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- <text id=93CT1914>
- <link 93HT0299>
- <link 90TT1079>
- <link 90TT1078>
- <title>
- Vietnam--History
- </title>
- <history>
- Compact ALMANAC--CIA Factbook
- Southeast Asia
- Vietnam
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>CIA World Factbook</source>
- <hdr>
- History
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> In BC 111, ancestors of the present-day Vietnamese,
- inhabiting part of what is now southern China and northern
- Vietnam, were conquered by forces of China's Han dynasty.
- Chinese rule lasted more than 1,000 years (until 939 AD) when
- the Vietnamese ousted their conquerors and began a southward
- expansion that, by the mid-18th century, reached the Gulf of
- Siam.
- </p>
- <p> Despite their military achievements, the Vietnamese continued
- to suffer from internal political divisions. Throughout most of
- the 17th and 18th centuries, contending families in the north
- and south struggled to control the powerless kings of the Le
- dynasty. During this period, Vietnam was effectively divided
- near the 17th parallel, just a few kilometers above the
- demarcation line established at the 1954 Geneva conference.
- </p>
- <p>French Rule
- </p>
- <p> Vietnam was reunited following a devastating civil war in the
- 18th century but soon fell prey to the expansion of European
- colonialism. The French conquest of Vietnam began in 1858 with
- an attack on what is now the city of Danang. France imposed
- control gradually, meeting heavy resistance, and only in 1884
- was Vietnam officially incorporated into the French empire.
- </p>
- <p> Fiercely nationalistic, the Vietnamese never truly accepted
- the imposition of French rule. By 1930, the Vietnamese
- Nationalist Party had staged the first significant armed
- uprising against the French, but its virtual destruction in the
- ensuing French repression left the leadership of the
- anti-colonial movement to those more adept at underground
- organization and survival--the communists. In that same year,
- the recently formed Indochinese Communist Party (ICP) took the
- lead in setting up short-lived "soviets" in the Nghe An and Ha
- Tinh Provinces in northern Vietnam, an action that identified
- the ICP with peasant unrest.
- </p>
- <p> The ICP was formed in Hong Kong in 1930 from the amalgamation
- of the Vietnamese and the nascent Lao and Khmer communist
- groups, and it received its instructions from the Moscow-based
- Communist International (Comintern).
- </p>
- <p>Communist Movement
- </p>
- <p> The Vietnamese communist movement began in Paris in 1920,
- when Ho Chi Minh, using the pseudonym Nguyen Ai Quoc, became a
- charter member of the French Communist Party. Two years later,
- Ho went to Moscow to study Marxist doctrine and then proceeded
- to Canton as a Comintern representative. While in China, he
- formed the Vietnamese Revolutionary Youth League, setting the
- stage for the formation of the Indochinese Communist Party in
- 1930. French repression of nationalists and communists forced
- some of the insurgents underground, and others escaped to
- China. Other dissidents were imprisoned, some emerging later to
- play important roles in the anti-colonial movement.
- </p>
- <p> Ho Chi Minh was abroad at that time but was imprisoned later
- in Hong Kong by the British. He was released in 1933, and in
- 1936 a new French government released his compatriots who, at
- the outset of World War II, fled to China. There they were
- joined by Ho, who organized the Viet Minh--purportedly a
- coalition of all anti-French Vietnamese groups. Official
- Vietnamese publications state that the Viet Minh was founded
- and led by the ICP.
- </p>
- <p> Because a Vichy French administration in Vietnam during World
- War II cooperated with occupying Japanese forces, the Viet
- Minh's anti-French activity was also directed against the
- Japanese, and, for a short period, there was cooperation
- between the Viet Minh and Allied forces. When the French were
- ousted by the Japanese in March 1945, the Viet Minh began to
- move into the countryside from their base areas in the mountains
- of northern Vietnam. By the time Allied troops--Chinese in the
- north and British in the south--arrived to take the surrender
- of Japanese troops, the Viet Minh leaders had already announced
- the formation of a Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRV) and on
- September 2, 1945, proclaimed Vietnam's independence.
