They did not defeat China. The "war" vs China was from 79-91, not just the 3-4 week battle in 79 where both sides lose similar amount of troops, but north Vietnam towns and industry was destroyed, setting back Vietnam for decades afterwards.. Vietnam made concessions in the end, lost towns and islands, and ended up adopting a foreign policy that was acceptable to China, which was China's goal to begin with. The foreign policy is the 3 nos(now updated to 4 nos), no foreign military bases, no foreign alliances, no teaming up with another country to attack a third country. In other words, Vietnam is isolated now and cannot ever go against Chinese regional interests. Vietnam was too confident after us war, even wanting to be regional superpower and invading it's neighbors like back in history. But china will not allow such a thing since China is the regional superpower and China does not want wars going on next to its border, or foreign military bases but wants stability and peace. After 91 Vietnam was never brave enough to fight China directly again and today is in Chinas economic shadow and reliant on Chinese economy to grow. Just like vs France or USA, Vietnam will not survive without Chinese support or protection.. for example USA cannot step one foot in north Vietnam for the whole war purely because of Chinese support and them learning their lesson in the Korean war. Obviously this is a huge advantage for Vietnam and means they literally can never lose and just need to outlast USA and keep killing them until they had enough and decide to go home. Just like in Afghanistan. Basically, the wins vs France and USA would not be possible without Chinese support. Both militarily, politically, economically. Chinese support and knowledge was also essential. Like Chinese engineers, war doctrines that China learned and successfully mastered in Korean war, etc etc. China had already learned how to defeat USA, sk, and 17 other UN countries combined in direct frontal combat. This is why Vietnam knows how to use artillery after, and the tactics involved, along with anti air guns and other critical knowledge, even building, running and maintaining armies itself. Chinese were also directly involved in the fighting at dien bien phu itself and teaching them to operate artillery, and also supplying the artillery and shells that devasted the French forces. The rest is history as we say.
@@ex0duzz Chinese dont know how to fight, human waves tactics suffered mass casualties , even with Soviet air cover and overwhelming fire power , Chinese couldnt push the Americans out of Korea . Vietnam is weak we lost many people , but Vietnam is unified one country one people, while China have to beg for a foreign visa to go to their own sovereign territory such as Taiwan.
@@unemusiqueunjour France have no right to claim to be a liberal country if your proud of repressing a lesser developed country , how did you feel when the Wehrmacht occupied France that was only for 4 years untill British and American blood bought your pathetic little countries freedom.
@@mouloudo not even, note that the amount of enemy regulars outnumbered them during the peak of the war in 1968-1972 by at least 2:1. Their strength was the fact that the rural population supported them due the disastrous pacification campaign led by the US Military. That and the fact that the ARVN suffered from problems such as corruption, dissertion and overall low morales, crippling their capability to fight effectively. That led to the US taking the lead, but that also crippled the legitimacy of the government in the eyes of the population, seeing the coalition not as an international efforts to hamper a rebellion but as an invading force.
Official communist accounts should not be taken at face value. This idea that morale did not waver on the Vietnamese side isn't supported by unofficial primary accounts from the Vietminh side. While ultimately victorious, their losses were gravely disproportionate and the ability to sufficiently feed the 50,000 troops was strained to put it mildly. One account of Vietminh soldiers describes foraging for edible brush and trying to figure out how to sufficiently boil paltry amounts of rice that was thoroughly rotten. This and other accounts are cited in Max Hasting's book, Vietnam: An Epic Tragedy
@@RatherCrunchyMuffin Their morale was superior to the US because they saw what foreign occupation did to their country in 100 years. The vietnamese would have gladly died before surrendering to the west
@@goodluckchannel9938 Uncle Ho worked as a short-order cook in Paris when he was young. He said he ws half impressed with French cookery, but wasn't really overwhelmed. How could one take seriously a bunch of chefs who didn't even know how to sharpen their knives? Think of that artillery at Dien Bien Phu as French methods with Confucian thoroughness.
@@TheDavidlloydjones Dien Bien Phu was conceived as a trap to destroy the viet army . It costed them 150.000 men, half of their army. Another " victory " like that and vietminh would has been entirely fucked . But France was directed by a left government including communists, and partner of the ennemy, who took pretext of this " defeat " to give up . Their press wrote about the battle of " Lon San Fou " (= " We don't care") ...
@@felix25ize Felix, Congratulations. You've found a new one. What you have there is a more ridiculous version of the 1968 rationalization that the Tet Offensive was a great victory for America because they never got the copying machine in the press room of the Saigon Embassy. The army that was trapped at Dien Bien Phu was the French one because the French were entirely incapable of imagining that the Vietnamese could get heavy artillery up into the hills dominating their stupid camp down on the plain. I don't know where you got your 150,000 figure from, but it's entirely implausible: even advanced modern air power doesn't cause that sort of casualty count in a single location in a single season. The French, remember, were begging the US for air assistance, and Eisenhower was wisely putting them off. There were no human-wave attacks on the plain, either: the French simply walked into a trap of their own construction, and then gave up, partly from starvation, partly from loss of the support of the Mendes-France Administration back home. You're quite right that the Vietnamese made huge sacrifices in both cases, perhaps rather more in the Tet case because the French didn't have the USAF's power in 1954. Nevertheless, your story is entirely lunatic, and you are entitled to some sort of prize for coming up with it.
