Embers Of War: The Fall Of An Empire And The Making Of America's Vietnam - Embers of War: The Fall of an Empire and the Making of America's Vietnam Part 41
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Embers of War: The Fall of an Empire and the Making of America's Vietnam Part 41

IF AMERICAN MILITARY INTERVENTION IN VIETNAM WAS AT LONG last off the table, the Eisenhower administration still could not bring itself to take the next step and support a negotiated settlement. Even as each of the other main players in Geneva gravitated toward partition as the preferred solution-Viet Minh and French negotiators made significant progress on the particulars in secret meetings on June 4, 5, and 10, even as Georges Bidault personally remained noncommittal-the administration was loath to sign on. (At least publicly; privately, Bedell Smith told Australia's Casey on June 13 that he personally accepted the idea of partition.)50 In domestic political terms, it would be better for the conference to collapse than for it to agree to a compromise with Communists, especially of the Chinese variety.

Hence the equanimity with which U.S. officials greeted the splits that emerged in restricted sessions in mid-June. The disagreements concerned the authority and composition of an international supervisory commission that would monitor the peace, and the status of Cambodia and Laos. Resolution seemed impossible, and many delegates, Eden among them, concluded that a breakup of the conference was imminent. Dulles was pleased, or at least not disturbed. "It is our view," he cabled Bedell Smith on June 14, "that final adjournment of Conference is in our best interest, provided this can be done without creating an impression in France at this critical moment that France has been deserted by US and UK and therefore has no choice but capitulation on Indochina to Communists at Geneva and possible accommodation with Soviets in Europe."51

But what if such capitulation and accommodation occurred, or what if the Communists used the failure of the conference as an excuse to try to conquer the whole of the Indochinese peninsula? Robert Bowie, the director of the State Department's Policy Planning Staff, articulated precisely that fear at a meeting of the NSC on June 15. Here was the United States, Bowie said, withdrawing from the Geneva Conference because she found the Communist proposals unacceptable, yet she was unwilling to do anything to bolster the French position. The likely result: The Viet Minh would charge down the peninsula and get more of Indochina than they were demanding at the conference. In the wake of such a development, Nehru and other "Asiatics" would swing to the Communist side. Far better, Bowie asserted, to defend "South Vietnam," if necessary with four U.S. divisions.52

Although U.S. diplomats in Saigon had made similar noises for several weeks, this was a revolutionary idea in the halls of power in Washington.53 Bowie had not merely asserted that partition served American interests better than allowing the negotiations to fail; he had said the southern half of Vietnam was militarily defensible. The five-power staff talks had come to the same conclusion, with a consensus that a line from Thakhek (in Laos) to Dong Hoi-that is, about 1750' north-could be defended. For the moment, Bowie found few takers for his argument, but his advocacy gained force among high officials in the days thereafter. Already by June 17, John Foster Dulles could be heard singing a new tune at another meeting of the NSC. Seconding Eisenhower's comment that the native populations of Southeast Asia viewed the war as a colonial enterprise, the secretary, according to the note taker, said "perhaps the time had come" to let the French get out of Indochina entirely and then try to "rebuild from the foundations." And later in the same meeting: "For the United States or its allies to try to fight now in the Delta area was almost impossible, if for no other reason than that the French have no inclination to invite us in. They are desperately anxious to get themselves out of Indochina.... Probably best to let them quit."54

The "perhaps" and the "probably" were important. Although in hindsight Dulles's words constituted a watershed moment-the first clear sign of a monumental policy shift, from keeping the French fighting and resisting negotiations to moving France out of Indochina altogether and "rebuild[ing] from the foundations," without the taint of colonialism-at the time, in mid-June 1954, neither he nor President Eisenhower knew what they wanted. They still groped hesitantly for some means of reconciling the competing imperatives on Indochina: to keep the nation out of "another Korea" while avoiding any hint of "appeasement" of the Communists. Seeing danger whichever way they turned, especially in a congressional election year, the two men still saw advantages in letting the Geneva meeting collapse without an agreement. On June 12, Smith candidly told Eden that he had just received a "plain spoken" personal message from Eisenhower instructing him to do everything in his power to bring the proceedings to an end as quickly as possible. "We decided," the president himself would recall of this period in June, "that it was best for the United States to break off major participation in the Geneva Conference. The days of keeping the Western powers bound to inaction by creating divisions of policy among them in a dragged-out conference were coming to an end."55

