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The Third Indochina War
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The Third Indochina War

Conflict between China, Vietnam and Cambodia, 1972-79

The Third Indochina War

Conflict between China, Vietnam and Cambodia, 1972-79

Edited ByOdd Arne Westad, Sophie Quinn-Judge
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2006
eBook Published 27 September 2006
Pub. location London
Imprint Routledge
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.4324/9780203968574
Pages 256 pages
eBook ISBN 9781134167760
SubjectsArea Studies, Politics & International Relations
KeywordsLe Duc Tho, Pol Pot, Le Duan, Khmer Rouge, Truong Chinh
Get Citation

Get Citation

Westad, O. (Ed.), Quinn-Judge, S. (Ed.). (2006). The Third Indochina War. London: Routledge, https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203968574
ABOUT THIS BOOK

This new collection explores the origins and key issues of the Third Indochina War, which began in 1979.

Drawing on unique documentation from all sides, leading contributors reinterpret and demystify the long-term and immediate causes of the Vietnamese-Cambodian and Sino-Vietnamese conflicts. They closely examine how both the links between policies and policy assumptions in the countries involved, and the dynamics - national, regional and international - drove them towards war. Rather than explaining the conflicts as determined by age-old resentments and suspicions or seeing war between the former allies as the necessary outcome of the conflicts of the 1970s, the contributors to this volume look at the concrete causes for the breakdown in cooperation and the road to war.

This volume includes even-handed assessments of the roles of the major players, including a look at the beginnings of Thai-Chinese military cooperation in support of the Khmer Rouge. The subjects covered remain highly relevant to inter-state relations in South East Asia, where border issues are still a cause of tension. An updated chronology of events leading to the outbreak of hostilities is also included.

This book will be of immense interest to all students of the Third Indochina War, Southeast Asian history and of international relations and war studies in general.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |11 pages
Introduction: From war to peace to war in Indochina
ByODD ARNE WESTAD
View abstract
chapter 1|21 pages
The Sino-Vietnamese split and the Indochina War, 1968–1975
ByLIEN-HANG T. NGUYEN
View abstract
chapter 2|32 pages
China, the Vietnam War, and the Sino-American rapprochement, 1968–1973
ByCHEN JIAN
View abstract
chapter 3|22 pages
The changing post-war US strategy in Indochina
ByCÉCILE MENÉTREY-MONCHAU
View abstract
chapter 4|16 pages
The Paris Agreement of 1973 and Vietnam’s vision of the future
ByLUU DOAN HUYNH
View abstract
chapter 5|23 pages
The Paris Agreement and Vietnam–ASEAN relations in the 1970s
ByNGUYEN VU TUNG
View abstract
chapter 6|26 pages
The socialization of South Vietnam
ByNGÔ VINH LONG
View abstract
chapter 7|35 pages
Vietnam, the Third Indochina War and the meltdown of Asian internationalism
ByCHRISTOPHER E. GOSCHA
View abstract
chapter 8|20 pages
External and indigenous sources of Khmer Rouge ideology
ByBEN KIERNAN
View abstract
chapter 9|24 pages
Victory on the battlefield; isolation in Asia: Vietnam’s Cambodia decade, 1979–1989
BySOPHIE QUINN-JUDGE
View abstract

This new collection explores the origins and key issues of the Third Indochina War, which began in 1979.

Drawing on unique documentation from all sides, leading contributors reinterpret and demystify the long-term and immediate causes of the Vietnamese-Cambodian and Sino-Vietnamese conflicts. They closely examine how both the links between policies and policy assumptions in the countries involved, and the dynamics - national, regional and international - drove them towards war. Rather than explaining the conflicts as determined by age-old resentments and suspicions or seeing war between the former allies as the necessary outcome of the conflicts of the 1970s, the contributors to this volume look at the concrete causes for the breakdown in cooperation and the road to war.

