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| == Early life and education ==
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| Engineer and doctor Nguyen Ngoc Bich was born on 18 May 1911{{efn|name=DoB-DoD-NNB|The exact dates of birth and of death of Dr. Bich, together with the locations, are inscribed in a commemoration stela for both [[Henriette_Bùi_Quang_Chiêu|Dr. Henriette Bui]] and Dr. Bich in a [[Cao Dai]]{{sfn|Lancaster|1961|p={{plain link|url=https://archive.org/details/emancipationoffr0000lanc/page/86/mode/2up?q=%22cao+dai%22&view=theater|name=85}}}}{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|2021}} cemetery in [[Ben Tre]], [[Vietnam]]. A photo of this stela is provided in ''Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography.''{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|Vu-Quoc-Loc|2023}}}} in An Hoi village, Bao Huu canton, Bao An district, now in Giong Mong district, Ben Tre province. He was the son of Mr. Nguyen Ngoc Tuong (1881–1951), [[Cao Dai]]{{sfn|Lancaster|1961|p={{plain link|url=https://archive.org/details/emancipationoffr0000lanc/page/86/mode/2up?q=%22cao+dai%22&view=theater|name=85}}}}{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|2021}} Ban Chinh Dao (Ben Tre), and Ms. Bui Thi Giau.
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| As a child, he stayed with his father, lived in many places such as Can Tho, Ha Tien, Can Giuoc and mainly studied in Can Giuoc. In 1926, at the age of 15, he went to Saigon to study and graduated with a Baccalaureat at Chasseloup Laubat French School with very high scores, studying abroad in France. In France, he studied and obtained engineering degrees from the École Polytechnique in Paris (he entered in 1931 and graduated in 1933) and later from the École Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées also in Paris. These are 2 prestigious engineering universities in France, as well as in the world so far, especially Polytechnique because the entrance exam is very difficult and is a military school under the tutelage of the French Ministry of the Army, students when graduating have the rank of a military officer and at that time had to work for the government (civil or military) for a period of time.
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| <!--
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| Figure 1. Student at Ecole Polytechnique (1931–1932)
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| * Check for [[WP:NPOV]] style; rewrite if necessary.
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| * References
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| * Refer to master biography{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|Vu-Quoc-Loc|2023}} for details.
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| == Life in exile ==
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| [[File:Henriette_Bùi_Quang_Chiêu_1931.jpg|thumb|left|Dr. Henriette Bui Quang Chieu, companion of Dr. Bich, in 1931]]
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| Back in France, he lived with [[Henriette_Bùi_Quang_Chiêu|Dr Henriette Bui Quang Chieu]], Vietnam's first female doctor, but the two did not marry because they were relatives (his mother, Bui Thi Giau, was a cousin of Bui Quang Chieu, Henriette Bui's father). Back in France, he founded in Paris Minh Tan{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|2023}} publishing house ((agents in Vietnam were the two bookstores Truong Thi (Hanoi) and Bich Van Thu Xa (Saigon)) with some friends to publish works of Vietnamese intellectuals to help improve people's knowledge living in Vietnam.
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| <!--
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| Figure 2. Publishing house Minh Tân in Paris
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| Published books include such as Dao Duy Anh's "''Hán-Việt Tự Điển''" (Chinese-Vietnamese dictionary) and "''Pháp-Việt Tự Điển''" (French-Vietnamese dictionary), "''French-Vietnamese'' Scientific ''Nouns''", Hoang Xuan Han's "''Danh từ khoa học Pháp-Việt''" (Scientific vocabulary French-Vietnamese), "''Chinh Phụ ngăm bị khảo''" and "''La sơn Phu tử''", Tran Duc Thao's "''Phénoménologie et matérialisme dialectique"'' (Phenomenology and Dialectical Materialism), doctors Pham Khac Quan and Le Khac Thien's "''Danh tử Pháp Việt về thuật ngữ kỹ thuật trong y tế''" (French Vietnamese vocabulary on technical terminology in medicine), etc. After graduating from medicine and receiving a doctor's degree, he studied cancer and taught Medical Physics at the Paris Medical School until his death. After he finished composing his Agrégation thesis ("agrégation" (translated into Thạc Sĩ in Vietnamese) is a degree higher than PHD), he could not take the exam because foreigners who want to be enrolled in the exam, must provide a letter of recommendation from their Embassy, at that time the Embassy of the State of Viet Nam with which he refused to have any link. During the French colonial period, French citizenship was given with parsimony to the ones who rendered great service to France and who applied for it. He did not render any service to France, he just had to work as a civil engineer for the colonial government, which was mandatory because he graduated from Ecole Polytechnique.
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| ☛ NOT DONE, TO ADD: [[User:Egm4313.s12|Egm4313.s12]] ([[User talk:Egm4313.s12|talk]]) 16:44, 28 April 2023 (UTC)
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| * Check for [[WP:NPOV]] style; rewrite if necessary.
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| * References
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| * Refer to master biography{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|Vu-Quoc-Loc|2023}} for details.
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| == Engagement in politics ==
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| In 1954, before Diem was selected by Bao Dai, according to the books ''Our Vietnam: The War 1954–1975'' by Arthur John Langguth{{sfn|Langguth|2000|p=84}} and ''The Lost Crusade – America in Vietnam'' by Chester L. Cooper,{{sfn|Cooper|1970|loc=pp. 122–123}}<!--{{efn|Page 122–123 in Cooper (1970){{sfn|Cooper|1970}}.}}--> he was widely regarded as a possible prime minister of the State of Vietnam.
