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Vietnam (Modern)

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Title: Vietnam (Modern)


1
Vietnam (Modern)
  • HIS 216
  • Civilizations of Asia

2
Map of Viet Nam
  • Slightly larger than New Mexico more populous
    than England, France or Italy (more than 76
    mill.)
  • Tropical south monsoonal north with hot, rainy
    season (mid-May to mid-September) and warm, dry
    season (mid-October to mid-March)
  • Low, flat delta in south and north central
    highlands hilly, mountainous in far north and
    northwest
  • Arable land 19.97 (CIA Factbook)

3
Early Europeans in Asia
  • In 1511 Portuguese captured Malacca from the
    native, trade-oriented Muslim sultanate, which
    had enjoyed Ming Chinese patronage since the
    early 15th century.
  • Organized mission efforts in Viet Nam were first
    launched from Macao. In 1615 Italian Portuguese
    Jesuit missionaries arrived from Macao at Tourane
    (Da Nang), and founded the Cochinchinese Mission
    at Faifo (Hoi An).
  • By the 18th century, Southeast Asia was a mosaic
    of tiny states, kingdoms, principalities, and
    sultanates. The European presence was limited a
    few trading posts along various coastlines, and
    Spanish colonial possessions in the Northern
    Philippine islands.

4
Alexander de Rhodes
  • The most famous resident of this mission was
    Alexander de Rhodes (1591-1660), a Frenchman from
    the papal seat of Avignon.
  • De Rhodes has been credited with the development
    of quôc ngu, the phonetic alphabet used in the
    writing of modern Vietnamese. The writing system
    was actually the collective effort of Portuguese
    and Italian Jesuits, but de Rhodes was its most
    famous promoter.

5
Early French Involvement in Viet Nam
  • The French arrived in Viet Nam later than other
    Europeans (in 1680). However, by the mid-19
    century the French were more involved in Viet Nam
    than any country.
  • Nguyen Anh appealed to the French bishop Pigneau
    de Behaine, for support. In return for French
    help in restoring the southern court, Nguyen Anh
    gave the French the port of Tourane and the
    island of Poulo Condore (Con Lon). The support
    never came from the French however, Pigneau
    found troops to help the Nguyen defeat the Tay
    Son armies in the South.

6
French Imperialism in Indochina
  • The Englishs aggressive stance against the Qing
    government over the issue of opium, and their
    eventual dispatching of gunboats, had an impact
    on the colonial policies of the French
    government.
  • In 1858 (in sync with the Second Opium War raging
    in China) a French and Spanish joint fleet of 14
    ships and 3,000 soldiers landed at Da Nang.
  • Through treaties that followed this conflict, the
    Nguyen court turned three provinces (Bien Hoa,
    Gia Dinh, and Dinh Tuong) over to the French. By
    1867, the entire Mekong Delta was under French
    control.

7
French Imperialism (cont.)
  • In March 1874 another treaty was signed with the
    Vietnamese court, granting greater rights to
    travel, trade and proselytize throughout Viet
    Nam.
  • In 1883 the French again attacked and shelled the
    citadel at Ha Noi. During August 25 of year, the
    French forced the Vietnamese to sign a treaty
    (Harmand Treaty) relinquishing Bac Bo and Trung
    Bo, the remaining Viet territory, to the French.
  • To mark the end of the 2,000 year special bond
    between China and Viet Nam, the French later took
    the imperial seal given Gia Long by the Qing
    emperor in 1803, and melted it down!)

8
Native Response to Imperialism
  • When the 1862 treaty was signed, local rebellions
    sprang up throughout Viet Nam. Rebels called
    themselves soldiers of nghia (yi), and they
    attacked the Nguyen court for not rallying to
    their cause.
  • Chinese translations of Western works, produced
    during Chinas Self-strengthening Movement
    (1874-1894) made new ideas accessible to
    Vietnamese scholars. The ideas of Rousseau,
    Voltaire, Montesquieu, Darwin, and Herbert
    Spencer inspired social activism. In 1904 the
    Association for the Modernization of Viet Nam was
    founded. One of its leaders Phan Boi Chau
    (1867-1940) traveled to Japan in 1905, to
    continue his study of Western learning.
  • Both Confucian scholars, and early reformers
    would eventually give way to western-trained
    activists, who sought a more radical means for
    driving out the French.

9
Viet Nams New Modernity
  • Viet Nam had become part of the larger
    Indochinese Union. The Union consisted of five
    territories the protectorates of Tonkin
    (northern Viet Nam) and Annam (central Viet Nam)
    the colony of Cochin China and the protectorates
    of Laos and Cambodia.
  • Under the administration of Paul Donner
    (1897-1902), the French set about redesigning
    Viet Nam in their own image, initiating and
    intensive construction program including
    highways, bridges, and railroads. The local tax
    burden for these projects was very heavy. The
    need to cheap corvee labor also took its toll on
    the local populace.
  • Quôc ngu, along with Chinese, was taught for
    the first time in a school setting.
  • Western-trained Vietnamese discovered that the
    colonial glass ceiling prevented them from
    reaching the upper ranks of elite society.

