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Japan–Vietnam relations

Japanese–Vietnamese relations (Japanese: 日越関係; Japanese: にちえつかんけい Nichietsukankei; Vietnamese: Quan hệ Nhật Bản - Việt Nam) are over a millennium old, and the establishment of friendly trade relations can be traced to at least the 16th century. Modern relations between the two countries are based on Vietnam's developing economy and Japan's role as an investor and foreign aid donor, as well as migrant Vietnamese workers supplying much needed labour in Japan.[1][2]

Japanese–Vietnamese relations

Japan

Vietnam

In 2023, Vietnam and Japan upgraded their relations to a "comprehensive strategic partnership".[3]

Country comparison edit

Official name Socialist Republic of Vietnam Japan
Flag    
Coat of Arms    
Anthem Tiến Quân Ca Kimigayo
National day 2 September 11 February
Capital city Hanoi Tokyo
Largest city Ho Chi Minh City – 8,993,082 (21,281,639 Metro) Tokyo – 13,960,236 (37,468,000 Metro)
Government Unitary Marxist–Leninist one-party socialist republic Unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy
Head of State Võ Thị Ánh Xuân Naruhito
Head of Government Phạm Minh Chính Fumio Kishida
Official language Vietnamese Japanese
Main religions 69% Shinto

66,7% Buddhism

1,5% Christianity

6,2% Other

Current Constitution 28 November 2013 3 May 1947
Area 331,699 km2 (128,070 sq mi) 377,976 km2 (145,937 sq mi)
Time zones 1 1
Population 103,808,319 125,927,000
Population density 295/km2 337/km2
GDP (nominal) $465.814 billion $4.110 trillion
GDP (nominal) per capita $4,623 $33,138
GDP (PPP) $1.559 trillion $6.721 trillion
GDP (PPP) per capita $15,470 $54,184
HDI 0.704 0.925
Currency Vietnamese đồng Japanese yen

History edit

Early contact edit

In the 8th century, Abe no Nakamaro, a descendant of the Imperial House of Japan, entered the Chinese civil service under the Tang dynasty and eventually served as governor (jiedushi) of Annam from 761 to 767.[5]

During the 8th century, the Japanese court composite ritual art comprising orchestral music and dance (Bugaku) known as Rinyu-gaku is said to have been introduced by a foreign monk named "Buttetsu" (Phật Triết) who came from Rinyu (Chăm Pa).[6]

An archaeological dig in Kyūshū, the most southwesterly of the four main islands of Japan, revealed fragments of a Vietnamese ceramic with the inscribed date of 1330, but ended in 1332.[7][8]

16th to 17th century edit

 
An Edo-period Japanese red seal ship sailing out of Nagasaki for Annam (Vietnam)
 
Chùa Cầu, a Japanese-built covered bridge in Hội An

As early as the 16th century, contact between Japan and Vietnam came in the form of trade and bartering.[9] Along with Siam (Thailand) and Malaysia, Japanese red seal ships frequented Vietnamese ports. Vietnamese records show that when the port of Hội An was opened by Lord Nguyễn Hoàng in the early 17th century, hundreds of Japanese traders were already residing there.[7]

Vietnamese traders bought silver, copper and bronze from Japan in exchange for Vietnamese silk, sugar, spices and sandalwood, which fetched a huge profit back in Japan. In order to handle the influx of traders, a Japanese district called Nihonmachi was set up at Hội An.[7] The metals trade was vital to the Nguyen lords, for they needed coins for commerce and bronze to cast guns.

The two countries enjoyed a warm degree of friendship.[7] Shōgun Tokugawa Ieyasu exchanged amicable letters and gifts with Lord Nguyen. His son Lord Nguyễn Phúc Nguyên would marry his daughter Princess Ngoc Khoa to Araki Shutaro, an eminent Japanese trader.[7]

An aggregate of 34 letters were exchanged between the Tokugawa Shogunate and what the Japanese referred to as An Nam Quốc (安南國), of these letters 15 came from the Tokugawa Shogunate and 19 from the Nguyễn lords based in Quảng Nam.[10] This made Vietnam one of the Asian countries that the Tokugawa Shogunate corresponded with the most during this period.[10]

When Japan entered a period of self-isolation, trade continued to flow, either through the planning of permanent residents or through intermediary Dutch merchants. However, in 1685 the Tokugawa shogunate became aware of the nation's overexploited silver and copper mines, and a trade restriction was put in place. Due to the importance of these metals, the new regulations dampened trade between Japan and Vietnam, as well as much of South Asia.[7]

Despite officially isolating itself from the outside world, references to Vietnamese–Japanese relations can still be found, the Chronicle Đại Nam Thực Lục Tiền Biên written during the 19th century makes references to Japanese trading vessels engaged in commercial operations in both the provinces of Gia Định and Biên Hòa in 1679.[10] On the 22nd page of the 5th volume of the Đại Nam Thực Lục Tiền Biên it notes: "Warships commanded by (Duong) Ngạn Địch and Hoàng Tiến came to the Bàn Lân hamlet (now in Biên Hòa province) via the Lôi Lạp estuary (now in Gia Định province). They reclaimed fallow land and built towns where trading vessels from the Qing Empire, western countries, Japan, and Java flocked."[10] This indicates that trade between the two countries existed even after the sakoku policy was enacted.[10]

19th to 20th century edit

19th century edit

A report dated the 10th day of the 12th month of the 16th year of Gia Long's reign (1817) assembled by Lê Tông Chất (the Imperial Delegate for the Northern region) mentioned the tale of five Vietnamese drifters who, while travelling from Gia Định (modern-day Ho Chi Minh City) to Huế, drifted ashore to Japan.[10] The report noted that these soldiers left the city of Gia Định in the middle of 1815 and after a short while ended up in Japan, these soldiers were rescued and supported by local Japanese residents and officials and ended up returning to Vietnam through the Trấn Nam Quan border gate in 1817 after traveling through Qing China.[10]

With the Meiji restoration in 1868, Japan adopted a more outward-facing foreign policy, part of which eventually involved more active diplomacy and trade with French Indochina, the colonial state that contained the territory of present-day Vietnam. While Japan's economic transformation and colonial expansion in Asia secured its subjects' elevated legal status abroad (especially in European colonies like French Indochina where one's race was a factor in legal status), it also attracted the attention of colonialism's opponents. A number of Vietnamese nationalists became drawn to Japan after its 1905 victory in the Russo-Japanese War, as Phan Bội Châu encouraged Vietnamese youth to travel to Japan and study in preparation for revolution against the French colonial government in what was called the Đông Du movement; among these students was Cường Để, heir to the throne of the Nguyễn dynasty. The Russo-Japanese War had created diplomatic tension between France and Japan due to France's closeness to Russia throughout the conflict, leading to the Franco-Japanese Treaty of 1907. The treaty improved relations between Japan and French Indochina, prompting Japan to crackdown on Vietnamese students in the Đong Du movement who by 1910 had either fled Japan or been deported, including Cường Để who, like Phan Bôi Châu, escaped into self-imposed exile.[11]

