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Wednesday 25 May 2016

Vietnam

The rice fields of Vietnam provide the basic food of the Vietnamese people.
Most of the people in Vietnam are farmers, and rice is the chief crop.


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Vietnam's flag and coat of arms feature a star that stands for Communism. The rice and the cogwheel on the coat of arms represent the importance of agriculture and industry to Viet­nam. The flag was adopted by North Vietnam in 1955.
Vietnamese children stand outside a village house in southern Vietnam. Most Vietnamese—like these children—have broad faces, high cheekbones, and straight black hair.
The Indochina Peninsula about A.D. 300 - This map shows the early states of Indochina, Jiao Zhi was an in­dependent kingdom called Nam Viet before it was conquered by China in 111 B.C. Present-day Vietnam is shown in yellow.
The Indochina Peninsula in 1900 - This map shows French Indochina, which included Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam. France divided Vietnam into Tonkin, Annam, and Cochin China. Present-day Vietnam is shown in yellow.

Facts in brief about Vietnam
Capital: Hanoi.
Official language: Vietnamese.
Area: 331,689 km2. Greatest distances— north-south, 1,657 km;
east-west, 612 km. Coastline— 3,444 km.
Elevation: Highest—fan Si Pan, 3,143 m above sea level. Lowest — sea level along the coast.
Population:  Estimated 1996 population— 75,280,000; density,
227 people per km2, distribution, 79 per cent rural, 21 per cent urban.. Estimated 2001 population— 83,024,000.
Chief products: Agriculture— rice. Manufacturing— cement, fer­tilizer, iron and steel, paper products, textiles. Mining— coal. Money: Currency unit— dong. One dong = 100 xu.

Important dates in Vietnam
111 B.C The Chinese conquered what is now northern Vietnam.
A.D. 939 China ended its rule over the Vietnamese, who then set up an independent state.
1802 Nguyen Anh united the country and called it Vietnam.
1858-1883 France took control of Vietnam.
1940-1945 Japan controlled Vietnam during World War II.
194G War began between France and the Vietminh.
1954 The Vietminh defeated the French. The Geneva Confer­ence divided Vietnam into two nations.
1957 The Viet Cong began to rebel against the South Vietnam­ese government. The fighting developed into the Viet­nam War.
1973 U.S. participation in the Vietnam War ended.
1975 The Vietnam War ended on April 30, when South Viet­nam surrendered to the Communists.
197G The Communists unified North and South Vietnam into the nation of Vietnam.
t978 Vietnam invaded Cambodia and helped pro-Vietnamese Cambodians gain control of the government.
1989 Vietnam claimed to have withdrawn all its troops from Cambodia, but some people believed troops remained.

Vietnam is a tropical country in Southeast Asia. It ex­tends south from China in a long, narrow S-curve. Laos and Cambodia lie west of Vietnam, and the South China Sea lies to the east. Hanoi is the capital of Vietnam, and Ho Chi Minh City is the largest city.
Most Vietnamese live in villages on the coastal plain and on deltas formed by rivers. They grow rice and a few other crops on the fertile land. Many people who live near the coast catch fish for a living.
In ancient times, the Vietnamese people lived in what is now northern Vietnam. China ruled the area from about 100 B.C. until the A.D. 900's, when the Vietnamese formed an independent state. During the next 900 years, the Vietnamese expanded their territory until they con­trolled all of what is now Vietnam.
France gained control of Vietnam in the late 1800's. The French governed the country until Japan occupied it during World War II (1939-1945). After Japan's defeat in 1945, France tried to regain control of Vietnam. But the Vietminh, a group controlled by Communists and headed by Ho Chi Minh, gained power in northern Viet­nam. Fighting broke out between French forces and the Vietminh in 1946. It ended in 1954, with the French de­feat in the Battle of Dien Bien Phu and an international
conference to arrange a peace settlement. The confer­ence, held in Geneva, Switzerland, decided to divide Vietnam temporarily into two zones. The Communists received control of the northern zone, called North Viet­nam. Non-Communist Vietnamese received control of the southern zone, called South Vietnam.
In 1957, Vietminh members in the South began to rebel against the South Vietnamese government. North Vietnam began publicly supporting the revolt in 1959.
The Communists goal was to unify the country under their control. The fighting developed into the Vietnam War China, the Soviet Union, and other Communist countries sent aid to the Vietnamese Communists dur­ing the war. Non-Communist countries supported South Vietnam. The United States became the chief ally of the South. It backed the South's war effort with supplies and hundreds of thousands of troops. In 1973, the partici­pants in the war agreed to a cease-fire and the United States withdrew its last combat troops. But the Commu- nlsts soon resumed their wsr effort !n April 1975, the Communists defeated South Vietnam and took control of it. in 1976, they unified North and South Vietnam into the single nation of Vietnam. For more details of the conflict, see Vietnam War.
Government
Vietnam's leaders call the country a republic and a dictatorship of the working class. In practice, however, the government is tightly controlled by the leaders of the nation's Communist Party.
The Communist Party of Vietnam is headed by a Po­litburo of about 15 members. The Politburo is the most powerful governmental unit in Vietnam. It makes all the government's policies.
