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It was in August 196440 years ago this monththat
the United States stepped irrevocably into the Vietnam
War. However, that step had been foreshadowed a full
decade earlier.
On Aug. 4, 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson announced
that North Vietnamese boats had fired on US warships.
Congress on Aug. 7 responded with the Gulf of Tonkin
Resolution, which opened the way for large-scale US
intervention in Southeast Asia.
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| United States Air
Force B-26s loaned to France sit on the ramp
at Tourane, Vietnamlater known
as Da Nang. They still wear the nose art they carried
in Korean action, mere months before. American airpower
assistance was the last hope for the French in Indochina.
(Photo Bernard Reck via Warren Thompson) |
Less well known, however, is that the Vietnam fuse
had been lit back in 1954. The spark was the battle
of Dien
Bien Phu.
In early 1954, France, a key Western ally, faced a
major crisis in what was then called French Indochina.
Several
thousand French soldiers were trapped in the fortress
at Dien Bien Phu, an isolated town in northern Vietnam,
near the border with Laos.
In an effort to assist the besieged garrison, French
forces had borrowed and were using a US Navy aircraft
carrier, 10 US Air Force B-26s, several C-47s and C-119s,
and hundreds of US Air Force personnel.
Washington wanted to help. The question was how far
President Dwight D. Eisenhower would go to prevent a
communist triumph at Dien Bien Phu.
Vietnam and other parts of Indochina had been French
colonies since the 19th century. Chased out by occupying
Japanese forces in World War II, France had returned
after the defeat of Japan and sought to re-establish
colonial control.
Frances actions provoked open warfare with communist-dominated
Viet Minh forcesled by Gen. Vo Nguyen Giapwhich
in 1946 launched a broad armed uprising against the
French. In October 1949, Chinas communists won
their own civil war and started sending aid southward.
Total Destruction
The Viet Minh prepared for all-out war. Bernard B.
Fall, the author of Street Without Joy, a classic
1961 study
of the 1946-54 Vietnam War, wrote that Giap sought
not mere victory but the total destruction of
French forces.
Frances goal was a mirror imagetotal destruction
of communist forces. France sought to lure Giaps
forces into a set-piece battle, which it felt sure
it would win.
In early 1953, France had roughly 200,000 troops in
the field. Some 200,000 Vietnamese troops fought with
them as allies. French forces held delta areas and
towns but they did not control the back country and
highlands.
France had an overwhelming advantage in air mobility.
This was especially useful for dealing with the rugged
inland terrain. In late 1952, French forces established
and held a northern strong point at Na San. French
air forces supplied the fortified garrison using an
air
bridge from French-held Hanoi, only 50 minutes of
flying time from Na San. In early December 1952, French
forces
turned back a two-division attack, after which the
Viet Minh withdrew.
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| France employed
paratroopers in quick raids that destroyed Chinese
supplies for the Viet Minh. Paratroopers
were also used to reinforce Dien Bien Phu, but to
no avail. French air mobility was not matched by
air striking power. (AP photo) |
France relied on airdrop techniques perfected in the
China-Burma-India theater in World War II. One such
example was a three-battalion parachute drop at Lang
Son in July 1953. The French paratroopers destroyed
Chinese arms and supplies and left without holding
on to useless real estate, as historian
Howard R. Simpson put it in his book, Dien Bien Phu,
the Epic
Battle America Forgot.
The commander of all French forces in Indochina was
Gen. Henri Navarre. His plans called for the deployment
to Vietnam of roughly half a million French troops
by the end of 1954. With such a large force, he thought,
he would be able to subdue the Viet Minh once and
for
all.
In the fall of 1953, Navarre took a bold step. He
sent French forces to seize and fortify the town of
Dien
Bien Phu, an outpost nestled in a deep valley. In
Navarres
view, establishing the fortress served two purposes.
First, it would block the route from Vietnam into
Laos and thereby force Giap to stretch his supply
lines if
he wanted to operate in that neighboring country.
Second, such a fort would allow France to keep an
eye on local
opium production, which helped to finance the Viet
Minh.
