The Japanese surrendered to the Allies in August 1945, and the Communist Viet Minh under Hồ Chí Minh aimed to take power. Due to the Japanese associations, Hồ was able to persuade Bảo Đại to abdicate on August 25, 1945, handing power to the Việt Minh — an event that greatly enhanced Hồ’s legitimacy in the eyes of the Vietnamese people. Bảo Đại was appointed “supreme adviser” in the new government in Hanoi, which asserted independence on September 2.
As his country descended into violence — rival Vietnamese factions clashing with each other and with the French — Bảo left the country after a year in the “advisory” role, living in Hong Kong and China. The French persuaded him to return in 1949 as leader and Emperor. But the war between the French colonial forces and the Việt Minh continued, ending in 1954 shortly after a major victory for the Việt Minh at the Battle of Dien Bien Phu.
The USA, nervous since the war of Hồ Chí Minh’s communism, became strongly opposed to the idea of a Vietnam run by Hồ after his government of the north, the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, in 1950 gained recognition from the Soviet Union and China. In the south in the same year, the French formed a rival Vietnamese government under Bảo Đại in Saigon which was recognized by the United States and Great Britain, but did not enjoy wide popular support.
The 1954 peace deal between the French and the Việt Minh involved a Chinese-inspired, supposedly temporary partition of the country into North and South. Bảo Đại had intentions to to take full control of South Vietnam, and from his home in France appointed the religious nationalist Ngô Đình Diệm as Prime Minister. However, in 1955 Diệm used a referendum to remove the Emperor and took control of the South himself, managing to win American support.
Bảo Đại took no further major part in Vietnamese politics and died in a military hospital in Paris in 1997. He was interred in the Cimetière de Passy, Paris.
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