Japanese women called Karayuki-san migrated to cities like Hanoi, Haiphong and Saigon in colonial French Indochina in the late 19th century to work as prostitutes and provide sexual services to French soldiers who were occupying Vietnam since the French viewed Japanese women as clean they were highly popular.[12][13] Images of the Japanese prostitutes in Vietnam were put on French postcards by French photographers.[14][15][16][17][18] The Japanese government tried to hide the existences of these Japanese prostitutes who went abroad and do not mention them in books on history.[19][20]

During the 19th century the Đại Việt sử ký toàn thư was distributed in Japan.[21] In 1883 Toshiaki Hikida, a military officer of the General Staff Office of the Japanese Imperial Army, was assigned his post in Vietnam, during his stay there a local mandarin in Hanoi would give him a copy of the Đại Việt sử ký toàn thư which after returning to Japan in 1884 he would publish and reprint there.[21] Afterward, Hikida's version of the Đại Việt sử ký toàn thư would become widely circulated outside of Vietnam.[21]

World War I edit

On 27 August 1914 Japan officially entered the World War I on the side of the allies (also known as the Entente Powers), Japan invaded and took the German colony of Tsingtao and the rest of the Kiautschou Bay Leased Territory.[22] In November 1914 Japan would supplant the German sphere of influence in southern China with its own political and economic influence, putting it in direct competition with the French Indochina.[22] Despite the fact that the Japanese openly supported a number of anti-French secessionist movements such as Prince Cường Để's Duy Tân Hội, the French situation in Europe forced Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau to ask the Japanese for their help.[22]

Clemenceau asked the Empire of Japan to aid them with the transportation of the travailleurs et tirailleurs indochinois to Europe and by sending its own forces to help fight in Europe.[22] Clemenceau also wanted the Japanese intervene in Siberia against the Bolshevik forces during the Russian Civil War to secure the repayment of French-Russian loans, which were crucial to the French post-war economy.[22]

Both during and after the war the economic relations between France and Japan strengthened as Japan became a creditor of France, following the latter's financial difficulties which came as a result of the war.[23][22]

Joint French-Japanese administration of Vietnam edit

 
The seal of the Commissariat genéral aux relations franco-japonaises in Hanoi of the Government-General of French Indochina
 
The seal of the Commissariat délégué aux relations franco-japonaises in Saigon of the Government-General of French Indochina

In June 1940, France fell to Nazi Germany which led to the creation of the puppet Vichy regime to which the government of French Indochina remained loyal, motivated in part by a desire not to antagonize Japan who by then occupied the Chinese territory directly bordering Indochina. French Indochina's new alignment with Axis nations could not fully prevent Japanese aggression, however, as Japan was willing to use military force against French Indochina in order to achieve its strategic goals in the region. On 22 September 1940, Japan invaded Vietnam in a limited conflict that secured privileges to station large numbers of troops in Tonkin as well as control over a number of key bases;[24] French Indochina allowed Japan to station troops in the rest of Indochina and ceded further bases in July 1941 after which Japan also began constructing its own military bases to strike against the Allies in Southeast Asia.[25] The Japanese occupation was a partial one in which French Indochina maintained control over its own military and most aspects of government and administration. Even so, when Japan made demands of the French colonial government, it was in no position to refuse. As a result, as the war progressed, French Indochina granted more and more economic privileges to Japanese companies. This precarious relationship between Japan and French Indochina continued until March 1945 when they ousted the colonial government and replaced it with a government called the Empire of Vietnam, essentially a Japanese puppet state, which stayed in place for mere months until Japan's surrender in August 1945.[24]

While Japan maintained a cordial but tense relationship with the French colonial government, it also worked to establish independent relationships with various Vietnamese political factions with histories of opposition to the French authority, most notably the Hoa Hao Buddhist sect and adherents of Cao Dai as a means of undermining French authority through the establishment of its own local political support base. The Viet Minh, established in May 1941, regularly engaged in guerrilla combat with Japanese (and French) forces until their surrender to the Allies in 1945; the Vietnamese Nationalist Party (Việt Nam Quốc Dân Đảng, or VNQDĐ) also fought Japanese forces in China and Indochina.

In Hanoi on 15–20 April 1945 the Tonkin Revolutionary Military Conference of the Việt Minh issued a resolution calling for a general uprising, resistance and guerilla warfare against the Japanese by establishing 7 war zones across Vietnam and insisting that the people's only way forward was armed resistance against the Japanese and ouster of the Vietnamese puppet government that served them. The resolution also called for the French's recognition of Vietnamese independence and for the de Gaulle-led French government (Allied French) to cooperate with the Vietnamese against Japan.[26][27]

Events following the Japanese coup d'état in French Indochina edit

Japanese wartime policies in Vietnam came at the expense of the Vietnamese people. The Japanese ordered the destruction of paddy fields in favor of jute cultivation, and hoarded rice for domestic use, which resulted in the Vietnamese famine of 1945, in which 400 thousand to 2 million Vietnamese died of hunger.

In July, the Việt Minh led attempts to force an entry into Japanese rice silos and redistribute it to starving peasants. The following month, Trường Chinh wrote an article titled "Policy of the Japanese Pirates Towards Our People" in Issue No 3 of the Communist Review (Tạp chí Cộng sản). In the article, Trường Chinh refuted the Japanese claims to have liberated Vietnam from France, and went into detail on Japanese atrocities such as looting, slaughter, torture, and rape against the Vietnamese people in 1945.[28][29]

1946–1976 edit

 
The document establishing official bilateral relations between Japan and North Vietnam signed in Paris, France, on 21 September 1973

After 1945 a number of Japanese soldiers would stay behind in French Indochina, several of them took Vietnamese war brides and would sire children with them (Hāfu).[30] Many of these leftover Japanese soldiers would work with Hồ Chí Minh and the Indochinese Communist Party after the war to fight against French colonialism.[30] In 1954, the Vietnamese government ordered the Japanese soldiers to return home.[30] They were "encouraged" to leave their families behind effectively abandoning their war children in Vietnam.[30] The half-Japanese children left behind in Vietnam after 1954 were subjected to harsh discrimination. These children were often raised by single mothers who were harshly condemned for sleeping with Japanese soldiers during the war.[30]

Despite there not being any official diplomatic ties between Japan and North Vietnam between 1954 and 1973, private exchanges were gradually being rebuilt. In March 1955 the Japan–Vietnam Friendship Association was founded and in August that year the Japan–Vietnam Trade Association was established.[31] Afterwards, in 1965 the North Vietnam–Japan Friendship Association was established to help maintain unofficial relations between the two countries.[31]

