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United States–Vietnam relations

Relations between the United States and Vietnam have historically been complex and have repeatedly switched back and forth between positive and negative, but the United States and Vietnam share warm diplomatic relations in the present.

American–Vietnamese relations

United States

Vietnam
Diplomatic mission
United States Embassy, HanoiVietnamese Embassy, Washington, D.C.
Envoy
Ambassador Marc KnapperAmbassador Nguyễn Quốc Dũng

Formal relations between the two countries were first initiated in the 19th century under U.S. President Andrew Jackson, but relations soured after the U.S. refused to protect the Kingdom of Vietnam from French invasion. During World War II, the U.S. covertly assisted the Viet Minh in fighting Japanese forces in French Indochina, though a formal alliance was not established. After the dissolution of French Indochina in 1954, the U.S. supported the capitalist South Vietnam as opposed to communist North Vietnam and fought North Vietnam directly during the Vietnam War. After American withdrawal in 1973 and the subsequent fall of South Vietnam in 1975, the U.S. applied a trade embargo and severed ties with Vietnam, mostly out of concerns relating to Vietnamese boat people and the Vietnam War POW/MIA issue. Attempts at re-establishing relations went unfulfilled for decades, until U.S. President Bill Clinton began normalizing diplomatic relations in the 1990s. In 1994, the U.S. lifted its 30-year trade embargo on Vietnam. The following year, both countries established embassies and consulates. Relations between the two countries continued to improve into the 21st century.

Vietnam is now considered to be a potential ally of the United States, especially in the geopolitical context of the territorial disputes in the South China Sea and in the containment of Chinese expansionism.[1][2][3][4][5] Vietnam, one of the countries with the most favorable public opinion regarding the U.S., is the only communist country to have such a favorable view.[6][7][8][9][10] Every U.S. president since diplomatic normalization in 1995 has visited Vietnam at least once, highlighting the importance of Vietnam in the U.S.'s growing pivot to Asia; these visits have been welcomed by the Vietnamese populace despite political differences.[11][12][13][14]

Vietnamese Americans, making up more than 2.1 million people, are mostly immigrants who moved to the U.S. after the Vietnam War; they comprise nearly half of all overseas Vietnamese, but are mostly loyal to the fallen South Vietnamese government instead of the ruling communist government.[15]

History

19th century

In 1829, U.S. President Andrew Jackson sent a diplomatic delegation led by Edmund Roberts on the USS Peacock to the Nguyễn dynasty to establish bilateral relations and expand trade between the two countries. The ship arrived in Vũng Lấm, Phú Yên province on 2 January 1833.[16] The ruler of Vietnam at the time, Emperor Minh Mạng, was not eager to allow foreigners to freely enter Vietnam and engage in trade. The emperor required that Americans follow Vietnamese laws, and only allowed them to do business in Da Nang, Central Vietnam. After receiving this unwelcome message, Edmund Roberts and his delegation left Vietnam.[17]: 24  The American-Vietnamese relationship remained frozen after many disagreements and tensions from 1836 to 1859. This lasted until 1873, when Vietnam had trouble fighting against the invading French forces in northern Vietnam. Emperor Tự Đức appointed Foreign Minister Bùi Viện as "Grand Emissary" and sent him to the United States to seek support and aid against the French Empire. The diplomatic delegation passed through Yokohama, Japan, then arrived in San Francisco in mid-1873.[17]: 274  Bùi Viện and the Vietnamese emissaries traveled to Washington, D.C. and met with U.S. President Ulysses S. Grant, who promised aid and an alliance with Vietnam. However, the U.S. Congress cancelled Grant's intervention in Vietnam.[17]: 275  In 1884, Vietnam was completely conquered by France, becoming French Indochina.

World War II

 
A 1946 telegram sent by Hồ Chí Minh, the leader of the Việt Minh and head of the Provisional Revolutionary Government of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, addressed to President Harry S. Truman asking the United States to get involved in Vietnam in support of Vietnamese independence.

The U.S. and Vietnam had informal relations during World War II, though this was not directly with French Indochina. Though the U.S. had good relations with the French Third Republic, after the latter fell to Nazi Germany in 1940, Germany established Vichy France, which took over administration of the French colonies, including French Indochina. Vichy France allowed the Empire of Japan to access French Indochina, and in July 1941 Japan extended its control to the whole of French Indochina.

During the Pacific War, American agents of the Office of Strategic Services, led by United States Army officer Archimedes Patti, arrived in Vietnam and met with the Viet Minh, a communist independence movement led by pro-American revolutionary Ho Chi Minh.[18] The OSS and the Viet Minh cooperated together to fight Japanese forces in French Indochina, and the OSS trained the Viet Minh, who gave the OSS agents shelter. The People's Army of Vietnam, founded in 1944 in the mountains of northwest Vietnam, had been backed and supported by the OSS and trained by American military personnel, including Patti, who greatly respected the Vietnamese. The first commander of the PAVN was Võ Nguyên Giáp, who was trained under the watch of the Americans.

The relations between the Viet Minh and the OSS marked the beginning of American involvement in Vietnam. Later, Ho Chi Minh asked to set up an alliance with the United States, which was approved by U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt with support from U.S. General Dwight D. Eisenhower. However, relations were strained following further events in French Indochina, including the death of OSS officer A. Peter Dewey, who was shot by Viet Minh fighters during the 1945 Vietnam uprising; the Viet Minh claimed they mistook Dewey for a French soldier, and Ho Chi Minh reportedly apologized to the U.S. and ordered a search for Dewey's body,[19] though Vietnamese historian Trần Văn Giàu reported that Dewey's body was dumped in a nearby river and was never recovered.[20] After Harry S. Truman, a fervent anti-communist, took power following Roosevelt's death, a U.S.-Vietnam alliance was never established.[citation needed]

Vietnam War

 
Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson visiting a textile mill in Saigon, 1961

In the postcolonial wave following the end of World War II, the First Indochina War forced the French Fourth Republic out of French Indochina. In the 1954 Geneva Conference, French Indochina was dismantled and superseded by the independent states of North Vietnam, South Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos. However, with the Cold War ongoing, the concern became political ideologies. Vietnam had been split into two opposing countries: North Vietnam, a communist country that fought the French and thus came into opposition with American ideals; and South Vietnam, a capitalist country that fought alongside the French and was generally in line with the U.S.' geopolitical outlook that communism had to be contained. The two countries were divided at the 17th parallel north, not unlike the 38th parallel north that divided North Korea and South Korea in the Korean War. The Geneva Conference provided that a general election be held by July 1956 to create a unified Vietnamese state, but they were not directly signed onto nor accepted by delegates of South Vietnam and the U.S., and South Vietnamese leader Ngo Dinh Diem refused to allow elections.

The U.S. supported South Vietnam, having already supported France during the First Indochina War. The U.S. sent American military advisors to train and assist the Army of the Republic of Vietnam, and spent massive amounts of money in efforts to modernize the country; however, this created tensions between the U.S. and North Vietnam. Tensions reached a breaking point following the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin incident, when the U.S. accused the Vietnam People's Navy of attacking the USS Maddox and other United States Navy vessels on two separate occasions. While the first incident barely damaged the USS Maddox and resulted in 10 Vietnamese casualties (4 killed and 6 wounded), the second incident was contentious, and was proven to not have happened in the 2000s.[21] However, at the time, U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson used both incidents as justification to take any necessary retaliatory measures; the U.S. Congress promptly passed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, which authorized the deployment of American forces in Vietnam.

 
U.S. Army soldiers burning a Viet Cong base camp during the Vietnam War, 1968

The Gulf of Tonkin incident started American involvement in the Second Indochina War, known in the Western world as the "Vietnam War". For 11 years, the U.S, South Vietnam, and their allies fought North Vietnam, the Viet Cong, and their allies. Though the U.S. and South Vietnam used air superiority, close air support, and Central Intelligence Agency-led intelligence operations to their advantage, North Vietnam and the Viet Cong made use of guerrilla warfare, though their tactics gradually became more conventional as the war progressed. The Vietnam War was a massive undertaking for all involved: North Vietnam and the Viet Cong had around 690,000 soldiers by 1966, South Vietnam had a strength of 1.5 million soldiers by 1972, and the U.S. deployed a total of 2.7 million soldiers over the course of American involvement, peaking at 543,000 in April 1969. The U.S. spent roughly $140 billion ($950 billion in 2011)[22] in direct expenses to South Vietnam to build infrastructure, train an army and police force, and modernize the country.[23] Casualties and destruction caused by the war were immense, with the conflict killing between 1.3 million and 3.4 million people, a combined total of combatants and non-combatants from both sides. American society was greatly polarized by the war, which coincided with the height of the counterculture phenomenon and civil rights movement; opposition to American involvement in the Vietnam War was related to these movements, but was a major and significant movement in its own right. American sympathies toward and perspectives on Vietnam depended on political stance, and the U.S. government itself experienced divisions between pro-war and anti-war politicians.

