Posted on 11/03/2017 9:00:28 AM PDT by Perseverando
Geoffrey Shaws account is a page-turning, sorrowful account of how the United States betrayed a man of remarkable character and political genius.
On 2 November, groups of Vietnamese men, women, and children will gather for memorial services across the world to honor the death of a man largely forgotten in American historical memory. Once this man was a household name, frequently featured on the front pages of our nations newspapers and spoken from the mouths of reporters on the nightly news.
That man is Ngo Dinh Diem, president of the Republic of Vietnam (better known as South Vietnam) from 1955 to 1963, his rule and life cruelly ended in a military coup tacitly supported by the U.S. government. A recent book on Diems life, The Lost Mandate of Heaven: The American Betrayal of Ngo Dinh Diem, President of Vietnam, by military historian Geoffrey Shaw clarifies why Americans would do well to mourn the tragic loss of a man many deemed to be Vietnams best chance of defeating communism.
Diem was rarity in history as a devout Catholic head of state in Asia. He has not been served well by the most popular American appraisals of the Vietnam War era. Less than two months ago, Ken Burns and Lynn Novicks popular PBS series on the Vietnam War devoted much of its second episode to Diems rise and fall. Burns portrayal appears to borrow heavily from an earlier PBS documentary on the Vietnam War produced by foreign correspondent Stanley Karnow that aired in 1983. Both tell essentially the same story.
An Overplayed Trope: Diem the Antipathetic Ally
According to the Burns-Novick and Karnow narrative, Diem, a member of a well-respected, well-connected aristocratic Vietnamese Catholic family, served in various French colonial government positions prior to Vietnams independence in the 1950s. Vietnams division between north and south at the 17th parallel at the Geneva Conference in 1954 enabled Diem to assert his authority over South Vietnam with the support of the French and Americans.
A referendum held in the south in 1955 one many viewed as illegitimate due to fraud sealed Diems role as president of the country. With the approval of the United States, Diem shortly thereafter rejected the Geneva stipulation that the north and south were to hold nationwide, conciliatory elections in 1956 to determine the government of a unified Vietnam, allegedly because he knew he would lose to the more popular Ho Chi Minh, who ruled the communist north.
As the years progressed, Diem and his notorious brother, Ngo Dinh Nhu, were plagued by turmoil within his administration, failing government programs across the countryside, and rising popular support for the communist insurgency. The brothers in turn pursued ever-more repressive measures to preserve their authority. Secret police forces led by Nhu imprisoned, tortured, and murdered enemies of the regime, while government policies enriched the countrys Catholic minority to the detriment of the majority-Buddhist nation.
Eventually, the Vietnamese could take no more. Protests erupted across the country, resulting in some of the most iconic moments of the Vietnam War era. Photos of the public self-immolation of Buddhist monk Thích Quảng Đức ultimately scored American photographer Malcolm Browne a Pulitzer Prize, and seemed to encapsulate the degree of resentment among the Vietnamese populace towards Diem and his brother.
The two, fearing the loss of their authority, pushed even harder on the Buddhist protesters, while Washington, which by this point was pouring significant financial and military resources into the country, grew increasingly impatient with the seemingly intransigent and incompetent Diem regime.
Members of the John F. Kennedy administration, finding Diem an intractable force increasingly hostile to U.S. interests, gave the green-light to leaders in the south Vietnamese military to remove Diem from power. A coup initiated on 1 November, 1963 drove the brothers into hiding. By the next day, their hideout in a Catholic Church discovered, they were both dead, murdered in the back of a military truck.
Although many of the details above are true, Shaws work shows that the overall theme Diem the troublesome, dictatorial politician is far from accurate.
Diem, the Ideal Vietnamese Leader
Shaws biography of Diem paints a far different picture of Americas Mandarin. For starters, Diem was a deeply religious man, whose Catholic faith was central to every decision in his life. Often attracted to the religious life, Diem had to be constantly pushed to embrace his natural skills as an administrator and politician.