This volume includes even-handed assessments of the roles of the major players, including a look at the beginnings of Thai-Chinese military cooperation in support of the Khmer Rouge. The subjects covered remain highly relevant to inter-state relations in South East Asia, where border issues are still a cause of tension. An updated chronology of events leading to the outbreak of hostilities is also included.

This book will be of immense interest to all students of the Third Indochina War, Southeast Asian history and of international relations and war studies in general.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |11 pages
Introduction: From war to peace to war in Indochina
ByODD ARNE WESTAD
View abstract
chapter 1|21 pages
The Sino-Vietnamese split and the Indochina War, 1968–1975
ByLIEN-HANG T. NGUYEN
View abstract
chapter 2|32 pages
China, the Vietnam War, and the Sino-American rapprochement, 1968–1973
ByCHEN JIAN
View abstract
chapter 3|22 pages
The changing post-war US strategy in Indochina
ByCÉCILE MENÉTREY-MONCHAU
View abstract
chapter 4|16 pages
The Paris Agreement of 1973 and Vietnam’s vision of the future
ByLUU DOAN HUYNH
View abstract
chapter 5|23 pages
The Paris Agreement and Vietnam–ASEAN relations in the 1970s
ByNGUYEN VU TUNG
View abstract
chapter 6|26 pages
The socialization of South Vietnam
ByNGÔ VINH LONG
View abstract
chapter 7|35 pages
Vietnam, the Third Indochina War and the meltdown of Asian internationalism
ByCHRISTOPHER E. GOSCHA
View abstract
chapter 8|20 pages
External and indigenous sources of Khmer Rouge ideology
ByBEN KIERNAN
View abstract
chapter 9|24 pages
Victory on the battlefield; isolation in Asia: Vietnam’s Cambodia decade, 1979–1989
BySOPHIE QUINN-JUDGE
View abstract
CONTENTS
ABOUT THIS BOOK

This new collection explores the origins and key issues of the Third Indochina War, which began in 1979.

Drawing on unique documentation from all sides, leading contributors reinterpret and demystify the long-term and immediate causes of the Vietnamese-Cambodian and Sino-Vietnamese conflicts. They closely examine how both the links between policies and policy assumptions in the countries involved, and the dynamics - national, regional and international - drove them towards war. Rather than explaining the conflicts as determined by age-old resentments and suspicions or seeing war between the former allies as the necessary outcome of the conflicts of the 1970s, the contributors to this volume look at the concrete causes for the breakdown in cooperation and the road to war.

This volume includes even-handed assessments of the roles of the major players, including a look at the beginnings of Thai-Chinese military cooperation in support of the Khmer Rouge. The subjects covered remain highly relevant to inter-state relations in South East Asia, where border issues are still a cause of tension. An updated chronology of events leading to the outbreak of hostilities is also included.

This book will be of immense interest to all students of the Third Indochina War, Southeast Asian history and of international relations and war studies in general.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |11 pages
Introduction: From war to peace to war in Indochina
ByODD ARNE WESTAD
View abstract
chapter 1|21 pages
The Sino-Vietnamese split and the Indochina War, 1968–1975
ByLIEN-HANG T. NGUYEN
View abstract
chapter 2|32 pages
China, the Vietnam War, and the Sino-American rapprochement, 1968–1973
ByCHEN JIAN
View abstract
chapter 3|22 pages
The changing post-war US strategy in Indochina
ByCÉCILE MENÉTREY-MONCHAU
View abstract
chapter 4|16 pages
The Paris Agreement of 1973 and Vietnam’s vision of the future
ByLUU DOAN HUYNH
View abstract
chapter 5|23 pages
The Paris Agreement and Vietnam–ASEAN relations in the 1970s
ByNGUYEN VU TUNG
View abstract
chapter 6|26 pages
The socialization of South Vietnam
ByNGÔ VINH LONG
View abstract
chapter 7|35 pages
Vietnam, the Third Indochina War and the meltdown of Asian internationalism
ByCHRISTOPHER E. GOSCHA
View abstract
chapter 8|20 pages
External and indigenous sources of Khmer Rouge ideology
ByBEN KIERNAN
View abstract
chapter 9|24 pages
Victory on the battlefield; isolation in Asia: Vietnam’s Cambodia decade, 1979–1989
BySOPHIE QUINN-JUDGE
View abstract

This new collection explores the origins and key issues of the Third Indochina War, which began in 1979.