To the United States, the Vietnam War was a Cold War conflict of political ideologies. Though the U.S. outwardly intervened in the interests of freedom, determination, and sovereignty, this was only when communism was not a major factor. However, North Vietnam was a communist country with relations to communist China and the Soviet Union, and was already surrounded and assisted by communist organizations elsewhere in Indochina such as the Khmer Rouge and the Pathet Lao, providing credence to the idea that communism was a global and monolithic force. By defeating North Vietnam, communist "tyranny and aggression" could be contained, and the security of Indochina could be preserved, with a unified Vietnam under Southern rule serving as a bulwark against communism in the region.

To North Vietnam, the war against the U.S. was simply an extension of their greater war for independence. In their view, the U.S. had merely replaced the French's role as another major-power colonialist obstacle to independence, Vietnamese reunification under Northern rule, and the rise of communism and postcolonial states in Indochina.

 
The wreckage of a People's Army of Vietnam T-54 tank, destroyed by Army of the Republic of Vietnam soldiers, 1972

In 1969, with the Vietnam War becoming increasingly unpopular in the United States, U.S. President Richard Nixon enacted a plan of "Vietnamization", where U.S. military forces withdrew from combat roles and instead only provided intelligence, support, and logistics, with the end goal being a self-sufficient South Vietnam capable of fighting the conflict themselves. By 1972, U.S. forces had largely withdrawn, and their operations were limited to air support, artillery support, advisors, and materiel shipments. On 27 January 1973, the Paris Peace Accords were signed by the U.S., North Vietnam, South Vietnam, and Viet Cong representatives. The Accords called for a ceasefire, withdrawal of all U.S. forces, continuance in place of North Vietnamese troops in the South, and the eventual reunification of Vietnam "through peaceful means". In reality, once the last U.S. combat troops left Vietnam in March 1973,[24] and the U.S. was effectively barred from providing military assistance in Indochina under the 1973 Case–Church Amendment,[25] there was no effective way to prevent North Vietnam from overwhelming South Vietnam's defenses, and the Accords proved unenforceable.

North Vietnam and South Vietnam continued to fight for two more years, from 1973 to 1975, but South Vietnam, having to fight without the American support to which it had become accustomed, and lacking the financial support to pay its troops or supply them properly, suffered severe losses of personnel and territory to North Vietnamese forces. In March 1975, North Vietnamese General Võ Nguyên Giáp of North Vietnam, planning to test American resolution, sent General Văn Tiến Dũng to launch an attack on Buôn Ma Thuột; when the U.S. Congress blocked attempts to support South Vietnam, Giáp launched a full-scale invasion of South Vietnam, and by late April, North Vietnamese forces had surrounded the South Vietnamese capital of Saigon. The U.S. launched Operation Frequent Wind, sending U.S. Navy Task Force 76 to evacuate Saigon before North Vietnamese forces could capture the city, initially only to evacuate American embassy staff but eventually accepting South Vietnamese civilians and military personnel as they boarded evacuation flights or flew their own aircraft to the evacuation fleets, to the point that aircraft that were not being used had to be pushed off aircraft carriers to make space for more. In Operation Frequent Wind, a total of 1,373 Americans and 5,595 Vietnamese and third-country nationals were evacuated by helicopter,[26]: 258  and the total number of Vietnamese evacuated by Frequent Wind or self-evacuated and ending up in the custody of the United States for processing as refugees to enter the United States totaled 138,869.[27]: 92  Shortly after, North Vietnamese forces captured Saigon, ending the Vietnam War with a decisive North Vietnamese victory and initiating the reunification of Vietnam into the modern Socialist Republic of Vietnam. Saigon was renamed to Ho Chi Minh City, but the capital of Vietnam remained in Hanoi.

Agent Orange

 
A Vietnamese professor with a group of handicapped children, many of whom developed birth defects resulting from the use of Agent Orange

"Agent Orange" was a herbicide and defoliant used by the U.S. as part of Operation Ranch Hand, a herbicidal warfare program initiated by the U.S. military. Developed from 1962 to 1971, Agent Orange consists of a fifty-fifty mixture of 2,4,5-T and 2,4-D, over 20 million gallons of it were produced by the U.S. over the course of the war. Agent Orange was primarily intended to destroy the foliage used as concealment by North Vietnamese soldiers.

The 2,4,5-T used to produce Agent Orange was later discovered to be contaminated with 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzodioxin, an extremely toxic dioxin compound. Agent Orange's use led to the deaths of thousands of people, the destruction of over 3.1 million hectares (31,000 km2 or 11,969 mi2) of Vietnam's forests, and up to a million Vietnamese and Americans alike experiencing birth defects, disabilities, and health problems resulting from the toxic chemicals used in Agent Orange.[28][29] The Viet Nam Red Cross Society estimates that up to 1 million people are disabled or have health problems due to the effects of Agent Orange, but the U.S. government has dismissed these figures as unreliable and unrealistically high.[30]

Prisoners of war and missing soldiers

Following American withdrawal from the Vietnam War in 1973, the U.S. listed about 2,500 Americans as prisoners of war (POW) or missing in action (MIA), but only 1,200 Americans were reported to have been killed in action with no body recovered. Only 591 American POWs were returned during Operation Homecoming in early 1973. Many American MIAs were pilots who were shot down over North Vietnam or Laos. Investigations of these incidents have involved determining whether the men involved survived being shot down; if they did not survive, then the U.S. government considers efforts to recover their remains. The U.S. POW and MIA issue greatly affected attempts at normalizing diplomatic ties between the U.S. and Vietnam in the aftermath of the Vietnam War

As of 2007, the U.S. government listed 1,763 Americans unaccounted for in Southeast Asia, including 1,353 in Vietnam. Since 1973, 883 Americans have been accounted for, including 627 in Vietnam. Additionally, the U.S. Department of Defense has confirmed that of the 196 individuals who were officially considered "last known alive", the U.S. government has determined the fate of all but 31. The U.S. considers achieving the fullest possible accounting of Americans missing and unaccounted for in Indochina to be one of its highest priorities with Vietnam.

Severance of diplomatic ties and attempts at normalization

Following the Vietnam War, Vietnam pursued the establishment of diplomatic relations with the United States. This was initially to obtain US$3.3 billion in reconstruction aid, which U.S. President Richard Nixon had secretly promised after the Paris Peace Accords were signed, in the form of a letter offering a specific figure.[31] In June 1975, Vietnamese Premier Phạm Văn Đồng, speaking to the National Assembly, invited the U.S. to normalize relations with Vietnam and to honor its commitment to provide reconstruction funds. Representatives of two American banks—the Bank of America and First National City Bank—were invited to Hanoi to discuss trade possibilities, and American oil companies were informed that they were welcome to apply for concessions to search for oil in Vietnamese waters.

However, the U.S. government neglected Đồng's call for normalized relations, because it was predicated on reparations, and the American political climate in the wake of the war precluded the pursuit of such an outcome. The U.S. also applied a trade embargo against Vietnam in 1975. In response to Vietnam, the administration of U.S. President Gerald Ford imposed its own precondition for normal relations by announcing that a full accounting of American POWs and MIA, including the return of any remains, would be required before normalization attempts. No concessions were made on either side until U.S. President Jimmy Carter softened the American demand from a full accounting to simply the fullest possible accounting, and dispatched a diplomatic mission to Vietnam in 1977 to initiate normalization discussions.

 
A Vietnamese refugee fleeing Vietnam by boat climbs a rope ladder to the deck of the USS White Plains, 1979

Although Vietnam was initially adamant about American economic assistance (their first postwar economic plan counted on the amount promised by President Nixon), the condition was dropped in mid-1978, when Vietnamese Foreign Minister Nguyễn Cơ Thạch and the U.S. government reached an agreement in principle on normalization, but the date was left vague. When Thạch urged November 1978, the U.S. government was noncommittal: at that time, the U.S. was preoccupied with a large influx in Vietnamese boat people, and they were already attempting to normalize relations with China; relations between Vietnam and China were strained at the time—eventually deteriorating into the Sino-Vietnamese War in 1979—and the U.S. did not wish to risk their relations with China by normalizing relations with one of China's enemies. The Vietnamese government responded by formalizing their relations with the Soviet Union. Their original hope, however, had been to gain both diplomatic recognition from the United States and a friendship treaty with the Soviet Union, as a double guarantee against future Chinese interference. In the U.S., the issue of normalizing relations with Vietnam was complicated by the Cambodian–Vietnamese War, the Vietnamese refugee crisis, and the unresolved POW and MIA issues, with U.S. President Ronald Reagan continuing to enforce the trade embargo and barring normalization as long as Vietnamese troops occupied Cambodia. Any efforts to improve relations remained closely tied to the U.S.' willingness to honor its 1973 aid commitment to Vietnam and Vietnam's failure to account for the whereabouts of American MIAs in Indochina.