In Paris, however, one man had a different idea. On June 18, six days after the Laniel government failed to win a vote of confidence (306 to 296), Pierre Mendes France, who had spoken out against this war longer and more fervently than any other leading politician, became France's new prime minister. In soliciting the National Assembly's support, the veteran Radical deputy didn't merely proclaim as his first objective a cease-fire in Indochina; he vowed that he would resign within thirty days of his investiture if an agreement had not been reached. His last act before resigning, he added, would be to introduce a bill for conscription to supplement the professional army in the field, which the Assembly would have to vote on the same day. Mendes France was sufficiently encouraged by the results of the de Brebisson-Ha secret discussions to make this pledge, but he knew it was a gamble. How would the delegations at Geneva respond? Would he be able to bring the Viet Minh, the Americans, the Chinese, the Soviets along? And what about Bao Dai's State of Vietnam, which that week had had her own change of leadership, one little noticed at the time but with enormous implications for the future? Buu Loc was out as prime minister, replaced by Ngo Dinh Diem. Would Diem, who immediately announced his opposition to any settlement involving partition, upset the Mendes France timetable?

So many questions, so much to work out. And the clock was now ticking.

CHAPTER 23

"WE MUST GO FAST"

IT WAS A GAMBLE, BUT A CONSIDERED ONE. PIERRE MENDeS FRANCE had announced to the world that he would resign as French premier if he could not end his country's eight-year war in Indochina within one month (that is, by end of the day on July 20, 1954). Since agreeing on June 13 to be premier-designate, Mendes France, well-known for his colossal zest for work and immense powers of concentration, had immersed himself in the details of the military situation in Vietnam. The more he learned, the more he realized he had to move quickly to secure an agreement. There was still a war on. The picture in the Red River Delta was growing more and more bleak, senior military officers told him on June 14; desertions from the VNA were reaching epidemic proportions, and the Hanoi-Haiphong road was in constant danger of being cut, not for hours as was happening already, but permanently. Within weeks, Vo Nguyen Giap would be ready to launch a large-scale attack from various points on the delta's perimeter. Worse yet, the Viet Minh commander might not need to initiate such an all-out assault; so extensive was the pourrissement in the delta that the French position might quickly collapse anyway. "We must act quickly," the officers implored the premier-designate, "we must make them put their cards on the table as soon as possible."1

But it was not merely the dismal military situation that caused Mendes France to stake his political future on securing a rapid agreement at Geneva. For years, as we have seen, he had been a Cassandra in parliament, using his credentials as an economist to argue that France could not afford the war, could not afford to fight a major military campaign in Asia while seeking recovery at home. And without such an economic recovery, the country's broader foreign policy objectives, including in Europe and North Africa, would be unattainable.2 Everything was connected to everything else. Admittedly, liquidating the Indochina enterprise short of success would not be easy-there would be denunciations from some commentators at home, and French prestige abroad would suffer a blow-but what alternative was there? "To govern is to choose," Mendes France had once declared (gouverner, c'est choisir), and he had been withering in his criticism of previous French governments for avoiding the tough decisions on Indochina. Now he would get the chance to follow his dictum.

