> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Ho communist nationalist|N.hcn]]</sup><span id="Ho communist nationalist jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="Ho communist nationalist"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Ho communist nationalist jump|N.hcn]]) <i>Ho, communist or nationalist?</i> "For many decades there would be a heated debate among diplomats, politicians and political scientists in every corner of the world as to whether [[Ho Chi Minh]] was a communist or a nationalist. The answer is that he was both."<ref name=Tonnesson.1991/><sup>:120</sup><!--{{sfn|Tønnesson|1991|p=120}} --> This view is consistent with that of Jean Sainteny who wrote in his 1972 memoir: "I have been asked countless times, `Was Ho Chi Minh primarily a Nationalist or a Communist?' My reply is always the same: Ho Chi Minh was both. For him nationalism and communism were, respectively, goal and the means to attain that goal. The two complemented each other, merged."<ref name=Sainteny.1972/><sup>:20</sup> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Ho gave pistols |N.hgp]]</sup><span id="Ho gave pistols jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="Ho gave pistols"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Ho gave pistols jump |N.hgp]]) <i>Ho gave pistols:</i> That Ho gave the new pistols to his rivals, but not to his own people, testified to his political acumen in rallying his rivals to accept him as the top leader.<ref name="VQL.2023a"/><!--{{sfn|Vu Quoc Loc|2023a}}--> | |||
<!--{{Image|Ho Chi Minh and Sainteny on Catalina 1945 Mar 24.JPG|right|350px|Add image caption here.}}--> | |||
[[File:Ho Chi Minh and Sainteny on Catalina 1945 Mar 24.JPG|thumb|right|150px|Ho Chi Minh and Sainteny on the seaplane ''Catalina,'' on their way to meet d'Argenlieu on the battleship ''Emile-Bertin'', 1945 Mar 24.]] | |||
<!--<sup>[[#HCM Sainteny Catalina |N.hsc]]</sup><span id="HCM Sainteny Catalina jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="HCM Sainteny Catalina"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#HCM Sainteny Catalina jump |N.hsc]]) <i>Ho and Sainteny on Catalina:</i> On 1945 Mar 24, Ho and Jean Saiteny boarded the seaplane ''Catalina'' that took them to meet Admiral Thierry d'Argenlieu on the French battleship ''Emile-Bertin,'' mooring in the Ha Long Bay. | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Ho in France 1946 |N.hif]]</sup><span id="Ho in France 1946 jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="Ho in France 1946"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Ho in France 1946 jump |N.hif]]) <i>Ho in France 1946:</i> See Youtube video ''French involvement in Vietnam & Dien Bien Phu - 1962,'' time [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XWY9KbIXpdI&t=2m09s 2:09], showing the moment Ho's plane landed in Paris and the subsequent greetings the French government giving to Ho as a head of state. Flying with Ho from Biarritz to Paris, Sainteny recalled: "At four o'clock we were over Paris. The Bourget airport was thick with crowds of people. Marius Moutet, Minister of Colonies, was there, surrounded by numerous distinguished civilians and military notables representing the French government. Above the airport floated the associated flags of France and Vietnam."<ref name=Sainteny.1972/><sup>:76</sup> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Ho Tienpao prison |N.htp]]</sup><span id="Ho Tienpao prison jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="Ho Tienpao prison"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Ho Tienpao prison jump |N.htp]]) <i>Ho in Tienpao prison:</i> Tienpao in the [[Wikipedia:Wade-Giles|Wade-Giles]] transliteration is Tianbao in [[Wikipedia:pinyin|pinyin]]. See the analysis in ''Notes on Vietnam History.''<ref name=VQL.2023a/> | |||
{{Image|Ho Chi Minh with a horse.jpg|right|150px|Ho Chi Minh took refuge in the jungle to battle French forces.<ref name=Sainteny.1972/>.}} | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Ho in Vietnam 1944 |N.hvn]]</sup><span id="Ho in Vietnam 1944 jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="Ho in Vietnam 1944"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Ho in Vietnam 1944 jump |N.hvn]]) <i>Ho in Vietnam 1944:</i> A French report at that time stated: "more than 200 political refugees had passed from China to Tonkin, most of them armed with pistols and daggers (''poiguards''), and that among them was a certain 'Nguyen Hai Quoc', who had crossed the border under the name of 'Ho Chi Minh'. Nguyen Hai Quoc, a man 'around sixty years old', was 'the probable leader' of the Viet Minh: 'Under Nguyen Hai Quoc's leadership, the new elements coming from Kwangsi have undertaken to reawaken the movement and bring back to their former activities the implacables who had taken refuge in the mountains.' "<ref name="Tonnesson.1991"/><sup>:118, 208</sup><!--{{sfn|Tønnesson|1991|pp=118, 208}}--> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Ho insight revolution | N.hir]]</sup><span id="Ho insight revolution jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="Ho insight revolution"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Ho insight revolution jump | N.hir]]) <i>Ho's insight for revolution:</i> Ho was convinced that with the Japanese occupation of Indochina and "with international events moving fast and Decoux's government isolated from metropolitan France, the potential for revolution in Vietnam was much enhanced."<ref name=Logevall.2012/><!--{{sfn|Logevall|2012|p=34}}--> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Ho met OSS |N.hmo]]</sup><span id="Ho met OSS jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="Ho met OSS"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Ho met OSS jump |N.hmo]]) <i>Ho met OSS:</i> [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho]]'s "mission was probably to obtain information on the development of the war, try to gain Allied recognition for his league and perhaps also secure the [[Wikipedia:Viet Minh|Viet Minh]] a role in a forthcoming invasion". At the same time, [[Wikipedia:vi:Hoàng_Quốc_Việt|Hoang Quoc Viet]] carried out a similar mission in Kwangsi (now [[Wikipedia:Guangxi|Guangxi]]) with the Chinese <!--{{lang-de|[[:de:Zhang_Fakui|Gen. Chang Fa-kwei]]}}-->[[Wikipedia:de:Zhang_Fakui|Gen. Chang Fa-kwei]], who told him that "I hope we shall soon meet again in Hanoi".<ref name="Tonnesson.1991"/><sup>:210</sup><!--{{sfn|Tønnesson|1991|p=210}}--> See also the [https://openvault.wgbh.org/catalog/V_F8F9FACD595E4A74BCA28655493A1743 PBS interview with Hoang Quoc Viet in 1981]. | |||
<!--<sup>[[#HCM Vietnam Independence |N.hvi]]</sup><span id="HCM Vietnam Independence jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="HCM Vietnam Independence "></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#HCM Vietnam Independence jump |N.hvi]]) <i>HCM Vietnam Independence :</i> For a detailed comparative analysis between the US Declaration of Independence and Ho Chi Minh’s Declaration of Vietnam Independence, see ''Notes of Vietnam History''.<ref name=VQL.2023a/> "Bao Dai, the French-protected emperor of Annam, with nominal authority also in Tonkin, had gained nominal independence aer Japan ousted the French regime in March 1945. When he abdicated voluntarily in August 1945, he ceded his powers to the new Democratic Republic. Shortly before Bao Dai abdicated, his government had obtained from Japan something that France had always refused to concede: sovereignty also in Nam Ky (Cochinchina), hitherto under direct French rule, where the emperor had previously had no say." <ref name=Tonnesson.2010/><sup>:12</sup> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Lancaster book |N.dlb]]</sup><span id="Lancaster book jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="Lancaster book"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Lancaster book jump |N.dlb]]) <i>Lancaster book:</i> Donald Lancaster's 1961 book ''The Emancipation of French Indochina''<ref name=Lancaster.1961/> was "The best single book on the history of all Indochina to about 1955".<ref name="Gettleman.1967"/> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Leclerc accepted assignment|N.dgl]]</sup><span id="Leclerc accepted assignment jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="Leclerc accepted assignment"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Leclerc accepted assignment jump |N.laa]]) <i>Leclerc accepted assignment:</i> Devillers (1952) wrote that Leclerc accepted his assignment on 1945 May 22 to command two French divisions placed under the general command of American forces in the Pacific ("Dès lors, c’est à obtenir la participation française à cet assaut que Paris voue ses efforts. Le 26 mai, le Gouvernement français offre à Washington de mettre à la disposition du Commandement américain dans le Pacifique un Corps d'Armée à deux divisions. Le general Leclerc, chef de la prestigieuse 2ème Division Blindée, le vainqueur de Koufra, de Paris, de Strasbourg et de Berchtesgaden, le plus connu et le plus populaire des chefs militaires français, a accepté le 22 mai d’en prendre le commandement."). | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Leclerc entered Hanoi |N.leh]]</sup><span id="Leclerc entered Hanoi jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="Leclerc entered Hanoi"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Leclerc entered Hanoi jump |N.leh]]) <i>Leclerc entered Hanoi:</i> "Dès le premier contact, il mettra Ho Chi Minh en confiance. « Alors, Monsieur le Président, on est d’accord maintenant ? » s'écriera-t-il de sa voix dure, un peu trainante, en s'avançant la main largement ouverte vers le vieux révolutionnaire... Comme il a fait mettre à tous ses véhicules des drapeaux français et vietnamiens, il a demandé, pour sa villa, une garde mixte de 15 Francais et de 15 Viêts."<ref name=Devillers.1952/><sup>:238</sup> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#March 6 Accords |N.m6a]]</sup><span id="March 6 Accords jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="March 6 Accords"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#March 6 Accords jump1 |N.m6a1]], [[#March 6 Accords jump2 |N.m6a2]], [[#March 6 Accords jump3 |N.m6a3]]) <i>March 6 Accords:</i> "Ho Chi Minh saw no option but to negotiate. In the spring of 1946 he offered concessions to the French, agreeing to permit them to return to the north to displace the Chinese. He also agreed to affiliate an autonomous Vietnam with the French Union, a loose federation of states linked to France. In return, French negotiator Jean Sainteny pledged that there would be a national referendum to determine whether Cochinchina, the southern part of Vietnam, would rejoin Annam and Tonkin in a reunited Vietnamese state or remain a separate French territory."<ref name=Lawrence.Logevall.2007/><sup>:7</sup> | |||
: Point 1 of the March 6 Accords stipulated that the French government recorgnized the Republic of Vietnam as a ''"Free state"'' within the French Union, and regarding Cochinchina, a referendum would be organized to unify the three regions of Vietnam, and the French government would ratify the decisions of the voting population ("Le Gouvernement français reconnait la République du Viêt-Nam comme un État libre ayant son governement, son parlement, son armée et ses finances, faisant partie de la Fédération Indochinoise et de l'Union Française. En ce qui concerne la réunion des trois 'Ky', le gouvernement Français s'engage à entériner les décisions prises par la population consultée par référendum").<ref name=Devillers.1952/><sup>:225</sup> | |||
<span id="Minh Tan"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Minh Tan jump|N.mbl]]) <i>Minh Tan book list:</i> A list of important books published by Minh Tan can be found in [https://archive.org/details/nguyen-ngoc-bich-1911-1966-a-biography Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography]. | |||
<!--: Back to [[#Minh Tan jump|Note]].--> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Moffat memo on Krull |N.mok]]</sup><span id="Moffat memo on Krull jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="Moffat memo on Krull"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Moffat memo on Krull jump|N.mtl]]) <i>Moffat memo on Krull:</i> [[Wikipedia:Abbot Low Moffat|Abbot Low Moffat]], "who headed the Division for Southeast Asian [SEA] Affairs at [the] State" [Department],<ref name=Patti.1980/><sup>:381</sup> wrote a memo on 1947 Feb 24 about Germaine Krull's 1945 report<ref name=Krull.1945/> as follows: "The underlying diary by a former French war correspondent (Germaine Krull) describes the Allied occupation of Saigon, September 12 to 24, 1945. The report is by far the most graphic, vivid, and absorbing account of this critical period, which witnessed the beginning of the war in Indochina, which has reached SEA. Highlights have been marked in blue pencil, but the report is well worth reading in its entirety."<ref name=Krull.1945/> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Mountbatten to Leclerc |N.mtl]]</sup><span id="Mountbatten to Leclerc jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="Mountbatten to Leclerc"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Mountbatten to Leclerc jump|N.mtl]]) <i>Mountbatten to Leclerc:</i> "Si Roosevelt vivait encore, vous ne rentreriez pas en Indochine."<ref name=Devillers.1952></ref><sup>:153</sup> | |||
<span id="Napalm battles"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Napalm battles jump|N.nb]]) <i>Napalm battles:</i> See, e.g., the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_V%C4%A9nh_Y%C3%AAn battle of Vinh Yen] (1951), the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_N%C3%A0_S%E1%BA%A3n battle of Na San] (1952), the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Dien_Bien_Phu battle of Dien Bien Phu] (1954), etc. | |||
<!--:Back to [[#Napalm battles jump|Note]]. --> | |||
<span id="Napalm girl"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Napalm girl jump1 |N.ng1]], [[#Napalm girl jump2 |N.ng2]]) <i>Napalm girl:</i> A photo of the scars on the back and arm of Phan Thị Kim Phúc, the "napalm girl", is given in Stockton (2022).<ref name=Stockton.2022/> | |||
<span id="NNC-VQL-more-details"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#NNC-VQL-more-details jump1 |N.bq1]], [[#NNC-VQL-more-details jump2 |N.bq2]]) <i>NNB quotations:</i> See more detailed quotations in ''Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography''<!--{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|Vu-Quoc-Loc|2023}}--><ref name=NNC.VQL.2023/> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Nguyen Ai Quoc |N.naq]]</sup><span id="Nguyen Ai Quoc jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="Nguyen Ai Quoc"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Nguyen Ai Quoc jump |N.naq]]) <i>Nguyen Ai Quoc:</i> [[Wikipedia:vi:Hoàng_Quốc_Việt|Hoang Quoc Viet]] recounted in his [https://openvault.wgbh.org/catalog/V_F8F9FACD595E4A74BCA28655493A1743 1981 interview with the PBS]: "I was sent to the southern part of the country at one point to discuss things with our comrades there. The discussion was very heated and it was very difficult to iron things out. Then I happened to mention the name Ho Chi Minh. These people in the south asked me who Ho Chi Minh was. I told them that he was Nguyen Ai Quoc. They all stood up and clapped and said that as I was a representative sent by Ho Chi Minh then there was no need for any further discussion. This was because at that time there was a feud going on between the so called "Old Viet Minhs" and "New Viet Minhs". But when they heard from me that Ho Chi Minh was indeed Nguyen Ai Quoc, they were all overjoyed, saying that if Nguyen Ai Quoc had returned home to lead the movement then everything would be solved, that there should be unity and solidarity." | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Notes on Vietnam history |N.vnh]]</sup><span id="Notes on Vietnam history jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="Notes on Vietnam history"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Notes on Vietnam history jump |N.vnh]], [[#Notes on Vietnam history jump2 |N.vnh2]], [[#Notes on Vietnam history jump3 |N.vnh3]]) <i>Notes on Vietnam history:</i> See quotations in ''Notes on Vietnam history''.<ref name=VQL.2023a/><!--{{sfn|Vu Quoc Loc|2023a}}--> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Original writer |N.vql]]</sup><span id="Original writer jump"></span> | |||
<span id="Original writer"></span>--> | |||
<span id="Original writer"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Original writer jump |N.vql]]) <i>Original creator and writer:</i> [[wikiversity:User:Egm4313.s12|Prof. Loc Vu-Quoc]], vuquocloc@yahoo.com, [https://sites.google.com/site/locvuquoc1/ Publications], <!--{{Plain link|url=https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=xlH7V2QAAAAJ&view_op=list_works&is_public_preview=1|name=Google Scholar}}-->[https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=xlH7V2QAAAAJ&view_op=list_works&is_public_preview=1 Google Scholar]. Wikipedia [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Egm4313.s12 User:Egm4313.s12].. Citizendium [https://en.citizendium.org/wiki/User:Loc_Vu-Quoc User:Loc Vu-Quoc]. See also [https://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Nguyen_Ngoc_Bich Nguyen Ngoc Bich] on [https://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Welcome_to_Citizendium Citizendium]. | |||
<span id="Political influence"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Political influence jump|N.pi]]) <i>Political influence:</i> A direct quote from the [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/article/abs/contributors/DFA1B1B34B49325008EAB9EB582BF0DE brief introduction of the contributors] to [[The China Quarterly]], [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/volume/0FB8E56075A0E2649EB01EC2BFB9ABFB Volume 9], 1962, reads: Dr. Bich's "personal influence upon Cochin Chinese opinion is considerable, and he is regarded by many as a possible successor to President Ngo Dinh Diem". | |||
<!--:Back to [[#Political influence jump|Note]].--> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Power vacuum to August Revolution |N.pvar]]</sup><span id="Power vacuum to August Revolution jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="Power vacuum to August Revolution"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Power vacuum to August Revolution jump |N.pvar]]) <i>Power vacuum to August Revolution:</i> "In August and September 1945, the white-bearded Ho Chi Minh emerged as the winner of the Indochina game. ... He expected an Allied invasion and prepared himself for assisting the invading forces. Instead he got a power vacuum and a sudden Japanese surrender. This provided him with an occasion more favorable for bloodless revolution than he could ever have imagined. He then proclaimed the republic that would later defeat both France and the United States."<ref name="Tonnesson.2007"/><sup>:73</sup> | |||
<span id="Primary sources, quotations"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Primary sources, quotations jump1|N.psq1]], [[#Primary sources, quotations jump2|N.psq2]], [[#Primary sources, quotations jump3|N.psq3]]) <i>Primary sources, quotations:</i> See primary sources, extensive notes and quotations in ''Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography''<ref name=NNC.VQL.2023/> and ''Notes on Vietnam History.''<ref name=VQL.2023a/> | |||
<!--:Back to [[#Primary sources, quotations jump1|Note 1]], [[#Primary sources, quotations jump2|Note 2]].--> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Taberd Cochin China |N.tcc]]</sup><span id="Taberd Cochin China jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="Taberd Cochin China"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Taberd Cochin China jump |N.tcc]]) <i>Taberd Cochin China:</i> [[Wikipedia:Jean-Louis Taberd|Jean-Louis Taberd]] was likely among the first to explain the meaning of "[[Wikipedia:Cochin China|Cochin China]]" in his 1837 scientific article; see quotation in ''Notes on Vietnam History''.<ref name="VQL.2023a"/><!--{{sfn|Vu Quoc Loc|2023a}}--> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#They in Atlantic Charter |N.tac]]</sup><span id="They in Atlantic Charter jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="They in Atlantic Charter"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#They in Atlantic Charter jump |N.tac]]) <i>"They" in Atlantic Charter:</i> "They" here means [[FDR]] and [[Churchill]] and their respective governments.<ref name="FRUS-Atlantic.1941"/><!--{{sfn|FRUS-Atlantic|1941}}--> | |||
<span id="Virginia Thompson"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Virginia Thompson jump |N.vt]]) <i>(Virginia) Thompson</i> was the first British historian with a deep knowledge on French Indochina with her 1937 book ''[https://archive.org/details/FrenchIndoChina/page/n1/mode/2up French Indo-China]'' (Internet Archive), George Allen & Unwin LTD, London. Also see the review of this book: ''French Indo-China'' By Virginia Thompson (New York: Macmillan Company, 1937, pp.516, $5.00), [https://academic.oup.com/ahr/article-abstract/43/4/876/70968 reviewed by H.I. Priestley], The American Historical Review, Volume 43, Issue 4, July 1938, Pages 876–877, https://doi.org/10.1086/ahr/43.4.876 | |||
