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Is it Time to Recognize Vietnam?
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14221 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
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7 / 1988 |
3,007 Words |
| Author
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William J. Duiker William J. Duiker is professor of East Asian history at
Pennsylvania State University. |
In the decade and a half since the fall of Saigon in the spring of 1975, communist leaders in Vietnam have had little opportunity to savor the fruits of victory. The national economy, plagued by the ill-advised efforts of the regime to move rapidly to socialism in the conquered South, is in a shambles. In foreign affairs, the continuing presence of Vietnamese occupation troops in the People's Republic of Kampuchea (PRK) has led to hostile relations with most of its neighbors and isolation in world affairs.
In the United States, it has understandably been difficult for many Americans to view the discomfiture of their onetime adversary without a measure of satisfaction. Bad memories from the war have been compounded by the conviction that Hanoi has been less than helpful in attempting to account for the remains of American soldiers killed during the conflict.
But there have been more tangible reasons for the United States to take delight in Hanoi's postwar difficulties. While the regime's internal policies, however repugnant to many Americans, are of little direct concern to the United States, its invasion of Kampuchea and maintenance of a pro-Hanoi regime in Phnom Penh transgresses the principle of noninterference in the affairs of sovereign states and, in the eyes of many, threatens U.S. security interests and those of many of its friends and allies in the region.
Of more immediate importance to Washington, perhaps, is Hanoi's increasingly intimate alliance with Moscow. The growing Soviet economic and military presence in Indochina, and specifically Soviet use of naval and air facilities at Cam Ranh Bay, represents a potentially
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