And besides, all was not necessarily lost. Grim though the military prospects might be, diplomatically Mendes France saw reason to be hopeful. From Jean Chauvel's telegrams he knew that the bilateral FrancoViet Minh negotiations in Geneva were making slow but steady progress, which seemed to indicate that the Viet Minh too sought an early end to the war. The other leading delegations, meanwhile-with the exception of the Americans, that is, who he knew suspected his left-wing credentials-were pleased by his selection, and the task now was to strike quickly, while he had the advantage of freshness and could count on broad support in the Assembly. By announcing this deadline, he hoped to create a psychological situation closely approximating a truce. After all, a major enemy offensive operation during the four-week window would bring international opprobrium, and since only the enemy was in a position to be able to launch such an operation in the near future, the cost to French maneuverability in the field would be minimal. In Korea, the negotiations had been allowed to drag on for months and months; he could not let that happen here.3

But there were risks as well in setting a deadline, huge risks, and Mendes France knew it. His own reputation would suffer a blow, possibly a fatal one, if he failed to deliver a deal by July 20. Furthermore, his country's adversaries might be tempted to slow down the negotiations with the aim of securing last-minute concessions as the clock ticked down. Tensions among the Western powers, palpable enough in recent weeks, could increase as the three governments worked to establish a common position before the deadline. Nevertheless, Mendes France took the plunge. At two A.M. on June 18, 1954, some hours after electrifying the delegates in the National Assembly with his Indochina wager, Pierre Mendes France became premier of France, by a vote of 419 to 47, with 143 abstentions. It was one of the strongest majorities in the history of the Fourth Republic. The left-wing press cheered the result, and "Mendesiste" delight could be seen also in the more centrist papers such as Le Monde, Franc-Tireur, Combat, and France Observateur.

His rise to the highest political office in the land was at once extraordinary and entirely to be expected. A descendant of Marrano Jews who had fled the Portuguese Inquisition of 1684, Pierre Mendes France was born in Paris in 1907. From an early age, he assumed the wholly secular sense of identity long held by middle-class Jewish families of the Third and Fourth republics, who trusted that an assimilationist but condoning France would satisfy their sense of belonging. Ambitious and brilliant, he had served as the precocious undersecretary of finance in Leon Blum's second ministry in 1938 and as de Gaulle's minister of economic affairs in 194445. Yet Mendes France remained to an extent an outsider throughout the wartime and early postwar years, an emerging political star who drew his strength not from party maneuvering or parliamentary skill but from the force of his intellect and his moral fervor, from his willingness to face hard truths, make tough choices, and get things done. To his young supporters and staffers, he was "PMF," after FDR, and to the journalistic allies who founded the weekly magazine L'Express to promote his cause, the future had at long last arrived.4

Mendes France retained much of the Geneva delegation headed by Jean Chauvel, while the Ministry for the Associated States he entrusted to Guy La Chambre, a veteran Radical Party member and former minister for the air. The Foreign Ministry Mendes France kept for himself, because the chief initial task he had set for himself-making peace in Indochina-he viewed as essentially diplomatic.

Thus came to a sudden end the Bidault phase of the Geneva Conference, after seven and a half weeks-and the Bidault phase of the Indochina War, after seven and a half years. Almost continuously the former history teacher had been at the center of things, from before the real shooting started in 1946, but he would not be there for the denouement. At Geneva he had initially pursued the policy of the victor, calling for a cease-fire based on the leopard skin formula (the irregular outline of territorial zones controlled by the opposing sides) and stubbornly refusing to discuss the political future of Vietnam or even to meet with Pham Van Dong. "I am not used to associating with assassins," Bidault haughtily declared, adding: "What do I have to hear from him? I know that he has only one idea: to kick us out the door."5 As the weeks passed, however, Bidault saw the need to shift ground somewhat, to appear more flexible. He allowed the de BrebissonHa Van Lau talks to proceed, even as he continued to rule out a personal encounter with Pham Van Dong. But to the end he was ambivalent, temporizing, circumspect.6 He never could bring himself to link the military and political questions, or to abandon hope for some kind of deus ex machina, inevitably involving U.S. military intervention. Even after many in his own delegation embraced partition as the only real solution, he remained resistant, proclaiming into mid-June that only the leopard skin suited him.7