- </p>
- <p> Deep divisions between Vietnamese communist and non-communist
- nationalists soon began to surface, however, especially in the
- south, and with the arrival of Allied forces later in September,
- the DRV was forced to begin negotiations with the French on
- their future relationship. The difficult negotiations broke down
- in December 1946, and fighting began with a Viet Minh attack on
- the French in Hanoi.
- </p>
- <p>Civil War
- </p>
- <p> A prolonged three-way struggle ensued among the Vietnamese
- communists (led by Ho Chi Minh), the French, and the Vietnamese
- nationalists (nominally led by Emperor Bao Dai). The communists
- sought to portray their struggle as a national uprising; the
- French attempted to reestablish their control; and the
- non-communist nationalists, many of whom chose to fight
- alongside the French against the communists, wanted neither
- French nor communist domination. Ho Chi Minh's Viet Minh forces
- fought a highly successful guerrilla campaign and eventually
- controlled much of rural Vietnam. The French military disaster
- at Dien Bien Phu in May 1954 and the conference at Geneva,
- where France signed the Agreement on the Cessation of
- Hostilities in Vietnam on July 20, 1954, marked the end of the
- eight-year war and French colonial rule in Indochina.
- </p>
- <p>1954 Cease-Fire Agreement and Partition
- </p>
- <p> The 1954 cease-fire agreement negotiated in Geneva provided
- for provisional division of the country at approximately the
- 17th parallel; a 300-day period for free movement of population
- between the two "zones" established thereby; and the
- establishment of an International Control Commission--representatives of Canada, India, and Poland--to supervise its
- execution. The cease-fire agreements also referred to "general
- elections" that would "bring about the unification" of the two
- zones of Vietnam. The agreement was not accepted by the Bao Dai
- government, which agreed, however, to respect the cease-fire.
- </p>
- <p> Following the partition of Vietnam under the terms of the
- Geneva agreements, there was considerable confusion in the
- south. Although Bao Dai had appointed a well-known nationalist
- figure, Ngo Dinh Diem, as prime minister, Diem initially had to
- administer a country plagued by a ruined economy and by a
- political life fragmented by rivalries of religious sects and
- political factions. He also had the problem of coping with
- 850,000 refugees from the north. The communist leaders in Hanoi
- expected the Diem government to collapse and come under their
- control. Nevertheless, during his early years in office, Diem
- was able to consolidate his political position, eliminating the
- private armies of the religious sects and, with substantial US
- military and economic aid, build a national army and
- administration and make significant progress toward
- reconstructing the economy.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, the communist leaders consolidated their power in
- North Vietnam and instituted a harsh "agrarian reform." In the
- late 1950s, they reactivated the network of communists who had
- stayed in the south (the Viet Cong) with hidden stocks of arms,
- reinfiltrated trained guerrillas who had been regrouped in the
- north after 1954, and began a campaign of terror against
- officials and villagers who refused to support the communist
- cause. The communists also exploited grievances created by
- mistakes of the Diem government as well as age-old shortcomings
- of Vietnamese society, such as poverty and land shortages.
- </p>
- <p> By 1963, the North Vietnamese communists had made significant
- progress in building an apparatus in South Vietnam.
- Nevertheless, in 1964 Hanoi decided that the Viet Cong (VC)
- cadres and their supporters were not sufficient to take
- advantage of the political confusion following the overthrow of
- Diem in November 1963. Hanoi ordered regular troops of the
- North Vietnamese army (People's Army of Vietnam--PAVN) into
- South Vietnam, first as "fillers" in VC units, then in regular
- formations. The first regimental units were dispatched in the
- fall of 1964. By 1968, PAVN forces were bearing the brunt of
- combat on the communist side.
- </p>
- <p>US Assistance
- </p>
- <p> In December 1961, President Diem requested assistance from
- the United States. President Kennedy sent US military advisers
- to South Vietnam to help the government deal with aggression
- from the North. In March 1965, President Johnson sent Marine
- units to the Danang area to defend US installations. In July
- 1965, he decided to commit up to 125,000 US combat troops to
- Vietnam. By the spring of 1969, the United States had reached
- its greatest troop strength--543,000--in Vietnam.
- </p>
- <p> The US bombing of North Vietnam, which began in March 1965,
- was partially halted in 1968. US and North Vietnamese
- negotiators met in Paris on May 15, 1968, to discuss terms for a
- complete halt and to arrange for a conference of all "interested
- parties" in the Vietnam war, including the Government of the
- Republic of Vietnam (GVN) and the National Liberation Front.
