Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 III The Geneva Accords 1954 A. U.S. Military Planning and Diplomatic Maneuver, January-July, 1954 B. Role and Obligations of the State of Vietnam C. The Viet Minh Position and Sino-Soviet Strategy D. The Intent of the Geneva Accords Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 633 16. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - SENSITIVE) UNITED STATES • VIETNAM RELATIONS 1945 • 1967 VIETNAM TASK FORCE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE flb /3 TOP SECRET - SENSITIVE Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 III THE GEHEVA ACCORDS 0295 Sec Def Cont Nr. X-. Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive PART III THE GENEVA ACCORDS 195^ Foreword This part of the study examines the Geneva Conference of 195^- • Section A deals with U.S. positions before and during the conference* Section B discusses the role of the Bao Dai Government of Vietnam during Geneva, and its consequent obli- gations. Section C relates the Viet Minh position at Geneva to overall objectives and strategy of the communist powers. The final portion, Section D, analyzes the outcome of the conference as viewed first by the communists, then by the West, and finally as its spirit and effects can be seen in objective retrospect. A. U.S. Military Planning and Diplomatic Maneuver, January- July, 195U B. Role and Obligations of the State of Vietnam C. The Viet Minh Position and Sino- Soviet Strategy D. The Intent of the Geneva Accords TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 GO < ^ s* > > & < 2 CO when the Chiefs examined the alternatives to military victory and. found, them all infeasible or unacceptable to the U.S. A cease-fire prior to a political settlement, the JCS paper stated, prob- ably would, "lead to a political stalemate attended, by a concurrent and irretrievable deterioration of the Franco -Vietnamese military position." A coalition government would, lead, to communist seizure of power from within, with the U.S. helpless to prevent it. Partition, on the other hand, would, amount to recognition of communist success by force of arms, cession to the communists of the key Tonkin Delta, and. undercutting of our containment policy in Asia. c . Elections Would. Be Subverted. The Chiefs also commented, at some length on the difficult question of elections. They took the position that even if elections in Vietnam could, be carried, out along democratic lines (which they doubted), a communist victory would, almost certainly result because of communist territorial control, popular support, and. superior tactics: A-5 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive "Such factors as the prevalence of illiteracy, the lack of suitable educational media , and. the absence of adequate communications in the outlying areas would, render the holding of a truly representa- tive plebiscite of doubtful feasibility. The Com- munists, by virtue of their superior capability in the field, of propaganda, could, readily pervert the issue as being a choice between national ind.epend.ence and. French Colonial rule. Furthermore, it would be militarily infeasible to prevent widespread intimi- dation of voters by Communist partisans. While it is obviously impossible to make a dependable fore- cast as to the outcome of a free election, current intelligence leads the Joint Chiefs to the belief that a settlement based upon free elections would, be attended, by almost certain loss of the Associated States to Communist control." The JCS views, together with their recommendation that the U.S. not associate itself with any settlement that "would, fail to provide reasonably adequate assurance of the future political and. territorial integrity of Indochina..." were approved by the Secretary of Defense on 23 March. 2/ d. The U.S. Proposes United. Action Secretary Dulles on March 29 publicly proposed, collective military operations as a future course of action for the "free world" in Indochina. Dulles suggested the organization of a ten-nation collec- tive defense alliance for Southeast Asia. 3/ Such a coalition was the U.S. Government's preferred alternative to unilateral U.S. interven- tion, either at Dien Bien Phu, or subsequently in a more general con- text. With the climax at Dien Bien Fnu approaching, the inter-agency debate in Washington had me.de clear that American intervention there solely with air and. naval forces was neither desirable nor feasible, and. there was little support for a ground intervention. United action also was the result of the Eisenhower's Administration's inability to marshal support among Congressional leaders for a unilateral U.S. in- tervention without participation by the allies. President Eisenhower himself clearly preferred intervention through united action to a purely American undertaking. The united action proposal, however, was not acceptable either to the British or to the French before the Geneva Conference. The British thought that any military intervention under united, action prior to Geneva would, impede a political settlement at the Conference and. most likely lead, to a further expansion of the war, including a A-6 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive ! possible Chinese intervention. London, therefore, was only willing to consider the establishment of a collective defense alliance in Southeast Asia after the Geneva Conference. France saw Dulles 1 proposal for united action as a parry of the urgent French request for immediate U.S. inter- vention at Dien Bien Phu. Initially, the French feared, that united, action would internationalize the war and thereby pla.ce it beyond control of Paris. Later, the French ca,me to fear that united action would be used, as a device to impede negotiations. For these reasons, the American proposal for united, action failed to gather support either in Paris or in London before Geneva. e. U.S, Discourages Ea,rly Cease-fire In the months before the conference, the U.S. maintained an adamant opposition to any course other than full prosecution of the war. Dulles told French Ambassador Henri Bonnet on 3 April, for instance, that a negotiated settlement would, lead only to face-saving formulae for either a French or a Viet Minh surrender. The Secretary termed a division of Indochina "impractical" and a coalition government the "beginning of disaster." Writing to Chruchill on k April, Eisenhower echoed, this line, asserting: "There is no negotiated solution of the Indochina problem which in essence would not be either a face-saving device to cover a French surrender or a face-saving device to cover a communist retirement." And it was precisely to bring about the latter -- China's "discreet disengagement" -- that the President wanted British cooperation in "united action." h/ The U.S. was concerned that a disaster at Dien Bien Phu would, propel the French into acceptance of an immediate cease-fire even before the conference could begin. Dulles obtained, assurances from Bidault that the French would not adopt that approach. 5/ The British did not share U.S. fears. Eden doubted that a cease-fire would lead either to a massacre of the French or to large-scale infiltration of French-held terrain by Viet Mihh forces. 6/ © A- 7 TOP SECRET - Sensiti ve Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive 2. Events Make the Geneva Conference Inevitable a - U.S. Plans Initial Geneva Position Assured that the French would not cease fire prior to the conference , Washington forged ahead in late April and early May in search of a policy that would guide the American delegation. The National Security Council, less than a "week before the opening con- ference session, carefully examined American alternatives. 7/ Th e NSC urged the President not to join the Geneva deliberations without assurance from France that it was not preparing to negotiate the surrender of Indochina. Again, the Korean example was foremost: Com- munist tactics, the NSC said, will likely resemble those at Panmunjom: a cease-fire with lack of compliance by the communists because of in- effective supervision, a wilting French position before the communists 1 typical dilatory tactics, all resulting in the French accepting almost any terms. b. NSC Recommends Strong U.S. Stand • The NSC, therefore, decided that the French had to be pressured into adopting a strong posture in the face of probable com- munist intransigence. The NSC urged a policy of informing Paris that its acquiescence in a communist takeover of Indochina would bear not only on France's future position in the Far East, but also on its status as one of the Big Three; that abandonment of Indochina would grievously affect both France 1 s position in North Africa and Franco-U.S. relations in that region; that U.S. aid to France would automatically cease upon Paris 1 conclusion of an unsatisfactory settlement; and, finally, that communist domination of Indochina would be of such serious strategic harm to U.S. interests as to produce "consequences in Europe as well as elsewhere /without/ ... apparent limitation^ " In addition, the NSC recommended that the U.S. determine immediately whether the Associated States should be approached with a view to continuing the anti-Viet Minh struggle in some other form, including unilateral U.S. involvement "if necessary. " c. Dulles Anno unces Possibility of U.S. Disassociation The NSC T s adamant attitude was reflected in Dulles 1 extreme pessimism over the prospects for any meaningful progress in talks with the communists. At Geneva on April 25, the Secretary said that the solution of the Indochina problem was the primary responsibility of France, the non-Communist Vietnamese, andjthe Viet Minh. The U.S. would not normally expect to "interpose /.its/ veto" except "where we felt that the issues involved had a pretty demonstrable interest to the United States itself." And he went on to say that if highly disad- vantageous solutions were proposed at the conference which the U.S. could not_pre vent , "we would probably want to disassociate ourselves from it /the Conference/. " 8/ A-8 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 i TOP SECRET - Sensitive d. Dulles Deprecates Partition This first official indication for public consumption of , U.S. refusal to join in a settlement contrary to our interests , was coupled with a comment by Dulles on the possibility of partition. In views that would change later, Dulles said he did. not see how partition [ could be arranged with the fighting not confined to any single area. [ , Although he did not actually rule out partition, he made it clear that the U.S. would agree only to a division equivalent to a communist sur- render, one that would place all the communist troops in a small re- groupment area out of harm's way. But that arrangement "might not be acceptable to them, " he said, coyly. 3* U.S. Makes Final Preparations for Geneva a. French Inform U.S. of Opening Proposals The test of U.S. policy came May 5 when the French informed. Washington of the proposals they intended to make in the first round of talks. The proposals included a separation of the Vietnam situation of "civil war" from the communist aggressions in Cambodia and Laos; a cease- fire supervised, by international authority, to be followed, by political discussions aimed, at free elections; the regrouping of regular forces of the bel3_igerents into defined zones upon signature of a cease-fire agreement; the disarming of all irregular forces ( i.e . , the Viet Minh guerrillas); and. a guarantee of the agreements by "the States partici- pating in the Geneva.. Conference." b. JCS Study French Proposals Once more, the Chiefs, in reviewing the proposals, fell back on the Korean experience, which they said, demonstrated the certainty that the communists would, violate any armistice controls, including those supervised, by an international body. An agreement to refrain from new military activities during armistic^. negotiations would, be a strong obstacle to communist violations; but the communists, the JCS concluded,, would, never agree to such an arrangement. The Chiefs therefore urged, that the U.S. not get trapped, into backing a French armistice proposal that then could, be taken up by the communists and exploited, to bind, us to a cease-fire. The only way to get satisfactory results was through military success, and since the Navarre Plan was no longer tenable, the next best alternative was not to associate the U.S. with any cease-fire in advance of a satisfactory political settlement. The first step, the Chiefs believed, should, be the conclusion of a settlement that would "reasonably assure the political and. territorial integrity of the Associated States..."; only thereafter should, a cease-fire be entertained. 9/ c. Eisen hower Suggests Possibility of United Action As previously, the Joint Chiefs 1 position became U.S. policy, in this case with only minor emendations. The President, reviewing the A- 9 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive JCS paper , agreed that the U.S. could not "back the French proposal with its call for a supervised cease-fire that the communists would never respect. Eisenhower further concurred with the Chiefs' insistence on priority to a political settlement, with the stipulation that French forces continue fighting while negotiations were in progress. He added that the U.S. would continue aiding the French during that period and would, in addition, work toward a united action coalition "for the purpose of preventing further expansion of communist power in Southeast Asia." 10/ d. NSC Recommends Continued Study of United Action These statements of position paved the way for a National Security Council meeting May 8 which set forth the guidelines of U.S-. policy on negotiations for the delegation at Geneva. The decision taken at the meeting simply underscored what the President and the Chiefs had already stated: "The United States will not associate itself with any proposal from any source directed toward a cease- fire in advance of an acceptable armistice agreement, including international controls. The United States could concur in the initiation of negotiations for such an armistice agreement. During the course of such negotiations, the French and the Associated States should continue to oppose the forces of the Viet Minh with all the means at their disposal. In the meantime, as a means of strengthening the hands of the French and the. Associated States during the course of such negotia- tions, the United States will continue its program of aid and its efforts to organize and promptly activate a Southeast Asian regional grouping for the purpose of preventing further expansion of Communist power in South- east Asia." 11/ ^ e. U.S. to Be an "Interested Nation," Not a Negotiator Before receiving detailed instructions from Dulles, Smith spoke twice at the first round of plenary sessions, once on May 10 (the second plenary) and again on May 12 (at the third). At these sessions, Smith brought home two major points of U.S. policy: first, he declined to commit the U.S. in advance to a guarantee of the settle- ment, despite Bidault's call for all the participants to make such a guarantee; 12/ second, he proposed that national elections in Vietnam be supervised by an international commission "under United Nations auspices." Smith stressed that the UN should have two separate functions overseeing not only the cease-fire but the elections as well. Both these points in Smith f s speech were to remain cardinal elements of U.S. policy throughout the negotiations. 13/ On 12 May Smith received instructions clearly designed to make the UoS. an influential, but unentangled and A-10 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive unobligated, participant. The U.S., Dulles cabled him, -was to be "an interested nation which, however, is neither a belligerent nor a princi pal in the negotiation." Its primary aim would be to: "...help the nations of that area /Indochina/ peace- fully to enjoy territorial integrity and political independence under stable and free governments with the opportunity to expand their economies, to realize their legitimate national aspirations, and to develop security through individual and collective defense against aggres- . sion, from within and without. This implies that these people should not be ama l gamated into the Communist bloc of imperialistic dictatorship." Accordingly, Smith was told, the U.S. should not give its approval to any settlement or cease-fire. "...which would have the effect of subverting the existing lawful governments of the three aforementioned states or of permanently impairing their territorial integrity or of placing in jeopardy the forces of the French Union of Indochina, or which otherwise contra- vened the principles stated. . .above. " lk/ f . U.S. Takes Hard Line for Geneva The NSC decision of May 8, Smith's comments at the second and third plenary sessions, and Dulles 1 instructions to Smith reveal the hardness of the U.S. position on a Geneva settlement. The U.S. would not associate itself with any arrangement that failed to provide ade- quately for an internationally supervised cease-fire and national elections that resulted in the partitioning of any of the Associated States; or that compromised the independence and territorial integrity of those States in any way.. Smith was left free, in fact, to withdraw from the conference or to restrict the American role to that of observer. 15/ g. French Military Situation Deteriorates The pessimistic American view of the conference was founded also on the deterioration of the Franco-Vietnamese military effort, particularly in the Tonkin Delta. After the debacle at Dien Bien Fhu, the French gradually shifted their forces from Laos and Cambodia into the Delta; but the Viet Minh naturally did likewise, moving several battalions eastward. U.S. Army intelligence reported on May 26, on the basis of French reports, that the Viet Minh were redeploying much faster than anticipated, to the point where only 2,000 of 35,000 troops originally in northwestern Tonkin remained. To thwart the communist military threat, General Ely told General Trapnell (on May 30 ) that French forces were forming a new defensive perimeter along the Hanoi-Haiphong axis; but Ely A- 11 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive made no effort to hide the touch-and-go nature of French defensive capabilities during the rainy season already under .way. 16/ The bleak picture darkened further after General Valluy reported in early June to U.S., British, Australian, and New Zealand Chiefs of Staff assembled in Washington that the Delta was in danger of falling to the communists, that neither Frenchmen nor Vietnamese would fight on in the south in that eventuality, and that only prompt allied intervention could save the situation. 17/ h. Viet Minh Successes Merely Confirm U.S. Hard Line • Valluy's presentation merely reinforced what the U.S. already was aware of, namely, that while the communists put forth unacceptable proposals at Geneva, they were driving for important gains in the Delta that would thoroughly demoralize French Union soldiers and set the stage for French withdrawal to the south. Deterioration on the battlefield and pessimism at the negotiating table, therefore, worked hand- in-hand toward confirming to Washington not that its goals for an Indochina settlement were unrealistic, but rather that the only way to attain them was through decisive military victory in conformity with the original "united action" proposal of March 29. A- 12 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 r TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. A. 1. FOOTNOTES 1. MemCon between Douglas MacArthur II (State, Europe) and Laniel at Bermuda, December k, 1953 (SECRET). 2. Radford memorandum to the Defense Secretary (Wilson), March 12, 195^ (TOP secret). 3- Dept. of State Press Release No. 165, March 29, 1954. See Part II. B. k. dalles "EYES ONLY" tel. No. 3^76 to American Embassy - Paris (Dillon) and No. 5175 to American Embassy - London (Aldrich), April 3, 195^ (TOP SECRET); also Dulles "EYES ONLY" tel. NIACT 5179 to American Embassy - London (Aldrich), April k> 195^ (TOP SECRET). 5. Dulles "EYES ONLY" tel. DULTE 15 to the Acting Secretary (Smith) for passage to the President, April 24, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 6. Dulles "EYES ONLY" tel. DULTE 9 from Geneva for Smith, Dillon, and Aldrich, April 26, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 7. "United. States Position on Indochina to be Taken at Geneva," undated (TOP secret). 8. The briefing was reported in a priority cable from Dulles at Geneva, tel. SECTO 6, April 25, 195^ (CONFIDENTIAL); emphasis supplied. 9. Radford memorandum to SecDef, May 7, 195^, Enclosure: "Comments to be furnished to the Secretary of Defense re Radios SECTO 106 and SECTO 110, dated 5 May 195^5 and DA. IN 59296, dated. 6 May 195V 1 ' (TOP SECRET). 10. Ibid . 11. Reported in Dulles "EYES ONLY" tel. TEDUL 1*3 to Smith at Geneva, May 8, I95I4 (TOP SECRET). 12. Verbatim Minutes of the Geneva Conference (Dept. of State), Second Plenary Session, p. 87. (Hereafter cited as U.S. Verb Min /session/) ' 13. U.S. Verb Min/3, p. 122. Ik. Dulles priority tel. TOSEC 138 to Smith at Geneva, May 12, 195U (CONFIDENTIAL) ; emphasis supplied. 15. Ibid . 16. Dillon priority tel. No. I3I* from Paris, July 11, 195k (TOP SECRET). 17. Dulles to American Consulate - Geneva, tel.. TEDUL 171, June 7, 195^ (TOP SECRET). A- 13 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. A. 2. U.S. AND FRENCH ON UNITED ACTION, MAY-MID JUNE 195^ TABLE OF CONTENTS and. OUTLINE Page 1. U.S. Attempts to Reach Agreement with France on United. Action A-l6 a. United. Action Stressed, as an Option A-l6 b. French Request U.S. Terms for Intervention A-l6 c. U.S. States Intervention Terms . . . . A-l6 d..' Eisenhower Still Favors United. Action A-17 e. The French Reject Independence Options for Associated. States A-l8 f . Laniel Presents Two Additional Questions to U. S A-18 g. The U.S. Replies A-l8 h. Other Concerned. Western Nations are Kept Informed ■ A-l8 2. Agreement with France Appears Increasingly Unlikely A- 19 a. U.S. Begins Contingency Planning A- 19 » b . Three Regional Pacts Considered A-19 c. JCS Point Out Key Planning Considerations A-19 d. JCS Urge Limited U.S. Commitment. A-20 e. JCS Call for Meeting of Interested. Western Powers A-20 f. U.S. Again Requests Independence for Associated States A-21 g. French Response is Encouraging A-21 k-lk TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive ^ge h. Question of Chinese Air Attack Again Arises A-21 i. Dillon Outlines French Position A-21 j • U.S. Repeats Initial Reply . A-22 k. Other Obstacles to U. S. -French Accord . . A-22 1. The Continuing Issue of Independence for Associated States A-23 » 3- United Action Option Withdrawn ' A-23 a. Issues Begin to Lose Relev3.nce in Changing War A-23 b. Dulles Considers Withdrawing Option of United. Action A-23 c. Dulles Withdraws Option A-2^4 d. U.S. Turns to Studies with U.K. on Intervention A-2k e. United. Action Option Has Come Full Cycle A-2k ■ k. French Use Threat of U.S. Intervention at Geneva A-25 a. French Do Not Intend to Request U.S. Involvement A-25 b. French Bring Out Possible U.S. United Action as a Lever in Bargaining A-25 c. United Action is an Alternative but not a Subverting Force A-25 A- 15 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. A. 2. U.S. AND FRENCH ON UNITED ACTION, MAY-MID JUNE 195 1 * 1 . U.S. Attempts to Reach Agreement with France on United Action a • United Action Stressed, as an Option The formulation of an American approach to negotiations was paralleled, by a search for an appropriate military alternative. Perceiving the inevitable bogging down of talks at Geneva as the consequence of communist procrastination, but also mindful of the bankruptcy of the Navarre Plan, the Administration still hoped, that "united, action" could, be achieved, once Britain and. France realized., as we had. consistently tried, to convince them, that negotiating with the communists was a wasteful exercise. But in keeping open the option of united, action, the Administration, during May and. the first half of June, as in April, carefully conditioned it on a range of French concessions and promises. Thus, this second go- T round. of united, action was not designed, to make further negotiations impossible; rather, it was intended to provide an alternative which the French might utilize once negotiations were conceded by them to be useless. b. French Request U.S. Terms for Intervention The issue of united, action arose again in early May when Premier Laniel, in a talk with Ambassador Dillon, expressed, the view that the Chinese were the real masters of the negotiations at Geneva. This being the case, Laniel reasoned, the Chinese would, probably seek to drag out the talks over any number of peripheral issues while the Viet Minh pushed on for a military d.ecision. Readjustment of the French position in the field, with a major withdrawal on the order of 15 battalions to the Tonkin Delta, was probable very soon, Laniel said, unless the U.S. decided, to give its active military cooperation. In the interim, the Premier requested, that a U.S. general be dispatched to Paris to assist in military planning. 1/ c. U.S. States Intervention Terms Laniel ! s views failed to make an impression in Washington. Although the Administration agreed, to dispatch a general (Trapnell), Dulles proposed., and Eisenhower accepted, a series of "indispensable" conditions to American involvement which would have to be met by Paris: 2/ (1) A formal request for U.S. involvement from France and the Associated States; similar invitations to other nations; (2) An immediate, favorable response to those invita- tions from Thailand, the Philippines, Australia, and New Zealand, as well as the assurance that Britain "would." either participate or be acquiescent"; A-16 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive (3) Presentation of "some aspect of matter" to the UN by one of the involved Asian states; (k) A French guarantee of complete independence to the Associated States, "including unqualified option to withdraw from French Union at any time..."; (5) A French undertaking not to withdraw the Expeditionary Corps from Indochina during the period, of united action in ord.er to ensure that the U.S. would be providing air and sea, but not combat troop, support; (6) Franco-American agreement on the training of native forces and a new command structure during united, action (Admiral Radford was reported, to be thinking in terms of a French supreme command with a U.S. air command); (7) Full endorsement by the French cabinet and Assembly of these conditions to ensure a firm French commitment even in the event of a change in government in Paris. It was further agreed, that in the course of united, action, the U.S. would, pursue efforts to broaden the coalition and. to formalize it as a regional defense pact. d. Eisenhower Still Favors United. Action Eisenhower was still insistent on collective action, but recognized, that the British might not commit themselves initially and that the Australians, facing a general election later in May, could. * only give "evidence" of their willingness to participate. A second major problem was Indochinese ind.epend.ence. Dulles posed the American dilemma on this score: on the one hand, the U.S. had. to avoid, giving Asia reason to believe we were intervening on behalf of colonialism; on the other, the Associated. States lacked, the personnel and. leader- ship necessary to carrying on alone, "in a sense," said Dulles, "if the Associated States, were turned loose, it would, be like putting a baby in a cage of hungry lions. The baby would, rapidly be devoured." His solution was that the Associated States be granted, (evidently, orally) the right to withdraw from the French Union after passage of a suitable time period, perhaps five or ten years. A final point con- cerned Executive-Congressional relations once a French request, backed by Parliamentary assent, reached "Washington. The President felt he should, appear before a joint session of Congress and seek a Congressional resolution to use the armed, forces in Indochina. At Eisenhower's request, Dulles directed that State Department begin working up a first draft of such a Presidential message. 3/ A - 17 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive e. The French Reject Independence Options for Associated States The American response to Laniel 1 s requests set the stage for an extended series of discussions over the ensuing five weeks. In Paris , Dillon communicated the American conditions to Laniel, who accepted the conditions , but with important reservations. First, Laniel indicated his dismay at the U.S. insistence on the right of the Associated States to withdraw from the French Union. The Premier com- mented, that the French public could, never accept this condition inasmuch as the Associated. States had themselves never made it and, since even the Viet Minh envisioned joining the Union. Second, the obvious U.S. reluc- tance to go beyond air and. naval forces disturbed, the Premier. He requested that the U.S. provide, in addition, artillery forces and. token ground, troops. Moreover, he indicated pleasure that UK participation was no longer a prerequisite to American involvement. f . Laniel Presents Two Additional Questions to U.S . Laniel 1 s qualified, approval of the preconditions was accom- panied, by a request for a U.S. response to two other questions: (l) Could, the U.S. in some way guarantee the borders and. independence of Laos and Cambodia following a French withdrawal from those countries? (2) Could, the U.S. provide written assurance of prompt air intervention to meet a Chinese Communist air attack on French forces in the delta? kj g. The U.S. Replies • The American response to Laniel's demurrers and requests was for the most part negative. On the French-Associated. States relationship, which Ambassador Dillon had. commented was the chief barrier to a French request for intervention, 5/ Dulles replied, (through Dillon) that the U.S. might have some flexibility on the matter, but had to remain adamant on complete independence if we ever hoped, to gain Thai and Filipino support. Next, on the question of the extent of U.S. involvement, the U.S. was more amenable: we would, not exclude anti- aircraft "and. limited. U.S. ground, forces for protection of bases which might be used, by U.S. naval and air forces." As for Laniel's specific requests, Washington answered that it saw no way, in view of the military and. legal impracticalities, to guarantee the security of Laos and. Cambodia; the alternative was that Laos and. Cambodia join with Thailand, in seeking a UN Peace Observation Commission (POC) on their territories. On the possibility of Chinese MIG intervention, considered extremely remote by the Defense Department, the French were to be assured that a collective defense arrangement would include protection against that contingency. 