It could be argued-and was argued, by Bidault and his supporters, and by some observers since-that this approach yielded real results for France. By resisting partition and by laying preparations with Washington for possible military escalation, so the argument goes, Bidault elicited concessions from the Communist side, concessions impossible to imagine at the time of Dien Bien Phu's surrender six weeks earlier. The alternative view is that Bidault's "diplomatic somnambulism" (to use Raymond Aron's phrase), his evident revulsion at having to negotiate with Pham Van Dong and his Soviet and Chinese allies, only delayed an agreement.8 Vyacheslav Molotov, upon returning to Moscow in late June, complained to the Central Committee that the Frenchman's reluctance to discuss an armistice line contributed to the sluggish progress of the conference. China's Zhou Enlai agreed, as did Britain's Anthony Eden, as indeed did key players in the French delegation. On June 19, with Bidault finally off the stage, Jean Chauvel told Eden that the French team was now able to discuss seriously the partition of Vietnam.9

For Eden, it was as though the clouds had suddenly parted. Where just days earlier he had despaired to colleagues that the conference seemed likely to collapse without agreement (a result, he ruefully noted, that would please the Americans), rendering all his hard work over the previous months meaningless, he now saw reason to be hopeful, even optimistic. Bidault was gone, and the new man wanted a deal. Not only that, in recent days both Molotov and Zhou, seeking to exploit the changed situation in Paris, had made concessions. On June 15, Molotov had proposed a compromise on the composition of the supervisory commission to come out of the conference, suggesting that neutral India could be named chair. He also affirmed his willingness to tackle military issues first, so long as political matters were not neglected. Zhou, for his part, said cryptically on June 14 and explicitly on June 16 that the situations in Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia were not wholly alike and should be treated separately. Laos and Cambodia could be considered neutral nations like India and Burma, he told Eden, and as such could be given the right to remain in the French Union provided they had no American or other foreign bases. On June 18, Zhou issued the proposal again in formal session and was followed by Pham Van Dong, who indicated the willingness of his government to remove its forces from Laos and Cambodia so long as no foreign military bases were established anywhere in Indochina.10

II

EDEN SAW ZHOU ENLAI AS THE REAL FORCE BEHIND THIS COMMUNIST diplomatic maneuver, and his judgment seems correct in hindsight. Molotov was content to let him play the key role. In the first several weeks of the conference, Zhou had mostly adhered to a firm line and showed scant signs of the refined charm that would enchant so many interlocutors in the years to come. Most of the time he had been the bitter challenger with the chip on his shoulder, quick to lash out, notably against Walter Robertson, the hard-line American assistant secretary of state who as head of the Far East desk helped shape the administration's China policy. His words dripping with sarcasm, Zhou would mock Robertson's pronouncements, reminding him and all within earshot of Washington's errors of judgment concerning Chiang Kai-shek and the survivability of the revolution.11

But not this time. This time when Robertson rose to tell the conference (in tones Eden in his diary said constituted a "violent attack") that the new Communist proposals were unacceptably imprecise, Zhou Enlai held his fire and reiterated his offer.12 Why his new conciliatory tone? Contemporary observers assumed that Mao Zedong was eager to keep the Geneva Conference from breaking up and to prevent the United States from establishing a military presence in Laos and Cambodia. With the odious Bidault gone and a longtime foe of the war taking power in Paris, and with the Eisenhower administration seemingly intent on letting the negotiations fail, now was the time, these analysts imagined Mao and Zhou thinking, to move aggressively to secure a deal.