Navarre sensed no danger in taking this step. He knew
that heavy artillery could cause him problems, but
the commander was convinced that China would not give
Giap
heavy guns. Even if Giap somehow got such weapons,
thought Navarre, the Viet Minh would not be able to
move them
up onto the hills above Dien Bien Phu.
The French strategy was to make the 15,000-man garrison
a strong point and draw Giaps forces into battle
in the valley. Navarre ringed Dien Bien Phu with artillery
outposts bearing names such as Beatrice, Isabelle,
and Huguette. These positions were deeply buried and
buttressed
to withstand artillery fire.
French officers believed that, by creating interlocking
fields of fire, they could defeat an attack in much
the same way that they had successfully repelled the
enemy at Na San. The Europeans were confident that,
even should Giap get a few artillery pieces into play,
French counterbattery fires would silence them.
French forces also had the air all to themselves.
They planned to use air support to spot and hit artillery
and troop concentrations.
Tables Turned
Giap, a brilliant strategist, turned the tables in
three ways.
First, he immediately began to build massive concentrations
of manpower and supplies in the Dien Bien Phu area.
Second, he brought in Chinese-supplied heavy artillery
and Chinese advisors to further train his Viet Minh
gunners. Engineers built roads and bridges for trucks.
In a few months, his artillerymen had surveyed the
whole of Dien Bien Phu.
Third, he put off a frontal attack and set his forces
to digging trenches that would come close to the French
outposts. He would keep at it until he controlled
a trench perimeter around Dien Bien Phu.
As Giaps biographer, Peter G. MacDonald, put
it: The
French had thrown down the gauntlet, but, because
the jungle country concealed troop movements, it took
some
time for them to realize that Giap had picked it up.
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| Gen. Vo Nguyen
Giap (in black) plans the encirclement of Dien
Bien Phu. Using the cover of the jungle,
Giap moved men and artillery ever closer to the
French outpost, holding fire to avoid alerting the
defenders. (AFP/Getty Images) |
Giap soon had 50,000 combat troops at Dien Bien Phu
and 300,000 soldiers and peasants moving artillery,
anti-aircraft guns, and other materiel along the 500-mile
supply lines almost with impunity. Those forces outgunned
the Dien Bien Phu garrison. The French had flown in
about 60 artillery pieces of heavy caliber (57 mm
and bigger). However, Giap had in place in January
1954
more than 200 heavy artillery pieces, including the
fearsome Stalin Organs, Soviet-built Katyusha
rocket launchers.
Dien Bien Phu would never be the stronghold the French
wanted. Instead, it had become a trap.
The situation in Indochina was a headache for Eisenhower.
The President deplored Frances colonial agenda.
Moreover, he had in late 1953 come to hold a bleak
view of Frances military situation. In his memoirs,
he recalls that Frances move into Dien Bien
Phu raised eyebrows among soldiers who were
well-acquainted with the almost invariable fate of
troops invested in
an isolated fortress.
Eisenhower was not sure there was a way to win in
Vietnam, and he was wary of getting the US involved.
Early US Involvement Yet America already was involved. President Harry
S. Truman reluctantly had provided military aid to
French
forces in Vietnam, and, now, the US was picking up
as much as 75 percent of the cost of Frances
adventure in Indochina. According to an Eisenhower biographer, Stephen E.
Ambrose, the President ruled out use of US ground
troops. He
told participants at a Jan. 8, 1954, National Security
Council meeting, This war in Indochina would
absorb our troops by divisions.
One month later, he told influential Sen. Leverett
Saltonstall (R-Mass.) that he was frightened
about getting ground forces tied up in Indochina. That left airpowerland-based and sea-based. In
fact, Eisenhower put US airpower at the heart of all
secret discussions of US assistance to France. This
was consistent with President Eisenhowers so-called New
Look defense policy, which emphasized airpowerespecially
strategic nuclear airpoweras the centerpiece
of US military power.
Only a few months before, in a famous speech in January
1954, Secretary of State John Foster Dulles had unveiled
the new concept of massive retaliation. With
that phrase, Dulles was signaling that the United
States would not try to match communist forces tank
for tank,
gun for gun, or rifleman for rifleman. Rather, the
US, faced with aggression, would retaliate instantly
by means and at places of our choosing.