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| Along with some Vietnamese in France, he wanted to give the country another way than the one of war: cooperation between North and South that help each other develop to catch up with neighbouring countries and avoid dependence on foreign states: negotiations and economic and trade cooperation while waiting for favourable conditions for the two sides to unite the country. That idea was echoed by him in an article he wrote in the quarterly magazine China Quarterly, March 3–5, 1962. Later, the same idea was proposed by Ho Chi Minh (in 1958 and 1962){{efn|"In his speech at the twelfth anniversary of independence on September 2, 1957, Ho Chi Minh emphasized the consolidation and development of the economy in order to enhance the people's destiny. Regarding the South, he spoke of patience to reunify the country peacefully through general elections and advocated meetings and negotiations with the South, a position he reiterated on February 7, 1958 in New Delhi. On March 7, 1958, Pham Van Dong sent a letter to Ngo Dinh Diem, requesting meetings to reduce the army on each side and establish trade relations, the first steps towards future unification. The South Vietnamese government, learning from past communist actions against the nationalists (1945–46), did not believe in this outstretched hand."{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|2023|p=330}}
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| <!--According to the documents (FRUS, 1961–1963, Volume IV, Vietnam, August-December 1963, D151) « -->
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| "In March 1962, Mr. Ho Chi Minh said, in an interview with journalist Wilfred Burchett, the his concern for a peaceful resolution of the Vietnam issue [... and] in September [of the same year], the Indian President of the ICC (International Control) reported that Ho had said he was prepared to extend the hand of friendship to Diem ('a patriot') and that the North and South might possibly initiate several steps toward a modus vivendi, including an exchange of members of divided families."{{sfn|FRUS|1963|No.151}}}} and Ngo Dinh Diem and Ngo Dinh Nhu{{efn|"In March 1962, Ho Chi Minh said, in an interview with journalist Wilfred Burchett, his concern for a peaceful resolution of the Vietnam issue [... and] in September [of the same year], the Indian President of the ICC (International Control Commission) reported that Ho Chi Minh had said that he was prepared to extend a hand of friendship to Ngo Dinh Diem ('a patriotic'), and the North and the South can initiate some steps towards a modus vivendi, including the exchange of members of divided families."{{sfn|FRUS|1963|No.151}}}} (in 1963) but without success. A member of his group went to Geneva (Geneva Conference in 1954) to meet Phan Van Dong. He was invited by Georges Bidault, French Foreign Minister (until June 16, 1954) to meet and an American professor from Washington came to Paris to see him. But at that time the U.S. policy was to eliminate communism, and Pham Van Dong's side paid attention to the planned reunification elections in 1956.
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| [[File:Nguyen Ngoc Bich Minh Tan Logo.png|150px|thumb|right|Publisher Minh-Tan logo]]
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| That group of Vietnamese intellectuals—most of whom were professionals trained and residing in France—kept to be discreet at that time and often met at the headquarters of Minh Tan publishing house, which made them called by some the Minh Tan group. The publisher's logo is a pigeon sandwiched in the beak of an olive branch, symbolizing "Peace".
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| <!--
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| Figure 2b. Minh Tan's logo is a dove carrying an olive branch, symbolizing "Peace"".
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| Figure 3. The French military interrogation in 1946 left a mark on his forehand (family photo 1964).
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| -->
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| He sent his candidacy for the 1961 South Viet Nam presidential election, with his partner Nguyễn Văn Thoại,{{efn|Nguyen Van Thoai comes from a famous Catholic family in the South. His brother, Nguyen Van At, married Ngo Dinh Thi Hiep, one of Ngo Dinh Diem's two sisters, and their son was later Cardinal Nguyen Van Thuan, the co-vice archbishop of Saigon. Nguyen Ngoc Bich is the son of one of the founders of [[Cao Dai]] (three million followers).}} a professor at Collège de France in Paris and a former minister of Ngô Đình Diệm. But his file was dismissed by the Ngo Dinh Diem government because of "technical problems".
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| ☛ NOT DONE, TO ADD: [[User:Egm4313.s12|Egm4313.s12]] ([[User talk:Egm4313.s12|talk]]) 16:44, 28 April 2023 (UTC)
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| * Check for [[WP:NPOV]] style; rewrite if necessary.
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| * References
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| * Refer to master biography{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|Vu-Quoc-Loc|2023}} for details.
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|
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| == End of life ==
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| [[File:Nguyen Ngoc Nhut headstone.jpg|thumb|right|Nguyen Ngoc Nhut (1918-1952)]]
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| Suffering from throat cancer, he returned to Vietnam in 1966 when he was very severe and died in Thu Duc on 4 Dec 1966.{{efn|name=DoB-DoD-NNB}} He was buried in Ben Tre, near the grave of his father Nguyen Ngoc Tuong and his brothers, including his brother martyr Nguyen Ngoc Nhut,{{sfn|Nguyen-Hung|2003}}{{efn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Nhut's name was given to a street in Ho Chi Minh City and in Ben Tre city.}} who was a member of the Southern Administrative Resistance Committee. But the grave is open because Nhut's remains have been moved by the government to a martyr's graveyard in Ben Tre.
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| ☛ NOT DONE, TO ADD: [[User:Egm4313.s12|Egm4313.s12]] ([[User talk:Egm4313.s12|talk]]) 16:44, 28 April 2023 (UTC)
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| * Check for [[WP:NPOV]] style; rewrite if necessary.
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| * References
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| * Refer to master biography{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|Vu-Quoc-Loc|2023}} for details.
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| == Peaceful negotiation ==
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|
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| TO REMOVE: [[User:Egm4313.s12|Egm4313.s12]] ([[User talk:Egm4313.s12|talk]]) 15:30, 8 April 2023 (UTC)
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| * This section will be removed, and replace by Section [[#A 1962 peace proposal|A 1962 peace proposal]].