National government. Vietnam has a 496-member National Assembly. The Assembly meets twice a year to endorse laws and policies made by the Communist Party. A Council of State—made up of members of the National Assembly—deals with such matters as national defence and the execution of laws. The Council mem­bers make up a collective presidency. Members of a Council of Ministers head various departments of the government. The Communist Party chooses—and the National Assembly elects—the members of the Council of State and the Council of Ministers.
Local government. Vietnam is divided into 36 prov­inces, three cities independent of provinces, and one special zone. The cities are Haiphong, Hanoi, and Ho Chi Minh City. The Vung Tau-Con Dao special zone is south­east of Ho Chi Minh City. People's councils conduct gov­ernment business at the provincial level and on down to the village level. Local government officials must follow Communist Party policies. The Communist Party chooses—and the people elect—the officials of the lower levels of local government. These officials elect the members of the higher levels of local government
Courts. The Communist Party controls the court sys­tem of Vietnam. The system includes the People's Su­preme Court, local people's courts, and military courts.
Armed forces. Vietnam has one of the world's larg­est armed forces. The entire force is called the People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN). It consists of an army of about 1,100,000 members; a small navy and air force; and paramilitary forces, such as a militia and border defence forces. About 2 million people serve in the paramilitary forces.
People
Thousands of years ago, people moved into the Viet­nam area from the north and from islands to the south. The Vietnamese people probably developed out of these two groups. Today, they make up almost 90 per cent of Vietnam's population. Tay, Thai, Chinese, and Khmer are the largest minority groups in Vietnam.
Most Vietnamese people have broad faces, high cheekbones, and straight black hair. On average, the men stand a little over 150 centimetres tall and weigh about 54 kilograms. Most Vietnamese women are slightly smaller than the men.
Most of the Vietnamese people live on the Mekong and Red river deltas and on the coastal plain. The Tay and Thai live mostly in the northern provinces. Thai peo­ple form a majority in nearby Thailand. The majority of the Chinese live in cities. Most of the Khmer are farmers in southwestern Vietnam. Khmer people make up a ma­jority in neighbouring Cambodia.
Population. For Vietnam's total population, see the Facts in brief table with this article. The population in­cludes about 1 1/2 million Tay, 1 million Thai, 1 million Chinese, and 900,000 Khmer.
Ho Chi Minh. City, with a population of about 4 mil­lion, is Vietnam's largest city. Hanoi, the next largest city, has a population of about 3 million. Haiphong, the third largest, has about 1 y million people.
Way of life. The Vietnamese way of life changed little for hundreds of years before the arrival of French colo­nists in the late 1800's. But since then, the influence of the French, the Communists, and the Americans, and the years of war during the mid-1900's, have brought great changes.
Before the late 1800's, Vietnam was an agricultural so­ciety built on strong family ties. Almost all the people lived in villages and farmed the land. People owed loy­alty to their families before all else, and held their fami­lies' interests above their own. The oldest male was head of the family, and his oldest son was the second most important family member. In many cases, related families lived together. These extended families in­cluded the parents, their unmarried children, and the oldest married son and his wife and children. Parents chose their children's marriage partners. Families hon­oured their ancestors by performing special ceremo­nies.
France gained control of Vietnam in the late 1800's. The French brought industry to the country, and many Vietnamese left their farms to work in the new factories in the cities. Agriculture was developed and expanded, with many Vietnamese working on French-developed rubber plantations. A new class of wealthy landowners emerged under French rule. They controlled more of the farmland than had any previous group in Vietnam. But the events that most changed the traditional Viet­namese way of life began in the mid-1900's.
The Communists who came to power began trans­forming the society according to Communist principles. Party leaders extended their control to all walks of life. They forced people to live according to the rules of the Communist Party. They urged women to perform the same jobs as men, and discouraged religious worship and the ceremonial honouring of ancestors.
The Vietnam War brought other changes to Vietnam­ese life. It broke up families as fathers and sons left home to fight. Hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese died in the war. In the north, areas near some cities were heavily bombed, forcing many people to move to the countryside. But almost all the ground fighting took place in rural areas of southern Vietnam. It drove many families from their farm homes to the somewhat safer cities. In the cities of the south, many people learned Western customs from U.S. business people, govern­ment workers, and soldiers who came to Vietnam be­cause of the war.
Clothing. The people of Vietnam wear mostly cotton clothing. But the styles differ in northern Vietnam and southern Vietnam.
In cities of the north, most men and women wear plain black trousers with tightly buttoned white or dark-coloured jackets. Many people wear sandals made of worn-out car tyres. In cities of the south, some people wear the same style of clothing. But many people who have lived there since before the Communist take-over wear Western-style clothing, especially the men. Many women still wear the traditional Vietnamese ao dai (a long coatlike garment) over black or white trousers. In northern rural areas, most women dress in loose-fitting shirts and skirts. Some men wear coatlike garments that hang to the knees. Rural people in the south usually wear loose-fitting trousers and long-sleeved shirts.
