President Ho Chi Minh
and Party leaders at a meeting on December 6,1953 in
Viet Bac resistance zone to decide the start of Dien Bien
Phu
Campaign.nbsp;
President Ho Chi Minh giving the task to General
Vo Nguyen Giap.
The High Command of the Dien Bien Phu
Campaign holding a meeting chaired by General Vo Nguyen Giap and deciding to shift
the tactic from “Lightening battle,
lightening victory” to “Firm fighting, firm advancing”
(January
26,1954).
Marching to the
front.
Soldiers of Battalions 351 and 312 hauling
artillery to the battlefield.
More than 20,000 pack- bikes served Dien
Bien
Phu Campaign.
Building Tuan Giao-Dien
Bien road.nbsp;
Trucks of the Transport Department
acrossing a stream to Dien Bien Phu
battlefield.
The political commisar of Battalion 312
handing the flag “Determined to fight and to win” from
President Ho Chi Minh to Company 243, the main force to
attack the enermy’s post on Him Lam Hill.
nbsp;
Soldier of the Regiment 98 (Battalion 316)
attacking the enemy who then controlled half
of C1 Hill.
An anti-aircraft 12.7-mm gun unit (of Battalion
351) firing at enermy planes and protecting our soldiers to allow
them to get close to
the enemy on
the ground.
General De Castries in
his Command bunker.
The French troops assembling tanks in
Dien Bien Phu.
| The Dien Bien Phu victory was
a resplendent milestone in the fight against colonialism for independence
and freedom in the 20th century. It was one of the biggest and
typical strategic decisive battles that fully manifested the strength of
the times and the nation in its history of thousands of years of fighting
to defend the Homeland.
After more
than seven years of conducting the second war of aggression against
Vietnam, the French colonialists lost more than 300,000 officers and men.
All the plans by Leclerc, Valut, Thierry d’Argenlieu, Bolaert, Pignon,
Revert, De Lattre de Tassigny went bust,nbsp; one after the other. The
French seemed to be always starting all over again. In the war without
frontlines, a product of the people’s warfare, the Vietnamese fought the
enemy innbsp; face-to-face battles and behind the adversary lines, in the
rural and the urban areas, which weakened and exhausted the French
expeditionary Corps. Subsequently, the French Cabinet was appointed and
collapsed 17 times, 5 French High Commissioners and 6 French
Commanders-in-Chief of the French army in Indochina had to be summoned
back to France.nbsp;
Thanks to
the politics of people’s warfare, with the combination of two approaches
to its execution: guerilla and regular war, our army and people could
gradually switch from the passive to the active, recording successive
resounding victories.
In face of
successive defeats in Indochina, French public opinion became more and
more tired of the war. In dire straits and utter confusion, the French
Government did not want to carry on the excessively expensive and
desperate war, but it did not wish to give way to the Americans. They held
the view that a best solution then was to use the US aid in cash and
hardware to pull out of the quagmire as an “honourable exit” on the
bargaining table.
On May 7,
1953, under the US agreement, French Premier Renet Mayer appointed 4-star
Gen. Navarre to replace Gen. Salan, as Commander-in-Chief of the French
Expeditionary Corps in Indochina, hence the birth of the Navarre Plan, to
salvage the honour of France.
Our
selection of Dien Bien Phu as a strategic location, and later a decisive
strategic battlefield, was entirely correct.
Our overall
strategic plan was to split and disperse the enemy, launch active
operations on other battlefronts, where they were most vulnerable and
which they could not afford to abandon, but had to send further troops to
come to their rescue. To execute this ploy, we embarked on diversionary
activities, to fool the enemy and manipulate them at will.
To limit
the enemy’s mobile forces, one of their most formidable and efficient, we
had to divert and disperse them to the other battlefronts, so that the
enemy could not afford to muster large forces for the rescue of Dien Bien
Phu, a fundamental condition for the certain victory of the Dien Bien Phu
Campaign. Thanks to this tactic, we had to force 70 out of 84 mobile
battalions of the enemy to different battlefields throughout Indochina.
At Dien
Bien Phu, the main battlefront, the Campaign Command headquarters (i.e.
the advance party) drew up a plan for “lightning battle, lightning
victory”, with a determination to eliminate this complex of fortified
positions in 2 days and 3 nights, as the condition of the enemy was still
a temporary defensive one.nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;nbsp;
After
hearing the reports, Commander-in-Chief Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap, the supreme
commander of the campaign, was so valiantly assertive and sensitive to the
situation that he proposed a change in the plan from “lightning battle,
lightning victory” into “firm fighting, firm advancing”, with a subsequent
re-disposition of the forces. His guideline for operations was fully
approved by the Standing Committee of the Party Central Committee and
President Ho Chi Minh.
In the Dien
Bien Phu Campaign, the enemy was already mired in isolation, digging in
and setting up last-ditch defenses in a deep valley, surrounded by our
forces on higher positions. We had built a whole network of communication
trenches, a system of set battle-arrays for our army men’s encirclement
and offensive. It was for the first time that our forces launched their
encirclement and offensive on a fortified camp when the enemy had better
and more modern supplies and ammunitions. Along with the annihilation of
the enemy’s resources, i.e. artillery, tanks and aircraft, by means of a
network of communication lines and advancing trenches under the tactic of
“ encirclement for usurpation and annihilation”, our army men step by step
tightened the noose. Thus we enhanced our superior positions in both space
and time during the Campaign and generated our monumental might in the
offensive, which was aimed at obliterating the whole complex of fortified
positions, for final victory.
