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the South by suddenly sending a “human wave” of 213,000 soldiers across the 38th parallel.
In Vietnam, the French, tired of the standard anti-colonial scrapping, and fearful that the Viet Minh would expand the war into neighbouring Laos, came up with a plan. They would fortify a strange misty valley a few miles from the Lao border. It was, and is, an elliptical plain made of red clay and surrounded on all sides by thick jungle and very high mountains. Such a tempting target was supposed to lure the Viet Minh into making a human-wave attack. The French imagined tens of thousands, maybe scores of thousands, of lightly armed bo dois charging over open ground, only to be mowed down by French artillery and air power in a single coup. The French believed they were well prepared for their mission. They had even brought along two field-brothels (bordels militaires de campagne) staffed with Algerian and Vietnamese women. But French G-2 work was very poor at best and almost non-existent at worst. They didn’t know how many Vietnamese they were facing or where exactly these enemies were or even how they were armed. They knew only that the Viet Minh, who admittedly had no air force, likewise had no artillery to speak of, nor the skill to use it effectively if they had. These assumptions were mistaken. It was the French who became the sitting ducks.
The commander in Indochina was General Henri Navarre, who came from NATO headquarters in Europe. In his ignorance of Indochina, some saw the promise of a fresh perspective. He gave field command at Dien Bien Phu to an officer who had served under him in Italy during the Second World War: Colonel (but now, instantly, General) Christian Marie Ferdinand de la Croix de Castries, a cavalryman who had chosen to work his way up through the ranks rather than profit from the influence of his ancient military family. One of the officers Castries himself would most rely on at Dien Bien Phu was Colonel Charles Piroth. He, too, was a veteran of the Italian campaign, during which he had lost his left arm at the shoulder. He was an artilleryman whose task was to keep the Vietnamese human wave at bay until the optimal moment.
There were thirteen thousand French troops in all. Most of the rank-and-file were Algerians, Moroccans, or members of the Légion etrangère. Of this last group, many were ex-Nazis who considered questions about the previous decade somewhat impertinent. There were also some loyal tribal people, whom the French called autochthones. The French weren’t fully aware that there were fifty thousand Vietnamese with as many again in reserve.
When the first French troops arrived by parachute in November 1953, during the dry season, they began building an airstrip and then, on either side of the Nam Yum River, nine defensive positions, what Morgan calls “this network of overlapping little fortresses, this labyrinth of barbed wire and sandbags.…” The strongholds were given feminine forenames, beginning with Anne-Marie and extending down the alphabet to Isabelle (and, contrary to legend, these were not the names of Castries’s — or anybody else’s — mistresses back in Paris). The defences were made of earth, concrete, and barbed wire, and were connected to one another by communication trenches. The building materials for these and for the all-important airstrip, not to mention all the weapons, ammunition, food, medical supplies — everything — had to be flown in, for although Hanoi was less than three hundred kilometres miles away, it was sixteen hours distant by road: a road controlled by the Viet Minh in any case. The airlift involved cargo planes acquired from the United States: C-47 Dakotas (in the early stages, they made eighty flights a day) and C-117 Flying Boxcars. This is when the trouble began.
The French foresaw no danger in occupying the lower ground rather than the higher, because they doubted that the Viet Minh had much artillery. The French possessed sixty guns. Although none of the Viet Minh pieces was as large as the heaviest French ones, they numbered two hundred in all, many of them from China. Similarly, the French couldn’t accept that their enemy could move their big guns to the rugged mountaintops that surrounded the plain. But that’s precisely what Giap did. He disassembled the field pieces as much as possible, cordelling them with ropes, dragging them centimetre by centimetre and metre by metre, using thousands of ungloved hands and sandaled feet; for, as Morgan has written, “although the French had tanks and airpower, it turned out that long lines of coolies were more dependable.” The Viet Minh dug heavily disguised caves in which to conceal the cannon, bringing them out of hiding just long enough to do their work, before retracting them again. Also, they dug dummy caves at which they set off tiny explosions that mimicked muzzle flashes, tricking Colonel Piroth into wasting ammunition. They managed to render the French airfield useless and to prevent it from being repaired.