Housing in rural areas differs in northern and south­ern Vietnam because of differences in climate. In the cooler north, many people traditionally built simple wood or bamboo houses with tiled roofs. In the warmer south, most families had homes with walls and roofs made of palm leaves or straw. But today, sheets of metal or plastic are often used for roofs. Wood, brick, and tile are common building materials in the towns and cities.
Food. Most Vietnamese eat chiefly fish, rice, and veg­etables. Rice has long been the basic food in Vietnam. Most meals include a fish sauce called nuoc mam.
Language. Vietnamese is the official language of Vietnam. The people speak three major dialects (local forms) of Vietnamese—northern, central, and southern. But these dialects differ little from one another. Many members of the country's minority groups speak Viet­namese in addition to their own languages. There are dozens of minority-group languages. Many Vietnamese people, especially those living in the cities, can also speak English, French, Chinese, or Russian.
Education. After the division of Vietnam in 1954, both North and South Vietnam made special efforts to ex­pand their educational systems. But the Vietnam War disrupted education, and the war effort used up money and materials that could have provided schools and teacher training. The Vietnamese economy has been ex­tremely poor since the war ended, and the government has not been able to provide adequate funds for educa­tional needs. In spite of such problems, most of the Viet­namese people can read and write.
The Communist Party Controls the operation of all schools in Vietnam. The educational system includes general primary, junior, and secondary schools and vo­cational schools, which train skilled workers. Vietnam has 2 universities and more than 40 colleges and spe­cialized schools. The University of Ho Chi Minh City is the largest college of higher education.
Religion. The Communist leaders of Vietnam dis- courage all religious practices. Most of the Vietnamese people who practise a religion are Buddhists. Many of them also worship the spirits of animals and plants and believe in the teachings of Confucianism and Taoism. About 10 per cent of the southern Vietnamese are Roman Catholics. Two small religious groups—the Hoa Hao and the Cao Dai—have developed since 1920 in the south. Hoa Hao is closely related to Buddhism. Cao Dai combines certain beliefs of Taoism and Buddhism with those of several other religious.
Arts. Poetry has long been the most popular and powerful form of literature in Vietnam, and poets have always been highly respected. Most people can recite at least a few verses of "Kim Van Kieu," a poem that deals with love and sacrifice. This work of more than 3,000 lines was written by the poet Nguyen Du, who lived dur­ing the late 1700's and early 1800's.
Novels began to gain wide popularity in Vietnam dur­ing the years of French rule. They remain popular, espe­cially in the south. But the Communist leaders now care­fully regulate the books the people may read.
Vietnamese painting shows the influence of both an­cient Chinese and modern French art. Examples of tradi­tional Vietnamese architecture include mostly pagodas (temples), tombs, and old royal palaces.
Land and climate
Vietnam occupies the east coast of the Indochinese Peninsula. The Vietnamese sometimes describe their country as two rice baskets hanging from opposite ends of a farmer's carrying pole. In the north, the Red River Delta forms one "basket." The Mekong Delta in the south forms the other. A narrow stretch of land in central Viet­nam forms the "carrying pole" that connects the two river deltas.
The market places of Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam's largest city, are crowded with peddlers. Many of them display their pro­duce and other goods on the pavements in front of shops.
Vietnam extends about 1,600 kilometres from China south to the Gulf of Thailand. At its widest point—in the north—Vietnam extends almost 650 kilometres from Laos to the Gulf of Tonkin. At its narrowest point—in central Vietnam—it is only about 50 kilometres wide.
Vietnam has five main land regions: (1) the Northern Highlands, (2) the Red River Delta, (3) the Annamite Range, (4) the Coastal Lowlands, and (5) the Mekong Delta.
The Northern Highlands are a mountainous region in northwestern Vietnam. The highlands extend into China and Laos. Forests or jungles cover most of the mountains in this thinly populated region. The highest peak in Vietnam, Fan Si Pan, rises 3,143 metres above sea level in the highlands.
The Red River Delta extends from the Northern Highlands to the Gulf of Tonkin. It has been formed by the Red River, which flows from southern China through northern Vietnam into the gulf. Most of the delta lies 3 metres or less above sea level. The Red River floods much of this densely populated region almost every year. The Red River Delta is northern Vietnam's chief farming area.
The Annamite Range is a chain of mountains. It runs through western Vietnam from the Northern Highlands to about 80 kilometres north of Ho Chi Minh City. For­ests cover most of the mountains. Like the highlands, these mountains are thinly populated. Most of the peo­ple in this region are Montagnards.
The Coastal Lowlands occupy east-central Vietnam. The lowlands slope from the mountains to the South China Sea and extend from the Red River Delta to the Mekong Delta. Rice is grown throughout most of the re­gion. Many people who live along the coast are fisher­men. The lowlands are thickly populated.
The Mekong Delta covers all of Vietnam south of the Annamite Range and the Coastal Lowlands. It has been formed by the Mekong River, which flows from China through Southeast Asia into the South China Sea. The Mekong Delta, like the Red River Delta, lies 3 me­tres or less above sea level. Over half the people of southern Vietnam live on the delta. It is the chief agricul­tural area of Vietnam. See Mekong River.
