Word: bao
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...cover story on Indo-China is nauseating beyond belief. "The U.S. now has ... a new ally in the cold war." Who is this ally? The Emperor Bao Dai? A man who grovels before the oppressors of his people ... a traitor by any standards, who must be regarded with contempt or indifference by the majority of his people...
...support of the Emperor Bao Dai is . . also a repudiation of our own ideals. This action of our State Department and the slant in your article stink to the skies...
Most serious failure is the sluggish pace in recruiting a Viet Nam army. Bao Dai's government has thus far assembled only four battalions, about...
Statesman. Bao Dai has been back in Indo-China about a year. He has made some progress, but it is slow and the difficulties are enormous. The French have promised his government more authority, but they are vague in making good and sometimes stupidly petty. One point of friction between Bao Dai and French High Commissioner Léon Pignon concerns the high commissioner's residence in Saigon. It is the old imperial palace, and the symbol, in native eyes, of paramount place. Bao Dai wants it for his own use, and he stays away from the city lest...
Another disappointment has been Bao Dai's effort to enlist capable ministers and lower-echelon administrators. Partly this is because so many Vietnamese are fence-sitters or fear the terror of Viet Minh agents. Partly it is a consequence of French failure, in the past and at present, to train enough natives to take over the government. Bao Dai seems to be counting on U.S. pressure to loosen up the French in this respect...