• Dien Bien Phu in 1954 - Hell in a very small place

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Fri Feb 25 06:30:10 2022
    XPost: alt.war.vietnam, soc.history.war.misc

    Bob Bowie
    Former Nuclear Physicist (1985–2017)Feb 13

    Has there ever been a military operation with a 100% casualty rate?

    Yes.

    At the fifty-five day battle of Dien Bien Phu in 1954 where General Vo
    Nguyen Giap's Viet Minh army painfully vanquished the French- nobody was evacuated- not even the women and children. And yes- the French were
    allowed to bring their wives/families/mistresses with them in what was
    then a nine-to-five war.

    Unlike Khe Sahn in ‘68, the French base was situated at the bottom of
    the valley. The French made the tactical decision to occupy the low
    ground. All the better to look like a sitting duck to the other side-
    that was the plan. Dien Bien Phu was a series of eight fortifications
    rather than one contiguous base- built around North/South airfields
    which were ringed by hill top fire base positions.

    Things started going awry for the French forty-eight hours into the
    battle when the one-armed French artillery commander- unable to charge
    his semi-automatic pistol due to his one-handedness, laid down next to a grenade, pulled the pin and committed suicide.

    It turned out that Monsieur got off easy.

    After the second week of fighting both French airfields were permanently
    closed due to withering and surprisingly accurate Viet Minh artillery
    and mortar fire from the surrounding hills. At that point almost 13,000
    French troops- plus an unknown number of civilians including doctors,
    nurses, cooks, prostitutes both Vietnamese as well as women brought in
    from other French colonies there to service the French officers,
    military deserters and cowards- who were allowed to stay on at the base
    and happy to be needed to do menial jobs rather than be cast out into
    the jungle, contract workers and front office personnel were now there
    for the duration of the war. With both airfields cratered the French
    couldn't even evacuate their own wounded.

    Unbelievably despite both airfields being closed, every day fresh troops
    kept arriving by parachute to replace French troops killed or too
    seriously wounded to continue to fight. Seriously wounded in this case
    was a relative thing- with nowhere to go wounded French soldiers
    continued to fight bravely- some missing an arm or an eye.

    The French, despite losing all contact with the outside world save one
    high frequency radio transmitter at the command post inflicted such
    heavy casualties on the Viet Minh that nearly a month into the fight
    General Giap was a few hours from calling it quits and withdrawing his
    army back to the Northern Tonkin region which he controlled.

    Giap then came up with the solution that changed the course of the
    battle, the war and history. He sacked his Chinese military advisers who favored human wave attacks on the French fortifications and ordered his
    troops to start digging towards the French positions- sometimes coming
    up inside the French wire- other times secreting huge mines in tunnels
    dug underneath the French camps.

    As the area controlled by the French got smaller the air-dropped
    supplies that they relied on increasingly fell into enemy hands-
    including the devastating American made 155mm howitzer shells with short time-delayed fuses that could penetrate reinforced bunkers for several
    yards before exploding.

    The French wounded overflowed the two base hospitals and the shortage of medical supplies was so acute that bandages were reused- so bad were the conditions at the hospitals that an attending physician assured
    onlookers that the maggots which infested the wounds of his patients
    only ate the rotting flesh- thus helping to stave off gangrene.

    The inevitable end for the French came on May 7th, 1954 when the Viet
    Minh- who had been inside the compound for several weeks now- overran
    the command center and gave the French an ultimatum- surrender by 5:00pm
    or else.

    The American military intervention in the form of American troops and
    long range bomber air-support, reportedly nuclear- promised by Vice
    President Richard Nixon and Senator Lyndon B. Johnson was vetoed at the
    last moment by CIA Director Alan Dulles and President Dwight D.
    Eisenhower, leaving the French to be the first modern army to be
    defeated by a purely indigenous force.

    The surviving French- as well as the ambulatory wounded- were then force-marched 380 miles into captivity to camps near the Chinese border.
    The French had done the unthinkable- and lost every man they had in the
    valley. The ones who didn't die on the march died or suffered beatings, illnesses and starvation at the POW camps.

    Not even in the German defeat at Stalingrad were the losses at
    one-hundred percent. After Paulus' unexpected surrender hundreds if not thousands of Sixth Army regulars managed to evade the Soviets and make
    it safely back to German lines.

    Although still winning the war things certainly were looking a lot worse
    for the French- and two days later the government of France sued for
    peace at the scheduled conference between the two sides in Geneva,
    Switzerland- setting the stage for Johnson and Nixon to wage the second Indochina war.


    Vice President Richard M. Nixon Inspecting the French Emplacements at
    Dien Bien Phu in 1953.

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