An economics journal in North Vietnam, Nghiên cứu Kinh tế, on pages 60,-80 of issue No. 57 published an article accusing Japan of implementing neocolonial economic policies. The North Vietnamese warned other Asians that they had to "increase their vigilance over every activity of the Japanese financial magnates, step up their struggle against Japan's policies of economic aggression and promptly block its aggressive plots" in order to "clip the wings" of US imperialism. The article denounced the US-Japanese alliance and Japanese neocolonialism and urged that anti-imperialists and socialists disrupt them in Japan.[32][33]

During the Vietnam War of the 1960s and 1970s, Japan consistently encouraged a negotiated settlement at the earliest possible date. Even before the hostilities ended, it had made contact with the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (North Vietnam) government and had reached an agreement to establish diplomatic relations in September 1973.[31] Implementation, however, was delayed by North Vietnamese demands that Japan pay the equivalent of US$45 million in World War II reparations in two yearly installments, in the form of "economic cooperation" grants. Giving in to the Vietnamese demands, Japan agreed to pay the reparations and opened an embassy in Hanoi on 11 October 1975, following the unification of North Vietnam and South Vietnam into the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.[34]

On 30 January 1976 the Consul-General of Japan in Honolulu in the United States, Takaaki Hasegawa, was appointed to become the first Ambassador to North Vietnam.[31]

After the Vietnam War edit

In 1978, the first Official development assistance (ODA) loan was granted by the Japanese government to the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.[31] This initial grant was to be used for the procurement of products and associated services on the condition that the suppliers could be from any county and would not be exclusively limited businesses those owned Japanese nationals.[31] Meanwhile, Japanese trade with Vietnam—US$285 million in 1986[35]—was conducted through Japanese trading companies and the Japan-Vietnam Trade Association, which was made up of some 83 Japanese firms. Japanese government officials also visited Hanoi in support of trade, but Vietnam's failure to repay outstanding public and private debts inhibited further trade growth. Japanese exports to Vietnam emphasized chemicals, textiles, machinery, and transportation equipment. In return, Vietnamese exports to Japan comprised mostly marine products and coal.

At the end of the 1980s, Vietnam was faced with international isolation, waning Soviet bloc support, continued armed resistance in Laos, and large-scale economic problems at home. Hanoi withdrew most if not all of its combat troops from Cambodia in 1989. It appealed to developed countries to open channels of economic cooperation, trade, and aid. Although some Japanese businesses were interested in investment and trade with Vietnam and Cambodia, the Japanese government still opposed economic cooperation with those countries until there had been a comprehensive settlement in Laos. This stand was basically consistent with United States policy of the time. Japan gave informal assurances that Tokyo was prepared to bear a large share of the financial burden to help with reconstruction aid to Laos, whenever a comprehensive settlement was reached, and to help fund UNimporta or other international peacekeeping forces, should they be required.

Japan carried through on its promises. Following the Final Act of the International Paris Conference on Cambodia between the Laos parties, Indonesia (as co-chair with France), and the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, Japan promptly re-established diplomatic relations and ended economic restrictions with Cambodia and Vietnam. In November 1992, Tokyo offered Vietnam US$370 million in aid.[36] Japan also took a leading role in peacekeeping activities in Cambodia. Akashi Yasushi, UN undersecretary for disarmament, was head of the UN Transitional Authority in Cambodia, and Japan pledged US$3 million and even sent approximately 2,000 personnel including members of the SDF, to participate directly in maintaining recently restored peace. Despite the loss of a Japanese peacekeeper killed in an ambush, the force remained in Cambodia until the Cambodians were able to elect a new government.

Following the war, Vietnam joined ASEAN in 1995 and ASEAN Plus Three consultations, which include China, Japan, and South Korea were established in 1997. These nations share a place in the Southeast Asian economy and security framework.

On 30 October 1998 the Hải Vân Tunnel Construction Project was started, which was mainly financed by a loan provided by the Japanese Overseas Economic Cooperation Fund (OECF).[31] The tunnel helps connect the major cities of Huế and Đà Nẵng.

21st century edit

 
Nhật Tân Bridge in Hanoi, funded by Japan International Cooperation Agency ODA

In early 2000 the Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC) financed a Red River Bridge Construction Project (Thanh Trì Bridge) as well as the building of the southern portion of Hanoi Ring Road No. 3.[31] Thanh Trì Bridge at the time of its opening was the longest among seven viaducts in the Hanoi area that connect both sides of the Red River.[31]

December 2003 saw the establishment of the Vietnam–Japan Joint Initiative, which was created to make Vietnam more business-friendly for Japanese businesses.[31]

Japan gradually became Vietnam's single biggest donor country. In 2007, it pledged $US890 million in aid for the country, a 6.5 percent increase from the 2006 level of $US835.6 million.[37] The ODA pledged for 2011 by Japan reached 1.76 billion US dollars, which was four times larger than the donation from South Korea, Vietnam's second biggest donor, at 412 million.[38] Moreover, Japan's 2012 committed amount of donation to Vietnam raised to 3 billion dollars.

Bilateral cooperation on defense has been enhanced since the Haiyang Shiyou 981 incident in 2014, as both countries have experienced territorial issues with China. In a speech in May 2014, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe affirmed that Japan would provide Southeast Asian nations its "utmost support" in their South China Sea territorial disputes. In March that year the leaders of Vietnam and Japan agreed to upgrade bilateral relations to be an "Extensive Strategic Partnership for Peace and Prosperity in Asia", this new relationship promised to let both countries collaborate more closely with each other in a large number of fields including politics, economics, national security, culture, and human exchange.[31]

In 2017 the Japanese Emperor Akihito and his wife Empress Michiko visited Hanoi.[30] As a part of the official visit Emperor Akihito met with a number of war children that were abandoned after the war ended.[30] After listening to the tearful stories, Emperor Akihito said that he understood that the abandoned families of the Japanese soldiers had suffered many hardships after the war.[30]

On 19 October 2020, Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga visited his Vietnamese counterpart Nguyễn Xuân Phúc,[39] and they agreed to cooperate on regional issues including the South China Sea, where China's growing aggressiveness in disputed waters has drawn concern from neighboring states.[40] Following Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi's high-profile visit to Vietnam in September 2021, Japanese Defense Minister Nobuo Kishi shortly followed afterwards with his visit, inking an accord to export Japanese-made defense equipment and technology to the Southeast Asian country and the two countries agreeing to boost cooperation amid China worries.[41] On 28 September 2022, on the occasion of the state funeral for Shinzo Abe, Japan's former prime minister, in Tokyo, Vietnam's president Nguyễn Xuân Phúc was one of only seven heads of state which met with Japanese Emperor Naruhito.[42]

Vietnamese Prime Minister Phạm Minh Chính attended the 49th G7 Summit in Hiroshima, Japan in 2023.