{{Image|1945 Apr 13 Allies flags half staff Roosevelt died.JPG|right|250px|Allied flags at half staff on 1945 Apr 13, the day after FDR died.}} | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Truman foreign policy |N.tfp]]</sup><span id="Truman foreign policy jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="Truman foreign policy"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Truman foreign policy jump |N.tfp]]) <i>Truman foreign policy:</i> After Roosevelt died on 1945 Apr 12, "U.S. policy fell into the hands of Truman, who had no idea what Roosevelt had really wanted to achieve or how he had planned to achieve it. Over the coming three years, Truman would take this ignorance, combined with Stalin's strategic overreach and blundering, and create the Cold War that Roosevelt had always been keen to avoid."<ref name=OBrien.2024/> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#US invasion of Indochina |N.uii]]</sup><span id="US invasion of Indochina jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="US invasion of Indochina"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#US invasion of Indochina jump |N.uii]]) <i>US invasion of Indochina:</i> The US was the only country among the Allies (British and Chinese) that could invade Indochina; see Chap. 4, Colliding Plans, in Tønnesson (1991).<ref name="Tonnesson.1991"/><sup>:156</sup><!--{{sfn|Tønnesson|1991|p=156}}--> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#US war plan |N.uwp]]</sup><span id="US war plan jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="US war plan"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#US war plan jump |N.uwp]]) <i>US war plan:</i> "... to confuse the Japanese, possibly the French as well, concerning US intentions. Perhaps Roosevelt meant the plan seriously at first, and then changed it into a deceptive operation when he realized that it could not be carried out ... Indochina came to play a similar role in Roosevelt's war against Japan as Norway occupied in Churchill's war against Germany. For a long time, Churchill toyed with the idea of a Norwegian landing as a way of securing the transport route to Russia and bringing Sweden into the war. Then, when his generals and admirals adamantly refused to carry out the project, Norway instead became the focus of elaborate deception and diversion plans, aiming at inducing Hitler to keep as many troops as possible in an irrelevant theatre."<ref name="Tonnesson.1991"/><sup>:170, 220</sup><!--{{sfn|Tønnesson|1991|pp=170, 220}}--> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Vietnam-America troops |N.vat]]</sup><span id="Vietnam-America troops jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="Vietnam-America troops"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Vietnam-America troops jump |N.vat]]) <i>Vietnam-America troops:</i> "From the group of 110 assembled recruits, their field commander Dam Quang Trung and the Deer Team chose 40 of the 'most promising' young men to begin training immediately. The eager recruits who would be working with the Deer Team were officially christened by Ho Chi Minh the Bo Doi Viet-My, the 'Vietnamese-American Force.'"<ref name=Bartholomew-Feis.2006/><sup>:209</sup> On "August 16, 1945, the Deer Team and the Vietnamese-American Force left Tan Trao... Both Thomas and Vo Nguyen Giap were anxious to leave for Thai Nguyen," which was on their way to Hanoi.<ref name=Bartholomew-Feis.2006/><sup>:216</sup> When the Vietnamese-American Force attacked the Japanese garrison at Thai-Nguyen, "Nguyen Chinh remembered that the surrender document that he typed mentioned the Americans as well: 'We the Liberation Army and the Vietnam-America troops, commanded by the Viet Minh organization, already encircled tightly this garrison. We demand the [Japanese] troops inside the garrison accept the following conditions.' "<ref name=Bartholomew-Feis.2006/><sup>:369 Note 20</sup> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Vietnam Indepence Day |N.vid]]</sup><span id="Vietnam Indepence Day jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="Vietnam Indepence Day"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Vietnam Indepence Day jump |N.vid]]) <i>Vietnam Indepence Day:</i> That was 1945 Sep 2, the day Ho Chi Minh declared Vietnam's Independence, and also the day the Japanese formally surrendered on the USS Missouri. | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Viet Minh manifesto |N.vmm]]</sup><span id="Viet Minh manifesto jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="Viet Minh manifesto"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Viet Minh manifesto jump |N.vmm]]) <i>Viet Minh manifesto:</i> "Union de toutes les couches sociales, de toutes les organisations révolutionnaires, de toutes les minorités ethniques. Alliance avec tous les autres peuples opprimés de l'Indochine. Collaboration avec tous les élements antifascistes français. Un but: la destruction du colonialisme et de l'impérialisme fascistes."<ref name="Devillers.1952"/><sup>:97</sup><!--{{sfn|Devillers|1952|p=97}}--> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#VQL Foreword |N.vqf]]</sup><span id="VQL Foreword jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="VQL Foreword"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#VQL Foreword jump |N.vqf]]) <i>VQL Foreword:</i> See the Foreword and [[Nguyen Ngoc Bich|Bich]]'s open letter in ''Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911-1966): A Biography''<ref name=NNC.VQL.2023/> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Walking to Kunming |N.wtk]]</sup><span id="Walking to Kunming jump"></span> --> | |||
<span id="Walking to Kunming"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Walking to Kunming jump |N.wtk]]) <i>Walking to Kunming:</i> It takes about two weeks to walk from [[Wikipedia:vi:Pác_Bó|Pác Bó]] to [[Wikipedia:Kunming|Kunming]] using likely the same road (among several others) undertaken by the invading Mongols in the thirteen century.<ref name="VQL.2023b"/><!--{{sfn|Vu-Quoc-Loc|2023b}}--> | |||
<!--<sup>[[#Year of the Pig|N.ytp]]</sup><span id="Year of the Pig jump"></span>--> | |||
<span id="Year of the Pig"></span> | |||
* (↑ [[#Year of the Pig jump1|N.ytp1]], [[#Year of the Pig jump2|N.ytp2]]) <i>Year of the Pig:</i> In his interview in the 1968 documentary ''[[Wikipedia:In the Year of the Pig|In the Year of the Pig]],'' at the [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0pibqRPi8Bo&t=13m56s Youtube video time 13:56]<!--{{plain link|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0pibqRPi8Bo&t=13m56s|name=Youtube video time 13:56}}-->, Paul Mus recounted: "[[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho Chi Minh]] said [in 1945]<!--{{bracket|in 1945}}-->, 'I have no army.' That's not true now [in 1968]<!--{{bracket|in 1968}}-->. 'I have no army.' 1945. 'I have no finance. I have no diplomacy. I have no public instruction. I have just hatred and I will not disarm it until you give me confidence in you.' Now this is the thing on which I would insist because it's still alive in his memory, as in mine. For every time [[Wikipedia:Ho Chi Minh|Ho Chi Minh]] has trusted us, we betrayed him." | |||
== References == | == References == | ||
<!--{{Reflist|30em}}--> | <!--{{Reflist|30em}}--> | ||
<!-- | |||
<span style="background-color:yellow">NOTE: 24.5.17, Reference links are NOT the same as in Wikipedia. Be careful when copy the section References from Wikipedia so NOT to overwrite the changes for CZ. ENDNOTE </span> | |||
Patti 1980<ref name=Patti.1980/> | |||
Paul Mus 1969<ref name="NYT Paul Mus obituary"/> | |||
Brocheux 2007<ref name=Brocheux.2007/> | |||
Devillers 1952<ref name=Devillers.1952/> | |||
Doan-Them 1965<ref name=Doan-Them.1965/> | |||
Tonnesson 2007<ref name="Tonnesson.2007"/>, | |||
Tram-Huong 2003<ref name="Tram-Huong.2003"/>, | |||
Buttinger 1967a<ref name=Buttinger.1967a/>, | |||
Marr 1984<ref name=Marr.1984/>, | |||
Marr 1995<ref name=Marr.1995/>, | |||
Ho 1945<ref name="Ho to Byrnes.1945"/> | |||
Britannica<ref name=Britannica.VWC/> | |||
Rotter 2007<ref name=Rotter.2007/>, | |||
Sainteny 1972<ref name=Sainteny.1972/> | |||
--> | |||
Marr 2013<ref name=Marr.2013/>, | |||
<references> | <references> | ||
<!-- NEW REFS NOT YET REORGANIZED ALPHABETICALLY --> | |||
<!-- NEW REFS TO REORGANIZE ALPHABETICALLY --> | |||
<ref name="CTDN.2019"> | |||
{{citation |date=9 Apr 2019 |title=Street-naming plan in Can Tho, Vietnam, with biographies, Appendix 1 |work=The Can Tho Daily News |url=https://baocantho.com.vn/imagetsdt/files/2019/20190416/attachs/126_dup914_28_278_pl-i-quy-mo-duong-2019-09-04-2019.doc |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230210223941/https://baocantho.com.vn/imagetsdt/files/2019/20190416/attachs/126_dup914_28_278_pl-i-quy-mo-duong-2019-09-04-2019.doc |access-date=15 Mar 2023 |archive-date=2023-02-10 |ref = {{harvid|CTDN|2019}}}}. Internet archived 2023.02.10. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="FRUS-Atlantic.1941"> | |||
{{citation |year=1941 |title=The Atlantic Conference & Charter, 1941 | |||
|publisher=Milestones in the History of U.S. Foreign Relations, 1937–1945, US Dept of State | |||
|work=Milestones in the History of U.S. Foreign Relations, 1937–1945 | |||
|url=https://history.state.gov/milestones/1937-1945/atlantic-conf | |||
|access-date=21 Apr 2023 | |||
|ref ={{harvid|FRUS-Atlantic|1941}} | |||
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221115194149/https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1961-63v04/d151 | |||
|archive-date=2022-11-15 | |||
}}. | |||
<!--[https://web.archive.org/web/20221115194149/https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1961-63v04/d151 Internet archived 2022.11.15].--> | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bartholomew-Feis.2006"> | |||
{{citation |last=Bartholomew-Feis |first=Dixee |year=2006 |title=The OSS and Ho Chi Minh: Unexpected Allies in the War against Japan |publisher=University Press of Arkansas, Lawrence, Kansas | |||
|url=https://archive.org/details/osshochiminhunex0000bart | |||
|url-access=registration | |||
|access-date=2024-05-23 | |||
}}. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="Colman.2012"> | |||
{{citation |last=Colman | first=Jonathan |year=2012 |title=Lost crusader? Chester L. Cooper and the Vietnam War, 1963–68 |journal=[[Cold War History]] |volume=12 |number=3 |pages=429–449 | doi=10.1080/14682745.2011.573147 | s2cid=154769990 |url=https://doi.org/10.1080/14682745.2011.573147 |url-access=subscription}}. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=Brocheux.2007> | |||
{{citation |last=Brocheux | first=Pierre |year=2007 |title=Ho Chi Minh: A Biography |publisher=translated by Claire Duiker, Cambridge University Press, New York | |||
|url=https://archive.org/details/ho-chi-minh-a-biography-pdfdrive | |||
|url-access=registration | |||
|access-date=2024-05-20 | |||
}}. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="Britannica.VWC"> | |||
{{citation | |||
|title=How many people died in the Vietnam War? | |||
|encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Britannica | |||
|url=https://www.britannica.com/question/How-many-people-died-in-the-Vietnam-War | |||
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230328065158/https://www.britannica.com/question/How-many-people-died-in-the-Vietnam-War | |||
|archive-date=2023-03-28 | |||
|access-date=30 Mar 2023 | |||
}}, | |||
Encyclopedia Britannica, [https://web.archive.org/web/20230328065158/https://www.britannica.com/question/How-many-people-died-in-the-Vietnam-War Internet Archive 2023.03.28]. | |||
<!-- | <!-- | ||
|ref={{harvid|Encyclopedia Britannica, Vietnam-War casualties}} | |||
[https://web.archive.org/web/20230328065158/https://www.britannica.com/question/How-many-people-died-in-the-Vietnam-War Internet archived on 2023.03.28]. | |||
--> | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=Buttinger.1967a> | <ref name=Buttinger.1967a> | ||
{{citation |last=[ | {{citation |last=[[Joseph Buttinger|Buttinger]] |first=Joseph |year=1967a |title=Vietnam: A Dragon Embattled, Vol.1 |publisher=Frederik A. Praegers, New York |url=https://archive.org/details/vietnamdragonemb01butt/page/n5/mode/2up |url-access=registration |access-date=25 Feb 2023}} | ||
</ref> | </ref> | ||
<ref name=Buttinger.1967b> | <ref name=Buttinger.1967b> | ||
{{citation |last=[ | {{citation |last=[[Joseph Buttinger|Buttinger]] |first=Joseph |year=1967b |title=Vietnam: A Dragon Embattled, Vol.2 |publisher=Frederik A. Praegers, New York |url=https://archive.org/details/vietnamdragonemb02butt/page/n5/mode/2up |url-access=registration |access-date=25 Feb 2023}} | ||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=Caffery.1945> | |||
{{citation |last=Caffery |first=Jefferson |title=The Ambassador in France (Caffery) to the Secretary of State |date=1945-03-13 |url=https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1945v06/d175 }}, [https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1945v06 Foreign Relations of the United States (FRUS): Diplomatic Papers, 1945, The British Commonwealth, The Far East, Volume VI]. ([[Edward Stettinius Jr.]] was the Secretary of State on 1945 Mar 13.) | |||
</ref> | </ref> | ||
<ref name=Cooper.1970> | <ref name=Cooper.1970> | ||
<!--Cooper, 1970, p=122.--> | <!--Cooper, 1970, p=122.--> | ||
{{citation |last=Cooper |first=Chester L. |year=1970 |title=The Lost Crusade: America in Vietnam |publisher=Dood, Mead & Company, New York |url=https://archive.org/details/lostcrusadeameri00coop/page/n5/mode/2up |url-access=registration |access-date=7 Mar 2023}} | {{citation |last=Cooper |first=Chester L. |year=1970 |title=The Lost Crusade: America in Vietnam |publisher=Dood, Mead & Company, New York | ||
|url=https://archive.org/details/lostcrusadeameri00coop/page/n5/mode/2up | |||
|url-access=registration | |||
|access-date=7 Mar 2023}} | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="de Gaulle web"> | |||
{{citation |title=Charles de Gaulle (1959-1969) |series= Former Presidents of the Republic |url=https://www.elysee.fr/en/charles-de-gaulle |website=www.elysee.fr |date= 15 November 2018 |access-date=13 Jun 2023 |ref = {{harvid|de Gaulle web}} }}. [https://web.archive.org/web/20230328183641/https://www.elysee.fr/en/charles-de-gaulle Internet archived on 2023.03.28]. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="Deconde.2002"> | |||
{{citation | |||
|editor-last1 = DeConde |editor-first1 = A. | |||
|editor-last2 = Burns |editor-first2 = R.D. | |||
|editor-last3 = Logevall |editor-first3 = F. | |||
|year=2002 | |||
|title=Encyclopedia of American Foreign Policy |volume=3 | |||
|url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofam03deco/page/n5/mode/2up?view=theater | |||
|access-date=2024-05-11 | |||
|publisher=Charles Scribner's & Sons | |||
}}. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=Devillers.1952> | |||
{{citation |last=Devillers |first=Philippe |year=1952 |title=Histoire du Viêt-Nam de 1940 à 1952 |publisher=Seuil, Paris.}} See also [https://indomemoires.hypotheses.org/21651 Philippe Devillers (1920–2016), un secret nommé Viêt-Nam, Mémoires d'Indochine], [https://web.archive.org/web/20220629093316/https://indomemoires.hypotheses.org/21651 Internet archived 2022.06.29]. Patti (1980), p.542, wrote about Devillers (1952): "The most accurate French account of the period; barring several omissions and minor inaccuracies generally attributable to his sources and to the lack of American documentation, it is by far one of the more reliable histories." | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=Doan-Them.1965> | |||
{{citation |last=Đoàn-Thêm|year=1965 |title=Hai Mươi Năm Qua: Việc Từng Ngày, (1945-1964) <!--{{bracket|The Last Twenty Years: Daily Events (1945-1964)}}-->(The Last Twenty Years: Daily Events (1945-1964)) |publisher=Xuân Thu (1986?), Los Alamitos, California}}. <!--{{plain link|url=https://issuu.com/vietnamthuvien/docs/haimuoinamqua_1945-1964_viectungnga|name=Issuu}}-->[https://issuu.com/vietnamthuvien/docs/haimuoinamqua_1945-1964_viectungnga Issuu] (read only, cannot search). [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/ssd?id=mdp.39015039530707&seq=23 HathiTrust Digital Library] <!--{{plain link|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/ssd?id=mdp.39015039530707&seq=23|name=HathiTrust Digital Library}}--> (search only, cannot read). | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=Fall.1966> | |||
{{citation | |||
|last=Fall |first=Bernard B. | |||
|title=The Two Viet-Nams: A political and military analysis | |||
|year=1966 | |||
|publisher=Frederick A. Praeger, New York | |||
|url=https://archive.org/details/twovietnams0000unse/page/n7/mode/2up | |||
|url-access=registration |access-date=4 Oct 2024 | |||
}} | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="Fenn.1973"> | |||
{{citation |last=Fenn |first=Charles |year=1973 |title=Ho Chi Minh: A Biographical Introduction |publisher=Studio Vista, London | |||
|url=https://archive.org/details/hochiminhbiograp0000fenn/page/n3/mode/2up?view=theater | |||
|url-access=registration | |||
|access-date=2023-12-27 | |||
}}. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="Fox.2005"> | |||
{{citation |last=Fox | first=Margalit |year=2005 |title=Chester Cooper, 88, a Player in Diplomacy for Two Decades, Is Dead |work=[[The New York Times]] |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/07/obituaries/chester-cooper-88-a-player-in-diplomacy-for-two-decades-is-dead.html |url-access=subscription}}, Nov 7. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="Gettleman.1967"> | |||
{{citation |last=Gettleman | first=Marvin E. |year=1967 |title=A Vietnam Bibliography |url=https://cdn.mises.org/Left%20and%20Right_3_3_7_0.pdf?token=p777VAHo}}, Assistant Professor of History, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, with the assistance of Sanford L. Silverman, Liberal Arts Bibliographer. The Libraries, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, Oct 19. [https://web.archive.org/web/20220101025921/https://cdn.mises.org/Left%20and%20Right_3_3_7_0.pdf?token=p777VAHo Internet archived 2022.01.01] | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="Giniger.1984"> | |||
{{citation |last=Giniger | first=Henry |year=1984 |title=America Inside Out, Close to Events, book review |work=[[The New York Times]] | |||
|date=1984-10-14 | |||
|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1984/10/14/books/close-to-events.html |url-access=subscription | |||
}}. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="Gunn.2013"> | |||
{{citation | |||
|last=Gunn | |||
|first=Geoffrey C. | |||
|title=Prelude to the First Indochina War: New Light on the Fontainebleau Conference of July-September 1946 and Aftermath | |||
|journal=Southeast Asian Studies Annual Report | |||
|volume=54 | |||
|pages=19-51 | |||
|url=https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/58759811.pdf | |||
|date=2013-03-25 | |||
}}. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="Hammer.1954"> | |||
{{citation |last=Hammer |first=Ellen J. |year=1954 |title=The Struggle for Indochina |publisher=Stanford University Press, Stanford, California |url=https://archive.org/details/struggleforindoc0000hamm_h0h0/page/n6/mode/2up |url-access=registration |access-date=11 Mar 2023}}. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="Ho to Chairman Foreign Affairs.1945"> | |||
{{citation | |||
|last=Ho-Chi-Minh | |||
|title=Letter to US Chairman of Foreign Affairs Association | |||
|url=https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:1945_Oct_22_Ho_Chi_Minh_letter_to_US_Chairman_Foreign_Affairs_Association_p1.jpg | |||
|date=1945-10-22 | |||
}}. [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:1945_Oct_22_Ho_Chi_Minh_letter_to_US_Chairman_Foreign_Affairs_Association_p1.jpg Page 1], [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:1945_Oct_22_Ho_Chi_Minh_letter_to_US_Chairman_Foreign_Affairs_Association_p2.jpg Page 2], [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:1945_Oct_22_Ho_Chi_Minh_letter_to_US_Chairman_Foreign_Affairs_Association_p3.jpg Page 3], [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:1945_Oct_22_Ho_Chi_Minh_letter_to_US_Chairman_Foreign_Affairs_Association_p4.jpg Page 4]. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="Ho to Byrnes.1945"> | |||
{{citation | |||
|last=Ho-Chi-Minh | |||
|title=Letter to US Secretary of State James F. Byrnes | |||
|url=https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:1945_Oct_22_Ho_Chi_Minh_letter_to_US_Secretary_of_State_Byrnes_p1.jpg | |||
|date=1945-10-22 | |||
}}. [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:1945_Oct_22_Ho_Chi_Minh_letter_to_US_Secretary_of_State_Byrnes_p1.jpg Page 1], [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:1945_Oct_22_Ho_Chi_Minh_letter_to_US_Secretary_of_State_p2.jpg Page 2], [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:1945_Oct_22_Ho_Chi_Minh_letter_to_US_Secretary_of_State_p3.jpg Page 3]. | |||
