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Tra Co Beach
GETTING THERE & AWAY
NEIGHBOURING TENSIONS
China was on good terms with North Vietnam from 1954 (when the French left) until the late 1970s. But relations began to sour shortly after reunification, as the Vietnamese government became more and more friendly with China's rival, the USSR. There's good reason to believe that Vietnam was simply playing them off against each other, while receiving aid from both.
In March 1978 the Vietnamese government launched a campaign in the south against 'commercial opportunists', seizing private property to complete the country's 'socialist transformation.The campaign hit the ethnic Chinese particularly hard. It was widely assumed that the Marxist-Leninist rhetoric was a smokescreen for ancient Vietnamese antipathy towards the Chinese.
The anti-capitalist and anti-Chinese campaign caused up to 500,000 of Vietnam's 1.0 .million ethnic Chinese citizens to flee the country. Those in the north fled overland to China, while those in the south left by sea- The creation of Chinese refugees in the south proved to be lucrative for the government - to leave. Chinese entrepreneurs in Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC) had that kind of money, but refugees in the north were mostly dirt poor.
In response, China cut all aid to Vietnam, cancelled dozens of development projects and withdrew 800 technicians. Vietnam's invasion of Cambodia in (ate 1978 was the final straw: Beijing -alarmed because the Khmer Rouge was its close ally, and worried by the huge build-up of Soviet military forces on the Chinese-Soviet border - became convinced that Vietnam had fallen into the Russian camp, which was trying to encircle China with hostile forces. Which, ironically enough, was exactly what Vietnam suspected about the Chinese-Khmer Rouge alliance.
In February 1979 China invaded northern Vietnam at Lang Son 'to teach the Vietnamese a lesson'. Just what lesson the Vietnamese learned is not clear, but the Chinese learned that Vietnam's troops, battle-hardened by many years of righting the USA, were no pushovers. Although China's forces were withdrawn after 17 days. and the operation was officially declared a 'great success', most observers soon realised that China's People's Liberation Army (PLA) had been badly mauled by the Vietnamese. It is believed to have suffered 20,000 casualties in 21/2 weeks of fighting. Ironically, China's aid to Vietnam was partially responsible for China's humiliation.
Officially, these 'misunderstandings'are considered ancient history. Trade across the Chinese-Vietnamese border is booming and both countries profess to be 'good neighbours'. In practice, China and Vietnam remain highly suspicious of each other's intentions. Continued conflicts over who owns oil-drilling rights in the South China Sea are exacerbating tensions. The border area remains militarily sensitive, though the most likely future battleground is at sea.
If you visit China and discuss this border war you will almost certainly be told that China acted in self-defence because the Vietnamese were launching raids across the border and murdering innocent Chinese villagers. Virtually all Western observers, from the US government's Central Intelligence Agency to historians, consider China's version of events to be nonsense. The Chinese also claim they won this war. Nobody outside of China believes that, either.
For the inside story on how the communist comrades fell out, read Brother Enemy (1988) by Nayan Chanda, an excellent account of Cold War power plays and the making and breaking of alliances. |