Climate. Vietnam has a tropical climate. Monsoons (seasonal winds) affect the weather throughout the year. The summer monsoon brings heavy rains from the southwest. The winter monsoon brings lighter rainfall from the northeast Most of Vietnam has two seasons—a wet, hot summer and a drier, slightly cooler winter. However, some areas of northernmost Vietnam have four seasons.
In Hanoi, in northern Vietnam, the average tempera­ture is about 17° C in January and about 29° C in June. From May to October, the Red River Delta has high tem­peratures, heavy rains, and some typhoons, which sweep across the Gulf of Tonkin. Hanoi receives about 185 centimetres of rainfall a year.
In southern Vietnam, the humidity remains high throughout the year. Most rain faNs in summer. The Ho Chi Minh City area receives about 200 centimetres of rain between April and November. From December to March, the weather is cooler with little rain. The average temperature in Ho Chi Minh City ranges from about 26“ C in December to about 30° C in April.
Central Vietnam includes both the driest and the wettest regions of the country. It also has a greater temperature range than the north and south. Typhoons often strike the central coast. Mountain areas in Vietnam generally have lower temperatures and more rainfall than the delta regions and the Coastal Lowlands.
Economy
The economy of Vietnam depends on agriculture. About 70 per cent of the workers are farmers, and agri­cultural goods—especially rice—are the country's chief products. Vietnam has a socialist economy, in which the government owns most means of production. In the late 1980s, however, the government began an economic re­structuring that encouraged some forms of private en­terprise and competition.
Northern Vietnam has most of the country's natural resources. Anthracite (hard coal) is the chief mineral re­source, and the north has almost all the anthracite fields. Vietnam also mines chromium, clays, petroleum, phos­phates, salt, and tin. Forests cover one-third of Vietnam. Forest products include bamboo, cinnamon, quinine, and timber.
Agriculture. About 15 per cent of the land in Viet­nam is used for farming. About another 20 per cent of the land in the south is suitable for farming, but remains mostly uncultivated. The government is working to de­velop more farmland. Rice is the chief farm product of Vietnam. Other products include cassava, coffee, coco­nuts, cotton, jute, maize, peanuts, soybeans, sugar cane, sweet potatoes, tea, tobacco, and rubber.
The fishing industry is also important to Vietnam's economy. Many people who live on the coast earn their living from the fishing industry. The seafood caught in­cludes lobster, shrimp, squid, and many kinds of fish.
Manufacturing. Vietnam lacks the natural resources needed for heavy industry. The country has a small iron and steel industry. The Vietnamese use the iron and steel to manufacture farm tools, bicycles, and simple machinery. Vietnam also has cement, fertilizer, food- processing, paper, and textile industries.
Foreign trade. Vietnam's imports include petroleum products, medicines, machinery, military supplies, vehi­cles, and food. Its major exports are coal, peanuts, rice, rubber, tea, and handcrafted bamboo and rattan prod­ucts. Hong Kong, Japan, and Singapore are Vietnam's chief trading partners.
The Coastal Lowlands extend along much of Vietnam's sea- coast. A chain of mountains called the Annamite Range rises in the background beyond the western edge of the lowlands.
Transportation and communication. Vietnam has an extensive transportation system that includes roads and railways. The Red River and its branches, and the Mekong River and its branches, are important water­ways.
The bicycle ranks as the chief means of private trans­portation in northern Vietnam. It is also important in the south, but motor scooters are also widely used there. Less than 1 per cent of the people own cars.
Many newspapers are published in Vietnam. Before the 1960's, few Vietnamese owned a radio or a TV set. In the 1960's and 1970's, ownership of radios—and to a lesser extent TV sets—became fairly widespread in southern Vietnam. In northern Vietnam, few people own either a radio or TV set. Most rural people live in vil­lages and listen to radio programmes over public loud­speakers. Most of the TV sets are owned by collective farms, workers' organizations, or similar groups.
Vietnam's Communist Party has controlled all means of communication since it came to power. It does so to promote loyalty to the party and to curb opposition.
Early years. In ancient times, the Vietnamese people lived in what is now northern Vietnam. About 200 B.C., the Chinese general Zhao Tuo, also known as Trieu Da, united the area and parts of southeastern China into an independent kingdom called Nam Viet. The kingdom ex­tended almost as far south as the present city of Hue. In 111 B.C, China conquered Nam Viet and renamed it Jiao Zhi (also spelled Ciao Chi). In A.D. 679, the Chinese changed the name to Annam. meaning pacified south.
By the end of the A.D. 100's, two kingdoms— Funan and Champa—had developed in what is now southern and south-central Vietnam. Funan ruled the Mekong Delta and what is now southern Cambodia. Champa controlled central Vietnam between jiao Zhi (Annam) and Funan. During the 500's and 600s, Khmer people liv­ing west of Champa conquered Funan. They built a mighty empire during the next few hundred years.
Independence. In 939, the Chinese left Annam, and the Vietnamese established an independent state. A Vi­etnamese ruler named the kingdom Dai Co Viet (Great Viet State). But for hundreds of years, the name Annam was used as well. The country remained independent for over 900 years, except for a 20-year period of Chi­nese control in the early 1400's. During those 900 years, the Vietnamese built a small empire.