As a Vietnam vet, I have read everything I could lay my hands on regarding "my war" to better understand it; not just the American involvement or point of view, but everything! Prior to World War Two, Vietnam (then known as French Indochina) was a French colony. Early in the war, Japan drove the French out and took over. Ho Chi Minh, along with a large number of Vietnamese, cooperated with the American OSS (forerunner of the CIA) to fight the Japanese. At the end of the war, not wanting the French to return, Ho Chi Minh declared Vietnam to be an independent nation and formed a government. (As an admirer of the United States, he actually adopted a constitution based on the US constitution.) He knew he would need political support to keep the French from returning, so he requested diplomatic recognition of his government from the United States, which would have stopped the French from trying to reclaim their 'colony'. Unfortunately, President Truman and others in the US government were more concerned with the spread of Communism in Europe (Asia was just a 'backwater' to them) and didn't want to alienate De Gaulle and the French government, so that diplomatic recognition was withheld. The French returned, and the rest, as they say, is history. Another point; as the video said, after the French defeat, Vietnam was divided into north and south with separate governments. What the video did not say was that division was intended to be temporary until elections could be held, scheduled for 1956, at which time the Vietnamese people would decide under which government to unite. By that time, the United States had become concerned with the spread of communism in asia, and knowing "Uncle Ho" would win the election, did not allow the elections to take place. So came the Vietnam war for America. Maybe the saddest part is that although Ho Chi Minh was a communist, he would have been independent rather than a puppet for either China or Russia. Tito in Yugoslavia was a communist, and yet the United States supported him for years because he maintained his independence from the Soviet Block. Had Truman given Ho Chi Minh the diplomatic recognition he requested in 1947, not only would the Vietnam war have been averted, but Vietnam would have likely been a strong ally for the United States in asia. If you read nothing else about Vietnam, find a copy of "Vietnam: The Ten Thousand Day War". Unbiased and told from both sides.
Can't expect much from American,look how they betray Turkish in 21 century, American is not trustful, either you can balance your benefits and theirs, otherwise stay out working with them
@@enlightenedwarrior7119 The U.S. did Back Ho and his partisans. They were armed by the O.S.S. and helped by O.S.S. advisors. The Vichy French in Indo China collaborated with the Japanese. He states most of this. This is all historical fact that can be found by searching records online.
Why is it that every military blunder is usually caused by comfortably assuming the enemy won't attack me from "there". That its impossible to attack through a jungle, a mountain, a lake or a certain distance. What happened to the military mantra "the enemy will attack where you least expect it"?
No the truth is the French army generals were pretty cocky bout it. Remember They're the ones who chose Dien Bien Phu as the battle to win the war in Vietnam and you are telling me its all because of troop deployment? If that's the case why DIDN'T they have enough troop deployments? They chose the location, they had the time, they had all the SUPERIOR military equipment. Reality is they thought the enemy could be easily repelled by artillery and air strikes. But if you are telling me they had “enough troops“ then the assumption is that they would suddenly know - 1. NVA could haul up artillery up the surrounding mountains? 2. They would know that they had anti aircraft guns? 3. They would know the strength of the enemy? 4. They would also know that NVA could dig tunnels around the mountains? That does not make sense. So again they were just overconfident. I never said it was like playing a video game. I said most military defeat were all similar in that they don't expect the enemy to attack from a certain area. Also Lack of reliable Intel playing a crucial role in it. In short underestimating the enemy. So my original statement still runs true.
@@jackpacquiao Im talking within the context of this particular battle in 1954 with the French forces. When one side is able to field howitzers, tanks and aircrafts during battle and the other side doesnt, thats what i mean by superior military equipment.
France thought always that the Germans could never march through the Ardennes Forest. No need. They marched along the very good roads running through the Ardennes.
My grandfather was a Moroccan who fought for the French Foreign Legion during this battle. He spoke of how on patrols the Vietminh would hide in the lakes, breathing through grass straws, and then flank his platoon from behind after they had walked pass. It took his platoon ages (more than a few patrols) to figure out how they managed to get past them without detecting them. The unprecedented combat tactics employed by the Vietminh in such an unconventional terrain for war would have assured them overall victory in Vietnam regardless of the outcome of Dien Bien Phu. That is how they beat the Americans.
+dev3rse Moroccan and Algerian soldiers equipped with US and UK weapons are the soldiers who fought with the allied forces to liberate France during WWII: 6000 of them died heroically during the Battle of Monte Cassino (Italy). Only few French natives fought, the French replaced their North African, West African, Polynesian soldiers by white French when situation improved on the battledield in 1943: this is called French Army "whitening" ( "blanchiement"). African were sent back home, some of them who fought in 1940 were gunned down by French Army to avoid paying pensions (December 1944 Camp Thiaroye massacre near Dakar). Later French massacred Algerian at Setif (8 May 1945), during the end of of WWII Celebration when Algerians asked independence in return for Algerian help in liberating France. In 1953, some Moroccan soldiers joined the Vietminh, and fought with Vietminh, after Morocco king Mohamed V was exiled from Morocco by the French who replaced Mohamed V by a puppet regime obedient to the French.
+TheSatanicTicTac Free French were mainly muslims, here is the order of battle of the Free French in Italy: - 1rst, 2nd, and 3rd GTM (Moroccan Tabor groups) totaling 7,800 men. - 2nd Moroccan Infantery Division - 3rd Algerian Infantery Division - 4th Moroccan Mountain Division - 1rst Free French Division (1ere Division Francaise Libre) which was composed of at least 50% Aftricans: in Fall 1944, De Gaulle replaced 20,000 Africans by 20,000 white French ("Blanchiement"). If you visit Italy, near Monte Cassino ask for what happened to 7,000 women on May 1944. Don't forget to enjoy the view from Castro dei Volsci where stand the memorial dedicated to the victims of the mass rape of 7,000 Italian women (aged 11 to 86 years old, some of raped until death: 800 died trying to protect them) by units of Free French Forces. Even young Italian males, including priests were sodomized: the priest of Esperia was attached to a tree and sodomized, he died after 2 days of torture. The memorial is called "La Mamma Ciociara". After WWII, French sent those units to Indochina, to teach "Christian Civilization". Each Moroccan Goumier (from the GTM) was paid French Francs 4 per day + commission on the number of enemy ears brought back + plunder.