Beginning in mid-1978, however, Vietnam dropped its insistence that the MIA and aid questions be resolved as a precondition for normalization, and stopped linking the MIA issue to other unresolved matters between the two countries. Vietnamese leaders contrasted their restraint on the MIA issue with its alleged political exploitation by the United States as a condition for normal relations. As additional signs of goodwill, Hanoi permitted the joint U.S.-Vietnamese excavation of a B-52 crash site in 1985, and returned the remains of a number of American service members between 1985 and 1987. Vietnamese spokesmen also claimed during this period to have a two-year plan to resolve the MIA question, but did not reveal details.

Although Vietnam's Sixth National Party Congress in December 1986 officially paid little attention to restoring diplomatic relations with the U.S., the report of the Congress noted that Vietnam was continuing to hold talks with the U.S. on humanitarian issues, and expressed a readiness to improve relations. Although ambivalent in tone, the message was more positive than the 1982 Fifth National Party Congress report, which had attributed the stalemated relationship to American "hostile policy." The improved wording was attributable to the influence of newly appointed Party General Secretary Nguyễn Văn Linh, who was expected to attach high priority to expanding Vietnam's links with the West. Despite signs of improvement, in mid-1987, the Vietnamese government, having determined that cooperation had gained few concessions from the U.S., reverted to its pre-1978 position linking the aid and MIA issues. However, a meeting between Vietnamese leaders and Reagan's special envoy on MIAs, General John William Vessey Jr., in August 1987 yielded significant gains for both sides: in exchange for greater Vietnamese cooperation on resolving the MIA issue, the U.S. agreed to officially encourage charitable assistance for Vietnam. Although the agreement fell short of Hanoi's requests for economic aid or war reparations, it marked the first time that the U.S. had offered anything in return for Vietnamese assistance in accounting for the MIAs, and was an important step toward rapprochement.

Rapprochement

The influence of U.S. Senators John McCain and John Kerry on U.S. President Bill Clinton was instrumental in the U.S. government's 1994 decision to lift the trade embargo against Vietnam.[32] Both Kerry and McCain were decorated veterans of the Vietnam War who served on the Senate Select Committee on P.O.W./M.I.A. Affairs.[33] In this role, they became intimately familiar with the issue of American MIAs, frequently traveling to Vietnam and coordinating with Vietnamese government officials.[33] Following years of controversy in the U.S. over the fate of MIAs, as well as measurable progress by the Vietnamese government in meeting related American demands, Kerry and McCain began to advocate lifting the embargo, believing the policy would foster binational reconciliation, post-Vietnam War healing in the U.S., and further American economic and security interests. According to then-Senator Ted Kennedy, “John Kerry did it because the issue of the war burned in his soul, and he found a soulmate in John McCain.”[33] On many occasions, McCain and Kerry met personally with Clinton to promote lifting the embargo. In one conversation with Clinton, McCain stated, “It doesn’t matter to me anymore, Mr. President, who was for the war and who was against the war. I’m tired of looking back in anger. What’s important is that we move forward now.”[33] In arguing their case to Clinton, the Senators “offered geopolitical and economic reasons, but also emphasized the matter of national honor, since the Vietnamese had diligently done all that we had asked them to in the matter of M.I.A [soldiers].”[33]

The efforts of Kerry and McCain in the U.S. Congress and in the public sphere created the political capital and consensus necessary for the Clinton administration to lift the embargo.[34] Although officials in the Clinton administration were ultimately in consensus to lift the embargo, the administration perceived they did not possess sufficient political credibility.[33] Clinton had avoided military service in the Vietnam War as a young man, infamously describing the conflict in a letter in 1969 as “a war I opposed and despised with a depth of feeling I had reserved solely for racism in America before Vietnam.”[35] Consequently, Kerry and McCain sought to use their widespread credibility on the matter to create an environment in which Clinton could lift the embargo. In 1993, Kerry and McCain accompanied Clinton to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, despite substantial opposition from veterans’ groups.[33] Moreover, the two men accompanied Clinton in 1993 “as his escorts” to “deliver the commencement address at Northeastern University.”[33] Later, in 1994, Kerry and McCain co-sponsored a bipartisan Senate resolution urging the Clinton administration to lift the embargo. Despite significant opposition from Republican leadership and veterans’ groups, “McCain’s sponsorship persuaded twenty Republicans to vote for the measure, which passed by a vote of sixty-two to thirty-eight.”[33] While developing the bill, Kerry was in frequent communication with officials within the Clinton administration.[33] Following the vote, Kerry emphasized the promotion of national healing, stating, “it was time to put the war behind us.”[33] Likewise, McCain described the resolution as “as a seminal event in U.S.-Vietnamese relations,” adding that “the vote will give the President the… political cover he needs to lift the embargo.”[36]

The U.S. embargo on Vietnam was eventually lifted in February 1994. Formal normalization occurred in 1995, when both countries opened liaison offices that were later upgraded to formal embassies later in the year, with the U.S. later opening the Consulate General of the United States, Ho Chi Minh City, and Vietnam opening a consulate in San Francisco.[37] In 1997, the Vietnamese government agreed to pay the debts of the South Vietnamese government, then amounting to $140 million, in order to be allowed to trade with the U.S..[38] Following this, trade volumes boomed between the two countries.[39] Also in 1997, Clinton appointed former POW and U.S. Congressman Douglas "Pete" Peterson as the first U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam.

21st century

 
U.S. President Donald Trump and Vietnamese President and General Secretary Nguyễn Phú Trọng in front of a statue of Ho Chi Minh in Hanoi, 27 February 2019

The annual Bilateral Human Rights Dialogue resumed in 2006 after a two-year hiatus. The U.S. and Vietnam signed a Bilateral Trade Agreement in July 2000, which went into force in December 2001. In 2003, the two countries signed a Counternarcotics Letter of Agreement (amended in 2006), a Civil Aviation Agreement, and a textile agreement. In January 2007, Congress approved Permanent Normal Trade Relations (PNTR) for Vietnam. In July 2015, the United States hosted Vietnamese Communist Party General Secretary Nguyễn Phú Trọng in the first-ever visit of a Vietnamese Communist Party General Secretary to the United States following a concerted effort by the Obama administration to pursue warmer relations with Vietnam.[40]

Human rights

Vietnam's suppression of political dissent and restrictions on freedom of speech have been an issue of contention in terms of Vietnam's relations with the United States, and Vietnam's actions against freedom of expression have drawn criticism from the U.S. government.

In spring 2007, Vietnam's government launched a crackdown on political dissidents, and in November of that year, Vietnamese authorities arrested a group of pro-democracy activists, including two Americans. Despite continued suppression of dissent and expression, Vietnam made significant progress on expanding freedom of religion in 2005, when Vietnam passed comprehensive religious freedom legislation, outlawing forced renunciations and permitting the official recognition of new denominations. As a result, in November 2006, the U.S. Department of State lifted the designation of Vietnam as a “Country of Particular Concern,” based on a determination that the country was no longer a serious violator of religious freedoms, as defined by the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998. This decision was reaffirmed by the Department of State in November 2007. However, serious concerns continue due to Vietnam's suppression of freedom of speech.[41][42]

U.S. President Donald Trump was criticized for not mentioning human rights issues in Vietnam during his visit to Vietnam in 2017 and before the visit of Vietnamese Premier Nguyễn Xuân Phúc to the United States.[43]

Transport

In December 2003, the United States and Vietnam signed a Bilateral Air Transport Agreement. Several U.S. carriers already have third-party code sharing agreements with Vietnam Airlines. Direct flights between Ho Chi Minh City and San Francisco began in December 2004.[citation needed] Vietnam and the United States also signed a bilateral Maritime Agreement in March 2007 that opened the maritime transport and services industry of Vietnam to U.S. firms. In 2011 the U.S. banks agreed to invest $1.5 billion in Vietnamese infrastructure.

Military

 
Vietnamese military officers watching the USS Curtis Wilbur preparing to dock at the port of Da Nang, July 2004

According to the Council on Foreign Relations, Vietnam's defense policy is based on the "Four 'No's" principle: no military alliances, no foreign troops stationed on Vietnamese soil, no partnering with a foreign power to combat another, and no force or threatening to use force in international relations.[44] This was historically "Three 'No's"; however, the fourth, denouncing the use of force, was added in the December 2019 "National Defense White Paper", which also stated that Vietnam is willing to allow ships from other countries to dock at its ports.[45] Cooperation between the United States and Vietnam in other areas, such as defense, nonproliferation, counterterrorism, and law enforcement, is expanding steadily.

The territorial disputes in the South China Sea with China, which has become more assertive in its territorial claims, has also gradually strengthened relations between Vietnam, the U.S., and other Chinese rivals, including India and fellow ASEAN member and U.S. ally the Philippines.[46][47][48] The U.S. favors an open South China Sea for its larger Indo-Pacific strategy and because Chinese territorial claims in the region threaten the security and prosperity of its key regional allies.[49] With Vietnam's historically complex relationship with China that included past territorial disputes, Vietnam feels that Chinese claims and actions in the South China Sea threaten its sovereignty and territorial integrity.[45] In this regard, American and Vietnamese security interests align as they oppose Chinese in the South China Sea.

