Английская Википедия:Bùi Diễm
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Bùi Diễm (1 October 1923[1] – 24 October 2021) was South Vietnam's ambassador to the United States under President Nguyễn Văn Thiệu from 1965 to 1972,[2][3] then re-appointed ambassador-at-large and served until 1975.[4] He played a key role in the last desperate attempt to secure US$700 million in military aid to defend South Vietnam against the North in 1975.[5]
Bui Diem was born in Phủ Lý, Hà Nam, French Indochina, on October 1, 1923.[6] He was the nephew of Trần Trọng Kim, who served as the Prime Minister of Emperor Bảo Đại.[7] Diem had been active in politics since he studied at Pomelo School and joined the Nationalist Party of Greater Vietnam in 1944 through the introduction of a friend.[8][9] At age 31, Bui Diem became a member of the delegation to the 1954 Geneva Conference.[6] He also founded the Saigon Post newspaper in South Vietnam, which operated from 1963 to 1975,[10][11] and was a member of the negotiating team appointed by President Nguyễn Văn Thiệu at the Paris Peace Accords.[12] In 1973, concerned about the threat of the United States Congress to cut off spending for the Vietnam War, Diem was sent by President Thieu as a delegation to Washington to set out South Vietnam's position on the peace talks.[13]
Bui Diem and Anna Chennault acted as intermediaries between President Thieu and Richard Nixon in the "Anna Chennault Affair" to delay peace negotiations in Paris,[14][15] creating an opportunity to help then-republican candidate Nixon win the 1968 United States presidential election.[16] President Johnson knew this entire plan,[17] he forced the FBI, CIA, and NSA to monitor Diem and Anna's activities.[18][19] For his part, Bui Diem repeatedly denied making any deals with the Nixon campaign to sabotage the peace talks.[20]
After the fall of Saigon in 1975, he settled in the United States, living in Rockville, Maryland and running a Jewish delicatessen.[21] He wrote articles and worked for the RAND Corporation, then borrowed money and was a part- owner of Goldberg's Delly in downtown Washington until 1982.[4]
He was a scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and at the American Enterprise Institute,[22] as well as a research professor at George Mason University.[5] Bui Diem was interviewed by Stanley Karnow for Vietnam: A Television History, where he recounts in a stunning allegation that Lyndon B. Johnson had unilaterally deployed Marine ground troops into South Vietnam without consulting the South Vietnamese government.[23]
Bui Diem was the author of the book In the Jaws of History (1987),[24] and appeared as a witness in Ken Burns's series The Vietnam War, produced by PBS in 2017.[25][26] He has three children, two daughters and a son.[6] Diem speaks fluent English and French.[27] He passed away in Rockville, Maryland, on 24 October 2021, at the age of 98.[28]
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- Английская Википедия
- 1923 births
- 2021 deaths
- Vietnamese emigrants to the United States
- George Mason University faculty
- People of the First Indochina War
- Vietnamese exiles
- Ambassadors of South Vietnam to the United States
- American Enterprise Institute
- People from Hà Nam Province
- South Vietnamese politicians
- 20th-century Vietnamese diplomats
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