"Beat the American"? The U.S just left after their deal with Deng Jiaoping in 1973. It was a proxy war between the powers and that took place in Việt Nam. The real loser was Viet Nam since over 3 millions dead and the landscape got destroyed.
+Nick Nguyễn USA is the real looser. The Soviet Union lost over 20 Million people against Nazi Germany and still won. Those who won are the one who reached their goal, not who has the less casualties
@@johnsepulveda443 Are you sure you're taking heroin? Have you ever been to Vietnam? no one is forcing children or citizens like you say so don't misrepresent nonsense. this is the 21st century, be civilized and open your heart to accept the change of the world
Never underestimate the power of determined people. Win the war on the ground. Win the hearts and minds of the people. Let the locals win their own war. If not, let the locals lose the war.
@@Patrickka32 The Vietnamese were losing strategically and tactically. The Americans lost support for the war from their population which elected new representatives with a different foreign policy that withdrew their forces.
@@andrewdriver3318 Losing strategically and tactically? If so, why did the US sign the Paris Peace Accords with most conditions in favor of North Vietnam?
@@vietthanhbui5964 loss of support for the war at home saw new politicians elected who had different foreign policy objectives. They basically sold out the south Vietnamese to ensure reelection at home and needed to have the negotiations concluded before they were up for reelection. They also needed to get back pows held in North Vietnam since there would now be no military ability to rescue them. Nixon actually planed to resume military intervention in support of South Vietnam after his reelection but was ruined by the Watergate scandal instead.
I think the issue was so many Americans simply didnt know about it. Alot of the top politicians and officers were Korean and WW2 vets, mainly with experience on the major theaters like the bombing campaigns. The guys who fought in the jungles in WW2 were mostly grunts who retired, and most civilians learned about the big battles at sea and the air in the pacific or the grand campaigns in Germany, not the countless skirmishes in the China-Burma campaign or Saipan.
Viet Minh used the same tactic the British used against Fort Ticonderoga in 1777. Occupy the uncontested high ground and fire cannon at the enemy. Overconfidence is timeless.
Giap: "It's over De Castries, I have the High Ground" De Castries: "You understimate my power!" Giap:"Dont try it!" De Castries: REEEEEEE *Giap's artillery bombards the entire French defense in half*
Viet Minh occupy the uncontested highground because we haven't enough guns, and ammunitions to ultilizing benefit from contested highground. That things was mentioned by Giap generals in his memoir "Dien Bien Phu - Historical Point" in chapter 11,12 of his book. The key of victory in Dien Bien Phu is trench warfare. Giap mentioned in his memoir France never expected and had not prepared for trench warfare tactics of Viet Minh When realized that Viet Minh using trench warface Navarre asked for some trench warfare trained units but France can't filled this.
Outnumbered 2:1 and commanded by Anthony St. Clair... Retreating with 20 casualties was actually a good outcome for the Americans. Let's look at St. Clair's most famous battle for perspective. St. Clair: Let's camp with our forces divided. Nothing bad ever happens when you divide your forces. Miami scout: It looks like their militia's eating breakfast, nobody's keeping watch, and they've put all their weapons in a neat pile in the center. Their regulars are camped on the other side of the river. Little Turtle: Wow. That's stupid. Let's kill all of them.
🇩🇿🫡🇻🇳 These freedom fighters were/are Algeria's spiritual brethrens, one cause: expel the colonialists. Rip to all who gave up their lives for their nation's freedom. Allah yerhem el shuhada'.
La Guerre d'Algérie fut une victoire militaire pour la France. Le FLN n'avait aucune chance contre un contingent français de plusieurs centaines de milliers. La situation militaire était même totalement inverse par rapport à ce qu'elle fut durant la Guerre d'Indochine. C'est une décision politique émanant de la France de donner à l'Algérie son indépendance. Cette guerre à couté très cher et la volonté du général à ce moment la était d'en sortir la France pour pouvoir réallouer des budgets pour moderniser le pays et financer également les couts de développement du nucléaire civil et militaire français.
@@inerttech2570 My friend EK, as you possibly can not tell I do not live under a rock, and although I do appreciate your reply with what you might consider a more "historic fact" I have in fact heard it all before mainly from the French side. Furthermore I did not claim our ALN "CRUSHED" the French army, as all of what the ALN consisted of were simple peasants with a great will to gain freedom and who took inspiration from the Vietnamese people. a French general calling Algerian resistance fighters to lay down their home made bombs in Algiers El Arbi Ben Mhidi simply replied to him give us your Tanks and we'll give you our bombs. And on the political side, even with all the western countries supporting France in their fight against the FLN, They lost... heavily :) So again it wasn't just about military might and some "economy" and "we will give them their independence" it was a struggle of will, freedom and faith as well against the occupying aggressors. The result is Algeria's independence.
@jason lu Among American military historians there is a short list of truly great generals. It includes Washington, Lee, Geronimo, Giap, and very few others. He certainly earned the respect of his opponent.