</ref> | </ref> | ||
Line 87: | Line 1,212: | ||
</ref> | </ref> | ||
<ref name= | <ref name=Krull.1945> | ||
{{citation | |||
|last=Krull | |||
|first=Germaine | |||
|year=1945 | |||
|title=Diary of Saigon, following the Allied occupation in September 1945 | |||
|url=https://vva.vietnam.ttu.edu/images.php?img=/images/241/2410207001.pdf | |||
|access-date=2024-11-03 | |||
}}. [https://web.archive.org/web/20241119010638/https://vva.vietnam.ttu.edu/images.php?img=/images/241/2410207001.pdf Internet Archive 2024.11.19] | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="Lady.Borton.2020"> | |||
{{citation |last=Lady Borton |year=2020 |title=WE NEVER KNEW: Napalm use during Vietnam's French-American War | |||
|url=https://vietnamnet.vn/en/we-never-knewnapalm-use-during-vietnams-french-american-war-638460.html | |||
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220907175453/https://vietnamnet.vn/en/we-never-knewnapalm-use-during-vietnams-french-american-war-638460.html | |||
|archive-date=2022-09-07 | |||
}}, [https://vietnamnet.vn/ vietnamnet.vn], May 5. Also [https://archive.is/6csXE archive.is 2024.10.19]. | |||
<!-- | |||
[https://web.archive.org/web/20220907175453/https://vietnamnet.vn/en/we-never-knewnapalm-use-during-vietnams-french-american-war-638460.html Internet archived on 2022.09.07]. | |||
--> | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="Lambert.1992"> | |||
{{citation | |||
|last=Lambert | |||
|first=Bruce | |||
|date=1992-03-08 | |||
|title=Joseph A. Buttinger, Nazi Fighter And Vietnam Scholar, Dies at 85 | |||
|journal=[[The New York Times]] | |||
|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1992/03/08/nyregion/joseph-a-buttinger-nazi-fighter-and-vietnam-scholar-dies-at-85.html |url-access=subscription}}. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=Lancaster.1961> | |||
{{citation |last=Lancaster |first=Donald |year=1961 |title=The Emancipation of French Indochina |publisher=Royal Institute of International Affairs, Oxford University Press, New York; reprinted by Octagon Books, New York, 1975 |url=https://archive.org/details/emancipationoffr0000lanc/page/n5/mode/2up |url-access=registration |access-date=11 Mar 2023}} | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=Langguth.2000> | |||
{{citation |last=[[A.J. Langguth|Langguth]] |first=Arthur John |year=2000 |title=Our Vietnam: The war, 1954–1975 |publisher=Simon & Schuster, New York |url=https://archive.org/details/ourvietnam00ajla |url-access=registration |access-date=14 Mar 2023}} | |||
</ref> | </ref> | ||
<ref name= | <ref name="Lawrence.2007"> | ||
{{citation | |||
|editor-last1 = Lawrence | |||
|editor-first1 = Mark A. | |||
|editor-last2 = Logevall | |||
|editor-first2 = Fredrik | |||
|year=2007 | |||
|title=The First Vietnam War: Colonial Conflict and the Cold War |publisher=Harvard University Press, Massachusetts | |||
}}, | |||
edited by M.A. Lawrence and F. Logevall. | |||
</ref> | </ref> | ||
<ref name= | <ref name="Lawrence.2007b"> | ||
{{citation | |||
|last=Lawrence | |||
|first=Mark A. | |||
|chapter=Forging the "Great Combination" | |||
|pages=105-129 | |||
|editor-last1 = Lawrence |editor-first1 = Mark A. |editor-last2 = Logevall |editor-first2 = Fredrik | |||
|year=2007 | |||
|title=The First Vietnam War: Colonial Conflict and the Cold War | |||
|publisher=Harvard University Press, Massachusetts | |||
}}, | |||
edited by M.A. Lawrence and F. Logevall. | |||
</ref> | </ref> | ||
<ref name= | <ref name="Lawrence.Logevall.2007"> | ||
A | {{citation | ||
|last1 = Lawrence | |||
|first1 = Mark A. | |||
|last2 = Logevall | |||
|first2 = Fredrik | |||
|year=2007 | |||
|chapter=Introduction | |||
|pages=1-15 | |||
|title=The First Vietnam War: Colonial Conflict and the Cold War |publisher=Harvard University Press, Massachusetts | |||
}}, | |||
edited by M.A. Lawrence and F. Logevall. | |||
</ref> | </ref> | ||
<ref name= | <ref name=Logevall.2001> | ||
The | {{citation | ||
|last=Logevall | |||
|first=Fredrik | |||
|year=2001 | |||
|title=The Origins of the Vietnam War | |||
|url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_2900582319188_w1j4/mode/2up?view=theater | |||
|url-access=registration | |||
|access-date=2024-07-21 | |||
|publisher=Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, New York. | |||
}} | |||
</ref> | </ref> | ||
< | <ref name=Logevall.2012> | ||
<ref name= | {{citation | ||
|last=Logevall | |||
|first=Fredrik | |||
|year=2012 | |||
|title=Embers of War: The Fall of an Empire and the Making of America's Vietnam |url=https://archive.org/details/embersofwarfallo0000loge | |||
|url-access=registration | |||
|access-date=12 Apr 2012 | |||
|publisher=Random House, New York | |||
}}, 864 pp. Winner of the [https://www.pulitzer.org/winners/fredrik-logevall 2013 Pulitzer Prize in History]: "''For a distinguished and appropriately documented book on the history of the United States, Ten thousand dollars ($10,000).'' A balanced, deeply researched history of how, as French colonial rule faltered, a succession of American leaders moved step by step down a road toward full-blown war" • Winner of the [https://sah.columbia.edu/content/prizes/francis-parkman-prize/2013-fredrik-logevall-embers-war-fall-empire-and-making 2013 Francis Parkman Prize from the Society of American Historians] • Winner of the [https://americanlibraryinparis.org/fredrik-logevall-reflects-on-vietnam-different-dreams-same-footsteps/ 2013 American Library in Paris Book Award] • Winner of the Council on Foreign Relations [https://www.cfr.org/past-winners-arthur-ross-book-award 2013 Gold Medal] [https://www.cfr.org/arthur-ross-book-award Arthur Ross Book Award] • Finalist for the [https://www.cundillprize.com/winners/2013 2013 Cundill Prize in Historical Literature]. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=Marr.1984> | |||
{{citation |last=Marr | first=David G. |year=1984 |title=Vietnamese Tradition on Trial, 1920-1945 |publisher=University of California Press, Berkeley |url=https://archive.org/details/vietnamesetradit0000marr |url-access=registration |access-date=2024-05-05}}. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=Marr.1995> | |||
{{citation | |||
|last=Marr | |||
| first=David G. | |||
|year=1995 | |||
|title=Vietnam 1945: The Quest for Power | |||
|publisher=University of California Press, Berkeley | |||
|url=https://archive.org/details/vietnam1945quest0000marr/mode/2up?view=theater | |||
|url-access=registration | |||
|access-date=2024-07-05}}. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="Marr.2007"> | |||
{{citation | |||
|last=Marr | |||
|first=David G. | |||
|chapter=Creating Defense Capacity in Vietnam, 1945-1947 | |||
|pages=74-104 | |||
|editor-last1 = Lawrence |editor-first1 = Mark A. |editor-last2 = Logevall |editor-first2 = Fredrik | |||
|year=2007 | |||
|title=The First Vietnam War: Colonial Conflict and the Cold War | |||
|publisher=Harvard University Press, Massachusetts | |||
}}, | |||
edited by M.A. Lawrence and F. Logevall. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=Marr.2013> | |||
{{citation | |||
|last=Marr | |||
|first=David G. | |||
|year=2013 | |||
|title=Vietnam: State, War, and Revolution (1945-1946) | |||
|publisher=University of California Press, Berkeley.}} | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="McHale.2021"> | |||
{{citation | |||
|last=McHale | |||
|first=Shawn F. | |||
|year=2021 | |||
|title=The First Vietnam War: Violence, Sovereignty, and the Fracture of the South, 1945-1956 | |||
|publisher=Cambridge University Press | |||
}}. | |||
</ref> | </ref> | ||
<ref name=Nguyen-Ngoc-Bich> | <ref name=Nguyen-Ngoc-Bich> | ||
{{citation |last=Nguyen-Ngoc-Bich |title=Vietnam—An Independent Viewpoint |journal=[ | {{citation |last=Nguyen-Ngoc-Bich |title=Vietnam—An Independent Viewpoint |journal=[[The China Quarterly]] |volume=9 |date=March 1962 |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/article/abs/vietnaman-independent-viewpoint/91FC9BBCE8F39A365B303AC4118BEBC6 |url-access=subscription |access-date=18 Feb 2023}}, pp. 105–111. See also the contents of [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/volume/0FB8E56075A0E2649EB01EC2BFB9ABFB Volume 9], which included the articles of many well-known experts on Vietnam history and politics such as [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard_B._Fall Bernard B. Fall], [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoang_Van_Chi Hoang Van Chi], Phillipe Devillers (see, e.g., his classic 1952 book ''Histoire du Viet-Nam'' in Section [[#References|References]] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=French_Cochinchina&oldid=1224819233#cite_ref-43 French Cochinchina, Ref. 42]), [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P._J._Honey P. J. Honey]<!--(see, e.g., his [https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/2300EAC28055ADB13CD8B21AF51F3BBE/S0305741000025340a.pdf/lenfer_communiste_au_nord_vietnam_by_gerard_tongas_paris_les_nouvelles_editions_debresse_1961_463_pp_18_new_francs.pdf review of Tongas' ''Enfer Communiste'']), William Kaye (see, e.g., [https://www.jstor.org/stable/651693 A Bowl of Rice Divided: The Economy of North Vietnam, 1962])-->, Gerard Tongas (see, e.g, [https://www.abebooks.com/Jai-v%C3%A9cu-lEnfer-Communiste-Nord-Viet-Nam/31061452118/bd ''J'ai vécu dans l'Enfer Communiste au Nord Viet-Nam''], Debresse, Paris, 1961, [https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/2300EAC28055ADB13CD8B21AF51F3BBE/S0305741000025340a.pdf/lenfer_communiste_au_nord_vietnam_by_gerard_tongas_paris_les_nouvelles_editions_debresse_1961_463_pp_18_new_francs.pdf reviewed]] by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P._J._Honey P. J. Honey]), among others. | ||
</ref> | </ref> | ||
<ref name=NNC.2018> | <ref name=NNC.2018> | ||
{{citation |last=Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau |year=2018 |title=Le Temps des Ancêtres: Une famille vietnamienne dans sa traversée du XXe siècle |publisher=L'Harmattan, Paris, France |url=https://www.editions-harmattan.fr/livre-le_temps_des_ancetres_une_famille_vietnamienne_dans_sa_traversee_du_xxe_siecle_chau_nguyen_ngoc-9782343140834-58952.html |access-date=18 Feb 2023}}. Preface by historian Pierre Brocheux. | {{citation |last=Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau |year=2018 |title=Le Temps des Ancêtres: Une famille vietnamienne dans sa traversée du XXe siècle |publisher=L'Harmattan, Paris, France |url=https://www.editions-harmattan.fr/livre-le_temps_des_ancetres_une_famille_vietnamienne_dans_sa_traversee_du_xxe_siecle_chau_nguyen_ngoc-9782343140834-58952.html |access-date=18 Feb 2023}}. Preface by historian Pierre Brocheux. | ||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="NNC.2021"> | |||
{{citation |last=Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau |title=The basic truths on Caodaism |url=https://www.academia.edu/44590508 |date=20 Jul 2021 |publisher=education.edu}}. | |||
</ref> | </ref> | ||
Line 130: | Line 1,382: | ||
</ref> | </ref> | ||
<ref name= | <ref name="NYT Paul Mus obituary"> | ||
{{citation |last=[[A.J. | {{citation |title=Dr. Paul Mus dies; a Yale professor. Southeast Asia authority also taught in France |journal=New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/16/archives/dr-paul-mus-dies-a-yale-professor-southeast-asia-authority-also.html |date=16 August 1969 |ref={{harvid|NYT Paul Mus obituary}}}}. | ||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=OBrien.2024> | |||
{{citation | |||
|last=O'Brien | |||
|first=Phillips P. | |||
|title=Roosevelt, Yalta, and the Origins of the Cold War | |||
|url=https://foreignpolicy.com/2024/09/01/roosevelt-stalin-yalta-europe-division-soviet-world-war/ | |||
|journal=Foreign Policy | |||
|date=2024-09-01 | |||
}}. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="Osborne.1967"> | |||
{{citation |last=Osborne |first=Milton |year=1967 |title=Viet-Nam: The Search for Absolutes |journal=International Journal | volume=22 |number=4 |series=Fifty Years of Bolshevism (Autumn, 1967) |pages=647–654 |doi=10.2307/40200203 |jstor=40200203 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/40200203 |access-date=18 Feb 2023}}. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=Pace.2001> | |||
{{citation |last=Pace | first=Eric |year=2001 |title=Ellen Hammer, 79; Historian Wrote on French in Indochina |work=[[The New York Times]] |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2001/03/26/world/ellen-hammer-79-historian-wrote-on-french-in-indochina.html |url-access=subscription}}, Mar 26. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=Patti.1980> | |||
{{citation |last=Patti |first=Archimedes |year=1980 |title=Why Viet Nam? Prelude to America's Albatross |url=https://archive.org/details/whyvietnamprelud0000patt/mode/2up?view=theater |publisher=University of California Press | location = Berkeley |isbn = 978-0520047839}} | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=Patti.1981> | |||
{{citation |title=Vietnam: A Television History; Roots of a War; Interview with Archimedes L. A. Patti, 1981 |date=1981-04-01 |url=https://openvault.wgbh.org/catalog/V_3267C58E4C104A54A0AFDF230D618AE6}} | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="PBS US involvement in Vietnam"> | |||
{{citation | |||
|title=US Involvement in Indochina |url=https://illinois.pbslearningmedia.org/resource/45c681ef-d364-4851-9f64-7ecce19e3c79/us-involvement-in-indochina-video-ken-burns-lynn-novick-the-vietnam-war/ | |||
|access-date=2023-12-09 | |||
|ref={{harvid|PBS US involvement in Vietnam}} | |||
}}, <!--{{plain link|url=https://illinois.pbslearningmedia.org/|name=PBS Learning Media, Illinois}}-->[https://illinois.pbslearningmedia.org/ PBS Learning Media, Illinois]. Teaching video excerpt from the documentary [[The_Vietnam_War_(TV_series)|The Vietnam War]], a film by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="Rotter.2007"> | |||
{{citation | |||
|last=Rotter | |||
|first=Andrew J. | |||
|chapter=Chronicle of a War Foretold: The United States and Vietnam, 1945-1954 | |||
|pages=282-306 | |||
|editor-last1 = Lawrence |editor-first1 = Mark A. |editor-last2 = Logevall |editor-first2 = Fredrik | |||
|year=2007 | |||
|title=The First Vietnam War: Colonial Conflict and the Cold War | |||
|publisher=Harvard University Press, Massachusetts | |||
}}, | |||
edited by M.A. Lawrence and F. Logevall. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=Sainteny.1972> | |||
{{citation | |||
|last=Sainteny | |||
|first=Jean | |||
|year=1972 | |||
|title=Ho Chi Minh and his Vietnam | |||
|publisher=Cowles Book Company, Inc., Chicago. Translated from the 1970 French version ''Face à Ho Chi Minh'' by Herma Briffault. | |||
}} | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=Stockton.2022> | |||
{{citation |last1=Stockton | first1=Richard |year=2022 |title=The True Story Of Phan Thi Kim Phúc, The 'Napalm Girl' |url=https://allthatsinteresting.com/napalm-girl }}, edited by Leah Silverman, Dec 25. [https://web.archive.org/web/20230331075026/https://allthatsinteresting.com/napalm-girl Internet archived on 2023.03.31.] | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=Tong.2018> | |||
{{citation |last=Tong | first=Traci |year=2018 |title=How the Vietnam War's Napalm Girl found hope after tragedy, The World from PRX |work=[[The World]] |url=https://theworld.org/stories/2018-02-21/how-vietnam-wars-napalm-girl-found-hope-after-tragedy }}, Feb 21. [https://web.archive.org/web/20230322154140/https://theworld.org/stories/2018-02-21/how-vietnam-wars-napalm-girl-found-hope-after-tragedy Internet archived on 2023.02.22.] | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="Tonnesson.1985"> | |||
{{citation | |||
|last=Tønnesson | |||
|first=Stein | |||
|year=1985 | |||
|title=The Longest Wars: Indochina 1945-75 | |||
|journal=Journal of Peace Research | |||
|volume=22 | |||
|number=1 | |||
|pages=9-29 | |||
|publisher=SAGE Publications, London | |||
}} | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=Tonnesson.1991> | |||
{{citation | |||
|last=Tønnesson | |||
|first=Stein | |||
|year=1991 | |||
|title=The Vietnamese Revolution of 1945: Roosevelt, Ho Chi Minh and de Gaulle in a world at war | |||
|publisher=SAGE Publications, London | |||
|url=https://www.prio.org/publications/11461 |access-date=2024-05-05}}. Link to this book at the Norwegian National Library. | |||
<!--|ref={{harvid|Tonnesson 1991}}--> | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="Tonnesson.2007"> | |||
{{citation | |||
|last=Tønnesson | |||
|first=Stein | |||
|chapter=Franklin Roosevelt, Trusteeship and Indochina: A reassessment | |||
|pages=56-73 | |||
|editor-last1 = Lawrence |editor-first1 = Mark A. |editor-last2 = Logevall |editor-first2 = Fredrik | |||
|year=2007 | |||
|title=The First Vietnam War: Colonial Conflict and the Cold War | |||
|publisher=Harvard University Press, Massachusetts | |||
}}, | |||
edited by M.A. Lawrence and F. Logevall. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=Tonnesson.2010> | |||
{{citation |last=Tønnesson | first=Stein |year=2010 |title=Vietnam 1946: How the War Began | |||
|publisher=University of California Press, Berkeley, California |url=https://archive.org/details/vietnam1946howwa0000tnne/page/n7/mode/2up?view=theater | |||
|url-access=registration | |||
|access-date=2024-05-05}}. | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name="Tram-Huong.2003"> | |||
{{citation |last=Tram-Huong |year=2003 |title=Đêm trắng của Đức Giáo Tông (Sleepless Night of the [[Cao Dai]] Pope)|publisher=People's Police Publishing House, Vietnam}}. | |||
</ref> | </ref> | ||
Line 138: | Line 1,507: | ||
</ref> | </ref> | ||
< | <ref name=Vigneras.1957> | ||
{{citation |last=Vigneras |first=Marcel |title=Rearming the French |url=https://www.history.army.mil/html/books/011/11-6/index.html |publisher=U.S. Army in World War II, Center for Military History CMH Pub 11-6, Washington DC, 444 pages.}} | |||
</ref> | |||
<ref name=VQL.2023a> | <ref name=VQL.2023a> | ||
{{citation |last=Vu Quoc Loc |year=2023a |title=Notes on Vietnam History |url=https://archive.org/details/notes-on-vietnam-history |publisher=Internet Archive |access-date=27 Jun 2023 }}, [https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ CC BY-SA 4.0]. | {{citation |last=Vu Quoc Loc |year=2023a |title=Notes on Vietnam History |url=https://archive.org/details/notes-on-vietnam-history |publisher=Internet Archive |access-date=27 Jun 2023 }}, [https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ CC BY-SA 4.0]. | ||
</ref> | </ref> | ||
<ref name=VQL.2023b> | <ref name=VQL.2023b> | ||
{{citation |last=Vu-Quoc-Loc |year=2023b |title=Marco Polo's Caugigu - Phạm Ngũ Lão's Đại Việt - 1285 |url=https://archive.org/details/marco-polo-caugigu-pham-ngu-lao-dai-viet-1285 |publisher=Internet Archive |access-date=23 Apr 2023}}, [https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ CC BY-SA 4.0]. | {{citation |last=Vu-Quoc-Loc |year=2023b |title=Marco Polo's Caugigu - Phạm Ngũ Lão's Đại Việt - 1285 |url=https://archive.org/details/marco-polo-caugigu-pham-ngu-lao-dai-viet-1285 |publisher=Internet Archive |access-date=23 Apr 2023}}, [https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ CC BY-SA 4.0]. | ||
</ref> | </ref> | ||
</references> | |||
== External links == | |||
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nguyen_Ngoc_Bich Nguyen Ngoc Bich] originally created and written by [[User:Loc Vu-Quoc|Loc Vu-Quoc]] (i.e., [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Egm4313.s12 User:Egm4313.s12]) on Wikipedia, where anonymous users can edit. | |||
<!--We don't add Wikipedia-like 'categories' (e.g. '[[Category:History]]') to the text of articles at Citizendium because these are automatically added by the software once you've filled in the Metadata page for an article. You can add this via http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Special:MetadataForm if you wish.--> | <!--We don't add Wikipedia-like 'categories' (e.g. '[[Category:History]]') to the text of articles at Citizendium because these are automatically added by the software once you've filled in the Metadata page for an article. You can add this via http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Special:MetadataForm if you wish.--> | ||
[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]] | |||
[[Category: |
Latest revision as of 09:19, 3 December 2024
By Loc Vu-Quoc (Archive.is 2024.10.27), Edit history ◉ Started at 08:10, 10 June 2023
Introduction
Nguyễn Ngọc Bích | |
---|---|
Born | 18 May 1911 Bến Tre, Vietnam |
Died | 4 Dec 1966 Thủ Đức, Vietnam |
Occupation | *Engineer
|
Title | Doctor (medical) |
Known for | Resistance war, politics |
Nguyễn Ngọc Bích (1911–1966) is a hero of the Vietnamese resistance against the French colonists[1]:850. NOTE N.psq1 and revered as one of the most popular local heroes.[2]:122 The Nguyen-Ngoc-Bich street in the city of Cần Thơ, Vietnam, was named after him to honor and commemorate his feats (of sabotaging bridges to slow down the colonial French-army advances) and heroism (being on the French most-wanted list,[2]:122 imprisoned, subjected to an "intensive and unpleasant interrogation"[2]:122 that left a mark on his forehead,N.bi1 and exiled) during the First Indochina War.