Drawing on unique documentation from all sides, leading contributors reinterpret and demystify the long-term and immediate causes of the Vietnamese-Cambodian and Sino-Vietnamese conflicts. They closely examine how both the links between policies and policy assumptions in the countries involved, and the dynamics - national, regional and international - drove them towards war. Rather than explaining the conflicts as determined by age-old resentments and suspicions or seeing war between the former allies as the necessary outcome of the conflicts of the 1970s, the contributors to this volume look at the concrete causes for the breakdown in cooperation and the road to war.

This volume includes even-handed assessments of the roles of the major players, including a look at the beginnings of Thai-Chinese military cooperation in support of the Khmer Rouge. The subjects covered remain highly relevant to inter-state relations in South East Asia, where border issues are still a cause of tension. An updated chronology of events leading to the outbreak of hostilities is also included.

This book will be of immense interest to all students of the Third Indochina War, Southeast Asian history and of international relations and war studies in general.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |11 pages
Introduction: From war to peace to war in Indochina
ByODD ARNE WESTAD
View abstract
chapter 1|21 pages
The Sino-Vietnamese split and the Indochina War, 1968–1975
ByLIEN-HANG T. NGUYEN
View abstract
chapter 2|32 pages
China, the Vietnam War, and the Sino-American rapprochement, 1968–1973
ByCHEN JIAN
View abstract
chapter 3|22 pages
The changing post-war US strategy in Indochina
ByCÉCILE MENÉTREY-MONCHAU
View abstract
chapter 4|16 pages
The Paris Agreement of 1973 and Vietnam’s vision of the future
ByLUU DOAN HUYNH
View abstract
chapter 5|23 pages
The Paris Agreement and Vietnam–ASEAN relations in the 1970s
ByNGUYEN VU TUNG
View abstract
chapter 6|26 pages
The socialization of South Vietnam
ByNGÔ VINH LONG
View abstract
chapter 7|35 pages
Vietnam, the Third Indochina War and the meltdown of Asian internationalism
ByCHRISTOPHER E. GOSCHA
View abstract
chapter 8|20 pages
External and indigenous sources of Khmer Rouge ideology
ByBEN KIERNAN
View abstract
chapter 9|24 pages
Victory on the battlefield; isolation in Asia: Vietnam’s Cambodia decade, 1979–1989
BySOPHIE QUINN-JUDGE
View abstract
ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK

This new collection explores the origins and key issues of the Third Indochina War, which began in 1979.

Drawing on unique documentation from all sides, leading contributors reinterpret and demystify the long-term and immediate causes of the Vietnamese-Cambodian and Sino-Vietnamese conflicts. They closely examine how both the links between policies and policy assumptions in the countries involved, and the dynamics - national, regional and international - drove them towards war. Rather than explaining the conflicts as determined by age-old resentments and suspicions or seeing war between the former allies as the necessary outcome of the conflicts of the 1970s, the contributors to this volume look at the concrete causes for the breakdown in cooperation and the road to war.

This volume includes even-handed assessments of the roles of the major players, including a look at the beginnings of Thai-Chinese military cooperation in support of the Khmer Rouge. The subjects covered remain highly relevant to inter-state relations in South East Asia, where border issues are still a cause of tension. An updated chronology of events leading to the outbreak of hostilities is also included.