@@billmcfadden4791 Keeee-rect! This sound saying gives us a chance to gauge the New York Times's David Brooks's command of facts. Brooks says that it was *President* Eisenhower's bon mot. I don't know whether the idea was original with Eisenhower but doubt it. It was, however, the backbone of *Captain* Eisenhower's teaching as an instructor at West Point immediately after his graduation. Ike later deepened his feeling for the notion with his arduous coast-to-coast truck convoy across the semi-built highways of the 1930s. The horrible memory of that very sound and important military experiment informed him at two interesting points later. He puzzled some officers by loading gravel-pit equipment on the cross-channel ships right after D-Day: he knew that the roads of France and Germany were going to evaporate under Montgomery's and Patton's tanks. Later he put the thought to good use, when President, as builder of the Interstates.
A French survivor of DBP in an interview stated that the Vietminh soldiers told the prisoners that they "had won the battle because they were fighting for an ideal and [the French] were not". When he told them of the French paratroopers that fought valiantly and bravely to the death, they replied with "heroism is no answer".
They won the battle because french were 10k fighter (17k total personnal) against more than 200k. The french prepared all their defense in order fo support max 87mm mortar. Bad Intel, they faced US made 105mm artillery given by china. The viets literally did a genocide in all ex Indochina. The hmongs are still chase to death, to this day.
@@gringologie9302 Some Hmongs are still chased because they allied with foreign powers. It's the consequences of their action (unfortunately). If you are Hmong or know Hmongs, stop or tell them to quit being puppet to foreign powers.
Vietcong and Taliban are probably some of the most resilient fighters in the past 100 years. Both defeated the world's leading empire in about the same amount of time
No. As for french side, their whole country benefitted from colonies, not just politicians. Unlike US - Vietnam war, french citizens do see direct economical benefits from this war. They even retain economical benefits from some african countries up to this day. As for Vietnamese side, they fought so that other Vietnameses get a chance to live like human
Plus, majority of french soldiers are imported from frances other colonies anyway, no f was given to those lives. Overall French people were probably very happy about all this.
The leaders of the VietMinh movement were exceptionally capable, both militarily and as political leaders. They had been leading the war against the French since 1946, and had been preparing for it since the 1930’s. They had also gained practical experience by fighting Japanese occupation during WW2. The strategy-makers of the French, and later the US, were stupid in comparison.
Well the French just got out of WW2, their country was devastated. So not a good start at first. The war was unpopular just like Vietnam War and it rapidly lost support from civilians. The "strategy makers" had the WW2 in mind. How could they know that the viets could move 155mm cannons in the mountains? How could they know about the tunnels, the Trail, their ability overall? Viet-minhs were losing by using conventional tactics, but when they started to use guerilla warfare, French troops were doomed.
minh many here think the french just gave the VM the initiative and actually wanted to sit back on the defense. that is completely wrong. your assessment, on the other hand, is flawless. I would only add that the french lost the initiative because they underestimated their adversary.
France is like the Roman army. Rome got defeated in the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest. France is not good to fight in jungle and trees. Big armies are only good in open field battle. Which is why they set up in that valley. France has advantage in Open field battle while the Vietnam has advantage in the jungle.
Ho Chi Minh was in France for 4 months to campaign for France to cease fighting in Vietnam. He came to the United States and asked the US to help Vietnam build a democratic American model. But after all they refused, and Vietnam had to go its own way. Communism or capitalism is not important, it is important that they bring freedom, happiness for the people, and the economy of Vietnam is still better than 80% of democratic countries. If you are in a democratic country, respect your decision-making power in other countries. If yesterday you have mistaken Vietnam, today is still the same. When Pol Pot attacked Viet Nam the United Nations and other countries in the world did not respond to reports from Vietnam. They all assumed that Vietnam invaded Cambodia, then the Vietnam embargo. Now you know that Pol Pot's genocide regime under Chinese help has killed a third of Cambodia's population
No kidding. The Khmer Rouge outlawed money, banned fishing, evicted people from the city to the countryside, worked them to death in rice fields, tortured the religious, separated families and shot anybody who were, in their eyes: "Enemies of the State"!
Hồ Chí Minh warned Sainteny at the failure of the peace talks in Hà Nội in 1946: "You will kill 10 of our soldiers, we will kill in exchange only 1 of yours. But you will lose and we will win this war!" The Americans did not want to learn the painful lesson of the French and repeated the same unbearable humiliation! The more powerful ones had the clock and the weaker ones had time. The ones had no endurance/patience, while the others were ready to fight for 10 years or 20 years or more for their unification, freedom and independence
Your in ur country and you re going to fight like a tiger. A never ending war. concede victory renegociate a fair deal for those people but the need for funding a war industry who finance politicians . Corporations rule North America, Europe is still holding and China is becoming the first military power
@@TeeKoon simply this. Human history has lasted for millions of years and it will continue for the next thousands, tens of thousands of years. If viewed that way, every nation never escapes the rules of being affected by war or other adverse factors that affect the survival of its nation or nation. So you know what it takes for a country to survive? that is patriotism. so don't see a war that never ends but consider it a scary thing because every nation, every country has to face it, sooner or later and the most resilient and persistent will survive in the end.
@@TeeKoon Maybe we have to make nuke and missile in order to have a more lasting peace. I'm sure the leaders of the Communist Party of Vietnam will also have to think about it.
During 1969, I was in the 101st Airborne Division, in the A Shau valley, on a RTO artillery team. The NVA were tough and good soldiers, and like the French we found out real fast!
Roger Borroel You lie; you were never there! I spent two years there; we almost depopulated North Vietnam! I killed so many I was told my body count was too high!