6/ ** • Other Concerned Western Nations are Kept Informed, During the U.S. -French give-and-take, the British were clearly being kept at arm's length, no longer considered essential to the beginning of a united, action. This irked. London considerably, A-18 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive especially as the Washington-Paris exchanges were making headlines despite efforts to keep them under wraps. It was only because of the stories and. British annoyance that Dulles directed, that the British, Australian, and. New Zealand, ambassadors be informed, "in general terms" regarding U.S. -French talks, jj 2. Agreement with France Appears Increasingly Unlikely a. U.S. Begins Contingency Planning Although the setting up of several U.S. preconditions to involvement and. the qualifications of the French reply by no means made intervention an immediate possibility, the U.S., apparently for the first time, moved, ahead, on contingency planning. The State Department's Bureau of Far Eastern Affairs took the lead, by producing a hypothetical timetable based, on the assumption of U.S. -French agreement in principle to the proposed, conditions by 21 May. 8/ FEA also outlined, a full slate of urgent priority studies to be under- taken by various Government agencies, including U.S. strategy under differing circumstances of Chinese involvement in the war. 9/ By 2k May, FEA had. forwarded a contingency study of the Operations Planning Board, which proposed., among other things, U.S. public and. private communica- tions to Peking to prevent, or at least reduce the effectiveness of, direct Chinese intervention. 10/ b . T hree Regional Pacts Considered. The initiation of planning for U.S. intervention extended, to more far-ranging discussions of the purposes, requirements, and make-up of a Southeast Asia collective defense organization. The frame- work of the discussions evidenced, the Government's intention that united, action only be undertaken after the Geneva conference had. reached a stalemate or, far less likely, a settlement. Three regional formulations were envisaged: the first would, be designed, for direct action, probably without British participation, either to defeat the Viet Minh or exclude them from gaining control of Indochina; the second., formed, after a settlement, would, comprise the present SEATO members and. functions, in particular actual assistance to the participating Asian states against external attack or "Communist insurrection"; the third, would, have a broad. Asian membership, with its function limited to social and. economic cooperation, ll/ c. JCS Point Out Key Planning Considerations An important input to contingency planning on intervention came from the Joint Chiefs of Staff. On 20 May, the JCS sent a memorandum to the Secretary of Defense entitled. "U.S. Military Partici- pation in Indochina." 12/ In the paper, the Chiefs requested, formu- lation of a Defense Department position on the size of any U.S. contributions and. the nature of the command, structure once united action began. They noted the "limited availability of U.S. forces A- 19 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive for military action in Indochina" and the "current numerical advantage of the French Union forces over the enemy, i.e., approximately 5 to 3* Pointing out the disadvantages of either stationing large numbers of U.S. troops in Indochina or of basing U.S. aircraft on Indochina's limited facilities, the Chiefs considered "the current greatest need" to be an expanded, intensified training program for indigenous troops. The JCS observed, moreover, that they were guided, in their comments by the likely reaction of the CPR to U.S. involvement, as well as by the prescription: "Atomic weapons will be used whenever it is to our military advantage." d. JCS Urge Limited U.S. Commitment In view of these problems and prospects, the JCS urged the limitation of U.S. involvement to strategic planning and the train- ing of indigenous forces through an increase in MAAG to 2250 men. Our force commitment should be limited, they thought, primarily to air-naval support directed from outside Indochina; even here, the Chiefs cautioned against making a "substantial" air force commitment. The Chiefs were also mindful of the Chinese. Since Viet Minh supplies came mainly from China, "the destruction or neutralization of those outside sources supporting the Viet Minh would materially reduce the French military problems in Indochina." The Chiefs were clearly tak- ing the position that any major U.S. force commitment in .the Far East should be reserved for a war against the Chinese. Recognizing the limitations of the U.S. defense establishment for large-scale involve- ment in so-called "brush-fire" wars, the Chiefs were extremely hesitant, as had consistently been the case, to favor action along the periphery of China when the strategic advantages of U.S. power lay in decisive blows against the major enemy. Thus, the JCS closed, their memorandum with the admonition that air-naval commitments beyond, those specified "...will involve maldeployment of forces and reduce - * readiness to meet probable Chinese Communist reaction elsewhere in the Far East. From the point of view of the United. States, with reference to the Far East as a whole, Indochina is devoid, of decisive military objectives and I . the allocation of more than token U.S. armed, forces to that area would be a serious diversion of limited. U.S. capabilities." 13/ e. JCS Call for Meeting of Interested. Western Powers The JCS evidently also d.ecid.ed. that it would be a good idea to gather together military representatives of the U.S., France, the UK, Australia, and. New Zealand. At first, the Chiefs suggested, the downgrading of the representatives to below chief -of-staff level; but apparently on the strong protest of Under Secretary Smith at Geneva, Ik/ and of the British too, 15/ the Chiefs acquiesced, in a meeting at chief -of -staff level. But prior to the meeting, which ! began the first week of June, important developments occurred, in the U.S. -France go- 'round on intervention. A-20 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive f. U.S. Again Requests Independence for Associated States The ticklish problem of bringing France to concede the vitalness of granting full independence to the Associated States occupied center stage once more. On 27 May, the State Department, acknowledging France's hesitancy to go too far on this score, still insisted, on cer- tain "minimum measures," the most important of which was that France announce, during or immediately after the signing of the latest draft treaties, 16/ that she would, willingly withdraw all her forces from Indochina, unless invited, by the governments of the Associated States to maintain them or to establish ba,ses. The U.S., the Department added., would, be prepared, to make a similar declaration if it committed, forces. Beyond that step, the French were also asked, to permit Indochinese participation in the programming of economic aid, and their direct receipt of all military aid; to find, ways to broaden participation, of the Vietnamese defense ministry and armed forces in national de- fence; and. to push for the establishment of "representative and au- thentic nationalist governments" at the earliest possible date. YjJ g. French Response is Encouraging The French responded, with surprising a.ffirmativeness to these proposals. Dillon was able to report from Paris on 29 May, following a conversation with Laniel, that the two perhaps "had. now reached, accord in principle on political side." Laniel, he reported, urged immediate military talks to complete arrangements on training of ■ the Vietnamese, a new command structure, and. war plans. 18/ Inas- much as. Ely and. T Daniel in Indochina had reached general agreements on American assumption of responsibility for training the VNA, the way was apparently cleared for bilateral military talks in Washington to take place simultaneously with, and therefore disguised by, the five-power staff negotiations. 19/ h. Question of Chinese Air Attack Again Arises Dillon's optimism was cut short rather quickly. When he reported on talks with Schumann, Dillon had added Schumann's and. Pleven's concern about Chinese air intervention, which they felt would, be so damaging as to warrant a deterrent action in the form of a Presidential request to the Congress for discretionary authority to defend, the Delta in case of CCAF attack. The French wanted, a virtually instantaneous U.S. response, which would, be assured, by a Presidential request before, rather than after, overt Chinese aerial intervention. 20/ The State Department's retort was that the French first had. to satisfy the pre- viously reported, conditions before any such move by the President could be considered. i. Dillon Outlines French Position Dillon was no less disappointed, by Washington's reply than the French. He cabled back that there apparently was an "ex- tremely serious misunderstanding between U.S. and. French": 2l/ A-21 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive "French draw sharp distinction between (l) US intervention in present circumstances with Viet Minh bolstered, by Chinese Communist materiel, technicians and. possibly scattered, troops and (2) US reaction against full-scale air attack mounted from Communist Chinese bases." Dillon said that, for the French, the U.S. preconditions applied in the first case but not the second., wherein only Congressional authoriza- tion was understood to stand in the way of direct U.S. action. Ely, the Ambassador reported, had all along believed, he had Radford's personal assurance of an American reaction to Chinese air attack in the Delta. Now, the French wanted, to know if they could count on instant U.S. interdiction of a CCAF strike. The Ambassador closed. ' by reminding the Department of the incalculable harm to NATO, to the whole U.S. position in Western Europe, and. to the U.S. position against communist worldwide strategy if a Chinese attack were not met. 22/ j • U.S. Repeats Initial Reply Despite Dillon's protestations, the Department stuck by its initial position of May 15, namely, that Chinese air attack was unlikely and. that the U.S. would, meet that problem when it arose. 23/ Clearly, the U.S. was unwilling to make any advance commitments which the French could, seize upon for political advantage without having to give a quid, pro quo in their Indochina policy. Eisenhower affirmed this view and went beyond, it: the conditions for united action, he said, applied equally to Chinese direct and indirect involvement in Indochina. The U.S. would, make no unilateral commitment against any contingency, including overt, unprovoked Chinese aggression, without firm broad allied support. 2k/ k. Other Obstacles to U.S. -French Accord. There were other obstacles to U.S. -French agreement, as brought into the open with a memorandum to the President from Foreign Minister Bidault on June 1. 25/ One was American insistence on French Assembly approval of a government request for U.S. intervention. The French cabinet considered that to present a program of Allied, involvement to the Assembly except under the circumstance of "a complete failure of the Geneva Conference" attributable to the communists "would be literally to wish to overthrow the /French/ Government." A second, area of continuing disagreement concerned, the maintenance of French forces in the field, and the nature of a U.S. commitment. The French held that the U.S. could, bypass Congress by committing perhaps one division of Marines without a declaration of war. 26/ Although assured that the Marines, being part of the Navy, would be included in a U.S. air-naval commitment, the French wanted, much more. A-22 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive 1. The Continuing Issue of Independence for Associated States A final, but by no means negligible , French objection to the U.S. proposals was the independence issue. Far from having been settled, as Dillon supposed, the French were still unhappy about American pressure for concessions even after the State Department's May 27 revisions. The French were particularly disturbed (as Bidault implied) at the notion that the Associated States could leave the Union at any time, even while French fighting men were in the field on Indo- china's behalf. France was perfectly willing, Bidault remarked, to sign new treaties of association with the three Indochinese States, to allow them a larger voice in defense matters, and to work with them toward formation of truly national governments; but, to judge from his commentary, Paris would not go the whole route by committing itself in advance to Indochina's full freedom of action. And while this and. other issues remained unresolved., as Dulles observed on June h, Laniel's reported belief that the U.S. and France were politically agreed was, to Washington, a "serious overstatement." 27/ 3. United Action Option Withdrawn a • Issues Begin to Lose Relevance in a Changing War - Early in June, the unsettled, issues separating the U.S. from France began to lose their relevance to the war. Even if they could be resolved, it was questionable whether U.S. involvement could any longer be useful or decisive. Thus, on the matter of training the VNA, we were no longer certain that time would, permit our training methods to take effect even if the French promptly removed, themselves from responsibility in that area. State Department opinion now held, that the Vietnam situation had deteriorated, "to point where any com- mitment at this time to send over U.S. instructors in near future might expose us to. being faced with situation in which it would be contrary to our interests to have to fulfill such commitment. Our position accordingly is that we do not wish to consider U.S. training mission or program separately from over-all operational plan on assumption condi- tions fulfilled, for U.S. participation war Indochina." 28/ Simply put, the Department had. determined that the grave but still retrievable military situation prevailing at the time united, action was proposed and pursued, had,' in June, altered, radically. Morale of the Franco-Vietnamese forces had dropped, sharply, the whole Tonkin Delta was endangered., and. the political situation in Saigon was dangerously unstable. 29/ Faced with this uniformly black picture, the Administration moved to withdraw united, action from consideration by the French. b. Dulles Considers Withdrawing Option of United Action By mid- June, American diplomacy was in an unenviable position. At Geneva, very little progress had been made of a kind A-23 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive that could lead, any of the Allies to expect a satisfactory outcome. Yet, the alternative which the U.S. had. kept open no longer seemed viable either. As Dulles told. Smith, any "final agreement" with the French would, be "quite impossible," for Paris was moving farther than ever from a determination that united, action was necessary. "They want, and. in effect have, an option on our intervention," Dulles wrote, "but they do not want to exercise it and the date of expiry of our option is fast running out." 30/ From Paris, in fact, Ambassador Dillon urged the Secretary that "the time limit be now" on U.S. inter- vention." 3l/ And. Dulles was fast concluding that Dillon was correct. c. Dulles Withdraws Option In view of France's feeling that, because of strong Assembly pressure for a settlement, no request could, be mad.e of the U.S. until every effort to reach agreement at Geneva had. been exhausted, 32, Dulles in effect d.ecid.ed on 15 June that united action was no longer tenable. In a conversation with Bonnet, in which the Ambassador read a message from Bidault which indicated that the French no longer con- sidered the U.S. bound, to intervention on satisfaction of the seven conditions, the Secretary again put forth the difficulty of the American position. He stated, that the U.S. stood, willing to respond. to a French request under the conditions of 11 May, but that time and. circumstance might make future U.S. intervention "impracticable or so burdensome as to be out of .proportion to the results obtainable." . While this standpoint would be unsatisfactory to Bidault, especially in his dealings with the communists at Geneva, Dulles "could, not conceive that it would be expected, that the U.S. would, give a third, power the option to put it into war at times and. under conditions wholly of the other's choosing." 33/ United action was, then, not removed from con- sideration at a later date; but it was shelved, and it never appeared. . again in the form and with the purpose originally proposed. d. U.S. Turns to Studies with U.K. on Intervention Daring this period, of a gradual "brea,k" with France on united, action, the alternative for the United. States became a collec- tive defense arrangement with British participation. Once again, U.S. hopes shifted, to London, particularly when Eden, on 9 June, told Smith of his extreme pessimism over the course of the negotiations." Smith drew from the conversation the strong impression that Eden believed negotiations to have failed, and would, now follow the U.S. lead on a coalition to guarantee Cambodia and. Laos "under umbrella of some UN action" (Smith 1 s words). Whether the U.S. and. U.K. would, act prior to or after a likely settlement at Geneva by the desperate French became the major area of inquiry. 3V e. United Action Option Has Come Full Cycle The rebirth and. demise of united, action was a rare case of history repeated, almost immediately after it had. been made. The A-24 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive • United. States., having failed to interest Britain in united action prior to the start of the Geneva Conference , determined to plunge ahead with- out British participation as a sine qua non . But, the caveat to the French grew in importance. Conditions which had been given the French before the fall of Dien Bien Phu were now augmented, most importantly by a greater detailing of the process the French government would have to go through before the U.S. would consider intervention. k. French Use Threat of U.S. Intervention at Geneva a. French Do Not Intend to Request U.S. Involvemen t Even while the French pondered the conditions, urged their refinement and redefinition to suit French policies, and insisted in the end. that they saw no political obstacles separating the U.S. and r - France, Washington foresaw that the French were very unlikely to for- ! ward a request for U.S. involvement. Having learned something from 1 - the futile diplomatic bargaining in April, Department of State repre- sentatives in Paris and Washington saw that what the French wanted was [ not the military but the political benefits of U.S. involvement; and. ■ L they thought they could get them by bringing into the open the fact ! that the U.S. and. France were negotiating active American participation .-.- in the fighting. Thus, Dillon correctly assessed, in mid-May that French I inquiries about U.S. conditions for intervention represented a "wish to use possibility of our intervention primarily to strengthen their hand at Geneva." 35/ Dillon's sensitivity to the French position was proven accurate by Bidault's memorandum to the President: France would, in reality, only call on the United. States if an "honorable" settlement could, clearly not be obtained at Geneva, for only und.er that circum- stance could the National Assembly be persuaded that the Laniel govern- ; ment had done everything possible to achieve peace. b. French Bring Out Possible U.S. United Action as a Lever in Bargaining Our recognition of the game the French were playing did not keep us from posing intervention as an alternative for them; but by adhering tenaciously to the seven conditions, the U.S. ruled, out either precipitous American action or an open-ended commitment to be used, or rejected by Paris. "We cannot grant French an indefinite option on us without regard to intervening deterioration" of the military situation, Dulles wrote 8 June. 36/ As much as the Administration wanted, to avoid a sell-out at Geneva, it was aware that events in Indochina might pre- clude effective action even if the French suddenly decided they wanted U.S. support. c. United. Action is an Alternative But Not a Subverting Force The United/ States, then, did not propose united action with the intention of subverting the Conference. Instead., united, action was offered, as a palliative if the Conference should, become an exercise A-25 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive in futility for the Western side. Washington clearly hoped that France would find it could not gain an "honorable settlement" through talks with the Viet Minh, and that the British could admit to having been unrealistic in postponing a commitment to united action pending the outcome of talks. In shorty the U.S. predicted and welcomed the Conference's "subversion" through communist intransigence; yet when, in mid- June, the Conference began to break for what would, be a lengthy recess, Washington had to conclude that united action was no longer appropriate to military circumstances in Indochina, nor feasible given U.S. insistence on intervention only under conditions conducive to a decisive success. By the end of June, therefore, the pattern of U.S. diplomacy shifted — from united action in Indochina to collective defense in Southeast Asia, and from disenchantment with the Geneva Conference to attempts to influence a settlement at least basically in keeping with our interests. A-26 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. A. 2. FOOTNOTES 1. Dillon tel. from Paris No. U287 to Dalles, May 10, I95U (TOP SECRET). 2. In forwarding these conditions to the Embassy for transmittal to the French, Dalles noted that a prompt, favorable decision would be premature inasmuch as it might internationalize the war in a way offensive to the British, leaving the French with the difficult choice of internationalization or capitulation. Dulles "eyes only tel. to Paris NIACT 1*023, May 11, 195 1 )- (TOP SECRET). The conditions are also cited in Jean Lacouture and Philippe Devillers, La fin & f une guerre: Indochine 195^ (Paris: Editions du Seuil, i960 ) , pp. 176-77. 3. Dulles' words are as paraphrased. In a State Department Memorandum of Conversation, May 11, 195^> of a White House conference May 10 attended by the President, Dulles, Wilson, Deputy Defense Secretary Anderson, Radford, Robert Bowie, and Douglas MacArthur II (TOP SECRET). k. Dillon "eyes only" from Paris to the Und.er Secretary (for Dulles) No. 4383, May lk, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 5. Dillon commented: "I am certain that unless we can find some way to get around, this requirement /that the Vietnamese have the option of leaving the French Union/, French will never ask for outside assistance." In ibid . Dillon proposed that the real objection among Asians to the position of the Associated States rested not on the "purely juridical" problem of the right to leave the Union, but on Indochina's lack of powerful national armies. The Ambassador recommended that American training and equipping of the Vietnamese National Army (VNA), coupled with a French statement of intention to withdraw the Expeditionary Corps after the establishment of peace and a national army, would significantly dampen Asian antagonism to the Bao Dai regime. (Dillon from Paris tel. NIACT kk02 to Dulles, May 17, I95J+, TOP SECRET). Why Dillon assumed. Asians would significantly change their attitude toward French Indochina when, even with an American takeover of the ■ training and equipping of the NVA, French forces would still be on Vietnamese territory for a lengthy period is not known. 6. Dalles "eyes only" to Paris (Dillon) tel. NIACT k09k y May 15, 195 1 ! (TOP SECRET). 7. Dulles "eyes only" to Smith at Geneva tel. TEDUL 75, and to Dillon at Paris No. lflOU, May 17, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 8. FEA memorandum, "Procedural Steps for Intervention in Indochina," undated, (entered into FE files May 17, 195*0 (TOP SECRET). 9. FEA, Annex on "Studies to be Undertaken Immediately within United. States Government," attached to ibid . , (TOP SECRET). A-27 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive 10. OCB, Studies with Respect to Possible U.S. Action Regarding Indo - china , Tab E, "Plan for Political Warfare in Regard to Communist ; China intervention in Indochina," undated, in enclosure to memorandum from E. F. Drumright to Robert Murphy, May 2k, 195^ (TOP SECRET). ■; 11. This conceptualization stemmed from discussions of the NSC Planning Board, and. was part of a broader contingency study program. See the Board's statement in an enclosure to a memorandum for Robert Bowie (the Board 7 s chairman), May 19, 195*4 (TOP SECRET). 12. Memorandum from JCS to the Secretary of Defense, May 20, 195^ (TOP SECRET). I 13. These conclusions were subsequently confirmed, when, at the direction of General Ridgway, a technical team of seven officers representing the Engineer, Transportation, and Signal Corps went to Indochina on a covert mission to determine military and. military-related resources available there in the event U.S. intervention was imple- . mented. The team spent the period. May 31-June 22 in the field.* Their conclusions were, in general, that Indochina was devoid of the logistical, geographic, and. related resources necessary to a substantial American ground, effort such as Ridgway felt would, be required, for a success. The group's findings are in a report from Col. David W. Heiman, its leader, to Ridgway, July 12, 195^ (CONFIDENTIAL). The Chiefs 1 conclusions were disputed, however, by Drumright (in a memorandum to MacArthur, May 2k, 1954 , TOP SECRET). He argued that if, as everyone agreed, Indochina was vital to Ameri- can security, the U.S. should not consider more than a token ground, troop commitment to be a serious diversion of our capabili- ties. "While not arguing for a substantial troop commitment, Drumright suggested, that the U.S. plan for that eventuality rather than count on defense with atomic weapons or non-nuclear strikes on Chinese territory. Somehow, however, Drumright ! s concern about the Chinese did. not extend to the cons id.erat ion that a massive U.S. troop commitment, which he stated, elsewhere in the memoran- dum might prove necessary should token forces fail to do the job, risked, bringing on the Chinese. Ik. Smith from Geneva v eyes only" tel. DULTE 100 to Dulles, May 23, 195^ (TOP secret). 15. Dulles to Smith at Geneva tel. TEDUL 116, May 2k, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 16. On April 28 French and. Vietnamese representatives in Paris ini- tialled separate treaties of ind.epend.ence and. association. The treaties did. not take effect, however, until June k, when the French National Assembly finally approved, the documents. 17. Dulles tel. to American Embassy - Paris No. ^272, May 26, 195^ (TOP SECRET). See also Lacouture and. Devillers, p. 192. A-28 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 n TOP SECRET - Sensitive 18. Dillon priority telegram from Paris No. ^596, May 29, 195^ (TOP SECRET), See also Smith from Geneva SECTO 331, May 28, 1954 (TOP SECRET) and. Dillon from Paris (reporting talks with Schumann) No. 4580, May 28, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 19. McClintock from Saigon No. 2k68 to Dalles, May 19, I95U (SECRET); Dillon from Paris "eyes only" for Dulles, Smith, and. McClintock No. ^566, May 27, I95U (TOP SECRET), reporting Trapnell-Ely talks. Ely and. 0* Daniel were still at odds, Dillon noted., over structural changes in the NVA, war strategy, and. the role of U.S. advisors. ■ 20. Ibid . ; also, Dillon priority telegram from Paris No. U612, May 31, 1955 (TOP SECRET). 21. Murphy (acting Secretary) to American Embassy - Paris N1ACT V325, May 29, 1954 (TOP SECRET). 22. Dillon from Paris No. U607, May 30, I95U (TOP SECRET). See also Dillon from Paris No. ^625, June 1, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 23. Murphy to American Embassy - Paris NIACT U332, May 31, I95U (TOP SECRET). 2k. Eisenhower's unwavering attitud.e toward action in Asia only in concert with allies put him at odds with Dulles, who was prepared. to act unilaterally at least in circumstances of overt aggression. : "When the issue of possible CPR air intervention came before the President, he is reported, to have reacted sharply. Evidently supposing that conflict in the air would mean a Sino-U.S. wa.r, • the President said the United. States would, not intervene in China on any basis except united action. He would not be responsible for going into China alone unless a joint Congressional resolu- tion ord.ered. him to do so. The United. States should, in no event undertake alone to support French colonialism. Unilateral action by the United States in cases of this kind, would. d.estroy us. If we intervened- alone in this case, we would, be expected, to inter- vene alone in other parts of the world. He made very plain that the need, for united, action as a condition of U.S. intervention was not related, merely to the regional grouping for the defense of Southeast Asia but was also a necessity for U.S. intervention in response to Chinese Communist overt aggression. Yet,, when reminded, by his Special Assistant, Robert Cutler, of NSC 5 i l-05 l s position that U.S. unilateral action could, not be ruled, out in the event of overt Chinese aggression against Thailand, Burma, or Malaya, and of Dulles' September 2, I953 warning to China of a direct U.S. response to Chinese aggression in Indochina, the President stated, that no difference existed, between himself and Dulles. (Memorandum of conversation between Eisenhower and Cutler, June 1, 195^, TOP SECRET.), I A-29 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive i ' . 