Recently released Chinese archival documentation supports this interpretation. It shows that the Chinese, Soviet, and Viet Minh delegations met on June 15 in Geneva to evaluate the changed situation in Paris and to coordinate strategy. Zhou Enlai took a firm line, warning Pham Van Dong that the Viet Minh's refusal to acknowledge the presence of their troops in Cambodia and Laos threatened to kill the negotiations and squander a golden opportunity to secure a political agreement. Zhou accordingly proposed that the Communist side adopt a new line favoring withdrawal of all foreign troops from the two kingdoms, including the "volunteers" sent by the DRV, so that "our concessions on Cambodia and Laos will result in [the other camp's] concessions on the question of dividing the zones between the two sides in Vietnam." Molotov, having previously held several private discussions with Zhou, strongly backed the proposal. Pham Van Dong was noncommittal but ultimately seemed to imply assent.13 "The Chinese delegation has presented a proposal that contains a number of concessions," he wrote in a cable to the DRV Central Committee, "such as acknowledging that there are dissimilarities between the Laotian and Cambodian problems and the Vietnam problem and that there are dissimilarities between [the] Laotian problem and the Cambodian problems as well, and the position that all foreign troops would be withdrawn from Laos and Cambodia (the proposal means that if our troops are present they too will have to be withdrawn)."14

It was a huge blow to the DRV's attempt to secure recognition for her "sister" governments in Laos (Pathet Lao) and Cambodia (Khmer Issarak). Pham Van Dong had arrived in Geneva seeking to replace the French colonial state of Indochine with a new, revolutionary Indochina, in which the three "resistance governments" would join together under the leadership of the DRV. The dream was now dying. Zhou Enlai, seeking to advance the negotiations and to show wary non-Communist governments in Asia-notably India, Burma, and Indonesia-that the Viet Minh would not try to export Communism beyond Vietnam's borders, had made clear that the situation in Laos and Cambodia was different from that in Vietnam and would be judged accordingly.15 In a long telegram to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) leadership, he underscored his determination to secure Viet Minh agreement on the need to show flexibility on the key outstanding issues. Without such flexibility, "the negotiation cannot go on, and this ... will not serve our long-range interests." Zhou went on:

If we take the initiative to make concessions in Cambodia and Laos, we will be able to ask for more gains in Vietnam as compensation to us. Our position in Vietnam being relatively strong in various aspects, we will not only be able to keep our gains there, but also will be capable of gradually consolidating and expanding our influence.... The emphasis of our strategy at this stage should be to encourage the [peace] initiatives of the French, to keep the French from listening to the Americans completely, to make sure the British support stopping the war, and to quickly reach an armistice agreement as long as the conditions seem reasonable.16

Vietnamese sources, meanwhile, suggest Zhou Enlai may also have had another motivation for the new line: a desire by the CCP to incorporate Laos and Cambodia into China's sphere of influence, if only to keep them from falling into Vietnam's. Better to give the two states neutral status than to allow Ho Chi Minh's government to dominate all of Indochina.17

On June 19, the day before the chief delegates were scheduled to leave Geneva to return home to consult with their governments, Zhou Enlai told Canadian diplomat and China expert Chester Ronning that a settlement was within reach if only France would commit herself to a political solution. China and her allies had made important concessions, Zhou said, and now the French should follow suit. The next morning he reiterated these points to Eden and also expressed his keen desire to meet the new French premier. Eden, stopping in Paris en route to London later in the day, happily passed the message on to Pierre Mendes France. He urged the Frenchman to meet with Zhou at the earliest opportunity. Mendes France, having received the same recommendation from Jean Chauvel, agreed.18 But where should the meeting occur? The Chinese foreign minister would not go to Paris as long as his government was not recognized by France, while Mendes France feared he would be perceived as a supplicant if he went so soon to Geneva. Dijon was suggested, but the two sides settled instead on the Swiss city of Bern, on the pretext of thanking the Swiss Confederation president for providing a locale for the negotiations. The meeting was arranged for the following Wednesday, June 23, in the French embassy.19

