Area Handbook for North Vietnam, Volume 550, Issue 57U.S. Government Printing Office, 1967 - 494 pages General study of North Viet Nam - covers historical and geographical aspects, labour force, demographic aspects and social structures, living conditions, education, cultural factors, tradition, religion, the system of government, foreign policy, the economic structure, trade unionism, trade, banking, national level defence, the armed forces, etc. Bibliography pp. 415 to 476, maps, and statistical tables. |
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activities administrative agreement agricultural areas Army Bao Dai cadres Cambodia Central Committee Chinese Communist China Confucian construction cooperative Council crops cultural defense Dinh economic enterprises established factories farm Fatherland forces foreign France French groups Haiphong Hanoi highlands Ho Chi Minh Hoc Tap important increased Indochina Indochina War industrial JPRS land Lao Dong Party leaders major ment miles military million Minister Ministry namese National Assembly nationalist Nguyen Nhan Nhan Dan North Vietnam North Vietnam's Economy official operated organization Party's peasants Peiping People's percent persons Pham Van Dong piasters political population production propaganda provinces Quoc Red River Delta regime regions Republic of Vietnam rice rubles rural Saigon schools social Soviet Union Thanh tion Tonkin tons trade traditional Tran Translations on North United Viet Bac Viet Minh Vietnamese village Vo Nguyen Giap women workers
Popular passages
Page 58 - States declared that it would view any renewal of aggression, in violation of the agreement, with grave concern and as seriously threatening international peace and security.
Page 198 - negotiations without preconditions" as the 17 nations put it; 4. We would welcome unconditional discussions as President Johnson put it; 5. A cessation of hostilities could be the first order of business at a conference or could be the subject of preliminary discussions; 6. Hanoi's four points could be discussed along with other points which others might wish to propose; 7.
Page 194 - The internal affairs of South Vietnam must be settled by the South Vietnamese people themselves, in accordance with the programme of the South Vietnam National Front for Liberation, without any foreign interference.
Page 198 - Asia can be nonaligned or neutral if that be their option; 12. We would much prefer to use our resources for the economic reconstruction of Southeast Asia than in war. If there is peace, North Vietnam could participate in a regional effort to which we would be prepared to contribute at least one billion dollars; 13.
Page 163 - China: state ownership, that is, ownership by the whole people; co-operative ownership, that is, collective ownership by the working masses; ownership by individual working people; and capitalist ownership.
Page 197 - Commander-in-Chief, to take the necessary measures to repel any armed attack against the forces of the United States and to prevent further aggression" in the area. The resolution added that the "United States is, therefore, prepared, as the President determines, to take all necessary steps, including the use of armed forces...
Page 57 - Geneva in April 1954 with representatives of the United States, France, the United Kingdom, the Soviet Union, the People's Republic of China, the Republic of Korea.
Page 194 - Vietnam, and to correctly implement their basic provisions as embodied in the following points: 1. Recognition of the basic national rights of the Vietnamese people: peace, independence, sovereignty, unity and territorial integrity. According to the Geneva Agreements, the US Government must withdraw from South Vietnam all US troops, military personnel and weapons of all kinds, dismantle all US military bases there, cancel its "military alliance
Page 199 - Would North Vietnam be willing to agree to a time schedule for supervised phased withdrawal from South Vietnam of all external forces, those of North Vietnam as well as those from the United States and other countries aiding South Vietnam?