Vietnam hosted visits by five U.S. Navy vessels in 2007, including a port call to Da Nang by the amphibious assault ship USS Peleliu carrying a multinational contingent of medical and engineering personnel. In June 2007, Vietnamese observers took part for the first time in the multinational naval exercise Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training (CARAT), organized by the U.S. Navy. Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyễn Tấn Dũng stated that the country is in the final stages of preparation to take part in international peacekeeping, as part of its contribution as a new member of the United Nations Security Council.[citation needed]

When asked about the killing of Osama bin Laden in 2011, Nguyen Phuong Nga, a spokeswoman for the Foreign Ministry of Vietnam, agreed with American counterterrorism measures, saying, "Terrorists must bear responsibility for their acts and should be severely punished. Vietnam will continue to join the international community in the fight against terrorism, based on the UN Charter and the basic principles of international law, to eliminate terrorism."[50]

 
Members of the Vietnam People's Navy waving goodbye to the crew of the U.S. Navy's USS Coronado after an exchange between the two navies, 10 July 2017

In April 2013, following increased tensions between Vietnamese fishing vessels and the China Coast Guard, which peaked a month prior after a Chinese warning flare accidentally set a Vietnamese fishing boat ablaze, the Vietnam People's Navy and U.S. Coast Guard cooperated to improve security in Vietnamese waters and resolve confrontations between Vietnamese fishers and Chinese vessels.[51]

In June 2013, Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyễn Tấn Dũng said in a speech at the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore that he would welcome the U.S. playing a larger role in tempering regional tensions, as China and some of its Southeast Asian neighbors remain deadlocked over competing territorial claims in the South China Sea, saying, "No regional country would oppose the strategic engagement of extra-regional powers if such engagement aims to enhance cooperation for peace, stability and development. We attach special importance to the roles played by a vigorously rising China and by the United States — a Pacific power."[52][53]

In October 2013, the United States and Vietnam signed a pact allowing for the transfer of nuclear fuel and technology from the U.S. to Vietnam, which is already working with Russia to complete its first nuclear plant by 2014 to meet its rising energy demands, with an American official noting that, "Vietnam is actively taking steps now toward development of a robust domestic infrastructure to support a nuclear energy program."[54][55][56] In line with its more active engagement with Vietnam, the U.S. has provided funds and equipment for Vietnamese naval capabilities. In 2013, Secretary of State John Kerry announced that the U.S. would provide Vietnam with $18 million to enhance the capacity of its coast guard.[57]

Additionally, the U.S. and Vietnam also cooperate in the Clean Energy Sector. In 2014, the U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam announced the U.S. was providing technical assistance for developing wind power systems in Vietnam.[58]

In early October 2014, the U.S. approved a relaxation of its longstanding arms embargo on Vietnam.[59] In May 2016, President Obama announced the full lifting of the embargo during his visit to Vietnam.[60]

On 2 October 2016, U.S. Navy destroyer USS John S. McCain and submarine tender USS Frank Cable made the first port visit to Cam Ranh Bay since 1975.[61] A U.S. Navy aircraft carrier (USS Carl Vinson) visited Vietnam in March 2018. According to the Vietnam Foreign Ministry, the visit would "contribute to maintaining peace, stability, security, cooperation and development in the region".[62]

In May 2017, the U.S. delivered six 45-foot Defiant-class patrol boats to the Vietnam Coast Guard.[63] The cooperation in matters of their naval capabilities suggests that the shared security concerns over the South China Sea has strengthened the U.S.-Vietnam military relationship.[57]

The U.S.-Vietnam defense relationship, however, is limited by historical memory and Vietnam's multivector foreign policy. While fears about regime change have lowered, the U.S.' frequent criticism of Vietnam's human rights situation is understood in the context of the Vietnam War and creates worry in Vietnam about the U.S.' true intentions. This may serve to limit the scope and scale of military cooperation.[57] Similarly, with its multivector foreign policy, Vietnam avoids aligning too closely with any particular regional power, and in particular limits its engagement with the U.S. to avoid upsetting China.[57] To that end, Russia, not the U.S., is the largest arms exporter to Vietnam.[64]

Principal U.S. officials

Diplomatic missions

The U.S. Embassy in Vietnam is located in Hanoi. The U.S. Consulate General is located in Ho Chi Minh City. The Vietnamese Consulate General to the U.S. is located in San Francisco, California. In 2009, the United States received permission to open a consulate in Da Nang; in 2010, Vietnam officially inaugurated a consulate general in Houston.

See also

References

General
  •   This article incorporates public domain material from U.S. Bilateral Relations Fact Sheets. United States Department of State.
  •   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. Country Studies. Federal Research Division.
Specific
  1. ^ "US, Vietnam ties have never been better". Asia Times. 13 July 2020. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  2. ^ "Can Vietnam Be America's New Ally Against China?". The National Interest. 7 November 2019. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  3. ^ "Vietnam, unlikely US ally". The Guardian. 31 August 2010. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  4. ^ "Will We See a US-Vietnam Strategic Partnership?". The Diplomat. 15 July 2020. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
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  6. ^ "Opinion of the United States". Pew Research Center. 2017. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
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Further reading

  • Demmer, Amanda C. After Saigon's Fall: Refugees and US-Vietnamese Relations, 1975–2000 (Cambridge University Press, 2021, focus on restoration of relations.
  • Matray, James I. ed. East Asia and the United States: An Encyclopedia of relations since 1784 (2 vol. Greenwood, 2002). excerpt v 2

External links

  • History of Vietnam - U.S. relations
  • from the
  • Vietnam visa for U.S citizens