A French-educated engineer and medical doctor, and an intellectual and politician, he proposed an alternative viewpoint to avoid the high-casualty, high-cost war between North Vietnam and South Vietnam.[3]
Upon graduating from the École polytechnique (engineering military school under the French Ministry of Armed Forces) and then from the École nationale des ponts et chaussées (civil engineering) in France in 1935,[4] Dr. Bich returned to Vietnam to work for the French colonial government. After World War II, in 1945, he joined the Viet-Minh,N.bvm and became a senior commander in the Vietnamese resistance movement, and insisted on fighting for Vietnam's independence, not for communism.
SuspectingN.bs of being betrayed by the Communist factionN.bs of the Viet-Minh and apprehended by the French forces, Bich was saved from execution by a campaign for amnesty by his École polytechnique classmates based in Vietnam, mostly high-level officers of the French army,[5]: 299 and was subsequently exiled to France, where he founded with friends and managed the Vietnamese publishing house Minh Tan (in Paris), which published many important works for the Vietnamese literature,N.mbl in particular, the Sino-Vietnamese Dictionary, a key reference for many generations of writers and students for a standardized Vietnamese writing. To reprint this dictionary, Bich wrote a moving open letter to the dictionary author Dao Duy Anh, who could not be located due to war time, to ask for permission.N.vqf
In parallel, Bich studied medicine and became a medical doctor. He was highly regarded in Vietnamese politics, and was suggested by the French in 1954 as an alternative to Ngo Dinh Diem as the sixth prime minister of the State of Vietnam under the former Emperor Bao Dai as Head of State,[6]:84 who selected Ngo Dinh Diem as prime minister. While Bich's candidature for the 1961 presidential election in opposition to Diem was, however, declared invalid by the Saigon authorities at the last moment for "technical reasons",[7][4], he was "regarded by many as a possible successor to President Ngo Dinh Diem".[7] N.pi, N.tcq
A large majority of the information in this article came from the master document Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography,[8] which contains even more information, including primary-source evidence and photos, than presented here. Most images in the present article were uploaded for the first time at the time of the writing by the original writer.N.vql
Important historical events that affected Bich's adult life, together with those mentioned in his 1962 paper (e.g., failed agrarian reform, napalm bombs, famine, conquest for rice, etc.) are summarized, in particular the atmosphere in which Bich had lived for ten years working for the French colonialists (from 1935 to 1945), and the historical conditions that drove this French-educated engineer to become a "Francophile anticolonialist"N.fa1, N.psq2 and to join the Viet-Minh in 1945N.bvm (e.g., the French brutal repressions in 1940 and 1945, the power vacuum after the Japanese coup de force in 1945, Ho Chi Minh's call for a general uprising from Tân Trào, the 1945 August Revolution, the Black Sunday on 1945 Sep 2 in Saigon, etc.). The key principle is to summarize a historical event only when it was directly related to Bich's activities. Care is exercised in selecting references and quotations that complement, but not duplicate, other Wikipedia articles at the time of this writing. For example, the history and the general use of napalm bombs, which Bich mentioned in his 1962 article, are not summarized. Regarding the French using American-made napalm bombs in the First Indochina War, well-known battlesN.nb are also not summarized.
First Indochina War
The broader historic events of World War II and the First Indochina War---specifically, the short interwar period between end of the former and the beginning of the later—led to the context in which Nguyen Ngoc Bich fought the French colonists until he was captured.
Ellen J. Hammer was the first American-born historianN.vt with a deep knowledge of the French colonial rule in Indochina in the early 1950s during the First Indochina War. Dr. Hammer's[9] N.ejh highly influential book titled The Struggle for Indochina[10] N.ehb ---published in 1954 well before the United States sent American troops to Vietnam in the 1960s---described the events, politics, and historic personalities leading to the First Indochina War. Her works were considered among the must-read books by respected historians on Vietnam history, as Osborne (1967)[11] wrote: "Indeed, any serious student of Viet-Nam will have either read Devillers,N.pd Lacouture, Fall, Hammer and Lancaster's[12] N.dlb studies already, or will be better served by reading them first hand." To give a historical context within which Bich fought the French colonists, there is no better English source to begin than Dr. Hammer's Vietnam-history book.
The American dilemma---(1) To help the French to re-establish its colony in Vietnam or (2) To help free the Vietnamese from the yoke of French colonialism---was described by Hammer as follows:
American dilemma: Help the French or help the Vietnamese ❝ The United States has entangled itself in a war in a distant corner of Asia in which it resolutely does not want to participate and from which it equally resolutely cannot abstain. It has committed itself to the cause of France [ French Indochina ] and of Bao Dai, but enough of the old spirit of anticolonialism is left to make this a somewhat unsavory commitment: it cannot bring itself wholly to ignore the fact that the free world looks less than free to a people whose country is being fought over by a foreign army. Aware that a lasting peace can be built only on satisfaction of the national aspirations of the Indochinese, the United States must at the same time conciliate a France reluctant to abandon her colonial past. ❞ ---Ellen Hammer (1954), The struggle for Indochina, Preface p. xii.[10]:xii
The activities directly or indirectly affected Bich's life by four historic individuals are summarized. French General de Gaulle, by his desire to reconquer Indochina as a French colony, was a main force that led to the First Indochina War, in which Bich fought. Ho Chi Minh, founder and leader of the Viet-Minh, called for the general uprising---against the French colonists and the Japanese occupiers---to which Bich responded. US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt ardent anticolonialism could have prevented the two Indochina wars, and changed the course of history. US President Harry Truman was a reason that the First Indochina War is now called the "French-American" War in Vietnamese literature,[13] and through his support for the French war effort supplied napalm bombs, which Bich mentioned in his 1962 paper. The US funded more than 30% of the war cost in 1952 under US President Eisenhouer, and "nearly 80%" in 1954 under Truman.N.fwc
Charles de Gaulle
De Gaulle was a prime mover leading to the First Indochina War in which the French-educated Bich fought on the Viet-Minh side against the French colonialists.
At the beginning of World War II, in his historic four-minute call-to-arms broadcast from London on 1940 June 18, later known as L'Appel du 18 Juin in French history, the mostly then unknownN.cdg1 General de Gaulle counted on the French Empire, with Indochina as the "Pearl of the Empire", rich in rubber, tin, coal, and rice,[14]:28 to provide resources to fight the Axis, with the support of the British Empire and the powerful industry of the United States. Understanding that Indochina was under the menace of occupation by the Japanese, de Gaulle harbored the dream of wresting this colony back into the fold of the French Empire, writing in his memoirs "As I saw her move away into the mist, I swore to myself that I would one day bring her back."[14]:25 N.dgd
On 1945 Mar 13, four days after the Japanese coup de force in Indochina (Mar 9), de Gaulle summoned US ambassador to France Jefferson Caffery[15] to complain that the French army fighting in Indochina requested help from the US military authorities in China---headed by US General Wedemeyer[16] [17]:66 who followed closely the instructions of US President Roosevelt[17]:67---but was told that "under instructions no aid could be sent."[15] De Gaulle then played the Cold-War card, telling Caffery that France would fall into the sphere of influence of the USSR if the US did not support France to retake Indochina:[18]:243
De Gaulle to Caffery, 1945 March ❝ Do you [the US] want us [France] to become... one of the federated states under the Russian aegis? The Russians are advancing apace. . . When Germany falls they will be upon us. If the public here comes to realize that you are against us in Indochina there will be terrific disappointment and nobody knows to what that will lead. We do not want to become Communist; we do not want to fall into the Russian orbit; but I hope that you do not push us into it. ❞ --- De Gaulle to Jefferson Caffery, US Ambassador to France, 1945 March[19]:289
"Within two weeks" of the death of US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt on 1945 Apr 12, de Gaulle pressured Harry Truman on the Indochina issue, and his government launched "an intensive propaganda effort to mold world opinion in favor of the status quo (French control) in Indochina",[20]:116 and this after having approved the Japanese occupation of Indochina since 1940 September 22.[20]:452 By the time General de GaulleN.cdg2 came to the US in 1945 Aug (inset photo) to campaign for US military aid from then US President Harry Truman, the "French had been forced to drown several Vietnamese uprisings in blood. They had seen the colonial economy completely disrupted. They had been humiliated by the Germans in Europe and incarcerated by the Japanese in Indochina. Even to begin to reassert sovereignty in Indochina, the French were forced to go hat in hand to the Americans (see inset photo, de Gaulle visited Truman), British, and Chinese."[21]:413
To restore French rule over Indochina, on 1945 Jun 7, as Chairman of the French Provisional Government (formed in 1944 Aug after the liberation of Paris), General de Gaulle appointed General Leclerc to establish and to command the French Expeditionary Corps.[22]:321-2 N.laa Even though Eisenhower headquarters recommended against Leclerc’s appointment in favor of General Carpentier,[23]:397 they did not follow up with this objection since the focus was on defeating Japan, but did inform the French that it would take several months to equip the French divisions.[22]:322 De Gaulle also appointed Admiral Thierry d’Argenlieu as High Commissioner of Indochina, the "French Rasputin"[20]:382 N.dar who later played a key role in sowing the seeds of the First Indochina War.
On 1945 Aug 20, just ten days before he abdicated on 1945 Aug 30,N.bda Vietnam Emperor Bao Dai sent a moving plea to de Gaulle:N.bdq
Bao Dai to de Gaulle, 1945 Aug 20 ❝ I beg you to understand that the only means of safeguarding French interests and the spiritual influence of France in Indochina is to recognize the independence of Vietnam unreservedly and to renounce any idea of reestablishing French sovereignty or rule here in any form. . . . Even if you were to reestablish the French administration here, it would not be obeyed, and each village would be a nest of resistance. . . . We would be able to understand each other so easily and become friends if you would stop hoping to become our masters again. ❞ --- Bao Dai, message to de Gaulle on 1945 Aug 20[24]:xiii–xiv
Just a few days later on 1945 Aug 26 (or very shortly thereafter), Ho Chi Minh put the resistance in much stronger terms to US OSS Major Archimedes Patti, who still remembered vividly after some 35 years:N.hcm1
Ho Chi Minh to Archimedes Patti, 1945 Aug 26 ❝ If the French intended to return to Viet Nam as imperialists to exploit, to maim and kill my people, [I] could assure them and the world that Viet Nam from north to south would be reduced to ashes, even if it meant the life of every man, woman, and child, and that [my] government's policy would be one of scorched earth to the end. ❞ --- Ho Chi Minh to OSS Maj. Archimedes Patti[20]:4
The Southeast Asia and Buddhism expert Paul Mus, who first met Ho Chi Minh in 1945, recounted that Ho Chi Minh said[25] then:N.ytp1
Ho Chi Minh to Paul Mus, 1945 ❝ I have no army, no diplomacy, no finances, no industry, no public works. All I have is hatred, and I will not disarm it until I feel I can trust you [the French]. ❞ --- Ho Chi Minh, according to Paul Mus, the New York Times 1969 obituary[25]
Paul Mus added "For every time Ho Chi Minh has trusted us, we betrayed him."N.ytp2
War broke out on 1945 Sep 23,[14]:115 with Bich joining the Viet Minh, an organization founded by Ho Chi Minh, to fight the French.
Ho Chi Minh
For thirty years, from 1912 when Ho Chi Minh first visited Boston and New York City until about 1948-1949, Ho held out his hope that the US would provide military support for his anticolonialist resistance against the French.[14]:xxii Since that visit to the US in his early twenties, Ho---like Bich, a Francophile anticolonialist,N.fa2 N.psq3 who was both a communist and a nationalistN.hcn ---developed a "lifelong admiration for Americans".[6]:55 N.haa
Seizing on the opportunity of the Japanese entering Tonkin in 1940 September[20]:452 to begin occupy Indochina (with French agreement)[20]:452 to rid Vietnam of French colonial yoke,N.hir Ho (who was in Liuzhou, China) returned to the China-Vietnam border and began a "training program for cadres".[20]:452 Then on 1941 February 8,[20]:524 Ho crossed the border to enter Vietnam for the first time after 30 years away (from 1911 to 1941), and sheltered in cave Cốc Bó[26]:73 near the Pác Bó hamlet, in the Cao Bằng province, less than a mile from the Chinese border.[14]:34 N.dii There Ho convened a plenum in 1941 May, and founded the Viet-Minh, an anticolonialist organization that Bich joined in 1945.N.bvm
On 1941 Sep 8, two months after the total integration of Indochina into the Japanese military system, Ho (still known as Nguyen Ai Quoc at that time) in his call to arm to the people of Tonkin, announced the formation of the Viet-Minh to "fight the French and Japanese fascism until the total liberation of Vietnam."[27]:97 On 1941 Oct 25, the Viet-Minh published its first manifesto:
Viet Minh first manifesto, 1941 Oct 25 |
---|
❝ Unification of all social strata, of all revolutionary organizations, of all ethnic minorities. Alliance with all other oppressed peoples of Indochina. Collaboration with all French anti-fascist groups. One goal: the destruction of colonialism and imperialist fascism. ❞ N.vmm |
In 1942 August, Ho (named "Nguyen Ai Quoc" at that time) crossed the border into China with the intention of attracting the interest of the Allies in Chungking[20]:7 (now Chongqing) for the Vietnamese resistance movement, arrested by the Chinese on 1942 August 28 for being "French spy",[20]:525 but the real reason was Ho's political activities, viewed as "Communistic", instead of "nationalistic", by the Chinese (Chiang Kai-shek) and the Allies at Chungking (now Chongqing).[27]:103 N.vnh Ho was detained for thirteen months, starting at the Tienpao prison,[20]:51 N.htp moving through eighteen different prisons,[14]:77 N.vnh2 and ending up at Liuchow[20]:46 (now Liuzhou), from where he was released on 1943 September 10, after changing his name from Nguyen Ai Quoc to Ho Chi Minh.[20]:453 At that time, the name "Nguyen Ai Quoc" was very popular, while hardly any one heard of the new name "Ho Chi Minh".N.naq
Ho Chi Minh returned to Vietnam in 1944 September, after obtaining the authorization from the Chinese authority, Gen. Chang Fa-Kwei (Zhang Fakui (German), Trương Phát Khuê (Vietnamese)) ---who was under "severe pressure from the Japanese Ichigo offensive" to obtain intelligence in Indochina---and after submitting the "Outline of the Plan for the Activities of Entering Vietnam".[22]:134 N.hvn All three protagonists---the French Vichy colonialists, the Japanese occupiers, and the Viet-Minh---were deceived by US war plan,N.uwp and expected a US invasion of Indochina.N.uii Such expectation was the main reason[22]:209 that, in 1945 February-March, during an "unusually cold month of February,"[20]:56 N.cf45 Ho once again crossed back into China, and walked from the Pác Bó hamlet to Kunming to meetN.wtk (and to "make friends with"[22]:210) American OSS and OWI (Office of War Information) officers to exchange intelligence.N.hmo [22]:238 Ho's report to the OSS mentioned the Japanese coup de force on the evening of 1945 March 9.[22]:238
In Kunming, Ho requested OSS Lt. Charles FennN.fhh to arrange for a meeting with Gen. Claire Chennault, commander of the Flying Tigers.[20]:58 In the meeting that occurred on 1945 Mar 29, Ho requested a portrait of Chennault, who signed across the bottom "Yours sincerely, Claire L. Chennault".[20]:58 Ho displayed the portrait of Chennault, along with those of Lenin and Mao, in his lodging at Tân Trào as "tangible evidence to convince skeptical Vietnamese nationalists that he had American support".[20]:58 As additional evidence, Ho also possessed six brand-new US Colt .45 pistols in original wrappings that he requested and got from Charles Fenn.[28]:79 [29]:158 This "seemingly insignificant quantity" of arms,N.hgp together with "Chennault's autographed photograph" as evidence, convinced other factions of the primacy of the Viet Minh. Ho's American-backing ruse worked.[20]:58
In Cochin China (the south),N.tcc where Bich lived and worked, Tran Van Giau (Trần Văn Giàu in Vietnamese), a Viet Minh leader and "Ho Chi Minh's trusted friend",[20]:186 on 1945 Aug 22 used Ho's ruse of "American backing for the Viet Minh", to convince other pro-Japanese nationalist groups (Phuc Quoc, Dai Viet, United National Front[20]:524) and religious sects (Cao Dai, Hoa Hao) that they would be outlawed by the invading Allies, and thus should accept the leadership of the Viet Minh, which had strong support of "the Allies with arms, equipment and training".[20]:186
Fearing a US invasion with the French colonialists helping, the Japanese initiated operation Bright Moon (Meigo sakusen), leading to a coup de force on 1945 March 9 to neutralize the French forces and to remove the French colonial administration in Indochina[17]:65 (and thus the status of Bich's job in the French colonial government).
Two days later, on 1945 Mar 11, then Emperor Bao Dai abolished the "French-Annamite Treaty of Protectorate of 1884"[20]:73 that put Vietnam under French protectorate, and proclaimed Vietnam independence:N.vnh3
Bao Dai's proclamation of Vietnam independence, 1945 Mar 11 ❝ In view of the world situation, and that of Asia in particular, the Government of Viet-Nam publicly proclaims that from this day forward, the protectorate treaty with France is abolished and that the Country resumes its rights to independence. ❝ Viet-Nam will strive using its own means to develop itself to deserve the condition of an independent State and will follow the directives of the Greater East Asia Manifesto, considering itself as a member of the Greater East Asia, to contribute its resources to the common prosperity. Therefore, the Government of Viet-Nam trusts in the loyalty of Japan and is determined to collaborate with this country to achieve the aforementioned goal. ❞
--- Bao Dai, Hue, the 27th day of the 1st month of the 20th year Bao Dai (1945 Mar 11).[27]:125
The resulting power vacuum[17]:64 following this coup de force changed the political situation, and provided a favorable setting for the Viet Minh takeover of the government.[17]:73 In 1945 April, Ho walked a perilous journey from Pác Bó to Tân Trào, the Viet Minh headquarters in the Liberated Area. There, on 1945 August 16, Ho called for a general uprising to throw out the Japanese occupiers that ultimately led to the August Revolution.N.pvar
Power vacuum yielded a bloodless revolution, 1945 Mar 9 - Aug 26 ❝ In August and September 1945, the white-bearded Ho Chi Minh emerged as the winner of the Indochina game. All along he had expected Japan to be defeated, and he had consistently sought to tie his own movement to the United States and Nationalist China. In 1945 he was guilty of the same false assumptions as the Japanese. He expected an Allied invasion and prepared himself for assisting the invading forces. Instead he got a power vacuum and a sudden Japanese surrender. This provided him with an occasion more favorable for bloodless revolution than he could ever have imagined. He then proclaimed the republic that would later defeat both France and the United States. ❞ --- Tonnesson 2007, Franklin Roosevelt, Trusteeship and Indochina: A reassessment.[17]:73
Even though being a son of a Cao Dai pope,[30] [4] [31] N.cd Bich joined the Viet Minh in 1945,N.bjvm instead of the Cao Dai force.
