quote
editTo have quotation marks in blockquote, use the template {{''}}. See Template:Quotation_mark_templates.
″Have had long conference with Prime Minister, Ho Chi Min and he impresses me as sensible, well balanced, politically minded individual. His demands are few and simple namely limited independence, liberation from French rule, right to live as free people in family of nations and lastly right to deal directly with outside world.
He stated that for many years missionary work of propaganda within party, training of youth and preparation for this day has made them ready not necessarily for complete independence but at least the privilege of dying for their ideals. From that I have been these people mean business and am afraid that French will have to deal with them. For that matter will all have to deal with them. French and beginning to recognize this fact and are going to be big about it by offering Viet Minh terms for their independence. On other hand Vietnam is smart enough to see through Machiavellian attitude French here especially Sainteny and have absolutely refused to deal with him.
Annamese are in unique advantage our position in as much as Japs have given them independence so they consider themselves free of any sovereign power and this includes French who have been hiding behind Jap skirts, vichy tactics and passing themselves off as friends of Americans. On whole Viet Minh has full control of situation not only in hands (unreadable) whole of 3 provinces. Their organization is well knit, program clear and their demands on outside world few. They ask they be permitted travel particularly to America particularly for education purposes and that America send technical experts to help them establish those few industries Indochina is capable of exploiting. Prime Minister particularly asked me that American exercise some control over Chinese occupation forces and that Chinese purchase materials and food rather than requisitioning it during occupation period. Furthermore he pointed out and this I have confirmed from other sources Jap and French that due to flood this year famine is imminent and should Chinese depended on Indochinese for their subsistence during occupation period they will all starve plus creating situation where Annamese will be forced to wage war upon Chinese to protect his livelihood and family.
Annamese celebrating Annamese independence day tomorrow with high solemn mass by Catholics and special ritual by Buddhists.″
“ |
Have had long conference with Prime Minister, Ho Chi Min and he impresses me as sensible, well balanced, politically minded individual. His demands are few and simple namely limited independence, liberation from French rule, right to live as free people in family of nations and lastly right to deal directly with outside world. He stated that for many years missionary work of propaganda within party, training of youth and preparation for this day has made them ready not necessarily for complete independence but at least the privilege of dying for their ideals. From that I have been these people mean business and am afraid that French will have to deal with them. For that matter will all have to deal with them. French and beginning to recognize this fact and are going to be big about it by offering Viet Minh terms for their independence. On other hand Vietnam is smart enough to see through Machiavellian attitude French here especially Sainteny and have absolutely refused to deal with him. Annamese are in unique advantage our position in as much as Japs have given them independence so they consider themselves free of any sovereign power and this includes French who have been hiding behind Jap skirts, vichy tactics and passing themselves off as friends of Americans. On whole Viet Minh has full control of situation not only in hands (unreadable) whole of 3 provinces. Their organization is well knit, program clear and their demands on outside world few. They ask they be permitted travel particularly to America particularly for education purposes and that America send technical experts to help them establish those few industries Indochina is capable of exploiting. Prime Minister particularly asked me that American exercise some control over Chinese occupation forces and that Chinese purchase materials and food rather than requisitioning it during occupation period. Furthermore he pointed out and this I have confirmed from other sources Jap and French that due to flood this year famine is imminent and should Chinese depended on Indochinese for their subsistence during occupation period they will all starve plus creating situation where Annamese will be forced to wage war upon Chinese to protect his livelihood and family. Annamese celebrating Annamese independence day tomorrow with high solemn mass by Catholics and special ritual by Buddhists. |
” |
— Archimedes Patti, 1945.09.02 Archimedes Patti Operational Priority communication. |
Essay preserved
editThe Essay version 22:36, 29 March 2023, which was an earlier version of the Draft:Nguyen_Ngoc_Bich declined for being an essay, was preserved in the User:Egm4313.s12 subpage at User:Egm4313.s12/Nguyen Ngoc Bich essay.
Now the Draft:Nguyen_Ngoc_Bich is being rewritten using an encyclopaedic style (Information style and tone).