Diem had a reputation both as an ascetic scholar and a capable bureaucratic, one who seemed to perfectly fit the role of the ideal Vietnamese Confucian leader. Indeed, as Shaw shows, Ho Chi Minh admired Diems austerity, and likely sought to emulate it. Even at the height of his power, Diem lived meagerly, and was known to constantly give money away to any in need. He was known to rise early every day to attend Mass, and worked brutal 16-hour days.
Nor was he a distant, removed politician unfamiliar with the people he governed. According to many first-hand accounts, Diem seemed most alive when tramping through the Vietnamese countryside meeting with peasants, hearing their stories, and seeking to improve their lives. Nor is Diem the anti-Buddhist a fair caricature. Diems government poured large sums of money into supporting the preservation or revival of Buddhist buildings and organizations.
The Buddhist protesters who so famously undermined Diems regime in the months leading up to his ouster were in fact a minority within the south, incited by Buddhist extremist leaders very likely supported by the communists. Rather than a reflection of the teetering authority of the government, the Buddhist crisis was more likely a propaganda effort to obstruct what so many contemporary accounts and historical documents suggest: Diem and his brother were incrementally winning on both the political and military fronts.
A Biased Media, an Ambivalent Government
So how have we come to have such a skewed perception of Diem and his reign as president of South Vietnam? According to Shaw, two sources share the majority of the blame: an American press heavily biased against Diem, and a circle of senior government officials led by Averell Harriman and Roger Hilsman hell-bent on replacing him.
Correspondents from such publications as The New York Times and Washington Post, contrary to their portrayal by Burns and Novicks television series, were often junior reporters in search of the next sexy story to burnish their credentials. Many spent most of their time in Saigon and other major cities, inevitably drawn into the circles of rumor and intrigue that represented only a segment of Vietnamese society. This created a skewed perception of Vietnamese popular opinion, which was particularly troublesome given that Diems efforts were focused largely on protecting and improving the lot of poor South Vietnamese farmers, who made up a majority of the population.
Throughout the Kennedy administration, the press corps published article after article condemning just about everything Diem did, while urging his removal. The medias presentation of events on the ground were far more negative than those military assessments offered, or those of U.S. Ambassador Frederick Nolting, who supported Diems regime. The medias hatchet job was so over-the-top that U.S. officials on a number of occasions complained directly to the editors of the New York Times and Washington Post.
Harriman, a classic example of a condescending WASP bureaucrat, was widely known to despise Diem for resisting U.S. policy.
The Buddhist uprising of 1963 should be interpreted within this context, with Buddhist demonstrators (often protesting in English!) seeking to gain the attention of American journalists eager for the next breaking story.
As for Kennedys administration, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Averell Harriman led a cadre of officials within the government vehemently opposed to Diems regime. Much of this stemmed from Harrimans distaste for Diems attempts to maintain autonomy over his government, the latter often spurning U.S. directives he viewed as misguided, if not a threat to the survival of his country.
Probably the most famous example is Harrimans support for the neutrality of neighboring Laos, a policy that allowed the communists to take over large parts of the Laotian countryside and use it to transfer fighters and materiel to communist insurgents (the notorious Vietcong) in the south. The route through Laos became known, jokingly, as the Averell Harriman Memorial Highway. Diem was adamant in calling this out for what it was: a direct attack on his nations security and viability. Harriman, a classic example of a condescending WASP bureaucrat, was widely known to despise Diem for resisting U.S. policy.
Shaws research shows it was Harriman who instigated and led growing support within the Kennedy administration for Diems removal, consistently setting the tone of cabinet discussions as explicitly anti-Diem. As would be expected, he sought to sideline those individuals like Nolting who offered a different, more sympathetic take. Harriman also relied heavily on the biased reporting of the American media, Pulitzer-prize-winning journalist Marguerite Higgins observing:
And thus is history recast. All those Vietnamese-speaking Americans circling the countryside for the purpose of testing Vietnamese opinion; all those American officers gauging the morale of the troops all those dispatches from Ambassador Nolting an army of data collectors in reasonable agreement had been downgraded in favor of press dispatches stating opposite conclusions. It was the first time that I began to comprehend, in depth and in some sorrow, what was meant by the power of the press.