An epic encounter it would be. Zhou Enlai, attired not in his usual blue high-collared tunic but in a gray business suit and tie, looked younger and more relaxed than he had in Geneva, and he made an immediate winning impression on Mendes France: "L'homme etait impressionnant." Zhou opened sternly-China feared neither threat nor provocation and considered both to be illegitimate means of negotiation-but then followed a conciliatory line. He had lived in France and felt an attachment to the French people, he said, and moreover his view aligned with the French view, meaning military questions should take precedence over the resolution of political issues in Indochina. Achieving a cease-fire was the first priority. Much to the Frenchman's satisfaction and relief, Zhou then made clear that he accepted not only the view that Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam should be evaluated separately but also, indirectly, the view that there existed "two governments in Vietnam." Following an armistice, he went on, there should be elections for reunification of that country under a single government.

Zhou declared that his government-like that of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam-intended to move swiftly toward recognition of Laos and Cambodia and to follow a policy of nonintervention toward both. He even hinted that Beijing would have no objection if one or both of the kingdoms chose to be attached to the French Union. What would not be acceptable, however, would be for the United States to misinterpret this Chinese and DRV policy as an excuse to turn the kingdoms into "bases of aggression." In order to facilitate national reunification, both Phnom Penh and Vientiane should grant recognition to the resistance movements-Khmer Issarak and Pathet Lao-for the sake of unity. The latter, being a significant presence in Laos, should be granted a zone of administrative control, but Viet Minh forces that penetrated Laotian territory might be withdrawn after an armistice.

Mendes France liked what he heard, and he could see by the expression on Jean Chauvel's face that the ambassador was pleased as well. The premier agreed that there should be no American bases in Cambodia or Laos, and he voiced support for elections in Vietnam. The vote could not happen immediately, though, and there was moreover the issue of what kind of temporary division to have in the meantime. Did the Chinese government support partition? Zhou Enlai initially evaded a direct answer but then said he favored a formula involving "large sectors." Mendes France agreed that a "horizontal cut" was possible, but not as far south as suggested by the Viet Minh at Geneva. Everything else, he continued, depended on a resolution of this issue of the regroupment zones. Zhou concurred and said "this [is] also Mr. Eden's opinion." With hard work, he speculated, the military negotiators in Geneva ought to be able to reach agreement "within three weeks," at which point the foreign ministers could return and be ready to sign the documents. Mendes France, finding this time limit (July 15) to be uncomfortably close to his own July 20 deadline for the settlement of all outstanding problems, replied that three weeks "should be regarded as a maximum."20

The meeting drew to a close. Both sides were pleased with the outcome and said they understood each other well, but neither doubted that tough slogging remained. Mendes France flew back to Paris, while his Chinese counterpart, having earlier held sessions with the leaders of the Cambodian and Laotian delegations (he promised them that Beijing would respect their sovereignty and independence), departed for a series of meetings in Asia, among them a two-day secret session with Ho Chi Minh.

The following day in Paris, June 24, Pierre Mendes France summoned his four principal Indochina advisers to his home for a strategy session: General Ely, who had returned for a short visit from Saigon; Alexandre Parodi, the general secretary of the Foreign Ministry; and La Chambre and Chauvel. Their task: to establish the French diplomatic strategy for the climactic (as they saw it) portion of the Geneva meeting.

Militarily, the picture looked grim-since Dien Bien Phu's fall six weeks earlier, the Viet Minh had solidified their control over much of Tonkin and had assembled and deployed the main bulk of their fighting force around the delta; French intelligence estimated they were now in a position to launch a major assault at any time (though the analysts thought Giap would probably bide his time, pending the outcome at Geneva). Viet Minh reconnaissance units were active along the northern face of the delta's perimeter, and there were signs also of increased infiltration along the southern face. The French, meanwhile, were evacuating isolated outposts and concentrating their forces around Hanoi and along the Hanoi-Haiphong axis, leaving the defense of other areas to VNA units of dubious reliability. Nam Dinh, the third largest city in the delta, would soon have to be abandoned, French planners recognized. To the south, apart from a coastal strip held by French Union units, central Vietnam was now mostly under Viet Minh domination. The important naval and air base of Tourane (Da Nang) was increasingly at risk, while in the area between Qui Nhon and Nha Trang the Viet Minh had the initiative and were increasing their pressure.