@@jpc7118I worked for a Russian immigrant once that claimed they also supplied some of that. Anyway the Viet Minh is who toted those 155s up into those hills for their surprise. Gave the garrison a weeks cease fire to bury their dead then sighted in on their cemetery. Hell they did the same feat with placing artillery on the high ground at Khe Sanh . . . More than we had, (so I saw on RU-vid). B52s might've saved the US from similar. Got to wonder if military brass actually knew a goddamned thing about that history going in or if they just wanted to outdo the French at a stupid idea.
General Giap was no fanatic. He cared very much about his troops and paused his attack in order to change tactics since he didn't want to see his casualty rate continue to rise. Building trenches was his answer to move close in. What the French could not envision was the million men and women carrying artillery parts, ammunition and supplies. They were facing two powerful converging historical forces, nationalism and socialism. Sun Tzu kicked Clausewitz ass.
Love him, or hate him, Giap was one of the greatest tacticians in Military History. Wasn't just "Luck" that his Armies saw so much victory in the field considering he had virtually no Air Force and literally NO Helicopters or Navy. Giap fought with what he had and "Dollar for Dollar" he was forced to be a brilliant tactician just to stand up to Great Industrial Armies like France and the USA with virtually unlimited resources at their disposal. As for Sun Tzu and Clausewitz it is hard to compare. Sun Tzu brings more 'wisdom' while Clausewitz brings more practical, common sense and logistical understanding. It is an unfair comparison because both had strengths and weaknesses in different areas. Who is greatest is an impossible question to answer.
randy109 I agree with you. Clausewitz doesn't take intangibles in consideration, Sun Tzu does. The mandate of heaven is one of the five preconditions for victory.
+Neville C He understood his enemies weakness and exploited them. Also he never used human waves, his troops launched small skirmishes and exhausted the French until the last great battle.
Lol, that's why you always lose to us, because you don't understand the most basic thing of why we fought. 99% of those peasants voluntarily fought and carried as heavy as they could, they did anything possible to gain independence and freedom from those colonizers who exploited and killed millions of Vietnamese for almost 100 years. Sacrifices had to be made, everybody understood that, don't act like you are way smarter than our fathers, because they knew the cost far too well, but they did it for us anyway. Anyway, I don't know where you learned those nonsense knowledge of how we fought (actually I do have a good guess though), just a fact for you: our peasants were our army, and our army were all normal people: peasants, teachers, workers, etc. Few were fully trained, we didn't have time and resources, given the scenario that we just gained our freedom, and we had to rebuild the whole agricultural system which was nearly destroyed by the Japanese. When our President Ho Chi Minh were calling out for all people to stand up to protect the freedom, none were hesitated since we all knew it was everybody's job.
Napoleon Bonaparte: "Morale is to the physical as three is to one". Nothing is more powerful in the battlefield that the will of kick out a foreigner invasor.
There are few people in the world as tenacious as the Vietnamese. Despite being separated by thousands of miles they remind me of the Scots, who fought off the Romans, English, and Vikings for centuries to the point that the Romans built a wall to contain them, the Vikings decided to sail further south for easier pickings, and the English found it easier to join forces with them. The Vietnamese are similar, pushing back the Chinese, fighting off the Mongols, and pushing out both the French and Americans.
French Generals and Politicians: Now that fixed fortifications completely failed at the Maginot Line, let's build a fort in the middle of the jungle deep in enemy territory and invite them to attack it.
@Александр The whole fucking point of the maginot line was to force the german army to pass trough belgium, where the french, british and belgian were supposed to have a their army. Unfortunally, there was the Rheinland rearmament fuck up that delayed the reaction time of the alliance, and a massive failure at intelligence analysis, which led to the Sedan break and everything else. But the maginot line did her job.
Dien Bien Phu has often been called the last battle of the Wehrmacht. Many thousands of ex German troops joined the Foreign Legion at the end of WWII. The French, who were scrambling to build up their armed forces, loudly proclaimed that no one involved in war crimes would ever serve France but there was little incentive for them to look too closely when presented with trained, experienced soldiers, ideal for fighting foreign, far away wars, so many of the men who parachuted into Dien Bien Phu were ex Nazi soldiers. As to be expected, they gave an excellent account of themselves in battle. In an ironic twist, the Russians captured thousands of German small arms on the Eastern Front in WWII. It was decided to refurbish and stockpile them for possible emergency issue. However the emergency never arose, the war ended and as the calibers were incompatible with those in use by the Red Army, they were given away to any ideological allies. This included the Viet Minh who used many of them at Dien Bien Phu. Thus we have the odd situation of ex German military servicemen being shot at by ex German military service weapons. Strange world.
In fact most FFL soldiers in the 50s and 60s were ancient SS soldiers. This is why a lot of FFL marching songs are inspired by German chants. They were crucial as they already acquired experience through ww2 and knew a thing or two about anti partisan warfare. France had to renew their fighting force after ww2 of course
I did not know that 🤔. Thank You for sharing - interesting about the rifles the French 🇫🇷 always getting in over their head 💀. Always so. arrogant + ignorant confidence - then asking US 🇺🇸 to save them - again and again
Hmmm, let's see, mountains all around me, with high ground advantage. There's this low valley, where I can be observed from all the surrounding peaks. Furthermore any deployment of artillery on the peaks would increase their range. It's not like locals who lived in the mountains would know the perfect spots to place this artillery. ..... yeah, let's set up at Dien Bien Phu....
that's the point. the french had such a strong military advantage that they gave the vietminh the terrain advantage hoping to lure them into a big battle and destroy their fighting force once and for all. the vietminh had been focused on guerilla warfare and the french wanted to end it. what they underestimated was how big the tactical advantage could become if the vietminh set up their attack correctly. as you can see from the video, the vietminh outnumbered the french by 5 to 1 and they still suffered losses 5 times more than the french did in most skirmishes.