1 The next day, June 2, the President directly confronted Dulles on this matter. Dulles distinguished between U.S. involvement in a collective grouping, which could only come about on satisfaction of the preconditions, and action in response to overt Chinese aggression. The Secretary 1 s view was that in the latter case, the U.S. should, act unilaterally upon authorization by Congress, citing prior statements by himself and the President that had warned China of the consequences of overt aggression. The President responded, according to Cutler's report, that direct Chinese aggression would, force him to go all the way with naval and. air power (including "new weapons") directed at air bases and. ports in mainland China. He would therefore have to have much more than Congressional authoriza- tion in view of the likely public reaction to a Presidential request of Congress for war acts against China. Even though the Thais, Filipinos, French, and Indochinese would likely support such action, other countries, such as Australia, had to be brought along as well. The President, in short, was as concerned about the politics as the logic of getting involved in a conflict with China. (Memorandum of conference in the President f s office, June 2, 1954, involving the President, Dulles, Anderson, Radford, MacArthux, and. Cutler, TOP SECRET.) At its 200th meeting on 3 June, the NSC received, considered, and agreed, upon the President's views. | Following this important Presidential determination, Dulles called in the Australian and New Zealand ambassadors on the question of overt Chinese aggression in Southeast Asia. He explained that direct Chinese action was unlikely, but that the French had been pressing for assurance of a U.S. reply to Chinese air intervention in the delta. He reported, the U.S. position that Chinese aggression required a collec- < tive response and a UN appeal, and distinguished this procedure from the ! united, action concept of March 29. A brief memorandum was suggested, by the Secretary by which the ANZUS powers would, pledge, in the event of overt CPR aggression, to request approval of their parliaments for the use of armed, forces, support a UN appeal by the attacked, party, and seek to persuade other free nations to join in acting against China. The ambassadors, however, merely asked questions and, apparently, the proposed memorandum was not agreed upon by any of the Allies during the course of the Geneva Conference. See Dulles priority tel. to American Embassy - Canberra No. 238, June 5, 1954 (TOP SECRET). 25. Memorandum from Bidault to Eisenhower, Geneva, June 1, 195^ (TOP SECRET). See also Smith from Geneva tel. DULTE I56, June 6, 195^ (TOP secret). 26. Dillon tel. to Dulles No. Vf66, June 9, 195^ (TOP SECRET). Also, Dulles tel. to American Embassy - Paris No. 1*286, May 27, 195^ (TOP SECRET); here, the American position was that French forces would be maintained, during united action except for normal troop rotation, replacement by native forces as the military situation permits, and consultation with allies engaged in the united action. A-30 TOP SECRET - Sensitive i Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive 1 27. Dalles to American Embassy - Paris tel. No. kk21, June k 9 195^ (TOP SECRET). 28. Murphy (acting Secretary) "eyes only" tel. to American Embassy - Paris (Dillon), No. I+5O8, June 10, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 29. Dulles "eyes only" priority to American Embassy - Paris No. ^579> June Ik, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 30. Dulles priority to American Consul - Geneva (Smith) TEDUL 197> June lk 9 195^ (TOP SECRET). 31. Dillon "eyes only" from Paris to Dulles No. k8kl, June Ik, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 32. See, e.g . , Schumann's remarks to Dillon in the latter 1 s cable from Paris No. Vf66, June 9, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 33. Dulles to American Consul - Geneva (Smith) TEDUL 208, June 16, 195^ (TOP secret). 3I+. Smith "eyes only" for the Secretary from Geneva DULTE 164, June 9? 195^ (TOP SECRET). 35. Dillon priority telegram to Dulles No. 4424, May 18, 1954. Cf. Dulles 1 comment of June 7 in a cable to Geneva (priority TEDUL l69> TOP SECRET): "I have long felt and. still feel that the French are ' not treating our proposal seriously but toying with it just enough to use it as a talking point at Geneva." 36. Dalles priority tel. to American Consul - Geneva TEDUL 175, June 8, 1954 (TOP SECRET). A- 31 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 o A3 O I Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. A. 3- THE U.S. NEGOTIATING POSITION DURING THE CONFERENCE TABLE OF CONTENTS and. OUTLINE Page 1. Threat of United. Action Influences Negotiations A~3^ a. United. Action is Allowed, to Remain a Public Option A-3 1 * b. France and. U.K. Exploit U.S. Threat k-'ih c . Eden Viewed, as Moderating U.S. Threat A-3^ . 2. U.S. Pushes for a Regional Pact A-35 a. Communists Appear Intransigent ' A-35 b. French Increasingly Interested, in Partition A-35 c. Two New Factors Enhance Partition A-35 d. Communist Concessions' Show More Promise A-36 e. U.S. Remains Pessimistic..... A-36 3. U.S. Attempts to Unify Western Diplomatic Position A-36 a. French Request Statements of U.S. and. U.K. Support A-36 b. U.S. and U.K. Issue Joint Statement A-37 " I Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 ■ TOP SECRET - Sensitive Page k. U.S. Representation at Geneva Influences Favorable Outcome A-39 a. French Request High-Level U.S. Representation . A-39 b. Dulles Objects to High-Level U.S. Representative A-39 c . Dulles Lists Ob j ections A-^+0 d. Dulles and Mendes -France Agree on the Seven Points A-^-0 e. France Continues Insistence on High-Level U.S. Representation A-^l f . The U.S. Reconsiders French Request A-4l g. Bedell Smith Instructed Not to Commit the U.S A-^l h. Smith 1 s Presence Reinforces Western Position A-^2 A-33 TOP SECRET - Sensitive ■ Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 • - , . TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. A. 3. THE U.S. NEGOTIATING POSITION DURING THE CONFERENCE ■ ,.... ... ... . ■ > i i ....I.....!..,., — ■ .■.».. 1.. Threat of United Action Influences Negotiations a * United Action is Allowed to Remain a Public Option ' Between mid-June and the end of the Conference on 21 July, U.S. diplomacy worked at unifying the Western alliance behind a Southeast Asia defense pact and at coalescing a united Western diplomatic front at Geneva so as to obtain the best possible settlement. In this process, the Western alliance gradually cohered. The result was that Anglo-French cooperation was gained not only for the concept of a regional security pact, but also for a firm negotiating position vis-a-vis the communists. Additionally, although the U.S. private position was, by late June, to abide by a settlement which partitioned Vietnam and provided for "the ultimate reunification of Vietnam by peaceful means" (under the U.S.- UoK. seven-point memorandum of 29 June, our public posture at the Conference left unclear to the communists just what terms would in fact be acceptable to us. For our part, united action was a dead issue by mid- June; but the communist negotiators could not have known this. As a result, they may well have been influenced toward a settlement by the belief that further prolongation of talks would only reinforce Western unity, perhaps coalesce a united response in Indochina previously unobtainable by the U.S., and Very likely bring the three Indochinese states into the proposed American security treaty. b. France and U.K. Exploit U.S. Threat Both the French and the British negotiators made excellent use of America's ambivalent status. The Chief French delegate, Jean Chauvel, told a Russian delegate, Kuznetsov, for instance, that France's proposed division of Vietnam at the l8th parallel would probably be more acceptable to the other conferees than the unreasonable Viet Minh demand for the 13th parallel. Chauvel added that a settlement along the French line would thereby avert the risk of an internationalization of the conflict, l/ Eden also used the implied threat of U.S. involvement. During late May, he warned Chou "again" of the dangers inherent in the Indochina situation, which could lead to unpredictable and serious results. When Chou said he was counting on Britain to prevent this from happening, the Foreign Secretary replied Chou was mistaken, since Britain would stand by the U.S. in a showdown. 2/ And Bidault and Smith, in mid-June, agreed that in view of genuine Sino -Soviet desire to keep the Conference going, Chinese concern' over U.S. bases in Laos and Cambodia should not be dispelled. 3/ ' c. Eden Viewed as Moderating U.S. Threat The British seem to have played a particularly vital role in exploiting ambiguous American intentions for diplomatic gain. At the Conference, Eden was in close contact with Molotov and Chou, and evidently A- 3^ TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive earned their confidence and respect. He was clearly viewed as a moderating element who could be counted on (as Chou put it) to influence the U.S. away from rash actions such as might subvert the Conference. Eden T s conduct, therefore, served as a barometer to the Communists of the pros- pects for Western agreement to a settlement. When the British agreed to participate in five -power military staff talks in Washington (3-9 June), L and when Eden and Churchill flew to Washington in late June for talks with Dulles and Eisenhower, the communists may have believed that the U.K. was undergoing some kind of reassessment of its attitude toward U.S. proposals for a Southeast Asia coalition. The implicit warning of U.K. participation in a "united action" approach which it had previously rebuffed, whether or not the actual intention of the British leaders, could not have been missed in Moscow and Peking. 2. U.S. Pushes for a Regional Pact >■»»»' ■ . >■ a. Communists Appear Intransigent By mid-June there seemed to be little reason to expect that the Geneva Conference, even if it reconvened in July, would see any significant breakthroughs from the communist side. Inasmuch as the French had decided, under a new government committed to a settlement by 20 July, to continue their "underground" military discussions with the Viet Minh, U.S. diplomatic efforts concentrated on pushing the British to agree to a treaty system for Southeast Asia that would, in effect, guarantee the security of those areas left in non-communist hands fol- lowing a settlement. On ik June, Dulles observed that events at Geneva apparently had "been such as to satisfy the British insistence that they did not want to discuss collective action until either Geneva was over or at least the results of Geneva were known." Dulles assumed that the departure of Eden was "evidence that there was no adequate reason for further delaying collective talks on Southeast Asia defense." k/ b. French Increasingly Interested in Partition » ■ ■ ... . .ii ■ ■ » ■ 1 - - » ■ — T . . . ... While plans were being laid to press ahead with a regional coalition, important developments occurred at the Conference. Partition, which the communist side had introduced in late May as a compromise formula, was being given serious attention by the French. Informed of this by Smith, Dulles reiterated the- view that the U.S. could not possibly associate itself with a sell-out of the Delta any more than we could be expected (as Jean Chauvel had urged) to "sell" partition to the non- communist Vietnamese. 5/ c. Two New Factors Enhance Partition — --•»•'»'• ...... — -» — - - - - Two qualifications to the partition concept cropped up in the same period. A five-power military staff conference in Washington (U.S., U.K., France , Australia, and New Zealand) had ended 9 June with A-35 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive a report that considered the Thakhek-Dong Hoi line (midway between the 17th and l8th parallels) defensible in the event Vietnam were parti- tioned. 6/ Moreover , Chauvel had told U. Alexis Johnson, then a member of the American delegation, that French flirtation with the idea of one or more enclaves for each side in the northern and southern zones of divided Vietnam had been abandoned. Chauvel indicated his government had decided it would rather give up Haiphong than accept a Viet Minh enclave in the south if the choice came to that. 7/ The conference report and the Paris change of heart on the enclave concept had the effect of convincing some that if partition were adopted, it could pro- vide for a solid, militarily defensible South Vietnam. d. Communist Concessions Show More Promise In another area, the communists had conceded -- with Chou En-lai T s proposal at a restricted Conference session of l6 June — that Laos and Cambodia were problems distinct from that in Vietnam. And in a conversation with Smith, Molotov added his conviction that Pham Van Dong already had evidenced his willingness to withdraw Viet Minh "volunteers" from Laos and Cambodia. 8/ But, here as with partition, communist initiatives only satisfied in small part the American conception of acceptable terms. Until regular Viet Minh forces were entirely removed from Laos and Cambodia, until their puppet Free Khmer and Pathet Lao I elements were disarmed or withdrawn, and until the right of the royal governments to seek outside support for self-defense was confirmed, the U.S. saw little progress in Chou ! s statement. e. U.S. Remains Pessimis tic The gloom in American circles thickened considerably in late June. Continued irresolution at the # conference table, together with the strong feeling in Washington that the French delegation, now responsible to Premier Mendes-France (as of 18 June), would conclude a settlement as soon as the Conference reconvened, led Dulles to caution Smith against becoming involved in committee work (as the French pro- posed) that would appear to link the U.S. to any final decisions. "Our thinking at present," Dulles cabled Smith on 2k June, "is that our role at Geneva should soon be restricted to that of observer . ..." 9/ 3. U.S. Attempts to Unify Western Diplomatic Position ■ »»■»■■■■. r~ . .. 1, t . ■»■!■■«'» .■■«iii ii. ■»!■»■» «... a. French Request Statements of U.S. and U.K. Support . ■ ■ . 1 — .. ....... , — . — . . . , . — . ... j*- , x . . . While the U.S. wanted to cut back on its involvement in the Conference proceedings, the French hoped to obtain, as previously, suffi- cient U.S. support to bolster their negotiating position in the face of communist pressure. Thus, on 26 June, Henri Bonnet delivered an aide- memoire from his government to Dalles and Eden, noting the difficulties A -36 TOP SECRET - Sensitive 1 Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive • of the French position. The French "wanted to "assure the State of Viet- nam a territory as solid as possible," but the Viet Minh were unlikely to make concessions in the Tonkin Delta, and the Vietnamese in Saigon were likely to object violently to a partition arrangement. The French government, therefore } hoped that the U.S. could find a way to assist it in both directions: first, the U.S. and U.K. might issue a declaration following their upcoming talks in Washington that would "state in some fashion or other that, if it is not possible to reach a reasonable settle- ment at the Geneva Conference, a serious aggravation of international relations would result"; second, the U.S. might intercede with the Viet- namese to counsel them against opposing a settlement really in their best interests. 10/ b. U.S. and U.K. Issue Joint Statement The second suggestion was never given serious consideration, , for the U.S. did not wish to be tied to a settlement that would cede territory to the Viet Minh. The first, however, was acted upon when Churchill and Eden arrived in Washington on 2k June. Four days later, the U.S. and U.K. issued a joint statement which warned: "if at Geneva the French Government is confronted with demands which prevent an accept- able agreement regarding Indochina, the international situation will be seriously aggravated." ll / c. U.S. and U.K. Formulate "Seven Points" Agreement » i ■ ' » Of more immediate consequence for the course of the negoti- ations was the unpublicized agreement between the two countries on a set of principles which, if worked into the settlement terms, would enable London and Washington to "respect" the armistice. The principles, known subsequently as the seven points, were communicated to the French. They were: 12/ (1) Preservation of the integrity and independence of Laos and Cambodia, and assurance of Viet Minh withdrawal from those countries; . (2) Preservation of at least the southern half of Vietnam, and if possible an enclave in the Tonkin Delta, with the line of demarca< tion no further south than one running generally west from Dong Hoi; (3) No restrictions on Laos, Cambodia, or retained Vietnam "materially impairing their capacity to maintain stable non-Communist regimes; and especially restrictions impairing their right to maintain adequate forces for internal security, to import arms and to employ foreign advisers"; • (K) No "political provisions which would risk loss of the retained area to Communist control"; A- 17 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive (5) No provision that would "exclude the possibility of the ultimate reunification of Vietnam by peaceful means"; (6) Provision for "the peaceful and humane transfer, under international supervision, of those people desiring to be moved from one zone to another of Vietnam"; (7) Provision for "effective machinery for international supervision of the agreement." d. British Adherence to Seven Points Remains Doubtful Although agreement to the seven points represented some- thing of an American diplomatic victory (with the important exception of point 2, where the U.S. for the first time conceded that partition was inescapable), the U.S. was by no means confident that the British would actually abide by the relatively hard bargaining lines set forth. ". . .we have the distinct impression," Dulles wrote, "that the British : look upon this /memorandum of the seven points/ merely as an optimum solution and that they would not encourage the French to hold out for a solution as good as this." The Secretary observed that the British, - during the talks, had settled for agreement to "respect" the final terms; they preferred something stronger, and in fact "wanted to express these 7 points merely as a T hope T without any indication of firmness on our part." The U.S , quite aside from what was said in the seven points, "would not want to be associated in any way with a settlement which j fell materially short of the 7 point memorandum." 13/ The possibility of a unilateral withdrawal was still being "given consideration," Dulles reported, 1^ / even as the seven points were agreed upon. e. French Generally Concur with Seven Points Despite reservations about the feasibility of implementing the seven points, the U.S. hoped to get French approval of them. On 6 July Dillon telegraphed the French reaction as given him by Parodi, the Secretary -General of the cabinet. With the exception of point 5 dealing with elections, the French were in agreement. They were confused about an apparent conflict between the elections provision and point 4, under which political provisions, which would include elections, were not to risk loss of retained Vietnam. In addition, they felt U.S. intention merely to "respect" any agreement was too weak a term, and requested clarification of its meaning. 15/ Dulles responded the next day to both matters. Points h and 5 were not in conflict, he said. It was quite possible that an agree- ment in line with the seven points might still not prevent Indochina from going communist. The important thing, therefore, was to arrange for national elections in a way that would give the South Vietnamese a A-38 TOP SECRET - Sensitive . Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive liberal breathing spell: .". . . since undoubtedly true that elections might eventually mean unification Vietnam under Ho Chi Minh this makes it all more important they should be only held as long after cease-fire agreement as possible and in condi- tions free from intimidation to give democratic elements /in South Vietnam/ best chance." And so far as "respect" of that agreement was concerned, the U.S. and UbK. meant they "would not oppose a settlement which conformed to seven points .... It does not of course mean we would guarantee much settlement or that we would necessarily support it publicly. We consider 'respect' as strong a word as we can possibly employ in the circumstances .... 'Respect' would also mean that we would not seek directly or indirectly to upset settlement by force." 16/ k. U.S. Representation at Geneva Influences Favorable Outcome • • * ■ ■ i — —— — *■ » .... .... — — . -„ . — a.. French Request High -Level U.S. Representation •m q ■ » " ^ The seven points, Dulles 1 clarification of the U.S. posi- tion on elections in Vietnam, and his 'delimitation of the U.S. obligation towards a settlement were for the most part satisfactory to the French. But to Paris, the firm American position, to be influential at the Conference, had to be supplemented by high-level representation. Other- wise, Mend6s -France argued, the French could not present a strong front when Molotov and Chou resumed their places in the coming weeks. Answering U.S. doubts, Mendis-France averred that the French bargaining position was precisely in line with the seven points and would not deviate sub- stantially from them. With great feeling, he told a member of the U.S. Embassy in Paris that the presence of either the Secretary or the Under Secretary was "absolutely essential and necessary." lj/ b. Dulles Objects to High-Level U.S. Representative »■■■ — ■»..»■ ■ . r ' The U.S. remained opposed to any proposal that implied acceptance of the final terms. While recognizing Mendes-France's difficulties in carrying on almost alone, Dulles firmly believed the French would end by accepting a settlement unsatisfactory to the U.S. — whether or not the U.S. delegation was upgraded. 18/ Moreover, were the U.S. to send Smith or Dulles back to Geneva only to find the French compelled to negotiate an unacceptable agreement, Washington would be required to dissociate itself in a manner "which would be deeply resented by the French as an effort on our part to block at the last minute a A-39 ' TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 633 16. By: NWD Date: 201 1 i i TOP SECRET - Sensitive peace which they ardently desire," possibly with "irreparable injury to Franco -American relations . . . ." 19/ c. Dalles Lists Objections On 10 July these objections to Mende s -France ! s pleadings were forcefully raised in a direct message to the French Premier from the Secretary. Dulles stated that the presence of high-ranking Western Big Three delegates at Geneva would be no "substitute for a clear agree- ment on a joint position which includes agreement as to what will happen if that position is not accepted by the Communists." Denying that a true united front existed even with the seven -point memorandum, Dulles went on to say that the seven points seemed to be "merely an optimum solution" not only for the British, but equally for the French. He cited French willingness to permit communist forces to remain in northern Laos, to accept a demarcation line "considerably south of Donghoi," to neutralize and demilitarize Laos, and Cambodia, and to permit "elections so early and so ill-prepared and ill-supervised as to risk the loss of the entire area to Communism . . . ." These, said Dulles, were illustra- tive of a "whittling -away process" which, cumulatively, could destroy the intent of the seven points. Thus, believing that the French had already gone far toward nullifying some of the major provisions of the U.S. -U.K. memorandum, Dulles reiterated the long-standing position that the U.S. had the right "not to endorse a solution which would seem to us to impair seriously certain principles which the U.S. believes must, as far as it is con- cerned, be kept unimpaired, if our own struggle against Communism is to be successfully pursued." Dulles added that a U.S. position that created uncertainty in the minds of the enemy "might strengthen your hand more than our presence at Geneva . . . .." 20/ d. Dulles and Mende s -France Agree on the Seven Points ■ " ' ■' ■ ■■■■ ■■■■ - ■■■■■!!■■■ ■ --- ■ ... L ,_ -. Mende s -France, in reply, stated that France would accept nothing unacceptable to the U.S. 2l/ Apparently, this move had some effect on Dulles, for he flew to Paris for talks that resulted in a Franco -American endorsement of the U.S. -U.K. memorandum. 22/ In addition, Mendes-France and Dulles signed a position pape~on the same day (l^ July) that reiterated the U.S. position at the conference as "a friendly nation" whose role was subordinate to that of the primary non -communist parties, the Associated States and France. This paper went on to describe the seven points as those acceptable to the "pri- marily interested nations" and as those which *che U.S. could "respect." However, should terms ultimately be concluded which differed markedly from the seven points, the U.S. would neither be asked nor expected to accept them, and "may publicly disassociate itself from such differing terms." Dulles further obtained from the French certain assurances i . A-^0 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive regarding coordinated action regardless of the outcome of the conference. The position paper declared America 1 s intention "to seek, with other interested nations, a collective defense association designed to pre- serve, against direct and indirect aggression, the integrity of the non- communist areas of Southeast Asia following any settlement." 23/ e. France Continues Insistence on High-Level U.S. Representation On all but one matter, the U S. and France were now in complete accord on a negotiating strategy. That strategy, if adhered to, would not only prevent a sell-out to the communists, but also provide the framework for further allied discussions whether or not a settlement were concluded. The point of difference was Mende s -Franc e 1 s continued insistence that his delegation be supported by the presence of Dulles himself. Writing to Dulles of his understanding of the seven- point position paper just signed, the French Premier added: ". . .In effect, I have every reason to think that your absence would be precisely interpreted as demonstrating, before the fact, that you disapproved of the- conference and of every- thing which might be accomplished. Not only would those who are against us find therein the confirmation of the ill will which they attribute to your government concerning the re- establishment of peace in Indochina; but many others would read in it a sure sign of a division of the western powers." 2k/ f . The U.S. Reconsiders French Request For reasons not entirely clear, Mendes -France* s appeal for high-level U.S. representation at Geneva was now favorably received in Washington. Dulles was able to inform Mend^s-France on ik July: "In the light of what you say and after consultation with President Eisenhower, I am glad to be able to inform you that the President and I are asking the Undersecretary of State, General Walter Bedell Smith, to prepare to return at his earliest convenience to Geneva to share in the work of the conference on the basis of the understanding which we have arrived at." 25/ For the first time since mid-1953; the U.S. and France were solidly joined in a common front on Indochina. g. Bedell Smith Ins tructed Not to Commit the U.S • On 16 July Smith received a new set of instructions based upon the U S„ -France seven-point agreement. After reiterating the A-^l TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECEET - Sensitive passive, formal role the U.S. was to play at the Conference, Dalles told the Under Secretary (l) that if a settlement should be reached he was to issue a unilateral (or, if possible, multilateral) statement that "conforms substantially" to the seven points; (2) that "The United States "will not, however, become cosignatory with the Communists in any Declaration"; (3) that the U.S. should not be put in a position where it could be held responsible for guaranteeing the results of the Conference; (k) that Smith's efforts should be directed toward for- warding ideas to the "active negotiators" (France, Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam); and (5) that the U.S. should avoid permitting the French to believe that a breakdown of the negotiations was due to U.S C advice or pressure, thus making the U.S in some way morally obligated to inter- vene militarily in Indochina. Dulles stated with respect to this last point that the U.S C was "not prepared at the present time to give any commitment that it will intervene in the war if the Geneva Conference fails. ..." 26/ This decision, of course, remained unknown to the communists at Geneva, who continued to speculate on U.S. intentions. h. Smith 1 s Presence Reinforces Western Position • * Coming soon after the Dulles -Bidault talks in Paris (13-1^ July), Smith 1 s return was apparently interpreted by the Chinese, and doubtless by the Russians as well, as a sign of a united Western front at the Conference. 27/ When taken in conjunction with what Mend£s- Frauce had already publicly told the Rational Assembly of his intentions to ask for conscripts in the event his 20 July deadline passed without a settlement, and with what the Premier told Malenkov about not intending Geneva to "turn into a Panmunjom, " 28 / the return of Smith gave the French negotiating position the appearance of real strength. The com- munist delegations, therefore, were presented with an option. They could call France 1 s bluff -- by refusing further concessions or by making a settlement contingent on a U.S C • guarantee 29/ — or they could seek to gain French agreement that, hopefully, would obviate a U S.-U K.- French alignment in Asia. As the Conference ground on toward Mendes- France ! s 20 July deadline, major concessions from the communist side brought the settlement essentially in line with the seven points. A-42 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive . III. A. 3. FOOTNOTES 1. Johnson priority tel. SECTO 557 from Geneva, July 3, 195*1- (TOP SECRET). 2. Smith tel. SECTO 267 from Geneva, May 20, I95I1- (SECRET). 3. Smith tel. DULTE 193 from Geneva, June 17, 1954 (TOP SECRET). k. Dulles to Smith tel. TEDUL 196, June lH, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 5. Dulles priority tel. TEDUL 212 to Smith at Geneva, June 17, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 6. Dulles "eyes only" tel. TEDUL 222 to Smith at Geneva, June l8, 195^ .