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Members of General Staff on a visit to Havanna. Will be an interesting event to open the first VN military base in Cuba.

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A new highway and a new bridge connects Quảng Ninh to China. The PLA now has more options should the Chinese run amok. Vietnam/China relationship is on a free fall.

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Army units on exercise. Not seen here, feared and respected by enemies since centuries, the legendary frogmen

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Brazil’s FM Aloysio Nunes Ferreira on a visit to Vietnam. Both countries want to establish a permanent sea transport. There is a urgent need to develop a highsea naval fleet to protect commercial traffic at sea.

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Image of woman at war

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Women in the army

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Phí Thị Ngọc Lan, the first ever RoK policewomen of Viet descent. Many may follow.

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The picture shows the People's Committee Building in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. Photo: HKEJ

Home World International
How Vietnam learned to live without Chinese characters

Earlier, I posted on social media a few pictures of ancient Chinese characters that I took during my recent trip to Vietnam and some netizens were intrigued by them. Would the current state of international relations be different if Vietnam was still using Chinese characters today?

The use of Chinese characters by the Vietnamese people dates back to as early as the Eastern Han dynasty of ancient China (25 AD to 220 AD). For centuries, Chinese characters remained the official written language of ancient Vietnam and were widely used by its well-read intellectuals, who were deeply influenced by Confucianism.

At the same time, ancient Vietnam also adopted the same civil service examination system practiced by imperial China.

As a result, many ancient Vietnamese manuscripts were actually written in Chinese characters, and ancient Vietnamese intellectuals were just as familiar with Confucian classics as their counterparts in the Middle Kingdom.

In fact, the modern Vietnamese alphabet in use today has a relatively short history: it was “invented” by European missionaries in the 19th century through the Romanization of Chinese characters and was then promoted by the French colonial authorities.

Yet, the promotion of the newly invented alphabet by the French met with opposition from the Vietnamese social elites. And for that reason, throughout the late 1800s and the first half of the 20th century, Chinese characters declined in popularity among the younger generation,

After Ho Chi Minh took power, Chinese characters were used alongside the Vietnamese alphabet in the country. However, he immediately made a sweeping effort to ban Chinese characters and mandate the use of the Vietnamese alphabet in order to eliminate illiteracy across the nation as soon as possible and pave the way for economic development.

Compared to the complicated Chinese characters, the Vietnamese alphabet is a lot easier to pick up for the average individual. And Ho’s massive and concerted effort to eliminate illiteracy did pay off: in one month’s time, the vast majority of Vietnamese people became literate.

In fact Ho’s anti-illiteracy program was so successful that in 1987 the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) recommended commemorating him and his remarkable achievement in facilitating literacy in Vietnam.

However, apart from eliminating illiteracy, Ho actually had a more secret and personal agenda in banning Chinese characters and mandating the use of the Vietnamese alphabet across his country: even though Ho himself was deeply influenced by Chinese culture and spoke excellent Mandarin as well as Cantonese, he actually hated anything associated with China.

His grudge against China could have stemmed from his own unpleasant experience: during the 1930s, he was once held in custody by the Kuomintang authorities on the orders of Chiang Kai-shek and was badly tortured in jail, and hence his deep hatred of anything Chinese.

Besides, given that Vietnam had remained China’s vassal state “since ancient times”, Ho was determined to cast off the lingering influence of Chinese culture on his country by banning the use of Chinese characters, and help his countrymen reshape their sense of cultural and national identity, something that would prove instrumental in achieving Vietnam’s regional hegemony in the decades that followed.

Banning the use of Chinese characters among the Vietnamese people could also prevent China from building a “fifth column” in the country.

Moreover, the fact that Vietnam was finally having its own official language also helped put the country on an equal footing with China, as Beijing could no longer exert any cultural domination over Hanoi.

This article appeared in the Hong Kong Economic Journal on Sep 13
 
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Two important events

Senior VCP members travel to Washington for a meeting with US national security council, a body that makes decision between peace and war, chaired by US president. I think a deal can be made if the US provides security to Vietnam, while we assist the US to retain the dominant power in the Western Pacific. Win win for everybody.

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Also a senior VCP member welcomes Japanese Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry Hiroshige Seko to Hanoi. Vietnam seeks a close economic alliance with Japan, similar VN with RoK. Besides TPP is still a hot topic. Japan wants to see it to happen, and wants to lead the pact. Actually not a problem, however the Japanese have to put an attractive offer on the table.

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VN military buildup is at snail pace, no wonder somebody feels encouraged to advance aggression.

Russia made guided missile frigate Gepard class loaded on a transport vessel on route to Vietnam


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Launch of 700 ton off shore rescue vessel, 25 knots, manufactured by Ba Son shipyard

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The vessel can apparently carry a small heli.

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Hanoi, Vietnam, August 2017

Members of US Marines and US national guard (Oregon) to a visit to train Vietnamese staff in case of ABC attacks. That should remain a training though, unimaginable our enemies resort to the last means.

“We hope we never actually have to respond to these types of threats, but it’s our mission to train for it, and events like this show aggressors that we have the ability to respond,” said Oregon Air National Guard Lt. Col. Oliver Wisco, commander, medical group, CERFP Detachment 1. “This is expertise that we at the Oregon National Guard have and can share with other services and our state partners.”


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Medical staff of US Pacific Command stationed in Japan coming for a visit


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For one who is interested of. San Jose and Houston are two US cities with most Viet population in America, with all infrastructure from shopping centers to Vietnamese speaking radio/tv stations.

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Recently a man with little money from local Viet community makes headlines by donating $10m to San Jose and Houston for disaster recovery efforts: Kieu Hoang. He is founder of many companies including blood plasma California based RAAS and Shanghai RAAS, with net worth some $3.8b.

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more professionalism thanks friends and partners. VN field military hospital cat 2.


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the legendary revolutionary Cuba army, similar to legendary Vietnamese army, is suffering under lacks of money and modern equippments only the fighting spirit is high.


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Only few in Vietnam want to remember of the Vietnam war, lesser want to talk about it, but in America there are endless debates, books, movie films, memorial day and documentations about the US involvement in the bitter war. the New York Times brings lots stories about the war. will Ken Burns’s new 10-part documentary series about the Vietnam war be different?

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Captured U.S. pilot major Dewey Waddell is guarded by a militiawoman with a gun and a bayonet on a rice field. Vietnam, 1967. ullstein bild via Getty Images
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A China type56 rifle serving in VN Army (only China AK has the special three edge needle) ... since 1960s China support Vietnam War, 50-year-age rifle ?
This used for training purposes, these women are student from uni or college, I remember I was introduced how to use AK and CKC.
 
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