In 1009, the Ly family came to power. It ruled the country for over 200 years. The Ly rulers built a strong army that repeatedly defeated attacking forces from Champa, China, and the Khmer empire. The period was a time of growth, prosperity, and artistic achievement.
The Tran family seized power from the Ly rulers in 1225 and governed the country until 1400. During that period, Dai Co Viet defeated several attacking Mongol armies and fought almost continuously with Champa. China regained control of Dai Co Viet in 1407. The Viet­namese drove out the Chinese in 1427, and the Le fam­ily, which had led the fight against China, came to power. The family named the country Dai Viet (Great Viet). Under their rule, Dai Viet gained prosperity. Le rul­ers held the throne until 1787.
In 1471, Le Thanh Ton, the strongest of the Le rulers, conquered Champa. But weak rulers followed Le Thanh Ton, and civil war broke out in Dai Viet during the 1500's. The war began as two families—the Trinh in the north and the Nguyen in the south—fought for control of the country. Both sides claimed to support the Le rul­ers. The families finally stopped fighting in 1673, and Dai Viet had peace for about 100 years. During that time, the Nguyen family expanded their territory by seizing parts of the Khmer empire.
In the early 1770's, three brothers in central Dai Viet led a revolt against the Nguyen family. The brothers called themselves Tay Son after the name of their home village. The Tay Son conquered southern Dai Viet and then marched against the Trinh family. In 1787, they con­quered the north and removed the Le rulers.
The youngest Tay Son brother became ruler of north­ern and central Dai Viet. But Nguyen Anh, a member of the defeated Nguyen family, gained control of southern Dai Viet. In 1802, he defeated the Tay Son ruler and de­clared himself Emperor Gia Long of all Dai Viet, which he renamed Vietnam. Members of his family remained
the emperors of Vietnam until the end of World War II in 1345. But they had little power after the mid-1800's.
French rule. Roman Catholic missionaries from France began to arrive in Dai Viet in the 1600's. They converted thousands of Vietnamese to Catholicism, but the country's rulers became suspicious of the missionar­ies. From the 1600's until the early 1800's, Vietnamese rulers continually persecuted the missionaries.
In 1858, French forces began to attack parts of south­ern Vietnam. France acted partly to stop the persecution of the missionaries and partly because it wanted to be­come a colonial power in Vietnam. The French seized Saigon (now Ho Chi Minh City) in 1861 and the rest of the south by 1867. They took control of northern Viet­nam by 1883. That year, the French forced the Nguyen ruler to sign a treaty that gave France control of all Viet­nam. France divided the country into three areas— Co­chin China (southern Vietnam), Annam (central Vietnam), and Tonkin (northern Vietnam). France governed the areas as separate parts of French Indochina, which also included Cambodia and Laos.
Japanese control. Germany defeated France early in World War II, in June 1940. Japan, one of Germany's al­lies, soon took control of French Indochina. The Japa­nese allowed French officials to remain in Vietnam, but they had to govern according to Japan's wishes. Then, in March 1945, the Japanese arrested all French officials and forced Emperor Bao Dai to announce the independ­ence of Annam and Tonkin from France. Vietnam re­mained under Japanese control until Japan's defeat in August 1945.
The Indochina War. The Japanese defeat left no group in power in Vietnam. Ho Chi Minh, a Vietnamese Communist, returned to Vietnam from China. He was the head of the Revolutionary League for the Independ­ence of Vietnam, commonly called the Vietminh. The Vietminh swiftly took control of many areas of the coun­try, particularly in the north. Emperor Bao Dai, unable to form a government, stepped down in favour of Ho Chi Minh. In September 1945, Ho proclaimed Vietnam inde­pendent and announced the formation of the Demo­cratic Republic of Vietnam (DRV). Ho became head of the new government, which was controlled by the Com­munist Vietminh, but supported by many non- Communist nationalists who did not want a return to French colonial rule.
Within weeks, British and Chinese troops arrived in Vietnam to accept the surrender of the Japanese. These troops also established order and had the effect of hold­ing onto Vietnam for the French, whose first forces soon arrived. The French quickly reestablished control of Co­chin China. But they were not able to put down all resist­ance. Relations between the Vietminh and France wors­ened. On Dec. 19, 1946, Vietminh forces attacked the French in Hanoi, and the Indochina War—also known as the Vietminh War—began.
By mid-1949, the French had formed the State of Viet­nam to oppose the Vietminh. The State of Vietnam was led by a Vietnamese nationalist government headed by Bao Dai. Many nationalists, opposed to the Communist control of the Vietminh, began to support the new gov­ernment. Western allies of France supported the State of Vietnam, and Communist nations supported Ho Chi Minh's DRV government. Both governments claimed to represent all of Vietnam. In 1953, the Communists began to take control of the farmland in northern Vietnam.
They killed or imprisoned landowners they considered their enemies and assigned production quotas to all farmers.