- President Johnson ordered all bombing of the North stopped
- effective November 1, 1968, and the four parties met for their
- first plenary session on January 25, 1969.
- </p>
- <p> The Paris meetings, which began with so much hope, moved
- slowly. Beginning in June 1969, the United States began a troop
- withdrawal program concurrent with the assumption by GVN armed
- forces of a larger role in the defense of their country. While
- the United States withdrew from ground combat by 1971, it still
- provided air and sea support to the South Vietnamese until the
- signing of the cease-fire agreements. The peace agreement was
- concluded on January 27, 1973.
- </p>
- <p>After the 1973 Peace Agreement
- </p>
- <p> While Hanoi continued to proclaim its support of the peace
- agreement, it illegally sent thousands of tons of materiel into
- South Vietnam, including sophisticated offensive weaponry new to
- the South. Tens of thousands of PAVN troops infiltrated South
- Vietnam to join the 160,000 there at the time of the cease-fire.
- Numerous attacks were carried out against installations, lines
- of communication, economic facilities, and, occasionally,
- population centers.
- </p>
- <p> At the beginning of 1975, the North Vietnamese began a major
- offensive in the South that succeeded in breaking through the
- central highlands defenses. After taking over provincial
- capitals in that area, a combination of forces from the
- demilitarized zone area and the highlands routed South
- Vietnamese defenders. Pressures from the highlands and from the
- Cambodian border region led to a general GVN military collapse,
- which in turn resulted in the fall of Saigon itself by the end
- of April. Faced with the threat of a takeover by a communist
- regime, tens of thousands of Vietnamese fled the country. The
- exodus of dissatisfied Vietnamese--both from the North and
- the South--continues today.
- </p>
- <p>Reunification
- </p>
- <p> For the first few months after the war, separate governments
- were maintained in the northern and southern parts of the
- country. However, in mid-November 1975, the decision to reunify
- the country was announced, despite the vast social and economic
- differences remaining between the two sections. Elections were
- held in April 1976 for the National Assembly, which was convened
- the following June. The assembly ratified the reunification of
- the country and on July 2 renamed it the Socialist Republic of
- Vietnam (SRV). It also appointed a committee to draft a new
- constitution for the entire country. The party Central Committee
- approved the constitution in September 1980. New National
- Assembly elections were held in April 1981.
- </p>
- <p> The fourth congress of the Vietnam Worker's Party, held
- December 4-20, 1976, selected a new party leadership and
- established major national policies. It reelected Secretary
- General Le Duan who, in effect, had led the party since Ho Chi
- Minh's death in 1969. In addition, the fourth party congress
- changed the party's name to the Vietnamese Communist Party and
- enlarged the Politburo and the full Central Committee by about
- 60%. New members tended to be younger, with some technical and
- administrative expertise. A considerable percentage were
- southern cadre long involved in the war there. Despite the new
- faces, top positions went to established leaders, assuring
- continuity with the past. Similarly, the fifth party congress
- (1982) maintained continuity by reconfirming the top
- leadership, despite its age, while expanding the Central
- Committee to bring in new members who were younger and who had
- more economic experience.
- </p>
- <p> In 1986, the death of Secretary General Le Duan, as well as
- the alarm over the economy's downward spiral, set the stage for
- the watershed sixth party congress (December 1986). Spearheaded
- by Nguyen Van Linh, who was named the new party leader, the
- congress endorsed the need for sweeping economic reform and
- "renovation" of the party, as well as a policy of "openness"
- patterned, to a degree, on the policies being promoted in the
- USSR. While reaffirming Vietnam's alliance with the Soviet
- Union, the congress softened Hanoi's anti-Beijing posture and
- called for more attention to developing relations with
- noncommunist nations. The balance of power in the leadership
- shifted to the "reformers," with the remaining "conservatives"
- arguing for a slower pace. The lingering influence of the
- conservatives, as well as bureaucratic malaise and severe
- economic problems, has adversely affected formulation and
- implementation of the reform policies.
- </p>
- <p>Source: U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs, May
- 1990.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-