Egm4313.s12 (talk) 22:43, 29 March 2023 (UTC)
Draft
editDraft for a Wikipedia article on Nguyen Ngoc Bich
First Indochina War
editAmerican policy
editUnder US President Franklin D. Roosevelt, the US policy was to remove the French colonists from Indochina,[1], p.57 [a] as the 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."[1], pp.68-69 [a]
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.[1]
The US was even supplying "considerable amount of equipment" to the Vietminh using unmarked aircraft and seacraft.[1], p.70 [a]
What he [American writer George K. Tanham] refrains from stating explicitly that all this equipment from Thailand, China, and the Philippines was American equipment, brought in on American aircraft, by American pilots. French reconnaissance pilots brought back aerial photographs of those aircraft parked on Communist-held airstrips at Vinh and Thanh-Hoa, in northern Central Viet-Nam, unmarked except for their serial numbers—and some of those pilots, now discharged and flying in Indochina for civilian airlines, maintain that a small number of the American “privately chartered” aircraft flying at present in behalf of the Lao Government bear the same serial numbers as those identified earlier on the Viet-Minh airfields.
— Bernard B. Fall (1966), The Two Viet-Nams: A political and military analysis, p.70.[1]
American officers humiliated French prisoners held by the Japanese.[1], p.69 [a]
... the visit of an American officer to one of the grimmer prison camps. When a young French officer cried out to the American to liberate them from their imprisonment, he retorted: “Those fellows must have had a reason for putting you in there. So why don’t you just stay where you are?” ... Humiliation was piled upon humiliation: ... when the official surrender of the Japanese forces in Tongking took place, on September 27, no French flag was flown (although Soviet and Viet-Minh flags were prodigally displayed), and gallant [French] General Alessandri, who in the meantime had returned from Yunnan, was offered seat No. 115 at the ceremony, behind the Viet-Minh leaders (then unrecognized) and a bevy of Chinese junior officers. No Frenchman accepted an invitation to attend the ceremony.
— Bernard B. Fall (1966), The Two Viet-Nams: A political and military analysis, p.69.[1]
In August 1945, Bao Dai wrote to de Gaulle, imploring the latter to renounce re-establishing the old French colonial "grandeur":
Quote Philippe Devillers
— Bernard Fall
Then due to the reality of the cold war, Roosevelt's successor, US President Harry S. Truman reverted to supporting the French, and by 1954 paid 80% of the cost of the First Indochina War.
Refer to Liggio
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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.
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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,[3] portended what was to come more than ten years later during the (American) Second Indochina War.
A 1962 peace proposal
editVietnam-War casualties
editThe Vietnam War started on 1955 Nov 1—when the Vietnam Military Assistance Advisory Group was formed, with one of its members Technical Sergeant Richard B. Fitzgibbon Jr. being the first American soldier to die in this war in 1956[b]—and lasted for 20 years, until 1975, had more than three million casualties, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica.[5]
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.
— Encyclopedia Britannica, How many people died in the Vietnam War?.[5]
Peace proposal
editIn 1962, Dr. Bich[6] laid out an argument to avoid North Vietnam solving its famine problem, due to low yields in its agricultural production as a result of using archaic methods and its ineffective agrarian reform, by conquering the rice-rich South Vietnam.
His main points were (1) South Vietnam should establish a liberal democratic government, and (2) 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.
A detailed summary of Dr. Bich's article, faithful to his own writing, together with the full article translated into French is available in Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911-1966): A Biography.[2]
In early 1962, Hanoi was pursuing the neutralization of South Vietnam, similar to the neutralization of Laos, once the latter was successful. But "mounting American support for the regime in Saigon, the collapse of the accords on Laos within weeks after their signing, and the outcome of the Cuban crisis convinced many party members that neutralization of the South and any diplomatic solution to the situation there would not work."[7], p.118
Notes
edit- ^ a b c d See more detailed quotations in Nguyen Ngoc Bick (1911-1966): A Biography[2]
- ^ The first American soldier to die in Vietnam was Lieutenant Colonel Albert Peter Dewey, who was mistakenly killed in a Viet-Minh ambush on 1945 Sep 26, the day he was to fly out of Saigon, after being declared persona non grata by the British, who helped reinstate the French as ruler of Cochinchina (South Vietnam).[4], Chap. 1
Citations
editReferences
edit- "151: Memorandum Prepared for the Director of Central Intelligence (McCone)", Foreign Relations of the United States, 1961-1963, Volume IV, Vietnam, August-December 1963, 1963, retrieved 15 Mar 2023. Internet archived 2022.11.15.