The division of Vietnam. In April 1954, representa­tives of the DRV, the State of Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, China, France, Great Britain, the Soviet Union, and the United States met in Geneva, Switzerland, to arrange a peace settlement for Vietnam. The fighting in Vietnam and France's claim to the area ended in May 1954, when the Vietminh defeated the French in the Battle of Dien Bien Phu. The representatives at the Geneva Conference then decided to divide Vietnam temporarily into two parts, North Vietnam and South Vietnam. The confer­ence also called for elections in 1956 to unite Vietnam under one government. See Geneva Accords.
Flo Chi Minh became president of North Vietnam. Bao Dai was head of South Vietnam. In 1955, the people of South Vietnam chose Ngo Dinh Diem as their leader. Diem then established the Republic of Vietnam with himself as president. Fie refused to go along with the elections planned for 1956, claiming the Communists would not permit fair elections. Vietnam remained di­vided.
The Vietnam War begins. In 1957, Vietminh mem­bers in South Vietnam began to rebel against Diem's rule. These rebels became known as the Viet Cong. In 1959, North Vietnam publicly supported the revolt. It or­dered the Viet Cong to begin an armed struggle against the South Vietnamese government. In 1960, the Viet Cong were organized into the National Liberation Front, which was formed to lead the revolt. Gradually, the war grew larger and more intense.
The United States had sent civilian and military advis­ers to help the South Vietnamese in the 1950's. In early 1965, the U.S. began sending ground combat troops to
Vietnam and began bombing North Vietnam. American participation in the war continued until 1973. At the same time, China and the Soviet Union sent arms and supplies to North Vietnam and the Viet Cong.
South Vietnam and the war. President Diem signed a new constitution into law in 1956. It declared that South Vietnam was a republic. But Diem and his family actually controlled the government.
Viet Cong attacks in South Vietnam increased during the late 1950's and early 1960s. Diem turned more and more to undemocratic policies to combat the Communists, and South Vietnamese political leaders began to criticize the Diem government. In 1962, Diem declared a national emergency. He established a curfew, the cen­sorship of news, and other restrictions.
On Nov. 1, 1963, a group of army generals led by Duong Van Minh seized the South Vietnamese govern­ment. Diem was murdered. A series of military groups held power for brief periods until june 1965. A group led by Nguyen Cao Ky, an air force general, then took control. In 1967, Nguyen Van Thieu, an army general, was elected president. Meanwhile, the war grew into a major conflict and battles raged in South Vietnam.
In June 1972, the National Assembly gave Thieu power to rule by decree (presidential order) for six months. In August, Thieu ruled that almost all hamlet and village officials would no longer be elected but would be appointed by the national government. This decree ended most local elections in South Vietnam.
North Vietnam and the war. After the division of Vietnam, the Communists completed a take-over of all farms, factories, and other businesses in the North. Dur­ing the 1960's and early 1970's, North Vietnam concen­trated more and more of its agricultural and industrial efforts in support of the war.
Ho Chi Minh served as North Vietnam's president until he died in 1969. Control of the government then passed to the Politburo of the Communist Party.
Communist victory and unification. After 1965, South Vietnam depended more and more on American support in its war against the Communists. Beginning in the late 1960's, American involvement in Vietnam be­came increasingly unpopular in the United States. In early 1973, South Vietnam, the United States, and the Communists signed a cease-fire agreement, and the United States removed its last ground troops from Viet­nam. But the Communists soon launched another offen­sive against South Vietnam. In April 1975, Saigon, the capital of South Vietnam, fell to the Communists, and the Communists gained control of the South. For more details on the conflict, see Vietnam War.
in 1976, the Communists unified North and South Vietnam into the single nation of Vietnam. Communist officials-from the North took control of the government of the unified country. They changed the name of Sai­gon to Ho Chi Minh City.
Recent developments. Since the end of the Vietnam War, Vietnam has faced great economic difficulties. The country's extreme poverty, along with dissatisfaction with certain government programmes, have caused large numbers of people to flee the country. One such programme was designed to move large numbers of people from cities to rural areas to relieve urban over­crowding and unemployment. But the programme was poorly planned and carried out. It has met widespread opposition by the people. Another government pro­gramme sent many southerners to "reeducation" camps, which were essentially concentration camps for political prisoners. About a million people, including people both of Vietnamese and of Chinese ancestry, have left the country as refugees. In addition, thousands of Chi­nese have been expelled.
Many refugees left Vietnam in small boats, risking drowning and pirate attacks in the South China Sea. These refugees became known as boat people. They went to countries in Southeast Asia, where they stayed in refugee camps until they could be relocated in other countries. The largest number by far moved to the United States.
Another major development since the end of the war has been troubles between Vietnam and neighbouring countries. In 1978, Vietnam invaded Cambodia. It re­placed Cambodia's Khmer Rouge Communis; govern­ment with a pro-Vietnamese Communist government. The Khmer Rouge Communists, along with non- Communist groups, then fought a guerrilla war against the new government and the Vietnamese forces who occupied Cambodia. The war ended in 1991. Vietnam gradually withdrew its troops during the 1980's, and claimed a complete withdrawal by .September 1989. But some people claimed that some Vietnamese troops never left, it was also said that some troops returned to Cambodia later.