The clear implication was that the United States was
prepared to resort to nuclear weapons.
At first, however, France only requested use of 25
B-26 bombers and 400 USAF support personnel to maintain
them.
The plan was to use B-26s for strafing and bombing
of the encroaching Viet Minh troops. Eisenhower sent
only
10 B-26s and 200 US airmen to maintain them. He also
laid down the strict proviso that they would rotate
out of Vietnam and be home by June 15, 1954.
Still, it was impossible to miss the significance
of the American deployment. For all Eisenhowers
emphasis on reduced numbers and a definite date for
withdrawal, wrote Ambrose, he had sent
the first American military personnel to Vietnam.
Meanwhile, Giap bided his time. He had canceled his
original assault plan, which called for launching
the main attack in January 1954. He did this because
he
had not yet finished the disposition of his forces.
However, the French appear to have drawn the wrong
inference, concluding that their artillery and air
strikes were
weakening the communist force. What they did not know
was that Giap was steadily moving his artillery closer,
positioning it down the front slopes of the hills,
all concealed by camouflage. Giaps 105 mm guns
had yet to be fired.
Throughout this period, the Dien Bien Phu garrison
was bleeding. French commanders had dispatched soldiers
on armed patrols, hoping to clear the surrounding
hills
of Viet Minh, but sniper attacks and firefights with
small clusters of guerrillas were having an effect.
France had suffered 1,000 casualties by February 1954.
The Siege Begins
The attack that formally began the siege of Dien Bien
Phu was launched March 13, 1954.
Giaps forces unleashed fire from 105 mm guns
and other artillery on three key northern strong points
and on the main airstrip. The artillery shells cratered
the runway and destroyed aircraft on the strip. French
mechanics hastened to repair what they could and got
three F8F Bearcat fighter-bombers airborne to escape.
Viet Minh gunners turned six others into scorched
hulks.
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| C-119 Flying Boxcars such as this one were lent
to the French for both mobility
and attack. Most of the aircrews flying these aircraft
were Americanssome military advisors, some
civilians. (Photo by Edgar Burts) |
The artillery outposts fell within hours. Then began
a dismal trickle of wounded survivors into Dien Bien
Phus garrison hospital. The French plan to create
intricate fields of fire was falling apart. One who
knew it was the French artillery chief, Col. Charles
Piroth, who had assured his leaders that his guns
would silence the enemys. On March 15, he killed
himself in the fortress, using a hand grenade.
The French tried to hit back with artillery and airpower.
Already in action were some 30 US C-119 Flying Boxcars
modified to drop napalm on the Viet Minh artillery.
According to Ambrose, Eisenhower believed that napalm
would burn out a considerable area and help
to reveal enemy artillery positions.
Most of the aircrews flying these C-119s were American
employees of Civil Air Transport (CAT), the contract
airline founded by Maj. Gen. Claire Lee Chennault,
the head of the World War II Flying Tigers. More
than a few aircrew members included US pilots from
the Military Assistance Advisory Group, stated Simpson.
The first napalm strike was carried out March 24.
It targeted revetted gun positions about one-half
mile
outside Dien Bien Phu. According to Simpson, Viet
Minh Gen. Tran Do credited the strikes as being somewhat
effective. Do later said: Under the enemy napalm
bombs, even stone and earth took fire. Yet the
Viet Minh held on, according to Do, and
continued with the artillery fire.
At the Dien Bien Phu airstrip, daylight operations
ceased. Night operations worked for a few days, due
in part
to an unusual tactic described by Simpson. One C-47
would roar over the strip at full power as if dropping
supplies. Meanwhile, a second C-47 cut its engine
and glided in to land. The first C-47 followed in
turn.
Flares and light from artillery fire ended the trick
as Viet Minh gunners wised up. Soon, C-47s were gliding
into an anti-aircraft barrage.
At that point, Dien Bien Phu could be supplied only
via airdrop. A reinforcement group of paratroopers
made it within the garrison a few days after the start
of
the siege. Indeed, small groups of personnel were
being dropped into the fortress until a few days before
it
fell.
