- Bernard B. Fall
Bernard B. Fall (
November 19 ,1926 -February 21 ,1967 ) was a prominentwar correspondent ,historian , political scientist, and expert onIndochina during the 1950s and 1960s.Early life
Born in
Vienna ,Austria , Fall was taken by his Jewish parents, Leon Fall and Anna Seligman, to live inFrance when Austria was annexed byNazi Germany in 1938. After France fell toGermany in 1940, Leon Fall aided theFrench Resistance . Leon Fall was eventually killed by the Gestapo, while Seligman was deported and perished in Auschwitz. Bernard Fall followed in his father’s footsteps in 1942 and joined the French Resistance, after which time he fought the Germans in theAlps . As France was being liberated in 1944, Fall joined theFrench Army , which he served in until 1946. For his service, he was awarded theFrench Liberation Medal . FollowingWorld War II , Fall worked as an analyst for theNuremberg War Crimes Tribunal , in which capacity he investigatedKrupp Industries.Academic career
From 1948 to 1949, Fall studied at the
University of Paris . From 1949 to 1950, he attended theUniversity of Munich .After completing his studies inEurope , Fall traveled to theUnited States in 1950 on aFulbright Scholarship , where he studied at the University of Maryland for a time. In 1951, Fall attendedSyracuse University , where he received amasters degree inpolitical science in 1952. Fall then took classes at The Johns Hopkins School for Advanced International Studies, where he was encouraged to studyIndochina . Fall took the idea to heart. Not content to study Indochina from afar, Fall traveled toVietnam in 1953, where theFirst Indochina War was being waged between French Union forces and theViet Minh . While in Vietnam, Fall, due to his Frenchcitizenship , was allowed to accompany French soldiers and pilots into enemy territory. Based on his observations, Fall predicted the French would eventually fail in Vietnam. When the French were defeated in the criticalBattle of Dien Bien Phu , Fall claimed the United States was partly responsible for France’s loss. Fall believed that the United States did not support France to a sufficient extent during the First Indochina War.In 1954, Fall returned to the United States and married Dorothy Winer. In 1955, he earned a
doctorate from Syracuse University and became an assistant professor atAmerican University . In 1956, he taughtinternational relations courses atHoward University . Fall became a fullprofessor at Howard University in 1962 and taught there intermittently until his death.Never losing his interest in Indochina, Fall would return to the region five more times (in 1957, 1962, 1965, 1966, and 1967) in order to study developments there firsthand. Fall was eventually given a grant by the
Southeast Asia Treaty Organization to study the development ofCommunism inSoutheast Asia , which he used to observe the rise of Communist activity inLaos . However, Fall was particularly interested in the tensions betweenNorth Vietnam andSouth Vietnam . While teaching at the Royal Institute of Administration inCambodia in 1962, Fall was invited to interviewHo Chi Minh andPham Van Dong inHanoi , where Ho Chi Minh told Fall his belief that Communism would prevail in South Vietnam in about a decade’s time.Vietnam war
Fall himself supported the American military presence in South Vietnam, believing it could stop the country from falling to Communism. However, Fall was highly critical of
Ngo Dinh Diem ’s American-backedregime and the tactics used by theUnited States Military in Vietnam. As the conflict between the American forces and the Communists in Vietnam escalated throughout the 1960s, Fall became increasingly pessimistic about the U.S.’s chances of success, predicting that if it did not learn from France’s mistakes, it too would fail in Vietnam. Fall wrote extensive articles detailing his analysis of the situation in Vietnam, and lectured a great deal about his ideas on theVietnam War . Fall’s research was considered invaluable to many U.S.diplomats and military officials, but his negative opinions were often not taken seriously. By 1964, Fall concluded that the U.S. forces in Vietnam were losing. Fall’s dire predictions caught the attention of theFBI , which began to monitor his activities.Death
In 1967, while accompanying a
platoon of U.S. Marines in Vietnam, Fall stepped on a landmine and was killed, along with Gunnery SergeantByron G. Highland , a U.S. Marine Corps combat photographer. He was dictating notes into a tape recorder, which captured the following last words, just before the explosion: "We've reached one of our phase lines after the fire fight and it smells bad--meaning it's a little bit suspicious...Could be an amb--". Fall left behind his wife and three daughters. Although he had lived in the United States for many years, he never became a U.S. citizen.Books
Fall wrote many books about his experiences in Vietnam, including "The Viet-Minh Regime" (1954), "The Two Vietnams" (1963), "Viet-Nam Witness, 1953-66" (1966), and "Hell in a Very Small Place: The Siege of Dien Bien Phu" (1966). Fall also wrote "Anatomy of a Crisis: The Laotian Crisis of 1960-1961" (published 1969). Perhaps Fall’s most famous and important book was "Street Without Joy" (1961), which detailed the kind of warfare he had witnessed during his first trip to Vietnam. His last book, "Last Reflections on a War" (1967), was published after his death.
ee also
*
Autrefois, Maison Privée External links
* [http://bernardfall.com Website for biography, "Bernard Fall: Memories of a Soldier-Scholar"] , includes first chapter ("The Last Departure") and 48 photographs [retrieved
January 28 2007 ]
* [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/10/02/AR2006100201290.html "A Casualty Of War and Then of Love"] , David Chanoff, "The Washington Post ", October 3, 2006; Page C02.
* [http://www.truthdig.com/interview/item/200601003_the_un_quiet_frenchman/ "The unquiet Frenchman"] , an interview with Dorothy Winer Fall by Sarah Stillman, October 6, 2006
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