American-Vietnamese Relations in the Wake of War: Diplomacy After the Capture of Saigon, 1975-1979

American-Vietnamese Relations in the Wake of War: Diplomacy After the Capture of Saigon, 1975-1979

by Cécile Menétrey-Monchau
American-Vietnamese Relations in the Wake of War: Diplomacy After the Capture of Saigon, 1975-1979

American-Vietnamese Relations in the Wake of War: Diplomacy After the Capture of Saigon, 1975-1979

by Cécile Menétrey-Monchau

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Overview

When the Vietnam War ended with the North Vietnamese capture of Saigon on April 30, 1975--27 months after a cease-fire had been signed in Paris--the differences between the United States and Vietnam were far from being resolved. Mutual bitterness regarding the war remained. Newly unified Vietnam wanted normalization of relations and the subsequent economic reconstruction aid promised in the Paris Peace Accords. Understandably wary of such diplomatic relations, the United States requested information regarding soldiers listed as missing in action and assistance with the repatriation of military remains. A series of misconceptions and misunderstandings as well as changes from a regional to a global U.S. foreign policy left both countries bereft of an easy solution.

This book describes the negotiations during the late Ford and early Carter administrations (1975-1979) and discusses the repercussions the diplomatic stalemate had on the domestic and international politics of the United States and Vietnam, emphasizing the conflicting priorities and political goals of both countries, at home and abroad. This previously neglected period in United States-Vietnam relations deals with issues such as Hanoi's constant exultation over the victory, American denial of responsibility, the division between the presidents' public declarations and congressional policies, and both sides' use of the MIA issue. Based primarily on recently declassified documents and former U.S. official Douglas Pike's uncensored collection, the work also makes use of media press sources from America, Vietnam, Britain, France and China. Interviews with Vietnamese immigrants and former U.S. politicians provide insight unavailable in written histories. Appendices contain the February 1973 correspondence between President Nixon and the Prime Minister of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, six diplomatic notes from 1976, and a January 30, 1979, letter from President Carter to Chinese Vice Premier Deng Xiaoping.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780786423989
Publisher: McFarland & Company, Incorporated Publishers
Publication date: 07/19/2006
Series: Asian and Asian American Studies
Pages: 316
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 10.00(h) x 0.63(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Author Cécile Menétrey-Monchau lives in Paris, France.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments     
Preface     
Abbreviations     
Important Names and Offices     
Introduction     

I : FORD AND VIETNAM’S PEACE
• A New Start for Vietnam and a First Opening to Washington     
• Hanoi and Saigon’s Application for Membership to the United Nations     
• Adapting to a New Environment: Vietnamese Policies and Ford’s Election Campaign     

II : THE ADVENT OF THE CARTER YEARS
• The Fourth Party Congress     
• The New Socialist Man, the New American Man and the New China     
• The Woodcock Mission     

III : TALKS TURN COLD
• The Paris Negotiations ( January–May 1977)     
• The Nixon Letter     
• Background to the Nixon Letter     
• The Paris Negotiations ( June and December 1977)     
• The Spying Affair     

IV : COLD WAR CLASH
• Brotherhood Turns Sour     
• Vietnam Changes Its Mind     
• The Hoa Crisis     
• Vietnam’s Dual Opening to Moscow and Washington     
• Brzezinski’s Growing Influence and His Visit to China     
• Consequences of the Brzezinski trip to China on the NSC Perception of the Sino-Cambodian-Vietnamese Conflicts     

V : REVERSAL IN U.S. FOREIGN POLICY
• Vietnam’s American Card     
• The Thach Delegation to New York     
• The Drawing of Lines     
• Normalization with Peking     

VI : WINNING THE THIRD VIETNAM
• Vietnam Invades Cambodia     
• Deng’s Visit to the United States     
• China’s Lesson on Vietnam     

Conclusion     
Appendices     
Chapter Notes     
Bibliography     

Index     
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