U.S. President Joe Biden’s announcement that all U.S. troops would depart Afghanistan by Sept. 11—after more than 20 years of conflict there—has led to much debate. Some have praised the decision as a necessary break with the logic of endless wars while others have condemned the president’s abrupt withdrawal decision as a historic mistake and an abandonment of the United States’ moral responsibility to help Afghanistan develop a strong and functioning state and prevent a Taliban takeover.
Throughout the years of debating U.S. Afghan policy, leaders and advocates have looked for insights from the history of U.S. military interventions elsewhere, especially Iraq and Vietnam. It is reported, for instance, that then-U.S. President Barack Obama advocated against military expansion in Afghanistan in 2009 after reading Gordon M. Goldstein’s Lessons in Disaster: McGeorge Bundy and the Path to War in Vietnam, which chronicled the flaws of an incremental escalation strategy in Vietnam in the 1960s.
Writing in the Atlantic, meanwhile, author George Packer referred to the lessons Biden may have drawn from when the United States withdrew from South Vietnam in the mid-1970s. And in a 2009 conversation with former U.S. diplomat Richard Holbrooke, reported in Packer’s book Our Man: Richard Holbrooke and the End of the American Century, Packer stated Biden directly equated the Afghanistan and Vietnam situations, notably to justify a complete withdrawal of Afghanistan, something former U.S. President Richard Nixon and his secretary of state, Henry Kissinger, had managed to get “away with” in the 1970s in Vietnam.
Such reasoning makes sense. Biden had a direct personal experience with the decisions of this period as a young first-term senator and an outspoken critic of the financial and human costs of the Vietnam War. Yet another, less obvious analogy has started to bubble up: Pierre Mendès-France’s fateful decision to withdraw from Indochina in 1954. The French politician, who was a severe critic of successive Fourth Republic governments’ Indochina policies, was elected president of the Council of Ministers (equivalent to prime minister) in June 1954, soon after his country’s military defeat to the Viet Minh at Dien Bien Phu. Mendès-France pledged he would end France’s involvement in Indochina within 30 days, and his promise was effectively fulfilled at the 1954 Geneva Conference.
Political commentator Fareed Zakaria has cited this crucial policy decision as a good example of assertive decision-making. He even recently invoked Mendès-France’s famous maxim “to govern is to choose” to justify Biden’s Afghanistan decision. As with most historical analogies, contemporary applications and understandings can be debated. Building on the same historical reference, for example, Brookings Institution fellow Jeremy Shapiro, has—in sharp contrast—faulted Biden for being hesitant.
But is the Indochina analogy relevant or useful? Most historians would balk at this analogical exercise given the important differences between the two contexts. In the 1950s, France was a colonial power in decline following World War II. The United States was still a global superpower that, under a new administration, was reconsidering its military role in Afghanistan in light of global strategic shifts. In the case of Indochina, French withdrawal involved a political-institutional process to end a colonial presence that dated back to the second half of the 19th century. The United States is planning a military withdrawal after a comparatively short 20-year involvement.
Nevertheless, there are important similarities and possible lessons. First, both states were war-weary. Mendès-France and Biden inherited long, costly wars with unclear and changing strategic objectives. Although many supporters of the First Indochina War effort emphasized the political, military, and diplomatic stakes, Mendès-France was mainly preoccupied with the increasing financial costs of a war he argued was “badly run on the political, military, and moral levels.” And, he said, “things were even worse in budgetary terms.” By 1954, the overall cost of the war had been 3 billion francs (or approximately $8.2 billion in 2020 currency), of which France paid 70 percent of the total. The rest came as support from U.S. aid. French military and financial involvement also drastically increased following China’s growing support to Vietnam after 1949. The French government had to triple its military budget between 1948 and 1952 to meet mounting military commitments in both the European and Indochina theaters. And so, in June 1954, Mendès-France explained a negotiated peace in Indochina was necessary for the “reordering of our finances, the recovery of our economy and its expansion … because this war placed an unbearable burden on our country.”
Similarly, Biden has argued against “keeping thousands of troops grounded and concentrated in just one country at a cost of billions each year,” saying it “makes little sense to me and to our leaders.” According to a recent report, the Afghanistan War effectively cost more than $2 trillion and hundreds of thousands of lives. He said reducing these financial expenses are crucial to be able to fund ambitious social and economic programs and priorities at home—much as Mendès-France did as well.
Second, both statesmen recognized these wars were not going in their favor. Mendès-France was convinced that since 1950, a negotiated settlement with the adversary had been “commanded by the facts” on the ground. That had become self-evident following the Dien Bien Phu military defeat.
Yet where Mendès-France saw little hope of a military victory, France’s military establishment still believed in a possible military success—as did advocates of a global role for France, notably in the fight against the spread of communism in Southeast Asia. Nevertheless, Mendès-France believed in a more modest global role since France no longer had the material means to maintain its past commitments. “Between so many crushing obligations and which are, alas, incompatible,” Mendes-France argued France “finally [had] the courage to choose.” His choice was to reallocate resources to the country’s domestic economic needs, to European defense (notably NATO and the European Defence Community), and to Africa (especially Algeria).
Like Mendès-France, Biden has shown a readiness to directly oppose the diagnoses of his military commanders. Despite strong opposition from the U.S. Defense Department, Biden has called for a change in strategic priorities to end the “cycle of extending or expanding our military presence in Afghanistan, hoping to create ideal conditions for the withdrawal and expecting a different result.” By ending a costly military engagement in a region of gradually decreasing salience to U.S. national interests, Biden’s choice is to focus on the challenges of a rising China and an assertive Russia in other global theaters.
In short, both cases demonstrate a clear recognition on the part of a political leader that the costs of maintaining the status quo are higher than the costs of a drastic policy change, even though that assessment may not be shared by military leadership and parts of the political class. Alarmists predicted French withdrawal would have calamitous effects and presage France’s decline. However, leaving Indochina is now widely seen as a sagacious choice. The Geneva peace talks were also considered to be an unexpected opportunity to salvage the French reputation after the trauma of the military’s Dien Bien Phu defeat.
For his part, Biden may not have the possibility to buck-pass the burden of the war to another great power as France did in 1954, when the United States—slowly but surely—took on the French mantle. Nevertheless, it has the opportunity to revitalize the Ankara talks with the Taliban and push for a successful negotiated outcome involving all Afghan and regional stakeholders—as France did in Geneva in July 1954. Mendès-France was also conscious at the time that French withdrawal did not mean the war in Indochina/Vietnam would de-escalate, and the Biden administration seems to also have come to terms with this reality, betting rather on an offshore counterterrorism strategy to support more limited goals in the region.
Biden inherited a war he did not start and a peace agreement he did not negotiate. Mendès-France was also dealt a poor hand when he assumed office in the immediate aftermath of Dien Bien Phu, but he nevertheless managed to make the right choice.