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| === Vietnam-War casualties ===
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| [https://www.britannica.com/question/How-many-people-died-in-the-Vietnam-War How many people died in the Vietnam War?] Britannica (accessed on 2023.02.18)
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|
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| [https://www.britannica.com/editor/The-Editors-of-Encyclopaedia-Britannica/4419 Written and fact-checked by The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica]
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| {| class="wikitable"
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| |In 1995 Vietnam released its official estimate of the number of people killed during the Vietnam War: as many as 2,000,000 civilians on both sides and some 1,100,000 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong fighters. The U.S. military has estimated that between 200,000 and 250,000 South Vietnamese soldiers died. The Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., lists more than 58,300 names of members of the U.S. armed forces who were killed or went missing in action. Among other countries that fought for South Vietnam, South Korea had more than 4,000 dead, Thailand about 350, Australia more than 500, and New Zealand some three dozen.
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| |}
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|
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| === The China Quarterly, Vol. 9, Mar 1962 ===
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| [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly The China Quarterly | Cambridge Core]
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| {| class="wikitable"
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| |''The China Quarterly'' is the leading scholarly journal in its field, covering all aspects of contemporary China including Taiwan. Its interdisciplinary approach covers a range of subjects including anthropology/sociology, literature and the arts, business/economics, geography, history, international affairs, law, and politics. Edited to rigorous standards by scholars of the highest repute, the journal publishes high-quality, authoritative research. International in scholarship, ''The China Quarterly'' provides readers with historical perspectives, in-depth analyses, and a deeper understanding of China and Chinese culture. In addition to major articles and research reports, each issue contains a comprehensive Book Review section.
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| |}
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|
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| [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/volume/0FB8E56075A0E2649EB01EC2BFB9ABFB The China Quarterly: Volume 9 - | Cambridge Core (Mar 1962)]
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|
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| ==== Contributors ====
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| [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/article/contributors/DFA1B1B34B49325008EAB9EB582BF0DE Contributors]
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|
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| ==== Vietnam—An Independent Viewpoint ====
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| Nguyen-Ngoc-Bich (1962),
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| [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/article/abs/vietnaman-independent-viewpoint/91FC9BBCE8F39A365B303AC4118BEBC6 Vietnam—An Independent Viewpoint]
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| [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly The China Quarterly], [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/volume/0FB8E56075A0E2649EB01EC2BFB9ABFB Volume 9], March, pp. 105–111.
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| DOI: [https://doi.org/10.1017/S030574100002525X https://doi.org/10.1017/S030574100002525X]
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|
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| ===== '''Summary of main points''' =====
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| In 1962, Dr. Bich{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Bich|1962}} laid out an argument to avoid the subversion war by North Vietnam to conquer rice from South Vietnam to solve its famine problem due to low yields in agricultural production using archaic methods and due to the failed agrarian reform. His main points were (1) South Vietnam should have a truly liberal democratic government, (2) the South should establish commercial relations with the North to help solve the said famine problem, (3) the South should maintain a non-aligned neutrality that would prevent interference from the North, (4) the South would peacefully negotiate with the North toward a progressive reunification. Below is a more detailed summary of his article, looking back from more than 60 years later. As a result, past tense is used in this summary to describe long-past events, instead of the sometimes present tense used in the original article.{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|Vu-Quoc-Loc|2023}} The full article translated into French is available in the document <!--[[c:Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A biography|Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A biography]]-->''Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography.''{{sfn|Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau|Vu-Quoc-Loc|2023}}
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| {| class="wikitable"
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| |Contrary to the belief of the Western world (that the Vietnamese generally disliked, and had an inferiority complex against, the Chinese), the Vietnamese tended to be too proud of their history and victories against the Chinese and Mongol invaders over the centuries.
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| Aware of the Chinese historical "fierce expansionism", an important question for North and South Vietnam was how to safeguard the future of Vietnam as a whole country.
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| While South Vietnam tried to forcibly assimilate Chinese immigrants and their descendants, North Vietnam adopted a "more subtle attitude", moving from "fears" during the Chiang Kai-shek era to "solidarity and friendship" after the communist had won in 1949.
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| The Geneva agreements, while satisfying for China, left the North Vietnamese to be content with the prospect of reunifying with South Vietnam upon an election. After the failure of the agrarian reform, there was a concern of the presence of many Chinese soldiers and civilians in North Vietnam. To keep Chinese economic aid flowing, Ho Chi Minh initially maintained a balance between Peking (Beijing) and Moscow, but subsequently tilted toward Moscow after Peking admitted that it could not help carry out a semi-heavy industrialization. In September 1960, Le Duan, then Secretary-General of the Party, put forward a three-point program: (1) Support Moscow in any Sino-Soviet dispute, (2) Five-year plan (1961–1965) to socialize North Vietnam, (3) Progressive and peaceful reunification of the two Vietnams.
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| With the nomination of Le Duan—who led the struggle for independence in South Vietnam for a long time and knew the South more than anyone else—as First Secretary of the Party, North Vietnam began to undertake the reconquest of the South, with the first step being to eliminate the Ngo Dinh Diem regime and the American influence in the South. There were deeper motives.
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| "The most striking feature of the Vietnamese Communist leadership was its outstanding spirit of realism, even pragmatism." They continuously and critically reexamined facts so that a lesson could be drawn for every action and every happening to avoid past mistakes. By doing so, they tended to imitate or to repeat past actions that were proven successful, and lacked imagination and open-mindedness to create new solutions to tackle new challenges.
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| [[File:French_plane_dropped_napalm_bomb_on_Vietminh_force.png|550px|thumb|center|French plane pulling up after a dive to drop Napalm bombs on Vietminh force ambushing a French battalion. The white streak below the plane, clearly visible against the dark background of trees further behind, was the Napalm bomb that was just dropped. 1953 December.]]