10
Ho Chi Minh (1890-1969)
  • HCM was born Nguyen That Thanh in May 19,1890,
    and was a son of a minor scholar from a poor
    peasant family in Nghe An Province.
  • HCM worked as a teacher until he left Viet Nam in
    1911 abroad a French ocean liner. At this time
    he dropped his given name for the pseudonym Ai
    Quoc (the Patriot). He lived in London and then
    the United States, before traveling to France at
    the end of WW I.
  • In 1919 Nguyen Ai Quoc unsuccessfully presented
    an eight-point petition for Viet Nams
    independence at the Versailles Peace Conference,
    which followed the conclusion of World War One.
  • In 1920 he was made one of the founding member of
    the French Communist Party. In 1923 Nguyen Ai
    Quoc went to Moscow to study revolutionary
    tactics.

11
Nationalists vs. Communists
  • In 1925 the Vietnamese Revolutionary Youth League
    was founded by Ho Chi Minh (1890-1969) and
    supporters in Canton. Ho stayed in Canton until
    1927 as a Comintern (Communist International)
    organizer.
  • In 1927 a teacher Nguyen Thai Hoc (1901-30),
    along with a group of Vietnamese intellectuals,
    founded the Viet Nam Nationalist Party (Viê?t Nam
    Quôc dân d?ng VNQDD) in northern Viet Nam.
    This new party was modeled on the party
    organization of the Chinese KMT.

12
Nationalists vs. Communists (cont.)
  • In February 1930, radical Vietnamese factions of
    the Vietnamese Revolutionary Youth League in Hong
    Kong formed the Vietnamese Communist Party (VCP).
    In October 1930, members of the VCP Central
    Committee changed the name of their party to
    Indochinese Communist Party (ICP). This change
    was made on the advice of the Comintern in
    Moscow.
  • During June 1930, the nationalist VNQDD led an
    uprising at the garrison in Yen Bay, which was
    pacified by the French without mercy. Nguyen
    Thai Hoc was captured and executed. Authorities t
    the time recorded 699 executions with trials in
    1930 alone, along with 3000 arrests, 83 death
    sentences, and 546 life sentences (Buttinger, p.
    437).
  • Only with the joint ICP-VNQDD establishment of
    the Vi?t Nam Ð?c L?p Ð?ng Minh H?i (Viet Minh) in
    early May 1941, was the movement on steady ground
    again.

13
Viet Nam in WWII
  • In early 1941, Nguyen Ai Quoc slipped back into
    Viet Nam after an absence of 30 years. In 1942 he
    changed his name to Ho Chi Minh.
  • In March 1944 US advisors to the KMT recognized
    Ho Chi Minh as the strongest leader in the
    anti-Japanese Vietnamese leadership. For this
    reason, the US offered the assistance and
    guidance of the OSS (Office of Strategic
    Services) to the Viet Minh. Saving American
    pilots had also endeared the Viet Minh to the
    Americans.
  • On August 7th, 1945 the US dropped the A-bomb on
    Hiroshima. On August 10th, HCM called for his
    forces to lead a general uprisings. On August
    15th, Japan surrendered. On the next day the
    United National Front (a group of nationalist
    groups in the South) took over Sai Gon.
  • The Viet Minh soon swept into Hanoi. On
    September 2nd,1945, HCM announced the
    independence of Viet Nam and the establishment of
    a democratic republic.

14
First Indochinese War (1946-54)
  • The British landed in Saigon on September 13th,
    1945. The British commander Douglas Gracey
    turned power over to the returning French. Three
    months after the end of W.W.II, Viet Nam would be
    divided into a French-controlled south and the
    communist-influenced DRV in the north.
  • On December 19, 1946 the Viet Minh launched a
    surprise attack on the French garrisons around Ha
    Noi, and then withdrew to guerrilla camps in the
    countryside.
  • The Viet Minh kept a low profile until 1948,
    building their base of support in the northern
    and central highlands of Viet Nam.

15
First Indochinese War (cont.)
  • In the fall of 1950, Viet Minh forces crushed the
    French garrisons stationed along the
    Sino-Vietnamese border, marking the first major
    defeat of the French in the conflict. This
    victory opened up communications between the PRC
    and the DRV, bringing increased military support.
  • In May 1954 all parties finally agree to hold
    talks at an international conference in Geneva,
    Switzerland. On the eve of the talks, the
    (March-May) Battle of Dien Bien Phu and the
    French defeat had a powerful effect on the French
    negotiators.

16
Second Indochinese War
  • The national election proposed in Geneva never
    took place , so the country remained divided at
    the 17th parallel north (latitude).
  • By 1958, the DRV realized that Viet Nam would not
    become unified without a protracted military
    struggle between the two regions. Ha Noi had
    developed the Peoples Army of Viet Nam (PAVN) by
    the late 1950s, In the beginning of 1959, the
    military campaign against South Viet Nam was
    launched.
  • In the south US advisors to the new RVN
    government under Ngo Dinh Diem (19011963)
    gradually increased. In February 1962, the US
    established the Military Assistance Command in
    Viet Nam (MACV).

