Bao Dai
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Bao Dai born in Hue]], (1913[1]-1997[2]), under French colonial rule of Indochina, was Emperor of Annam]] (1932-1945), and Head of State of French Indochina until replaced by Ngo Dinh Diem]] after the Geneva Accords. During the Second World War]], he worked with the Vichy]] French and the Japanese, abdicated in 1945,[3]acted as a political advisor to Ho Chi Minh]] in 1949, and returned as Head of State under French Union control. After appointing Diem the Prime Minister, he left Vietnam in 1955. His names are complex. A member of the Nguyen Dynasty, he was born to his father, King Khai Din, as Prince Nguyen Vinh Thuy. After his abdication, the Communist government called him "citizen" Vinh Thuy. In 1949, when he returned as head of a coalition, he was, again, known as Bao Dai. 1945Following the Japanese assumption of power in March 1945, they created a government under Bao Dai. He invited Ngo Dinh Diem]] to become Prime Minister but, after receiving no response, turned to Trang Trong Kim and formed a cabinet of French-trained but nationalist ministers. [4] His authority extended only to Tonkin and Annam; the Japanese simply replaced the former French officials in Cochin China]]; Cao Dai]] and Hoa Hao]] members also gained power there. 1948Bao Dai participated in discussions about a provisional government, in which he might be an acceptable, if not ideal, Head of State. The new government, established with Bao Dai as Head of State, was viewed critically by nationalists as well as communists. Most prominent nationalists, including Ngo Dinh Diem]], refused positions in the government. Many went into voluntary exile. [5] He refused to recognize coalition movements, such as Dan Xa Dang]] in Cochinchina]]. 1949Under French sponsorship in July, Bao Dai was named, in the Elysee Agreements, to head a provisional government, creating Vietnam from the Indochinese regions of Tonkin]] (north), Annam]] (central) and Cochinchina]] (south). Bao Dai said of it, "it is not a Bao Dai solution...but just a French solution." Among the many problems were that the non-Communist groups had too many conflicting ties, such as the VNQDD]] with the Chinese Kuomintang]]; the Constitutionalists, Cao Dai]], Hoa Hao]], and Binh Xuyen]] with France; the Dai Viet]] with Japan. Given this factionalism, the Viet Minh]], accurately or not, enjoyed support as an uniquely Vietnamese faction.[6] 1950Over the objections of Ho Chi Minh]], on 29 January 1950, France's National Assembly granted autonomy to the State of Vietnam, which the U.S. accepted on February 1, rejecting Ho's claim. [7] He created a strongly French-oriented government. While he may have been sympathetic to Vietnamese nationalism, his upbringing had been French. [8] He took no active role in government and spread his time among resorts. An American diplomat said of him,
Not only could he not gain support in the countryside, but not even of honest nationalists, one of such as Phan Quang Dan]], later an opposition leader under Ngo Dinh Diem]]. 1952The head of the U.S. economic mission to Vietnam, Robert Blum, saidIt became clear Bao Dai was simply outside the flow of power. References
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