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| [[File:French indochina napalm 1953-12 1.png|550px|thumb|center|French Napalm bomb exploded over Vietminh force. 1953 December. This image during the (French) [[First Indochina War]], conjuring up the horrific destruction of the Napalm on the human flesh,{{sfn|Tong|2018}} portended what was to come more than ten years later during the (American) [[Second Indochina War]] with even more deadly advanced Napalm technology.]]
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| For example, they stopped following the advice of Chinese tacticians in launching large-scale mass attacks once many of their soldiers died by French napalm bombs. They switched from the costlier manufacturing of arms to the less expensive manufacturing of hand grenades, which can be used against light battalions to seize their arms. They bred dogs, instead of pigs, as a source of meat since dogs produced two litters of young each year, while pigs produced only one.
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| A deeper motive to swing closer to Moscow was to develop a rapid industrialization to raise the standard of living to avoid complaints about dictatorship and restriction of freedom, and also the "dreaded spectre of becoming a mere satellite state".
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| The targets of the Five-Year Plan were "extremely optimistic". In the old French Indochina, "great leaps forward" in economics were achieved in some sectors, such as a 400% increase in plantation area, 150% increase in the number of workers in industrial establishments, in spite of World War I. Now, there was an abundance of labor due to high unemployment. The planned industrial projects could be completed if foreign aid maintained the same rhythm and agricultural production was adequate.
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| It was doubtful, however, that the target of growing agricultural production by 61% over five years could be achieved due to low yields resulting from the archaic methods of cultivation, the old system of sub-letting land, the difficulty of cultivating new land, the discontent among the peasants, and the disastrous agrarian reforms and its consequence. Hunger had become endemic, and China could not come to the rescue because of her own problems. Rice had to be smuggled from the South to the North.
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| [[File:Famine_in_Vietnam,_1945_(3).jpg|250px|thumb|right|The great Vietnamese famine 1944–1945.]]
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| The five-year plan ran a "grave risk of failure" due to lack of food to feed the people in North Vietnam, without an increase in rice supply from South Vietnam, not to mention other unpredictable factors such as floods, droughts, bad weather, etc.
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| The success of the Five-Year Plan would be a primary condition to maintain some independence from Peking, which would exert a greater influence than from Moscow in the case of "necessary and inevitable war", and the North being a satellite of China "would constitute a most serious menace for the South, particularly in time of any major crisis".
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| The reconquest of the South entrusted to Le Duan could then be understood as "a struggle unleashed simply for the purpose of conquering rice", without which the five-year plan most certainly would fail. For many Southerners, their reaction against the Diem regime, rather than the love for Communism, enabled this subversion war to continue. The enormous economic benefit that North Vietnam would harvest from the national reunification was the primary reason for the war.
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| North Vietnam was fighting to secure rice, and thus the war was, from the purely national point of view, a legitimate one. Ngo Dinh Diem on the other hand refused to provide aid to alleviate the famine in the North.
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| The Vietnamese people had for a long time a desire to have a liberal, truly democratic government. and had proven that in the end they would rise time and again to thwart the yoke imposed on them by any foreign power.
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| To avoid such internal war for rice from becoming a proxy war for Moscow, there should be a liberal regime in Saigon that allowed for establishing commercial relations with Hanoi and for a call to stop the fighting. Moreover, a non-aligned political neutrality would prevent interference by North Vietnam in the affairs of South Vietnam.
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| A peaceful and progressive reunification of the two Vietnams could only be achieved through negotiation at a table, and not by arm struggle in the jungle. The South would hope to live side by side peacefully with the North to collaborate in building the common Vietnamese nation, as the alternative would make "reunification" a propaganda that concealed the desire to conquer.
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| |}
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| ==Publication==
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| * {{citation |last=Nguyen-Ngoc-Bich |title=Vietnam—An Independent Viewpoint |journal=[[The China Quarterly]] |volume=9 |date=March 1962 |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/article/abs/vietnaman-independent-viewpoint/91FC9BBCE8F39A365B303AC4118BEBC6 |url-access=subscription |access-date=18 Feb 2023}}, pp. 105–111. See also the contents of [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/volume/0FB8E56075A0E2649EB01EC2BFB9ABFB Volume 9], which included the articles of many well-known experts on Vietnam history and politics such as [[Bernard B. Fall]], [[Hoang Van Chi]], Phillipe Devillers (see, e.g., his classic 1952 book ''Histoire du Viet-Nam'' in Section [[#References|References]] and [[French Cochinchina#cite ref-41|French Cochinchina, Ref. 40]]), [[P. J. Honey]]<!--(see, e.g., his [https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/2300EAC28055ADB13CD8B21AF51F3BBE/S0305741000025340a.pdf/lenfer_communiste_au_nord_vietnam_by_gerard_tongas_paris_les_nouvelles_editions_debresse_1961_463_pp_18_new_francs.pdf review of Tongas' ''Enfer Communiste'']), William Kaye (see, e.g., [https://www.jstor.org/stable/651693 A Bowl of Rice Divided: The Economy of North Vietnam, 1962])-->, Gerard Tongas (see, e.g, [https://www.abebooks.com/Jai-v%C3%A9cu-lEnfer-Communiste-Nord-Viet-Nam/31061452118/bd ''J'ai vécu dans l'Enfer Communiste au Nord Viet-Nam''], Debresse, Paris, 1961, [https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/2300EAC28055ADB13CD8B21AF51F3BBE/S0305741000025340a.pdf/lenfer_communiste_au_nord_vietnam_by_gerard_tongas_paris_les_nouvelles_editions_debresse_1961_463_pp_18_new_francs.pdf reviewed]] by [[P. J. Honey]]), among others.