Diplomatic missions edit

Vietnamese ambassadors to Japan edit

South Vietnam ambassadors to Japan
  1. Đinh Văn Kiểu (1955, Chargé d'affaires)
  2. Nguyễn Ngọc Thơ (1955–1956)
  3. Bùi Văn Thinh (1956–1962)
  4. Nguyễn Huy Nghĩa (1963)
  5. Nguyễn Văn Lộc (1963–1965, Chargé d'affaires)
  6. Nguyễn Duy Quang (1965–1967)
  7. Vĩnh Thọ (1967–1970)
  8. Đoàn Bá Cang (1970–1972, Chargé d'affaires)
  9. Đỗ Vạng Lý (1972–1974)
  10. Nguyễn Triệu Đan (1974–1975, until the Fall of Saigon)
Vietnam ambassadors to Japan
  1. Nguyễn Giáp (1976–1980)
  2. Nguyễn Tiến (1981–1984)
  3. Đào Huy Ngọc (1984–1987)
  4. Võ Văn Sung (1988–1992)
  5. Nguyễn Tâm Chiến (1992–1995)
  6. Nguyễn Quốc Dũng (1995–1999)
  7. Vũ Dũng (1999–2003)
  8. Chu Tuấn Cáp (2003–2007)
  9. Nguyễn Phú Bình (2008–2011)
  10. Đoàn Xuân Hưng (2012–2015)
  11. Nguyễn Quốc Cường (2015–2018)
  12. Vũ Hồng Nam (2018–2022)
  13. Phạm Quang Hiệu (2023–present)

References edit

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  29. ^ "The OSS in Vietnam, 1945: A War of Missed Opportunities by Dixee Bartholomew-Feis". The National WWII Museum | New Orleans. 15 July 2020. Retrieved 9 May 2024.
  30. ^ a b c d e f g h Ian Harvey (6 March 2017). "Japan's Emperor and Empress Meet With Children Abandoned by Japanese Soldiers After WWII". War History Online (The place for military history news and views). Retrieved 6 September 2022.
  31. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Japan and Vietnam - Archival Records on Our History (Joint Project Celebrating the 45th Anniversary of Japan-Viet Nam Diplomatic Relations) (2018). "Japan and Vietnam § IV. Vietnam and Japan: Old Partners, New Partnership". National Archives of Japan. Retrieved 19 October 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  32. ^ "JPRS 53162 18 May 1971 TRANSLATIONS ON NORTH VIETNAN No. 939". Translations on North Vietnam, Volume 17. JPRS (Series). U.S. Joint Publications Research Service. 1971. pp. 10, 11.
  33. ^ INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS JAPAN'S ECONOMIC EXPANSION SEEN AS NEOCOLONIALISM WITH U.S. IMPRINT
  34. ^ Masaya Shiraishi. Japanese Relations with Vietnam, 1951-1987. SEAP Publications, 1990. ISBN 0877271224, pp.43-44.
  35. ^ Ronald J. Cima. Vietnam: A Country Study. The Division, 1989, p.171.
  36. ^ Institute of World Economy. World Economic Problems. Institute of World Economy, National Centre for Social Sciences of the S.R. Vietnam, 1994. Page 28
  37. ^ "Donors pledge nearly USD 3.8 billion in ODA". Retrieved 3 May 2015.[permanent dead link]
  38. ^ . Archived from the original on 11 November 2020. Retrieved 23 July 2012.
  39. ^ "Prime Minister Suga Visits Viet Nam and Indonesia". MOFA, Japan. 20 October 2020. Retrieved 22 October 2020.
  40. ^ "Suga and Vietnamese PM meet, with focus on economic and defense cooperation". Japan Times. 19 October 2020. Retrieved 22 October 2020.
  41. ^ "Japan inks deal to export defense assets to Vietnam amid China worry". Nikkei Asia. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  42. ^ "Emperor Naruhito, in a rare move, meets with 7 heads of state in one day". Arab News Japan. Retrieved 13 October 2022.

  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. Country Studies. Federal Research Division.

External links edit

  • Embassy of Vietnam in Japan
  • Embassy of Japan in Vietnam (in Japanese and Vietnamese)