With terrible and inexorable efficiency, the guns in the mountains also destroyed the French expedition’s fix-winged aircraft as well as helicopters and tanks. Food, ammunition, and medical supplies were running out as the casualties piled up, with no way to transport the wounded to Hanoi where they could be treated effectively. “By the end of March,” Morgan wrote, “Dien Bien Phu was surrounded. The only way in was by parachute, and there was no way out.” And as the cannon in the mountains pounded away, the Viet Minh down in the valley continually dug trenches of their own, moving ever closer. “Here, nine years into the nuclear age, was a return to siege warfare that went back to medieval times.” Giap was a close student of the military classics — Napoleon, Clausewitz, and, most tellingly of all, the Marquis de Vauban, whose ideas had revolutionized siege three centuries earlier. For his part, Castries asked Hanoi to air-drop him four copies of the official manual of siege warfare published during the First World War.
The siege became a daily melodrama in the eyes of the world, including, of course, the United States, which, then as later, saw Ho Chi Minh not as a nationalist primarily, but as a tool of the Third International, bent on propagating global communism. When General Navarre took over in the region, insisting that the purpose of the campaign was to prevent the Viet Minh from attacking Luang Prabang, he told a subordinate, “We’ve had American generals, veterans of Korea, tell us how satisfied they were with our deployment. They invested a lot of money here and they didn’t want us to lose.”
His listener replied tactfully: “My only desire is to believe you, General.” At one point Washington considered using nuclear weapons, but decided against the plan, fearing it would lead to sending U.S. ground forces into Vietnam.
A few French troops were getting in by parachute, but only a few. One sergeant wrote to his brother back home: “The Viets are two hundred metres from our barbed wire, hiding in trenches. They look at us. We look at them.” He added: “On top of everything, we’ve run out of wine.” A major with a safe desk job in Saigon learned that his wife had been lost at sea en route from France by steamship. In despair, he asked to be dropped into Dien Bien Phu. He was volunteering to commit suicide or, as he put it, “doing Camerone.” The reference was to a famous nineteenth-century battle in Mexico in which an entire Légionnaire command was wiped out. Colonel Piroth no longer counted enough pieces of artillery to keep the enemy away or enough gunners left alive to man the guns if he still had them. He retreated to his bunker. Having only one arm, he found it difficult to load and cock his pistol, so he committed suicide by using his teeth to pull the pin on a grenade. Castries was, in Ted Morgan’s words, “marinated in despondence.” (Morgan enjoys culinary metaphors. A few pages on, a certain section of the battlefield is “truffled” with landmines.)
Most of French strongpoints were quite low, but there was one, code-named Dominique, that was a hundred or more metres high and of enormous circumference. Indeed, it is still the dominant geographical feature of Dien Bien Phu, overlooking the town. A full battalion was needed to defend it properly. Toward the end, it was manned by only two thin companies of Algerians, whom Castries considered unreliable in any case. “Better to obliterate a company than rout a battalion,” Giap observed, as he tightened his stranglehold on each of the sorry outposts in turn. In Paris, the government began to look a bit wobbly. In Dien Bien Phu, the monsoon had begun. Mushrooms sprouted on the soldiers’ boots after only twenty-four hours. The troops were out of almost everything. Both the living and the dead were sucked down into the mud.
On May 7, 1954, after fifty-six days of actual siege, General Castries surrendered. The most famous photograph of this French War is one of Viet Minh soldiers standing atop the round corrugated-iron roof of the general’s bunker, waving their flag. Of the thousands of French troops who were taken prisoner, relatively few survived captivity and made it back to Europe or North Africa. Today, Dien Bien Phu’s