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|
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| ==Timeline==
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| Important historical events in Vietnam and in the world that affected directly or indirectly the life of Dr. Nguyen Ngoc Bich, from his birth in 1911 to his death in 1966.
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| ===1911===
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| * MM DD, Nguyen Ngoc Bich was born in LOCATION, Vietnam. Section [[#Early life and education|Early life and education]].
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|
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| ===1930===
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| * Feb 9-10, [[Yen Bai mutiny]]. Brutal repression by the French colonialists. Bich at 19 years old.
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|
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| ===1931===
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| * MM DD, began to study at the Ecole Polytechnique, Paris, France. Bich at 20.
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| * met Henriette Bui.
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|
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| ===1933===
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| * graduated from the Ecole Polytechnique. Bich at 22.
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| * began to study at the Ecole National des Ponts et Chaussees.
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|
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| == Notes OLD ==
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| {{notelist}}
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|
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| == Citations OLD ==
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| <!--{{notelist}}-->
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| {{Reflist}}
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| == References OLD ==
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| {{refbegin}}
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|
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| * {{citation
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| |title=151: Memorandum Prepared for the Director of Central Intelligence (McCone) |work=Foreign Relations of the United States, 1961–1963, Volume IV, Vietnam, August-December 1963
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| |year=1963
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| |url=https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1961-63v04/d151
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| |access-date=15 Mar 2023
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| |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221115194149/https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1961-63v04/d151
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| |archive-date=15 Nov 2022
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| |ref = <!--{{harvid|FRUS|1963}}-->{{harvid|FRUS|1963|No.151}}
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| }}.
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| <!--[https://web.archive.org/web/20221115194149/https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1961-63v04/d151 Internet archived 2022.11.15].-->
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| * {{citation |title=Dr. Paul Mus dies; a Yale professor. Southeast Asia authority also taught in France |journal=New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1969/08/16/archives/dr-paul-mus-dies-a-yale-professor-southeast-asia-authority-also.html |date=16 August 1969 |ref={{harvid|NYT Paul Mus obituary}}}}.
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| * {{citation |first=Pierre |last=Asselin |year=2013 |title=Hanoi's Road to War, 1954–1965 |publisher=University of California Press, California}}.
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| * {{citation |last=Bartholomew-Feis |first=Dixee |year=2006 |title=The OSS and Ho Chi Minh: Unexpected Allies in the War against Japan |publisher=University Press of Arkansas, Lawrence, Kansas}}.
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| * {{citation |last=Brocheux | first=Pierre |year=2007 |title=Ho Chi Minh: A Biography |publisher=translated by Claire Duiker, Cambridge University Press, New York}}.
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| * {{citation |last=[[Joseph Buttinger|Buttinger]] |first=Joseph |year=1967a |title=Vietnam: A Dragon Embattled, Vol.1 |publisher=Frederik A. Praegers, New York |url=https://archive.org/details/vietnamdragonemb01butt/page/n5/mode/2up |url-access=registration |access-date=25 Feb 2023}}
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| * {{citation |last=Cooper |first=Chester L. |year=1970 |title=The Lost Crusade: America in Vietnam |publisher=Dood, Mead & Company, New York |url=https://archive.org/details/lostcrusadeameri00coop/page/n5/mode/2up |url-access=registration |access-date=7 Mar 2023}}
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| * {{citation |last=Colman | first=Jonathan |year=2012 |title=Lost crusader? Chester L. Cooper and the Vietnam War, 1963–68 |journal=[[Cold War History]] |volume=12 |number=3 |pages=429–449 | doi=10.1080/14682745.2011.573147 | s2cid=154769990 |url=https://doi.org/10.1080/14682745.2011.573147 |url-access=subscription}}.
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| * {{citation |last=Devillers |first=Philippe |year=1952 |title=Histoire du Viêt-Nam de 1940 à 1952 |publisher=Seuil, Paris.}} See also [https://indomemoires.hypotheses.org/21651 Philippe Devillers (1920–2016), un secret nommé Viêt-Nam, Mémoires d'Indochine], [https://web.archive.org/web/20220629093316/https://indomemoires.hypotheses.org/21651 Internet archived 2022.06.29]. Patti (1980), p.542, wrote about Devillers (1952): "The most accurate French account of the period; barring several omissions and minor inaccuracies generally attributable to his sources and to the lack of American documentation, it is by far one of the more reliable histories."
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| * {{citation |last=Donaldson |first=Gary |year=1996 |title=America at War Since 1945: Politics and Diplomacy in Korea, Vietnam, and the Gulf War |publisher=Praeger, Westport, Connecticut |url=https://archive.org/details/americaatwarsinc0001dona/page/n3/mode/2up |url-access=registration |access-date=8 Apr 2023}}
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| * {{citation |last=Fenn |first=Charles |year=1973 |title=Ho Chi Minh: A Biographical Introduction |publisher=Studio Vista, London |url=https://archive.org/details/hochiminhbiograp0000fenn/page/n3/mode/2up?view=theater |url-access=registration |access-date=2023-12-27}}.
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| * {{citation |last=Fox | first=Margalit |year=2005 |title=Chester Cooper, 88, a Player in Diplomacy for Two Decades, Is Dead |work=[[The New York Times]] |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/07/obituaries/chester-cooper-88-a-player-in-diplomacy-for-two-decades-is-dead.html |url-access=subscription}}, Nov 7.
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| * {{citation |last=Gettleman | first=Marvin E. |year=1967 |title=A Vietnam Bibliography |url=https://cdn.mises.org/Left%20and%20Right_3_3_7_0.pdf?token=p777VAHo}}, Assistant Professor of History, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, with the assistance of Sanford L. Silverman, Liberal Arts Bibliographer. The Libraries, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, Oct 19. [https://web.archive.org/web/20220101025921/https://cdn.mises.org/Left%20and%20Right_3_3_7_0.pdf?token=p777VAHo Internet archived 2022.01.01]
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| * {{citation |last=Giniger | first=Henry |year=1984 |title=America Inside Out, Close to Events, book review |work=[[The New York Times]] |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1984/10/14/books/close-to-events.html |url-access=subscription}}, Oct 14.