japan, vietnam, relations, japanese, vietnamese, relations, japanese, 日越関係, japanese, にちえつかんけい, nichietsukankei, vietnamese, quan, hệ, nhật, bản, việt, over, millennium, establishment, friendly, trade, relations, traced, least, 16th, century, modern, relations. Japanese Vietnamese relations Japanese 日越関係 Japanese にちえつかんけい Nichietsukankei Vietnamese Quan hệ Nhật Bản Việt Nam are over a millennium old and the establishment of friendly trade relations can be traced to at least the 16th century Modern relations between the two countries are based on Vietnam s developing economy and Japan s role as an investor and foreign aid donor as well as migrant Vietnamese workers supplying much needed labour in Japan 1 2 Japanese Vietnamese relationsJapan Vietnam In 2023 Vietnam and Japan upgraded their relations to a comprehensive strategic partnership 3 Contents 1 Country comparison 2 History 2 1 Early contact 2 2 16th to 17th century 2 3 19th to 20th century 2 3 1 19th century 2 3 2 World War I 2 3 3 Joint French Japanese administration of Vietnam 2 3 4 Events following the Japanese coup d etat in French Indochina 2 3 5 1946 1976 2 3 6 After the Vietnam War 2 4 21st century 3 Diplomatic missions 3 1 Vietnamese ambassadors to Japan 4 References 5 External linksCountry comparison editOfficial name Socialist Republic of Vietnam Japan Flag nbsp nbsp Coat of Arms nbsp nbsp Anthem Tiến Quan Ca Kimigayo National day 2 September 11 February Capital city Hanoi Tokyo Largest city Ho Chi Minh City 8 993 082 21 281 639 Metro Tokyo 13 960 236 37 468 000 Metro Government Unitary Marxist Leninist one party socialist republic Unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy Head of State Vo Thị Anh Xuan Naruhito Head of Government Phạm Minh Chinh Fumio Kishida Official language Vietnamese Japanese Main religions 45 3 Folk28 4 No religion14 9 Buddhism8 5 Christianity1 5 Hoahaoism1 2 Caodaism0 2 Others 4 69 Shinto 66 7 Buddhism1 5 Christianity6 2 Other Current Constitution 28 November 2013 3 May 1947 Area 331 699 km2 128 070 sq mi 377 976 km2 145 937 sq mi Time zones 1 1 Population 103 808 319 125 927 000 Population density 295 km2 337 km2 GDP nominal 465 814 billion 4 110 trillion GDP nominal per capita 4 623 33 138 GDP PPP 1 559 trillion 6 721 trillion GDP PPP per capita 15 470 54 184 HDI 0 704 0 925 Currency Vietnamese đồng Japanese yenHistory editEarly contact edit In the 8th century Abe no Nakamaro a descendant of the Imperial House of Japan entered the Chinese civil service under the Tang dynasty and eventually served as governor jiedushi of Annam from 761 to 767 5 During the 8th century the Japanese court composite ritual art comprising orchestral music and dance Bugaku known as Rinyu gaku is said to have been introduced by a foreign monk named Buttetsu Phật Triết who came from Rinyu Chăm Pa 6 An archaeological dig in Kyushu the most southwesterly of the four main islands of Japan revealed fragments of a Vietnamese ceramic with the inscribed date of 1330 but ended in 1332 7 8 16th to 17th century edit nbsp An Edo period Japanese red seal ship sailing out of Nagasaki for Annam Vietnam nbsp Chua Cầu a Japanese built covered bridge in Hội An As early as the 16th century contact between Japan and Vietnam came in the form of trade and bartering 9 Along with Siam Thailand and Malaysia Japanese red seal ships frequented Vietnamese ports Vietnamese records show that when the port of Hội An was opened by Lord Nguyễn Hoang in the early 17th century hundreds of Japanese traders were already residing there 7 Vietnamese traders bought silver copper and bronze from Japan in exchange for Vietnamese silk sugar spices and sandalwood which fetched a huge profit back in Japan In order to handle the influx of traders a Japanese district called Nihonmachi was set up at Hội An 7 The metals trade was vital to the Nguyen lords for they needed coins for commerce and bronze to cast guns The two countries enjoyed a warm degree of friendship 7 Shōgun Tokugawa Ieyasu exchanged amicable letters and gifts with Lord Nguyen His son Lord Nguyễn Phuc Nguyen would marry his daughter Princess Ngoc Khoa to Araki Shutaro an eminent Japanese trader 7 An aggregate of 34 letters were exchanged between the Tokugawa Shogunate and what the Japanese referred to as An Nam Quốc 安南國 of these letters 15 came from the Tokugawa Shogunate and 19 from the Nguyễn lords based in Quảng Nam 10 This made Vietnam one of the Asian countries that the Tokugawa Shogunate corresponded with the most during this period 10 When Japan entered a period of self isolation trade continued to flow either through the planning of permanent residents or through intermediary Dutch merchants However in 1685 the Tokugawa shogunate became aware of the nation s overexploited silver and copper mines and a trade restriction was put in place Due to the importance of these metals the new regulations dampened trade between Japan and Vietnam as well as much of South Asia 7 Despite officially isolating itself from the outside world references to Vietnamese Japanese relations can still be found the Chronicle Đại Nam Thực Lục Tiền Bien written during the 19th century makes references to Japanese trading vessels engaged in commercial operations in both the provinces of Gia Định and Bien Hoa in 1679 10 On the 22nd page of the 5th volume of the Đại Nam Thực Lục Tiền Bien it notes Warships commanded by Duong Ngạn Địch and Hoang Tiến came to the Ban Lan hamlet now in Bien Hoa province via the Loi Lạp estuary now in Gia Định province They reclaimed fallow land and built towns where trading vessels from the Qing Empire western countries Japan and Java flocked 10 This indicates that trade between the two countries existed even after the sakoku policy was enacted 10 19th to 20th century edit 19th century edit A report dated the 10th day of the 12th month of the 16th year of Gia Long s reign 1817 assembled by Le Tong Chất the Imperial Delegate for the Northern region mentioned the tale of five Vietnamese drifters who while travelling from Gia Định modern day Ho Chi Minh City to Huế drifted ashore to Japan 10 The report noted that these soldiers left the city of Gia Định in the middle of 1815 and after a short while ended up in Japan these soldiers were rescued and supported by local Japanese residents and officials and ended up returning to Vietnam through the Trấn Nam Quan border gate in 1817 after traveling through Qing China 10 With the Meiji restoration in 1868 Japan adopted a more outward facing foreign policy part of which eventually involved more active diplomacy and trade with French Indochina the colonial state that contained the territory of present day Vietnam While Japan s economic transformation and colonial expansion in Asia secured its subjects elevated legal status abroad especially in European colonies like French Indochina where one s race was a factor in legal status it also attracted the attention of colonialism s opponents A number of Vietnamese nationalists became drawn to Japan after its 1905 victory in the Russo Japanese War as Phan Bội Chau encouraged Vietnamese youth to travel to Japan and study in preparation for revolution against the French colonial government in what was called the Đong Du movement among these students was Cường Để heir to the throne of the Nguyễn dynasty The Russo Japanese War had created diplomatic tension between France and Japan due to France s closeness to Russia throughout the conflict leading to the Franco Japanese Treaty of 1907 The treaty improved relations between Japan and French Indochina prompting Japan to crackdown on Vietnamese students in the Đong Du movement who by 1910 had either fled Japan or been deported including Cường Để who like Phan Boi Chau escaped into self imposed exile 11 Japanese women called Karayuki san migrated to cities like Hanoi Haiphong and Saigon in colonial French Indochina in the late 19th century to work as prostitutes and provide sexual services to French soldiers who were occupying Vietnam since the French viewed Japanese women as clean they were highly popular 12 13 Images of the Japanese prostitutes in Vietnam were put on French postcards by