Under the pressure of a "strong resolution calling for Bao Dai's abdication" by the "leftist students and faculty" in Hanoi around 1945 Aug 20[20]:185-6 and also by the Viet Minh,[20]:186 Bao Dai "voluntarily"[24]:12 abdicated to become the "Supreme Advisor"[27]:143 N.bda2 to the new government of Ho Chi Minh, who "did not thus declare but confirm Vietnam's independence in his famous address to the people in Ba Dinh square in Hanoi"[24]:12 on 1945 Sep 2.N.hvi
After the August Revolution in 1945, the French began to negotiate their return to Tonkin with both the Viet Minh and the Chinese army coming to disarm the defeated Japanese north of the 16th parallel. Ho Chi Minh was weary of the Chinese, who might stay in Vietnam permanently, signed the preliminary March 6 [1946] AccordsN.m6a1 N.m6a3 with Jean Sainteny, "commissioner of the French Republic in Tonkin and North Annam [central Vietnam],"[24]:9 to agree to let the French army under General Leclerc to enter Tonkin. On 1946 Mar 18, "General Leclerc led 1,200 troops and 220 vehicles,"[32]:90 bearing both French and Viet-Minh flags,[27]:238 N.leh "into Hanoi to the relief and delight of more than ten thousand French civilians who had gathered along Trang Tien Street to cheer and sing” the French national anthem.[32]:90 After his entry into Hanoi, "Leclerc quickly established cordial relations with Ho Chi Minh."[33]
Then High Commissioner d'Argenlieu, the "abomination of Vietnam,"N.dar2 insisted to meet Ho Chi Minh on the French battleship Emile-Bertin, "bristling with guns" to impress on Ho French military power, in the Ha Long Bay on 1946 Mar 24, together with Gen. Leclerc and Jean Sainteny for a follow-up discussion stipulated by the preliminary March 6 Accords.N.hsc The key issue was to find a venue for a conference leading to a permanent agreement. While d'Argenlieu wanted to have the conference in Dalat, Cochin China (south Vietnam), Ho together with Leclerc and Sainteny wanted to meet in Paris.
In May 1946, Ho Chi Minh boarded an airplane for France.N.hif The conference at Fontainebleau, outside of Paris, failed to reach an agreement. The main disagreements, "nearly insoluble fundamental differences of viewpoint,"[34]:84 centered around the unification of the three regions, called the "three Ky," namely Tonkin (north), Annam (central), Cochin China (south Vietnam), and the independence of Vietnam, to which France only wanted to give an "autonomy".[34]:84 On 1946 August 1, D'Argenlieu undercut the Fontaineblau negotiation by calling for a "federation" conference in Dalat, giving the autonomy status to Cochin China, thus preempted the unification of the "three Ky."[34]:84 Ho told Sainteny:
Ho Chi Minh to Jean Sainteny, 1946 September ❝ Then if we must fight, we will fight. You will kill ten of my men while we will kill one of yours. But you will be the ones to end up exhausted. And in the long run, I will win! ❞ --- Sainteny 1972, Ho Chi Minh and His Vietnam.[34]:66, 89
CBS reporter David Schoenbrun interviewed Ho Chi Minh on 1946 Sep 11, the same day that a telegram was dispatched from the High Commissioner d'Argenlieu to the French Indochina Committee on the arrest of Bich on 1946 Aug 25.:N.bb
CBS Schoenbrun interviewed Ho Chi Minh, 1946 Sep 11 ❝ President Ho, how can you possibly fight a war against the modern French army? You have nothing. You've just told me, what a poor country you are. You don't even have a bank, let alone an army, and guns, and modern weapons, the French planes, tanks, napalm. How can you fight the French? ❝ And he [Ho] said: Oh we have a lot of things that can match the French weapons. Tanks are no good in swamps. And we have swamps in which the French tanks will sink. And we have another secret weapon, it's nationalism. And don't think that a small ragged band cannot fight against a modern army. It will be a war between an elephant and a tiger. If the tiger ever stands still the elephant will crush him and pierce him with his mighty tusks. But the tiger of Indochina is not going to stand still. We're going to hide in our jungles by day and steal out by night. And the tiger will jump on the back of the elephant and tear huge chunks out of his flesh and then jump back into the jungle. And after a while the mighty elephant will bleed to death. ❞
--- CBS reporter David Schoenbrun, Youtube video French involvement in Vietnam & Dien Bien Phu - 1962, time 3:10.[35]
Bich wrote about the French use of American-made napalm bombs; see Section Napalm bombs.
Franklin D. Roosevelt
If Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR) had lived beyond 1945 Apr 12, when he died, he "would have tried to keep France from forcibly reclaiming control of Indochina, and might well have succeeded, thereby changing the flow of history,"[14]:710 meaning the First Indochina War with more than half a million deaths,N.fwc and the Second Indochina War with more than three million deaths,N.awc would be avoided; then Bich would not join the Viet Minh to fight the French colonialists.
FDR blamed European empires for wars: "European colonialism had helped bring on both the First World War and the current one, he was convinced, and the continued existence of empires would in all likelihood result in future conflagrations."[14]:46 "What is more, like Wilson, he [FDR] emerged from World War I convinced that the scramble for empire not only had set the European powers against one another and created the conditions that led to war, but also worked against securing a negotiated settlement during the fighting."[14]:47
In WWII, FDR believed that "France had ceased to exist," despite having the strongest army in Europe, [14]:27 and thought that European countries (France and Germany) could not live together peacefully: Both FDR and his Secretary of State Cordell Hull "believed that Franco-German disputes lay at the root of much of Europe's inability to maintain the peace".[14]:44
Moreover, de Gaulle's Indochina cause was hampered as FDR disliked de Gaulle's pomposity, egotism, and "his serene confidence that he represented the destiny of the French people."[14]:44 "In social interaction, de Gaulle was as austere and pompous as FDR was relaxed and jovial."[14]:44 That both de Gaulle and the Vichy government wanted to preserve the French Empire further “enhanced Roosevelt’s disdain" for de Gaulle.[14]:46 Cordell Hull was convinced that "de Gaulle was a fascist and an enemy of the United States."[14]:45
By the time of Pearl Harbor, FDR had become a "committed anticolonialist,"[14]:46 who wanted "complete independence for all or almost all European colonies",[14]:74 as evidenced by his speech in March 1941:
❝ There has never been, there isn't now, and there never will be, any race of people on earth fit to serve as masters over their fellow men.… We believe that any nationality, no matter how small, has the inherent right to its own nationhood. ❞ ---Franklin D. Roosevelt, address to White House Correspondents' Association, March 1941.[14]:72
"Roosevelt went out of his way to single out France in Indochina and often cited French rule there as a flagrant example of onerous and exploitative colonialism."[20]:51
Roosevelt's anti-colonialist speech was subsequently encoded in the third point of The Atlantic Charter,N.cac which Churchill was reluctant to agree to, worrying that it would affect the British colonies:N.chac
The Atlantic Charter, 1941 |
---|
❝ Third, theyN.tac respect the right of all peoples to choose the form of government under which they will live; and they wish to see sovereign rights and self-government restored to those who have been forcibly deprived of them; ❞ |
---Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill, The Atlantic Charter, August 14, 1941.[36] |
The Atlantic Charter inspired Third-World countries from Algeria to Vietnam in their fight for independence,[36] as Ho Chi Minh often referred to The Atlantic Charter in his letters to US government officials: “the carrying out of the Atlantic and San Francisco Charters implies the eradication of imperialism and all forms of colonial oppression,” wrote Ho Chi Minh to US Secretary of State James F. Byrnes in the Harry S. Truman administration on 1945 Oct 22.[37]:2 N.hac
One of Roosevelt's great war aims was to liberate the Indochinese, whom he dismissed as "a people of small stature," from the French colonialism.[22]:1
FDR envisioned a new world order in which the "four policemen," i.e., the US, the USSR, Great Britain and China, would maintain peace in the world. He discussed this concept with Stalin in Tehran in 1943.[17]:60 But failing to build up China as a great power, FDR encountered difficulties with his vision for Indochina.[17]:60
Yet, despite the "accepted wisdom" of historians prior to 2007 that (1) "Roosevelt abandoned or watered down his Indochina policy before he died," and (2) "the Truman administration built upon Roosevelt’s policy revision by endorsing the French return to Indochina," a 2007 argument was presented that "Roosevelt, though he was under pressure to abandon his policy, did not yield before he died."[17]:60
Even though US intelligence (through "intercepted Japanese diplomatic messages"[17]:65) knew about the Japanese's concern of a US invasion and their plan to topple the French colonial government in Indochina since as early as 1945 Feb 11, none of this information was passed on to de Gaulle.[17]:65 On 1945 Mar 8, the day before the Japanese coup de force, Roosevelt ordered Lt Gen. Albert C. Wedemeyer---US commander of the China Theater, which included "mainland China, Manchuria, and Indochina, plus all the offshore islands, except Taiwan," and who began his assignment at the end of 1944 Oct[20]:14 --- "not to hand over supplies---any supplies at all---to French forces operating in Asia."[17]:66
"By fuelling French and Japanese expectations of a US invasion, Roosevelt, Wedemeyer and the OSS prompted a Franco-Japanese confrontation [i.e., the Japanese coup de force on 1945 March 9], which in turn paved the way for revolution,"[22]:220 i.e., the August Revolution in 1945, the year Bich joined the Viet Minh to fight the French.
On 1945 Mar 23, FDR "wanted to know what Wedemeyer could do to arm local resistance groups opposed to French rule."[17]:67 Wedemeyer wrote in a cable in 1945 May: "When talking to the President on my last visit he explained the United States policy for FIC [French Indochina] and told me that I must watch carefully to prevent British and French political activities in the area and that I should give only such support to the British and French as would be required in direct operations against the Japanese."[17]:67 Wedemeyer "continued to carry out Roosevelt’s directives on Indochina well after the President’s death,"[22]:18 and squabbled with Lord Mountbatten, head of South-East Asia Command (SEAC), over "which commander held responsibility for military operations in Indochina."[14]:88
Mountbatten, the Supremo, asked Gen. Leclerc, who left Paris on 1945 Aug 17 on his way to reconquer Indochina under the order of de Gaulle, to first come to Kandy, Sri Lanka, SEAC headquarters.[27]:152 When Leclerc arrived on 1945 Aug 22, Mountbatten told him, "If Roosevelt had lived, you would not go to Indochina."[27]:153 N.mtl
Harry S. Truman
Truman reversed Roosevelt’s commitment to free Indochina of French colonialism, allowing the French to reconquer Cochin-china with the help of the British, leading to The First Indochina War, with Bich fighting the French.
Roosevelt had selected Truman as his Vice President because Truman was more moderate than the previous left-leaning VP Henry Wallace.[38] But Roosevelt kept Truman in the dark about foreign policies,N.tfp met Truman only six times, and only one time alone without aides. Truman did not have experience in international relations, and was kept so, particularly about the important Yalta Conference in 1945 February, where Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin discussed the new world order.[38]
After the secretive FDR (who "never wrote down, and rarely discussed, a concrete vision for the postwar world"[38]) died, "U.S. policy fell into the hands of Truman, who had no idea what Roosevelt had really wanted to achieve or how he had planned to achieve it. Over the coming three years, Truman would take this ignorance, combined with Stalin’s strategic overreach and blundering, and create the Cold War that Roosevelt had always been keen to avoid."[38]
To maintain the appearance of continuing Roosevelt’s policy regarding Indochina, as Truman "did not want to convey the impression that his [Indochina] policy was at odds with Roosevelt’s,"[17]:70 it took Truman close to two months, from the death of Roosevelt on 1945 Apr 12, until 1945 Jun 7 (the date of the telegram from Acting Secretary of State Joseph Grew, on behalf of Truman, to US Ambassador Patrick Hurley),[17]:72 N.uah to provide American officials in the Far East (US Ambassador Patrick Hurley and Gen Wedemeyer, US commander of China Theater) with "less than clear" policy regarding Indochina, "portraying change as continuity" of Roosevelt's policy of not letting the French reconquer Indochina as a colony.[17]:71
Truman's ("less than clear") US policy is described by Grew as follows: "It is the President's intention at some appropriate time to ask that the French Government give some positive indication of its intentions in regard to the establishment of civil liberties and increasing measures of self-government in Indo-China before formulating further declarations of policy in this respect."[17]:71
Under the threat of the Cold War with the Soviet Union, Truman did not want to “have a conflict with France and Britain”[17]:70 over the insistence of these countries to reconquer their lost colonies, effectively abandoning Roosevelt’s trusteeship plan for Indochina. Hurley and Wedemeyer "continued to operate in the shadow of FDR."[17]:70
As a result, "lacking clear directives from Truman, US military and intelligence agencies remained uncertain of their government's Indochina policy. Some of them therefore continued to apply Roosevelt's anti-French policy."[22]:19 French official Jean Sainteny lamented that he was "face to face with a deliberate Allied maneuver to evict the French from Indochina and that at the present time the Allied attitude is more harmful than that of the Viet-Minh."[39]:68-69 N.bq2
❝ General Wedemeyer's orders not to aid the French came directly from the War Department. Apparently it was American policy then that French Indochina would not be returned to the French. The American government was interested in seeing the French forcibly ejected from Indochina so the problem of postwar separation from their colony would be easier. . . . While American transports in China avoided Indochina, the British flew aerial supply missions for the French all the way from Calcutta, dropping tommy guns, grenades and mortars. ❞ ---Bernard B. Fall (1966), The Two Viet-Nams: A political and military analysis, p.57.[39]:57
Three months after Roosevelt's death, at the Potsdam Conference in 1945 July, the US adopted a neutral stance regarding the French return to Indochina: "The United States would not obstruct the restoration of French sovereignty, but neither would it give active backing,"[40]:112 contrary to what the British had hoped for, which was "active American support of French aims" of reconquering Indochina.[40]:111 Still, the partition of Indochina, with the Chinese in the north of the 16th parallel, and the British in the south, represented a "significant British victory," since London now had "an opportunity to reinstall a French military and administrative presence below the sixteenth parallel, a foothold that France could presumably exploit to recover the rest of the country from Chinese control."[40]:112
On the other hand, if the US had let the British control the whole of Indochina, the French would "most likely have been able to oust Ho Chi Minh's revolutionary government from Hanoi in the fall of 1945, thus immediately provoking general warfare."[24]:23 It was "the presence of a large Chinese army that allowed the Viet Minh to establish itself as the leading force in the new republic, with a legitimate claim to representing the southern part of the nation as well,"[24]:23 where Bich had joined the Viet Minh to fight the French.
French Marines wading ashore off the coast of Annam (Central Vietnam) in July 1950, using US-supplied ships, weapons, equipment. Quote by Bernard Fall in gallery title.[14]:702
War began
Two camps of historians chose two different dates for the start of the First Indochina War: Either 1945 Sep 23, or more than a year later, 1946 Dec 19. Of these two dates, 1945 Sep 23 is more relevant to Bich since he had been captured on 1946 Aug 25,[8] before 1946 Dec 19.
1945 Sep 23
The First Indochina War started on 1945 September 23 with the brutal repression of the Vietnamese by some 1,400 French soldiers, who had been imprisoned by the Japanese, then freed and re-armed by British General Gracey, and who went on a rampage, beating, lynching any Vietnamese they saw on the street.[14]:115
French war correspondent Germaine Krull, who arrived in Saigon on 1945 Sep 12 with the British Gurkhas soldiers and a small group of French soldiers,N.bfa was likely the first to mark the start of the First Indochina War on this date, as she described in her "most graphic, vivid, and absorbing" reportN.mok what she had witnessed "with her own eyes":
❝ It is impossible to describe this day, which marked the beginning of the war in Indo-China. I saw everything with my own eyes - Annamites [Vietnamese] tied up, some of them tortured, drunken officers and soldiers with smoking guns. On the Rue Catinat, I saw soldiers driving before them a group of Annamites bound, slave-fashion, to a long rope. Women spat in their faces. They were on the verge of being lynched. In more distant sections I saw French soldiers come out of Annamite houses with stolen shoes and shirts… From time to time, an Annamite dwelling would burst into flame. Women and children were fleeing. That night, French soldiers strolled on the Rue Catinat, a gun on one arm, a woman on the other. I have never been so deeply ashamed as on that day of September 23rd. When I returned to the hotel, the faces of the English were expressionless and conversations stopped as I went by. I remember the horror and shame I had felt in June of 1940 when Vichy was established, but never in my life had I felt such utter sadness and degradation as on this night.
That night I realized only too well what a serious mistake we had made and how grave the consequences would be. It was the beginning of a ruthless war. Instead of regaining our prestige we had lost it forever, and worse still, we had lost the trust of the few remaining Annamites who believed in us. We had showed them that the new France was even more to be feared than the old one. ❞
---Germaine Krull (1945), Diary of Saigon, following the Allied occupation in September 1945.[41]:19
This date, 1945 Sep 23, "would go down in history: Trần Văn Giàu, a key communist leader of the southern Viet Minh, announced that "the war of Resistance has begun!" Vietnam's armed struggle against the French had started. It would last nine more years."[42]:45 Giau issued the following call for armed struggle to throw out the French, addressing to his Vietnamese compatriots, including those who were working for the French colons like Bich:
❝Compatriots of the South! People of Saigon! Workers, farmers, youth, self-defense, militia, soldiers!
Last night, the French colonialists occupied our government headquarters in the center of Saigon. Thus, France began to invade our country once again.
On September 2,N.vid our compatriots swore to sacrifice their last drop of blood to protect the independence of the Fatherland:
"Independence or death!"
Today, the Resistance Committee calls on: All compatriots, old, young, men, and women, take up arms and rush to fight off the invaders. Anyone who does not have a duty assigned by the Resistance Committee must immediately leave the city. Those who remain must:
– Not work, not serve as soldiers for the French.
– Not show the way, not inform the French.
– Not sell food to the French.
– Find the French colonialists and destroy them.
– Burn all French offices, vehicles, ships, warehouses, and factories.Saigon occupied by the French must become a Saigon without electricity, without water, without markets, without shops.
Fellow countrymen! From this moment on, our top priority is to destroy the French invaders and their henchmen. Fellow soldiers, militiamen, and self-defense members! Hold your weapons firmly in your hands, charge forward to drive out the French colonialists, and save the country.
The resistance war has begun!
Morning of September 23, 1945
Chairman of the Southern Resistance Committee
TRAN VAN GIAU ❞---Trần Văn Giàu 2011, HỒI KÝ TRẦN VĂN GIÀU (XVII) [Memoirs of Tran Van Giau, Vol.17], diendan.org. Internet Archive 2023.03.27
"Thus began, it could be argued, the Vietnamese war of liberation against France. It would take several more months before the struggle would extend to the entire south, and more than a year before it also engulfed Hanoi and the north, which is why historians typically date the start of the war as late 1946 [Dec 19].[24]:xii But this date, September 23, 1945, may be as plausible a start date as any."[14]:115
Resistance
After graduating in 1935 from the École nationale des ponts et chaussées, a civil engineering school, Nguyen Ngoc Bich returned home to work as a civil engineer for the colonial government at the Soc-Trang Irrigation Department until the Japanese coup d'état in Viet Nam (1945 Sep 03). Bich then joined the Resistance in the Soc-Trang base area and was appointed Deputy Commander of the Military Zone 9 (vi), established on 1945 Dec 10, and included the provinces of Cần Thơ, Sóc Trăng, Rạch Giá, together with six other provinces. Bich sabotaged many bridges that were notoriously difficult to destroy such as Cai-Rang Bridge in Can Tho --- where a street was named to honor his feats[43] N.nnbs --- Nhu-Gia Bridge in Soc Trang, etc., blocking the advance of French forces directed by General Valluy and General Nyo, who were under the general command of General Philippe Leclerc, commander of the French Far East Expeditionary Corps (Corps expéditionnaire français en Extrême-Orient, CEFEO). Between 1946 March 6, when the March 6 Accords were signed,N.m6a3 and 1946 December 19, when most historians used as the date that started the First Indochina War, in Cochinchina, the military situation did not favor the Vietnamese.
