For almost 100 years, Việt Nam was a colony of France. Actually, it was just part of a larger colony called French Indochina which also included present-day Cambodia and Laos. The colonization ended with the decisive battle between the Việt Minh, led by General Võ Nguyên Giáp, and the French, led by Colonel Christian de Castries, when Điện Biên Phu fell on May 7, 1954.
Be sure to click on each photo to see a larger version.
Điện Biên Phủ is in the extreme northwest, almost into Laos. Back in 1954, it was not much more than a village. Today, it is a regional city of almost 100,000, served by two flights daily from Hà Nội. It has done a marvelous job of preserving the old battlefields, many of which are in the center of town today. It has managed to avoid the kitsch of the Cu Chi Tunnels near Sài Gòn, and there is much more to see than on a tour of the old DMZ.
It was pure accident that the trip was planned for the 52nd anniversary of the fall of Điện Biên Phủ, but I’m glad it happened. This old gentleman was helped by his son and grandson to clamber atop an old French tank. But, it was his eyes that caught me – he appeared to be lost for awhile as he gazed into the distance. I wonder if he was reliving the battles of his youth. I wonder if he pondered friends
long lost. I’m sure many of them rest here in the beautifully tended cemetery of 640 soldiers – only four of which have names. The remainder have never been identified.
Inside the military museum is an excellent map depicting the battle. Narration is in Vietnamese, French, and English and covers the entire time span from the initial parachuting of French troops in November, 1953 until the surrender in 1954. Outside is a static display of the some of the weaponry. Some readers may recognize this as an American 105 mm artillery piece and therefore assume it was
used by the French. Not so – while the French did indeed have this piece, the 105 was also the primary artillery of the Việt Minh. The guns had been captured during the Korean War, then transported south and given to the Vietnamese by China.
While there were numerous battles all over the valley, the final ones were fought on French strongholds atop small hills inside the city. This is a recreation of an old French bunker that was part of the defenses of Point A1, one of the last to fall. It was overrun, recaptured, and overrun again a total of three times in mostly hand-to-hand fighting. Today the barbed wire gives visitors some idea of the difficulty in assaulting this hill. Note the nearby mountains. In an incredible miscalculation, the
French did not believe the Việt Minh could haul artillery into those hills. The result of their arrogant miscalculation was to have their fortifications pounded into rubble, lose the use of the airfield, and have hundreds of their troops killed.
General Giáp ran the whole show from his mountain command center some 25 kilometers from the city. Well hidden in dense forest, the old compound has been
preserved. In the valley, Colonel de Castries held out in his command bunker until the end came with ignominious surrender.
Today a huge statue, built for the 50th anniversary of the victory, towers over the city. But also, not far from de Castries’s bunker, is a small memorial to the
French soldiers who died at Điện Biên Phủ. Also dedicated in 2004, it was built by an association of members of the Foreign Legion.
Do you suppose that one day there might be a memorial to the American troops who died in Việt Nam? One day in the future when the war is forgotten, and life goes on for everyone?
(Note to new readers of this post: be sure to read the comments.)
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