17
Second Indochinese War (cont.)
  • National Liberation Front (NLF) a loose alliance
    of anti-Diem organizations, secretly guided by Ha
    Noi and first established in the winter of
    1960-61. When the alliance's military arm became
    involved in skirmishes with South Vietnamese
    government, Diem himself gave the groups the
    pejorative title Viet Cong or "Vietnamese
    Communists."
  •  
  • Gulf of Tonkin Incident (1964) events involving
    two allegedly unprovoked attacks by North
    Vietnamese torpedo boats on the destroyers Maddox
    and C. Turner Joy of the U.S. Seventh Fleet in
    the Gulf of Tonkin on August 2nd and August 4th. 
    On August 5th, President Lyndon Johnson issued
    the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution to increase US
    commitment of troops and resources to the
    Vietnamese civil war effort.
  •  
  • Tet Offensive (1968) The NLF and North
    Vietnamese attack on the Lunar New Year's holiday
    in late January 1968 on more than 100 cities and
    military bases in the South.

18
Third Indochinese War (1979)
  • On February 8th, Deng and his entourage flew back
    to Beijing from a US state visit, and he
    immediately began to prepare for the attack on
    Viet Nam.
  • 200,000 Chinese soldiers were made ready for the
    attack. This army faced 50,000 local forces
    under the command of 67-year-old Vo Nguyen Giap.
    The Vietnamese forces was entirely battle-ready,
    unlike the green Chinese troops.
  • Beijing sent 1,000 tanks, which would face the
    impressive anti-tank artillery units stationed
    along the border. Chinas air force was no
    competition for the SAM-2 anti-aircraft stations
    and the advanced Russian MIG-21 aircraft that the
    Vietnamese had at their disposal.
  • Concrete figures regarding the invasion have not
    yet emerged. Conservative Chinese sources state
    that 20,000 Chinese were killed or wounded,
    compared to 50,000 Vietnamese. VN figures state
    that 62,500 Chinese casualties were incurred.

19
Doi Moi (Renovation) Policies
  • After the war the US-led embargo and the failures
    of collectized agriculture put great strains on
    the Vietnamese economy. In 1986 Viet Nam imported
    1.5 million tons of rice to feed a population
    that had been self-sufficient even in wartime.
  • In December 1986 at the Sixth National Congress
    of the VCP, General Secretary Nguyen Van Linh
    presided over a momentous shift in policy
    emphasizing economic growth, and downplaying
    ideological squabbling.
  • After ten years of the reforms, Viet Nam had
    become the worlds third largest exporter of
    rice.

20
Viet Nams Future
  • The Vietnamese leadership will not turn back to
    the pre-1986 era of policy-making, nor will VNs
    leaders succumb fully to the power of free market
    forces.
  • Viet Nam as a Buffer Zone between China and
    Southeast Asia. Some ASEAN nations and Australia
    have reportedly adopted this strategy These
    countries are eager to build up Viet Nams
    military capability to a point just strong enough
    to hold back a Chinese intrusion, giving the
    international community time to respond.
  • Chinese involvement in Viet Nams economy.
    According to Ha Nois estimates, 80 of consumer
    products sold in Viet Nams urban areas come from
    China.

21
Useful Titles
  • Mark Philip Bradley, Imagining Vietnam and
    America The Making of Postcolonial Vietnam,
    19191950. Chapel Hill University of North
    Carolina Press, 2000.
  • David G. Marr, Vietnamese Anticolonialism
    18851925. Berkeley University of California
    Press, 1971.
  • ___________, Vietnamese Tradition on Trial,
    19201945. Berkeley University of California
    Press, 1981
  • Truong Buu Lam, ed., Colonialism Experienced
    Vietnamese Writings on Colonialism, 19001931.
    Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press, 2000.
  • Peter Zinoman, The Colonial Bastille A History
    of Imprisonment in Vietnam, 18621940. Berkeley
    University of California Press, 2001.
  • Edwin E. Moïse, Vietnam War Bibliography
    URLhttp//www.clemson.edu/caah/history/FacultyPag
    es/EdMoise/bibliography.htmlmisc
  • NYT multimedia presentation Amanda Hesser, The
    Past Lingers in Changing Vietnam
    http//www.nytimes.com/packages/khtml/2005/08/28/t
    ravel/20050828_VIETNAM_AUDIOSS.html

22
Contact Info.
  • James A. Anderson, Assistant Professor
  • The Department of History
  • 219 McIver Building, UNCG
  • PO Box 26170
  • Greensboro, NC 27402-6170
  • Phone(336) 334-5209
  • Fax (334) 334-5910
  • Email jamie_anderson_at_uncg.edu
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