NOTE: A lot of nonsense is written about all the North Vietnamese who moved to the South between 1954 and 1956. Here is the well-researched background evidence from Peter Brush, a Vietnam Vet and excellent researcher on the Vietnam War. -- Grover Furr _________________________________________________ Facts *don't* speak for itself. The number of people going North was held to a small total by order of the Viet Minh, who wanted its sympathizers to remain in the south to prepare for the elections that had been promised. The bulk of those going South fell into two groups -- dependents of the colonial native arny (200,000) and Catholics (670,000). Catholic communities in the north had a special status under the French. They raised militia units that fought beside the French and against the Viet Minh. With the collaspe of French rule, these Catholic communities feared reprisals under the Viet Minh. The US paid Diem $89 each for each Catholic refugee. At that time, the per capita income in SVN was $85. The US 7th Fleet assisted the French navy in hauling them from north to south. Whole villages were moved, with their leadership generally intact. For the first two years of the resettlement program most of these Catholics were supported by US relief programs. The whole thing was a welfare program tailored to meet the needs of a minority group by a minority leader and it grated on the non-Catholic majority. The whole affair provided the US with a good public relations tool. Dr. Dooley called the 17th parallel "the rim of Hell" with "Demons of Communism stalking outside and now holding the upper half of the country in their strangling grip." Dooley's heroes were the Vietnamese who fought on the side of the colonialists against the majority of their countrymen. One month after Geneva, the CIA concluded: "If the scheduled national elections are held in July 1956, and if the Viet Minh does not prejudice its political prospects, the Viet Minh will almost certainly win." The Viet Minh would then take power in the south by peaceful and legal means. The US and GVN therefore refused to hold the promised elections. Catholics were trustworthy opponents of the Viet Minh. But by embracing them, Diem planted the seeds for the anti-Catholic demonstrations that led to the fall of his government. Diem gave the Catholics preferential treatment in land distribution, relief and assistance, commercial and export-import licenses, government employment, and other government generosity financed by the US. They came to fill almost all important civilian and military positions. The 80% of SVN's population who were either practicing or nominal Buddhists created a smoldering resentment. Peter Brush _____________________________________