@@DiamondhandsForever it was stupidity. That's why the French have been losing wars for the past 90 years. The stronger your army is the *MORE* prudent you have to be. It was stupid that's why a ragtag army handed them their asses.
@@Peterblack12 you sound terribly dumb They knew it and they wanted that, but the only thing they didn't expect was that Russia and China gave them shiton of weapons and ammunitions in order to bring full communism in Vietnam and have a control on it... You don't know shit about this war, do you? Where are you from? Dear general from youtube
It is clear that the indochinese want independence and are oppressed by the french. The video also shows the west threatening to use nukes. The person responsible for indochinese liberation is somehow a criminalous villian?
the French have been resilient....my god! the Viet Minh were in the tens of thousands...the French managed to resist for so long with much less resources than the Americans in Vietnam, they did 10 times better with 10 times less. big respect. In the end it was their politicians who gave in, not the military.
@@gandigooglegandigoogle7202 forgive me for being any rude with you, but this has been said a lot, many weaker armies have triumphed against much stronger ones over history.
From that day, only the Soviet Union was their true ally. No matter what the world got to say, the Vietnamese chose the Russian to be their comrades-in-arm.
@Alexis Versa Yeah they fought the chinese and win because the chinese has fulfilled their purpose and retreat themselves. the new chinese president strengthened his position in the army and removed a threat in the south and started to reform china into a superpower. the vietnamese got stripped off everything and industry they built in the north for decades and live forever in poverty. You can say they win if you like though.
@@johnsepulveda443 master? they only supply our weapons, they dont get to say what will we do or how we fight tho, and they didnt try to , Russian arent US you know, bull crap propaganda shit
Traiano Welcome do you understand what the North Vietnamese army and especially the viet Cong were doing to villagers ??? Killing women and children Are you familiar with the picture of the south Vietnamese officer who shot the viet Cong in the head and why he did it? The viet Cong had just killed his entire family!!!
@Traiano Welcome Politicians bossing the soldiers is called democracy. The soldiers running things is military dictatorship of one kind or another. Recently Peronism has been the most popular variety.
I’m American. Born in South Carolina. To see the patriotism by the north Vietnamese only brings respect to my mind. Regardless of any political indifference they fought as a country. Watch the beginning 3:20 when they start mentioning the supply root that was built for the heavy artillery and anti air... women in the work line carrying supplies and smiling. Actually enthusiastic to help her country. They fought with honor and ferocity. I don’t condone the regime but damn if they aren’t patriotic I don’t know what is. ✊🏻
A regime that is supported by the people cannot be defeated by a power like the United States. I'm sure you don't know what that "regime" is like in Vietnam, other than the defamatory propaganda of the US government.
most us people dont think that, youre just a prejudiced person. And technically thats not even what happened. We had the division set up, and troops were there to police it. Back home people didnt want to be at war anymore, the lowest of society was being sent to the jungle to die while colleges swelled with kids turning into hippies. Look at afghanistan for an example of when we stay. Its a policing action, nation-building, not a war in the sense that usa and vietnam are in total war
Two great legacies left behind by the French in Vietnam is the architecture particularly in the north and the great bread making skills they shared with the Vietnamese . Vietnamese bread rolls are yummo.
I can think of three times completely unexpected artillery on higher ground has won a devastating victory in history,this,Napoleon at Toulon and probably the most daring of all, Knox at Dorchester heights,pulling canons by Oxen through 300 miles of freezing swamps and frozen lakes,no wonder Fort Knox is aptly named after this Military genius. One of the most underrated and modest Artillery commanders in history.
"Napoleon discovered a canal during his FAILED EXPEDITION in Egypt" Excuse me for a second : Muhahahahahahahahahahahaha. He had the idea to make a tunnel between France and England as well..... Napoleon got sent in Egypt by "Le Directoire". The French Leaders wanted to get rid off him after his Great Victory in the Italian Campaign. He had a small Army with absolutely no back up and support. Still managed great victories. Egyptology was created by him. English sided with the neandertalmuslims.
@@namonlyone well not exactly ...17,000 men DID go to the garrison but wounded and dead kept the garrison to just under 10,000 at any one time. the garrison had artillery and tanks but the actual fortifications were simple wood, earth, thin sheet metal, and barbed wire ...except for a pre-built concrete roof for the command post and wood for repairs became quite difficult to obtain.
It was a gallant last stand. Most of the guys who left Hanoi to be dropped over Dien Bien Phu were not paratroopers. They knew being sent for an already lost battle but refused to let their comrades down. Maybe not a smart gesture but certainly a true esprit de corps.
Very bad thing to get surrounded on all side with enemy on higher ground. The Foreign Legion sure fought hard though. It's a fatal decision to stay in those entrenched position. Might have been different if the French run and fight, negating the Vietmin artillery factor.
Yes de Castries family arrogance. French industrialist Roger Godino said Indochine was where he learned that a French soldier was worth no more than a Vietnamese.
General Giap who beat the French then beat The Americans forcing them to run out of Vietnam on April 30 1975 in an act of betrayal, to their allies, and cowardice almost without parallel in history. Now perhaps if Fat Donny Chump, the King of BankTrumpcy sexual molestation and draft Dodging, had served in the USA Military The Americans would have won, LMFAO.
Vraiment très intéressant et objectif il me semble, ma conclusion est toujours la même : le sang des braves coule à flot à la source de l'incompétence des dirigeants. Dommage que beaucoup de commentaires soient...comment dire...si désespérants de bêtise !