However, dropping and retrieving supplies soon became
a nightmare as Viet Minh artillery shrank the effective
size of the drop zone. Morning fog and stretches of
cloudy weather made it even harder. On March 27, French
Col. Jean Louis Nicot, the man in charge of the aerial
resupply effort, had to raise the drop altitude from
2,000 feet to 8,000 feet. Drop zone accuracy declined,
and some supplies inevitably fell into Viet Minh hands.
By mid-April, the drop zone had been compressed into
a ground area only 1,500 yards in diameter. Giaps
cunning had put a gaping hole in the Hanoi-Dien Bien
Phu air bridge.
Operation Vulture
With the drop zone all but gone, the Frenchwith
the encouragement of some US officials based in Saigonpressed
hard for the US to launch an overwhelming air strike
to save Dien Bien Phu. In fact, only 10 days after
the start of Giaps initial assault, Gen. Paul
Ely, the French Chief of Staff, arrived in Washington
to
plead the French case to US policy-makers.
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| This ex-US Navy
F8F Bearcat in theater was armed with napalm.
Napalm raids were flown by these and
the C-119s in a desperate effort to strip away Giaps
jungle cover so his forces could be more accurately
targeted. (Sigmund Alexander via Warren Thompson) |
Ely met with Dulles and Adm. Arthur W. Radford, Chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. They discussed and approved
Operation Vulture, a plan attributed in part to US
and French officers in Indochina and in part to Radfords
own staff.
Operation Vulture was to be a type of massive retaliation
with airpower. The target was to be the Viet Minh
forces arrayed around Dien Bien Phu. This was the
first time
that US leaders had seriously contemplated a major
military intervention with airpower alone.
Eisenhower was still open to the possibility of such
an airpower operation. After the Ely visit, he confided
to Dulles that he would not wholly exclude the
possibility of a single strike, if it were almost
certain this could prove decisive results.
Yet Ike had concerns about the tactic. There
were grave doubts in my mind about the effectiveness
of such
air strikes on deployed troops where good cover was
plentiful, he said in his memoirs.
Operation Vulture, however, was the source of considerable
confusion.
One version of the plan, detailed in Simpsons
book, envisioned sending 60 B-29s from US bases in
the region to bomb Giaps positions. Supporting
the bombers would be as many as 150 fighters launched
from
US Seventh Fleet carriers. The fighters were needed
because of the proximity of Chinese airfields to the
border with Vietnam. With the experience of Korea
fresh in their minds, senior officials thought China
would
not hesitate to open a new MiG Alley over
northern Vietnam and Laos.
That was not the most disquieting aspect of Operation
Vulture, however. The plan included an option to use
up to three atomic weapons on the Viet Minh positions.
Radford, the top American military officer, gave this
nuclear option his backing. US B-29s, B-36s, and B-47s
could have executed a nuclear strike, as could carrier
aircraft from the Seventh Fleet. Eisenhower, who liked
to deal directly with his Chiefs on military matters,
certainly knew of the JCS option.
Declassified material confirms that Operation Vulture
was seriously consideredand that it had room
for both conventional and atomic weapons. In fact,
France
evidently thought the plan was a go, but
it wasnt.
A Misunderstanding
In his book Eisenhower: Soldier and President, Ambrose
recounted the situation this way:
On the morning of April 5, Dulles called Eisenhower
to inform him that the French had told [the US ambassador
to Paris] that their impression was that Operation
Vulture had been agreed to and hinted that they expected two
or three atomic bombs to be used against the Viet
Minh. Eisenhower told Dulles to tell the French ... that they
must have misunderstood Radford.
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| Secretary of State
John Foster Dulles (left) meets with President
Eisenhower. Dulles advocated massive
retaliation to combat communist aggression,
but
Eisenhower refused pleas to employ nuclear weapons
in Vietnam. (AP photo ) |
Clearly, Eisenhower saw an air attack as a distinct
possibility, but was he ready to use tactical nuclear
weapons? On this point, Eisenhower never showed his
hand. His longtime aide, Army Gen. Andrew J. Goodpaster,
recalled in a 1967 interview that the President simply never
told anybody whether he would or not.