(TOP SECRET). 7. Smith, from Geneva priority tel. DULTE 195, June 18, 1954 (SECRET). 8. Smith from Geneva tel. DULTE 202, June 19, I95U (TOP SECRET). 9. Dulles to American Consulate - Geneva tel. TOSEC 478, June 2k, 195^ (SECRET). 10. In Dulles to American Embassy - Paris tel. No. 4852, June 28, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 11. New York Times, June 29, 195^, p. 2. ' ; . - , 12. Anthony Eden, Memoirs: Full Circle (Boston, Houghton Mifflin, i960), P. 1^9- 13. Dulles to American Embassy - Paris "eyes only" for Dillon priority tel. No. 52, July 3, 3_95^ (TOP SECRET). Ik. Ibid . 15. Dillon from Paris priority tel. No. 50, July 6, I95I1 (SECRET). 16. Dulles to American Embassy - Paris tel. No. 77, July 7, 195^ (SECRET). Regarding the U.S. view of a Ho Chi Minh electoral victory, we not only have the well-known comment of Eisenhower that Ho, at least in 195^-j would have garnered 80 per cent of the vote, but also the privately expressed view of Livingston Merchant (Dept. of State) that Ho would be the likely winner. See the latter in Dept. of State Memorandum of Conversation of May 31, 195^-, at which Merchant report- edly "felt their /the Associated States v 7 status was sufficiently independent so that they could freely express their will on a point of this type, although he recognized the possibility that in Viet Nam Ho might win a plebiscite, if held today." (TOP SECRET). A-i+3 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive i i 17. Dillon priority tel. No. 118 from Paris, July 9, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 18. Dalles "eyes only" tel. NIACT 101 to Aldrich in London, July 7, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 19. Dulles priority tel. to Dillon in Paris No. 85, July 8, 195^- (TOP SECRET) . 20. Dulles to Dillon tel. No. 127, July 10, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 21. Dillon from Paris priority tel. No. 134, July 11, 195*1 (TOP SECPET) . 22. "Memorandum of Points Referred to in Paragraph 2 of the France - United States Position Paper," July l4, 1954 (SECRET). 23. Annex A to Dulles letter to Smith of July 16, 1954, signed July l4 by Dulles and Mendes-France (SECRET). 2k. Dulles priority tel. No. 179 from Paris, July lk, 1954 (SECRET). 25. Ibid. 26. Dulles letter to Smith, July l6, 1954 (TOP SECRET). 27. In a talk between Huang Hua (of the CPR delegation) and Seymour Topping of the New York Times , as reported in Smith's tel. SECTO 66l from Geneva, July 19, 1954 (TOP SECRET). 28. Dillon priority tel. No. 118 from Paris, July 9, 1954 (TOP SECRET). 29. This threat was transmitted through Seymour Topping by Huang Hua near the end of the conference. See Smith's tel. SECTO 639 from Geneva, July l8, 1954 (TOP SECRET). A-44 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 3 } CO ! TO o I— LA m rn O oo Tl CO z 2 to o Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. B. THE ROLE AKD OBLIGATIONS OF THE STATE OF VIETNAM SUMMARY One principal controversy over the Geneva Accords of 195^ stems from the view that Vietnam under the Bao Dai regime was actually still a French colony , and hence was obligated by the agreements reached by France at Geneva, Specifically, it is argued. Article 27 of the agreement signed by the French fixed responsibility for observance on the signatory govern- ments "and their successors." The answer to the charge that the State of Vietnam thereby became a guarantor of the Accords is partly a matter- of international law -- a contentious point of law, given the relatively new phenomenon of former colonial states assuming full sovereignty. But it is also a matter of fact and of declaratory policy. In fact, the GVN was an independent state before the Accords were signed, and was treated as a separate state throughout the conference. It signed nothing at Geneva. To the contrary, in its declarations it clearly repudiated the Accords, and declined to accept any responsibility for observing or en- forcing them. q The GVN had been given full independence from France on h June 195^> and was accepted as an equal by the other governments at Geneva. There- fore, the GVN was not automatically obligated by the July agreements between the Viet Minh and France. From the beginning of the conference, . the GVN interests clashed with French desires. The French wanted to end the Indochina fighting even if disengagement entailed serious concessions to the Viet Minh. Hard-line GVN counterproposals, running against the prevailing spirit of compromise, were rejected by both the communist powers and the West. The final wording of the agreement on the cessation of hostilities was drawn up as the French and the Viet Minh would have it. The U.S., intent on promoting some constructive outcome of the .conference, offered little support to the GVN. The U.S. did refuse to act on France's behalf to pressure the GVN, and did urge the French to be more receptive' to the GVN delegates. But since U.K. and French delegates were ready to make substantial accommodations with the communists to achieve a quick end to the fighting, and with little U.S. backing, the GVN negotiating position was foredoomed (Tab l) . France, the dominant Western power in the disputed area, and the Viet Minh were the designated executors of the Accords. Neither the armistice agreement nor other aspects of the settlement were practicable without DRV ajid French compliance. The GVN delegates at Geneva were emphatic in their repeated refusal to accept GVN responsibility for accords signed by France, especially with reference to partition and elections. No pre- cipitate withdrawal of French military and diplomatic power from Vietnam was foreseen, so that the Accords embodied the anomaly of ignoring the sovereign GVN, even with respect to enforcing the Accords on its territory (Tab 2). B-l TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive DISCUSSION III. Bo Tab 1 - GVN Status and Negotiating Position at Geneva Tab 2 - French and GVN Responsibilities after Geneva i r B-2 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 i Bl [ r I > Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. B. 1. GVN STATUS AND NEGOTIATING POSITION AT GENEVA TABLE OF CONTENTS and OUTLINE Page I 1. GVN is Independent Before Geneva b-5 a. Status of GVN Changes B-5 b . Talks Lead. Toward GVN Independence B-5 c . GVN Ind.epend.ent After h June 195^ B-6 • d. GVN and DRV Status at Geneva Differ B-6 2. GVN Unable to Forestall Partition B-7 a. GVN Requests Written Assurance Country Will Not be Partitioned B-7 b- France Assures GVN it Will Not Seek Partition B-8 c. DRV Admits Feasibility of Partition B-8 d. French Opposition to Partition Collapses ' B-9 3. GVN Refuses to Accept French Leadership ' B-9 a. Vietnamese are Stubborn and. Unyielding B-9 ■ b. GVN Consistently Opposes Partition , B-10 c. GVN not Informed of French-DRV Agreements B-ll d. Note to French Delegation Rejects Partition B-12 e. Vietnamese Register Opposition to Elections B-12 f . GVN Rejects Draft of Final Declaration B-13 3 g. GVN Presents Counter-Proposals B-13 h. GVN Unable to Influence Outcome B-l*4 J B-3 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive « k. U.S.-GVN Relations at Geneva a. U.S. Refuses to Influence GVN for France.... b. French Disregard. U.S. Requests, Remain Aloof from GVN c. U.S. Declines to Support Final GVN Position. Page B-15 B-15 B-15 B-l6 i \. ■ B-k TOP SECRET - Sensitive r i Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. B. 1. GVN STATUS AND NEGOTIATING POSITION AT GENEVA 1. GVN is Independent Before Geneva a. Status of GVN Changes The sovereign independence of Vietnam was a constant source of irritation and contention between France and the U.S. From the con- clusion of World War II until the Geneva Conference , Washington continu- ally urged Paris to follow the nationalist winds and establish an independent State of Vietnam. Coupled with pressures from Vietnamese nationalists, France did. move in this direction -- albeit as slowly as possible. In June, 19^-8, Bao Dai was persuad.ed. to become political leader of a "State of Vietnam/' incorporating Cochin China, Tonkin, and Annam, which would, be "independent .. .within the French Union." A treaty to this effect, the Elysee Agreements, was drawn up and approved by both sides in March, 19^-9? but was delayed In ratification by the French Assem- bly until 29 January 1950- There were a number of qualifications on the meaning of "independence" in the French Union, including complete free- . d.om of movement of French military forces throughout the countries of the Union and legal immunity for French enterprises on the territory of other Union nations. On 3 July ^-953* "the French were pressured into announcing plans to negotiate and redefine Franco-Vietnamese political relations. 'But it was not until March, 195^ that these negotiations be- gan, producing on 28 April a joint declaration recognizing what it called, "total independence" for Vietnam. Buttinger calls this "a shabby inde- pendence." The country became fully sovereign on 3 June 195*+ • It is important to remember that French procrastination, among other reasons, on setting the d.emand.s for full Vietnamese indepen- dence led. to hesitancy on the part of the U.S. to intervene militarily in support of the French. With all, the status of the Bao Dai government did begin to change prior to the conclusion of the Geneva Conference -- too late to figure in Franco-American deliberations about "united, action," but soon enough to make Vietnam an independent state before the Confer- ence agreed, to a settlement of the war. 1 b. Talks Lead. Toward GVN Independence Between July, 195 3> &nd. April, 195^* French and Vietnamese repre- sentatives had. a series of talks on ways to complete the independence of Vietnam promised in France 1 s 3 July 1953 declaration. On 8 March 195^? the final round, of talks began in Paris, and at a meeting on 28 April, agreement was reached, by a Franco-Vietnamese political committee on the text of separate treaties of independence and association, with the latter (consisting of seven articles) to be spelled out in subsequent conventions. Premier Laniel and Vice President Nguyen Trung Vinh signed, a common declara- tion that same day which specified that the treaties would, come into force B-5 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 633 16. By: NWD Date: 201 1 k. > TOP SECRET - Sensitive upon ratification by the two governments. But, the ratification -process was delayed, for over a month. The U.S. Mission in Saigon was clearly annoyed that the long-awaited break in the Franco-Vietnamese deadlock did not lead immediately to ratification. The Mission speculated that the French were delaying to keep a free hand, at Geneva by making no commitments on Vietnam until the outcome of the conference could be known. The Mission noted that in so doing, the French were only feeding the doubts and suspi- cions of the Vietnamese about future French intentions toward. Indochina. 1/ Washington, for its part, refused to consider the 28 April initialling j of agreements as satisfying its pre-condition on complete Vietnamese in- I dependence. 2/ c. GVN Independent After h June 195^ * Not until k June, did the French National Assembly finally ratify the two treaties. 3/ By the Treaty of Independence, Vietnam was recognized "as a fully independent and sovereign State invested with all the competence recognized by international law." Vietnam agreed to re- place France "in all the rights and. obligations resulting from interna- tional treaties or conventions contracted by France on behalf or on account of the State of Vietnam or of any other treaties or conventions concluded. • by France on behalf of French Indochina insofar as those acts concern Vietnam." In other words, the GVN assumed, responsibility for all agree- ments executed prior to ratification of the independence treaty. Under the accompanying Treaty of Association, Vietnam's status as an equal in the French Union was acknowledged, for the first time, and with it the right (subsequently re-confirmed) to determine its extent of participa- tion in the Union. The State of Vietnam was, therefore, a fully indepen- dent entity by k June 195^- • France's international obligations in or for Vietnam as of that date were freely taken over by the GVN. This was ; in contrast, it might be added, to the DRV's abrogation of agreements concluded in Vietnam's behalf by France when Ho's regime took power on 2 September 19^5- k/ / d. GVN and DRV Status at Geneva Differ ■ 9 The final communique of the Berlin Conference (18 February 195*0 specified, that the Indochina phase of the Geneva deliberations would be attended by the United. States, Great Britain, Communist China, the Soviet Union, France, "and. other states concerned." Invitations to participants, it was further agreed, would, be issued only by the Berlin conferees (U.S., UK, USSR, and France). There had been some doubt as to the status of the DRV at the upcoming Indochina convention, but subsequent talks between Molotov and Bidault in April clarified, the position of the DRV. 5/ Although the WN was still considered a rebel group by the West, rather than an interested State, admission of the Viet Minh to the conference was never a serious problem. As one of the principal combatants whose consent to a cease-fire was considered indispensable, the Viet Minh could, hardly be B-6 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive ignored. Moreover, the Soviet Union indicated, to the French that it would, not accept the presence of delegates from the Associated. States unless the DRV were admitted to the conference. 6/ The principal Western objection concerning the DRV was that the invitation had. been tendered to the Viet Minh not only by the Soviet Union but also by Communist China, a move admitted, by Molotov at the first plenary session on 8 May and. protested by France and. the United States, jj Word of the DRV's admission naturally angered, the Bao Dai government. When informed, of Franco-Soviet Agreement on the DRV's admission, the Bao Dai government d.ecid.ed that Vietnam would, go to the conference only upon invitation of the Western Big Three -- that is, only if the SVN status differed, from that of the DRV. On 2 May the invitations arrived, with the Soviets being informed that GVN participation would in no way confer d.e jure recognition on the DRV. 8/ Although the Bao Dai govern- ment could not bar the DRV from the conference table, it did not accord Ho's regime anything more than the status of a belligerent. There was, then, a distinction between the status of the DRV and the GVN at the Geneva Conference. Whereas all the major powers implicitly or explicitly recognized the full status of the GVN as a state, the Western powers conceded only belligerent status for the DRV/Viet Minh. In practice, however, the Viet Minh were much more a part of the negotiat- ing process, particularly as regards military arrangements. The GVN, in its own right, pursued, a consistent public line, emphasizing its independence and. its hope for the continued, political unity of Vietnam -- under Bao Dai. 2. GVN Unable to Forestall Partition a. GVN Requests Written Assurance Country Will Not be Partitioned. At the time the Conference began, the State of Vietnam was concerned, and suspicious about the possibilities of a partitioning of the country. Mindful of past instances of partition in Korea and Germany, and deeply in doubt of French willingness to stand firm against Viet Minh territorial claims, the GVN urged, the French government to give written assurance that Paris would 'not seek a division of Vietnam. On 25 April, Bao. Dai had. served notice on the French that his government would, not tolerate partition. GVN representatives in Paris issued, a communique in the name of Bao Dai's cabinet which noted various plans in the air for a partition of Vietnam. The communique stated that a partition "would. be in defiance of Vietnamese national sentiment which has asserted, itself with so much strength for the unity as well as for the ind.epend.ence of its country. Neither the Chief of State nor the national government of Viet- nam admit that the unity of the country can be severed legally..." In calling for French assurances that they would not negotiate a sacrifice of Vietnamese interests with the "rebels," the communique implied, that the Vietnamese government would not sign the April treaties until such assurances were received. And, the GVN cabinet warned that a compromis- ing agreement would, never receive Vietnam's approval: B-7 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 ! . TOP SECRET - Sensitive "...neither the Chief of State, nor the Vietnamese Government, will consider themselves as bound by decisions running counter to the interests, i.e., independence and unity, of their country that would, at the same time, violate the rights of the peoples and offer a reward to aggression in opposition to the principles of the Charter of the United Nations and democratic ideals." ^J b . France Assures GVN it Will Ifot Seek Partition I In response to this clear-cut statement, the French came forward with both oral and written promises. On 3 May, Maurice Dejean, the Commissioner General for Indochina, said, in Saigon: "The French government does not intend to seek a settlement of the Indochina problem on the basis of a partition of Vietnamese territory. . .Formal assurances were given on this subject last April 25 by the French minister for foreign affairs to the minis- ter for foreign affairs of Vietnam, and they were confirmed to j him on May 1." 10/ Written assurance came from Bidault on 6 May, when he wrote Bao Dai that the task of the French government was to establish peace in Indochina, not "to seek here /at Geneva/ a definitive political solution." Therefore, the French goal would be, said Bidault, to obtain a cease-fire with guaran- tees for the Associated States, hopefully with general elections in the future. Bidault continued: "As of now, I am however in a position to confirm to Your ] Majesty that nothing would be more contrary to the intentions J of the French government than to prepare for the establishment, at the expense of the unity of Vietnam, of two states having each an international calling ( vocation )." 11/ c. DRV Admits Feasibility of Partition 1 In their talks with the Viet Minh, however, the French found. their adversary as stubborn at the bargaining table as on the battlefield. The negotiations during most of May made insignificant progress; but toward . the end of the month, the Viet Minh made their first major concession when they strongly hinted that, given the right conditions, they might lift their demand for a united Vietnam. This, it can be speculated, was seen by Paris as a way of getting itself off the hook. While it may have been unacceptable to negotiate all of Vietnam away, half of Vietnam could be sold to the U.S. as a realistic compromise. On May 24, Hoang Van Hoan, DRV Ambassador to Peking and. spokes- man of the DRV delegation, informed, a special envoy of the French newspaper Le Monde (Jean Schwoebel) that a military settlement through a cease-fire B-8 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 •. TOP SECRET - Sensitive need, not, as the Viet Minh had. previously insisted., be preceded, by a political settlement. Hoan reportedly stated: "it is first necessary to have a cease-fire. We do not pose a single prior political condition. If, in the plan of M. Dong, political proposals precede those which con- cern the cease-fire, it is solely a question of presentation..." 12/ Hoang Van Hoan's statement was confirmed, the next day when Pham Van Dong, speaking at the sixth restricted, session, referred, for the first time to territory under Viet Minh control. Dong T s proposals included specific reference to areas under the control of each Vietnamese state; in regroup- ing forces of the two sides, he suggested, that territorial readjustments also be made so that each side would, be able to have complete economic and. administrative, as well as military, control. So as not to be mis- understood, Dong further urged, that a line of demarcation be drawn that would, be topographically suitable and. appropriate . for transportation and. communication within each state. 13/ Thus, quite contrary to French and. Vietnamese expectations, the Viet Minh had. opened, the way toward parti- tion, and. appeared, willing to contemplate the creation, albeit temporary, of separate zones of political control. d. French Opposition to Partition Collapses French support of GVN opposition to partition, which Bidault upheld privately to Smith and. Eden at Geneva, lk/ collapsed once the new government of Pierre Mend.es -France took over in mid-June. Mendes- France, keenly aware of the tenoi: of French public anti-war opinion, was far more disposed, than his predecessor to make every effort toward achiev- ing a reasonable settlement, and he quickly foresaw that agreement with the Viet Minh was unlikely unless he accepted the concept of partition. His delegate at Geneva, Jean Chauvel, and. the new Commissioner General for Indochina, General Paul Ely, reached the same conclusion. 15/ At a high-level meeting in Paris on 2h June, the new govern- ment thoroughly revised the French negotiating position. The objectives i for subsequent talks, it was d.ecid.ed, would be: (l) the regroupment of ' forces of both sides and. their separation by a line at about the l8th parallel; 16/ (2) the establishment of enclaves under neutral control i in the two zones, one for the French in the area of the Catholic bishoprics at Phat Diem and Bui Chu, one for the Viet Minh at an area to be deter- mined; (3) the maintenance of Haiphong in French hand.s in order to assist in the regroupment. At this same meeting, it was also decided that, for the purpose of psychological pressure on the Viet Minh, if not military preparedness for future contingencies, France should announce plans to, send, a contingent of conscripts (later determined as two divisions) to Indochina. 17/ ' 3. GVN Refuses to Accept French Leadership a. - Vietnamese are Stubborn and. Unyielding The State of Vietnam delegation at Geneva was determined Bf to be intimidated neither by the DRV and its communist allies, nor by the B-9 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Western powers. The GVN representatives continually referred to their sense of responsibility to the Vietnamese people and to national aspira- tions for unity and freedom. The obvious dependence of the GVN on the military power of the West was not mirrored by an accompanying political spirit of accommodation: the GVN attitude at Geneva must be characterized as stubborn, unyielding, and idealistic. The GVN was the one nation at Geneva that remained completely unmoved by the spirit of compromise. b. GVN Consistently Oj)-poses Partition The attitude of GVN toward the Geneva Settlement was the product not only of its non-recognition of the DRV, but also of its hostility to partition and its opposition to national elections held in a divided country. Evidently quite independent of American instigation or pressure, the Saigon government concluded well in advance of the Conference termina- tion on 21 July that it could not accept what it regarded as a set of agreements contracted in defiance of Vietnamese aspirations and without GVN consent. Nguyen Quoc Dinh, speaking for the GVN in the third plenary session (12 May) at Geneva, first read into the record in detail the new [ treaty guaranteeing GVN independence, then laid down his country T s unyield- l ing opposition to any agreement' which would tend to split the country either .geographically or politically. Any document tabled for consideration, said Quoc Dinh, "Must not lead to partition, either direct or indirect, final or provisional, de facto or de jure, of the national territory." Free elections can be held, he asserted, "as soon as the /}JNj Security Council has decided that the authority of the State has been established in the whole of the territory, and that conditions of freedom have been obtained." 18/ In the fifth restricted session, on 2k May, Quoc Dinh again stressed the GVN's total independence from France: • "...the problem of the independence of Vietnam dominates all events in Indochina whether considered from the point of view of the independence which the state of Vietnam /has/ secured as a result of negotiations with France, or from that of the in- dependence which Vietnam must defend from all foreign invaders." 19/ On the following day, Quoc Dinh repeated, in the Sixth Restricted Session, that the GVN "would not agree to any plan which would result in the partition of Vietnam." Any partition, he said., would, incur "the grave danger one would gradually move down a path which would, lead to what his people feared most." 20/ On the 27th of May, Quoc Dinh once again spoke on partition. He reminded the other delegates that the GVN had finally achieved, independence, the first of its aspirations. The second, aspira- tion, also achieved, was territorial integrity. The GVN could, not now accept partition "without betraying its own people": "With reference to Vietnam, the Vietnam delegation wished to warn the conference against any measures tend- ing to divide the national territory. If a division B-10 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive of Vietnam were to be sanctioned, the result would not be peace but only a pause before fresh hostilities... Partition would therefore mean sooner or later — probably sooner -- a renewal of war." 2l/ On 29 May, speaking in rebuttal to the DRV delegation, Quoc Dinh stated, "it is impossible for a people to accept of its own free will a mutilation of its country. . .No Vietnamese patriot could accept partition This marked the fourth successive meeting in which the GVN delegate empha- sized his country's point of view on partition, elections, or both subjects. This emphatic repetition continued. In the Seventh Plenary Session, on 10' June, speaking of a statement made by Molotov, Quoc Dinh accused the USSR of laboring .under certain misunderstandings of the GVN and, for the ! fifth time since tabling his proposals, he repeated the DRV position: r TT "I noted in his statement. . .what I suppose was a mistake of inadvertent omission. He said that only the Viet Minh delegation had proposed that a free general election should take place in Viet- nam. I'm sorry that I must contradict. The Dele- gation of the State of Vietnam also had the honor to propose such elections; the difference being that, whereas the Delegation of Viet Minh proposed that there should be no international supervision which, in the present circumstances, means that elections could not possibly be honest and true, • the Delegation of the State of Vietnam has proposed that elections should take place under international supervision." 22/ • Quoc Dinh then reasserted the complete independence of GVN from France, referring to the treaty of h June 195^ • A week later, the Vietnamese delegate was again pushing his case on the floor of the conference: "As regards the independence of our country, it is a well-known fact that we have indicated the contents of two treaties we had with the French on that. . .As regards the elections, we ourselves, in our proposal of May 12, have taken the initiative of proposing elections in Vietnam. These elections must be free, sincere, and supervised. The best control would be exercised by the UN." 23/ The GVN insistence on territorial integrity and on elections only after full control was pressed with great energy -- almost with vehemence -- up to the very last moment of the Geneva Conference. c. GVN not Informed of French- DRV Agreements The evidence suggests that it was not until sometime in early July that the Bao Dai government learned of France's readiness to parti- tion the country, given an acceptable demarcation line. According to a B-ll TOP SECRET - Sensitive r : i Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive CIA source, based upon the report of a nationalist southern Vietnamese ' with "extensive" political contacts , Diem was greatly troubled in early July over France's apparent inclination to abandon the North rather than • seek to retain a foothold there. 2k/ Diem was said to be convinced that partition would be suicidal, since it would put an end to active anti- Viet Minh resistance. Moreover, Diem was convinced that the French intended to maintain a hold on the South only through manipulating independent irregular forces, such as the armed sects to whom the French allegedly r - were providing rifles. d. Note to French Delegation Rejects Partition GVN anger at hints of a possible French sellout on the parti- tion issue was reflected in a note handed the French delegation (and, with- out France's knowledge, to the U.S. delegation also) by Nguyen Huu Chau of the Vietnamese delegation on 17 July 195^ • The note maintained, that not until 16 July did Vietnam learn that at the very time the French High Command had. ordered the evacuation of troops from important areas in the Tonkin Delta, the French had also "accepted abandoning to the Viet Minh all of that part situated north of the eighteenth parallel and that the delegation of the Viet Minh might claim an even more advantageous demarca- tion line." The Vietnamese delegation protested against having been left "in complete ignorance" of French proposals, which were said, not to "take any account of the unanimous will for national unity of the Vietnamese people." Disparaging the regroupment plan and the "precarious" nature of the cease-fire being considered, the note again urged that a cease-fire be accompanied by the disarmament of "all the belligerent forces in Viet- nam." This would be followed by provisional United Nations control of all Vietnam "pending the complete re-establishment of security, . of order and of peace. . .which will permit the Vietnamese people to decide their destiny by free- elections." UN control of a unified. Vietnam, the note stated, was preferable to "its maintenance in power in a country dismem- bered and condemned to slavery." 