The tactic
during the campaign was for successive breakthroughs, in combination with
encirclement and usurpation. To destroy the enemy’s solid fortified
defense works, we had to launch sudden breakthroughs to annihilate them,
and the breakthroughs had to be successive, without interruption which
gave the enemy no breathing space for resistance. Since the campaign was a
huge formation, complex and comprehensive, the breakthroughs should come
one after the other, so that we could have enough time to make necessary
re-arrangements of formations and changes in the battle arrays.
Furthermore, all this was combined with encirclement and usurpation.
Therefore, the communication lines and trenches were dug in such a way as
to retain the combat power, using them as effective springboards for
efficient assaults on the enemy’s entrenched fortifications, and come
closer to the enemy positions to minimize casualties from adversary
artillery fire.
Such was
our tactic. As for the battle complexion and array, we launched
encirclement on the east and west of the enemy’s fortified entrenchments
on the high ground, foiled their defensive lines on lower ground,
destroyed their defensive belt on the periphery to make deep thrusts into
their interior and their command post, besieged the airfield and pressed
closer to it, to finally cut off all airlifted supplies, the enemy’s only
lifeline and last hope.
This art of
operation was quite compatible with the Vietnamese conditions. The battle
complexion and array bore expression of our tradition of Vietnamese
martial art - “pitting the weaknesses against the fortes ”. It was due to
the fact that we were inferior in hardware, such as aircraft, tanks,
artillery … that we had to resort to it. This tactic called for a long
campaign. Later in the Ho Chi Minh Campaign, as our power for sudden
breakthroughs and deep thrusts was robust and mighty, we could launch our
strikes to liberate Saigon in only a few days.
Resolving
the conflicts in the relations between the objective conditions and
actions, in compatibility with the actual facts conforms to dialectics and
shows our creativity and methodological command. One of the things,
interesting and creative, lies in the fact that for the first time in
Vietnam, and rarely seen in the world as well, we hauled large artillery
pieces up the rugged mountain peaks and camouflaged them well in the
shelters, to point them directly at the enemy’s positions on the lower
ground, to overwhelm and overpower them. With this tactic, we could
protect our artillery pieces, multiply our power and achieve accuracy. As
a matter of fact, our artillery range was 5-7 km from the targets (usually
the 105 mm artillery gun can fire at a target 10-11 km away). With such
close range, we could achieve better accuracy and economy of shells,
hitting the centre of the target with 2-3 shells only, instead of up to 7
shells for long range, not to mention the greater power and
destructiveness. Our men were safe in the bomb- and shell-proof shelters.
Thanks to this advantage, although we were outgunned, from higher
positions, we could overwhelm the enemy’s artillery, with such efficiency
that Pirot, the French artillery commander, caught unawares, had panicked
and went to the length of committing suicide.
The Dien
Bien Phu victory was a triumph of the people’s warfare on a nationwide
scale, with resounding onslaughts and offensives on Gia Lam airport, Cat
Bi airfield, Highway 5, Hanoi railways, and on all the other battlefronts
that thinned out and dispersed the enemy’s forces across Indochina. At
Dien Bien Phu, we annihilated and captured 16,200 enemy troops, and
inflicted an attrition of 200,000 enemy troops in all of Indochina. The
victory of the Dien Bien Phu campaign was the common triumph of all
Indochina.
Dien Bien
Phu recorded another golden chapter in our valiant nation’s heroic history
against foreign invasion.
The victory
brought about a fiery confidence and ushered in a new era for the national
liberation movement, that was surging up powerfully in the world,
particularly in Africa, resulting in a chain of reactions that led to
independence for the French colonies and other oppressed nations as well.
It was the
dauntless indomitability of a people who were resolved to fight foreign
invaders that President Ho Chi Minh asserted: “The history of the world
and Vietnam proves: If a people rise up to struggle for their Fatherland,
no one and no force whatever can defeat them.” It was the triumph of
Vietnamese culture – Ho Chi Minh Culture.
At
5.40 p.m, on May 7, 1954 our soldiers planting the flag “Determined
to fight and to win” on the top of
General De Castries’ bunker.
|
With its
exceptionally important strategic military position, Dien Bien Phu
overwhelms a large region of the North-West and Upper Laos. The
French concentrated their buildup of large armed forces there, 21
battalions with 16,200 troops, including 17 infantry battalions, 3
artillery battalions, 1 engineering battalion, 1 tank company, 1 air
squadron, and 1 motorized vehicle company. All of the French
paratroopers and 40% of their crack mobile forces in Indochina were
stationed there. These forces were positioned into three
sub-regions, North, Centre and South, with 49 fortified camps. Thus
Dien Bien Phu was turned into the most powerful complex of
entrenched fortifications in Indochina
then. |
At 5 p.m on March 13,
1954, our army fired its first salvos, attacking the complex of
entrenched fortifications in Dien Bien Phu.
In the first drive of
assaultsnbsp; (March 13-17, 1954), our army neatly annihilated the
entrenched camps on Him Lam and Doc Lap, forced the Ban Keo
entrenched camp to surrender, and broke up the northern gateway of
the complex.
In the second offensive
drive on March 30, 1954, our army tightened its encirclement,
splitting the enemy forces while launching never-ending assaults,
thus driving the enemy, severely worn out and utterly demoralized,
into a passive defense.
From May 1-7, 1954, our
army launched its 3rd drive of assaults, totally
obliterating the whole complex of entrenched camps in Dien Bien Phu.
The historic Dien Bien Phu Campaign was brought to a triumphant end,
annihilating or capturing alive 16,200 enemy troops, setting ablaze
62 airplanes, capturing and destroying all the enemy arsenal of arms
and
ammunitions. |
nbsp;Story: Senior Lieut. Gen. – Prof. Hoang Minh
Thao - Photos: Filesnbsp; nbsp; |