Meanwhile, Air Force Gen. Earle E. Partridge, commander
of US Far East Air Forces, visited Saigon in April,
bringing along Brig. Gen. Joseph D. Caldara. Their
discussions with the French officers there left them
convinced that
the Dien Bien Phu defenders had not thought through
the consequences of the air strikes. With Giaps
trenches now at the forts, there was no way to separate
the fortress itself from the bombs that would fall
from B-29s or from the blast radius of nuclear weapons.
Moreover, according to Simpson, Caldara flew his B-17
over Dien Bien Phu and came back with the conviction
that only a daylight raid was possible.
The time for decision came in late April. On April
24, Dulles told Eisenhower that Paris was begging
for Seventh
Fleet air cover because it would allow the French
to send in a relief column from Laos. Dulles cabled
back
that the US could not act without Congressional supportsupport
which Eisenhower knew from previous feelers would
not be forthcoming.
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| Dien Bien Phu fell
on May 7, 1954, and the defeated French left
Indochina shortly thereafter. Here, captured
French soldiers trudge through the fields after
the surrender at Dien Bien Phu. (AP photo/Vietnam
News Agency) |
Navarre also demanded action. A cable from Saigon
informed Dulles that Navarre wanted immediate
and massive air support.
Now, the French were desperate, and they wanted
us to go in and bomb, Eisenhower recalled in
a 1967 interview.
In the end, Eisenhower was not willing to step all
the way into Vietnam. He ruled out unilateral US intervention
at an April 27 press conference. He later declared, Airpower
might be temporarily beneficial to French morale,
but I had no intention of using United States forces
in
any limited action when the force employed would probably
not be decisively effective.
The defenders of Dien Bien Phu were now on their own.
In the last two weeks before the fortress fell, French
(and some American) aircrews continued to do what
they could to bomb and strafe Viet Minh positions
and to
deliver aerial supplies, despite increasingly intense
anti-aircraft fire. The US carrier Belleau Wood, manned
with a French crew and equipped with Corsair fighter-bombers,
arrived in the Tonkin Gulf to take over from a French
carrier whose airplanes had been supporting Dien Bien
Phu. The French Navy, flying US-built F6F Hellcats,
had provided effective and heartening air support,
but their 500-pound bombs could not knock out Giaps
heavy, revetted artillery.
Dien Bien Phu fell on May 7.
After that, momentous events unfolded rapidly. France
realized that it had lost Indochina and made clear
that it would fight no more. Paris began preparations
for
a full withdrawal from that part of the world.
In June 1954, France, charged with civil administration
in southern Vietnam, granted that region its independence.
Six weeks later, on July 20-21, 1954, the US, France,
Britain, and the Soviet Union met in Geneva. Out of
this conference came measures that were supposed to
end the Indochina war.
The conference agreed to a partition of Vietnam into
north and south. Partition was to be temporary, with
unification to come after national elections in 1956.
Elections never came.
At the same time, however, the US began organizing
a collective defense system aimed at blocking communist
advances. In September 1954, the US and seven other
nations signed the Manila Pact, basis of the Southeast
Asia Treaty Organization.
It was one of the pillars of Americas own Vietnam
War.
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| Only four months
after the surrender, Dulles signed the Manila
Pact, the basis for the SEATO treaty.
The treaty commitment helped pave the way for Americas
own Vietnam War. (© Bettman/CORBIS) |
By that time, however, American blood had already
been spilled in Vietnam. On May 6, 1954, CAT pilots
James
B. McGovern and Wallace A. Buford were flying their
C-119 Boxcar on a Dien Bien Phu airdrop mission. Clear
weather made it easy for the Viet Minh anti-aircraft
gunners to target the aircraft. The stricken Boxcar
crashed behind enemy lines.
Thus it was that McGovern and Bufordtwo pilotsbecame
the first Americans known to have died in combat in
Vietnam.
Rebecca Grant is a contributing editor of Air Force
Magazine. She is president of IRIS Independent Research
in Washington,
D.C., and has worked for Rand, the Secretary of the Air
Force, and the Chief of Staff of the Air Force. Grant
is a fellow of the Eaker Institute, the public policy
and research arm of the Air Force Associations
Aerospace Education Foundation. Her most recent article, Storms
of War, appeared in the July issue.
Copyright Air Force Association. All rights reserved.
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