25/ e. Vietnamese Register Opposition to Elections The long-standing GVN hostility to partition, expressed well in advance of final agreement to that arrangement, was paralleled by a wariness of a national plebescite on unification. In June, 195^ > the Saigon Mission cabled Washington that a national election: ".;.to which Department quite rightly attaches importance. . .is now of less significance in Vietnam than before owing to general feeling of panic and anxiety lest entire country be lost through unfortu- nate armistice terms. Press has announced, that de- crees will presently be signed by Bao Dai providing for municipal elections and, with exception of Saigon- Cholon, for direct election of mayors. This should B-12 TOP SECRET - Sensitive I Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive to some extent meet Department's requirement in this regard although it is far less than national elections or preparations for National Constitu- ent Assembly." 2( c The GVN protest note to the French of 17 July asserted, that a cease-fire without disarmament was incompatible with a plebiscite. They held, further that the regroupment of the armed, forces of the bellig- erents into separate north-south zones compromised, in advance the freedom of any future elections. Moreover, in the GVN view, elections could, be con- sidered, only after internal security and. peace had. been re-established., thereby excluding a set time-frame. 2jJ In short, the GVN argued, strongly against any scheduled, post-settlement national election, and. warned, that a plebiscite to determine a government for a unified. Vietnam could, hardly , be envisaged with the northern zone controlled by communist armed forces. f . GVN Rejects Draft of Final Declaration On 18 July, GVN, in a conference session, Foreign Minister Tran Van Do spoke out against the draft Final Declaration of the Confer- ence which had. been circulated among the delegations. He said that Viet- nam could not associate itself with the declaration, and pointed in [ particular to the conditions for a cease-fire, which stipulated a division J of the country, and. to Vietnam's lack of an opportunity to present its own proposals. Tran Van Do requested, the right to offer Vietnam's own * draft declaration at another plenary session. 28/ g. GVN Presents Counter-Proposals The next day, 19 July, the Vietnamese delegation offered, its ' proposals, an elaboration of the ideas contained, in the note to the French delegation. The proposal warned that the French, Soviet, and Viet Mihh drafts all spoke of a provisional partition, whereas the inevitable result would, in fact be "to produce in Vietnam the same effects as in Germany, Austria, and Korea." The proposal went on: "it would, not bring the peace which is sought for, deeply wounding the national sentiment of the Vietnamese people; it would, provoke trouble throughout the country, trouble which would not fail to threaten a peace so dearly acquired." The delegation then re- newed, its plan for a cease-fire in small regroupment zones; the disarming of irregular troops and, after a fixed period, of all Viet Minh troops; the withdrawal of foreign troops simultaneous with disarmament of the Viet Minh; and UN control of the cease-fire, the regroupment, the disarmament and withdrawal, the elections which would follow the restoration of order, and national administration. 29/ Tran Van Do's proposal did. not receive consideration at the final plenary session of the Geneva Conference on 21 July. 30/ The dele- gation head protested this as well as the "hasty conclusion of the Armis- • tice Agreement by the French and. Viet Minh High Commanders only..." Furthermore, Tran Van Do protested, the abandonment of national territory B-13 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 C ! I . TOP SECRET - Sensitive to the Viet Minh even though still occupied by Vietnamese troops, and the setting up of a date for national elections by a military command without Vietnamese agreement. He concluded: "...the Government of the State of Vietnam wishes the Conference to take note of the fact that it reserves its full freedom of action in order to safeguard the sacred right of the Vietnamese people to its territorial unity, national inde- pendence, and freedom." After other delegation leaders had indicated con- sent to the military agreement on the Cessation of Hostilities and Final Declaration, Tran Van Do spoke again. He requested the Conference to incor- porate in the Declaration the following text: "The Conference takes note of the Declaration of the Government of the State of Vietnam undertaking: to make and support every effort to re-establish a real and lasting peace in Vietnam; not to use force to re- sist the procedures for carrying the cease-fire into effect, in spite of the objections and reservations that the State of Vietnam has expressed, especially in its final statement." 31/ Tran Van Do's final effort was dismissed by Eden (as chairman), who urged. that, the Final Declaration having already been printed., the conferees take note of Do's statement. Nevertheless, Do ! s comments then and. previ- ously clearly established, his government's opposition to the Geneva Accords. That the Cessation of Hostilities Agreement was signed by the French and Viet Mirth military commands, the main belligerents, accommodated the fact that the GVN did not recognize the political existence of the DRV. The French, correctly anticipating adverse reactions from the GVN, avoided seek- ing GVN official consent to the armistice. The French also knew that the GVN would never accede to a partition arrangement, and formal approval | • of the armistice by the military commands removed, the possibility of GVN obstruction of a cease-fire. h. GV^ Unable to Influence Outcome The French had good, reason for avoiding communication with the Vietnamese during the last days of the Geneva Conference: scheduled elections were prominent among the concessions that France had to make in order to obtain a settlement at all; and the reunification of Vietnam was deferred, by the device of the promised plebiscite. As the Conference drew to a close, and time was running out for the French, they traded on the Viet Mi.nh desire for the future "integrity of the Vietnam state" in order to salvage what they could from their own tottering situation. The French finally agreed to Vietnam-wide elections within two years. As in the partition agreements, the GVN was not able to influence that decision to any appreciable degree. In the larger sense, GVN aspirations were sacri' ficed to the position of France versus its Communist antagonist. Each' side was determined not to allow all of Vietnam to fall into the hands of the other. France agreed to elections, knowing -- as the USSR and. China also knew -- that elections might never be held. 32/ B-l4 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 f 1 i I TOP SECRET - Sensitive k. U.S. -GYN Relations at Geneva a. U.S. Refuses to Influence GVN for France French readiness to accept a divided Vietnam --a disposition which before the end. of June culminated in abandonment of the enclave alter' native in favor of a north-south partition -- was not communicated, to the ' GVN. To the contrary, then and throughout the conference, the GVN dele- gation and government were informed of shifts in position, if at all, as faits accomplis . During June, for instance, Chauvel on several occasions approached, the U.S. with news of the "underground" negotiations with the Viet Minh and. with the hope that, once partition had. been fixed, the U.S. would, "sell" that solution to Saigon. 33/ In the same month, Chauvel, evincing understanding that the U.S. would, prefer to disassociate itself from a partition settlement, nevertheless asked, if the U.S. would, soften Bao Dai opposition by indicating it was the best solution obtainable. • Chauvel described Diem and. Buu Loc as "difficult," unrealistic, and. un- reasonable in their opposition, and likely to upset the delicate negotia- tions. 3^4/ The U.S. consistently reacted, negatively to these approaches, in the undoubtedly correct belief that the French were merely attempting to identify the U.S. with the partition concept in Vietnamese eyes. For example, Secretary Dulles instructed, the U.S. Ambassador on 2 July concern- ing Diem as follows: "it seems to me that the new Vietnamese Prime Minister, Ngo Dinh Diem, who has the reputation of uncompromising nationalist, is quite in the dark about developments critically affecting country he is trying . to lead. We fear that if results of French negotiations with communists are revealed, to him as a fait accompli , the very reaction French wish to avoid will result. You should, therefore indicate our concern to the French and ascertain their own intentions with respect to con- sulting him or minimizing his resentment and. their views with respect to plans and. prospects for maintaining order in South Vietnam." 35/ By refusing to act as intermediaries for the French, the U.S. in turn kept free of entanglement in a "French solution" to the Vietnam problem. b. French Disregard. U.S. Requests, Remain Aloof from GVN French aloofness from the GW continued, into July. Despite U.S. requests of the French delegation that the GVN be kept informed of developments, the French remained, wary of contact for fear of provoking a GVN reaction that, in turn, might fracture the delicate French discus- sions with the Viet Minh. Chauvel consequently informed. U. Alexis Johnson that "he was handling this /liaison with the GVN/ through members of his staff and was avoiding direct contact with Vietnamese in order not to have to answer their questions." 36/ When Offroy, another member of the French B-15 TOP SECRET - Sensitive i Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive delegation, suggested that the U.S. placate the Vietnamese with assurance of free world political, economic, and military support after the settle- ment, U. Alexis Johnson replied that this was a matter which the French had to handle. 37/ c# U.S. Declines to Support Final GVN Position When the penultimate session of the Conference recessed, Tran Van Do and another member of his delegation, Tran Van Chuong, explained Vietnam's position to U. Alexis Johnson. Even though they admitted, that they recognized the impracticality of the GVN proposals , the GVN delegation felt that "they must make the moral position of their government clear to the world, and to the Vietnamese people. If the other sid.e rejected it, the position of their government would have been improved." U. Alexis Johnson observed that time was short for another plenary session; he suggested that they ask Mend.es -France for an extension of his self-imposed, deadline for concluding the negotiations. After some hesitation, they did so, and Mend.es -France, although he urged the Vietnamese to circulate their proposal, stated he definitely could not ask the French National Assembly for more time at Geneva. Johnson at this point "reminded. Mend.es-France of the U.S. posi- ' tion on GVN concurrence with any agreement. • Mend.es -France /said/ he was very conscious of this and. was asking De Jean /sic/ immediately to go to Cannes to see Bao Dai." 38/ Nothing came of this exchange. In summary, however, it must be said, that while the GVN attained, none of its major objectives, and. while it received little support from the U.S., it continued to exist. Its territorial and political integrity J below the 17th parallel was assured, after a fashion, for at least two years by the Geneva Accord.s. B-16 TOP SECRET - Sensitive . . K Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. B. 1. FOOTNOTES 1. McClintock from Saigon tel. No. 502, May 4, 195^ (SECRET). 2. Dulles to Paris tel. No. ^398* June k, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 3. The treaties are published, in U.S. VerbMin/3 (May 12), pp. 99-101. k. See the DEV's Declaration of Independence, in Ho Chi Minh, Selected- Works (Hanoi: Foreign Languages Publishing House, 196l), III, 20. 5. Memorandum from Heath to Dulles and. Smith: "The Indochina Phase of the Conference," May 1, I95U (SECRET). 6. Lacouture and Devillers, p. 122. 7. The U.S. objection was based, on long-standing opposition to any move that would, accord. China the status of a major power equivalent to the fifth member of a "Big Five." See, e.g., Dulles to American Embassy - Canberra tel. No. I58, April 1, I95U (TOP SECRET). 8. Lacouture and. Devillers, pp. 122-23. 9. G. McMurtrie Godley (First Secretary) from Paris tel. No. 2757, April 29, 195*4- (UNC). 10. Lacouture and. Devillers, p. 123 5 n. 3* 11. Ibid . , pp. 123-24. 12. Ibid . , p. I87. 13. U.S. VerbMin/lC Restricted 6, p. 7 (CONFIDENTIAL). Ik. Smith from Geneva tel. SECT0 217, May 15, I95I+ (SECRET). 15. Lacouture and. Devillers, p. 23*4-. 16. French insistence on the l8th parallel originated, in the recommendation of General Navarre, who was asked, several questions by the French dele- gation at Geneva regarding the likely impact of the then-existing mili- tary situation on the French negotiatory position. Navarre's responses were sent April 21. On the demarcation line, Navarre said, that the l8th parallel would leave "us" the ancient political capitol of Hue and Tourane (Da Nang), and. permit the retention of militarily valuable terrain. See General Ely's Memoires: 1 T Indochina dans la Tourmente (Paris: Plan, 1964), p. 112, and Lacouture and. Devillers, p. 126. 17. Ibid.., pp. 235-36. B-17 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 633 16. By: NWD Date: 201 1 ... ■ TOP SECRET - Sensitive 18. U.S. VerbMin/3, pp. 10U, 105. 19. I.C. Restricted/5, p. 16 (C). Records of the Restricted Sessions are summaries rather than word.- for -word, quotations, for the most part. 20. I.C. Restricted/6, p. 16 (c). 21. I.C. Restricted/7, p. 13 (c). 22. U.S. VerbMin/7, p. 3kk. 23." I.C. Restricted/l^, p. 26 (c). 2k. CIA Report CS-U2198, July lk, 195^ from Saigon (SECRET)- Lacouture and. Devillers hold that Diem was stupefied when he learned of partition for the first time from Ambassador Heath via a personal letter from Eisenhower, July 12 (pp. 256-57)- 25. Reported, in Smith's priority tel. SECTO 633 from Geneva, July 17, 195*1 (SECRET). 26. McClintock from Saigon tel. No. 2656, June k, 195*+ (TOP SECRET). 27. Smith from Geneva priority tel. SECTO 633, July 17, I95I4 (SECRET). 28. Smith from Geneva priority tel. SECTO 65^, July 18, 195^ (COMFIDEHTIAL)j Smith from Geneva tel. SECTO 655, July 18, 195^ (SECRET). 29. Smith from Geneva priority tel. SECTO 673, July 19, 195I* (SECRET). .30. U.S. VerbMin/8, pp. 3^7-^8. 31. Ibid . , p. 355. 32. Hans Morgenthau, "The 195^ Geneva Conference: An Assessment/ 1 in A Symposium on America's Stake in Vietnam , Wew York: American Friends of Vietnam, 1956, pp. 6U-70. 33. Dulles to Smith at Geneva priority tel. TEDUC 212, June 17, 195!* (TOP SECRET). 3^. Smith from Geneva priority DULTE 195, June 18, 195 1 ! (SECRET). In. an aide-memoire delivered, by Henri Bonnet, the French ambassador to Washing- ton, to Dulles and Eden on June 26, the French government urged the U.S. not to encourage an adverse Vietnamese reaction to partition. The U.S. was also asked "to intervene with the Vietnamese to counsel upon them wisdom and self-control and. to dissuade them from refusing an agreement which, if it is reached, is dictated not by the spirit of abandoning them, but on the contrary by the desire to save in Indochina all that can possibly be saved, and. to give the Vietnamese B-18 TOP SECRET - Sensitive ■ Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive state , under peaceful conditions, opportunities which have not always been possible heretofore because of the war." See Dulles' tel. No. 4852 to American Embassy - Paris, June 28, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 35. AmEmbassy Paris 39? July 2, I95I1- (TOP SECRET). 36. Johnson from Geneva priority tel. SECTO 56O, July 6, 195^- (TOP SECRET) 37. Johnson from Geneva priority tel. SECTO 57^^ July 8, l^k (SECRET). 38. Smith from Geneva tel. SECTO 655? July 18, I95U (SECRET). B-19 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 ) o VJ ' { r t c ■ \ Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. B. 2. FRENCH AND GW RESPONSIBILITIES AFTER GENEVA TABLE OF CONTENTS AND OUTLINE Page 1. French Presence Does Not Imply French Sovereignty. » B-21 { 2. France Is The Executor Of The Geneva Agreements B-21 a. GVN Does Not Inherit French Responsibilities B-21 b . GVN Position is Anomalous B-27 * B-20 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. B. 2. French and. GVN Responsibilities After Geneva 1. French Presence Does Not Imply French Sovereignty The fact that French Union forces were still in Vietnam at the time the Geneva military agreements were signed, and. that they remained there during and. after the Conference, need, not be interpreted, as evi- dence of lack of Vietnamese sovereignty. French Union forces could, hardly have left the country immediately without surrendering all Vietnam to the communists, and. without inviting the slaughter of the Vietnamese National Army. French officers and. noncommissioned, officers led. the latter troops. Clearly, . only a gradual withdrawal of the French Expedi- tionary Corps was reasonable in view of the prevailing military situation. The GVN accepted, these realities and. recognized, the need, for continued. French presence. The French government, in granting the GVN ind.epend.ence had. agreed, that the Expeditionary Corps would, be pulled out of Vietnam at the request of the GVN — although no doubt it hoped, to delay that day. In fact, the French moved, swiftly after Geneva, und.er American urging, to relinquish to the GVN the full trappings of the sovereignty granted. •in June, 195^- • By mid- September, the turning over of the civil service, police, and. other public administration in South Vietnam was formally com- pleted. By February, 1955 > the Vietnamese Army was placed, under the com- mand, of Vietnamese lead.ers, and the French accepted American primacy in advising, training, and equipping GVN armed forces. 2. France Is The Executor Of The Geneva Agreements a. GY^ Does Not Inherit French Responsibilities Article 27 of the Armistice agreements signed, by France . states in part: "The signatories of the present Agreement and. their successors in their functions shall be responsible for ensuring and observance and enforcement of the terms and. provisions thereof..." That clause seemed to obligate the State of Vietnam in the event France ■ abrogated its responsibilities — but even if construed, thusly, the obli- gation extended only to "the present /militar^ Agreement," and not to the political provisions included in the unsigned Final Declaration. It is also possible to construe the reference to "successors" as a bind.er on the procession of French governments likely to follow Mend.es -France. In any event, the State of Vietnam explicitly d.enied responsibility for all the agreements concluded, by France at Geneva, although it pledged not to interfere with the cease-fire, l/ The declarations of Vietnamese disavowal were early, repeated and specific. Moreover, these declarations included warnings that the partition and. elections provided for by the Geneva Conference would lead, to renewed violence. Examples of these statements follow: B-21 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 f r Note Date 2 12 May 5h 25 May 5k k 27 May $k . . 29 May $k A ' 6 10 Jun 5h TOP SECRET - Sensitive Geneva Conference Declarations of GVN On Partition On Elections Geneva Conference "must not lead to partition, either direct or indirect, final or provisional, de facto or de jure, of the national territory." State of Vietnam "would not agree to any plan which would result in the partition of Vietnam." Parti- tion involved "grave danger." "...The Vietnam delegation wished • to warn the Conference against measures tending to divide the national territory. If a division of Vietnam were to be sanctioned, the result would not be peace, but a pause before fresh hostilities: There was no example of a country torn physically apart which had not endeavored to recover its -unity and its historic frontiers. Partition would therefore mean sooner or later -- probably sooner -- a re- newal of war." "We do believe that there are cer- tain principles which should guide us. Among these principles is the political and territorial integrity of the Vietnamese country. When it was agreed that representatives of Vietnam should attend this confer- ence, it is obvious that one could not ignore the consequences of this attendance. It is impossible for a people to accept of its own free will a mutilation of its country... No Vietnamese patriot could accept partition o" fT Elections can be held "as soon as the JmJ Security Council has decided that the authority of the State has been established in the whole of the territory, and that conditions of freedom have been obtained. IT "The delegation of the State of Vietnam. . .had the honor to pro- pose. . .elections; . . .whereas the Delegation of Viet Minh proposed that there should be no inter- national supervision which, in B-22 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive r Note Date 6 (Continued) . 7 16 Jun 5^ 8 17 Jul 5h 9 18 Jul ■ »■»■■ The speech by Chou En-lai at this meeting seemed to support the DRV view, although it was more mildly stated. In retrospect, however, it appears that this meeting marked a turning point, at least for the DRV on their insistence for including the Pathet Lao and Free Khmer in a settlement. Chou's proposals, contrary to Pham Van Dong's, implied the withdrawal of Viet Minh forces from Laos and Cambodia and also suggested the postponement of a political settlement for those two states: "I have stated, on several occasions at this conference, that the situations in the three states are not completely alike. That is to say, that the situation in Vietnam is not completely the same as that in Laos, while the situation in Laos is not completely the same as that in Cambodia. Therefore, the concrete situations in Laos and Cambodia should be taken into consideration in working out solutions for the problems of these two countries." 13/ Two days later, Pham Van Dong, in the fifteenth restricted session, announced the decisive termination of efforts to include all of Indochina in the political agreement: "..•I would like to say there have been Vietnam volunteers which fought on the side of the resistance elements of Laos and Khmer. They have been withdrawn. Today if there are such forces they will be withdrawn," 14/ e. The DRV Reluctantly Accepts Partition . In its early proposals, the DRV did not recognize the possi- bility of partition, aiming instead at a unification of all Vietnam. In conjunction with their demands for immediate elections, this was calcu- lated to give them control of the whole country. Lacking support from I C-10 TOP SECRET - Sensitive . . Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 ; TOP SECRET - Sensitive Peking and Moscow, the DRV was forced to give in on this point. Molotov, on 17 May, opened the door by agreeing that military solutions should precede political solutions, and Eden, on 25 May, moved to include on the agenda the question of "regrouping areas for Vietnam." Pham Van Dong, in reply, accepted this concept of including a demarcation line and made the following points: ' • 1. There should be a recognition of the principles of readjusting the areas under control of each state; 2. -Readjustment would mean an exchange of territory taking into account actual areas controlled including population and strategic interests; 3. Each side would get territory in one piece to include complete control of the area both economic and administrative; k. A line of demarcation should be established following the topographical line of territory so that it is easy to follow and would make transportation and communications possible within each state. 15/ The subsequent discussions of a cease-fire and partition were stymied initially by the DRV demand for a demarcation line at the 13th parallel. After two weeks, by l6 June, the DRV reduced this demand to "all of Tonkin and the entire delta area." The French, "without agreeing," said if such an arrangement were made, they "would demand a free hand in the South, indicating area south of the line starting approximately l8th parallel..." 16/ Discussions continued through the rest of June. The French Ambassador, Bonnet, commented on 28 June that the Viet Minh dis- position to negotiate arose, in the French opinion, from a fear that the conflict might expand to include the U.S.; 17 / in other words, the DRV had come around to the view of China and the USSR. From this time on, the French increasingly threatened the DRV with the possibility of U.S. intervention, even though, ironically enough, the U.S. was moving further away from such a position: "Chauvel reports that he spoke most firmly to Dong regarding military discussions. He said French have accepted Viet Minh proposal that Viet Minh receive Tonkin area, including Capitol, but that further Viet Minh proposal for demarcation line is un- acceptable. Chauvel reiterated in strongest terms fact that French proposal for demarcation line just north of Dong Hoi would be acceptable to conference and would thus eliminate danger of extension of war." 18/ By 6 July, Pham Van Dong was almost willing to accept the 17th parallel. His attitude indicated that he, personally, was ready to compromise and that he felt his government was coming around: "Chauvel had seen Dong this morning. On question of demarcation lines, Dong again referred to status of popu- C-ll TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive lations sympathizing with Viet Minh who would be left south of demarcation line proposed by French. He said this ques- tion would be easier for him if he could get some general political assurances regarding eventual status these people. Chauvel said Dong indicated that with such assurances he might be able to accept Dong Hoi line." 19/ f . The DRV is Disappointed on Elections In Pham Van Dong's 10 May plan, a take-over of all Vietnam by the DRV was almost certain. "Foreign" troops would be withdrawn and elections would take place as soon as possible. "Local government" would fill in during the interval. Supervision of the elections them- selves would be by locally composed commissions. The French and the GVN vehemently opposed both immediate elections and elections unsuper- vised by some kind of international commission. There was no movement in this impasse until l6 July when Molotov opened new possibilities by suggesting that a decision on elections be left up to the GVN and DRV after a military settlement was made. The Chinese were willing to concede that elections might not take place for two or three years. Even under these pressures, there was no progress until very near the time set by the French for termination of Geneva talks-. On 19 July, at an extra- ordinary meeting attended by Molotov, Eden, Mendes -France, Chou En-lai, and Pham Van Dong agreement was reached on postponing elections for two years. 20/ This, of course, represented a severe setback for the ambi- tions of the DRV. g. The DRV Does Not Achieve Its Goals at Geneva ■■» ■■■ I. ......... ■ . «. , T .!■.■«, The DRV, by the end of the conference, had moved a long way from its initial position on every important consideration. The cease- fire was considered ahead of the political decisions. The country was partitioned, giving the GVN about half the total territory, which was probably much more than it deserved on the basis of France-GVN military strength. Elections were put off for two years instead of being held immediately, and control of the elections was to be international rather than local. The Pathet Lao and Free Khmer movements were not represented at the convention, and the DRV had drawn its Viet Minh troops out of Laos and Cambodia. Bernard Fall's comment that the DRV was forced "to accept conditions far less favorable than the military situation warranted" 2l/ is. reinforced by a detailed analysis' of the French military position in the Tonkin Delta by Lacouture and Devillers in La fin d*une guerre , in which the French situation is described as on the verge of collapse. 22/ . * The DRV, according to Kahin and Lewis, probably expected, however, that the concessions they had made were only temporary: "...in evacuating its military units from the South, the Viet Minh was not being called upon to abandon its struggle for power, but only to transfer the competition from the mili- tary to the political plane. And whether in a military or an exclusively political contest, the Viet Minh confidently expected victory." 23/ Ol2 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 [ TOP SECRET - Sensitive This, as Victor Bator points out, was a serious mistake: "...there must have been some miscalculation at that time on the part of Democratic Republic of Vietnam. They must have thought that South Vietnam Government would never be able to assert its independence and become strong enough to demand the French withdrawal. They underestimated the American interest in South Vietnam and expected to exploit the chaotic conditions in the South for gaining their political ends. However, as has already been observed, the events took a different turn in the South." 2k/ Ho commented much later on his personal feelings about the results of the Geneva Conference, and from these comments comes an indication of his feelings on later situations: "We thought we had achieved something with the French by compromising and it turned out to be shaky. Only through full and unconditional independence can we achieve stability. . .We are determined to continue to fight until we achieve total victory, that is, military and political..." 25/ I i C-13 TOP SECRET - Sensitive [ . ■ I L: Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. C. I. FOOTNOTES 1. CIA Study OOI7/66 , "Asian Communist Employment of Negotiations as a Political Tactic" (s), p. k2. 2. CIA Study OOI7/66 (S), p. lQ. 3. U.S. VerbMin/2, pp. 58 ff. ■ 1 k. Ibid. . , pp. 65-66. * ■ ■ I 5v After Dien Bien Phu and. the withdrawal of most French forces to the 1 . Tonkin Delta , Viet Minh strength in and. around the Delta was reported. as Sh infantry battalions , 1 artillery division, 110 district companies, [ and from ^0,000 to 50,000 militia. French- Vietnamese strength stood at 109 battalions (of which some 60 percent was VNA) and about 80,000 auxiliary troops and. militia. Despite this manpower advantage for the French Union forces, an intelligence estimate for the period, said they faced possible defections on a mounting scale which could become very large if the Viet Minh scored major victories or if the French were believed, about to abandon Hanoi and portions of the Delta. See NIE-63-4-54, "Probable Military and. Political Developments in Indo- china over tie Next 30 Days (15 June-15 July)," June 15, 195^ (SECRET). In General Valluy's report to the five-power military staff confer- ence on June 4, moreover, he stated, there were no southern Vietnamese who could oppose northern Vietnamese once the Tonkin Delta was lost and defense of the South became necessary. See Dulles 1 tel. TEDUL 171 to the American Consul - Geneva, June 7, I95U (TOP SECRET). 