In 1979, Chinese forces occupied Vietnam's northern border area for about a month in an effort to punish the Vietnamese for invading Cambodia. Friction, including border clashes from time to time, continued between Vietnam and China for many years. In the early 1990s, relations between the two countries improved.
in the late 1980's, the government began a pro­gramme of economic restructuring. This programme encouraged some forms of private enterprise and com­petition. In 1994, the United States lifted its 30-year trade embargo on Vietnam.

The Vietnam War was fought mainly in North and South Viet­nam from 1957 to 1975. Troops also battled in Laos and Cambo­dia, and U.S. pilots flew missions from bases in Thailand
The Vietnam War was fought in the air and on the ground. American B-52 bombers made thousands of raids on enemy bases in North and South Vietnam, and armed helicopters carried troops into battle. Millions of civilians became refugees.
South Vietnam, where most of the fighting took place, suffered the most damage. The war made refugees of some 10 million South Vietnamese, about half the population.

Important dates in the Vietnam War
1957 The Viet Cong began to rebel against the South Vietnam­ese government headed by President Ngo Dinh Diem.
1963 (Nov. 1) South Vietnamese generals overthrew the Diem government, and Diem was killed the next day.
1964 (Aug. 7) In the United States, the Tonkin Gulf Resolution gave the president power to take "all necessary meas­ures" and "to prevent further aggression."
1965 (March 6) U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson sent U.S. Ma­rines to Da Nang, South Vietnam. The Marines were the first U.S. ground troops in the war.
1968 (Jan. 30) North Vietnam and the Viet Cong launched a major campaign against South Vietnamese cities.
1969 (June 8) U.S. President Richard Nixon announced that U.S. troops would begin to withdraw from Vietnam.
1973 (Jan. 27) The United States, North and South Vietnam, and the Viet Cong signed a cease-fire agreement.
1973 (March 29) The last U.S. ground troops left Vietnam.
1975 (April 30) South Vietnam surrendered.


Vietnam War was a major conflict in Southeast Asia. The war began as a civil war to decide the government of Vietnam. It developed into a major international con­flict, involving the United States in the longest war in which Americans have taken part. It began in 1957 and ended in 1975. Vietnam, a small country in Southeast Asia, was divided into Communist-ruled North Vietnam and non-Communist South Vietnam. North Vietnam and Communist-trained South Vietnamese rebels fought to take over South Vietnam. The United States and the South Vietnamese army tried to stop them but failed.
The Vietnam War was actually the second phase ot fighting in Vietnam. During the first phase, which began in 1946, the Vietnamese fought France for control of Vietnam. At that time, Vietnam was part of the colony of French Indochina. The Vietnamese defeated the French in 1954. Then Vietnam was divided into North and South Vietnam.
The Communists called the Vietnam War a war of na­tional liberation. They saw it as an extension of the strug­gle with France and as another attempt by a foreign power to rule Vietnam. North Vietnam wanted to end U.S. support of South Vietnam and to unite the north and south. China and the Soviet Union, at that time the two largest Communist nations, gave the Vietnamese Communists war materials but not troops.
U.S. aid to non-Communist South Vietnam was based on a fear that if one Southeast Asian nation fell to the Communists, the others would also fall, one after the other, "like a row of dominoes."
The Vietnam War had several periods. From 1957 to 1965, it was mainly a struggle between the South Viet­namese army and Communist-trained South Vietnamese rebels known as the Viet Cong. From 1965 to 1969,
North Vietnam and the United States did much of the fighting. Australia, New Zealand, the Philippines, South Korea, and Thailand also helped South Vietnam The United States began to withdraw its forces in 1969. In January 1973, a cease-fire was arranged. The last Ameri­can ground troops left Vietnam two months later. The fighting began again soon afterward. The war ended when South Vietnam surrendered on April 30, 1975.
Background to the war. Vietnam, Laos, and Cambo­dia made up the French colony of Indochina from the late 1800's to the 1940's (see Indochina). Japan occupied Indochina during most of World War II (1939-1945). France tried to reestablish control after Japan's defeat in 1945. But Ho Chi Minh, a Vietnamese patriot and Com­munist, organized a revolt in northern Vietnam, and de­clared Vietnam independent. See Ho Chi Minh.
France fought against Ho's Vietminh, or Revolutionary League for the Independence of Vietnam, but was de­feated in 1954. Peace agreements were signed at Ge­neva, Switzerland, in 1954. These Geneva Accords pro­vided for the temporary division of Vietnam, but called tor nationwide elections in 1956 to reunify the country.
Ho Chi Minh set up a Communist government in North Vietnam. The south became the Republic of Viet­nam, commonly called South Vietnam. Ngo Dinh Diem, an anti-Communist, became president of South Vietnam. His government refused to take part in nationwide elec­tions proposed by the Geneva peace agreements.
Early stages of the war. Diem was an unpopular ruler. Members of the Vietminh in the south rebelled. They were known as the Viet Cong, meaning Vietnam­ese Communists. North Vietnam supported the rebels. It developed a supply route to South Vietnam through Laos and Cambodia. This system of roads and trails be­came known as the Ho Chi Minh Trail.