Harrimans argument that Diems persecution of Buddhists had made it impossible for the United States to back him eventually won in the White House, despite a congressional fact-finding mission in late October 1963 (the month before the assassination) that concluded Washington should stick with Diem. The White House ignored the report, and a wealth of other information, and communicated to Vietnamese military coup plotters they would not oppose Diems removal.
The men who supported the coup surely must have known what would happen to Diem and his brother. When the two were discovered inside the Church of Saint Francis Xavier in Cholon on 2 November, soldiers acting on coup leaders orders secured them inside a personnel carrier, where their executioner cut out their gallbladders while they were still alive, and then shot them.
This was the ignominious end to an American ally, a man whom observers Americans, French, British, Australian, and even North Vietnamese believed (or in the case of the communists, feared) was Saigons best chance to preserve an independent South Vietnam. In an ironic twist of fate, the man at the helm of the administration responsible for Diems demise was himself assassinated three weeks later in Dallas, Texas. The rest, unfortunately, is in the words of Nolting, a most unsavory story of missed opportunities and lost lives.
Setting the Record Straight
Ngo Dinh Diem came to power in South Vietnam through the help of the United States. Burns-Novicks film and Karnow suggest even this was a farce, given Diems ultimate rejection of the planned 1956 nationwide elections, though Shaws careful research proves this a problematic thesis, as well. Although the communists quite expectedly called foul when Diem demurred on elections, Ho Chi Minhs government had already been in direct violation of the 1954 Geneva Accords by building up their military forces and supporting communist insurgent networks in the south.
Much of the data remains unreleased by a communist Vietnamese government eager to preserve a certain narrative regarding Diems rule.
Meanwhile, in the north, the communists were busy suppressing revolts, murdering thousands of people during their unpopular and poorly contrived land reform efforts. Moreover, as Shaw argues, their flagrant violation of the Laotian neutrality agreement years later proves the communists would never have allowed a free and fair nationwide election anyway. Diem simply saw the sham for what it was.
Shaws account of the rise and fall of this ideal Confucian, Catholic Vietnamese leader is a page-turning, if terribly sorrowful account of how the United States betrayed a man of remarkable character and political genius. It is steeped in primary and secondary sources, and many years in the making. Perceived weaknesses of the book such as its possible under-reliance on Vietnamese, rather than Western sources should be tempered by the acknowledgement that much of that data remains unreleased by a communist Vietnamese government eager to preserve a certain narrative regarding Diems rule.
For those interested in understanding a different perspective on the early days of U.S. involvement in Vietnam than that peddled by the fiercely anti-Diem Burns-Novick and Karnow documentaries, The Lost Mandate of Heaven is a much-needed antidote. Shaw not only sets the record straight on a man who deserves our esteem rather than our enmity, he provides a valuable lesson on carefully vetting the sources we should rely on to rightly judge mens character, motives, and ability. As Diems story proves, our judgments may determine the fates of nations.
This article has been updated to reflect the co-directorship of the Burns-Novick documentary.
Casey Chalk is a graduate student at the Notre Dame Graduate School of Theology at Christendom College.
Yes - and look where it got us: Iran, Iraq, Egypt, Viet Nam, Libya, on and on.
LOL!
Whenever my wife was asked her religion, she said ‘none’!
It was poison to be an open Buddhist during Diem’s reign.
Now crawl back into your hole.
” and the Buddhists would have come around and realized that Catholics were less deadly to them than maniac Communists.”
Tell that to my wife’s classmates that ‘disappeared’ under Diem’s reign.
“The President and a third of the people were Catholic, because it had been a French colony, until the French left.”
LOL! Under Diem’s reign, if you wanted a government job or promotion in the military you ‘converted’ to Catholicism!
