Eisenhower praises the progress in South Vietnam (1960)

In October 1960 Dwight D. Eisenhower, then in the final weeks of his presidency, wrote to South Vietnamese president Ngo Dinh Diem. Eisenhower’s letter hailed the fifth anniversary of the formal creation of South Vietnam and praised Diem’s leadership, even as others were condemning it:

Dear Mr President,

“My countrymen and I are proud to convey our good wishes to you and to the citizens of Vietnam on the fifth anniversary of the birth of the Republic of Vietnam.

We have watched the courage and daring with which you and the Vietnamese people attained independence in a situation so perilous that many thought it hopeless. We have admired the rapidity with which chaos yielded to order and progress replaced despair.

During the years of your independence it has been refreshing for us to observe how clearly the government and the citizens of Vietnam have faced the fact that the greatest danger to their independence was Communism. You and your countrymen have used your strength well in accepting the double challenge of building your country and resisting communist imperialism.

In five short years since the founding of the Republic, the Vietnamese people have developed their country in almost every sector. I was particularly impressed by one example. I am informed that last year over 1,200,000 Vietnamese children were able to go to elementary school – three times as many as were enrolled five years earlier. This is certainly a heartening development for Vietnam’s future. At the same time Vietnam’s ability to defend itself from the communists has grown immeasurably since its successful struggle to become an independent Republic.

Vietnam’s very success as well as its potential wealth and its strategic location have led the communists of Hanoi, goaded by the bitterness of their failure to enslave all Vietnam, to use increasing violence in their attempts to destroy your country’s freedom.

This grave threat, added to the strains and fatigues of the long struggle to achieve and strengthen independence, must be a burden that would cause moments of tension and concern in almost any human heart. Yet from long observation I sense how deeply the Vietnamese value their country’s independence and strength and I know how well you used your boldness when you led your countrymen in winning it. I also know that your determination has been a vital factor in guarding that independence while steadily advancing the economic development of your country.

I am confident that these same qualities of determination and boldness will meet the renewed threat as well as the needs and desires of your countrymen for further progress on all fronts.

Although the main responsibility for guarding that independence will always, as it has in the past, belong to the Vietnamese people and their government, I want to assure you that for so long as our strength can be useful, the United States will continue to assist Viet-Nam in the difficult yet hopeful struggle ahead.”

Sincerely,
Dwight D. Eisenhower
October 22nd 1960