Vietnam had a long history both as an independent kingdom and major power in its region, and as a subjugated province
of China; its people were both proud of their past glory and painfully aware of their many years of subjugation. In
the mid-nineteenth century, Vietnam became a colony of France. And like other European possessions in Asia, it fell
under the control of Japan during World War II. After the defeat of Japan, the question arose of what was
to happen
to Vietnam in the postwar world. There were two opposing forces attempting to answer that question, both of them appealing
to the United States for help. The French wanted to
reassert their control over Vietnam. Challenging them
was a powerful nationalist movement within Vietnam committed to creating an independent nation. The nationalists were
organized into a
political party, the Vietminh, which had been created in 1941 and led ever since by Ho Chi Minh, a communist
educated in Paris and Moscow, and a fervent Vietnamese nationalist. The Vietminh had
fought against Japan throughout
World War II (unlike the French colonial officials who hadremained in Vietnam during the war--as representatives of the Vichy
regime--and had collaborated
with the Japanese). In the fall of 1945, after the collapse of Japan and before the
Western powers had time to return, the Vietminh declared Vietnam an independent nation and set up
a nationalist government
under Ho Chi Minh in Hanoi.
Ho had worked closely during the war with American intelligence forces in Indochina in fighting
the Japanese; he apparently considered the United States something like an ally.
When the war ended in 1945, he began
writing President Truman asking for support in his struggleagainst the French. He received no reply to his letters,
probably because no one in the State
Department had heard of him. At the same time, Truman was under heavy pressure
from both the British and the French to support France in its effort to reassert control in Vietnam. The French argued
that without Vietnam, their domestic economy would collapse. And since the economic revival of Western Europe was quickly
becoming one of Truman's top priorities, the United States did nothing to stop the French as they moved back into Vietnam
in 1946 and began tostruggle with the Vietminh to reestablish control over the country. At first, the French had little
difficulty reestablishing control. They drove Ho Chi Minh out of Hanoi and into hiding in the countryside; and in 1949,
they established a nominally independent national government under the leadership of the former emperor, Bao Dai--an ineffectual,
westernized playboy unable to assert any real independent authority. The real power remained in the hands of the French.
But the Vietminh continued to challenge the French
dominated regime and slowly increased its control over large areas of
the countryside. The French appealed to the United States for support; and in February 1950, the Truman administration
formally
recognized the Bao Dai regime and agreed to provide it with direct military and economic aid. For the next four years,
during what has become known as the First Indochina War, Truman
and then Eisenhower continued to support the French military
campaign against the Vietminh; by 1954, by some calculations, the United States was paying 80% of the France's war costs.
But the
war went badly for the French anyway. Finally, late in 1953, Vietminh forces engaged the French in a major
battle in the far northwest corner of the country, at Dien Bien Phu, an isolated and
almost indefensible site. The
French were surrounded, and the battle turned into a prolonged and horrible siege, with the French position steadily deteriorating.
It was at this point that the Eisenhower administration decided not to intervene to save the French. The defense of
Dien Bien Phu collapsed and the French government decided the time had come to get out. The First Indochina War had
come to an end.