VIETNAMESE CIVILIANS ARE COMPELLED INTO SERVICE TO MAKE FORTIFICATIONS AT PHU LY, SOUTH OF HANOI, ON JUNE 22, 1954. (photo credit 23.1)

Chauvel, long an advocate of partition and sensing the momentum coming his way, argued that this dire military picture called for accepting a line at Tourane, or roughly the sixteenth parallel, though the effort should be made to get it drawn higher, at the seventeenth. No one objected. On the subject of the election for reunification, the five men agreed on the need to avoid fixing a specific date, or at least setting it as far into the future as possible. La Chambre stressed that Bao Dai's State of Vietnam would need time to consolidate her position in the south. Yes, Chauvel replied, and it would be imperative to get American assistance for this task.

But would Washington even accept partition? Chauvel felt confident that Undersecretary of State Walter Bedell Smith had come around on the matter and saw no realistic alternative, but what about Eisenhower and Dulles? "The United States has a tendency to think in terms of an anticommunist crusade," Chauvel acknowledged, which was why the Eisenhower administration wanted to retain Haiphong as a base for future operations in Asia-presumably for a war to drive the Communists out of Indochina and perhaps out of China too. The British government, on the other hand, still desirous of normalizing relations with Beijing, would accept a DRV-dominated Vietnam if the Geneva powers could guarantee the country's neutrality. A crucial question in the coming weeks would be whether the Anglo-Saxons would adopt a single position, and which one it would be.

None of the men present in the premier's home that day believed they could retain Hanoi or Haiphong in any negotiated agreement. Possibly they could hang on to one or two of the Catholic bishoprics in the north, General Ely opined, or at least secure for them some kind of neutral status, but Chauvel foresaw a full French withdrawal from Tonkin, in three stages: to Hanoi, then to Haiphong, and finally out of northern Vietnam. Mendes France's suggestion that perhaps the United States would be satisfied if Haiphong was retained for a year or two was met with a collective shake of the head. Chauvel said he could think of no justification for keeping the port city. Better to focus on securing a line of division, with no Viet Minh enclaves below it. The others agreed.21

"We must go fast," Mendes France declared at this point, "not only because of the time limit we have set for ourselves, but also because the situation is quite favorable. Everybody is more or less undecided at present and is searching for the way. If France displays determination and indicates clearly what it regards as important, what it will not surrender at any cost, and what concessions it is prepared to make, it will reverse the present situation and regain the political initiative at the negotiations."22

That day, June 24, 1954, Pierre Mendes France did what Georges Bidault and Joseph Laniel had always refused to do: He formally agreed to seek the temporary division of Vietnam, as a means of bringing the long and bloody Indochina war to an end.23

III

THAT SO MUCH OF THE DISCUSSION AT THE FRENCH PREMIER'S home that fateful day should revolve around American policy and American intentions is revealing. No one present doubted that any partition agreement would require U.S. backing, tacit or formal, or that one had to go through the Americans to have any hope of gaining the backing of Bao Dai's State of Vietnam, whose pro-Washington leanings were increasingly evident. The Saigon government had not been a key player at the Geneva Conference, but from the start it had made clear its misgivings about the whole enterprise and its staunch opposition to any division of the country. Bao Dai, aware that the French had long since lost faith in him, more and more saw his fortunes as being tied to the United States. Facing pressure from various quarters to replace the ineffectual Buu Loc as prime minister in anticipation of the post-Geneva environment, Bao Dai selected a man who, in addition to being a staunch anti-Communist and committed nationalist, had lived in America and had several influential American backers: Ngo Dinh Diem.