I’m chinese and I support Vietnam~ Vietnamese sacrificed a lot for the independence and freedom of the nation~ long live the people of vietnam!!! 🇻🇳🇻🇳🇻🇳
Not to forget, China actually invaded Vietnam (What about not interfering in the sovereign affairs of other countries!) in response to the Vietnamese attempt to overthrow the Khmer Rouge, one of the most genocidal governments in history.
gene it was an incredible feat of military engineering to drag that artillery (some or all of which was captured in N. Korea) thru a tract less and mountainous jungle in the middle of nowhere, by hand no less. I am not a big fan of giap but he deserves a great deal of credit for this very difficult yet successful venture. when one side gets out performed by the other side in the arena of tactics or strategy does NOT make the other side arrogant or idiots. All military planning is based on assumptions of how the enemy is going to behave ...in this case his assumptions make some sense, especially when it took a herculean effort by tens of thousands of coolies working in terrible conditions to make those assumptions incorrect.
I feel sorry for the French during this battle they didn't realize what was coming to them but when you put yourself in an enemy territory surrounded by almost all of the enemy at the end of the day there's really nothing that you could do they were in Vietnam they weren't in France...
French soldiors are brave, simply wrong French soldiers that led to its defeat from the start, the fight against a heroic nation who fought for their homeland.
I thought those generals and commanders who were seasoned in battle, finished school and academy, must be better than General Giap, a history teacher, It wasn't ?
Casualties and losses of France: 1,571-2,293 dead 5,195 - 6,650 wounded 1,729 missing 11,721 captured (of which 5,000 wounded) 8,290 POW dead after battle Casualties and losses of Vietnam: 4,020 dead 9,118 wounded 792 missing French estimated: 23,000 killed and wounded. The number 23,000 is estimated by France to reduce shame.
US Provided 2 B-26 Invader bomber squadrons (painted with French marks), dozen of C-119 Flying Boxcars, etc.. All those planes were fawn by American Pilots. France aircraft force were maintained by some 200 hundred American maintenance crew. USS Saipan provided the whole logistical support. French troops which were professional soldiers and mostly soldiers from other colonies and Algeria were equipped by the US, from underwear to howitzer. The French have access to Napalm. All the information about US participation to Dien Bien Phu were declassified and US pilots who helped resuply the French received the Legion of Honor in 2005. Captain James B. McGovern Jr was awarded posthumously the Legion of Honor, his plane was downed at DPB while he tried to resupply the French.
BÊn tấn công thì tất nhiên phải hy sinh nhiều hơn bên ngồi trong công sự vững chắc thôi, nhưng chúng nó toàn đưa ra để bào chữa cho việc đi ăn cướp bị đánh vỡ mặt.
Jim joe Kelly It sounds like music from a great Vietnam war film from the early 80s that was never filmed, except in our imagination. Something like music from ''The Year of Living Dangerously'' or ''Fields of Death''... but more of a gritty war drama with mass scenes than intimate piece of few people. I could imagine this music at the end of the film when Francois, sergeant in French army, was being evacuated from Vietnam and he looks at the land he fell in love into despite death and war and suffering and at the same time he feels deep nostalgia and that the whole era is coming to its end, long passed colonial age...
Vietminhs lost almost half of their army at Dien Bien Phu, which was conceived as a trap for this purpose. Again another victory of that kind, and vietminh would no more have existed . But a left government in France, including communists at the orders of U.S.S.R. , took pretext of this " defeat " to give-up ...
Lol! The French failed because 1) they failed to respect the enemy and their resolve 2) they did not understand or prepared for the geographic challenges. They failed like they did against the Germans, woefully unprepared
Another point is NVA have the full support of the Chinese Army. All support and logictic was provided by the chinese army. And for the 10 000 french soldiers captured, only 2 000 came back, the others were killed by starving.
@@wtfsob123456 they killed 4 times more viets than they lost men, while outnumbered and abandonned by their allies while China was providing hard for vietnam...
@@mouloudo LOL how much Vietnamese got from Chinese compare to France got from USA? Even I provide you ten million tons of weapon and supply, transport it 500 km to Dien Bien Phu through moutain and jungle only by walking is quite challenge. lol. Loser can tell everythings and they still lose even they had superiority in everything.
"""Am I a black person? ROFL!!!!!!!!!. Why do you ask?""" Thats a natural question. Im French and very proud to be. Im Catholic and my skin color is White. I'd like to know your origins. Im curious to know only this detail about you. Are you proud of them? If you are proud of them, then that shouldnt be a problem for you to tell me where are your origins from. You claim to be American... but I doubt your ancestors fought during the War of Independence. As mine fought so many Wars for France.
Apparently, French Army can't learn lessons. In Dien Bien Phu they did basically what their countrymen did with Maginot Line: "Hey, here's an idea: let's shove our troops in this stronghold and hope that somehow everything come out well".
@Dannyboy55, The only Military Credit that has to be given to the English is their Navy. In France we respect Admiral Georges Rodney and Admiral Nelson. The English had a very strong Navy. But on European Land campaigns, they were miserable. Wellington and Marlborough are jokes seriously. The first one only fought a small French Army, when France was at War with the whole of Europe. And the second one got so seriously defeated in Battle of Malplaquet that he got sacked by his hierarchy.
it doesn't look like the french could fight worth a crap , anyway they could have avoided the war by just giving the Vietnamese their freedom from colonization , some nations despise colonization , does anyone in particular come to mind ?
