Vietnam History Overview
Conquered by the armies of China's Han dynasty
in 111 BC, it was not until 939 AD that the Vietnamese were
able to expel the Chinese and begin a southward domination
that, by the mid-18th century, had reached the Gulf of Siam.
The 17th and 18th centuries were marked by the power struggles
between feuding families in the north and south, as they attempted
to control the largely ineffectual kings of the Le dynasty.
Vietnam finally fell to French colonial
rule in 1884, after fierce resistance. Integral to Vietnam's
eventual independence was Ho Chi Minh, who was one of many
who established the Viet Minh - a broad coalition of anti-French
groups. When Japan ousted France from power in March 1945,
the Viet Minh began to infiltrate the countryside from their
mountain bases in the north.
Following Japan's surrender, Viet Minh leaders
announced the formation of a Democratic Republic of Vietnam,
(DRV) and on September 2, 1945, proclaimed Vietnam's independence.
The arrival of Allied forces, however, pushed Vietnam back
into the hands of the French. After negotiations between the
DRV and the French collapsed in December 1946, the Viet Minh
attacked French forces in Hanoi and ignited an eight year
war that culminated in the historic French military defeat
at Dien Bien Phu in 1954.
Vietnam was split in two by the 1954 Geneva
Accords: the Communist north, and the anti-Communist, US-supported,
south. Political and ideological opposition fermented, and
again turned into armed struggle, obliging the US and other
countries to commit combat troops in 1965. This led to a prolonged
and costly war, which at its 1969 peak, saw over half a million
US combat troops stationed in South Vietnam.
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The Paris peace talks, begun in May 1968,
eventually led to the US withdrawing troops from June 1969.
However, the US continued to provide air and sea support to
the South Vietnamese until a peace agreement was signed on
January 27, 1973. Tens of thousands of North Vietnamese troops
infiltrated the south to join the 160,000 already there at
the time of the cease-fire and, at the beginning of 1975,
they began a major offensive that led to the fall of Saigon
on 30th April 1975. On 25th April 1976, the Democratic Republic
of Vietnam was renamed the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.
In 1977, Vietnam became a member of the United Nations.
War with Cambodia, isolation, trade embargoes,
and devastating natural disasters, all added to Vietnam's
difficulties in forging ahead. However, despite the collapse
of the former Soviet Union, its major trading partner, economic
growth rates still managed to average over 8% per year in
the early nineties.
Vietnam has now established diplomatic relations
with 164 countries, trade relations with over 100 countries,
and has attracted foreign investment from more than 50 countries
and territories. The tremendous capacity of its people to
meet the most desperate challenges, is likely to lead Vietnam
to a bright future...
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