united, states, vietnam, relations, this, article, based, partially, entirely, public, domain, works, government, thus, require, cleanup, help, rewriting, from, neutral, viewpoint, meet, wikipedia, standards, expanding, article, adding, verifiable, content, fr. This article is based partially or entirely on public domain works of the U S government and thus may require cleanup You can help by rewriting it from a neutral viewpoint to meet Wikipedia s standards and expanding the article by adding verifiable content from reliable sources The talk page may contain relevant discussion November 2015 Relations between the United States and Vietnam have historically been complex and have repeatedly switched back and forth between positive and negative but the United States and Vietnam share warm diplomatic relations in the present American Vietnamese relationsUnited States VietnamDiplomatic missionUnited States Embassy HanoiVietnamese Embassy Washington D C EnvoyAmbassador Marc KnapperAmbassador Nguyễn Quốc DũngMeeting of US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Vietnamese Minister of Foreign Affairs Phạm Binh Minh in 2019 Formal relations between the two countries were first initiated in the 19th century under U S President Andrew Jackson but relations soured after the U S refused to protect the Kingdom of Vietnam from French invasion During World War II the U S covertly assisted the Viet Minh in fighting Japanese forces in French Indochina though a formal alliance was not established After the dissolution of French Indochina in 1954 the U S supported the capitalist South Vietnam as opposed to communist North Vietnam and fought North Vietnam directly during the Vietnam War After American withdrawal in 1973 and the subsequent fall of South Vietnam in 1975 the U S applied a trade embargo and severed ties with Vietnam mostly out of concerns relating to Vietnamese boat people and the Vietnam War POW MIA issue Attempts at re establishing relations went unfulfilled for decades until U S President Bill Clinton began normalizing diplomatic relations in the 1990s In 1994 the U S lifted its 30 year trade embargo on Vietnam The following year both countries established embassies and consulates Relations between the two countries continued to improve into the 21st century Vietnam is now considered to be a potential ally of the United States especially in the geopolitical context of the territorial disputes in the South China Sea and in the containment of Chinese expansionism 1 2 3 4 5 Vietnam one of the countries with the most favorable public opinion regarding the U S is the only communist country to have such a favorable view 6 7 8 9 10 Every U S president since diplomatic normalization in 1995 has visited Vietnam at least once highlighting the importance of Vietnam in the U S s growing pivot to Asia these visits have been welcomed by the Vietnamese populace despite political differences 11 12 13 14 Vietnamese Americans making up more than 2 1 million people are mostly immigrants who moved to the U S after the Vietnam War they comprise nearly half of all overseas Vietnamese but are mostly loyal to the fallen South Vietnamese government instead of the ruling communist government 15 Contents 1 History 1 1 19th century 1 2 World War II 1 3 Vietnam War 1 3 1 Agent Orange 1 3 2 Prisoners of war and missing soldiers 1 4 Severance of diplomatic ties and attempts at normalization 1 5 Rapprochement 1 6 21st century 2 Human rights 3 Transport 4 Military 5 Principal U S officials 6 Diplomatic missions 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory Edit19th century Edit In 1829 U S President Andrew Jackson sent a diplomatic delegation led by Edmund Roberts on the USS Peacock to the Nguyễn dynasty to establish bilateral relations and expand trade between the two countries The ship arrived in Vũng Lấm Phu Yen province on 2 January 1833 16 The ruler of Vietnam at the time Emperor Minh Mạng was not eager to allow foreigners to freely enter Vietnam and engage in trade The emperor required that Americans follow Vietnamese laws and only allowed them to do business in Da Nang Central Vietnam After receiving this unwelcome message Edmund Roberts and his delegation left Vietnam 17 24 The American Vietnamese relationship remained frozen after many disagreements and tensions from 1836 to 1859 This lasted until 1873 when Vietnam had trouble fighting against the invading French forces in northern Vietnam Emperor Tự Đức appointed Foreign Minister Bui Viện as Grand Emissary and sent him to the United States to seek support and aid against the French Empire The diplomatic delegation passed through Yokohama Japan then arrived in San Francisco in mid 1873 17 274 Bui Viện and the Vietnamese emissaries traveled to Washington D C and met with U S President Ulysses S Grant who promised aid and an alliance with Vietnam However the U S Congress cancelled Grant s intervention in Vietnam 17 275 In 1884 Vietnam was completely conquered by France becoming French Indochina World War II Edit Main articles Office of Strategic Services and Viet Minh A 1946 telegram sent by Hồ Chi Minh the leader of the Việt Minh and head of the Provisional Revolutionary Government of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam addressed to President Harry S Truman asking the United States to get involved in Vietnam in support of Vietnamese independence The U S and Vietnam had informal relations during World War II though this was not directly with French Indochina Though the U S had good relations with the French Third Republic after the latter fell to Nazi Germany in 1940 Germany established Vichy France which took over administration of the French colonies including French Indochina Vichy France allowed the Empire of Japan to access French Indochina and in July 1941 Japan extended its control to the whole of French Indochina During the Pacific War American agents of the Office of Strategic Services led by United States Army officer Archimedes Patti arrived in Vietnam and met with the Viet Minh a communist independence movement led by pro American revolutionary Ho Chi Minh 18 The OSS and the Viet Minh cooperated together to fight Japanese forces in French Indochina and the OSS trained the Viet Minh who gave the OSS agents shelter The People s Army of Vietnam founded in 1944 in the mountains of northwest Vietnam had been backed and supported by the OSS and trained by American military personnel including Patti who greatly respected the Vietnamese The first commander of the PAVN was Vo Nguyen Giap who was trained under the watch of the Americans The relations between the Viet Minh and the OSS marked the beginning of American involvement in Vietnam Later Ho Chi Minh asked to set up an alliance with the United States which was approved by U S President Franklin D Roosevelt with support from U S General Dwight D Eisenhower However relations were strained following further events in French Indochina including the death of OSS officer A Peter Dewey who was shot by Viet Minh fighters during the 1945 Vietnam uprising the Viet Minh claimed they mistook Dewey for a French soldier and Ho Chi Minh reportedly apologized to the U S and ordered a search for Dewey s body 19 though Vietnamese historian Trần Văn Giau reported that Dewey s body was dumped in a nearby river and was never recovered 20 After Harry S Truman a fervent anti communist took power following Roosevelt s death a U S Vietnam alliance was never established citation needed Vietnam War Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article United States in the Vietnam War Vice President Lyndon B Johnson visiting a textile mill in Saigon 1961In the postcolonial wave following the end of World War II the First Indochina War forced the French Fourth Republic out of French Indochina In the 1954 Geneva Conference French Indochina was dismantled and superseded by the independent states of North Vietnam South Vietnam Cambodia and Laos However with the Cold War ongoing the concern became political ideologies Vietnam had been split into two opposing countries North Vietnam a communist country that fought the French and thus came into opposition with American ideals and South Vietnam a capitalist country that fought alongside the French and was generally in line with the U S geopolitical outlook that communism had to be contained The two countries were divided at the 17th parallel north not unlike the 38th parallel north that divided North Korea and South Korea in the Korean War The Geneva Conference provided that a general election be held by July 1956 to create a unified Vietnamese state but they were not directly signed onto nor accepted by delegates of South Vietnam and the U S and South Vietnamese leader Ngo Dinh Diem refused to allow elections The U S supported South Vietnam having already supported France during the First Indochina War The U S sent American military advisors to train and assist the Army of the Republic of Vietnam and spent massive amounts of money in efforts to modernize the country however this created tensions between the U S and North Vietnam Tensions reached a breaking point following the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin incident when the U S accused the Vietnam People s Navy of attacking the USS Maddox and other United States Navy vessels on two separate occasions While the first incident barely damaged the USS Maddox and resulted in 10 Vietnamese casualties 4 killed and 6 wounded the second incident was contentious and was proven to not have happened in the 2000s 21 However at the time U S President Lyndon B Johnson used both incidents as justification to take any necessary retaliatory measures the U S Congress promptly passed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution which authorized the deployment of American forces in Vietnam U S Army soldiers burning a Viet Cong base camp during the Vietnam War 1968 The Gulf of Tonkin incident started American involvement in the Second Indochina War known in the Western world as the Vietnam War For 11 years the U S South Vietnam and their allies fought North Vietnam the Viet Cong and their allies Though the U S and South Vietnam used air superiority close air support and Central Intelligence Agency led intelligence operations to their advantage North Vietnam and the Viet Cong made use of guerrilla warfare though their tactics gradually became more conventional as the war progressed The Vietnam War was a massive undertaking for all involved North Vietnam and the Viet Cong had around 690 000 soldiers by 1966 South Vietnam had a strength of 1 5 million soldiers by 1972 and the U S deployed a total of 2 7 million soldiers over the course of American involvement peaking at 543 000 in April 1969 The U S spent roughly 140 billion 950 billion in 2011 22 in direct expenses to South Vietnam to build infrastructure train an army and police force and modernize the country 23 Casualties and destruction caused by the war were immense with the conflict killing between 1 3 million and 3 4 million people a combined total of combatants and non combatants from both sides American society was greatly polarized by the war which coincided with the height of the counterculture phenomenon and civil rights movement opposition to American involvement in the Vietnam War was related to these movements but was a major and significant movement in its own right American sympathies toward and perspectives on Vietnam depended on political stance and the U S government itself experienced divisions between pro war and anti war politicians To the United States the Vietnam War was a Cold War conflict of political ideologies Though the U S outwardly intervened in the interests of freedom determination and sovereignty this was only when communism was not a major factor However North Vietnam was a communist country with relations to