Word: bao
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Uncle Ho." By the time the French were ready to pick up the postwar strings again in Indo-China, Communist Ho was very much a popular hero, better known as "Uncle Ho." He spoke a "soft" Communist line, talked more about freedom, democracy and reform. Bao Dai was in a different position. He had suffered in reputation because he had "gotten along" with Vichy French and Japanese...
...returning French began negotiations with the Viet Minh leader. There were polite hints that Bao Dai must go-he was too "unpopular." Bao abdicated, and Ho was in the saddle...
...Bao Dai stayed on in Indo-China for a while, as plain citizen Nguyen Vinh Thuy and Honorary Councilor to the Republic. Nobody had much use for him. He went abroad and flung himself into a reckless round of pleasure and sport...
...champagne and caviar, played roulette for 10,000-franc chips ("His Majesty's losses," remarked a croupier, "befitted his rank"), sometimes conducted jazz bands, sent his secretary to open negotiations with the many women who caught his eye. ("My grandfather had 125 wives and 300 children," Bao Dai once remarked to a journalist. "I have a few mistresses. What then?") He played golf capably and bridge like a master. A crack shot with rifle or revolver, he often arranged target competitions with the château's servants...
Meanwhile the French, back in Indo-China, had broken with Ho Chi Minh, were floundering in a Communist-led nationalist uprising. They appealed to Bao Dai to come home again and help rally his people against the Red menace. They promised to grant Viet Nam gradual independence within the new French Union. Bao was persuaded. On March 8, 1949, he signed the document creating the new Indo-Chinese Republic which he would head as chief of state. As he left the gaudy safety of the Riviera for the hazards of a country torn by civil war, he grinned and said...