This book will be of immense interest to all students of the Third Indochina War, Southeast Asian history and of international relations and war studies in general.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |11 pages
Introduction: From war to peace to war in Indochina
ByODD ARNE WESTAD
View abstract
chapter 1|21 pages
The Sino-Vietnamese split and the Indochina War, 1968–1975
ByLIEN-HANG T. NGUYEN
View abstract
chapter 2|32 pages
China, the Vietnam War, and the Sino-American rapprochement, 1968–1973
ByCHEN JIAN
View abstract
chapter 3|22 pages
The changing post-war US strategy in Indochina
ByCÉCILE MENÉTREY-MONCHAU
View abstract
chapter 4|16 pages
The Paris Agreement of 1973 and Vietnam’s vision of the future
ByLUU DOAN HUYNH
View abstract
chapter 5|23 pages
The Paris Agreement and Vietnam–ASEAN relations in the 1970s
ByNGUYEN VU TUNG
View abstract
chapter 6|26 pages
The socialization of South Vietnam
ByNGÔ VINH LONG
View abstract
chapter 7|35 pages
Vietnam, the Third Indochina War and the meltdown of Asian internationalism
ByCHRISTOPHER E. GOSCHA
View abstract
chapter 8|20 pages
External and indigenous sources of Khmer Rouge ideology
ByBEN KIERNAN
View abstract
chapter 9|24 pages
Victory on the battlefield; isolation in Asia: Vietnam’s Cambodia decade, 1979–1989
BySOPHIE QUINN-JUDGE
View abstract

This new collection explores the origins and key issues of the Third Indochina War, which began in 1979.

Drawing on unique documentation from all sides, leading contributors reinterpret and demystify the long-term and immediate causes of the Vietnamese-Cambodian and Sino-Vietnamese conflicts. They closely examine how both the links between policies and policy assumptions in the countries involved, and the dynamics - national, regional and international - drove them towards war. Rather than explaining the conflicts as determined by age-old resentments and suspicions or seeing war between the former allies as the necessary outcome of the conflicts of the 1970s, the contributors to this volume look at the concrete causes for the breakdown in cooperation and the road to war.

This volume includes even-handed assessments of the roles of the major players, including a look at the beginnings of Thai-Chinese military cooperation in support of the Khmer Rouge. The subjects covered remain highly relevant to inter-state relations in South East Asia, where border issues are still a cause of tension. An updated chronology of events leading to the outbreak of hostilities is also included.

This book will be of immense interest to all students of the Third Indochina War, Southeast Asian history and of international relations and war studies in general.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |11 pages
Introduction: From war to peace to war in Indochina
ByODD ARNE WESTAD
View abstract
chapter 1|21 pages
The Sino-Vietnamese split and the Indochina War, 1968–1975
ByLIEN-HANG T. NGUYEN
View abstract
chapter 2|32 pages
China, the Vietnam War, and the Sino-American rapprochement, 1968–1973
ByCHEN JIAN
View abstract
chapter 3|22 pages
The changing post-war US strategy in Indochina
ByCÉCILE MENÉTREY-MONCHAU
View abstract
chapter 4|16 pages
The Paris Agreement of 1973 and Vietnam’s vision of the future
ByLUU DOAN HUYNH
View abstract
chapter 5|23 pages
The Paris Agreement and Vietnam–ASEAN relations in the 1970s
ByNGUYEN VU TUNG
View abstract
chapter 6|26 pages
The socialization of South Vietnam
ByNGÔ VINH LONG
View abstract
chapter 7|35 pages
Vietnam, the Third Indochina War and the meltdown of Asian internationalism
ByCHRISTOPHER E. GOSCHA
View abstract
chapter 8|20 pages
External and indigenous sources of Khmer Rouge ideology
ByBEN KIERNAN
View abstract
chapter 9|24 pages
Victory on the battlefield; isolation in Asia: Vietnam’s Cambodia decade, 1979–1989
BySOPHIE QUINN-JUDGE
View abstract
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