Vietnam’s Independence.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Containment in Asia Explain the reasons for foreign involvement in Korea and Vietnam in terms of containment of Communism. .
Advertisements

War in Southeast Asia Chapter 15 Section 4.
Vietnam’s Independence.
Vietnam’s Independence.
Nationalism in India and Vietnam: The Fight Against Colonial Control 7 th Grade Geography SS7H3 The student will analyze continuity and change in Southern.
 In the 1950's the United States began to send troops to Vietnam.  During the following 25-years the ensuing war would create some of the strongest.
Chapter 19 Section 1 Part 1. Colonization of Vietnam From the late 1800s, France ruled Vietnam, calling the land, French Indochina.
Chapter 29 Section 1 Notes Second Half “Kennedy and Foreign Policy”– “Conflict in Vietnam”
THE ROAD TO WAR IN VIETNAM MAIN IDEA: In Asia, the Cold War flared into actual wars supported mainly by the superpowers.
The Vietnam War. Vietnam War Why we fought?
The War in Vietnam A Chronology. Vietnam Background Vietnam is a country in South East Asia Main crop is rice Southern Vietnam is hot, humid, and has.
Vietnam. Indochina Before WWII France ruled most of Indochina Before WWII France ruled most of Indochina After WWII France tried to reestablish control.
Vietnam’s Road to Independence
Independence in Vietnam  1802 – Nguyen Anh (renamed Emperor Gia Long) named Vietnam and unified the country.  1860s – 1880s: France took control of.
French Indochina.

30-1: Moving Toward Conflict. Background information The Players: Ho Chi Minh: Communist Leader of North Vietnam Vietminh: Communist group led by Ho Chi.
Standards SS7H3 The student will analyze continuity and change in Southern and Eastern Asia leading to the 21st century. a. Describe how nationalism led.
By: Lawrence Book McKnight
Vietnam’s Independence.
Chapter 18 – The Cold War Section 4: Vietnam War and Southeast Asia
Vietnam War and Southeast Asia
Vietnam War and Southeast Asia
India’s Independence Nationalism & Gandhi.
Watch this opening scene. What is happening?
Complete the notes page for Vietnam’s independence
conflict in Vietnam Laos & Cambodia
Origins of the Vietnam War
Before World War 2: France ruled Indochina
The Vietnam War.
America and Vietnam The Early Years.
Getting in… Right Side of Notebook
Containment Communism
War in Southeast Asia.
INDIA AND VIETNAM… THE ROAD TO INDEPENDENCE
Vietnam Protestors American citizens who protested against the Vietnam war. This was done sometimes peacefully, and sometimes violently. The American.
Containment Communism
ASIA Conflict & Change (Nationalism & Independence)
Vietnam’s Independence.
ASIA Conflict & Change (Nationalism & Independence)
Vietnam War and Southeast Asia
Containment Communism
Vietnam BACKGROUND OF THE WAR.
Vietnam’s Independence.
Where is Vietnam?. Where is Vietnam? War Between France & Vietnam France ruled Vietnam as a colony. They called it Indochina. This lasted about 100.
Vietnam War and Korean War SS7H3a: Describe how nationalism led to independence in Vietnam. SS7H3e Explain the reasons for foreign involvement in Korea.
Vietnam’s Independence.
Vietnam’s Independence.
Vietnam’s Independence.
U.S. Involvement in Vietnam
Vietnam’s Independence.
Background to the Conflict
New Nations in Southeast Asia
Containment Communism
Southeast Asia.
Geneva and Eisenhower Making Vietnam more Complex
Vietnam War and Southeast Asia
Nationalism led to independence in Vietnam
What we learned from the Korean War
Vietnam War Anticipation Guide
Stopping the spread of Communism: Korean War and Vietnam
War in Vietnam.
Vietnam’s Independence.
Chapter 29 Section 1 Notes Second Half
Vietnam War The Beginnings.
The early causes of The War.
Essential Question: How did nationalism lead to independence in India and Vietnam? Standards: SS7H3a. Describe how nationalism led to independence in India.
Vietnam War and Southeast Asia
Describe how nationalism led to independence in India and Vietnam.
Presentation transcript:

Vietnam’s Independence

Standards SS7H3 The student will analyze continuity and change in Southern and Eastern Asia leading to the 21st century. a. Describe how nationalism led to independence in India and Vietnam.

