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The defining feature of Vietnamese history is nationalism.

Throughout its history, Vietnam experienced


foreign domination. Despite 1,000 years of Chinese rule (111 BC to AD 939), Vietnam emerged with
many of its cultural and historical traditions intact. From 1862 until 1893, the French established control
over the entire Indochina region, including Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia. They administered the area as
French Indochina until World War II. Following the Japanese occupation of 1945, the French allowed the
formation of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam under Ho Chi Minh's nationalist resistance movement,
the Vietminh. Ho's group subscribed to a nationalistic brand of communism while another organization,
consisting of royalist and anticommunist groups, supported Emperor Bao Dai.

After World War II, the French attempted to reestablish control over the region. While they provisionally
recognized Ho's government in the north, the French sought to negotiate the future of South Vietnam.
However, negotiations broke down and the Vietminh attacked French forces. In 1949, the French
recognized the authority of the Bao Dai government over southern Vietnam. Fighting between the
French and the Vietminh continued until a humiliating French defeat at Dien Bien Phu in May 1954. At
the Geneva Conference of July 1954, an armistice ended the fighting and Vietnam was divided at the
seventeenth parallel into two nations: the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, headed by the communists
and the southern Republic of Vietnam, led by the anticommunist forces, organized around Bao Dai.
While this north-south divide was intended to be a temporary measure, Ngo Dinh Diem proclaimed
himself the first president of the Republic of Vietnam and repudiated the provisions of the Geneva
Accords. Thereafter, Vietnam remained a politically divided and conflict-ridden place until 1975.

After the French withdrew from Vietnam, the United States became steadily involved in propping up the
southern regime. However, a groundswell of opposition emerged against the repressive Diem regime in
the late 1950s, led by the National Liberation Front (NLF) and its military arm, the Viet Cong. As U.S.
involvement in the country increased, so did North Vietnam's control over the Viet Cong. By the mid-
1960s, protecting South Vietnam became a cornerstone of U.S. foreign policy in Asia. At the peak of its
military involvement, 500,000 U.S. troops were stationed in Vietnam to fight the Viet Cong. Massive U.S.
aid, however, failed to shore up the South Vietnamese government and communist victory became
increasingly inevitable, as domestic opposition undermined the American will to fight. After a 1973
peace agreement, the United States withdrew its troops and the South Vietnamese government
continued its downward spiral. Without U.S. assistance, Saigon (then capital of South Vietnam) fell to the
Viet Cong and, in April 1975, the South Vietnamese government surrendered.
The reunification of the country gave birth to the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, with its capital at Hanoi.
The North Vietnamese quickly consolidated their control over the south and dominated its politics. The
new leaders imposed reeducation camps to instill socialist values and moved to collectivize farms and
nationalize business operations. Saigon was renamed Ho Chi Minh City, honoring the founder of the

Vietnam

Democratic Republic of Vietnam. The National Assembly approved a new Constitution which declared
the state to be a "proletarian dictatorship" and proclaimed the Communist Party as the "only force
leading the state and society." Later constitutional revisions introduced major political and economic
reforms, including the right to private property. Over the years, many refugees fled Vietnam and settled
in the West, fearing political persecution and diminished economic opportunities.

At present, the Constitution designates the 450-member National Assembly as the supreme organ of the
state. In practice, however, power is in the hands of party elites who hold important administrative
positions in government. The Vietnamese Communist Party (VCP) is the country's only political party.
Based on constitutional revisions in 1992, the president is elected by and from the National Assembly.
The president in turn, nominates the vice-president, the prime minister, the chief justice of the Supreme
Court, and the head of the Supreme People's Inspectorate—all of whom must be approved by the
Assembly. The day-to-day affairs of governing are entrusted to the prime minister, the five deputy
ministers, and cabinet ministers. The VCP's Central Committee (150 members) and Politburo (15
members) exercise considerable influence.

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