communist China and the Soviet Union and was already surrounded and assisted by communist organizations elsewhere in Indochina such as the Khmer Rouge and the Pathet Lao providing credence to the idea that communism was a global and monolithic force By defeating North Vietnam communist tyranny and aggression could be contained and the security of Indochina could be preserved with a unified Vietnam under Southern rule serving as a bulwark against communism in the region To North Vietnam the war against the U S was simply an extension of their greater war for independence In their view the U S had merely replaced the French s role as another major power colonialist obstacle to independence Vietnamese reunification under Northern rule and the rise of communism and postcolonial states in Indochina The wreckage of a People s Army of Vietnam T 54 tank destroyed by Army of the Republic of Vietnam soldiers 1972 In 1969 with the Vietnam War becoming increasingly unpopular in the United States U S President Richard Nixon enacted a plan of Vietnamization where U S military forces withdrew from combat roles and instead only provided intelligence support and logistics with the end goal being a self sufficient South Vietnam capable of fighting the conflict themselves By 1972 U S forces had largely withdrawn and their operations were limited to air support artillery support advisors and materiel shipments On 27 January 1973 the Paris Peace Accords were signed by the U S North Vietnam South Vietnam and Viet Cong representatives The Accords called for a ceasefire withdrawal of all U S forces continuance in place of North Vietnamese troops in the South and the eventual reunification of Vietnam through peaceful means In reality once the last U S combat troops left Vietnam in March 1973 24 and the U S was effectively barred from providing military assistance in Indochina under the 1973 Case Church Amendment 25 there was no effective way to prevent North Vietnam from overwhelming South Vietnam s defenses and the Accords proved unenforceable North Vietnam and South Vietnam continued to fight for two more years from 1973 to 1975 but South Vietnam having to fight without the American support to which it had become accustomed and lacking the financial support to pay its troops or supply them properly suffered severe losses of personnel and territory to North Vietnamese forces In March 1975 North Vietnamese General Vo Nguyen Giap of North Vietnam planning to test American resolution sent General Văn Tiến Dũng to launch an attack on Buon Ma Thuột when the U S Congress blocked attempts to support South Vietnam Giap launched a full scale invasion of South Vietnam and by late April North Vietnamese forces had surrounded the South Vietnamese capital of Saigon The U S launched Operation Frequent Wind sending U S Navy Task Force 76 to evacuate Saigon before North Vietnamese forces could capture the city initially only to evacuate American embassy staff but eventually accepting South Vietnamese civilians and military personnel as they boarded evacuation flights or flew their own aircraft to the evacuation fleets to the point that aircraft that were not being used had to be pushed off aircraft carriers to make space for more In Operation Frequent Wind a total of 1 373 Americans and 5 595 Vietnamese and third country nationals were evacuated by helicopter 26 258 and the total number of Vietnamese evacuated by Frequent Wind or self evacuated and ending up in the custody of the United States for processing as refugees to enter the United States totaled 138 869 27 92 Shortly after North Vietnamese forces captured Saigon ending the Vietnam War with a decisive North Vietnamese victory and initiating the reunification of Vietnam into the modern Socialist Republic of Vietnam Saigon was renamed to Ho Chi Minh City but the capital of Vietnam remained in Hanoi Agent Orange Edit Main article Agent Orange A Vietnamese professor with a group of handicapped children many of whom developed birth defects resulting from the use of Agent Orange Agent Orange was a herbicide and defoliant used by the U S as part of Operation Ranch Hand a herbicidal warfare program initiated by the U S military Developed from 1962 to 1971 Agent Orange consists of a fifty fifty mixture of 2 4 5 T and 2 4 D over 20 million gallons of it were produced by the U S over the course of the war Agent Orange was primarily intended to destroy the foliage used as concealment by North Vietnamese soldiers The 2 4 5 T used to produce Agent Orange was later discovered to be contaminated with 2 3 7 8 Tetrachlorodibenzodioxin an extremely toxic dioxin compound Agent Orange s use led to the deaths of thousands of people the destruction of over 3 1 million hectares 31 000 km2 or 11 969 mi2 of Vietnam s forests and up to a million Vietnamese and Americans alike experiencing birth defects disabilities and health problems resulting from the toxic chemicals used in Agent Orange 28 29 The Viet Nam Red Cross Society estimates that up to 1 million people are disabled or have health problems due to the effects of Agent Orange but the U S government has dismissed these figures as unreliable and unrealistically high 30 Prisoners of war and missing soldiers Edit Main article Vietnam War POW MIA issue Following American withdrawal from the Vietnam War in 1973 the U S listed about 2 500 Americans as prisoners of war POW or missing in action MIA but only 1 200 Americans were reported to have been killed in action with no body recovered Only 591 American POWs were returned during Operation Homecoming in early 1973 Many American MIAs were pilots who were shot down over North Vietnam or Laos Investigations of these incidents have involved determining whether the men involved survived being shot down if they did not survive then the U S government considers efforts to recover their remains The U S POW and MIA issue greatly affected attempts at normalizing diplomatic ties between the U S and Vietnam in the aftermath of the Vietnam WarAs of 2007 the U S government listed 1 763 Americans unaccounted for in Southeast Asia including 1 353 in Vietnam Since 1973 883 Americans have been accounted for including 627 in Vietnam Additionally the U S Department of Defense has confirmed that of the 196 individuals who were officially considered last known alive the U S government has determined the fate of all but 31 The U S considers achieving the fullest possible accounting of Americans missing and unaccounted for in Indochina to be one of its highest priorities with Vietnam Severance of diplomatic ties and attempts at normalization Edit Following the Vietnam War Vietnam pursued the establishment of diplomatic relations with the United States This was initially to obtain US 3 3 billion in reconstruction aid which U S President Richard Nixon had secretly promised after the Paris Peace Accords were signed in the form of a letter offering a specific figure 31 In June 1975 Vietnamese Premier Phạm Văn Đồng speaking to the National Assembly invited the U S to normalize relations with Vietnam and to honor its commitment to provide reconstruction funds Representatives of two American banks the Bank of America and First National City Bank were invited to Hanoi to discuss trade possibilities and American oil companies were informed that they were welcome to apply for concessions to search for oil in Vietnamese waters However the U S government neglected Đồng s call for normalized relations because it was predicated on reparations and the American political climate in the wake of the war precluded the pursuit of such an outcome The U S also applied a trade embargo against Vietnam in 1975 In response to Vietnam the administration of U S President Gerald Ford imposed its own precondition for normal relations by announcing that a full accounting of American POWs and MIA including the return of any remains would be required before normalization attempts No concessions were made on either side until U S President Jimmy Carter softened the American demand from a full accounting to simply the fullest possible accounting and dispatched a diplomatic mission to Vietnam in 1977 to initiate normalization discussions A Vietnamese refugee fleeing Vietnam by boat climbs a rope ladder to the deck of the USS White Plains 1979 Although Vietnam was initially adamant about American economic assistance their first postwar economic plan counted on the amount promised by President Nixon the condition was dropped in mid 1978 when Vietnamese Foreign Minister Nguyễn Cơ Thạch and the U S government reached an agreement in principle on normalization but the date was left vague When Thạch urged November 1978 the U S government was noncommittal at that time the U S was preoccupied with a large influx in Vietnamese boat people and they were already attempting to normalize relations with China relations between Vietnam and China were strained at the time eventually deteriorating into the Sino Vietnamese War in 1979 and the U S did not wish to risk their relations with China by normalizing relations with one of China s enemies The Vietnamese government responded by formalizing their relations with the Soviet Union Their original hope however had been to gain both diplomatic recognition from the United States and a friendship treaty with the Soviet Union as a double guarantee against future Chinese interference In the U S the issue of normalizing relations with Vietnam was complicated by the Cambodian Vietnamese War the Vietnamese refugee crisis and the unresolved POW and MIA issues with U S President Ronald Reagan continuing to enforce the trade embargo and barring normalization as long as Vietnamese troops occupied Cambodia Any efforts to improve relations remained closely tied to the U S willingness to honor its 1973 aid commitment to Vietnam and Vietnam s failure to account for the whereabouts of American MIAs in Indochina Beginning in mid 1978 however Vietnam dropped its insistence that the MIA and aid questions be resolved as a precondition for normalization and stopped linking the MIA issue to other unresolved matters between the two countries Vietnamese leaders contrasted their restraint on the MIA issue with its alleged political exploitation by the United States as a condition for normal relations As additional signs of goodwill Hanoi permitted the joint U S Vietnamese excavation of a B 52 crash site in 1985 and returned the remains of a number of American service members between 1985 and 1987 Vietnamese spokesmen also claimed during this period to have a two year plan to resolve the MIA question but did not reveal details Although Vietnam s Sixth National Party Congress in December 1986 officially paid little attention to restoring diplomatic relations with the U S the report of the Congress noted that Vietnam was continuing to hold talks with the U S on humanitarian issues and expressed a readiness to improve relations Although ambivalent in tone the message was more positive than the 1982 Fifth National Party Congress report which had attributed the stalemated relationship to American hostile policy The improved wording was attributable to the influence of newly appointed Party General Secretary Nguyễn Văn Linh who was expected to attach high priority to expanding Vietnam s links with the West Despite signs of improvement in mid 1987 the Vietnamese government having determined that cooperation had gained few concessions from the U S reverted to its pre 1978 position linking the aid and MIA issues However a meeting between Vietnamese leaders and Reagan s special envoy on MIAs General John William Vessey Jr in August 1987 yielded significant gains for both sides in exchange for greater Vietnamese cooperation on resolving the MIA issue the U S agreed to officially encourage charitable assistance for Vietnam Although the agreement fell short of Hanoi s