❝ Outside Saigon the various nationalist resistance groups, weakened though they were by the months of warfare with the British and French, still controlled large sections of the Cochin Chinese countryside. Ho Chi Minh proposed to General Leclerc the sending of mixed Franco-Vietnamese commissions to establish peace in Cochin China after the signing of the March 6 accord, but the General saw no reason for this in what was supposed to be French territory. When Ho sent his own emissaries to the south, they were arrested by the French who continued to regard Cochin China as a French colony, claiming a free hand there until the referendum could be held. This led to difficult local problems, as in the case of the Vietnamese emissary sent by one Vietnamese zone commander [Nguyen Ngoc Bich] to discuss a cease-fire with the local French commanding officer. The emissary was unceremoniously informed that the French expected complete capitulation—the surrender of arms and prisoners—and that this was an ultimatum. They had until the 31st of March to comply; if they failed to do so, the fighting would begin again. Before the Vietnamese left French headquarters, the French officer took his name and it was soon public knowledge that the French had put a price on his head as well as on that of his commander, Nguyen Ngoc Bich. In this particular region of Cochin China fighting resumed by the end of the month. ❞ ---Ellen Hammer (1954), The struggle for Indochina, pp. 157–158.[10]
Chester L. Cooper was an American diplomat and a key negotiator in many critical agreements in the 1950s and '60s, beginning with his involvement in the Geneva Conference on Indochina in 1954.[44] In his 2005 memoir In the Shadows of History: 50 Years Behind the Scenes of Cold War Diplomacy, "he recounted his association with a constellation of historic figures that included John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, Nikita S. Khrushchev and Ho Chi Minh".[44] N.clc Dr. Cooper N.dcc --- who acquired a deep knowledge of Vietnam history from his years in Asia, from 1941 to 1954, first working for the Office of Strategic ServicesN.hos in China, then for the CIA in 1947, and subsequently became head of the Far East staff of the Office of National Estimates in 1950[45]---devoted some three to four pages to describe Dr. Bich in his Vietnam-history book The Lost Crusade: America in Vietnam, in particular some aspects of Bich's resistance activities:
❝ As commander of the Viet Minh forces in the Delta during the late 40s, Bich became one of the most popular local heroes. During 1946 the Viet Minh hierarchy became concerned that Bich might pose a threat to the aims of the Viet Minh in the southern part of Vietnam, and by the end of that year Ho apparently decided that Bich had served his purpose in the Delta. He was "invited" to move North to become a member of the Viet Minh political and military headquarters in Hanoi. Bich was reluctant to leave his command, not only because of his desire to continue the fight against the French, but also because he felt uneasy about leaving his base of power. Nonetheless, he made his way north via the nationalist underground to Hanoi. A day or two before Bich was to report to the Viet Minh headquarters, the French discovered his hiding place near Hanoi. Since he was on the French "most wanted" list, he was subjected to an intensive and unpleasant interrogation. ❞
---Chester L. Cooper (1970), The Lost Crusade: America in Vietnam, p. 122.[2]
Joseph A. Buttinger was an ardent advocate for refugees of persecution, and a "renowned authority on Vietnam and the American war" in that country.[46] In 1940, he helped founded the International Rescue Committee, "a nonprofit organization aiding refugees of political, religious and racial persecution", and while "working with refugees in Vietnam in the 1950s, he became immersed in the history, culture, and politics of that nation".[46] His scholarship was in high demand during the Vietnam War. The New York Times described his his two-volume Vietnam-history book, Vietnam: A Dragon Embattled,[47][1] N.jbr1 as "a monumental work" that "marks a strategic breakthrough in the serious study of Vietnamese politics in America" and as "the most thorough, informative and, over all, the most impressive book on Vietnam yet published in America".[46] Joseph Buttinger wrote in Vietnam: A Dragon Embattled, Vol. 2 that Dr. Bich was "the resistance hero" whom "Diem had no success" to convince to join his cabinet:
❝ Diem left Paris for Saigon on June 24, accompanied by his brother Luyen, by Tran Chanh Thanh, and by Nguyen Van Thoai, a relative of the Ngo family and the only prominent exile willing to join Diem's Cabinet. With others, such as the resistance hero Nguyen Ngoc Bich, Diem had no success. He tried unsuccessfully to win Nguyen Manh Ha, a Catholic who had been Ho Chi Minh's first Minister of Economics but who had parted with the Vietminh in December, 1946. These men, and others too, rejected Diem's concept of government, which clearly aimed at a one-man rule. Nor did they share Diem's illusions about the chances of preventing a Geneva settlement favorable to the Vietminh. Diem apparently believed that the National Army, no longer fighting under the French but for an independent government, would quickly become effective and reduce the gains made by the Vietminh. ❞ ---Joseph Buttinger (1967), Vietnam: A Dragon Embattled, Vol.2, p. 850.N.jbr2
That Nguyen Ngoc Bich was being hunted by the French colonists was described in Joseph Buttinger's book:[47]:641
❝ [Note] 9. Miss Hammer cites the case of an emissary sent by Nguyen Ngoc Bich. The French took down his name when he came to their headquarters to negotiate a cease-fire, and "it was soon public knowledge that the French had put a price on his head as well as on that of his commander, Nguyen Ngoc Bich" (ibid., p. 158). ❞ ---Joseph Buttinger (1967), Vietnam: A Dragon Embattled, Vol.1, p. 641.N.pbh
Napalm bombs
French Napalm bomb exploded over Vietminh force. 1953 December. This image during the (French) First Indochina War, conjuring up the horrific destruction of the Napalm on the human flesh,[48] N.ng2 portended what was to come more than ten years later during the (American) Second Indochina War with even more deadly advanced Napalm technology.
On the French use of American-made napalm bombs, Bich wrote that the Viet Minh stopped following the advice of Chinese tacticians in launching large-scale mass attacks once many of their soldiers died by French napalm bombs. They switched from the costlier manufacturing of arms to the less expensive manufacturing of hand grenades, which can be used against light battalions to seize their arms.[3]
Publications
- Nguyen-Ngoc-Bich (March 1962), "Vietnam—An Independent Viewpoint", The China Quarterly 9. Retrieved on 18 Feb 2023, pp. 105–111. See also the contents of Volume 9, which included the articles of many experts on Vietnam history and politics such as Bernard B. Fall, Hoang Van Chi, Phillipe Devillers (see, e.g., his classic 1952 book Histoire du Viet-Nam in Section References and French French Cochinchina, Ref. 42), P. J. Honey, Gérard Tongas (see, e.g, J'ai vécu dans l'Enfer Communiste au Nord Viet-Nam, Debresse, Paris, 1961, reviewed] by P. J. Honey), among others.
Bich's 1962 paper, summary
In 1962, Dr. Bich laid out an argument to avoid the subversion war by North Vietnam to conquer rice from South Vietnam to solve its famine problem due to low yields in agricultural production using archaic methods and due to the failed agrarian reform. His main points were (1) South Vietnam should have a truly liberal democratic government, (2) the South should establish commercial relations with the North to help solve the said famine problem, (3) the South should maintain a non-aligned neutrality that would prevent interference from the North, (4) the South would peacefully negotiate with the North toward a progressive reunification. Below is a more detailed summary of his article, looking back from more than 60 years later. As a result, past tense is used in this summary to describe long-past events, instead of the sometimes present tense used in the original article. The full article translated into French is available in the document Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography.N.bb2
Vietnam, China, and USSR
Contrary to the belief of the Western world (that the Vietnamese generally disliked, and had an inferiority complex against, the Chinese), the Vietnamese tended to be too proud of their history and victories against the Chinese and Mongol invaders over the centuries.
Aware of the Chinese historical "fierce expansionism", an important question for North and South Vietnam was how to safeguard the future of Vietnam as a whole country.
While South Vietnam tried to forcibly assimilate Chinese immigrants and their descendants, North Vietnam adopted a "more subtle attitude", moving from "fears" during the Chiang Kai-shek era to "solidarity and friendship" after the communist had won in 1949.
The Geneva agreements, while satisfying for China, left the North Vietnamese to be content with the prospect of reunifying with South Vietnam upon an election. After the failure of the agrarian reform, there was a concern of the presence of many Chinese soldiers and civilians in North Vietnam. To keep Chinese economic aid flowing, Ho Chi Minh initially maintained a balance between Peking (Beijing) and Moscow, but subsequently tilted toward Moscow after Peking admitted that it could not help carry out a semi-heavy industrialization. In September 1960, Le Duan, then Secretary-General of the Party, put forward a three-point program: (1) Support Moscow in any Sino-Soviet dispute, (2) Five-year plan (1961–1965) to socialize North Vietnam, (3) Progressive and peaceful reunification of the two Vietnams.
Le Duan: Reconquer the South
With the nomination of Le Duan—who led the struggle for independence in South Vietnam for a long time and knew the South more than anyone else—as First Secretary of the Party, North Vietnam began to undertake the reconquest of the South, with the first step being to eliminate the Ngo Dinh Diem regime and the American influence in the South. There were deeper motives.
Communist pragmatism
"The most striking feature of the Vietnamese Communist leadership was its outstanding spirit of realism, even pragmatism." They continuously and critically reexamined facts so that a lesson could be drawn for every action and every happening to avoid past mistakes. By doing so, they tended to imitate or to repeat past actions that were proven successful, and lacked imagination and open-mindedness to create new solutions to tackle new challenges.
For example, they stopped following the advice of Chinese tacticians in launching large-scale mass attacks once many of their soldiers died by French napalm bombs. They switched from the costlier manufacturing of arms to the less expensive manufacturing of hand grenades, which can be used against light battalions to seize their arms. They bred dogs, instead of pigs, as a source of meat since dogs produced two litters of young each year, while pigs produced only one.
Rapid industrialization
A deeper motive to swing closer to Moscow was to develop a rapid industrialization to raise the standard of living to avoid complaints about dictatorship and restriction of freedom, and also the "dreaded spectre of becoming a mere satellite state".
The targets of the Five-Year Plan were "extremely optimistic". In the old French Indochina, "great leaps forward" in economics were achieved in some sectors, such as a 400% increase in plantation area, 150% increase in the number of workers in industrial establishments, in spite of World War I. Now, there was an abundance of labor due to high unemployment. The planned industrial projects could be completed if foreign aid maintained the same rhythm and agricultural production was adequate.
Agricultural risk of failure
It was doubtful, however, that the target of growing agricultural production by 61% over five years could be achieved due to low yields resulting from the archaic methods of cultivation, the old system of sub-letting land, the difficulty of cultivating new land, the discontent among the peasants, and the disastrous agrarian reforms and its consequence. Hunger had become endemic, and China could not come to the rescue because of her own problems. Rice had to be smuggled from the South to the North.
The five-year plan ran a "grave risk of failure" due to lack of food to feed the people in North Vietnam, without an increase in rice supply from South Vietnam, not to mention other unpredictable factors such as floods, droughts, bad weather, etc.
The success of the Five-Year Plan would be a primary condition to maintain some independence from Peking, which would exert a greater influence than from Moscow in the case of "necessary and inevitable war", and the North being a satellite of China "would constitute a most serious menace for the South, particularly in time of any major crisis".
Famine, conquest of rice
The reconquest of the South entrusted to Le Duan could then be understood as "a struggle unleashed simply for the purpose of conquering rice", without which the five-year plan most certainly would fail. For many Southerners, their reaction against the Diem regime, rather than the love for Communism, enabled this subversion war to continue. The enormous economic benefit that North Vietnam would harvest from the national reunification was the primary reason for the war.
North Vietnam was fighting to secure rice, and thus the war was, from the purely national point of view, a legitimate one. Ngo Dinh Diem on the other hand refused to provide aid to alleviate the famine in the North.
North-South relation
The Vietnamese people had for a long time a desire to have a liberal, truly democratic government. and had proven that in the end they would rise time and again to thwart the yoke imposed on them by any foreign power.
To avoid such internal war for rice from becoming a proxy war for Moscow, there should be a liberal regime in Saigon that allowed for establishing commercial relations with Hanoi and for a call to stop the fighting. Moreover, a non-aligned political neutrality would prevent interference by North Vietnam in the affairs of South Vietnam.
Reunification negotiation
A peaceful and progressive reunification of the two Vietnams could only be achieved through negotiation at a table, and not by arm struggle in the jungle. The South would hope to live side by side peacefully with the North to collaborate in building the common Vietnamese nation, as the alternative would make "reunification" a propaganda that concealed the desire to conquer.
Notes
(↑ NOTE) How to create the Note jump-to and jump-back links: The Note link-labels, such as N.bda in superscript, are unique identifiers for the corresponding Notes, with "N" standing for "Note", followed by a period and three or four characters summarizing the Note contents, e.g., "bda" for "Bao Dai abdication," which is the title (in italics) of the Note (jump-to) link N.bda. In front of each Note, the uparrow ↑ preceeding a Note (jump-back) link such as (↑ N.bda) indicates the link to jump back UP to the main text where the jump-to link N.bda appears.
The target of the jump-back link (↑ N.bda) is the HTML anchor with the code <span id="Bao Dai abdication jump"></span>
having the anchor name being "Bao Dai abdication jump", without an Anchor_text (or link text, or link label) inside. The code [[#Bao Dai abdication jump|N.bda]]
creates the jump-back link (see Help:Link) with label "N.bda" to jump back UP to the main text where the anchor with anchor name "Bao Dai abdication jump" was embedded.
- (↑ N.atr) Alliance transposition: A surprising alliance transposition happened, with rightist resistance fighters turned to the Japanese (just like the French turned to the British), whereas the leftist resistance fighters turned to China and America (just like the French turned to the USSR) ["On pent ainsi, et bien que de tels rapprochements soient très arbitraires, exprimer en termes européens la situation indochinoise : contre l'impérialisme présent (qui est ici la France), les « résistants » de droite (Caodaistes, Hoa Hao, Phuc Quoc, etc.) regardent vers le Japon (comme les nôtres vers les Anglo-Saxons), tandis que les « résistants » de gauche se tournent vers la Chine et l'Amérique, comme les nôtres le faisaient vers l'U.R.S.S. La transposition étonne, mais elle est, à notre avis, exacte."][27]:99
- (↑ N.awc) American War casualties: The Second Indochina War or the Vietnam War, known as the "American War" in Vietnamese literature, led to a "staggering number of deaths, especially among Vietnamese (between three and four million Vietnamese lost their lives), and the utter destruction of much of the country of Vietnam and large portions of Laos and Cambodia."[49]:85 "In 1995 Vietnam released its official estimate of the number of people killed during the Vietnam War: as many as 2,000,000 civilians on both sides and some 1,100,000 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong fighters. The U.S. military has estimated that between 200,000 and 250,000 South Vietnamese soldiers died. The Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., lists more than 58,300 names of members of the U.S. armed forces who were killed or went missing in action. Among other countries that fought for South Vietnam, South Korea had more than 4,000 dead, Thailand about 350, Australia more than 500, and New Zealand some three dozen."[50]
- (↑ N.p4a) Atlantic Charter, Point 4: "Fourth; they will endeavor, with due respect to their existing obligations, to further the enjoyment by all states, great or small, victor or vanquished, of access on equal terms, to the trade and to the raw materials of the world which are needed for their economic prosperity;"N.cac2
- (↑ N.bda, N.bda2) Bao Dai abdication: Under the pressure of the Viet Minh,[20]:186-187 Bao Dai had decided to abdicate on 1945 Aug 24,[20]:186-187 composed the Imperial Rescript of abdication dated and signed on 1945 Aug 25,[27]:140 and abdicated officially on 1945 Aug 30.[20]:220 Ho Chi Minh then appointed "Mr. Nguyen Vinh Thuy" (Bao Dai's birth name) as "Supreme Counsellor"[20]:220 of the Provisional Government of Vietnam.[20]:220 On 1945 Oct 22, Ho Chi Minh sent a letter to the US Secretary of State James F. Byrnes,[37]:2 and attached the Imperial Rescript of Bao Dai's abdication together with Bao Dai's message to his royal clan about his abdication, both of which were an English translation with no date, but with the recorded date as 1945 Aug 22 in the US National Archives and Records Administration (NARA). The date of 1945 Aug 25 for the Imperial Rescript of Bao Dai's abdication and Bao Dai's message to his royal clan about his abdication, as recorded by historian Devillers (1952)[27]:140 is likely more reliable and correct.
- (↑ N.bdq) Bao Dai quote: In the foreword by Devillers for Tønnesson's 2010 book Vietnam 1946.[24]:xiii-xiv
- (↑ N.brd) Before FDR died: Churchill had been resisting to bother FDR regarding Indochina, but relented under the urge of the British Foreign Office, and dispatched on 1945 Apr 11, the day before FDR died, a "strongly worded telegram," stating "It would look very bad in history if we failed to support isolated French forces in their resistance to the Japanese to the best of our ability, or, if we excluded the French from participation in our councils as regards Indo-China."[17]:67-68
- (↑ N.bs) Betrayal suspicion: On the betrayal suspicion, Chester Cooper wrote in 1970:[2]:123 "Whether the Viet Minh had actually betrayed him to French agents is not known for certain, but Bich always suspected that this was how he had been discovered," whereas the assertion that Bich "was betrayed by his Communist colleagues to the French" was written in the short biography that accompanied Bich's 1962 article, in Honey, P.J., ed. (March 1962), "Special Issue on Vietnam", The China Quarterly 9. Retrieved on 18 Feb 2023. Volume 9. See the Note on The China Quarterly.
- (↑ N.bb) Bich biography: See primary sources and extensive quotations from secondary sources (history books and articles) in Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography.[8]
- (↑ N.pbh) Bich's head price: See Joseph Buttinger's book, Vol. 1[47] N.jbr3
- (↑ N.bi1, N.bi2) Bich's injury: A photo showing the injury mark on the forefront of Dr. Bich as a result of this "intensive and unpleasant interrogation" can be found in Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography.[8]
- (↑ N.bjvm) Bich joined Viet Minh: See the quotation from a French doctoral thesis in Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography.[8]
- (↑ N.nnbs) Bich street: A street in Can Tho is named Nguyen Ngoc Bich to commemorate him blowing up the Cai-Rang Bridge in this city to stop the French troops advance in 1945–46.[43] The short biography in Vietnamese, together with an English translation, in this street-naming plan is provided in the document Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography,[8]
- (↑ N.bvm) Bich Viet Minh: The Viet Minh is "nationalist front organization with many non-communist members, but under communist domination, most clearly at the level of the top leadership."[24]:23 That Bich joined the Viet Minh in 1945 was mentioned in a French PhD dissertation with page image provided in Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911-1966): A Biography.[8]
- (↑ N.bvm) British-French arrived: "Depuis le 12 septembre [1945] en effet,par petits paquets, les troupes alliées arrivent par avion : une compagnie française du 5ème RIC, un bataillon gurkha de la 20ème division indienne du général Douglas D. Gracey, que Mountbatten a désignée pour opérer le désarmement des Japonais en Indochine du Sud."[27]:156
- (↑ N.jbr1, N.jbr2, N.jbr3) Buttinger review: Osborne (1967), a Vietnam scholar, provided a critical review[11] of Joseph Buttinger's two-volume book.[47][1] A recent summary of Joseph Buttinger's book was provided by Stefania Dzhanamova on 2021 Aug 11 on Goodreads.
- (↑ N.cd) Cao Dai: "Appealing largely to the uneducated and essentially superstitious masses, the Cao Dai mushroomed in size to over five hundred thousand by 1930, giving the French authorities cause for concern. A schism took place in 1933 when Pham Cong Tac, one of the original founders, organized a secret sect known as Pham Mon to exploit political objectives. With the death of Pope Le Van Trung in 1936, Tac seized control of the temple at Tay Ninh and proclaimed himself 'interim Pope.' From this point on the Cao Dai split into several distinct sects but retained in all of them a rigid rightist political philosophy, conservative in nature and vehemently anticommunist and promonarchical."[20]:501 [22]:97
- At first, the French colonialists tolerated the Cao Dai, prefering religious sects over Communists, allowing it to be practiced in Cochinchina (south Vietnam), but not in Annam (central Vietnam) and Tonkin (north Vietnam).[22]:98 "In 1940-41, the French altitude changed in Cochinchina loo, since it was realized that the new religion had turned into a pro-Japanese force.[47]:252 Citing messages from above, Caodaist priests predicted the certain victory of the Axis."[22]:98
- In the Spring of 1941, the Caodaistes found themselves in serious difficulty with the French administration, and sought help and protection from the Japanese, who were not in a position to provide. As a result, the Caodaistes were crushed by the French, with Cao Dai leaders sent into exile. By December of 1941, the "famed" Kempeitai, the Japanese political police modeled after the Gestapo, came to Indochina, and provided help and protection to the Caodaistes and other nationalist factions.[27]:89-90 (In Devillers (1952)[27]:90, "Kempeitai" was translated into French as "Gendarmerie" and "police politique", whereas in Patti (1980)[20]:41, "kempeitai" was translated as "security police".)