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| * {{citation |last=Hammer |first=Ellen J. |year=1954 |title=The Struggle for Indochina |publisher=Stanford University Press, Stanford, California |url=https://archive.org/details/struggleforindoc0000hamm_h0h0/page/n6/mode/2up |url-access=registration |access-date=11 Mar 2023}}.
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| * {{citation |editor=Honey, P.J. |title=Special Issue on Vietnam |journal=[[The China Quarterly]] |volume=9 |date=March 1962 |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/volume/0FB8E56075A0E2649EB01EC2BFB9ABFB |url-access=subscription |access-date=18 Feb 2023}}. [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/volume/0FB8E56075A0E2649EB01EC2BFB9ABFB Volume 9] contained the articles written by several well-known intellectuals on Vietnam history and politics such as [[Bernard B. Fall]], [[Hoang Van Chi]], Phillipe Devillers (see [[French Cochinchina#cite ref-41|French Cochinchina, Ref. 40]]), [[P. J. Honey]], William Kaye (see e.g., [https://www.jstor.org/stable/651693 A Bowl of Rice Divided: The Economy of North Vietnam, 1962]), Gerard Tongas, among others. See the [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/article/editorial/5958FFC9348ED8A5B69E462E3B72B806 Editorial] and the [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/article/abs/contributors/DFA1B1B34B49325008EAB9EB582BF0DE brief introduction of the contributors].
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| * {{citation |last=Lambert | first=Bruce |year=1992 |title=Joseph A. Buttinger, Nazi Fighter And Vietnam Scholar, Dies at 85 |work=[[The New York Times]] |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1992/03/08/nyregion/joseph-a-buttinger-nazi-fighter-and-vietnam-scholar-dies-at-85.html |url-access=subscription}}, Mar 8.
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| * {{citation |last=Lancaster |first=Donald |year=1961 |title=The Emancipation of French Indochina |publisher=Royal Institute of International Affairs, Oxford University Press, New York; reprinted by Octagon Books, New York, 1975 |url=https://archive.org/details/emancipationoffr0000lanc/page/n5/mode/2up |url-access=registration |access-date=11 Mar 2023}}
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| * {{citation |last=[[A.J. Langguth|Langguth]] |first=Arthur John |year=2000 |title=Our Vietnam: The war, 1954–1975 |publisher=Simon & Schuster, New York |url=https://archive.org/details/ourvietnam00ajla |url-access=registration |access-date=14 Mar 2023}}
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| * {{citation |editor-last1 = Lawrence |editor-first1 = Mark A. |editor-last2 = Logevall |editor-first2 = Fredrik |year=2007 |title=The First Vietnam War: Colonial Conflict and the Cold War |publisher=Harvard University Press, Massachusetts }}.
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| * {{citation |last=Logevall | first=Fredrik |year=2012 |title=Embers of War: The Fall of an Empire and the Making of America's Vietnam |url=https://archive.org/details/embersofwarfallo0000loge |url-access=registration |access-date=12 Apr 2012 |publisher=Random House, New York}}, 864 pp. Winner of the [https://www.pulitzer.org/winners/fredrik-logevall 2013 Pulitzer Prize in History]: "''For a distinguished and appropriately documented book on the history of the United States, Ten thousand dollars ($10,000).'' A balanced, deeply researched history of how, as French colonial rule faltered, a succession of American leaders moved step by step down a road toward full-blown war" • Winner of the [https://sah.columbia.edu/content/prizes/francis-parkman-prize/2013-fredrik-logevall-embers-war-fall-empire-and-making 2013 Francis Parkman Prize from the Society of American Historians] • Winner of the [https://americanlibraryinparis.org/fredrik-logevall-reflects-on-vietnam-different-dreams-same-footsteps/ 2013 American Library in Paris Book Award] • Winner of the Council on Foreign Relations [https://www.cfr.org/past-winners-arthur-ross-book-award 2013 Gold Medal] [https://www.cfr.org/arthur-ross-book-award Arthur Ross Book Award] • Finalist for the [https://www.cundillprize.com/winners/2013 2013 Cundill Prize in Historical Literature].
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| * {{citation |last=Marr | first=David G. |year=1984 |title=Vietnamese Tradition on Trial, 1920-1945 |publisher=University of California Press, Berkeley |url=https://archive.org/details/vietnamesetradit0000marr |url-access=registration |access-date=2024-05-05}}.
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| * {{citation |last=Marr | first=David G. |year=2013 |title=Vietnam: State, War, and Revolution (1945-1946) |publisher=University of California Press, Berkeley.}}
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| * {{citation |last=Nguyen-Hung |year=2003 |title=Dũng khí Nguyễn Ngọc Nhựt (The Heroic Nguyen Ngoc Nhut) |publisher=Trẻ (Youth), Ho-Chi-Minh City, Vietnam |series=Nam Bộ Nhân Vật Chí (History of notable personalities in South Vietnam)}}.
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| * {{citation |last=Nguyen |first=Lien-Hang T. |year=2012 |title=Hanoi's War |publisher=University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill}}.
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| <!--
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| * {{citation |last=Nguyen-Ngoc-Bich |title=Vietnam—An Independent Viewpoint |journal=[[The China Quarterly]] |volume=9 |date=March 1962 |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/article/abs/vietnaman-independent-viewpoint/91FC9BBCE8F39A365B303AC4118BEBC6 |url-access=subscription |access-date=18 Feb 2023}}, pp. 105–111. See also the contents of [https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/china-quarterly/volume/0FB8E56075A0E2649EB01EC2BFB9ABFB Volume 9], which included the articles of many well-known experts on Vietnam history and politics.