Vietnam’s Independence

Background Vietnam was ruled by China for a thousand years before it won its independence in 939 CE. For many years, the country thrived and was one of the most advanced cultures in Asia. However, by the 1900s, it would become another Southeastern Asian country controlled by a European power.

French Control France laid claim to the land area known as Indochina (now Vietnam) in the 1900s. The French wanted control of this land because of its seaports and abundance of natural resources.

Nationalism The people who lived in Indochina had worked hard for generations to maintain independence from China. They resented being treated like second-class citizens in their own country by the French. Soon, nationalism was on the rise and it was directed at the French colony leaders.

Ho Chi Minh Ho Chi Minh was a young man who began to fight for independence from the French. He believed that the Communist Party was the way to go because they often spoke against European colonial powers. In the 1930s, he organized the Indochinese Communist Party and staged protests against the French. The French rulers arrested many of the members, and Minh had to flee the country to escape the death penalty.

Ho Chi Minh – Indochinese Delegate to French Communist Congress in 1921

Vietminh On September 2, 1945, Ho Chi Minh declared Vietnam’s independence from France. He created the Vietminh League, a guerrilla army, to fight against the French. The Vietminh received assistance from China and the Soviet Union. For 8 years, the Vietminh fought the French without much success until 1954 when they defeated a French military camp at Dien Bien Phu. After this Vietminh victory, the French finally decided to surrender control of the country to Ho Chi Minh.

Ho Chi Minh with Vietminh in 1950 Video

Vie Vietnamese soldiers resting between advances in a trench at Dien Bien Phu – 1954.

Vietminh troops celebrating after French surrender.

French troops leaving (in jeep) as Vietminh (back left) take over Hanoi.

17th Parallel The two sides went to Geneva, Switzerland for a conference to end French involvement in Vietnam. The US also attended and was alarmed at the idea of Minh & the Communist Party ruling Vietnam. The US used its influence to have the country split into two parts (at the 17th Parallel), with Minh in control of the northern region and the US in charge of the southern region. The plan was to keep Vietnam split until the country was stabilized, and then to let the people vote on what kind of government they wanted to country to have.

Division of Vietnam after Geneva Conference

“Up to a million refugees left communist North Vietnam during Operation Passage to Freedom after the country was partitioned.”

Vietnam War Although he had control over the north, Ho Chi Minh was not satisfied and continued to fight for full Vietnamese unification. He created another guerrilla army, the Viet Cong, to fight against anti-communist forces in South Vietnam. Gulf of Tonkin Video Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara video. In 1965, the US went to war with North Vietnam to protect the South and to prevent the spread of communism. Over 500,000 US troops fought in Vietnam. Ho Chi Minh’s Viet Cong fought against American forces for almost a decade.

“If we have to fight, we shall fight “If we have to fight, we shall fight. You will kill ten of our men, and we will kill one of yours, and in the end it will be you who will tire of it.” ~Ho Chi Minh

Uniting Vietnam After many years of fighting and the loss of thousands of lives on both sides, the US decided to withdraw its forces from Vietnam in 1973. The conflict ended in a cease-fire agreement. The last US helicopter left the American Embassy in Vietnam in April 1975. Video-The Saddest Day The next day, the North Vietnamese army took over the country and unified it as the Republic of Vietnam. Even though Ho Chi Minh died in 1969, his dream of an independent Vietnam finally became a reality.

A CIA employee helps Vietnamese evacuees onto an Air America helicopter.