- After the Japanese coup de force on 1945 Mar 9, being pro-Japanese,[20]:76 [22]:103,373 the Cao Dai sect along with other pro-Japanese groupsN.atr in the United National Front (Mặt Trận Quốc Gia Thống Nhứt),[20]:524 established on 1945 Aug 14,[20]:554 were convinced by Tran Van Giau, a Viet Minh leader in Cochinchina---and later "a prominent Vietnamese historian who organized the 1945 revolution in Saigon and the whole of Cochinchina (Nam Ky)"[22]:21---that they all would be "outlawed"[20]:186 by the invading Allied, agreed to an alliance under the leadership of the Viet Minh.[51] [20]:524
- After the Japanese officially surrendered on 1945 Sep 2, the same day that Ho Chi Minh declared Vietnam Independence, General Leclerc (on 1945 Oct 5)[20]:454 and the French 5th Régiment d'Infanterie Colonial (RIC,[20]:xv Colonial Infantry Regiment, on 1945 Oct 3)[20]:454 were brought back to Cochinchina with the help of the British. The advance units of British troops, the 20th Indian Division, and of the French 5th RIC were flown into Saigon on 1945 Sep 12.[20]:455
- "The contentious character of the nationalist movement in the south facilitated Leclerc's 'pacification campaign' at the end of 1945 and the beginning of 1946. He took on the armies of the Hoa Hao, the Cao Dai, and the Viet Minh one after the other. At first, he seemed to score a resounding military success. Many Caodaists rallied to the French. By March, Leclerc estimated that his troops controlled, not just the cities, but also 80 percent of the villages. Politically, however, France had confronted and alienated much of the population, and when the Viet Minh reorganized its forces and started to cooperate more systematically with the religious sects, guerrilla activity resurfaced in most of the areas the French thought they had pacified."[24]:74
- On 1946 Apr 10, Nguyen Binh, the equivalent of Vo Nguyen Giap in the south,[24]:75 formed the Unified National Front (Mặt Trận Quốc Gia Liên Hiệp, "Front National Unifié"),[27]:253 composed of the Cao Dai and the same former pro-Japanese groups that were in the United National Front, established less than one year before on 1945 Aug 14, as mentioned above.
- The side switching of these groups prompted Ho Chi Minh to describe the pro-Japanese politicians as "weathercocks who were pro-French yesterday, pro-Jap today, and pro someone else tomorrow."[22]:105
- (↑ N.clc) Chester Cooper: A summary of an obituary[44] for Chester L. Cooper is in the document Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography.[8]
- (↑ N.dcc) Cooper, PhD: Chester L. Cooper undertook his doctoral study in urban land economics, and after an interruption due to WWII, received his PhD in 1960.[45]
- (↑ N.tcq) China Quarterly: The Editorial of The China Quarterly, Volume 9, reads: "Five of our articles are by specialists who have observed the Hanoi regime from a distance. M. Tongas and Mr. Hoang Van Chi are writing on the basis of personal experience. Dr. Bich presents an independent view of the whole Vietnamese situation." This China Quarterly issue contained the articles written by several well-known intellectuals on Vietnam history and politics such as Bernard B. Fall, Hoang Van Chi, Phillipe Devillers (See Philippe Devillers (1920–2016), un secret nommé Viêt-Nam, Mémoires d'Indochine, Internet archived 2022.06.29), P. J. Honey, William Kaye (see e.g., A Bowl of Rice Divided: The Economy of North Vietnam, 1962), Gerard Tongas, among others. See the Editorial and the brief introduction of the contributors.
- (↑ N.chac) Churchill, Atlantic Charter: "Both Churchill and many members of his Cabinet were alarmed by the third point of the Charter, which mentions the rights of all peoples to choose their own government. Churchill was concerned that this clause acknowledged the right of colonial subjects to agitate for decolonization, including those in Great Britain’s empire." Churchill wanted to "bind the United States closer to Great Britain," warned his cabinet on 1941 Aug 11 "that it would be “imprudent” to raise unnecessary difficulties. The Cabinet followed Churchill’s recommendation and approved the Charter."[36]
- (↑ N.cf45) Cold February 1945: It has never been that cold. The temperature went down to four degrees Celcius at noon in Hanoi on 1945 Feb 13, Tết, new year day, Lunar year Ất-Dậu ("13-2-1945, Tết Nguyên Đán Ất-Dậu. Chưa bao giờ rét như thế này. Tại Hà Nội, buổi trưa, hàn thử biểu xuống tới 4 độ"[52]:3).
- (↑ N.cac, N.cac2) Complete Atlantic Charter: See the complete Atlantic Charter from the FDR Presidential Library and Museum.
- (↑ N.dar, N.dar2) D'Argenlieu recalled: D'Argenlieu was recalled back to France because of the intense dislike that he caused among the Vietnamese and among the Socialists and Communists in France,[20]:394 who gave him the nickname "The Bloody Monk,"[14]:163 who was "widely believed to have sparked the war with his aggressive actions in 1946, in clear violation of the March 6 Accords [1946] and without informing Paris, [by recognizing] the autonomous 'Republic of Cochin China' in the name of France."[14]:137,180,189 Such recognition went against the stipulation of a referendum for the unification of the three regions ("Kỳ", i.e., Cochinchina, Annam, Tonkin) in the March 6 Accords.N.m6a2 D'Argenlieu was also known as the "abomination of Vietnam,"[20]:394 whom Bao Dai was averse to have any dealings with.
- (↑ N.cdg1, N.cdg2) De Gaulle: The permanent undersecretary at the British Foreign Office knew only that de Gaulle had a 'head like a pineapple and hips like a woman's', whereas the counselor at the US embassy in Paris and most of de Gaulle compatriots never heard of him.[14]:24 By Aug 1946, de Gaulle had resigned from the presidency of the French Provisional Government on 1946 Jan 20.[53]
- (↑ N.dgd) De Gaulle's dream: In 1940-41, in exchange for retaining control over Indochina and Thailand, both the French and the Thai agreed to let the Japanese Navy, Air Force, and Army use, for their military conquest, the harbors, air fields, and terrain in Indochina and Thailand.[22]:81 Meanwhile, in exile in London, De Gaulle later wrote in his war memoirs: "À moi-même, menant une bien petite barque sur l'océan de la guerre, L'Indochine apparaissait alors comme un grand navire désemparé que je ne pourrais secourir avant d'avoir longuement réuni les moyens du sauvetage. Le voyant s'éloigner dans la brume, je me jurais à moi-même de le ramener un jour." Ch. de Gaulle, Mémoires de guerre, Tome I, L'appel. 1940-42. p. 137.[22]:81(n3)
- (↑ N.pd) (Philippe) Devillers: See French Cochinchina, version 03:16, 26 September 2024, Ref.42: Philippe Devillers, Histoire du Viêt-Nam de 1940 à 1952, Seuil, 1952, and Philippe Devillers (1920–2016), un secret nommé Viêt-Nam, Mémoires d'Indochine, Internet archived 2022.06.29.
- (↑ N.dii) Devillers incorrect info: Devillers (1952) received incorrect information that Ho was in "Tsin Tsi" (Jingxi, Guangxi, China) as he wrote:[27]:97 "En mai 1941, il réussit à convoquer à Tsin Tsi dans le Kwang Si, à 100 km environ au Nord de Cao Bang, un 'Congrès' (In May 1941, he succeeded in calling for a plenum at Jingxi in the Guangxi province, about 100 km north of the Cao Bang province)."
- (↑ N.frd) FDR died: "Then, on April 12, as Roosevelt was once again on vacation---at his compound in Warm Springs, Georgia---he complained of a headache, slumped back in his chair, and died."[38]
- (↑ N.fhh) Fenn helped Ho: OSS Lt. Charles Fenn helped "make Ho Chi Minh the undisputed leader of the Viet Minh in 1945".[29]:96
- (↑ N.fa1, N.fa2) Francophile anticolonialists: "French teachings and models over Confucian ones. Some of these teachings were, to say the least, unhelpful to the colonial enterprise. Voltaire's condemnation of tyranny, Rousseau's embrace of popular sovereignty, and Victor Hugo's advocacy of liberty and defense of workers' uprisings turned some Vietnamese into that curious creature found also elsewhere in the empire: the Francophile anticolonialist."[14]:9
- (↑ N.fwc) French War casualties: The First Indochina War, known as the "French-American War" in Vietnamese literature, resulted in "500,000 on the side of the DRV (Democratic Republic of Vietnam) and 100,000 for the French."[24]:261(n3) See also detailed statistics and sources at First Indochina War: Mass Atrocity Endings, Posted on August 7, 2015 by World Peace Foundation; Internet Archive 2024.06.06.
- (↑ N.fwc) French-war cost: PBS US Involvement in Vietnam Video time 0:11 to 0:32:[54] "In 1952, General Dwight Eisenhower was elected President, in part because he promised to take a tougher stance on communism. That year, American taxpayers were footing more than 30% of the bill for the French war in Vietnam (also called the "French-American" war[13]). Within two years, that number would rise to nearly 80%." To be more precise, the "U.S. aid to the French military effort mounted from $130 million in 1950 to $800 million in 1953."[55]:597 The "United States became France's largest patron, ultimately funding 78 percent of the French war effort in Indochina,"reported historian L.H.T. Nguyen based on the Vietnamese document "Tong ket cuoc khang chien chong thuc dan Phap," Hanoi: Chinh Tri Quoc Gia, 1996.[56]:46
- (↑ N.ehb) Hammer (1954): Ellen Hammer's 1954 book The Struggle for Indochina[10] was "A superb study of the French effort to hold on to Indochina."[57]
- (↑ N.uah) Hurley, US Ambassador: Patrick Hurley was identified as "Major Gen. Patrick J. Hurley,"[20]:13 a “personal representative” in China for Roosevelt,[20]:15 and then “Ambassador Hurley” by 1945 Mar 9.[20]:63 Until around 1944 Nov 1-17, the US Ambassador to China was Clarence E. Gauss,[20]:15who resigned, and Gen. Hurley was appointed as US Ambassador.[20]:453 Thus, Patrick Hurley was correctly referred to as Roosevelt’s "ambassador to China" when Truman was president, after Roosevelt had died:[17]:66 "On [1945] March 8, the day before the Japanese struck against the French, Roosevelt gave separate audiences in the White House to his ambassador to China, Patrick Hurley; the commander of the China theatre forces, General Albert C. Wedemeyer; and Admiral William F. Halsey, who had raided the Indochina coast on January 12."
- (↑ N.ejh) (Ellen J.) Hammer received her PhD from Columbia University, where she specialized in international relations, with a dissertation on public law and government.[9] A summary of an obituary for Ellen J. Hammer is in the document Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography.[8]
- (↑ N.hos) HCM and OSS: For the relationship between the OSS and Ho Chi Minh during WWII, see the article OSS Deer Team and the book The OSS and Ho Chi Minh.[29]
- (↑ N.haa) Ho admires Americans: As cited in Logevall (2012),[14]:721 Note 22, p. 721: "Former New York Times Saigon correspondent A. J. Langguth, in his fine history of the American war, refers to Ho Chi Minh's 'lifelong admiration for Americans.' "[6]:55
- (↑ N.hac) Ho and Atlantic Charter: In his letter to the US Chairman of Foreign Affairs Association, Ho referred to the Atlantic Charter several times, twice on Page 1 alone: (1) " As a signatory power of the Atlantic and San-Francisco Charters, the United States of America have to be well informed on the real state of affairs", (2) "These principles of international justice and equality of status have been clearly expressed and solemnly proclaimed in point 3 and 4N.p4a of the Atlantic Charter and subsequently reiterated in the San Francisco Charter".[58]
- (↑ N.hcn) Ho, communist or nationalist? "For many decades there would be a heated debate among diplomats, politicians and political scientists in every corner of the world as to whether Ho Chi Minh was a communist or a nationalist. The answer is that he was both."[22]:120 This view is consistent with that of Jean Sainteny who wrote in his 1972 memoir: "I have been asked countless times, `Was Ho Chi Minh primarily a Nationalist or a Communist?' My reply is always the same: Ho Chi Minh was both. For him nationalism and communism were, respectively, goal and the means to attain that goal. The two complemented each other, merged."[34]:20
- (↑ N.hgp) Ho gave pistols: That Ho gave the new pistols to his rivals, but not to his own people, testified to his political acumen in rallying his rivals to accept him as the top leader.[59]
- (↑ N.hsc) Ho and Sainteny on Catalina: On 1945 Mar 24, Ho and Jean Saiteny boarded the seaplane Catalina that took them to meet Admiral Thierry d'Argenlieu on the French battleship Emile-Bertin, mooring in the Ha Long Bay.
- (↑ N.hif) Ho in France 1946: See Youtube video French involvement in Vietnam & Dien Bien Phu - 1962, time 2:09, showing the moment Ho's plane landed in Paris and the subsequent greetings the French government giving to Ho as a head of state. Flying with Ho from Biarritz to Paris, Sainteny recalled: "At four o'clock we were over Paris. The Bourget airport was thick with crowds of people. Marius Moutet, Minister of Colonies, was there, surrounded by numerous distinguished civilians and military notables representing the French government. Above the airport floated the associated flags of France and Vietnam."[34]:76
- (↑ N.htp) Ho in Tienpao prison: Tienpao in the Wade-Giles transliteration is Tianbao in pinyin. See the analysis in Notes on Vietnam History.[59]
- (↑ N.hvn) Ho in Vietnam 1944: A French report at that time stated: "more than 200 political refugees had passed from China to Tonkin, most of them armed with pistols and daggers (poiguards), and that among them was a certain 'Nguyen Hai Quoc', who had crossed the border under the name of 'Ho Chi Minh'. Nguyen Hai Quoc, a man 'around sixty years old', was 'the probable leader' of the Viet Minh: 'Under Nguyen Hai Quoc's leadership, the new elements coming from Kwangsi have undertaken to reawaken the movement and bring back to their former activities the implacables who had taken refuge in the mountains.' "[22]:118, 208
- (↑ N.hir) Ho's insight for revolution: Ho was convinced that with the Japanese occupation of Indochina and "with international events moving fast and Decoux's government isolated from metropolitan France, the potential for revolution in Vietnam was much enhanced."[14]
- (↑ N.hmo) Ho met OSS: Ho's "mission was probably to obtain information on the development of the war, try to gain Allied recognition for his league and perhaps also secure the Viet Minh a role in a forthcoming invasion". At the same time, Hoang Quoc Viet carried out a similar mission in Kwangsi (now Guangxi) with the Chinese Gen. Chang Fa-kwei, who told him that "I hope we shall soon meet again in Hanoi".[22]:210 See also the PBS interview with Hoang Quoc Viet in 1981.
- (↑ N.hvi) HCM Vietnam Independence : For a detailed comparative analysis between the US Declaration of Independence and Ho Chi Minh’s Declaration of Vietnam Independence, see Notes of Vietnam History.[59] "Bao Dai, the French-protected emperor of Annam, with nominal authority also in Tonkin, had gained nominal independence aer Japan ousted the French regime in March 1945. When he abdicated voluntarily in August 1945, he ceded his powers to the new Democratic Republic. Shortly before Bao Dai abdicated, his government had obtained from Japan something that France had always refused to concede: sovereignty also in Nam Ky (Cochinchina), hitherto under direct French rule, where the emperor had previously had no say." [24]:12
- (↑ N.dlb) Lancaster book: Donald Lancaster's 1961 book The Emancipation of French Indochina[12] was "The best single book on the history of all Indochina to about 1955".[57]
- (↑ N.laa) Leclerc accepted assignment: Devillers (1952) wrote that Leclerc accepted his assignment on 1945 May 22 to command two French divisions placed under the general command of American forces in the Pacific ("Dès lors, c’est à obtenir la participation française à cet assaut que Paris voue ses efforts. Le 26 mai, le Gouvernement français offre à Washington de mettre à la disposition du Commandement américain dans le Pacifique un Corps d'Armée à deux divisions. Le general Leclerc, chef de la prestigieuse 2ème Division Blindée, le vainqueur de Koufra, de Paris, de Strasbourg et de Berchtesgaden, le plus connu et le plus populaire des chefs militaires français, a accepté le 22 mai d’en prendre le commandement.").
- (↑ N.leh) Leclerc entered Hanoi: "Dès le premier contact, il mettra Ho Chi Minh en confiance. « Alors, Monsieur le Président, on est d’accord maintenant ? » s'écriera-t-il de sa voix dure, un peu trainante, en s'avançant la main largement ouverte vers le vieux révolutionnaire... Comme il a fait mettre à tous ses véhicules des drapeaux français et vietnamiens, il a demandé, pour sa villa, une garde mixte de 15 Francais et de 15 Viêts."[27]:238
- (↑ N.m6a1, N.m6a2, N.m6a3) March 6 Accords: "Ho Chi Minh saw no option but to negotiate. In the spring of 1946 he offered concessions to the French, agreeing to permit them to return to the north to displace the Chinese. He also agreed to affiliate an autonomous Vietnam with the French Union, a loose federation of states linked to France. In return, French negotiator Jean Sainteny pledged that there would be a national referendum to determine whether Cochinchina, the southern part of Vietnam, would rejoin Annam and Tonkin in a reunited Vietnamese state or remain a separate French territory."[60]:7
- Point 1 of the March 6 Accords stipulated that the French government recorgnized the Republic of Vietnam as a "Free state" within the French Union, and regarding Cochinchina, a referendum would be organized to unify the three regions of Vietnam, and the French government would ratify the decisions of the voting population ("Le Gouvernement français reconnait la République du Viêt-Nam comme un État libre ayant son governement, son parlement, son armée et ses finances, faisant partie de la Fédération Indochinoise et de l'Union Française. En ce qui concerne la réunion des trois 'Ky', le gouvernement Français s'engage à entériner les décisions prises par la population consultée par référendum").[27]:225
- (↑ N.mbl) Minh Tan book list: A list of important books published by Minh Tan can be found in Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography.
- (↑ N.mtl) Moffat memo on Krull: Abbot Low Moffat, "who headed the Division for Southeast Asian [SEA] Affairs at [the] State" [Department],[20]:381 wrote a memo on 1947 Feb 24 about Germaine Krull's 1945 report[41] as follows: "The underlying diary by a former French war correspondent (Germaine Krull) describes the Allied occupation of Saigon, September 12 to 24, 1945. The report is by far the most graphic, vivid, and absorbing account of this critical period, which witnessed the beginning of the war in Indochina, which has reached SEA. Highlights have been marked in blue pencil, but the report is well worth reading in its entirety."[41]
- (↑ N.mtl) Mountbatten to Leclerc: "Si Roosevelt vivait encore, vous ne rentreriez pas en Indochine."[27]:153
- (↑ N.nb) Napalm battles: See, e.g., the battle of Vinh Yen (1951), the battle of Na San (1952), the battle of Dien Bien Phu (1954), etc.
- (↑ N.ng1, N.ng2) Napalm girl: A photo of the scars on the back and arm of Phan Thị Kim Phúc, the "napalm girl", is given in Stockton (2022).[61]
- (↑ N.bq1, N.bq2) NNB quotations: See more detailed quotations in Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography[8]
- (↑ N.naq) Nguyen Ai Quoc: Hoang Quoc Viet recounted in his 1981 interview with the PBS: "I was sent to the southern part of the country at one point to discuss things with our comrades there. The discussion was very heated and it was very difficult to iron things out. Then I happened to mention the name Ho Chi Minh. These people in the south asked me who Ho Chi Minh was. I told them that he was Nguyen Ai Quoc. They all stood up and clapped and said that as I was a representative sent by Ho Chi Minh then there was no need for any further discussion. This was because at that time there was a feud going on between the so called "Old Viet Minhs" and "New Viet Minhs". But when they heard from me that Ho Chi Minh was indeed Nguyen Ai Quoc, they were all overjoyed, saying that if Nguyen Ai Quoc had returned home to lead the movement then everything would be solved, that there should be unity and solidarity."
- (↑ N.vql) Original creator and writer: Prof. Loc Vu-Quoc, vuquocloc@yahoo.com, Publications, Google Scholar. Wikipedia User:Egm4313.s12.. Citizendium User:Loc Vu-Quoc. See also Nguyen Ngoc Bich on Citizendium.
- (↑ N.pi) Political influence: A direct quote from the brief introduction of the contributors to The China Quarterly, Volume 9, 1962, reads: Dr. Bich's "personal influence upon Cochin Chinese opinion is considerable, and he is regarded by many as a possible successor to President Ngo Dinh Diem".