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| -->
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| * {{citation |last=Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau |year=2018 |title=Le Temps des Ancêtres: Une famille vietnamienne dans sa traversée du XXe siècle |publisher=L'Harmattan, Paris, France |url=https://www.editions-harmattan.fr/livre-le_temps_des_ancetres_une_famille_vietnamienne_dans_sa_traversee_du_xxe_siecle_chau_nguyen_ngoc-9782343140834-58952.html |access-date=18 Feb 2023}}. Preface by historian Pierre Brocheux.
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| * {{citation |last=Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau |title=The basic truths on Caodaism |url=https://www.academia.edu/44590508 |date=20 Jul 2021 |publisher=education.edu}}.
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| * {{citation |last=Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau |year=2023 |title=Viet Nam Political History of the Two Wars: Independence War (1858–1954) and Ideological War (1945–1975) |publisher=Nombre 7, Nîmes, France}}.
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| * {{citation |last1=Nguyen-Ngoc-Chau |last2=Vu-Quoc-Loc |year=2023 |title=Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911–1966): A Biography |url=https://archive.org/details/nguyen-ngoc-bich-1911-1966-a-biography |publisher=Internet Archive |access-date=21 Mar 2023}}, [[CC-BY-SA 4.0]]. ([https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Le5jRNs4Ib0FYTZkBdG2tlpAo0jH6q52/view?usp=share_link Backup copy].) Much of the information in the present article came from this biography, which also contains many relevant and informative photos not displayed here.
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| * {{citation |last=Osborne |first=Milton |year=1967 |title=Viet-Nam: The Search for Absolutes |journal=International Journal | volume=22 |number=4 |series=Fifty Years of Bolshevism (Autumn, 1967) |pages=647–654 |doi=10.2307/40200203 |jstor=40200203 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/40200203 |access-date=18 Feb 2023}}.
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| * {{citation |last=Pace | first=Eric |year=2001 |title=Ellen Hammer, 79; Historian Wrote on French in Indochina |work=[[The New York Times]] |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2001/03/26/world/ellen-hammer-79-historian-wrote-on-french-in-indochina.html |url-access=subscription}}, Mar 26.
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| * {{citation |last=Patti |first=Archimedes |year=1980 |title=Why Viet Nam? Prelude to America's Albatross |url=https://archive.org/details/whyvietnamprelud0000patt/mode/2up?view=theater |publisher=University of California Press | location = Berkeley |isbn = 978-0520047839}}
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| * {{citation |last=Scigliano | first=Robert |year=1963 |title=South Vietnam: Nation under Stress |publisher=Praeger, New York}}.
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| * {{citation |last1=Stockton | first1=Richard |year=2022 |title=The True Story Of Phan Thi Kim Phúc, The 'Napalm Girl' |url=https://allthatsinteresting.com/napalm-girl }}, edited by Leah Silverman, Dec 25. [https://web.archive.org/web/20230331075026/https://allthatsinteresting.com/napalm-girl Internet archived on 2023.03.31.]
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| * {{citation |last=Tong | first=Traci |year=2018 |title=How the Vietnam War's Napalm Girl found hope after tragedy, The World from PRX |work=[[The World]] |url=https://theworld.org/stories/2018-02-21/how-vietnam-wars-napalm-girl-found-hope-after-tragedy }}, Feb 21. [https://web.archive.org/web/20230322154140/https://theworld.org/stories/2018-02-21/how-vietnam-wars-napalm-girl-found-hope-after-tragedy Internet archived on 2023.02.22.]
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| * {{citation |last=Tønnesson | first=Stein |year=1991 |title=The Vietnamese Revolution of 1945: Roosevelt, Ho Chi Minh and de Gaulle in a world at war |publisher=SAGE Publications, London |url=https://www.prio.org/publications/11461 |access-date=2024-05-05}}. Link to this book at the Norwegian National Library.
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| <!--|ref={{harvid|Tonnesson 1991}}-->
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| * {{citation |last=Tram-Huong |year=2003 |title=Đêm trắng của Đức Giáo Tông (Sleepless Night of the [[Cao Dai]] Pope)|publisher=People's Police Publishing House, Vietnam}}.
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| * {{citation |last=Tran-Thi-Lien |year=2002 |chapter=Henriette Bui: The narrative of Vietnam's first woman doctor |pages=278–309 |title=Viêt Nam Exposé: French Scholarship on Twentieth-Century Vietnamese Society |editor=Gisele Bousquet and Pierre Brocheux |url=https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.12124 |publisher=University of Michigan Press |doi=10.3998/mpub.12124 |isbn=9780472098057 }}. [https://books.google.com/books?id=aPQfqQB_7K0C&dq=Bui+Quang+Chieu+Ngoc+Bich&pg=PA281 Google Book] (search for "Bui Quang Chieu Ngoc Bich"), accessed 20 May 2023.
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| * {{citation |last=Vu Quoc Loc |year=2023a |title=Notes on Vietnam History |url=https://archive.org/details/notes-on-vietnam-history |publisher=Internet Archive |access-date=27 Jun 2023 }}, [https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ CC BY-SA 4.0].
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| {{refend}}
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| == Gallery ==
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| ===Nguyen Ngoc Bich===
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| Images used to illustrate this article.