requests for economic aid or war reparations it marked the first time that the U S had offered anything in return for Vietnamese assistance in accounting for the MIAs and was an important step toward rapprochement Rapprochement Edit The influence of U S Senators John McCain and John Kerry on U S President Bill Clinton was instrumental in the U S government s 1994 decision to lift the trade embargo against Vietnam 32 Both Kerry and McCain were decorated veterans of the Vietnam War who served on the Senate Select Committee on P O W M I A Affairs 33 In this role they became intimately familiar with the issue of American MIAs frequently traveling to Vietnam and coordinating with Vietnamese government officials 33 Following years of controversy in the U S over the fate of MIAs as well as measurable progress by the Vietnamese government in meeting related American demands Kerry and McCain began to advocate lifting the embargo believing the policy would foster binational reconciliation post Vietnam War healing in the U S and further American economic and security interests According to then Senator Ted Kennedy John Kerry did it because the issue of the war burned in his soul and he found a soulmate in John McCain 33 On many occasions McCain and Kerry met personally with Clinton to promote lifting the embargo In one conversation with Clinton McCain stated It doesn t matter to me anymore Mr President who was for the war and who was against the war I m tired of looking back in anger What s important is that we move forward now 33 In arguing their case to Clinton the Senators offered geopolitical and economic reasons but also emphasized the matter of national honor since the Vietnamese had diligently done all that we had asked them to in the matter of M I A soldiers 33 The efforts of Kerry and McCain in the U S Congress and in the public sphere created the political capital and consensus necessary for the Clinton administration to lift the embargo 34 Although officials in the Clinton administration were ultimately in consensus to lift the embargo the administration perceived they did not possess sufficient political credibility 33 Clinton had avoided military service in the Vietnam War as a young man infamously describing the conflict in a letter in 1969 as a war I opposed and despised with a depth of feeling I had reserved solely for racism in America before Vietnam 35 Consequently Kerry and McCain sought to use their widespread credibility on the matter to create an environment in which Clinton could lift the embargo In 1993 Kerry and McCain accompanied Clinton to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial despite substantial opposition from veterans groups 33 Moreover the two men accompanied Clinton in 1993 as his escorts to deliver the commencement address at Northeastern University 33 Later in 1994 Kerry and McCain co sponsored a bipartisan Senate resolution urging the Clinton administration to lift the embargo Despite significant opposition from Republican leadership and veterans groups McCain s sponsorship persuaded twenty Republicans to vote for the measure which passed by a vote of sixty two to thirty eight 33 While developing the bill Kerry was in frequent communication with officials within the Clinton administration 33 Following the vote Kerry emphasized the promotion of national healing stating it was time to put the war behind us 33 Likewise McCain described the resolution as as a seminal event in U S Vietnamese relations adding that the vote will give the President the political cover he needs to lift the embargo 36 The U S embargo on Vietnam was eventually lifted in February 1994 Formal normalization occurred in 1995 when both countries opened liaison offices that were later upgraded to formal embassies later in the year with the U S later opening the Consulate General of the United States Ho Chi Minh City and Vietnam opening a consulate in San Francisco 37 In 1997 the Vietnamese government agreed to pay the debts of the South Vietnamese government then amounting to 140 million in order to be allowed to trade with the U S 38 Following this trade volumes boomed between the two countries 39 Also in 1997 Clinton appointed former POW and U S Congressman Douglas Pete Peterson as the first U S Ambassador to Vietnam 21st century Edit U S President Donald Trump and Vietnamese President and General Secretary Nguyễn Phu Trọng in front of a statue of Ho Chi Minh in Hanoi 27 February 2019The annual Bilateral Human Rights Dialogue resumed in 2006 after a two year hiatus The U S and Vietnam signed a Bilateral Trade Agreement in July 2000 which went into force in December 2001 In 2003 the two countries signed a Counternarcotics Letter of Agreement amended in 2006 a Civil Aviation Agreement and a textile agreement In January 2007 Congress approved Permanent Normal Trade Relations PNTR for Vietnam In July 2015 the United States hosted Vietnamese Communist Party General Secretary Nguyễn Phu Trọng in the first ever visit of a Vietnamese Communist Party General Secretary to the United States following a concerted effort by the Obama administration to pursue warmer relations with Vietnam 40 Human rights EditThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on Talk United States Vietnam relations Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced September 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Some of this section s listed sources may not be reliable Please help this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged or deleted September 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral Please help improve it by replacing them with more appropriate citations to reliable independent third party sources September 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Vietnam s suppression of political dissent and restrictions on freedom of speech have been an issue of contention in terms of Vietnam s relations with the United States and Vietnam s actions against freedom of expression have drawn criticism from the U S government In spring 2007 Vietnam s government launched a crackdown on political dissidents and in November of that year Vietnamese authorities arrested a group of pro democracy activists including two Americans Despite continued suppression of dissent and expression Vietnam made significant progress on expanding freedom of religion in 2005 when Vietnam passed comprehensive religious freedom legislation outlawing forced renunciations and permitting the official recognition of new denominations As a result in November 2006 the U S Department of State lifted the designation of Vietnam as a Country of Particular Concern based on a determination that the country was no longer a serious violator of religious freedoms as defined by the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998 This decision was reaffirmed by the Department of State in November 2007 However serious concerns continue due to Vietnam s suppression of freedom of speech 41 42 U S President Donald Trump was criticized for not mentioning human rights issues in Vietnam during his visit to Vietnam in 2017 and before the visit of Vietnamese Premier Nguyễn Xuan Phuc to the United States 43 Transport EditIn December 2003 the United States and Vietnam signed a Bilateral Air Transport Agreement Several U S carriers already have third party code sharing agreements with Vietnam Airlines Direct flights between Ho Chi Minh City and San Francisco began in December 2004 citation needed Vietnam and the United States also signed a bilateral Maritime Agreement in March 2007 that opened the maritime transport and services industry of Vietnam to U S firms In 2011 the U S banks agreed to invest 1 5 billion in Vietnamese infrastructure Military Edit Vietnamese military officers watching the USS Curtis Wilbur preparing to dock at the port of Da Nang July 2004 According to the Council on Foreign Relations Vietnam s defense policy is based on the Four No s principle no military alliances no foreign troops stationed on Vietnamese soil no partnering with a foreign power to combat another and no force or threatening to use force in international relations 44 This was historically Three No s however the fourth denouncing the use of force was added in the December 2019 National Defense White Paper which also stated that Vietnam is willing to allow ships from other countries to dock at its ports 45 Cooperation between the United States and Vietnam in other areas such as defense nonproliferation counterterrorism and law enforcement is expanding steadily The territorial disputes in the South China Sea with China which has become more assertive in its territorial claims has also gradually strengthened relations between Vietnam the U S and other Chinese rivals including India and fellow ASEAN member and U S ally the Philippines 46 47 48 The U S favors an open South China Sea for its larger Indo Pacific strategy and because Chinese territorial claims in the region threaten the security and prosperity of its key regional allies 49 With Vietnam s historically complex relationship with China that included past territorial disputes Vietnam feels that Chinese claims and actions in the South China Sea threaten its sovereignty and territorial integrity 45 In this regard American and Vietnamese security interests align as they oppose Chinese in the South China Sea Vietnam hosted visits by five U S Navy vessels in 2007 including a port call to Da Nang by the amphibious assault ship USS Peleliu carrying a multinational contingent of medical and engineering personnel In June 2007 Vietnamese observers took part for the first time in the multinational naval exercise Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training CARAT organized by the U S Navy Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyễn Tấn Dũng stated that the country is in the final stages of preparation to take part in international peacekeeping as part of its contribution as a new member of the United Nations Security Council citation needed When asked about the killing of Osama bin Laden in 2011 Nguyen Phuong Nga a spokeswoman for the Foreign Ministry of Vietnam agreed with American counterterrorism measures saying Terrorists must bear responsibility for their acts and should be severely punished Vietnam will continue to join the international community in the fight against terrorism based on the UN Charter and the basic principles of international law to eliminate terrorism 50 Members of the Vietnam People s Navy waving goodbye to the crew of the U S Navy s USS Coronado after an exchange between the two navies 10 July 2017 In April 2013 following increased tensions between Vietnamese fishing vessels and the China Coast Guard which peaked a month prior after a Chinese warning flare accidentally set a Vietnamese fishing boat ablaze the Vietnam People s Navy and U S Coast Guard cooperated to improve security in Vietnamese waters and resolve confrontations between Vietnamese fishers and Chinese vessels 51 In June 2013 Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyễn Tấn Dũng said in a speech at the Shangri La Dialogue in Singapore that he would welcome the U S playing a larger role in tempering regional tensions as China and some of its Southeast Asian neighbors remain deadlocked over competing territorial claims in the South China Sea saying No regional country would oppose the strategic engagement of extra regional powers if such engagement aims to enhance cooperation for peace stability and development We attach special importance to the roles played by a vigorously rising China and by the United States a Pacific power 52 53 In October 2013 the United States and Vietnam signed a pact allowing for the transfer of nuclear fuel and technology from the U S to Vietnam which is already working with Russia to complete its first nuclear plant by 2014 to meet its