6. U.S. VerbMin/l, pp. 15-16. 7. IC Restricted/l (c), p. 8. 8. CIA Study 0017/66 (S), p. 43. 9. u.s. verbMin/5, p. 198. 10. U.S. VerbMin/5, pp. 216-228; U.S. VerbMin/7, pp. 333-3^2 11. CIA Study OOI7/66 (S), p. hk. 12. IC Restricted/14 (c), pp. 18-19. 13. IC Restricted/lU (c), p. 9; CIA Study OOI7/66 (s), p. 1*5 Ik. IC Restricted/l5 (c), p. 16. 15. IC Restricted/6 (c), p. 7- 16. DULTE I87, Geneva to SecState, 16 June 195^ (TOP SECRET) C-l4 TOP SECRET - Sensitive [r • '~ Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive 17. SECTO lj-89, translation of aide memoir e, Bonnet to State, 28 June 195^ (TOP SECRET). 18. SECTO 557, Geneva to State, 3 July 195^ (TOP SECRET). 19. SECTO 560, Geneva to State, 6 July I95U (TOP SECRET). 20. Lacouture and Devillers, La fin d.'une guerre , p. 268. 21. Fall, Viet -Nam Witness , p. 135- 22. Lacouture and Devillers, p. 28U. 23. Kahin and Lewis, The United States in Vietnam , pp. 1*7-1*8. 2k. Bator, Vietnam — A Diplomatic Tragedy , p. 17. 25. CIA Study 0017/66 (S), p. k9. C-15 TOP SECRET - Sensitive • Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. C. 2. SINO- SOVIET OBJECTIVES AND STRATEGY TABLE OF CONTENTS and. OUTLINE Vage 1. USSR and China are Motivated by Different Objectives C-l8 a. Atmosphere at Geneva is Different from Panmunjon C-l8 b . Soviet Ob j ect ives C-l8 (1) USSR Seeks to Avert a Major International Crisis (2) USSR Wishes to Prevent French Support of EDC (3) USSR Seizes the Opportunity to Create a New Communist State c. Chinese Objectives : The Need for Border Security C-19 (1) China's Policy Calls for Assistance to "Wars of National Liberation" (2) China Wary of U.S. Intervention (3) China Wishes to Prevent Laos and. Cambodia from Becoming U.S. Allies (k) China Attempts to Enhance the Image of "Peaceful Co-existence" o 2. USSR and. China Serve as Moderating Influences on the Viet Minh C-21 a. Opening Position of Both Countries Supports DRV Hard. Line C-21 b. Shift to Support of Bilateral French-DRV Discussions is Apparent Early C-22 c. USSR and China Change DRV Approach to Cease-fire C-22 d. DRV Responds to Sino-Soviet Pressure on Partition C-22 e. Molotov Proposes Compromise on Elections C-23 C-l6 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 [ TOP SECRET - Sensitive Page f • DRV is Pressed to Give Up Claims for Pathet Lao and Free Khmer Representation C-23 g. Chinese Play a Major Role in Pathet Lao-Free Khmer Exclusion • C-21+ h. USSR and China Agree to a Control Commission C-25 i. Sino-Soviet Influence Has Significant Effect C-25 e C-17 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 f . i TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. C. 2. SINO-SOVIET OBJECTIVES AND STRATEGY 1. USSR and. China Motivated by Different Objectives a. Atmosphere at Geneva is Different from Panmunjom Daring the Korean War, the initial communist move toward, negotiations came at a time of fairly clear-cut military stalemate. Dis- cussions at Panmunjom extended, over two years while UN and. communist armies fought over small parcels of strategically valuable terrain. In Indochina, to the contrary, the first communist indications of willingness to nego- tiate came in September 1953 (from both Peking and. Moscow), while the Viet Minh were preparing for the "general counteroffensive," and. with , the French Union forces constricting their defensive perimeter and. des- perately seeking to prevent large-scale desertions, by the Vietnamese. Moreover, a final settlement was reached, after only two months of bargain- ing. The reasons for this unexpectedly rapid, and. compromise settlement lie in Moscow and. Peking. For reasons that were either the same or com- plementary, these two communist powers created, an atmosphere for serious negotiations. b. Soviet Objectives Unlike the Chinese, the Soviet Union was never explicit about its motivations for working toward, a settlement. Nevertheless, there are strong grounds for believing that the Soviets had. these goals in view: (l) averting a major war crisis over Indochina that would stimulate Western unity, provide the U.S. with support previously lacking for "united, action," and conceivably force Moscow to help defend the Chinese; (2) reducing the prospects for successful passage of the European Defense Community in the French National Assembly; (3) seizing the opportunity to create a communist- controlled, enclave in Vietnam which could then be expanded into a new com- munist state. (l) USSR Seeks to Avert a Major International Crisis On the first point, the Soviets were surely aware that the United States probably would be prepared, under certain conditions, to consider active involvement in the war. Newspaper reports of the time added both credence and uncertainty to American plans for "united, action." The Soviets during this period, were caught up, moreover, in a full-fledged, policy debate over the import of Eisenhower's defense program for Soviet national security. When the debate was resolved sometime in April 195^, apparently First Secretary Khrushchev 1 s perception of the continued dan- ger of a new world war that might be touched off by a reckless American nuclear strike won out over the relative optimism of Premier Malenkov. Specifically, Moscow probably reasoned, that a failure to settle at Geneva would lead, to U.S. involvement and. escalation in Indochina, that at one point there might be another direct clash between American and Chinese forces, and that the Soviet Union therefore would, be called upon to come to the aid of its Chinese ally. C-l8 TOP SECRET - Sensitive ( Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive As the Soviets entered, the Geneva Conference, then, it seems that one of their primary aims was to diminish the possibility of U.S. intervention, either in the guise of a united, action or unilaterally, ! in Indochina. While this outlook did not prevent the Soviets from seek- ing to capitalize on the change in administration in Paris from Laniel to Mend.es -France, it did work in the general direction of a reasonable settlement that would be honorable for the French and generally accepta- ble to the Viet Minh. The Russians evidently believed, however, that so long as the French (and the British) were agreeable to a settlement, the Americans would be hard-pressed, to disregard, their allies and inter- vene . - (2) USSR Wishes to Prevent French Support of EDC EDC was also almost certainly on Molotov's mind during the negotiations. There is no evidence to support the contention of some writers that Molotov explicitly baited. Mend.es -France with a lenient Indo- china settlement in return for Assembly rejection of EDC, but 'Molotov need, not have been that explicit. Throughout 1953 and into 195^-, Soviet propaganda was dominated, by comments on EDC and. the danger of a rearmed. Germany. It was certainly in Soviet interest to pressure the DRV for concessions to the French, since removal of the French command from Indo- f china would restore French force levels on the Continent and thereby some- j what offset the need, for an EDC. Soviet interests, in short, probably dictated the sacrifice of Viet Minh goals if necessary to prevent German re -militarization. (3) USSR Seizes the Opportunity to Create a New Communist State Soviet efforts to gain control of Iran, Manchuria, Greece and Korea indicate a possible third, objective of their diplomacy at Geneva. In these instances, the Soviet Union attempted, to gain control of the tar- get state by establishing a communist enclave in the target state itself. This enclave would become, then, "a first stage in the ultimate absorption of the whole state by the communist bloc." It may have been that, in the Soviet view, the timing for such a move in Vietnam was correct and that control of Vietnam would come without the necessity for military conquest. 1/ c. Chinese Objectives: The Need, for Border Security In contrast to the Soviet position, the Chinese made their goals at Geneva quite clear: (l) emphasizing the commitment to assist "wars of national liberation"; (2) guarding against the possibility of U.S. military intervention; (3) preventing the Indochinese states from becoming U.S. bases or joining the American alliance system; and. (h) pro- moting the "five principles of peaceful coexistence" as part of China's effort to extend its influence across Asia. Central to each of these objectives was the need to create a zone of security that encompassed. Laos, Cambodia, and. the northern half of Vietnam, to insure China 1 s south- western flank against intrusion by the U.S. or any other large foreign power . C-19 TOP SECRET - Sensitive D Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive (1) China's Policy Calls for Assistance to "Wars of National ' Liberation " From the moment Chinese troops arrived at the Sino- Vietnamese border, Chinese assistance to the Viet Minh was clearly in line with Peking's policy of assisting wars of national liberation. This theme was alluded to frequently by Chinese delegates at Geneva. The Chinese, however, carefully controlled the dispensation of that aid in support of the war, and. only after the Berlin Conference did they significantly augment it to assure the fall of Dien Bien Phu. Regardless of Marxist rationale advanced by China for its policy toward the Viet Minh, China historically had acted to obtain vassal states on its periph- ery. China's domestic cohesion having been restored, it turned, consis- tent with centuries of policy towards Vietnam, to projecting its influence into Southeast Asia via Vietnam. (2) China Wary of U.S. Intervention In providing less assistance than it could have, Peking may very well have been wary of prompting American intervention and. a I wider war. In this respect, U.S. warnings to China during 1953 from an American Administration which publicly vowed a very hard line toward the j communist bloc could, not be ignored, by Peking. The Chinese by. 195^ had. evinced, moreover, greater concern than previously over the military effec- tiveness of nuclear weapons. Having been through a costly war in Korea, and having decided as early as the fall of 1952 to give priority to • "socialist reconstruction" at home, Peking was in no position to risk provoking the United States. Its willingness, to work for a settlement of the Indochina war may have stemmed, in this light, from the conviction that: (a) the DRV had made sufficient military gains for China, i.e.., territorial control in northern Vietnam; and (b) that the DRV should not be allowed, to provoke the West (and. the U.S. in particular) into a pre- cipitous military response that would, change the nature of the war and. perhaps of China's commitment as well. (3) China Wishes to Prevent Laos and. Cambodia from Becoming U.S. Allies Besid.es assuring that a communist state would occupy the northern portion of Vietnam, China also sought to neutralize the two other Ind.ochinese states. Chou indicated, at the Conference that he had. no ob- jection to the introduction of arms and. military personnel into Cambodia or Laos after the cease-fire; 2/ nor did. he object to their monarchical form of government, 3/ to their independent handling of internal politi- cal problems, k/ or to their joining the French Union. 5/ Surprisingly, Chou asked no concessions from the French on these counts, although the French had. half- expected. Chou to press for better trade relations, support for a CPR seat in the United. Nations, or French diplomatic recognition of Communist China. 6/ Instead, Chou made clear that China was concerned, preeminently about the establishment of U.S. bases in Cambodia and Laos for potential use against the mainland. Concessions to the French may C-20 TOP SECRET - Sensitive I . Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 633 16. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive have been seen by Peking as a way of keeping the French "in" and the . Americans out. The rapid, collapse of France could, create a vacuum into which the U.S. would, be forced, to move. The Chinese were disturbed, about the prospect of Cam- bodia, Laos , and. the State of Vietnam becoming members of the proposed. U.S. security treaty system for Southeast Asia, jj When, for example, Chou met with the Cambodian Foreign Minister (Nong Kimny) on 17 July, the Chinese Premier implicitly warned against Cambodian participation in a Southeast Asia pact or acceptance of foreign bases. The consequences of either move by Cambodia, Chou said, would be very serious for Cambodian ind.epend.ence and territorial integrity. And. he specifically stated, that his remarks applied, equally to Laos and Vietnam. 8/ Peking was not in- terested, in new territorial acquisitions; but neither would it tolerate an American military threat close by. * (k) China Attempts to Enhance the Image of "Peaceful Coexistence " A final Chinese objective was to enhance China 1 s image as an Asian power sincerely dedicated to peaceful coexistence. The policy of "peaceful coexistence" was framed in terms of the five principles: mutual friendship, mutual non-interference in internal affairs, non-aggression, equality and mutual respect for territorial integrity. The Chinese invested much time and. travel in convincing their Asian neighbors of Peking's sin- cerity. Seen in this larger context, the Indochina settlement, for which Chou must be credited with a major share, bolstered Peking's image as a dedicated worker for peace whose voice had to be heeded in Asian councils. Not inconsequentially, China 1 s stock in the communist bloc must have risen as well. 2. USSR and. China Serve as Moderating Influences on the Viet Minh a. Opening Position of Both Countries Supports DRV Hard Line For a variety of reasons the Soviets and Chinese found, it in their respective interests to work for a peaceful settlement of the Indo- china War. Although giving the impression, at first, of being fully be- hind the Viet Minh negotiating position, Molotov and Chou En-lai gradu- ally moved, toward, accommodation with the French. The two chief communist delegates were in fact instrumental in gaining concessions from the Viet Minh and in proposing acceptable alternatives to the French. At the out- set of the Conference, Molotov and Chou outwardly supported, without quali- fication Pham Van Dong's proposal for a political settlement to be followed by a cease-fire. When it became clear that the French were not going to accept that proposal, they evidently agreed, that further progress required a separation of military from political discussions. Molotov' s suggestion at the first restricted, session of 17 May along these lines, and Chou's remark to Eden on 20 May that a cease-fire should, have priority, repre- sented, real breakthroughs and. probably were the cause of Pham Van Dong 1 s willingness to engage in private military discussions with French General Delteil. C-21 TOP SECRET - Sensitive . 1 I .■ Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive b. Shift to Support of Bilateral French-DRV Discussions is Apparent Early The Soviet and Chinese delegations -- much more than the Viet Minh — were more anxious for direct Franco-Viet Minh discussions. The fact that Soviet officials on 30 March and again 5 May told Western officials that bilateral talks would be the most profitable form of nego- . tiations for a cease-fire 9/ suggests that the communists 1 initial back- ing of Fham Van Dong's proposal may have been simply a trial balloon. Once the French, supported by the U.K. and U.S., refused to budge from their call for an immediate , closely inspected cease-fire, Chou and Molotov were left free to initiate talks in the direction of compromise. c. USSR and. China Change DRV Approach to Cease-fire The pressure that the Chinese and the Soviets were able to bring to bear apparently forced the DRV to acquiesce in a cease-fire prior to a military settlement. Pham Van Dong had argued for a plan which would have made a cease-fire throughout Indochina contingent on the satisfaction of Viet Minh conditions for general elections and the formation of three united governments. But at the first restricted session of the Confer- ence on 17 May, Molotov pointed out that French proposals up to that point had dealt only with military matters, and proposed therefore that these be dealt with before going on to political arrangements. 10/ The Chinese agreed with this approach. In a conversation with Eden, Chou En-lai con- curred in the separation of military from political matters, with priority to a cease-fire, ll/ When, therefore, Hoang Van Hoan reportedly told Le Monde on 2k May that the DRV posed "not a single prior political condi- tion," he was reflecting the views of the Soviets and Chinese as much as paying the way for Dong's initiative of the next day. d. DRV Responds to Sino-Soviet Pressure on Partition There is evidence to believe that both the Chinese and the Soviets were instrumental in bringing about a series of Viet Minh concessions on the issue of where to draw the demarcation line between North and South Vietnam. The possibility of partition had been suggested initially to U.S. officials as early as k March by a member of the Soviet Embassy in London, apparently out of awareness of Franco-American objections to a coalition arrangement. 12/ The partition line mentioned, at that time was the l6th parallel, which would have placed. Tourane (Da Nang) in the hands of the Viet Minh (the l6th parallel crosses a few miles south of the port). It was also the Soviets who, on the opening day of the con- ference, approached the U.S. delegation on partition — this time averring that the establishment of a buffer state to China's south would be suffi- cient satisfaction of China's security needs. 13/ - In late June, after several rounds of secret Franco-Viet Minh military talks had failed to make headway, Ta Quang Buu (Vice Minister of National Defense) was still insisting on the 13th parallel, which strikes the coast just south of Tuy Hoa, as the partition line. Ik/ As suggested C-22 . TOP SECRET - Sensitive I Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive by Lacouture and Devillers, the Viet Minh may have been seeking to capitalize on Mendes-France's reputation as a man of peace, and. on the ongoing with- drawal of French Union forces from the southern Delta. 15/ This Viet Minh position underwent a drastic change by the middle of July; and. the change can be traced to a meeting between Chou En-lai and. Ho Chi Minh at Nanning rear the China-Vietnam bord.er • According to CIA reports, Chou applied pressure on Ho to accept a partition line much farther to the North, probably the 17th or l8th parallel. 16/ Pham Van Dong's subsequent compromise posi- tion indicating a willingness of the Viet Minh to discuss partition at the l6th parallel seems to have originated in the talks between Chou and. Ho. 17/ The French, however, refused, to budge from their opposition even though Molotov argued, that the 16th parallel represented, a substantial Viet Minh concession and d.emand.ed a French quid pro quo . 18/ The Soviet delegate then came forward with a new proposal to draw the demarcation line at the 17th. 19/ Precisely what motivated Molotov to make this pro- - posal is not clear. Speculatively, Molotov may simply have traded consider- able territorial advantage to the French (much more than was warranted by the actual Tonkin military situation) for some progress on the subject of elections. The Western negotiators, at least, recognized this possibility: Eden considered a line between the 17th and l8th parallels worth trading for a mutually acceptable position on elections; 20/ and Mend.es -France observed in a conversation with Molotov that the election and .demarcation questions might be linked in the sense that each sid.e could, yield on one of the questions. 2l/ e. Molotov Proposes Compromise on Elections The French had consistently held out for general elections in Vietnam, but without a time limit. (Election dates for Laos and. Cam- bodia were already set by their constitutions as August and September 1955 > respectively.) Molotov, however, reflected Viet Minh thinking in propos- ing that a date be fixed, offering June 1955 > but suggesting that elections might be agreed upon for 1955 with the exact date to be decided between Vietnamese and Viet Minh authorities. 22/ The Chinese proved, much more flexible. In a talk with a member of the British delegation, Li K ! o-nung argued, for a specific date, but said his government was willing to set it within two or three years of the cease-fire. 23/ Once again, the compro- mise was worked out on Molotov' s initiative. At a meeting on 19 July attended by Eden, Mendes -France, Chou, and Dong y Molotov drew the line at two years. 2k/ In view of the DRV d.emand for six months, the French com- promise position of 18 months, and. the Soviets 1 own one-year plan, the West had good reason to accept Molotov 1 s offer. f . DRV is Pressed, to Give Up Claims for Pathet Lao and. Free Khmer Representation A third, instance in which Viet Minh ambitions were cut short by the diplomatic intrusion of their comrades concerned the status of the C-23 . TOP SECRET - Sensitive [ I , • Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Pathet Lao and. Free Khmer. Throughout the month of May, the DRV had demanded that representatives of these movements be invited to the Conference to sit 5 like the Viet Minh, as belligerents wielding governmental power. These demands were consistently rejected by the non-communist side, which argued that the Pathet Lao and Free Khmer were creatures of the Viet Minh, guilty of aggression against the Cambodian and Laotian governments (in contrast to the "civil war" in Vietnam) , and not deserving status which they had in no way earned. When Molotov, on 17 May, recommended that "military matters" should be considered first, the question of seating the Pathet Lao and. Khmer delegations was dropped.. Nevertheless, the Viet Minh persisted in their position on an all- Indochina political settlement when the significant bargaining was | reduced, to "underground" military talks between them and. the French begin- ning in early June. 25/ The first compromise of the Viet Minh's position came on 20 May when Chou En-lai, in the same conversation with Eden at which the chief Chinese delegate also agreed to separate military from political matters, admitted, that political settlements might be different for the three Indochinese states. Chou thus moved a step closer to the Western position, which held, that the Laotian and Cambodian cases were substantially different from that in Vietnam. Not surprisingly, the Viet Minh, at a secret meeting with the French on 10 June, suddenly indicated their preference for concentrating on Vietnam rather than demanding the inclusion of Laotian and Cambodian problems in the bilateral discussions. 26, g. Chinese Play a Major Role in Pathet Lao-Free Khmer Exclusion The Viet Minh's major concern, as indicated on 16 June, was that they at least obtain absolute control of the Tonkin Delta, including Hanoi and Haiphong. 27/ Neither Chou nor the Viet Minh, however, went so far as to dismiss the existence of legitimate resistance movements in Laos and. Cambodia. But in ongoing talks with the British, Chou proved far more willing than the Viet Minh to push aside Pathet Lao-Free Khmer inter- ests. On 17 June, at a time when four rounds of secret Franco-Viet Minh military talks had failed, to make headway, Chou told Ed.en that it "would not be difficult" to gain Viet Minh agreement on withdrawing their "volun- teers" from Cambodia and Laos. Eden, moreover, got the impression from his meeting with Chou that the latter earnestly wanted a settlement and was greatly concerned over the possible break up of the conference. 28/ Cambodian resistance forces were small, making a political settlement with the Royal Government "easily" obtainable. In Laos, where those forces were larger, regroupment areas along the border with Vietnam and China (Sam Neua and. Phong Saly Provinces) would, be required. Asked by Eden whether . ' there might not be difficulty in gaining Viet Minh agreement to the with- drawal of their forces from the two countries, Chou replied it would "not be difficult" in the context of a withdrawal of all foreign forces. 29/ The Chinese, almost certainly with Soviet support, 30/ had. made a major breakthrough in the negotiations by implicitly adopting the Western view that the Pathet Lao and. Free Khmer forces did. not represent C-21+ TOP SECRET - Sensitive r i Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive legitimate indigenous movements and should be withdrawn. The Viet Minh volte-face came, as in the other cases, soon after. A Laotian delegate reported on 23 June that the Viet Minh were in apparent accord, on the withdrawal of their "volunteers" and even on Laos' retention of French treaty bases. The Viet Minh f s principal demand was that French military personnel in Laos be reduced to a minimum. Less clearly, Dong made sug- gestions about the creation of a government of "national union," Pathet Lao participation in 1955 elections for the national assembly, and a "temporary arrangement" governing areas dominated by Pathet Lao military forces. 31/ But these latter remarks were meant to be suggestive; Dong had come .around to the Western view (now shared by the Soviets and Chinese) on the important point of removing Viet Minh troops from Laos. Later in the conference, Dong would have to make a similar retreat on Cambodia. h. USSR and. China Agree to a Control Commission "While the Viet Minh from the beginning had. pressed for no outside control or supervision of either military or political agreements concerning Indochina, all other delegations quickly moved in that direc- tion. The Soviets took the lead on the communist side. The major issue was the composition and voting procedure of .the proposed International Con- trol Commission. From the Western standpoint, the ICC should not have I had a communist representative, since no communist could be considered neutral. The Soviets retorted, as expected, that Western backing of a Colombo Power (India, Pakistan, Indonesia, Ceylon, or Burma) was subject to the same objection, namely, that each of these nations always would vote with the Western bloc. As the matter evolved, a compromise settlement provided for a three-nation formula including one communist state. Both aspects of this agreement were based on Molotov T s original plan. 3^/ As to voting procedure, the communists not surprisingly in- sisted on unanimity, at least for "major questions." The West, while accept ing that rule, considered pushing for acceptance of majority voting to de- termine whether a question was minor or major. 33/ The result (Article k2 of the Agreement on the Cessation of Hostilities in Vietnam) was to specify unanimous agreement among the Commission representatives on matters pertinent to violations, or threats of violations, that might lead to the resumption of hostilities. However, minority reports could be issued, where the Commission was unable to agree on a recommendation. i. Sino-Soviet Influence Has Significant Effect There is little doubt that the conference would not have been able to move against the initial DRV intransigence without assistance from the Soviets and. Chinese. In the opening phase of discussion, both the major powers voiced, complete agreement with the DRV in policy and aims, but through a series of moves both powers also made great efforts to soften the DRV hard line and. to allow enough flexibility for concessions. The first problem, involving the seating of the Pathet Lao and Khmer, was solved by Soviet and Chinese agreement to postpone — indefinitely, as it turned out — any discussion of the question. The second stumbling block was the C-25 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 [ TOP SECRET - Sensitive ■ Viet Minh insistence on a political solution before a cease-fire* The ability of the Chinese and Soviets to overcome DRV resistance on this point was very encouraging early in the proceedings. Russia and. China were active behind the scenes on the question of partition, with Russia taking the ini- tiative even before the conference began, and with both major powers in- fluencing the decisions as the French and. Viet Minh moved, toward a mutually agreeable demarcation line. The common-sense role that the USSR and China played with reference to Pathet Lao and. Free Khmer inclusion brought about a key concession that had nearly stopped the conference — the need to separate the Vietnam question from the rest of Indochina. The final diffi- cult quest ion, the composition and function of the Control Commission, dragged, along for several weeks, but was finally solved with no little assistance of the USSR and. China. i C-26 TOP SECRET - Sensitive i . Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. C. 2. FOOTNOTES 1. J. M. Mackintosh, Strategy and. Tactics of Soviet Foreign Policy (New York: Oxford, 1963), pp. 83-84. 2. In a talk with Nong Kimny, Cambodian Foreign Minister, July 14; in Johnson tel. SECTO 6l6 from Geneva, July 15, 1954 (SECRET). 3. In a talk with Mendes -France, June 24; in Dillon tel. from Paris . priority No. 5035? June 24, 1954 (TOP SECRET). 4. Ibid , and Johnson priority tel. SECTO 517, June 24, 1954, from Geneva (SECRET), reporting Mendes -France *s conversation with Chou in Berne. Chou qualified this somewhat by urging that the resistance elements in the two countries be provided suitable means of re -integration into their respective societies. 5. Dillon tel. from Paris priority No. 5O35, June 24, 1954 (TOP SECRET). 6. Ibid . See also Johnson priority tel. SECTO 517, June 24, 195^ from Geneva (SECRET). 7. These views were presented, e.g ., to Seymour Topping by Huang Hua at a meeting described by Topping as deadly serious and devoid, of propa- gandist ic remarks. "When Huang spoke of possibility American bases in Indochina or ant i- communist pact in Southeast Asia, he became very agitated, his hands shook, and his usually excellent English broke down, forcing him to work through interpreter." See Smith's tel. SECTO 661 from Geneva, July 19, 1954 (TOP SECRET). See also Johnson priority tel. SECTO 517 from Geneva, June 24, 1954 (SECRET); Smith priority tel. SECTO 463 from Geneva, June 17, 1954 (SECRET); and. Smith tel. SECTO 636 from Geneva, July 17, 195^ (SECRET). 