French photographers 14 15 16 17 18 The Japanese government tried to hide the existences of these Japanese prostitutes who went abroad and do not mention them in books on history 19 20 During the 19th century the Đại Việt sử ky toan thư was distributed in Japan 21 In 1883 Toshiaki Hikida a military officer of the General Staff Office of the Japanese Imperial Army was assigned his post in Vietnam during his stay there a local mandarin in Hanoi would give him a copy of the Đại Việt sử ky toan thư which after returning to Japan in 1884 he would publish and reprint there 21 Afterward Hikida s version of the Đại Việt sử ky toan thư would become widely circulated outside of Vietnam 21 World War I edit On 27 August 1914 Japan officially entered the World War I on the side of the allies also known as the Entente Powers Japan invaded and took the German colony of Tsingtao and the rest of the Kiautschou Bay Leased Territory 22 In November 1914 Japan would supplant the German sphere of influence in southern China with its own political and economic influence putting it in direct competition with the French Indochina 22 Despite the fact that the Japanese openly supported a number of anti French secessionist movements such as Prince Cường Để s Duy Tan Hội the French situation in Europe forced Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau to ask the Japanese for their help 22 Clemenceau asked the Empire of Japan to aid them with the transportation of the travailleurs et tirailleurs indochinois to Europe and by sending its own forces to help fight in Europe 22 Clemenceau also wanted the Japanese intervene in Siberia against the Bolshevik forces during the Russian Civil War to secure the repayment of French Russian loans which were crucial to the French post war economy 22 Both during and after the war the economic relations between France and Japan strengthened as Japan became a creditor of France following the latter s financial difficulties which came as a result of the war 23 22 Joint French Japanese administration of Vietnam edit nbsp The seal of the Commissariat general aux relations franco japonaises in Hanoi of the Government General of French Indochina nbsp The seal of the Commissariat delegue aux relations franco japonaises in Saigon of the Government General of French Indochina In June 1940 France fell to Nazi Germany which led to the creation of the puppet Vichy regime to which the government of French Indochina remained loyal motivated in part by a desire not to antagonize Japan who by then occupied the Chinese territory directly bordering Indochina French Indochina s new alignment with Axis nations could not fully prevent Japanese aggression however as Japan was willing to use military force against French Indochina in order to achieve its strategic goals in the region On 22 September 1940 Japan invaded Vietnam in a limited conflict that secured privileges to station large numbers of troops in Tonkin as well as control over a number of key bases 24 French Indochina allowed Japan to station troops in the rest of Indochina and ceded further bases in July 1941 after which Japan also began constructing its own military bases to strike against the Allies in Southeast Asia 25 The Japanese occupation was a partial one in which French Indochina maintained control over its own military and most aspects of government and administration Even so when Japan made demands of the French colonial government it was in no position to refuse As a result as the war progressed French Indochina granted more and more economic privileges to Japanese companies This precarious relationship between Japan and French Indochina continued until March 1945 when they ousted the colonial government and replaced it with a government called the Empire of Vietnam essentially a Japanese puppet state which stayed in place for mere months until Japan s surrender in August 1945 24 While Japan maintained a cordial but tense relationship with the French colonial government it also worked to establish independent relationships with various Vietnamese political factions with histories of opposition to the French authority most notably the Hoa Hao Buddhist sect and adherents of Cao Dai as a means of undermining French authority through the establishment of its own local political support base The Viet Minh established in May 1941 regularly engaged in guerrilla combat with Japanese and French forces until their surrender to the Allies in 1945 the Vietnamese Nationalist Party Việt Nam Quốc Dan Đảng or VNQDĐ also fought Japanese forces in China and Indochina In Hanoi on 15 20 April 1945 the Tonkin Revolutionary Military Conference of the Việt Minh issued a resolution calling for a general uprising resistance and guerilla warfare against the Japanese by establishing 7 war zones across Vietnam and insisting that the people s only way forward was armed resistance against the Japanese and ouster of the Vietnamese puppet government that served them The resolution also called for the French s recognition of Vietnamese independence and for the de Gaulle led French government Allied French to cooperate with the Vietnamese against Japan 26 27 Events following the Japanese coup d etat in French Indochina edit Japanese wartime policies in Vietnam came at the expense of the Vietnamese people The Japanese ordered the destruction of paddy fields in favor of jute cultivation and hoarded rice for domestic use which resulted in the Vietnamese famine of 1945 in which 400 thousand to 2 million Vietnamese died of hunger In July the Việt Minh led attempts to force an entry into Japanese rice silos and redistribute it to starving peasants The following month Trường Chinh wrote an article titled Policy of the Japanese Pirates Towards Our People in Issue No 3 of the Communist Review Tạp chi Cộng sản In the article Trường Chinh refuted the Japanese claims to have liberated Vietnam from France and went into detail on Japanese atrocities such as looting slaughter torture and rape against the Vietnamese people in 1945 28 29 1946 1976 edit nbsp The document establishing official bilateral relations between Japan and North Vietnam signed in Paris France on 21 September 1973 After 1945 a number of Japanese soldiers would stay behind in French Indochina several of them took Vietnamese war brides and would sire children with them Hafu 30 Many of these leftover Japanese soldiers would work with Hồ Chi Minh and the Indochinese Communist Party after the war to fight against French colonialism 30 In 1954 the Vietnamese government ordered the Japanese soldiers to return home 30 They were encouraged to leave their families behind effectively abandoning their war children in Vietnam 30 The half Japanese children left behind in Vietnam after 1954 were subjected to harsh discrimination These children were often raised by single mothers who were harshly condemned for sleeping with Japanese soldiers during the war 30 Despite there not being any official diplomatic ties between Japan and North Vietnam between 1954 and 1973 private exchanges were gradually being rebuilt In March 1955 the Japan Vietnam Friendship Association was founded and in August that year the Japan Vietnam Trade Association was established 31 Afterwards in 1965 the North Vietnam Japan Friendship Association was established to help maintain unofficial relations between the two countries 31 An economics journal in North Vietnam Nghien cứu Kinh tế on pages 60 80 of issue No 57 published an article accusing Japan of implementing neocolonial economic policies The North Vietnamese warned other Asians that they had to increase their vigilance over every activity of the Japanese financial magnates step up their struggle against Japan s policies of economic aggression and promptly block its aggressive plots in order to clip the wings of US imperialism The article denounced the US Japanese alliance and Japanese neocolonialism and urged that anti imperialists and socialists disrupt them in Japan 32 33 During the Vietnam War of the 1960s and 1970s Japan consistently encouraged a negotiated settlement at the earliest possible date Even before