By 1961, the Viet Cong were strong enough to threaten Diem's government. U.S. President John F. Ken­nedy increased American economic and military aid to South Vietnam. By 1963, there were over 16,000 U.S. mil­itary advisers in South Vietnam.
In 1963, after widespread Buddhist protests against the government, President Diem was murdered. See Ngo Dinh Diem. By 1964, North Vietnamese army units were operating in the south, and the Viet Cong con­trolled up to 75 per cent of South Vietnam's population.
In August 1964, U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson an­nounced that two U.S. destroyers had been attacked in the Gulf of Tonkin, off the coast of North Vietnam. Some Americans doubted that the attack had occurred, and the attack has never been confirmed. But Johnson or­dered U.S. air strikes against North Vietnam. In March 1965, the first U.S. Marines were sent to South Vietnam.
The fighting intensifies. U.S. forces in Vietnam rose from about 60,000 in mid-1965 to a peak of over 543,000 in 1969. They joined about 800,000 South Vietnamese troops, and a total of 69,000 men from Australia, New Zealand, the Philippines, South Korea, and Thailand. Australian troops were first sent to Vietnam in 1965, with conscripts serving from 1966. The force was withdrawn in 1971. New Zealand soldiers served between 1964 and 1972.
The U.S. and its allies did not try to invade North Viet­nam. They relied on bombing North Vietnam and on "search and destroy" ground missions in South Vietnam. Helicopters played a key role in the fighting.
The Viet Cong and North Vietnamese adopted a de­fensive strategy. The lightly armed Communist forces re­lied on surprise and mobility. Avoiding major battles, they preferred guerrilla warfare (see Guerrilla warfare). They knew the terrain well, and received war materials from the Soviet Union and China.
The war dragged on, with neither side able to win it.
In the United States, people were divided over U.S. in­volvement. Some urged more decisive measures to de­feat North Vietnam. Others believed the United States was supporting corrupt and unpopular governments in South Vietnam, and called for U.S. withdrawal.
In January 1968, the Communists attacked major cities in South Vietnam. This campaign began at the start of Tet, the Vietnamese New Year celebration. The United States and South Vietnam fought back, and inflicted heavy losses on the enemy. But it was clear that the Communists were far from defeated. Peace talks began in Paris in May 1968.
U.S. troop withdrawal begins. The peace talks failed, but the new U.S. president, Richard Nixon, an­nounced a new policy known as Vietnamization. Begin­ning in July 1969, U.S. troops would gradually withdraw, leaving the fighting to the South Vietnamese.
In April 1970, U.S. and South Vietnamese troops in­vaded Cambodia to attack Communist military bases. This widening of the war aroused much protest in the United States. The Cambodian campaign ended in late June 1970. Opposition to the war in the United States grew rapidly, as television coverage brought scenes of war horror into millions of American homes. The anti­war movement in the United States was further out­raged in 1971 when a U.S. Army officer was convicted of massacring civilians in the hamlet of My Lai in South Vietnam in 1968. Charges that U.S. forces had used chemical weedkillers to defoliate large areas of Viet­namese jungle caused widespread international protest.
In March 1972, North Vietnam invaded the South. President Nixon ordered the renewal of U.S. bombing of the North, and also the laying of explosives in the har­bour of Haiphong, North Vietnam's chief port. The inva­sion was checked, and peace talks were restarted.
Victory for North Vietnam. The Paris peace talks were conducted by Henry Kissinger for the United States and Le Due Tho for North Vietnam. On Jan. 27, 1973, a cease-fire agreement was signed. By April, the last U.S. troops had left Vietnam, but the peace talks broke down and fighting resumed. South Vietnam's forces were forced into retreat, and on April 30,1975, South Vietnam surrendered. Saigon, the South's capital, was renamed Ho Chi Minh City.
Results of the war. About 1 million South Vietnam­ese and 58,000 Americans died in the war. Also, 501 Australian and 37 New Zealand soldiers died in the war. North Vietnamese losses ranged between 500,000 and 1 million. Countless numbers of civilians were killed.
The U.S. bombing was four times greater than the Al­lied bombing of Germany in World War II. Though North Vietnam suffered severe damage to its industries and transportation system, South Vietnam suffered even more damage. About half the South's population be­came refugees. Cropland, forest, and wildlife were de­stroyed in some areas.
The war made North Vietnam a power in Southeast Asia. North Vietnam helped set up Communist govern­ments in Laos and Cambodia in 1975. In 1976, it united North and South Vietnam into the single nation of Viet­nam. Vietnam has slowly rebuilt its economy, and re­opened some links with the West.
The Vietnam War had far-reaching effects on the United States. It was the first foreign war in which the U.S. failed to achieve its goals. Today, Americans still disagree on the main issues of the war, and whether or not their country should have become involved.

See also Cambodia (History); Johnson, Lyndon B.; Kissinger, Henry A.; Laos (History); Nguyen Van Thieu; Nixon, Richard; Vietnam.

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