8. Smith tel. SECTO 635 from Geneva, July 17, 1954 (SECRET). Interestingly, at this same conference, Chou indicated, it would, be acceptable for the Cambodians to have French or British military instructors, but not Ameri- cans. 9. Central Intelligence Agency, Memorandum : Asian Communist Employment of Negotiations as a Political Tactic , RSS^No. OOI7/66, p. 40 (SECRET/ No Foreign Dis/ Controlled. Dis.). ' 10. U.S. VerbMin/lndochina Restricted 1, pp. 4-5 (CONFIDENTIAL). ' 11. In Smith tel. SECTO 267 from Geneva, May 20, 1954 (SECRET). 12. CIA Memorandum RS OOI7/66 (cited previously), p. 39 (SECRET/No Foreign Dis/Controlled Dis . ) . 13. Ibid. , p. 4l. C-27 . TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Ik. Lacouture and. Devillers, pp. 238-39 15. Ibid ., pp. 239-1*0. 16. CIA Memo: "Asian Communist Employment of Negotiations as a Political Tactic" (SECRET), RSS OOI7/66. 17. Lacouture and Devillers, pp. 257-58. 18. Smith from Geneva tel. SECTO 632, July 17, 195^ (SECRET). 19.' Lacouture and Devillers, p. 268. - 20. Smith from Geneva priority tel. SECTO 638, July 18, 195^ (SECRET). 21. Smith from Geneva tel. SECTO 632, July 17, I95I* (SECRET). 22. Ibid . 23. Smith from Geneva tel. SECTO 6k5, July 18, 195^ (SECRET). 2k. Lacouture and Devillers, p. 268. 25. See, e.g . , Lacouture and Devillers, p. 213. 26. Ibid ., p. 215. 27. This was the demand made by the Viet Minh in secret talks with the French. Reported in Smith 1 s priority tel. from Geneva DULTE 187, June 16, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 28. Smith from Geneva tel. DULTE 193, June 17, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 29. Smith tel. DULTE 193 from Geneva, June 17, 195^ (TOP SECRET). See also Lacouture and. Devillers, pp. 217 and 219. 30. In a talk with Smith June 19, Molotov discussed, the Laos and Cambodia resistance movements and said he saw the possibility of agreement so long as neither side (i.e., the French or the Viet Minh) "adopted one-sided, views or put forward, extreme pretensions." Molotov said about 50 percent of Laotian territory was not controlled by the royal government (a curious way of putting it), with a much smaller move- ment in Cambodia. The tone of Smith's report on this conversation suggests that Molotov saw no obstacles to Viet Minh withdrawal of its "volunteers." Smith tel. DULTE 202 from Geneva, June 19, 195^ (TOP SECRET). 31. Johnson from Geneva tel. SECTO 51k, June 23, 195U (SECRET). 32. See e^., Smith from Geneva priority tel. SECTO 637, July 17, 195^ (SECRET). 33. Smith from Geneva priority tel. SECTO 638, July 18, 195*1 (SECRET). * C-28 TOP SECRET - Sensitive • - Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 c Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 ■ TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. D. • THE INTENT OF THE GENEVA ACCORDS SUMMARY One of the principal controversies surrounding the Geneva Conference concerns the intent of the Armistice and the Final Declaration. While it is clear that the Armistice between the French and the Viet Minh was de- signed to end the actual hostilities, the political intent of the bellig- erents, and that of the Conference participants expressed in the Final Declaration, is in doubt. The central issue in dispute is whether or not the participants intended to unify Vietnam, and if so, whether the subse- quent actions of the U.S. and the GVN in frustrating that intent make them culpable for the present war. China and Russia were, in general, pleased with the results of the Geneva Conference, even though they had been forced to accept a settlement considerably at variance from their initial demands. Since these powers were primarily interested in attaining their political goals without triggering a massive response from a united West, cessation of the war on even minimally advantageous terms would allow them time to consolidate gains and to extend their control further into Southeast Asia with fewer risks. They recognized that the DRV did not receive concessions commensu- rate with its military power and political control, but the Communists, probably miscalculating the future U.S. commitment to South Vietnam, no doubt felt that they could safely transfer the combat from the battlefield to the sphere of politics. However, the final settlement severely compro- mised DRV expectations and objectives: the line of partition was at the 17th parallel, not the 13th; elections were envisaged after two years, not immediately; supervision was to be by an international body, not by the belligerents themselves; and Communist movements in Laos and Cambodia were denied identity and support, not sanctioned by the Conference. Yet, . despite these setbacks and disappointments, the DRV apparently expected to fall heir to all of Vietnam in fairly short order, either through a plebiscite on unification, or by default when the GVN collapsed from internal disorder. (Tab l) For the United Kingdom as well as for France, the final outcome at . Geneva was in the main satisfactory. The bloodshed had ceased; the danger of broadened conflict was averted. The U.S C understanding of the Accords is more difficult to fathom. Immediately upon the conclusion of the conference, the U.S. representative, Under Secretary of State Walter Bedell Smith, stated that the results were the best possible under the circumstances. Both he and President Eisenhower stated that the U.S. "would view any renewal of the aggression in violation of the /Geneva/ agreements with grave concern and as seriously threatening international peace and security." President Kennedy in December 1961 used this quote as justification for his support of South Vietnam,, But the purpose of D-l TOP SECRET - Sensitive f Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive the U.S. declaration remains obscure. It can "be argued that its intent was not a long-term U.S. commitment , but an attempt to deter the DRV from attacking the GVN in the two-year period prior to elections. According to this argument, the Eisenhower Administration would have accepted any outcome if assured that the voting were free. A counter- argument is that Smith was throwing down the gauntlet to the Communists. An NSC action immediately following the Conference considered the Accords a "major disaster for U.S. interests" and called for affirmative political action to foreclose further loss. In other words, while the specifics of the Accords were much in line with the U.S. negotiating position, the overall U.S. evaluation of the Conference v held that territory had been yielded to the Communists. In this light, the Smith declaration marks the jumping-off point for the concerted U.S. efforts to devise a collec- tive security system for Vietnam and all of Southeast Asia, which cul- minated in the Manila Pact of September, 195^ (SEATO), and the aid program for Ngo Dinh Diem. (Tab 2) Interpretations of the spirit of the Accords are as disparate as the interests of the Geneva conferees. Yet, it is difficult to believe that any of the participants expected the Geneva Accords to provide an inde- pendent and unified Vietnam. The Communist states -- the Soviet Union, Communist China, and the DRV -- apparently assumed that the development of a stable regime in the South was very unlikely, and that the DRV would eventually gain control of the entire country. They, in any event, had sound evidence that the GVN was unlikely to last out the two years before elections. It may well be, then, that the conciliatory posture of the Communist states at the conference can be explained by their presumption that the specific terms of agreement were less important than the detente itself — that their future successes, however slow in coming, were inevitable. Western reactions and expectations, on the other hand, were no doubt quite different. While France was interested in extricating itself from its military failure, it was no less interested in maintain- ing its cultural and economic position in Vietnam. Even the United Kingdom gave every indication that it wished to prevent a general Com- munist takeover. Hence, it would appear that these powers, like the U.S., wanted to stop the fighting, but not at the sacrifice of all of Vietnam to the Communists. Thus, the spirit of the Accords may have been much less significant than the letter of the Accords. In other words, by dividing the country at the 17th parallel, with each zone under a separate "civil administration," by providing for the regroupment of forces and the movement of people North and South, and by putting off elections for two years, the Geneva participants jeopardized, if not precluded, the unification of Vietnam. Whatever the parties intended, the practical effect of the specific terms of the Agreement was a perma- nently divided nation. (Tab 3) • D-2 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 / TOP SECRET - Sensitive i DISCUSSION III. D. Tab 1 - The Outcome for the Communists Tab 2 - The Outcome for the West Tab 3 - The Spirit and the Practical Effect of Geneva D-3 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 f ' Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. D. 1. THE OUTCOME FOR THE COMMUNISTS TABLE OF CONTENTS and. OUTLINE Page 1. The Major Communist Powers Achieve Their Objectives D-5 a. Communists See Complete Takeover as Inevitable D-5 b. Chinese Not Adverse to Permanent Partition D-5 c. China Sees Creation of a Neutral Buffer Zone D-6 d. China's Domestic Economy is Protected D-6 e. U.S. Threat of Massive Intervention is Forestalled D-6 f . Prospects of Short-Run Stability Please the . D-6 Russians g. Russians See Influence on French View of EDC D-7 2. The Major Communist Powers Perceive Certain Losses D-7 a. Communist Consolidation of All Indochina is Not Achieved D-7 b. U.S. Influence in Indochina is Not Prevented D-7 ■ 3. The DRV Views its Gains and Losses p»8 a. Advantages are Gained, but at a Price j)_8 b. The DRV is Insured of Territorial Consolidation p_8 c. Election Plans Point to Eventual DRV Domination D-9 k. The DRV is Satisfied with the Geneva Outcome D-9 D-H TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 i TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. D. 1. THE OUTCOME FOR THE COMMUNISTS 1. Major Communist Powers Achieve Their Objectives To judge from the public commentaries of the communist delegation leaders — Molotov and Chou — China and the Soviet Union were satisfied with the outcome at Geneva. The final settlement seemed to meet most of their objectives, measured not simply in terms of their narrow interests in Indochina, but more broadly in terms of their global interests. The Viet Minh, however, accepted a settlement considerably at variance not only with their initial demands and their actual military control in Viet- nam, but with their compromise position as well. Yet, even the Viet Minh appeared, content with the results of Geneva. The reason — the belief that time was on their side. a. Communists See Complete Takeover as Inevitable At the final plenary session on 21 July, the Soviet, Chinese, and North Vietnamese delegates agreed, that the Accords, if properly imple- mented, would, end hostilities and. give the DRV a territorial base in the North. The stage would, thus be set for general elections in Vietnam and. produce the desired communist takeover. The political situation in South Vietnam was precarious. In addition, there was a multitude of armed sects • and other groups hostile to the central government of Bao Dai who continu- . ally relied on the French. The communists certainly had good, cause for f - considering that South Vietnam could not cohere sufficiently within the two-year period, prior to national elections, stipulated by the Final Declar- ation, to pose a viable alternative to the DRV. The communists had. good reason to believe that a stable regime in the southern zone would never be formed; hence the DRV would assume control of the entire country almost by default. b. Chinese Not Adverse to Permanent Partition Interestingly, however, the Chinese accepted the notion that the Geneva Accord.s had, at least temporarily -- and perhaps permanently — created, two separate political entities. As early as June, Chou told Jean Chauvel that the Chinese recognized, the existence of Viet Minh and Viet- namese governments. In talking of a final political settlement, Chou again stated, that this should be achieved, by direct negotiations between the two Vietnamese governments, l/ So far as the CPR was concerned, partition meant not a simple division of administrative responsibility -- which is : the implication of the Vietnam armistice provision (Article ll+a) for the conduct of "civil administration" by the "parties" who were to regroup to the two zones — but the establishment of governmental authority in North and. South Vietnam. What still remains unclear, of course, is the permanency which Chou privately attached, to that arragnement. D-5 TOP SECRET - Sensitive i r ! Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive c. China Sees Creation of a Neutral Buffer Zone Beyond Vietnam, the Chinese apparently believed that the final agreements would preclude the three Indochinese states from involvement in the American security system. When Chou communicated to Eden his concern about Laotian, Vietnamese, and Cambodian participation in a Southeast Asia treaty organization, the Foreign Secretary said he knew of no proposal for those States to join. 2/ The next day Eden told Molotov that a security pact in Southeast Asia was inevitable and completely in line with British policy; but he added, that no consideration was being given to the inclu- sion of Cambodia and Laos (a comment which Smith regarded as a "mistake" inasmuch as the U.S. hoped to use the threat of their inclusion to get a better settlement). 3/ When the conference closed, the Chinese felt j sufficiently assured about the matter, it would seem. On 23 July, a Chi- nese journalist confided: "We have won the first campaign for the neu- tralization of all Southeast Asia." kj d. China's Domestic Economy is Protected. China, at this time, was greatly concerned with her own in- ternal problems, and anxious to consolidate at home before moving further into Asia. The Korean War had exacerbated the pressing economic and polit- ical' problems within China, as had the attempts by Peking to push an economic reconstruction beyond, the limits of possibility. The Chinese were satis- fied that the Indochina situation after Geneva allowed, at least, temporary r • assurance that a major effort could be turned inward, without fear of reper- cussions along China's 'southwestern border. - e. U.S. Threat of Massive Intervention is Forestalled The USSR and China had watched warily the sporadic attempts of the U.S.; first, to keep the Indochina problem out of Geneva, and second, to gather the Western nations into united, action to prevent communist con- solidation of Indochina. There was an element of unpredictability concern- ing U.S. action in Southeast Asia, fostered purposely to a great extent by the U.S. and UK (with calculated moves such as the bilateral military talks in Washington), but also emphasized, by the inordinate number and wide variety of public statements on Indochina that were made by official and semi-official Washington during the months of June and July, while the Geneva Conference sat. Peking and Moscow, then, had some reason to believe that they had. pre-empted. U.S. military moves by diplomacy. f # Prospects of Short-Run Stability Please the Russians The Soviet government was not dedicated to the furtherance of Chinese goals in Southeast Asia, nor did the USSR want to see an in- crease in U.S. influence in this area. For these reasons, it was greatly in the interest of the Soviets to press for the withdrawal of French power from Indochina -- but in a way calculated, to inhibit any major increase in U.S. or Chinese power to replace the French. The creation, therefore, D-6 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive - L of a neutral state in Vietnam (or even the creation of two opposed half- states) met the immediate requirements of the USSR in the best manner possible under the circumstances — and. it was the short-range solution that the Soviets, as well as the other delegations, were seeking at Geneva. The future would, take care of itself. [ - '■■•.' g. Russians See Influence on French View of EDC Whether or not the cause and. effect relationship can be proved with any accuracy, the fact remains that the French did. not ratify the EDC agreements when these were presented to the French Assembly a month after Geneva. The reaction in the USSR was described as "jubilant," hail- ing the French rejection as "an important event in the political history of Europe." 5/ This event, following closely on the termination of the Geneva Convention, was seen by the Soviets as, at least in part, influenced by the communist strategy of letting the French off the hook in Geneva. 1 I 2. The Major Communist Powers Perceive Certain Losses a. Communist Consolidation of All of Indochina is Not Achieved At least for the immediate future, a communist consolidation f of all of Indochina was out of the question. Regardless of how inevitable I the surge of communist control into the area might seem, the move had. come to a halt temporarily at the 17th parallel. In effect, the communists were not prepared, to take the risks in pursuing their very real superiority, if not on the battlefield., then in the psyche. The communist assertion at Geneva that the Viet Minh controlled three quarters of the area of Vietnam was close to the truth. The decision to relinquish this local control throughout Vietnam must have been viewed as a loss. b. U.S. Influence in Indochina is Not Prevented. ( A major political and military objective of China was the prevention of U.S. bases in Southeast Asia. This aim, paralleling the 1 , Soviet objective of blocking U.S. influence in Europe, was an important part of overall Chinese strategy at' Geneva. But, if the Chinese Govern- 1 ment considered, the Geneva provisions a first step toward. Southeast Asia's .neutralization, this estimate was quickly disabused. The governments of Laos and. Cambodia issued, declarations on 21 July, which left room for the conclusion of alliances and. the stationing of foreign forces on their territory. To ease the communist outcry, both countries vowed, not to ally themselves in any manner "not in conformity with the principles of the Charter of the United Nations," nor to permit foreign bases while their security was not threatened. 6/ Nevertheless, their delegates in- dicated, even before the Conference that U.S. protection of their countries against aggression was desirable. The two zones of Vietnam, in contrast, were categorically enjoined, from permitting the establishment of foreign military bases and. from adhering to military alliances (Article 19 of the armistice agreement). The Chinese, because they were unable to obtain ■D-7 TOP SECRET - Sensitive V ['. ( - Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive a U.S. guarantee of the Accords, could not prevent the U.S. from subsequently- bringing Cambodia and Laos within the security perimeter of SEATO through the Protocol, a device broached by Und.er Secretary Smith at Geneva. 7/ Later, the U.S. spread this umbrella over SVN as "well. 3- The DRV Views Its Gains and Losses a. Advantages are Gained, but at a Price In terms of advantages, the military accords signed 21 July by Ta Quang Buu, Vice-Minister of National Defense of the DRV, and Brigadier General Delteil, Commander of French Union Forces in Indochina, ceded, the DRV full control of all Vietnamese territory north of the line set roughly at the 17th parallel. French attempts to acquire enclaves in the area of the bishoprics and. around. Haiphong had been rejected, and all French forces r were to be withdrawn from Haiphong within 300 days. Moreover, the Final Declaration of the Conference specified that the demarcation line was pro- visional and, under Article 7> would be expunged by elections to be held in July, 1956* The DRV, therefore, could look forward to a possible legal victory at the ballot boxes within two years. But, the disappointments to the Viet Minh must have weighed heavily also. National unity was specifically compromised, by the creation of two zones divided by a demilitarized area at the 17th, rather than the 13th or lVth, parallel. A fast political solution in six months had to be bargained, away as well; elections would, not be held, for two years, and even then under international, not strictly Vietnamese, supervision. Finally, the Viet Minh had. been forced to yield completely on their claims advanced in support of the Pathet Lao and. Free Khmer forces. In Laos and. Cambodia, as in Vietnam, international rather than indigenous inspection teams were to be admitted.. The so-called resistance forces would, either have to be withdrawn (in Laos, following temporary regroupment) or demobilized (in Cambodia) on the spot. The Viet Minh could, only salvage promises from the governments of Laos and Cambodia -- contained in their separate delcara- tions of 21 July — that "citizens" of the two countries would, be able to - participate as candidates or electors in elections to be held during 1955 • The Viet Minh accepted these results .even though they went well beyond compromise positions which they advanced, through the talks. b. The DRV is Insured, of Territorial Consolidation The Viet Minh had no desire to surrender their de facto control over considerable areas of Vietnam outside the Tonkin Delta. During June and July, according to CIA maps, Viet Minh forces held down the larger portion of Annam (excepting the major port cities) and significant pockets in the Cochin-China delta. Their consequent claim to all the territory north of a line running northwest from the 13th to the l4th parallel (from Tuy Hoa on the coast through Pleiku to the Cambodian border) 8/ was far more in keeping with the actual military situation than the French demand D-8 TOP SECRET - Sensitive - Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 I TOP SECRET - Sensitive for location of the partition line at the 18th parallel. Yet, the French would never consent to admitting communist control on the borders of both Cambodia and. Laos. The final decision to partition the country at the 17th parallel was, nevertheless, a success to the extent that it provided the DRV with absolute, unchallenged political control of haif of Vietnam -- a situation which the Viet Minh began then to view as the first crucial step in the series of political moves that would achieve goals commensur- ate with their military power: the quick political conquest ("liberation") of the rest of the country. -C. Election Plans Point to Eventual DRV Domi nation In keeping with their desire for haste in achieving an "all- Vietnamese" political settlement, the Viet Minh, while agreeing to parti- tion, wanted it to be temporary and to be followed quickly by elections. The Viet Minh delegates, therefore, had argued that elections should, be held six months after a cease-fire. But, the French retorted elections should be held 18 months after completion of the regroupment process, or between 22 and 23 months after the cease-fire. 9/ The compromise, urged by the USSR and. China, accomplished what was in fact the most important aim of the election talks: the fixing of a date, thus providing insurance that the elections would take place. In a very real sense, though, the two year lag gave the GVN invaluable time, and communist strategy on this issue seemed, to have backfired. k. The DRV is Satisfied, with the Geneva Outcome The Viet Minh evidently believed. — and no French authority on the spot doubted, this -- that it had the capability to eliminate the French j from Tonkin with one major offensive, and to drive on for further gains i in the South against a weakened, demoralized Franco -Vietnamese army. Fighting and talking simultaneously was pointed, to with approval by the Viet Minh as a tactic capable of being pursued for two years (like the Chinese in Korea) in order to assure greater territorial control. Whether the Viet Minh ultimately envisaged the conquest of all Vietnam before reach- ing agreement with the French is not known; but, like the French, the Viet I Minh probably regarded maximum control of territory and. population as in- surance against future elections. Reporters covering the Geneva Convention • quoted bitter comments of the DRV delegation after the final meeting, when the agreements were mad.e public. There is good reason to believe, however, that, in reality, the Viet Minh were satisfied with the results attained at Geneva. This satisfaction was based in part on certain miscalculations on the part of the DRV, which underestimated, the future commitment of the U.S. to the South Vietnamese and. which also underestimated the survivability of Diem and his government. It is apparent that the DRV felt that its losses at Geneva amounted, merely to delays that would set back the time schedules in Indochina, but that such a payment in time was well worth the territorial gains and the prevention of Western united action in Viet- nam. Unlike GVN and. U.S. statements during and. after Geneva, Viet Minh representatives publicly supported both the military agreements and the [ Final Declaration without qualification. D-9 ' • TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive ""■"" —————— — — — — — — — — — — — _ III. D. 1. FOOTNOTES ( » 1. Dillon priority tel. No. 5035 from Paris, June 2k, 195^ (TOP SECRET) 2. Smith tel. SECTO 636 from Geneva, July 17, I95U (SECRET). 3. Smith NIACT tel. SECTO 639 from Geneva, July 18, 195^ (SECRET). k. CIA Memorandum RSS OOI7/66, p. k6 ( SECRET/NoFornDis/Contr oiled Dis). 5. Mackintosh, pp. 8U-85. : 6. The declarations may be found in Great Britain, Foreign Office, r , Documents Relating to British Involvement in the Indo-China Conflict J 19^5-1965 . Misc. No. 25, Cmnd. 283^ (London: H.M.S.O., 1965), PP- 76 (Cambodia) and 79 (Laos). 7. In a talk with the Cambodian Foreign Minister Sam Sary, Philip Bonsai suggested that it would not be possible to guarantee Cambodia's security by a Conference mechanism subject to communist veto. Bonsai said, how- ever, that once a satisfactory cease-fire were concluded, one that did. not prevent Cambodia from cooperating with other non-communist states in defense matters, "he was confident U.S. and other interested countries looked forward to discussing with Cambodian Government" the security problem. (Johnson priority tel. SECTO 627 from Geneva, July 16, 195^> SECRET. ) When Sam Sary called a few days later on Smith in the com- . pany of Nong Kimny (Ambassador to Washington), the Under Secretary recommended that Phnom Penh, at the Conference, state its intention not to have foreign bases on its territory and not to enter into mili- tary alliances. At the same time, though, Cambodia would be free to import arms and. to employ French military instructors and technicians. While Cambodia would, thus perhaps not be free to join the contemplated SEATO, she might still benefit from it. Smith "assured the Cambodian Foreign Minister that, in our view, any aggression overt or covert against ' Cambodian territory would bring pact into operation even though Cam- bodia not a member. I took position that French Union membership afforded • Cambodia adequate desirable means of securing through France necessary arms, some of which would be American, as well as necessary instructors and technicians, some of which might well be American trained." Nong Kimny "limited himself to statement that Cambodia relies heavily on U.S. for eventual protection against aggression and that Cambodia de- sires to emerge from current conference with maximum freedom of action re measures Cwribodia may take to assure defense." Smith tel. SECTO 65O from Geneva, July 18, 195^ (CONFIDENTIAL). 8. See Chauvel's report in Johnson's priority tel. SECTO 553 from Geneva, July 2, I95U (TOP SECRET). Also: Lacouture and Devillers, p. 238. ' 9. Dillon from Paris tel. No. 32, July 2, 195I1. (TOP SECRET). D-10 T0P SECRET - Sensitive r ■/ J Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. D. 2. THE OUTCOME FOR THE WEST feg e . 