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  1. In 1948, the non-Communist nationalists formed the State of Vietnam, under French aegis, which was formally recognized by the United States in February 1950. Thus, by the time of the Geneva Conference on Indochina in 1954 there were two Vietnamese states claiming national authority.

  2. This is the first English translation of “Sur l’Indochine,” which was published in the February 1946 issue of Les Temps Modernes. While situated in a particular context and treating a specific issue, this essay offers one of the first sustained phenomenological reflections on interculturality and decolonization.

  3. Dec 4, 2009 · There were three periods in the evolution of American policy toward Indochina: 19459, during which the Americans remained anticolonial; 1950–2, when anticommunism and the Korean War led to deeper involvement in Indochina alongside the French; and 1953–4, when the new Republican administration in Washington seized direction of the war.

  4. Sep 28, 2010 · Summary. The struggle for Indochina after 1945 occupies a central place in the international history of the twentieth century. Fought over a period of three decades, at the cost of millions of lives and vast physical destruction in Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia, the conflict captured in microcosm all of the grand political forces that drove the ...

    • Fredrik Logevall
    • 2010
  5. Sep 1, 2011 · PDF | On Sep 1, 2011, Nguyen Thi Dieu published Indochina: An Ambiguous Colonization, 1858–1954 – By Pierre Brocheux and Daniel Hémery | Find, read and cite all the research you need on ...

  6. Jun 10, 2024 · On 26 April 1954, the Geneva Conference officially opened, with the participation of the Foreign Ministers of the Soviet Union, the People’s Republic of China, the United States, Great Britain, France, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea and the Republic of Korea.

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  8. Feb 6, 2012 · A history of the wars in Vietnam that takes in the most recent scholarship from the vantage point of the Vietnamese themselves. Sets the wider global context of the wars fully into their place as part of an internal, and ongoing, Vietnamese struggle.

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