the hostilities ended it had made contact with the Democratic Republic of Vietnam North Vietnam government and had reached an agreement to establish diplomatic relations in September 1973 31 Implementation however was delayed by North Vietnamese demands that Japan pay the equivalent of US 45 million in World War II reparations in two yearly installments in the form of economic cooperation grants Giving in to the Vietnamese demands Japan agreed to pay the reparations and opened an embassy in Hanoi on 11 October 1975 following the unification of North Vietnam and South Vietnam into the Socialist Republic of Vietnam 34 On 30 January 1976 the Consul General of Japan in Honolulu in the United States Takaaki Hasegawa was appointed to become the first Ambassador to North Vietnam 31 After the Vietnam War edit In 1978 the first Official development assistance ODA loan was granted by the Japanese government to the Socialist Republic of Vietnam 31 This initial grant was to be used for the procurement of products and associated services on the condition that the suppliers could be from any county and would not be exclusively limited businesses those owned Japanese nationals 31 Meanwhile Japanese trade with Vietnam US 285 million in 1986 35 was conducted through Japanese trading companies and the Japan Vietnam Trade Association which was made up of some 83 Japanese firms Japanese government officials also visited Hanoi in support of trade but Vietnam s failure to repay outstanding public and private debts inhibited further trade growth Japanese exports to Vietnam emphasized chemicals textiles machinery and transportation equipment In return Vietnamese exports to Japan comprised mostly marine products and coal At the end of the 1980s Vietnam was faced with international isolation waning Soviet bloc support continued armed resistance in Laos and large scale economic problems at home Hanoi withdrew most if not all of its combat troops from Cambodia in 1989 It appealed to developed countries to open channels of economic cooperation trade and aid Although some Japanese businesses were interested in investment and trade with Vietnam and Cambodia the Japanese government still opposed economic cooperation with those countries until there had been a comprehensive settlement in Laos This stand was basically consistent with United States policy of the time Japan gave informal assurances that Tokyo was prepared to bear a large share of the financial burden to help with reconstruction aid to Laos whenever a comprehensive settlement was reached and to help fund UNimporta or other international peacekeeping forces should they be required Japan carried through on its promises Following the Final Act of the International Paris Conference on Cambodia between the Laos parties Indonesia as co chair with France and the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council Japan promptly re established diplomatic relations and ended economic restrictions with Cambodia and Vietnam In November 1992 Tokyo offered Vietnam US 370 million in aid 36 Japan also took a leading role in peacekeeping activities in Cambodia Akashi Yasushi UN undersecretary for disarmament was head of the UN Transitional Authority in Cambodia and Japan pledged US 3 million and even sent approximately 2 000 personnel including members of the SDF to participate directly in maintaining recently restored peace Despite the loss of a Japanese peacekeeper killed in an ambush the force remained in Cambodia until the Cambodians were able to elect a new government Following the war Vietnam joined ASEAN in 1995 and ASEAN Plus Three consultations which include China Japan and South Korea were established in 1997 These nations share a place in the Southeast Asian economy and security framework On 30 October 1998 the Hải Van Tunnel Construction Project was started which was mainly financed by a loan provided by the Japanese Overseas Economic Cooperation Fund OECF 31 The tunnel helps connect the major cities of Huế and Đa Nẵng 21st century edit nbsp Nhật Tan Bridge in Hanoi funded by Japan International Cooperation Agency ODA In early 2000 the Japan Bank for International Cooperation JBIC financed a Red River Bridge Construction Project Thanh Tri Bridge as well as the building of the southern portion of Hanoi Ring Road No 3 31 Thanh Tri Bridge at the time of its opening was the longest among seven viaducts in the Hanoi area that connect both sides of the Red River 31 December 2003 saw the establishment of the Vietnam Japan Joint Initiative which was created to make Vietnam more business friendly for Japanese businesses 31 Japan gradually became Vietnam s single biggest donor country In 2007 it pledged US890 million in aid for the country a 6 5 percent increase from the 2006 level of US835 6 million 37 The ODA pledged for 2011 by Japan reached 1 76 billion US dollars which was four times larger than the donation from South Korea Vietnam s second biggest donor at 412 million 38 Moreover Japan s 2012 committed amount of donation to Vietnam raised to 3 billion dollars Bilateral cooperation on defense has been enhanced since the Haiyang Shiyou 981 incident in 2014 as both countries have experienced territorial issues with China In a speech in May 2014 Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe affirmed that Japan would provide Southeast Asian nations its utmost support in their South China Sea territorial disputes In March that year the leaders of Vietnam and Japan agreed to upgrade bilateral relations to be an Extensive Strategic Partnership for Peace and Prosperity in Asia this new relationship promised to let both countries collaborate more closely with each other in a large number of fields including politics economics national security culture and human exchange 31 In 2017 the Japanese Emperor Akihito and his wife Empress Michiko visited Hanoi 30 As a part of the official visit Emperor Akihito met with a number of war children that were abandoned after the war ended 30 After listening to the tearful stories Emperor Akihito said that he understood that the abandoned families of the Japanese soldiers had suffered many hardships after the war 30 On 19 October 2020 Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga visited his Vietnamese counterpart Nguyễn Xuan Phuc 39 and they agreed to cooperate on regional issues including the South China Sea where China s growing aggressiveness in disputed waters has drawn concern from neighboring states 40 Following Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi s high profile visit to Vietnam in September 2021 Japanese Defense Minister Nobuo Kishi shortly followed afterwards with his visit inking an accord to export Japanese made defense equipment and technology to the Southeast Asian country and the two countries agreeing to boost cooperation amid China worries 41 On 28 September 2022 on the occasion of the state funeral for Shinzo Abe Japan s former prime minister in Tokyo Vietnam s president Nguyễn Xuan Phuc was one of only seven heads of state which met with Japanese Emperor Naruhito 42 Vietnamese Prime Minister Phạm Minh Chinh attended the 49th G7 Summit in Hiroshima Japan in 2023 Diplomatic missions editOf Vietnam Tokyo Embassy Osaka Consulate Fukuoka Consulate Of Japan Hanoi Embassy Ho Chi Minh City Consulate Da Nang Consulate Vietnamese ambassadors to Japan edit South Vietnam ambassadors to Japan Đinh Văn Kiểu 1955 Charge d affaires Nguyễn Ngọc Thơ 1955 1956 Bui Văn Thinh 1956 1962 Nguyễn Huy Nghĩa 1963 Nguyễn Văn Lộc 1963 1965 Charge d affaires Nguyễn Duy Quang 1965 1967 Vĩnh Thọ 1967 1970 Đoan Ba Cang 1970 1972 Charge d affaires Đỗ Vạng Ly 1972 1974 Nguyễn Triệu Đan 1974 1975 until the Fall of Saigon Vietnam ambassadors to Japan Nguyễn Giap 1976 1980 Nguyễn Tiến 1981 1984 Đao Huy Ngọc 1984 1987 Vo Văn Sung 1988 1992 Nguyễn Tam Chiến 1992 1995 Nguyễn Quốc Dũng 1995 1999 Vũ Dũng 1999 2003 Chu Tuấn Cap 2003 2007 Nguyễn Phu Binh 2008 2011 Đoan Xuan Hưng 2012 2015 Nguyễn Quốc Cường 2015 2018 Vũ Hồng Nam 2018 2022 Phạm Quang Hiệu 2023 present References edit nbsp Japan portal nbsp Vietnam portal VnExpress Milestones in Vietnam