- (↑ N.pvar) Power vacuum to August Revolution: "In August and September 1945, the white-bearded Ho Chi Minh emerged as the winner of the Indochina game. ... He expected an Allied invasion and prepared himself for assisting the invading forces. Instead he got a power vacuum and a sudden Japanese surrender. This provided him with an occasion more favorable for bloodless revolution than he could ever have imagined. He then proclaimed the republic that would later defeat both France and the United States."[17]:73
- (↑ N.psq1, N.psq2, N.psq3) Primary sources, quotations: See primary sources, extensive notes and quotations in Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography[8] and Notes on Vietnam History.[59]
- (↑ N.tcc) Taberd Cochin China: Jean-Louis Taberd was likely among the first to explain the meaning of "Cochin China" in his 1837 scientific article; see quotation in Notes on Vietnam History.[59]
- (↑ N.tac) "They" in Atlantic Charter: "They" here means FDR and Churchill and their respective governments.[36]
- (↑ N.vt) (Virginia) Thompson was the first British historian with a deep knowledge on French Indochina with her 1937 book French Indo-China (Internet Archive), George Allen & Unwin LTD, London. Also see the review of this book: French Indo-China By Virginia Thompson (New York: Macmillan Company, 1937, pp.516, $5.00), reviewed by H.I. Priestley, The American Historical Review, Volume 43, Issue 4, July 1938, Pages 876–877, https://doi.org/10.1086/ahr/43.4.876
- (↑ N.tfp) Truman foreign policy: After Roosevelt died on 1945 Apr 12, "U.S. policy fell into the hands of Truman, who had no idea what Roosevelt had really wanted to achieve or how he had planned to achieve it. Over the coming three years, Truman would take this ignorance, combined with Stalin's strategic overreach and blundering, and create the Cold War that Roosevelt had always been keen to avoid."[38]
- (↑ N.uii) US invasion of Indochina: The US was the only country among the Allies (British and Chinese) that could invade Indochina; see Chap. 4, Colliding Plans, in Tønnesson (1991).[22]:156
- (↑ N.uwp) US war plan: "... to confuse the Japanese, possibly the French as well, concerning US intentions. Perhaps Roosevelt meant the plan seriously at first, and then changed it into a deceptive operation when he realized that it could not be carried out ... Indochina came to play a similar role in Roosevelt's war against Japan as Norway occupied in Churchill's war against Germany. For a long time, Churchill toyed with the idea of a Norwegian landing as a way of securing the transport route to Russia and bringing Sweden into the war. Then, when his generals and admirals adamantly refused to carry out the project, Norway instead became the focus of elaborate deception and diversion plans, aiming at inducing Hitler to keep as many troops as possible in an irrelevant theatre."[22]:170, 220
- (↑ N.vat) Vietnam-America troops: "From the group of 110 assembled recruits, their field commander Dam Quang Trung and the Deer Team chose 40 of the 'most promising' young men to begin training immediately. The eager recruits who would be working with the Deer Team were officially christened by Ho Chi Minh the Bo Doi Viet-My, the 'Vietnamese-American Force.'"[29]:209 On "August 16, 1945, the Deer Team and the Vietnamese-American Force left Tan Trao... Both Thomas and Vo Nguyen Giap were anxious to leave for Thai Nguyen," which was on their way to Hanoi.[29]:216 When the Vietnamese-American Force attacked the Japanese garrison at Thai-Nguyen, "Nguyen Chinh remembered that the surrender document that he typed mentioned the Americans as well: 'We the Liberation Army and the Vietnam-America troops, commanded by the Viet Minh organization, already encircled tightly this garrison. We demand the [Japanese] troops inside the garrison accept the following conditions.' "[29]:369 Note 20
- (↑ N.vid) Vietnam Indepence Day: That was 1945 Sep 2, the day Ho Chi Minh declared Vietnam's Independence, and also the day the Japanese formally surrendered on the USS Missouri.
- (↑ N.vmm) Viet Minh manifesto: "Union de toutes les couches sociales, de toutes les organisations révolutionnaires, de toutes les minorités ethniques. Alliance avec tous les autres peuples opprimés de l'Indochine. Collaboration avec tous les élements antifascistes français. Un but: la destruction du colonialisme et de l'impérialisme fascistes."[27]:97
- (↑ N.vqf) VQL Foreword: See the Foreword and Bich's open letter in Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911-1966): A Biography[8]
- (↑ N.wtk) Walking to Kunming: It takes about two weeks to walk from Pác Bó to Kunming using likely the same road (among several others) undertaken by the invading Mongols in the thirteen century.[62]
- (↑ N.ytp1, N.ytp2) Year of the Pig: In his interview in the 1968 documentary In the Year of the Pig, at the Youtube video time 13:56, Paul Mus recounted: "Ho Chi Minh said [in 1945], 'I have no army.' That's not true now [in 1968]. 'I have no army.' 1945. 'I have no finance. I have no diplomacy. I have no public instruction. I have just hatred and I will not disarm it until you give me confidence in you.' Now this is the thing on which I would insist because it's still alive in his memory, as in mine. For every time Ho Chi Minh has trusted us, we betrayed him."
References
Marr 2013[63],
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Buttinger, Joseph (1967b), Vietnam: A Dragon Embattled, Vol.2, Frederik A. Praegers, New York. Retrieved on 25 Feb 2023
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Cooper, Chester L. (1970), The Lost Crusade: America in Vietnam, Dood, Mead & Company, New York. Retrieved on 7 Mar 2023
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Nguyen-Ngoc-Bich (March 1962), "Vietnam—An Independent Viewpoint", The China Quarterly 9. Retrieved on 18 Feb 2023, pp. 105–111. See also the contents of Volume 9, which included the articles of many well-known experts on Vietnam history and politics such as Bernard B. Fall, Hoang Van Chi, Phillipe Devillers (see, e.g., his classic 1952 book Histoire du Viet-Nam in Section References and French Cochinchina, Ref. 42), P. J. Honey, Gerard Tongas (see, e.g, J'ai vécu dans l'Enfer Communiste au Nord Viet-Nam, Debresse, Paris, 1961, reviewed] by P. J. Honey), among others.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau (2018), Le Temps des Ancêtres: Une famille vietnamienne dans sa traversée du XXe siècle, L'Harmattan, Paris, France. Retrieved on 18 Feb 2023. Preface by historian Pierre Brocheux.
- ↑ Tran-Thi-Lien (2002), Henriette Bui: The narrative of Vietnam's first woman doctor, in Gisele Bousquet and Pierre Brocheux, Viêt Nam Exposé: French Scholarship on Twentieth-Century Vietnamese Society, University of Michigan Press, ISBN 9780472098057, DOI:10.3998/mpub.12124, at 278–309. Google Book (search for "Bui Quang Chieu Ngoc Bich"), accessed 20 May 2023.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 Langguth, Arthur John (2000), Our Vietnam: The war, 1954–1975, Simon & Schuster, New York. Retrieved on 14 Mar 2023
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Honey, P.J., ed. (March 1962), "Special Issue on Vietnam", The China Quarterly 9. Retrieved on 18 Feb 2023.
- ↑ 8.00 8.01 8.02 8.03 8.04 8.05 8.06 8.07 8.08 8.09 8.10 8.11 Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau & Vu-Quoc-Loc (2023), Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography, Internet Archive. Retrieved on 21 Mar 2023, CC-BY-SA 4.0. (Backup copy.) Much of the information in the present article came from this biography, which also contains many relevant and informative photos not displayed here.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 Pace, Eric (2001), Ellen Hammer, 79; Historian Wrote on French in Indochina, Mar 26.
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 Hammer, Ellen J. (1954), The Struggle for Indochina, Stanford University Press, Stanford, California. Retrieved on 11 Mar 2023.
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 Osborne, Milton (1967), "Viet-Nam: The Search for Absolutes", International Journal 22 (4): 647–654, DOI:10.2307/40200203. Retrieved on 18 Feb 2023.
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 Lancaster, Donald (1961), The Emancipation of French Indochina, Royal Institute of International Affairs, Oxford University Press, New York; reprinted by Octagon Books, New York, 1975. Retrieved on 11 Mar 2023
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 Lady Borton (2020), WE NEVER KNEW: Napalm use during Vietnam's French-American War, vietnamnet.vn, May 5. Also archive.is 2024.10.19.
- ↑ 14.00 14.01 14.02 14.03 14.04 14.05 14.06 14.07 14.08 14.09 14.10 14.11 14.12 14.13 14.14 14.15 14.16 14.17 14.18 14.19 14.20 14.21 14.22 14.23 14.24 14.25 14.26 14.27 Logevall, Fredrik (2012), Embers of War: The Fall of an Empire and the Making of America's Vietnam, Random House, New York. Retrieved on 12 Apr 2012, 864 pp. Winner of the 2013 Pulitzer Prize in History: "For a distinguished and appropriately documented book on the history of the United States, Ten thousand dollars ($10,000). A balanced, deeply researched history of how, as French colonial rule faltered, a succession of American leaders moved step by step down a road toward full-blown war" • Winner of the 2013 Francis Parkman Prize from the Society of American Historians • Winner of the 2013 American Library in Paris Book Award • Winner of the Council on Foreign Relations 2013 Gold Medal Arthur Ross Book Award • Finalist for the 2013 Cundill Prize in Historical Literature.
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 Caffery, Jefferson (1945-03-13), The Ambassador in France (Caffery) to the Secretary of State, Foreign Relations of the United States (FRUS): Diplomatic Papers, 1945, The British Commonwealth, The Far East, Volume VI. (Edward Stettinius Jr. was the Secretary of State on 1945 Mar 13.)
- ↑ Vietnam: A Television History; Roots of a War; Interview with Archimedes L. A. Patti, 1981, 1981-04-01
- ↑ 17.00 17.01 17.02 17.03 17.04 17.05 17.06 17.07 17.08 17.09 17.10 17.11 17.12 17.13 17.14 17.15 17.16 17.17 17.18 17.19 17.20 17.21 17.22 Tønnesson, Stein (2007), Franklin Roosevelt, Trusteeship and Indochina: A reassessment, The First Vietnam War: Colonial Conflict and the Cold War, Harvard University Press, Massachusetts, at 56-73, edited by M.A. Lawrence and F. Logevall.
- ↑ Marr, David G. (1995), Vietnam 1945: The Quest for Power, University of California Press, Berkeley. Retrieved on 2024-07-05.
- ↑ Rotter, Andrew J. (2007), Chronicle of a War Foretold: The United States and Vietnam, 1945-1954, The First Vietnam War: Colonial Conflict and the Cold War, Harvard University Press, Massachusetts, at 282-306, edited by M.A. Lawrence and F. Logevall.
- ↑ 20.00 20.01 20.02 20.03 20.04 20.05 20.06 20.07 20.08 20.09 20.10 20.11 20.12 20.13 20.14 20.15 20.16 20.17 20.18 20.19 20.20 20.21 20.22 20.23 20.24 20.25 20.26 20.27 20.28 20.29 20.30 20.31 20.32 20.33 20.34 20.35 20.36 20.37 20.38 20.39 20.40 20.41 20.42 20.43 20.44 20.45 20.46 20.47 20.48 20.49 20.50 Patti, Archimedes (1980), Why Viet Nam? Prelude to America's Albatross, Berkeley: University of California Press, ISBN 978-0520047839
- ↑ Marr, David G. (1984), Vietnamese Tradition on Trial, 1920-1945, University of California Press, Berkeley. Retrieved on 2024-05-05.
- ↑ 22.00 22.01 22.02 22.03 22.04 22.05 22.06 22.07 22.08 22.09 22.10 22.11 22.12 22.13 22.14 22.15 22.16 22.17 22.18 22.19 22.20 22.21 22.22 22.23 Tønnesson, Stein (1991), The Vietnamese Revolution of 1945: Roosevelt, Ho Chi Minh and de Gaulle in a world at war, SAGE Publications, London. Retrieved on 2024-05-05. Link to this book at the Norwegian National Library.
- ↑ Vigneras, Marcel, Rearming the French, U.S. Army in World War II, Center for Military History CMH Pub 11-6, Washington DC, 444 pages.
- ↑ 24.00 24.01 24.02 24.03 24.04 24.05 24.06 24.07 24.08 24.09 24.10 24.11 24.12 Tønnesson, Stein (2010), Vietnam 1946: How the War Began, University of California Press, Berkeley, California. Retrieved on 2024-05-05.
- ↑ 25.0 25.1 "Dr. Paul Mus dies; a Yale professor. Southeast Asia authority also taught in France", New York Times, 16 August 1969.
- ↑ Brocheux, Pierre (2007), Ho Chi Minh: A Biography, translated by Claire Duiker, Cambridge University Press, New York. Retrieved on 2024-05-20.
- ↑ 27.00 27.01 27.02 27.03 27.04 27.05 27.06 27.07 27.08 27.09 27.10 27.11 27.12 27.13 27.14 27.15 27.16 27.17 27.18 Devillers, Philippe (1952), Histoire du Viêt-Nam de 1940 à 1952, Seuil, Paris. See also Philippe Devillers (1920–2016), un secret nommé Viêt-Nam, Mémoires d'Indochine, Internet archived 2022.06.29. Patti (1980), p.542, wrote about Devillers (1952): "The most accurate French account of the period; barring several omissions and minor inaccuracies generally attributable to his sources and to the lack of American documentation, it is by far one of the more reliable histories."
- ↑ Fenn, Charles (1973), Ho Chi Minh: A Biographical Introduction, Studio Vista, London. Retrieved on 2023-12-27.
- ↑ 29.0 29.1 29.2 29.3 29.4 29.5 Bartholomew-Feis, Dixee (2006), The OSS and Ho Chi Minh: Unexpected Allies in the War against Japan, University Press of Arkansas, Lawrence, Kansas. Retrieved on 2024-05-23.
- ↑ Tram-Huong (2003), Đêm trắng của Đức Giáo Tông (Sleepless Night of the Cao Dai Pope), People's Police Publishing House, Vietnam.
- ↑ Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau (20 Jul 2021), The basic truths on Caodaism, education.edu.
- ↑ 32.0 32.1 Marr, David G. (2007), Creating Defense Capacity in Vietnam, 1945-1947, The First Vietnam War: Colonial Conflict and the Cold War, Harvard University Press, Massachusetts, at 74-104, edited by M.A. Lawrence and F. Logevall.
- ↑ Gunn, Geoffrey C. (2013-03-25), "Prelude to the First Indochina War: New Light on the Fontainebleau Conference of July-September 1946 and Aftermath", Southeast Asian Studies Annual Report 54: 19-51.
- ↑ 34.0 34.1 34.2 34.3 34.4 34.5 34.6 Sainteny, Jean (1972), Ho Chi Minh and his Vietnam, Cowles Book Company, Inc., Chicago. Translated from the 1970 French version Face à Ho Chi Minh by Herma Briffault.
- ↑ Giniger, Henry (1984-10-14), America Inside Out, Close to Events, book review.
- ↑ 36.0 36.1 36.2 36.3 The Atlantic Conference & Charter, 1941, Milestones in the History of U.S. Foreign Relations, 1937–1945, US Dept of State, 1941. Retrieved on 21 Apr 2023.
- ↑ 37.0 37.1 Ho-Chi-Minh (1945-10-22), Letter to US Secretary of State James F. Byrnes. Page 1, Page 2, Page 3.
- ↑ 38.0 38.1 38.2 38.3 38.4 38.5 O'Brien, Phillips P. (2024-09-01), "Roosevelt, Yalta, and the Origins of the Cold War", Foreign Policy.
- ↑ 39.0 39.1 Fall, Bernard B. (1966), The Two Viet-Nams: A political and military analysis, Frederick A. Praeger, New York. Retrieved on 4 Oct 2024
- ↑ 40.0 40.1 40.2 Lawrence, Mark A. (2007), Forging the "Great Combination", The First Vietnam War: Colonial Conflict and the Cold War, Harvard University Press, Massachusetts, at 105-129, edited by M.A. Lawrence and F. Logevall.
- ↑ 41.0 41.1 41.2 Krull, Germaine (1945), Diary of Saigon, following the Allied occupation in September 1945. Retrieved on 2024-11-03. Internet Archive 2024.11.19
- ↑ McHale, Shawn F. (2021), The First Vietnam War: Violence, Sovereignty, and the Fracture of the South, 1945-1956, Cambridge University Press.
- ↑ 43.0 43.1 Street-naming plan in Can Tho, Vietnam, with biographies, Appendix 1, 9 Apr 2019. Retrieved on 15 Mar 2023. Internet archived 2023.02.10.
- ↑ 44.0 44.1 44.2 Fox, Margalit (2005), Chester Cooper, 88, a Player in Diplomacy for Two Decades, Is Dead, Nov 7.
- ↑ 45.0 45.1 Colman, Jonathan (2012), "Lost crusader? Chester L. Cooper and the Vietnam War, 1963–68", Cold War History 12 (3): 429–449, DOI:10.1080/14682745.2011.573147.
- ↑ 46.0 46.1 46.2 Lambert, Bruce (1992-03-08), "Joseph A. Buttinger, Nazi Fighter And Vietnam Scholar, Dies at 85", The New York Times.
- ↑ 47.0 47.1 47.2 47.3 47.4 Buttinger, Joseph (1967a), Vietnam: A Dragon Embattled, Vol.1, Frederik A. Praegers, New York. Retrieved on 25 Feb 2023
- ↑ Tong, Traci (2018), How the Vietnam War's Napalm Girl found hope after tragedy, The World from PRX, Feb 21. Internet archived on 2023.02.22.
- ↑ Logevall, Fredrik (2001), The Origins of the Vietnam War, Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, New York.. Retrieved on 2024-07-21
- ↑ How many people died in the Vietnam War?. Retrieved on 30 Mar 2023, Encyclopedia Britannica, Internet Archive 2023.03.28.
- ↑ Tønnesson, Stein (1985), "The Longest Wars: Indochina 1945-75", Journal of Peace Research 22 (1): 9-29
- ↑ Đoàn-Thêm (1965), Hai Mươi Năm Qua: Việc Từng Ngày, (1945-1964) (The Last Twenty Years: Daily Events (1945-1964)), Xuân Thu (1986?), Los Alamitos, California. Issuu (read only, cannot search). HathiTrust Digital Library (search only, cannot read).
- ↑ Charles de Gaulle (1959-1969), Former Presidents of the Republic, 15 November 2018. Retrieved on 13 Jun 2023. Internet archived on 2023.03.28.
- ↑ US Involvement in Indochina. Retrieved on 2023-12-09, PBS Learning Media, Illinois. Teaching video excerpt from the documentary The Vietnam War, a film by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick.
- ↑ Encyclopedia of American Foreign Policy, vol. 3, Charles Scribner's & Sons, 2002. Retrieved on 2024-05-11.
- ↑ The First Vietnam War: Colonial Conflict and the Cold War, Harvard University Press, Massachusetts, 2007, edited by M.A. Lawrence and F. Logevall.
- ↑ 57.0 57.1 Gettleman, Marvin E. (1967), A Vietnam Bibliography, Assistant Professor of History, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, with the assistance of Sanford L. Silverman, Liberal Arts Bibliographer. The Libraries, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, Oct 19. Internet archived 2022.01.01
- ↑ Ho-Chi-Minh (1945-10-22), Letter to US Chairman of Foreign Affairs Association. Page 1, Page 2, Page 3, Page 4.
- ↑ 59.0 59.1 59.2 59.3 59.4 59.5 Vu Quoc Loc (2023a), Notes on Vietnam History, Internet Archive. Retrieved on 27 Jun 2023, CC BY-SA 4.0.
- ↑ Lawrence, Mark A. & Fredrik Logevall (2007), Introduction, The First Vietnam War: Colonial Conflict and the Cold War, Harvard University Press, Massachusetts, at 1-15, edited by M.A. Lawrence and F. Logevall.
- ↑ Stockton, Richard (2022), The True Story Of Phan Thi Kim Phúc, The 'Napalm Girl', edited by Leah Silverman, Dec 25. Internet archived on 2023.03.31.
- ↑ Vu-Quoc-Loc (2023b), Marco Polo's Caugigu - Phạm Ngũ Lão's Đại Việt - 1285, Internet Archive. Retrieved on 23 Apr 2023, CC BY-SA 4.0.
- ↑ Marr, David G. (2013), Vietnam: State, War, and Revolution (1945-1946), University of California Press, Berkeley.
External links
- Nguyen Ngoc Bich originally created and written by Loc Vu-Quoc (i.e., User:Egm4313.s12) on Wikipedia, where anonymous users can edit.