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| <gallery widths="110" heights="180">
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| File:Nguyen Ngoc Bich Street.png|Nguyen Ngoc Bich Street
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| File:Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911-1966) signature 1949.png|Signature 1949
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| File:Nguyen Ngoc Bich 1931 Ecole Polytechnique 2.png|Nguyen Ngoc Bich 1931 Ecole polytechnique
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| File:Nguyen_Ngoc_Bich_1933_X.png|Nguyen Ngoc Bich, circa 1933, Ecole polytechnique
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| File:Nguyen Ngoc Bich Minh Tan Logo.png|Publisher Minh-Tan logo
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| File:Nguyen Ngoc Nhut headstone.jpg|Nguyen Ngoc Nhut (1918-1952)
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| File:NN Chau TDA cover.png|Le Temps des Ancêtres: Une famille vietnamienne dans sa traversée du XXe siècle, book cover
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| File:Henriette_Bùi_Quang_Chiêu_1931.jpg|Dr. Henriette Bui
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| </gallery>
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|
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| ===First Indochina War===
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| Images used to illustrate this article.
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| <gallery widths="110" heights="180">
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| File:1945 Aug 16 Deer Team train Vietminh.png|1945 Aug 16 Deer Team train Vietminh
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| File:1945 OSS train Vietminh grenade launcher.png|OSS Deer team<!--{{efn|name=OSS-HCM}}--> training the Viet Minh to use a grenade launcher.
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| File:1945 Aug Alison Thomas Vietminh to Hanoi.png|1945 Aug OSS Maj. Allison Thomas and Viet-Minh fighters marching to Hanoi, Aug 1945.
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| File:Patti Giap US flag 1945 Aug 26.png|[[Office of Strategic Services|OSS]] Maj. [[Archimedes Patti]] and [[Vo Nguyen Giap]] saluted American flag, with a [[Viet Minh]] band playing the ''Star Spangled Banner'', 1945 Aug 26, Sunday.
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| File:1945 Aug Archimedes Patti, Vo Nguyen Giap.png|[[Vo Nguyen Giap]] gave a welcoming parade to US Maj. [[Archimedes Patti]], head of the US Army intelligence team ([[Office_of_Strategic_Services|OSS]]), 1945 Aug 26, Sunday.
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| File:1945 Vietnam Independence or Death.png|Vietnam Independence or Death demonstration, August 1945.
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| File:Président Ho-chi-Minh lit la Proclamation-d'indépendance sur la place Ba-dinh le 2nd Sep 1945.jpg|[[Ho Chi Minh]] declared [[Declaration_of_independence_of_the_Democratic_Republic_of_Vietnam|Vietnam independence, 1945 Sep 2]].
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| File:Ho Chi Minh, Giap, farewell to OSS team 1945.png|[[Ho Chi Minh]] and [[Vo Nguyen Giap]] giving a farewell party to the US Army intelligence team ([[Office_of_Strategic_Services|OSS]]), 1945.
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| File:French_plane_dropped_napalm_bomb_on_Vietminh_force.png|French plane pulling up after a dive to drop napalm bombs on Vietminh force ambushing a French battalion.
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| File:French_indochina_napalm_1953-12_1.png|French napalm bomb exploded over Vietminh force. 1953 December.
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| File:1stIndochinaWar001.jpg|French Marines wading ashore off the coast of Annam (Central Vietnam) in July 1950.
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| File:HD-SN-99-02042.JPEG|A Viet-Minh suspect captured by a French-Foreign-Legion patrol in 1954.
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| File:Vietnamese_refugees_board_LST_516_during_Operation_Passage_to_Freedom,_October_1954_(030630-N-0000X-001).jpg|Vietnamese refugees boarding the US Navy ship LST 516 during Operation Passage to Freedom, October 1954.
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| File:Famine_in_Vietnam,_1945_(3).jpg|The great Vietnamese famine 1944–1945.
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| File:1945.09.02 Archimedes Patti Operational Priority.pdf|1945.09.02 [[Archimedes Patti]] Operational Priority communication
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| File:1946_Ho_Chi_Minh_Leclerc_Sainteny_2.png|[[Ho Chi Minh]], Leclerc, Sainteny, 1945 Mar 18
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| File:1945_Aug_12_de_Gaulle_Truman_White_House.jpg|de Gaulle visited Truman, 1946 Aug 12
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| File:1945_Oct_22_Ho_Chi_Minh_letter_to_US_Secretary_of_State_p1.jpg|Ho Chi Minh's letter to US Secretary of State, 1945 Oct 22, Page 1, with date
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| File:1945_Oct_22_Ho_Chi_Minh_letter_to_US_Secretary_of_State_p2.jpg|Ho Chi Minh's letter to US Secretary of State, 1945 Oct 22, Page 2
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| File:1945_Oct_22_Ho_Chi_Minh_letter_to_US_Secretary_of_State_p3.jpg|Ho Chi Minh's letter to US Secretary of State, 1945 Oct 22, Page 3, with signature
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| File:Ho Chi Minh and OSS Deer Team, Bac Bo Palace, 1945 Sep.png|Ho Chi Minh and OSS Deer Team, Bac Bo Palace, 1945 Sep
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| </gallery>
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| ===Second Indochina War===
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| Images used to illustrate this article.
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| <gallery widths="120" heights="180">
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| File:Marines_Da_Nang_Vietnam_1965.04.30.png|US Marines wading ashore in Da Nang, Central Vietnam, on 1965 Apr 30
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| </gallery>
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| {{Commons category|Nguyen Ngoc Bich (1911-1966)}}
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| {{Draft categories|
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| [[:Category:1911 births]]
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| [[:Category:1966 deaths]]
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| [[:Category:Vietnamese engineers]]
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| [[:Category:Vietnamese nationalists]]
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| [[:Category:Vietnamese physicians]]
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| [[:Category:Vietnamese politicians]]
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| }}
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| [[fr:Nguyen Ngoc Bich]]
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| [[vi:Nguyen Ngoc Bich]]
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| {{Drafts moved from mainspace|date=March 2023}}
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