Japan relations VnExpress International Latest news business travel and analysis from Vietnam Retrieved 10 May 2024 VnExpress Vietnamese make up largest percentage of Japan s foreign workforce VnExpress International VnExpress International Latest news business travel and analysis from Vietnam Retrieved 10 May 2024 Vietnam upgrades ties with Japan to highest level Reuters 27 November 2023 Retrieved 10 May 2024 2019 Report on International Religious Freedom Vietnam U S Department of State Nussbaum Louis Frederic 2005 Abe no Nakamaro Japan Encyclopedia p 3 Japan and Vietnam Archival Records on Our History Joint Project Celebrating the 45th Anniversary of Japan Viet Nam Diplomatic Relations 2018 Japan and Vietnam Early Associations National Archives of Japan Retrieved 4 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a b c d e f Luc Thuan Japan early trade coin and the commercial trade between Vietnam and Japan in the 17th century Retrieved on 8 May 2009 John N Miksic Southeast Asian Ceramics New Light on Old Pottery Editions Didier Millet 2009 ISBN 9814260134 p 93 Owen Norman G Chandler David The Emergence of Modern Southeast Asia p 107 University of Hawaiʻi Press 2005 ISBN 0 8248 2841 0 a b c d e f g Japan and Vietnam Archival Records on Our History Joint Project Celebrating the 45th Anniversary of Japan Viet Nam Diplomatic Relations 2018 Japan and Vietnam II Exchange in the Early Modern Era National Archives of Japan Retrieved 4 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Phan Boi Chau tr Vinh Sinh and Nicholas Wickenden Overturned Chariot The Autobiography of Phan Bội Chau Honolulu University of Hawaiʻi Press 1999 Roustan Frederic 2012 Mousmes and French Colonial Culture Making Japanese Women s Bodies Available in Indochina Journal of Vietnamese Studies 7 1 52 105 doi 10 1525 vs 2012 7 1 52 JSTOR 10 1525 vs 2012 7 1 52 Archived from the original on 21 June 2022 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Carney Joey 27 April 2020 A Brief Primer on Vice and Sex in Colonial Vietnam Simi Press Hoskins Janet Summer 2007 Postcards from the Edge of Empire Images and Messages from French Indochina Asia s Colonial Photographies 44 IIAS Newsletter 16 17 Alt URL Hoskins Janet January 2007 Postcards from the Edge of Empire Images and Messages from French Indochina IIAS Newsletter Yee Jennifer 2004 Recycling the Colonial Harem Women in Postcards from French Indochina French Cultural Studies 15 5 5 19 doi 10 1177 0957155804040405 S2CID 162718081 Photos The Japanese Prostitutes Of Colonial Vietnam Saigoneer 15 July 2015 Archived from the original on 17 July 2015 陳碧純 山打根的八番娼館 之讀後心得 亞太研究論壇卷期 28 2005 06 頁309 315 http www rchss sinica edu tw capas publication newsletter N28 2806 pdf Archived 11 August 2022 at the Wayback Machine 佐藤トゥイウェン 第 4 章 孝 に殉じた天草の からゆきさん 周縁の文化交渉学シリーズ 8天草諸島の歴史と現在 関西大学文化交渉学教育研究拠点 2012年 柏木卓司 戦前期フランス領インドシナにおける邦人進出の形態 職業別人口表 を中心として アジア経済 31 3 1990 3 p 78 98 柏木卓司 ベトナムのからゆきさん 歴史と人物 10月号 中央公論 1979 208頁 神坂次郎 おれは伊平次 講談社文庫 2002 8 平田豊弘 松下光廣と大南公司 周縁の文化交渉学シリーズ 4 陶磁器流通と西海地域 関西大学 荒武賢一朗編 2011年 Ch Lemire Les cinq Pays de l Indo Chine francaise l etablissement de Kouang Tcheou le Siam Juillet 1899 Dean Meyers and My Van Tran The Cao Dai Prince Cuong De and the Japanese in 1937 1939 THE CRISIS OF THE EIGHTH LUNAR MONTH University of South Australia IJAPS Vol 2 May 2006 Sartore Melissa 7 June 2019 Facts About Karayuki San The Japanese Sex Workers Trafficked To The Rest Of The World Ranker Jolivet Muriel 2005 Japan The Childless Society The Crisis of Motherhood Routledge p 124 ISBN 1134757166 a b c Japan and Vietnam Archival Records on Our History Joint Project Celebrating the 45th Anniversary of Japan Viet Nam Diplomatic Relations 2018 Japan and Vietnam III Exchange in the Modern and Contemporary Periods National Archives of Japan Retrieved 4 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a b c d e f Claire Thi Lien Tran 11 January 2022 Indochina Version 1 0 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedie of the First World War Free University of Berlin Bavarian State Library and Deutsch Franzosische Gymnasium among others Retrieved 17 August 2022 Thi Lien Tran Claire Indochina in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War ed by Ute Daniel Peter Gatrell Oliver Janz Heather Jones Jennifer Keene Alan Kramer and Bill Nasson issued by Freie Universitat Berlin Berlin 2022 01 11 DOI 10 15463 ie1418 11594 Morlat Patrice Indochine annees vingt Le balcon de la France sur le Pacifique Une age de l histoire de France en Extreme Orient volume 1 Paris 2001 Indes savantes pp 169 170 in French a b David G Marr Vietnam 1945 The Quest for Power Berkeley University of California Press 1995 Howard Langer The Vietnam War An Encyclopedia of Quotations Greenwood Publishing Group 2005 ISBN 0313321434 pp 12 13 Truong Chinh 19 May 1971 I DOCUMENTS FROM THE AUGUST REVOLUTION RESOLUTION OF THE TONKIN REVOLUTIONARY MILITARY CONFERENCE JPRS 53169 19 May 1971 TRANSLATIONS ON NORTH VIETNAM No 940 DOCUMENTS ON THE AUGUST REVOLUTION Translations on North Vietnam Volume 17 JPRS Series U S Joint Publications Research Service pp 1 7 I DOCUMENTS FROM THE AUGUST REVOLUTION RESOLUTION OF THE TONKIN REVOLUTIONARY MILITARY CONFERENCE Excerpt from the Resolution of the Tonkin Revolutionary Military Conference Held Between 15 and 20 April 1945 Hanoi Nhan Dan Vietnamese 25 August 1970 pp 1 4 Truong Chinh 19 May 1971 Policy of the Japanese Pirates Towards Our people JPRS 53169 19 May 1971 TRANSLATIONS ON NORTH VIETNAM No 940 DOCUMENTS ON THE AUGUST REVOLUTION Translations on North Vietnam Volume 17 JPRS Series U S Joint Publications Research Service pp 8 13 The OSS in Vietnam 1945 A War of Missed Opportunities by Dixee Bartholomew Feis The National WWII Museum New Orleans 15 July 2020 Retrieved 9 May 2024 a b c d e f g h Ian Harvey 6 March 2017 Japan s Emperor and Empress Meet With Children Abandoned by Japanese Soldiers After WWII War History Online The place for military history news and views Retrieved 6 September 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k Japan and Vietnam Archival Records on Our History Joint Project Celebrating the 45th Anniversary of Japan Viet Nam Diplomatic Relations 2018 Japan and Vietnam IV Vietnam and Japan Old Partners New Partnership National Archives of Japan Retrieved 19 October 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link JPRS 53162 18 May 1971 TRANSLATIONS ON NORTH VIETNAN No 939 Translations on North Vietnam Volume 17 JPRS Series U S Joint Publications Research Service 1971 pp 10 11 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS JAPAN S ECONOMIC EXPANSION SEEN AS NEOCOLONIALISM WITH U S IMPRINT Masaya Shiraishi Japanese Relations with Vietnam 1951 1987 SEAP Publications 1990 ISBN 0877271224 pp 43 44 Ronald J Cima Vietnam A Country Study The Division 1989 p 171 Institute of World Economy World Economic Problems Institute of World Economy National Centre for Social Sciences of the S R Vietnam 1994 Page 28 Donors pledge nearly USD 3 8 billion in ODA Retrieved 3 May 2015 permanent dead link Int l donors pledge 7 9 billion for Vietnam next year News VietNamNet Archived from the original on 11 November 2020 Retrieved 23 July 2012 Prime Minister Suga Visits Viet Nam and Indonesia MOFA Japan 20 October 2020 Retrieved 22 October 2020 Suga and Vietnamese PM meet with focus on economic and defense cooperation Japan Times 19 October 2020 Retrieved 22 October 2020 Japan inks deal to export defense assets to Vietnam amid China worry Nikkei Asia Retrieved 12 September 2021 Emperor Naruhito in a rare move meets with 7 heads of state in one day Arab News Japan Retrieved 13 October 2022 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Country Studies Federal Research Division External links edit nbsp Wikibooks has a book on the topic of Japan s Foreign Policy Toward Vietnam 1978 1992 Thesis Embassy of Vietnam in Japan Embassy of Japan in Vietnam in Japanese and Vietnamese Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Japan Vietnam relations amp oldid 1223162076, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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