JuryFury.com                                                                   Now Every 15th of the Month !
Online School of Politics

JuryFury Chat     I-Traderschool     QuietPoly.com    Contributors                                                            April 15th, 2005
Areas of Interest



THE USA

American Foreign Policy

US House and Senate
US Presidents
State & Local Politics





Regional Politics
Politics of China
The British Commonwealth
Indian Subcontinent
Middle East
The European Union
Africa
Latin America
ASEAN
NATO
United Nations
The Non-aligned Movement
Eastern Europe
New Nations of the 20th Century



General Topics
Constitutional Law
Human Rights
Nuclear Disarmament & Treaties
International Warfare
Environmental Law
Peace Treaties
Economic & Social Alliances
International Organizations
Journalism & Media
Racism and Democracy
Women in the Workplace
Family Law
Courts and Practices
The Judicial System
Higher Education
Education and Government
Health Care & Insurance
Rights of the Disabled
Copyright & Working Online
Legal Representation
Legal Insurance
Pornography
Domestic Violence
Religion & Law
Workers Rights
Employers Rights
Prison & Life after
Social Organizations
Welfare & Poverty
Taxation and Democracy
Third World Aid Programs
Space Exploration
Alternative Energy
Petroleum Industry & Cars
Nuclear Power
Programs for the Arts
Sports Education
Policing the Internet
Privacy and freedom
Immigration
Food and Regulation
War on Drugs
War on Pharmaceuticals
Public Housing
Pollution and Control
Sexual
Discrimination
Electoral Process
Consumers Rights
Investors Rights
Abortion
Death Penalty
Social Security

Gender & Sexuality




Grassroots Organization
ACLU
World Watch
Oxfam
UNICEF
United Negro Fund
Ford Foundation

(suggestions welcome at  our chatsite)




Law of the Economy

Join
I-Traderschool,
our sister magazine,
for debates and news.




East Asia



Laos-Vietnam Relations

by Dr. John C. Walsh


The American War in Vietnam had many effects, some unintended and some unwanted. One of these was the creation of a socialist state in Laos which was then fraternally joined with the socialist state of Vietnam. This brought about a wholly new phase in the relations between the two states, which have historically been estranged and often unfriendly, despite the often intensive interactions between people from the two nations. Now, the future seems to hold a new era of Lao-Vietnamese co-operation that is causing many people to believe that the influence that will be wielded over Laos by Vietnam is unwelcome or, even, hegemonic.


Vietnam occupies the long coastal strip that joins southern China, close to Hainan island, all the way to the Mekong delta, in the extreme south of mainland Southeast Asia. It is a narrow strip of land with mountain ranges dividing it from the interior of the continent. Although Vietnam is composed of a wide variety of different ethnic groups, they have been united over the course of centuries in both the resistance to Chinese domination and acceptance of Chinese cultural practices and institutions. By contrast, Laos, to the west, occupies a landlocked region of mostly thickly forested mountains over which some four and a half million people are rather sparsely spread. Laos too contains a wide variety of ethnic minorities and only about 60% are members of the Tai family of peoples of which Laos are the main component. Historically, the Chinese had little interest in penetrating this interior region and kings and princes in the various city-states that have been established in Laos have been mostly concerned with the Khmers to the south and the other Tai princes to the west and the north.


Consequently, relations between Laos and Vietnam were rarely of crucial importance, although they had their fair share of the warfare that has been endemic to mainland Southeast Asia throughout all of known history. Vietnamese mandarins tended to follow the belief that the kingdom of Vientiane and its administrative units came under Vietnamese rule and that formal treaties were based on secure border institutions. However, it is wise to be cautious about attributing too much formality to these relations.


During the American War in Vietnam, the presence of around 75,000 members of a North Vietnamese ‘secret army’ enabled the Pathet Lao to secure control of the country, which was then re-established as the Lao Peoples’ Democratic Republic, in the same process that also happened in Cambodia. This process necessitated a fair amount of re-education and political education and Laos was ill-prepared to cope with this, given its low level of population and the poverty of the educational sector and the economy generally. Gradually, Vietnamese were brought in to hold crucial positions and to train Laotians, both in Laos and Vietnam and, consequently, their influence on the political and cultural life of Laos grew. Many Laotians apparently felt that this level of influence became excessive – ‘apparently’ because suppression of free speech makes it difficult to know exactly what the people of the country really think. Nevertheless, it would not be very difficult to believe that a people with such a long history would resent the overshadowing of its self-determined future by the protective wing of the older brother. It also poses an ideological issue since the self-determination of the Lao peoples, supposedly provided by the socialist system, is precluded by the Vietnamese hand.


As a result, the current spate of new development projects that seem to herald a new era of even more economic co-operation between the two countries are also considered by some to be further evidence of Vietnamese influence. An example is the road bridge connecting Xiengkhoang province in northern Laos with the Vietnamese province of Nghe An, together with the planned construction of a two-storey immigration and customs building, at a total cost of around USD5 million. Is this evidence of Vietnamese power or simply one neighbour helping another with an area of infrastructure that will benefit both of them?


Over the next few months, I hope to be monitoring events in this region closely and will make further reports in due course.


References and Further Reading


Evans, Grant, The Politics of Ritual and Remembrance: Laos since 1975 (Chiang Mai: Silkworm Books, 1998).

Gunn, Geoffrey C., Theravadins, Colonialists and Commissars in Laos (Bangkok: Wite Lotus Co. Ltd., 1998).

Luther, Hans U., Socialism in a Subsistence Economy: The Laotian Way: An Analysis of Development Patterns in Laos after 1975 (Bangkok: Chulalongkorn University Social Research Institute, 1983).

Stuart-Fox, Martin, Buddhist Kingdom, Marxist State, Studies in Asian History No.2 (Bangkok: White Lotus Co.Ltd, 1996).

Tran Van Quy, "The Quy Hop Archive: Vietnamese-Lao Relations Reflected in Border-Post Documents Dating from 1619-1880, in Mayoury Ngaosrivathana and Kennon Breazale, Breaking New Ground in Lao History: Essays on the Seventh to Twentieth Centuries (Chiang Mai: Silkworm Books, 2002), pp.239-59.

Vietnamese News Agency, "Laos Opens Vietnamese-Funded Bridge to Traffic" April 4th, 2005)



Note

This article is based on n ongoing research project being conducted by the author with the title ‘Lao-Vietnamese Economic Co-operation.’


 


Yahoo! World News Headlines

Our Winners Club

Our Contributors

Research Links

Legal Advice

ALL Awards & Internships





Become an Activist

Join an Organization
Get Volunteerism Alert
Write Letters to a local Politician
Start your own Group




Applied Politics Projects
Suggest a Project
Start your Yahoo Groups
Get Internship Credit
Funding for Projects





Encourage Discussion

Join Juryfury Chat
Promote Juryfury.com
Join online discussion Groups





Be In the Spotlight
Let us Interview you :
Authors of political books
Activists
Journalists
Lawyers
Law Enforcement
Politicians
Politican Scientists





Be A Columnist

Get Internship Credit
Write twice a Month
Get Heard
Start a Yahoo Group






Advertise with Us
Books (Free)
Political
Social
Economics
Religious
Science





About Us

Our Staff & Contributors
Our Magazines
   Quietpoly.com
   I-Traderschool
   Juryfury.com
The Company






Our Address:
QuietPoly Inc.
240 W. Saunders. Dr. (#146)

Flagstaff, AZ 86001
Tel (928) 214-7365
quietpoly@yahoo.com