1. U.K. Diplomacy is an Unqualified. Success D-12 a. British Prestige is Heightened D-12 b . Danger of a Wider War is Averted. D-12 2 . For France , The Results are Better Than Expected. D-12 a. France is Extricated without Dishonor D-12 b. France Retains a Significant Foothold, in Indochina D-13 3 . GVN Achieves More Than Its Situation Warrants D-13 k. U.S. Attitude on Geneva is Mixed D-l4 a. Initial U.S. Public View is Cautious D-l^ b . Public and. Private Reactions Vary D-lU c. U.S. -U.K. Seven-Point Program is Mostly Accomplished. D-15 d. Smith States U.S. Position on Accords D-l6 D-ll TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 i \ TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. D. 2. THE OUTCOME FOR THE WEST lo U.K. Diplomacy is an Unqualified Success a. British Prestige is Heightened The diplomacy of the Geneva Conference can "be viewed as a success for the co-chairmen -- the U.K. and the USSR. Although some have described Chou En-lai as the most influential delegate at Geneva, l/ and though Molotov rightfully has been credited with a key role in the initiation of needed compromises, Anthony Eden's presence and leadership made a difference in the results of the conference and in Britain 1 s world image. Eden repeatedly acted as an intermediary not only between the Communists and the West, but also among the U.S., France, and the GVN as well. He aided Molotov in seeing proposals for compromise through to agreements, but he was also capable of espousing and maintaining unyield- ing support for firm Western positions. In particular, he was able to keep the Soviets convinced that the U.K. would be at the side of the U.So if Communist intransigence led to a stalemate at Geneva* One specific pay-off for the U.K. was Peking's agreement on 17 June (after four years of silence on the point) to exchange charges d'affaires with London. b. Danger of a Wider War is Averted Tensions at Geneva were high. The Viet Minh was forcing the initiative on the battlefield in Indochina, the French Government was unstable, and at that time it seemed to many that all of strategic Vietnam would fall into Communist hands. Convictions were strongly held by many that that fall was inevitable unless the West took some united military action, or unless the diplomacy of Geneva brought unsuspected agreement. The danger of a wider war was very real. The U.K. wanted to support France and the United States, but not at the price of British troops and money . London's goal was to terminate the war and reduce international tensions -- to do all this without acceding to a Communist victory, and without adversely affecting British interests in that area of the world. The U.K. managed to steer a course close to its goals despite the fact that the British public was against U.Ko military involvement in Indochina. In the end, Eden was able to help avert the risks of a wider war and to bring the U.K. into SEATO -- presumably to help protect British gains at Geneva,, 2. For France, the Results are Better Than Expected a. France is Extricated without Dishonor The French, probably more than any other party to the conference, had cause for satisfaction. With cooperation from the other major powers, needless to say, the French found themselves a political beneficiary at D-12 TOP SECRET - Sensitive G Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Geneva despite France's unstable domestic politics and its poor military posture in Indochina. The settlements at Geneva were respectable enough for the French Government to stay in power. If anything, the results of Geneva provided a greater measure of internal political cohesion than France had enjoyed in a number of years. It would have been very diffi- cult for any French Government to continue the actual fighting in Indo- china — especially when it appeared to many that France was losing. b. France Retains a Significant Foothold in Indochina The results at Geneva also allowed France to hold on to some- thing very tangible — most of Indochina itself. The Viet Minh forces and auxiliaries in Cambodia and Laos were shunted aside , preserving paramount French influence in Vientiane and Phnom Penh. Moreover, in South Vietnam the French maintained clear title to their military, cultural, and economic interests; in North Vietnam, they had some pros- pect of salvaging their investments. As early as 26 June, France made it privately clear that its intention was to maintain a viable Vietnamese state in the south. Thus, when in late June the Franco-Viet Minh "underground" talks were elevated to direct discussions between Jean Chauvel and Pham Van Dong, the French gave as one of their objectives the hope of arriving at an equitable territorial settlement "which will assure the State of Vietnam a territory as solid as possible..." Although aware of possible violent GVN reaction against partition, the French considered that arrangement best for the GVN inasmuch as it would enable the country "to consolidate herself in such a fashion as to create in the face of the Viet Minh an authentically national and independent force." 2/ In agreeing to partition, the French Government, like Washington, was motivated in part by a desire to assure the State of Vietnam a defensible territory within which the Saigon regime could attempt to construct a stable authority competitive with the DRV. 3. GVN Achieves More Than Its Situation Warrants Considering the fact that the newly independent State of Vietnam was still little more than a figurehead for French authority, that the French by far were carrying the burden of the fighting against the Viet . Minh, and that the French and Vietnamese together were not doing well against the Viet Minh, the GVN received much more than they could have realistically expected from the Geneva Conference. Indeed, Geneva opened new opportunity to the GVN. Though territory had been lost, a way was gained for the establishment of governmental' authority in the south. Only through consolidation of territory and regroupment of population could Bao Dai have hopes of being able to meet the challenges -- whether at the polls or militarily — that the Viet Minh were sure to • provide in the future. The GVN delegation at Geneva nonetheless took the view that the Accords were a sell-out to the Communists. While the Saigon Regime did not directly disavow these agreements in the sense that they D-13 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 D f P* TOP SECRET - Sensitive rejected them altogether, or hinted at their intention of ignoring them, it clearly put a special interpretation on the agreements. For example, the GVN made it plain from the beginning that it would not countenance unsupervised elections. Moreover, it refused to contemplate elections unless and until it could secure and govern all its territory. This position was advantageous for the GVN, because it gave the DRV incentive to avoid actions south of the 17th parallel which might disrupt the election time-table, or give the GVN an excuse for refusing to hold elections. Through the concessions of the Communist countries and the firmness of its Western Allies, the GVN had been given time to consolidate itself. k* U.S. Attitude on Geneva is Mixed a. Initial U.S. Public View is Cautious The U.S. viewed the Conference results with mixed emotions. I > Publicly, the American position was that the Accords represented the • best that could have been obtained from a bad situation. The President, at a 21 July news conference, declined to criticize the Accords. He said they contain "features which we do not like, but a great deal depends on • how they work in practice." He announced the U.S. intention to establish permanent missions in Laos and Cambodia, and said the U.S. was actively "pursuing discussions with other free nations with a view to the rapid organization of a collective defense in Southeast Asia in order to prevent further direct or indirect Communist aggression in that general areao " jj Under Secretary Smith took the same line two days later. Denying that Geneva was another "Munich," Smith said: "I am . . . con- vinced that the results are the best that we could possibly have obtained in the circumstances," adding that "diplomacy has rarely been able to gain at the conference table what cannot be gained or held on the battle- field,," h/ Finally, Secretary Dulles, also on 23 July, made a statement to the press oriented toward the future. Referring to "the loss in Northern Vietnam," Dulles expressed the hope that much would be learned from the experience toward preventing further Communist inroads in Asia Two lessons could be culled, the Secretary observed. First, popular support was essential against Communist subversion; "the people should feel that they are defending their own national institutions." Second, collective defense should precede an aggressive enemy move rather than occur as a . - reaction to it. A collective security system in Southeast Asia, he con- cluded, would check both outright aggression and subversion. 5/ ■ * bo Public and Private Reactions Vary These initial public U.S. reactions to the Conference results were at considerable variance with what was being said within government councils. The fact that another piece of territory had been formally ceded to the Communists obviously weighed heavily on the Administration. When papers were drawn up for the National Security Council in August, the Geneva Conference was evaluated as a major defeat for Western D-lU TOP SECRET - Sensitive r I \ I Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive diplomacy and a potential disaster for U.S. security interests in the Far East. The Operations Coordinating Board (OCB) stated that the Final Declaration of the Conference "completed a major forward stride of Communism which may lead to the loss of Southeast Asia. It, therefore, recorded a drastic defeat of key policies in NSC 5^-05 and a serious loss for the free world, the psychological and political effects of which will be felt throughout the Far East and around the globe." 6/ In a separate report, the NSC was somewhat more specific concerning the extent of the damage: the Communists acquired "an advance salient" in Vietnam for use in military and non-military ways; the U.S. lost prestige as a leader in Asia capable of stemming Communist expansion; the Communist peace line gained at America's expense; Communist military and political prestige was enhanced as the result of their ability to exploit unstable situations in Southeast Asian countries without resort to armed attack, jj c. U.S. -U.K. Seven-Point Program is Mostly Accomplished The provisions of the Accords, however, should have furnished the U.S. grounds for some satisfaction. Comparing the U.S. -U.K. seven- point memorandum of 29 June with the final settlement nearly one month later, the Conference had very nearly satisfied the minimum U.S. objectives -- despite Washington's apprehension over faltering British or French sup- port . (1) The integrity and independence of Laos and Cambodia were preserved, and Viet Minh forces were, in the main, withdrawn from those two countries. (2) Southern Vietnam was retained (although without an en- clave in the North) , and the partition line was drawn somewhat south of Dong Hoi. (3) Laos, Cambodia, and "retained" Vietnam were not prevented from forming "non-Communist regimes" (in the case of Vietnam, within the two-year pre-election period) ; nor were they expressly forbidden "to main- tain adequate forces for internal security." Vietnam's right to import arms and other war materiel was, however, restricted to piece-by-piece replacement, and a ceiling was fixed on foreign military personnel at the number in the country at the War's close. (4-5) Recalling Dulles' interpretation of 7 July that elec- tions should "be only held as long after cease-fire agreement as possible and in conditions free from intimidation to give democratic elements best chance," 8/ the Accords did not stipulate "political provisions which would risk loss of the retained area to Communist control. . ./or/ exclude the possibility of the ultimate reunification of Vietnam by peaceful means." Although both Dulles and Mendes-France preferred that no date be set for the elections, the compromise two-year hiatus gave the Americans, the French, and the South Vietnamese a significant breathing spell. The D-15 TOP SECRET - Sensitive r i ( «. - ( \. : ■ Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive U.S. priority in the aftermath was accorded to programs designed to "give democratic elements best chance" through economic assistance and political support for South Vietnam. Elections, as Dulles indicated during the Conference, and as the OCB concurred in August ,9/ were agreeable to the U.S. ; but they "were two years away, and the primary task in the interim was seen as "to maintain a friendly non-Communist South Vietnam. . ."10/ The corollary objective (stated by the NSC in August, 195^5 &nd approved by the President) "to prevent a Communist victory through all-Vietnam elections, "ll/ then did not connote U.S. determination to subvert the Accords; rather, it appears to have meant that U.S. influence would aim at assuring that the communists would not gain an electoral victory through force, deceit, or other undemocratic methods . (6) The Accords expressly provided for the transfer of individuals desiring to move from one zone to another. (7) The Accords did seem, at the time , to have basically fulfilled the precondition of providing "effective machinery for inter- national supervision of the agreement." Although the machinery would be the ICC's rather than the UN's, Under Secretary Smith noted that the ICC would have a veto power on important questions, would be composed of one genuine neutral (India) and one pro-Western government (Canada), and would be permitted full freedom of movement into demilitarized zones and frontier and coastal areas. Smith, on 19 July, gave this assessment: "Taking everything into consideration, I strongly feel this is satisfactory and much better than we were able to obtain in Korea. French feel, and Eden and I agree, that with such composition built-in veto will work to our advantage. This setup is best French or anybody else could get., and I feel it is within spirit of point 7. "12/ d. Smith States U.S. Position on Accords The final statement by Under Secretary Smith, setting forth the U. So position on the Accords, provides the only public measure of the U.S. commitment to them. At Smith's urging, Dulles agreed that the U.S. delegation could take note of the Final Declaration as well as of the military agreement. But, Smith was specifically instructed not to take note of paragraph 13 of the Final Declaration. That paragraph aimed at ensuring respect for the armistice accords in Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam by declaring the conferees 1 agreement "to consult one another on any question which may be referred to them by the International Super- visory Commission..." Dulles felt that provision implied: "...a multilateral engagement with communists which would be inconsistent with our basic approach and which D-l6 TOP SECRET - Sensitive . Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 633 16. By: NWD Date: 201 1 D i . TOP SECRET - Sensitive • • • subsequently might enable Communist China to charge us with alleged violations of agreement to which it might claim both governments became parties. 13/ Aside from taking note of the three military armistice agreements and paragraphs 1 to 12 of the Final Declaration, Smith , in line with long- standing U.S. policy and his instructions of l6 July from Dulles, declared on the Government's behalf that the U.S. "will refrain from the threat or the use of force to disturb" the Accords. Moreover, the U.S. "would view any renewal of the aggression in violation of the aforesaid agreements with grave concern and as seriously threatening international peace and security." Finally, Smith reiterated a U.S. policy declaration of 29 June 195^ positing U.S. support of UN super- vision of free elections designed to reunify countries "now divided against their will..." Smith mentioned on this point that the U.S could not associate with any arrangement that would hinder "its tradi- tional position that peoples are entitled to determine their own future if r u ; ( . \ D-17 TOP SECRET - Sensitive D r i i r • i i c ? ■ V r Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. D. 2. FOOTNOTES 1. Hans Morgenthau, in "The 195^ Geneva Conference: An Assessment" ( America's Stake in Vietnam, New York : American Funds of Vietnam, 1956) \ says Chou was to Geneva what Metternich was to the Congress of Vienna of l8l5- 2. Aide-memoire delivered by Bonnet to Dulles and Eden June 26, in Dulles' Tel Wo. 4852 to American Embassy - Paris, 28 June 195*+ (TOP SECRET) 3. White House press release of 21 July 195^ k. Quoted in Richard P. Stebbins, et al., The United States- in World Affairs, I95U (New York: Harper and Bros., 1956) , p. 255 5. Department of State press release No. U00 5 23 July 195^4- 6. OCB, Progress Report on United States Objectives and Courses of Action With Respect to Southeast Asia (NSC 5^05), 6 August 195^ (TOP SECRET) 7 # NSC, Review of U.S. Policy in the Far East (NSC 5U29) , k August 195^ (TOP SECRET) 8. Dulles to American Embassy, Paris, Tel No. 77, 7 July 195 1 ! (SECRET) 9.' In its Progress Report of 6 August, OCB said there was need for "political action" to build a strong foundation in free Asia for the continued orientation of the countries there toward the Free World. "A test of such political action and orientation will be the elections in Laos and Cambodia during 1955 >, and in North and South Vietnam during 1956." 10. This objective, stated in NSC 5^29/l> was approved by the President. See NSC, Review of U Q S. Policy in the Far East , 12 August 195 ^ (TOP SECRET) ' ~ 11. Ibid, - .-■•'■ 12. Smith from Geneva Tel SECTO 666, 19 July I95U (TOP SECRET) 13. Dulles to Smith at Geneva, Tel TOSEC 576 MACT, 19 July I95H (TOP SECRET) D-18 TOP SECRET - Sensitive I Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 633 16. By: NWD Date: 201 1 D3 ^ ^ / Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive III. D. 3- THE SPIRIT AND PRACTICAL EFFECT OF GENEVA Page 1. The Accords, in Theory, are Clearly Drawn D-20 a. The Primary Objective of the Accords is a Cease-Fire D-20 b - Key Provisions for Partition and Elections D-20 (1) Summary of the Cease-Fire Agreement D-20 (2) Summary of the Final Declaration D-23 2. Theoretical and Practical Interpretations Differ D-2U a. The Election Provision Causes Controversy D-2U b . Practical Views Vary D-2**. c. Official Positions are in Agreement D-25 &• The Outcome Could Have Been Predicted D-25 •- D-19 ) TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 [ TOP SECRET - Sensitive r III. D. 3- THE SPIRIT AMD PRACTICAL EFFECT OF GENEVA 1. The Accords, in Theory, are Clearly Drawn a. The Primary Objective of the Accords is a Cease-Fire ■ The Geneva Accords -- that is, the armistice agreements for Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos, and the Final Declaration of the Conference — -were designed primarily to end hostilities and re-establish peace in Indochina, and secondarily to provide conditions conducive to the future independent political development of the three States of the region. The signed armistice agreements -were military, the only exception being the Declaration of the Royal Khmer Government , included in the Cambodia armis- tice, guaranteeing the political rights of all its citizens, l/ The unsigned Geneva Final Declaration deals with a political settlement, but in terms of future events -- elections to be held in Laos and Cambodia during 1955 as provided in their constitutions, and elections to reunify Vietnam following consultations within one year (by July, 1955) , followed by a national plebiscite within two years (July, 1956) . The goal for all of the powers at Geneva, both W.estern and Communist, was a cessation of the war on terms that would permit subsequent progress toward their dis- parate political objectives in Southeast Asia. All participants desired what might be termed a profitable suspension of the fighting: the Commu- nists wanted an agreement providing time for reconsolidation, and also a political arrangement that would facilitate future expansion; the West was willing to barter, holding out partition and elections in exchange for disengagement of French forces, establishment of the GVN as a viable political organization, and consolidation of the non-Communist Southeast Asian nations in a collective defense arrangement against the further encroachments of Communism. , . b. Key Provisions for Partition and Elections In retrospect, the key political provisions were those that produced the partition of Vietnam, and promised elections within two years. A short summation of the Vf articles and 2 annexes of the "Agreement on the Cessation of Hostilities in Viet-Nam, July 20, 195*+" signed only by the French and the DRV, follows below as a review of the final Geneva position to which, theoretically, all delegates agreed: (l) Summary of the Cease-Fire Agreement Article 1. DMZ established; "Peoples Army of Vietnam regroups north and French Union forces" south. 2. Regrouping to be completed in 300 days. 3. ICC to control joint waterways. i D-20 TOP SECRET - Sensitive i I f . . ' ... ( Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Article k. The regrouping zones to include territorial waters , islands. 5. DMZ to be evacuated within 25 days. 6. Crossing of provisional military demarcation line prohibited. 7. Unauthorized entry in DMZ prohibited. 8. Rules for civil administration of DMZ. 9. ICC to have freedom of movement. 10. Military commanders of both sides to order complete cease-fire. 11. Times for cease-fire; information on planned regrouping movements to be exchanged within 25 days of Agreement's entry into force. 12. Minefields and other obstacles to be removed; regrouping moves will avoid contact. 13 . Provision for air corridors. - 1I4.. Political and administrative measures in the two regrouping zones: conduct of civil administration; rules for transfer of territorial control; prohibition of reprisals; freely permitted transfer of residence by civilians. 15. Details covering disengagement and withdrawals of forces; timing, prohibition of hostilities; of sabotage; movement schedules. 16. Troop reinforcement prohibited; rotation permitted. 17. Military materiel augmentation prohibited, applicable to aircraft, naval craft, vehicles, etc; normal replacement authorized under specific ICC supervisory procedures. 18. Establishment of new military bases prohibited. 19.. Foreign military bases, alliances, and hostilities prohibited. 20. Points of entry for rotation established.. 21. PW liberation within 3° days of cease-fire, to include all PW's and civilian internees. 22. Commanders to insure punishment of violators of these Agreements. L * D-21 TOP SECRET - Sensitive i ' - .. I . I i: i Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive r Article * 23. Graves registration information to be exchanged. 2k. Both forces to respect DMZ, undertake no operations , engage in no "blockade of any kind in Viet-Nam"; definition of "territory." 25. Commanders to assist ICC. 26. Cost of ICC to be shared by both parties. 27. "The signatories of the present agreement and their successors in their functions shall be responsible for ensuring and obser- vance and enforcement of the terms and provisions thereof"; Commanders to comply in full; procedural refinements permitted as necessary. .28. "Responsibility for the execution of the agreement of the cessation of hostilities shall rest with the parties." 29. ICC to insure control. P 30. Joint Commission (JC) to be set up. 31. JC to have equal number from both sid.es. 32. President of the delegations to the JC shall hold General rank; joint sub-groups to be established by mutual agreement. 33. JC supervisory responsibilities: cease-fire, regroupment, observance of DMZ, liaison. . 3IU ICC to be Canada, India, and Poland; presided over by India. 35. ICC to set up mobile inspection teams; locations established. 36. ICC responsibilities: control movements, supervise DMZ, control release of PW's, supervise ports and airfields for replacements and nonreinforcement. 37. ICC to begin inspections as soon as possible. 38. Reporting procedures of ICC inspection teams 39. ICC handling of violations. k0. ICC intermediates JC and parties. ij-1. Recommendation procedure for ICC. k2. ICC decisions relating to violations which might resume hostilities must be unanimous. D-22 TOP SECRET - Sensitive • 1 Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Article lj-3. ICC to inform Geneva Conference members if a recommendation is refused. kk. ICC to be set up at the time of cease-fire. U5. ICC in Vietnam to cooperate with ICC in Laos, Cambodia. 1+6. ICC may progressively reduce its activities. hf. Provisions effective 2^00 hours, 22 July I95U. Annexes I. Demarcation line. ' II. Delineation of Provisional Assembly Areas. On 21 July, the day following the armistice agreements, the members of the Geneva Conference approved a Final Declaration (by voice vote, with the U.S. and GVN abstaining; a signed agreement was avoided in order not to emphasize U.S. refusal to approve). The declaration is essentially a comment on the armistice agreements, "taking note" and otherwise stressing certain key points. A summary of the declaration follows: (2) Summary of the Final Declaration The Conference: 1 # Takes note of cease-fire in Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam. 2. Expresses satisfaction in cease-fire agreements. 3. Takes note of planned 1955 elections in Cambodia and Laos. k. Takes note of prohibition of introduction of additional troops and materiel into Vietnam, and of declarations of Cambodia and Laos not to request foreign aid "except for the purpose of effective defense of their territory." 5. Takes note of prohibition of foreign bases in Vietnam, and declara- tions by Cambodia and Laos that they will not participate in any military alliances "not in conformity with principles of the Charter of the United Nations." ] 6. Recognizes the "essential purpose" of the Vietnam agreements is the end of hostilities, and that the DMZ is in no way a political j or territorial boundary; the political settlement of Vietnam to j be achieved in the near future. D-23 TOP SECRET - Sensitive [ . c Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive The Conference: * 7. Declares general elections should be held in July 195&> with mutual consultations to this end beginning on 20 July 1955 • 8. Emphasizes the provision for free movement of civilians. 9. Cautions against reprisals. 10* Takes note of French agreement to withdraw troops from Cambodia, Laos ^ and Vietnam "at the request of the government concerned." 11. Takes note of -French recognition of sovereignty of Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam. 12. Agrees as a group to respect sovereignty of Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam. 13- Agrees as a group to consult on questions presented by ICC. 2. Theoretical and Practical Interpretations Differ a. The Election Provision Causes Controversy The most serious controversy over the Accords has centered on the election provisions (Article 7) of the Final Declaration. The Declaration obviously envisaged elections to decide on a united Vietnam to be held by July, 1956. Since "the military demarcation line is pro- visional and should not in any way be interpreted as constituting a political or territorial boundary," the Geneva partition was a temporary, expedient measure. The Conference intended then to permit the Vietnamese people "to enjoy the fundamental freedoms guaranteed by democratic insti- tutions," and to devise a political settlement for their country "in the near, future." That settlement, the conferees declared, ought to come about (l) "on the basis of respect for the principles of independence, unity and territorial integrity" and (2) through "free general elections by secret ballot... in July 1956, under the supervision of an international commission composed of representatives of the Member States of the Inter- national Supervisory Commission. . .Consultation, will be held on this sub- ject between the competent representative authorities of the two zones from 20 July 1955 onwards." b. Practical Views Vary The difficulty with the election provisions of the Final Declaration, as with the Accords as a whole, relates not to their spirit, but to their practicality. It remains a matter of conjecture whether the members of the Convention genuinely thought that a political solution to D-2U TOP SECRET - Sensitive I. ( f I Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive unification had been postponed by only two years , or whether they felt that partition, even with the resultant risk of renewed military con- frontation was, in reality, the best and only solution that the conflict- ing aims and pressures at Geneva could provide. The British, like the Russians, thought partition achieved their goal of re-establishing a stability, however precarious, in Southeast Asia. The Chinese did" not gain as extensive a buffer zone as they had sought, but probably were satisfied to see the territorial establishment of the DRV; they could not (at that time) have been seriously concerned over a future threat from South Vietnam, since the Accords ruled out an extensive U.S. military presence there . The U.S. viewed the loss of North Vietnam as a political disaster, and immediately set about making treaty arrangements to prevent the loss of more Asian territory to Communism; but the U.S. was willing to accept partition as all that could be salvaged from a bad military situa- tion. The Southeast Asia policy of the U.S. in the aftermath of the Geneva Conference was focused on organizing free Asian states against further inroads of Communism. The two Vietnams faced each other across a demilitarized zone. The DRV, manipulating a Viet Minh infrastructure in the South, waited for the elections, or for voracious political forces in the South to plunge the Saigon Government into chaos before election time arrived. South Vietnam began its attempt to establish complete con- trol over its own countryside, and constantly decried the DRV's undemo- cratic handling of would-be migrants. » c. Official Positions dxe in Agreement On the surface, however, the parties to the Geneva Accords -- with exception of the South Vietnamese Government -- officially sub- scribed to the view that partition was, as the Final Declaration stated, only temporary. Moreover, and again with the GVN the exception, all the parties concluded that partition was the only realistic way to separate the combatants, meet the widely divergent military and political demands of the French and Viet Minh, and conclude an armistice. d. The Outcome Could Have Been Predicted But such assertions did not affect the practical import of the Geneva documents. By creating two regimes responsible for "civil administration" (Article 14. a. of the Vietnam Armistice Agreement), by providing for the regroupment of forces to two zones and for the move- ment of persons to the zone of their choice, and by putting off national elections for two years, the conferees, whatever their intentions, made a future political settlement for Vietnam unlikely. The separation of Vietnam at the 17th parallel was designed to facilitate the armistice, but in fact it also facilitated the development of two governments under inimical political philosophies, foreign policies, and socio-economic systems. Thus, reunification through elections remained as remote in Vietnam as in Korea or Germany. "Elections," as Victor Bater has D-25 TOP SECRET - Sensitive Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 201 1 TOP SECRET - Sensitive . commented , 2/ "can, indeed, decide secondary problems of coexistence in circumstances where some measurable minimum "basis for political agreement exists. But they are incapable of acceptance by two opposing states, or parts of a state, when diametrically opposite philosophies are involved." If the Geneva Accords were subverted, the subvert ers were the Geneva conferees themselves, who postulated an ideal political settlement incom- patible with the physical and psychological dismemberment of Vietnam they themselves undertook on July 21, 195^- i [ i / . D-26 TOP SECRET - Sensitive f Declassified per Executive Order 13526, Section 3.3 NND Project Number: NND 63316. By: NWD Date: 2011 TOP SECRET - Sensitive r III. D. 3. FOOTNOTES 1. Future elections in Vietnam are mentioned, in Article Ik of the Vietn Cease-Fire Agreements almost as a political aside. 2. Bator, "One War « Two Vietnams," Military Review , XLVII, No. 6 (June, 1967), 87. am L . D-27 TOP SECRET - Sensitive