@buster rymes lol, no one in VN love McDonald and burgers, we only eat those once in a while, our street food is much better and healthier anyway, come comrade, come to our place and we teach you real food
+Flaring DBP was not last big french defeat: a little more than one month later Vietnamese annihilated armored unit GM 100 at An Khe (Mang Yang pass battle) between 06/24/1954 and 06/29/1954. Armored unit GM 100 was supported by B-26 bombers (maintained by USAF specialists and flawn by French pilots). At An Khe, French GM 100 lost all their tanks, transport, signal equipment, artillery, and last but not least, their commanders. GM 100 armored unit turned into infantry unit until it just vanished. 700 French KIAs vs 100 Vietnamese KIAs.
+HELMUT ALTO +Flaring At least US fought with weapons produced by the US. Without the US, would the French fight naked, with spears and bows? From underwear to howitzer, US provided everything to French since French were defeated in 1940. By the way, DBP is a minor defeat in Indochina compared to 1950 French defeat on the Route Coloniale 4 (30 Sept to 8 Oct 1950): French lost 7000 soldiers and 3000 tons of weapons. Due to French Colonel Constans panic, Lang Son was evacuated by the French, without a single shot leaving to Vietminh enough weapons and ammunition for a Vietminh division during one year. DBP is getting its fame due to media cover. Historians compare RC4 defeat to the Battle of Quebec in magnitude. This is at the RC4 battle that the French really lost Indochina. My great uncle survived the RC4 Battle, search "Cao Bang, les soldats sacrifiés d'Indochine" on youtube. Almost 3/4 of the French soldiers were Moroccan, Tunisian and West African: those are the people who liberated France. As situation stabilized in Europe end 1944, De Gaulle asked his head of staff to replace 20,000 west African soldiers by French native ones: this operation was called the whitening of the French army. In November 1944, French army massacred 1300 West African soldiers who fought in 1940 along the French Army: just to avoid paying their pensions. Survivor were put in jail (2 to 10 years jail). Location of massacre is Camp Thiaroye near Dakar. Loosing soldiers in battle is more a proof of French High Command incompetence than anything else.
+HELMUT ALTO +Flaring In French history books, nobody ever mention African Soldiers who fought in 1940 for the French people and were massacred by French Army at Thiaroye to avoid paying these African soldiers. During their captivities those African soldiers were often used by German soldiers as live shooting targets, thousands have been killed this way. Before December 1943, Free French Forces were mainly African (Senegal, Equatorial Africa, Madagascar, and North Africa). Here is the order of battle of French expeditionary corp in Italy: 2nd Moroccan infantry division 3rd Algerian infantry division 4th Moroccan mountain division 1rst Motorized Infantry division (5 original Cameroon, French Equatorial Africa, and Djibouti battalions were replaced by French FFI on 1 May 1944). 3 groups of Moroccan Tabors Only officers and NCO were native French. At Bir-Hakeim, colonial artillery was manned by African soldiers. Jean Bedel Bokassa (Central Africa Dictator) who promoted himself emperor served in the Free French Forces.
+HELMUT ALTO +Flaring Thiaroye massacre was only acknowledged by French President F Hollande in 2014: he didn't tell who kill those African Soldiers who fought for France. Can you quote a French History book which retells this Thiaroye massacre (prior to 2014)? There was a movie about the Thiaroye massacre, this movie cannot be watched in France. You can watch it on youtube only. Other massacres by French Army get acknowledged thanks to the Internet: like 8 May 1945 at Setif (Algeria). French officials don't like the Internet, it brings back so many memories which they prefer to silence. 1947 Massacre of Vietnamese civilians at My Trach, 1947-1948 Malagesy Massacre (acknowledged by French President in 2012 during his visit to Madagascar) by French Army are parts of the same French repression logic. Jewish deportation organized by French National Railways (SNCF) was only acknowledged on 2001, and only after SNCF was denied any contracts in the US by organization of former deported Jews in every US States. French hate to talk about their wrong doings, meanwhile French love to pinpoint US wrong doing like My Lai massacre?
+Marco Polo but the sad thing is, that world super power illegally entered their territorial waters and had asked for it. America wouldn't have been able to go to war with either China or Russia because it knows what severe consequences it would bring during that time, so to flex it's muscles, it provokes two small Asian countries, (Korea and Vietnam) to start a war.
@@11B30Inf Viet Nam was a guerrilla war, not a battlefield war. They didn't need to beat us, they just had to outlast us. Which they did. The Vietnamese wanted foreigners OUT of their country more than the foreigners (France and US) wanted...... Tell me, what exactly did you want in Viet Nam? What in Viet Nam were you willing to give up your life and your children's lives for?
The French, much like the USA. deserved what they got, especially the French, because they were the ones (unlike the British n the Dutch) who refused to leave SE. Asia. n give the Vietnamese their independence.....when the French lost thru military defeat, the fighting should've stopped! I'll never understand why America insisted on prolong a 'proxy/superfluous war' .........SAD, so much needless suffering!
Key to this Viet Minh victory was the aquisition of AA machine guns and 37mm AA guns along with larger artillery pieces with the French intelligence hadnt understood.
The US paid about 80% of the cost of the French war on Vietnam. Are you saying that the Americans didn't give them the latest weapons too? Of course they did. The French made a strategic mistake: they tried to hold on to a colony whose people wanted their freedom and independence. Guns were not the problem, as the Americans were to find out later on, when they used B-52 bombers and all the best weapons, and still lost.
Part-2 Ludendorff launched 5 offensives in 1918, the French were responsible for stopping all of them. In Michael and George, French attacks on the Germans flanks halted the offensive. In Blucher the French halted that attack at Villiers de Cotterets and Mt. De Choisy. In Gneisnau-Yorck, the Germans were defeated by a French attack that rolled up their flank. During the peace offensive, the French fourth defeated the Kaiser's army while he watched.