rising energy demands with an American official noting that Vietnam is actively taking steps now toward development of a robust domestic infrastructure to support a nuclear energy program 54 55 56 In line with its more active engagement with Vietnam the U S has provided funds and equipment for Vietnamese naval capabilities In 2013 Secretary of State John Kerry announced that the U S would provide Vietnam with 18 million to enhance the capacity of its coast guard 57 Additionally the U S and Vietnam also cooperate in the Clean Energy Sector In 2014 the U S Ambassador to Vietnam announced the U S was providing technical assistance for developing wind power systems in Vietnam 58 In early October 2014 the U S approved a relaxation of its longstanding arms embargo on Vietnam 59 In May 2016 President Obama announced the full lifting of the embargo during his visit to Vietnam 60 On 2 October 2016 U S Navy destroyer USS John S McCain and submarine tender USS Frank Cable made the first port visit to Cam Ranh Bay since 1975 61 A U S Navy aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson visited Vietnam in March 2018 According to the Vietnam Foreign Ministry the visit would contribute to maintaining peace stability security cooperation and development in the region 62 In May 2017 the U S delivered six 45 foot Defiant class patrol boats to the Vietnam Coast Guard 63 The cooperation in matters of their naval capabilities suggests that the shared security concerns over the South China Sea has strengthened the U S Vietnam military relationship 57 Defense Secretary Ashton Carter and Vietnamese Defense Minister General Phung Quang Thanh in Hanoi 1 June 2015The U S Vietnam defense relationship however is limited by historical memory and Vietnam s multivector foreign policy While fears about regime change have lowered the U S frequent criticism of Vietnam s human rights situation is understood in the context of the Vietnam War and creates worry in Vietnam about the U S true intentions This may serve to limit the scope and scale of military cooperation 57 Similarly with its multivector foreign policy Vietnam avoids aligning too closely with any particular regional power and in particular limits its engagement with the U S to avoid upsetting China 57 To that end Russia not the U S is the largest arms exporter to Vietnam 64 Principal U S officials EditAmbassador Marc Knapper Consul General Marie C DamourDiplomatic missions EditThe U S Embassy in Vietnam is located in Hanoi The U S Consulate General is located in Ho Chi Minh City The Vietnamese Consulate General to the U S is located in San Francisco California In 2009 the United States received permission to open a consulate in Da Nang in 2010 Vietnam officially inaugurated a consulate general in Houston Of VietnamWashington D C Embassy San Francisco Consulate New York City Consulate Houston Consulate Of the United StatesHanoi Embassy Ho Chi Minh City Consulate See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Relations of the United States and Vietnam United States portal Vietnam portalU S Vietnam Dialogue Group on Agent Orange Dioxin U S South Vietnam relations U S Military Assistance Command in Vietnam Vietnamese AmericansReferences EditGeneral This article incorporates public domain material from U S Bilateral Relations Fact Sheets United States Department of State This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Country Studies Federal Research Division Specific US Vietnam ties have never been better Asia Times 13 July 2020 Retrieved 24 March 2021 Can Vietnam Be America s New Ally Against China The National Interest 7 November 2019 Retrieved 24 March 2021 Vietnam unlikely US ally The Guardian 31 August 2010 Retrieved 24 March 2021 Will We See a US Vietnam Strategic Partnership The Diplomat 15 July 2020 Retrieved 24 March 2021 Lo scacchiere del Sud Est asiatico Southeast Asia chessboard Limesonline com in Italian 19 March 2021 Retrieved 24 March 2021 Opinion of the United States Pew Research Center 2017 Retrieved 24 March 2021 Old Enemies Become Friends U S and Vietnam Brookings Institution Despite All Vietnam Still Likes Americans New York Times Not Your Father s Vietnam Opinion of the United States Vietnam Pew Research Center Sanger David E 18 November 2000 CLINTON IN VIETNAM THE OVERVIEW Huge Crowd in Hanoi for Clinton Who Speaks of Shared Suffering The New York Times President Bush Concludes Vietnam Visit NPR org Obama s Visit to Vietnam A Turning Point Beech Hannah 10 November 2017 In Danang Vietnam Trump Makes a Friendlier American Landing The New York Times Wieder Rosalie Vietnamese American In Reference Library of Asian America vol I edited by Susan Gall and Irene Natividad 165 173 Detroit Gale Research Inc 1996 Dossier of Xuan Dai Bay Phu Yen Province submitted to UNESCO Vietnam Tours 21 September 2011 Archived from the original on 25 October 2011 Retrieved 26 June 2012 Vung Lam bay used to be the most bustling trading port of Phu Yen in the past the door connecting Phu Yen to the outer trading worlds a b c Miller Robert 1990 United States and Vietnam 1787 1941 Washington DC National Defense University Press ISBN 9780788108105 Ho Chi Minh and the OSS Topping Seymour Summer 2005 Vietnamese Historian Recalls Untold Story of Tragic Murder of Peter Dewey O S S Society Newsletter McLean VA The O S S Society Inc pp 3 4 Topping Seymour Summer 2005 Vietnamese Historian Recalls Untold Story of Tragic Murder of Peter Dewey O S S Society Newsletter McLean VA The O S S Society Inc pp 3 4 Film The Fog of War Transcript Errol Morris Retrieved 28 June 2021 McNamara It was just confusion and events afterwards showed that our judgment that we d been attacked that day was wrong It didn t happen And the judgment that we d been attacked on August 2nd was right We had been although that was disputed at the time So we were right once and wrong once Ultimately President Johnson authorized bombing in response to what he thought had been the second attack It hadn t occurred but that s irrelevant to the point I m making here He authorized the attack on the assumption it had occurred Rohn Alan 22 January 2014 How Much Did The Vietnam War Cost The Vietnam War Retrieved 29 December 2022 No Way to Win The Vietnam War and the Tragedy of Containment chnm gmu edu Archived from the original on 3 November 2013 Retrieved 27 June 2018 U S withdraws from Vietnam Mar 29 1973 HISTORY com HISTORY com Retrieved 27 June 2018 https www cia gov readingroom docs CIA RDP78T02095R000900070017 0 pdf bare URL PDF Drury Bob Clavin Tom 3 May 2011 Last Men Out The True Story of America s Heroic Final Hours in Vietnam Simon and Schuster p 258 ISBN 978 1 4516 1025 3 Thompson Larry 2009 Refugee Workers in the Indochinese Exodus 1975 1982 MacFarland amp Co ISBN 9780786445295 York Geoffrey 12 July 2008 Last ghost of the Vietnam War The Globe and Mail Retrieved 29 December 2022 King Jessica 10 August 2012 U S in first effort to clean up Agent Orange in Vietnam CNN Retrieved 11 August 2012 Defoliation entry in Spencer C Tucker ed 2011 The Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War 2nd ed ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 85109 961 0 Gelb Leslie H 2 February 1976 HANOI SAYS NIXON PLEDGED 3 B1LUON AS POSTWAR AID The New York Times Retrieved 11 August 2022 Castelli Beth The Lifting of the Trade Embargo Between the United States and Vietnam The Loss of a Potential Bargaining Tool or a Means of Fostering Cooperation Penn State International Law Review vol 13 1 Jan 1995 a b c d e f g h i j k Carroll James 21 October 1996 A Friendship That Ended the War The New Yorker Stauch Thomas The United States and Vietnam Overcoming the Past and Investing in the Future The International Lawyer vol 28 1994 JSTOR www jstor org stable 40707185 seq 26 metadata info tab contents THE 1992 CAMPAIGN A Letter by Clinton on His Draft Deferment A War I Opposed and Despised The New York Times Associated Press 13 February 1992 Retrieved 17 November 2018 Greenhouse Steven 28 January 1994 Senate Urges End to U S Embargo Against Vietnam The New York Times Retrieved 17 November 2018 Political Risk Yearbook East Asia amp the Pacific PRS Group 2008 page 27 Sanger David E 11 March 1997 Hanoi Agrees to Pay Saigon s Debts to U S The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2 April 2021 Napier Nancy K Vuong Quan Hoang 2013 What we see why we worry why we hope Vietnam going forward Boise ID USA Boise State University CCI Press p 140 ISBN 978 0985530587 Kang David 2017 American Grand Strategy and East Asian Security in the Twenty First Century Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 133 ISBN 9781316616406 Bleiweis Scott 1 June 2016 U S Sends Mixed Messages about Human Rights in Vietnam Foreign Policy Association Vietnam 2017 Human Rights Report PDF Archived from the original PDF on 21 April 2018 Retrieved 27 February 2019 The Trump administration fails to call out Vietnam on its dismal human rights record The Washington Post The Evolution of U S Vietnam Ties Council on Foreign Relations a b Le Thu Huong 30 September 2020 Rough Waters Ahead for Vietnam China Relations Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Sudakov Dmitry 18 July 2011 India and USA to protect Vietnam from China PravdaReport Retrieved 29 December 2022 Former enemies US Vietnam now military allies Taipei Times www taipeitimes com 9 August 2010 Retrieved 29 December 2022 Kaplan Robert D 21 May 2012 The Vietnam Solution The Atlantic Retrieved 29 December 2022 Mastro Oriana Skylar 21 May 2020 Military Confrontation in the South China Sea Contingency Planning Memorandum No 36 Council on Foreign Relations Vietnam Condemns All Forms of Terrorist Acts Communist Party of Vietnam 1 December 2005 Archived from the original on 29 September 2011 Retrieved 12 May 2011 U S Helps Vietnam Defend Fishermen Who Get into Trouble With China U S News amp World Report 9 April 2013 Vietnamese Prime Minister Welcomes Larger Role for U S Wall Street Journal Facing China threat Vietnam seeks American balance Indian Express U S Agrees to Nuclear Deal With Vietnam Wall Street Journal 9 October 2013 US Vietnam sign nuclear trade agreement Reuters 10 October 2013 U S Vietnam sign nuclear trade agreement The Star 9 October 2013 a b c d Tu Cam Dang Thuy Nguyen Hang Thi 2019 Understanding the US Vietnam Security Relationship 2011 2017 The Korean Journal of Defense Analysis 31 121 144 US to lend Technical Help to Vietnam in Renewable Energy Sector IANS news biharprabha com Retrieved 21 February 2014 US to partially lift Vietnam arms embargo BBC News 3 October 2014 Retrieved 4 October 2014 US completely lifts ban on weapons sale to Vietnam Barack Obama says ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation United States warships make first visit to Vietnam base in decades South China Morning Post 4 October 2016 Retrieved 5 October 2016 US aircraft carrier in Vietnam for historic visit Times of India The Times of India Archived from the original on 5 March 2018 Retrieved 5 March 2018 Metal Shark delivers patrol boats to Vietnam www workboat com Retrieved 29 December 2022 Fisher Max Carlsen Audrey 9 March 2018 How China is Challenging American Dominance in Asia The New York Times Further reading EditDemmer Amanda C After Saigon s Fall Refugees and US Vietnamese Relations 1975 2000 Cambridge University Press 2021 focus on restoration of relations Matray James I ed East Asia and the United States An Encyclopedia of relations since 1784 2 vol Greenwood 2002 excerpt v 2External links EditHistory of Vietnam U S relations Fallout of the War from the Dean Peter Krogh Foreign Affairs Digital Archives Vietnam visa for U S citizens Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title United States Vietnam relations amp oldid 1136019543, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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