A Change of Guard

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Monday 20 April 2015

China's ties with Vietnam viewed through rose-tinted glasses



Xinhua


Press stresses the partnership between Beijing and Hanoi, but the evidence suggests Vietnam is still wary of its giant neighbour

Cary Huang

China and Vietnam have long had a "love-hate" relationship.

Historians have described it as like a family affair, with the closeness gained from shared values, culture and religion - but also bitterness from constant rivalries, including periods of Chinese rule and influence over Vietnam that stretched over more than a thousand years.

The latest period of love was built on the personal ties between the communist founding leaders: Chairman Mao Zedong characterised the relationship "as close as the lips and the teeth"; his Vietnamese counterpart, Ho Chi Minh, defined it as "comrades plus brothers".

The special bond was evident when China provided critical material aid to help their Vietnamese comrades' fight, first against the French in the first Indochina war from the late 1940s until 1954 - and the Americans in the second conflict, better known as the Vietnam war.

However, by February 1979 all signs of brotherly love had disappeared when a bloody Sino-Vietnamese border war broke out between the two neighbours.

China sent 200,000 soldiers into Vietnam to "teach their comrades a lesson" after about 250,000 ethnic Chinese had fled persecution there, with Hanoi allied with Russia, its Soviet socialist big brother. This war led to the loss of ten of thousands of lives on both sides.


Tensions between them have risen further in recent years, with street riots in Vietnam against Chinese businesses and citizens, as China has increasingly asserted itself in disputed territories in the South China Sea. That is why China's state-run media adopted a cautious tone when welcoming Vietnam Communist Party Secretary-General Nguyen Phu Trong on his historic visit to China earlier this month.

Xinhua hailed Trong's trip as a sign that both sides "cherished their strong and lasting bond".

In an article titled, "Partnership Re-established", the news magazine Beijing Review said the trip highlighted the "brotherly friendship" between the nations.

Elsewhere, the Global Times, a tabloid affiliated to the People's Daily, the party's mouthpiece, said the "relationship between the two nations was particularly special among all of its bilateral ties".

The Global Times added that neither country "would allow anybody to drive a wedge between them", referring to Vietnam's move closer to the United States. From China's perspective, Vietnam is a key neighbour and a strategic communist partner as Beijing restrains the Obama administration's so-called "pivot to Asia" - something the mainland regards as an attempt to slow its growing prominence.

However, Vietnam is cautious when dealing with China. During its long history under Chinese influence, Vietnam enthusiastically embraced many aspects of Chinese civilisation, while at the same time fighting with extraordinary vigour to maintain its own cultural identity and regain its sovereign independence.

As China's regional influence grows, Vietnam is increasingly defining itself and its popular history in terms of its historical conflicts with China.

So even while Trong was in Beijing, Vietnam was simultaneously hosting US Navy ships in Da Nang for annual joint naval activities. Trong will also pay a visit to Washington later this year.

Vietnam is also sparing no effort in trying to strengthen its ties with other regional powers, such as Russia and India, in the hope of checking China's fast-growing power.

It is apparent that efforts to establish a defensive socialist alliance have become unrealistic; their ideological affinity has fallen victim again to the imperatives of realpolitik. Their shared historical experiences, culture and values have failed to alter their respective agendas on national security and strategy.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as Ties with Vietnam viewed through rose-tinted glasses

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

HaSatan--He is truly master of, School of Vice.

He engineered man's fallen nature to do his bidding by; stealing, killing and destroying one another in the name of superiority. Nothing wrong in being superior as in your skill and ability, but don't start bashing your neighbors because of their inferiority disposition.

When Egypt was first, World Super Power, they didn't go on a campaign of world conquering conquest. No, it started with the Assyrian Empire and the Babylonian Empire and thereafter.

When God divided the sons of Noah into seventy nations, he did not intended for any of them to go and conquer the sixty-nine other nations for their lands. If those seventy nations would have kept to their boundary, this world would have less troubles. But HaSatan is the master of, School of Vice. Since his goal is to steal, kill and destroy, he uses man's ill nature to do his bidding by bringing discontent among those 70 nations that they should show their superiority power by going on a war path to conquer what do not belong to them and subjugate those they conquered. But Satan's School of Vice is not limited to warfare conquest, Do you really want to know the rest?
Sorry, I only had 12th grade education and I couldn't barely pass.

Caveat, not all 70 nations had a thirst for more land, only handful like Japanese, Germany, British, French and you name the rest...


MagogMademn