- "How many people died in the Vietnam War?", Encyclopedia Britannica, retrieved 30 Mar 2023. Internet archived on 2023.03.28.
- "Street-naming plan in Can Tho, Vietnam, with biographies, Appendix 1", The Can Tho Daily News, 9 Apr 2019, retrieved 15 Mar 2023
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link). Internet archived 2023.02.10.
- Asselin, Pierre (2013), Hanoi's Road to War, 1954-1965, University of California Press, California.
- Fall, Bernard B. (1966), The Two Viet-Nams: A political and military analysis, Praeger, New York.
- Nguyen, Lien-Hang T. (2012), Hanoi’s War, University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.
- Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau; Vu-Quoc-Loc (2023), Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911-1966): A Biography, retrieved 21 Mar 2023, Internet Archive, 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. The version on the Internet Archive will be frequently updated. The older version on Commons remains fixed.
- Tong, Traci (2018), "How the Vietnam War's Napalm Girl found hope after tragedy, The World from PRX", The World, Feb 21. Internet archived on 2023.02.22.
Gallery
editNguyen Ngoc Bich
editImages used to illustrate this article.
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Nguyen Ngoc Bich Street
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Signature 1949
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Nguyen Ngoc Bich 1931 Ecole polytechnique
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Nguyen Ngoc Bich, circa 1933, Ecole polytechnique
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Publisher Minh-Tan logo
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Nguyen Ngoc Nhut (1918-1952)
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Le Temps des Ancêtres: Une famille vietnamienne dans sa traversée du XXe siècle, book cover
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Dr. Henriette Bui
First Indochina War
editImages used to illustrate this article.
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1945 Aug 16 Deer Team train Vietminh
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OSS Deer team training the Viet Minh to use a grenade launcher.
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1945 Aug OSS Maj. Allison Thomas and Viet-Minh fighters marching to Hanoi, Aug 1945.
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OSS Maj. Archimedes Patti and Vo Nguyen Giap saluted American flag, with a Viet Minh band playing the Star Spangled Banner, 1945 Aug 26, Sunday.
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Vo Nguyen Giap gave a welcoming parade to US Maj. Archimedes Patti, head of the US Army intelligence team (OSS), 1945 Aug 26, Sunday.
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Vietnam Independence or Death demonstration, August 1945.
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Ho Chi Minh declared Vietnam independence, 1945 Sep 2.
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Ho Chi Minh and Vo Nguyen Giap giving a farewell party to the US Army intelligence team (OSS), 1945.
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French plane pulling up after a dive to drop napalm bombs on Vietminh force ambushing a French battalion.
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French napalm bomb exploded over Vietminh force. 1953 December.
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French Marines wading ashore off the coast of Annam (Central Vietnam) in July 1950.
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A Viet-Minh suspect captured by a French-Foreign-Legion patrol in 1954.
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Vietnamese refugees boarding the US Navy ship LST 516 during Operation Passage to Freedom, October 1954.
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The great Vietnamese famine 1944–1945.
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1945.09.02 Archimedes Patti Operational Priority communication
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de Gaulle visited Truman, 1946 Aug 12
Second Indochina War
editImages used to illustrate this article.
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US Marines wading ashore in Da Nang, Central Vietnam, on 1965 Apr 30
Category:Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911-1966) Category:1911 births Category:1966 deaths Category:Vietnamese engineers Category:Vietnamese nationalists Category:Vietnamese physicians Category:Vietnamese politicians
Map
editCode for the image on the left: [[File:Nguyen Ngoc Bich Street.png|thumb|left|Nguyen Ngoc Bich Street]]
Code for the image on the right: [[File:Nguyen Ngoc Bich Street.png|400px|thumb|right|Nguyen Ngoc Bich Street]]
See also Egm4313.s12/Mongol_invasion