“...historian Geoffrey Shaw clarifies why Americans would do well to mourn the tragic loss of a man many deemed to be Vietnams best chance of defeating communism.” Those are the key words. Despite all the bloviating, many U.S. powers didn’t WANT communism defeated. After Nam fell, it wasn’t long until they clamored for “normalized” relations; with Juan McStain, of all people, right out front!
Re: “Never mind that behind the scenes he was one of the worst Catholics ever, with at least two or three adulterous affairs every day”.
I know reliable women still living in Texas who tell how LBJ bedded down women and hit on them at social events. So what was the difference with Diem?
What were her classmates and neighbors doing; what was the VC activity in her area doing? Look at all the Muslims that proclaim they never knew a terrorist in their midst was one; proclaiming in affect their own innocence. Maybe your wife (how old rhen??) did not really know everything that was going on in the area where she lived. Maybe she never knew what some families other than her own were secretly involved in. Being innocent when others around you are secretly not innocent can lead to false perceptions of events that seem implausible at the time.
Just sayin, under many conditions in Vietnam at the time, some things can represent a hiding of reality that seems very foreign, blunt and incomprehensible when suddenly that reality hits. The Viet Cong depended on that, by infiltrating all sorts of “nationalist”, Buddhist and secular protest groups and eventually controlling them. They were always someone’s neighbors.
This is the first I’ve heard that Diem was a political genius and would-be savior of South Vietnam.
South Vietnam was a mess. But the Catholics were certainly better than the Communists. Ask your wife how she would have done under Pol Pot. Or ask all our American soldiers who were killed by the Viet Cong whether they enjoyed it.
Not sure if I made myself clear. It was JFK who bedded an average of three women a day. Something the lying media preferred to cover up.
I have a thirst for knowledge and wish to be disabused of any erroneous notions I might have.
So please tell me - your wife, who is the authority for your demographic research - how old is she? And at what age did she leave VietNam?
“South Vietnam was a mess.”
Very True.
“But the Catholics were certainly better than the Communists.”
I don’t think all Catholics are evil murdering dictators like Diem.
“Ask your wife how she would have done under Pol Pot.”
She is Vietnamese, not Cambodian.
“Or ask all our American soldiers who were killed by the Viet Cong whether they enjoyed it.”
I had a short assignment to TAMC back in the days and assisted many of the wounded.
“So please tell me - your wife, who is the authority for your demographic research - how old is she? And at what age did she leave VietNam? “
LOL! Please tell me what YOUR expertise is?
Truth.
The Catholics were a small minority in Vietnam. Around 7%. They were deeply tied to French colonial rule.
And they thought they had a right to run things. It would have never worked in a nation where 90%+ of the nation was non Catholic.
Disliking communist north doesn’t mean Diem was any good. And remember, his starting place was avoiding an election because he knew he couldn’t win it.
We should have stayed out of it and offered only training and equipment. A land war in Asia is insanity. You only win with nukes to equal out the numerical imbalance.
Had Kennedy not screwed up the Bay of Pigs and got beat about the head like an addled school boy by Khrushchev at the 61 summit he could have politically let Vietnam make it’s own choices and saved the lives of 58K Americans in an utterly stupid war that wasn’t fought with a thought of victory, just managing the next problem or crisis.
I got a lot closer than Hawai'i.
“There would have been at least hundreds of thousands fewer Americans killed there if JFK hadnt murdered our ally, and the Buddhists would have come around and realized that Catholics were less deadly to them than maniac Communists.”
OR.. the Catholics might have noticed that the Buddhists were less deadly to them than the maniac communists, and not insisted on running things and crushing the Buddhists.
“Agree. It is generally regarded that assassinating him was a ham-handed mistake at best and a disaster at worst, but I dont think it would have changed history either way, although my opinion is that ultimately he would have probably been more helpful than not.”
The favor was returned in spades Nov. 22, 1963.
“South Vietnam was a mess. But the Catholics were certainly better than the Communists.”
And even better under the larger groups like Buddhists. Funny how Catholics imagine that the only choice for Vietnam was Catholicism, or Communism.
It’s like they truly believe that over 90% of the population that isn’t catholic should defer to them... the followers of the French colonial religion.
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