ABSTRACT

The French withdrawal from Vietnam in 1954 was the product of global pressures and triggered significant global consequences. By treating the war as an international issue, this book places Indochina at the center of the Cold War in the mid-1950s. Arguing that the Indochina War cannot be understood as a topic of Franco-US relations, but ought to be treated as international history, this volume brings in Vietnamese and other global agents, including New Zealand, Australia, and especially Britain, as well as China and the Soviet Union. Importantly, the book also argues that the successful French withdrawal from Vietnam – a political defeat for the Eisenhower administration – helped to avert outright warfare between the major powers, although with very mixed results for the inhabitants of Vietnam who faced partition and further bloodshed.

The End of the First Indochina War explores the complexities of intra-alliance competition over global strategy – especially between the United States and British Commonwealth – arguing that these rivalries are as important to understanding the Cold War as east-west confrontation. This is the first truly global interpretation of the French defeat in 1954, based on the author’s research in five western countries and the latest scholarship from historians of Vietnam, China, and Russia. Readers will find much that is new both in terms of archival revelations and original interpretations.

part |105 pages

Escalation and Negotiation, March 1953–May 1954

chapter 1|20 pages

“More Important than Korea”

Background to Negotiation

chapter 2|16 pages

Defeat in Vietnam?

The Battle for Dien Bien Phu

chapter 3|14 pages

Vietnamese Confront the Cold War

chapter 4|16 pages

Before Geneva

The Foundations of Western Disunity

chapter 5|16 pages

In Search of a “Lesser Evil”

Partition as an Idea

chapter 6|21 pages

United Action Averted

part |64 pages

The Geneva Conference on Indochina, May–July 1954

chapter 7|22 pages

The Geneva Conference

The Bidault Phase

chapter 8|17 pages

Gouverner, C'est Choisir

chapter 9|23 pages

The Geneva Conference

The Mendès-France Phase

part |45 pages

The Global Legacy, July 1954–July 1956

chapter 10|21 pages

Making Partition Permanent

chapter 11|14 pages

Global Implications

chapter |8 pages

Epilogue

“Our Off spring”