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NiceGuy

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Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia boost ties
Updated: 10:26PM (GMT+7), Sun, December 23, 2012


A meeting between staff from the Vietnamese, Lao and Cambodian embassies in Japan was held in Tokyo on December 22 to increase mutual understanding and promote friendship and co-operation.

Vietnamese Ambassador Doan Xuan Hung highlighted the special friendship that exists among Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. The three countries’ embassies regularly hold exchanges to increase mutual understanding among embassy staff, promoting co-operation in external affairs in each locality, Hung said.

Lao Ambassador Kenthoong Nuathasing said he hopes the exchanges will be maintained to increase solidarity and friendship among staff at the embassies.

Minister-Counsellor of the Cambodian Embassy Iem Puthviro spoke of his pleasure in attending the meeting, and believed the event will enhance the three embassies’ traditional friendship.

At the exchange, participants enjoyed an art performance and took part in sporting competitions. They also introduced traditional dishes from their home countries.
External Relations - NHANDAN ONLINE


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VIet-Laos-Camb's relationship
In 1987 Vietnam's relationships with Laos and Cambodia did not differ substantially from their historic patterns. Contemporary Vietnamese attitudes reflected the conviction of cultural and political superiority that had prevailed during the nineteenth century when weaker monarchs in Laos and Cambodia had paid tribute to the Vietnamese court in a system modeled on Vietnam's own relationship to China. In the 1980s, Laos and Cambodia had once more become Vietnam's client states. Laos, with a communist party long nurtured by the Vietnamese, entered the relationship with docility; Cambodia, however, under a ruthless, but anti-Vietnamese dictatorship of its own, resisted being drawn into the Vietnamese orbit. Tension between the two states escalated into open warfare and, in 1978, Hanoi launched an invasion that toppled the Pol Pot regime in Phnom Penh. In 1987 Cambodia remained a state governed precariously by a regime installed by Hanoi, its activities constrained by the presence of a substantial Vietnamese occupation force and a tenacious insurgency in the countryside. Repeated Vietnamese assurances that Hanoi would withdraw its troops from the beleaguered country by 1990 were received with skepticism by some observers.

The communist victory in Vietnam in 1975 was accompanied by similar communist successes in Laos and Cambodia. The impression of the noncommunist world at the time was that the three Indochinese communist parties, having seized control in their respective countries, would logically work together, through the fraternal bond of a single ideology, to achieve common objectives. What appeared to be a surprising deterioration in relations, however, was actually the resurfacing of historical conflict that ideological commonality could not override. The victories of the Vietnamese communists and the Cambodian communist Khmer Rouge in 1975 did not bring peace. Relations between the two parties had been strained since the close of the First Indochina War. The Geneva Agreements had failed to secure for the Khmer communists, as part of the first Cambodian national liberation organization, the United Issarak Front, a legitimate place in Cambodian politics. Some Khmer Communist and Issarak leaders subsequently went to Hanoi, but among those who stayed behind, Pol Pot and his faction, who later gained control of the Khmer (Kampuchean) Communist party, blamed Vietnam for having betrayed this party at Geneva. Pol Pot never lost his antipathy for Vietnam. Under his leadership, the Khmer Rouge adhered for years to a radical, chauvinistic, and bitterly anti-Vietnamese political line. Skirmishes broke out on the Cambodian-Vietnamese border almost immediately following the communist victories in Saigon and Phnom Penh, and in less than four years Vietnam was again at war, this time with Cambodia. Vietnam offensive forces crossing the Cambodia border in December 1978 the took less than a month, to occupy Phnom Penh amd most of the country.

When tensions between Cambodia and Vietnam broke into the open, the reason was ostensibly Cambodian demands that Hanoi return territory conquered by the Vietnamese centuries earlier. Vietnam's offers to negotiate the territorial issue were rejected, however, because of more urgent Khmer concerns that Hanoi intended to dominate Cambodia by forming an Indochina Federation or "special relationship." In any event, Vietnamese interest in resolving the situation peacefully clearly came to an end once the decisison was made to invade Cambodia.

The invasion and the subsequent establishment of a puppet regime in Phnom Penh were costly to Hanoi, further isolating it from the international community. Vietnam's relations with a number of countries and with the United Nations (UN) deteriorated. The UN General Assembly refused to recognize the Vietnamese-supported government in Phnom Penh and demanded a total Vietnamese withdrawal followed by internationally supervised free elections. The ASEAN nations were unified in opposing Vietnam's action. Urged by Thailand's example, they provided support for the anti-Phnom Penh resistance. In February 1979, China was moved to retaliate against Vietnam across their mutual border.

The ensuing conflict in Cambodia pitted Vietnamese troops, assisted by forces of the new Phnom Penh government--the People's Republic of Kampuchea (PRK)--against a coalition of communist and noncommunist resistance elements. Of these elements, the government displaced from Phnom Penh by the Vietnamese, Pol Pot's communist Khmer Rouge (which had established the government known as Democratic Kampuchea in Cambodia in 1975), was the strongest and most effective military force, mainly because of support from the Chinese. The extremism and brutality of the Khmer Rouge's brief reign in Phnom Penh, where it may have been responsible for as many as 2 million deaths, made it infamous. ASEAN's concern that the reputation of the Khmer Rouge would lessen the international appeal of the anti-Vietnamese cause led it to press the Khmer Rouge and noncommunist resistance elements into forming a coalition that would appear to diminish the Khmer Rouge's political role. The tripartite Coalition Government of Democratic Kampuchea (CGDK) was formed on June 22, 1982. In addition to the Khmer Rouge, it comprised a noncommunist resistance force called the Kampuchean People's National Liberation Front (KPNLF)--under the leadership of a former official of Prince Norodom Sihanouk's government, Son Sann--and Sihanouk's own noncommunist force (the Armee Nationale Sihanoukiste-- ANS). The Cambodian government in exile needed the added legitimacy that noncommunist factions and the prestige of Sihanouk's name could contribute. The Chinese were reluctant to withdraw their support from the Khmer Rouge, which they viewed as the only effective anti-Vietnamese fighting force among the three coalition members. They were persuaded, however, to support the coalition and eventually began supplying arms to Son Sann and Sihanouk as well as Pol Pot.

Despite an extensive record of internal squabbling, the coalition government in 1987 provided the international community with an acceptable alternative to the Vietnamese-supported Heng Samrin regime in Phnom Penh. From 1982 to 1987, the coalition survived annual Vietnamese dry-season campaigns against its base camps along the Thai-Cambodian border, and, by changing its tactics in 1986 to emphasize long-term operations deep in the Cambodian interior, increased its military effectiveness. The coalition's military operations prevented the Vietnamese from securing all of Cambodia and helped create a stalemate.

In 1987 the situation remained deadlocked. Despite the costs, Vietnam's negotiating position remained inflexible. Hanoi apparently perceived itself to have gained enormously in terms of national security. The "special relationship" it had futilely sought with Pol Pot was effected almost immediately with the new Phnom Penh government when, in February 1979, a Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation was signed. In 1982 and 1983 a substantial number of Vietnamese reportedly settled in Cambodia, although Vietnam did not seem to be making a concerted effort to colonize the country. Instead, Hanoi appeared to be striving to build an indigenous regime that would be responsive to general Vietnamese direction and become part of an Indochinese community under Vietnamese hegemony.

In contrast to its relationship with Cambodia, Vietnam's relations with communist Laos have been fairly stable. Historically, the ethnic tribes comprising present-day Laos had been less resistant to Vietnamese subjugation, and relations had never reached the level of animosity characteristic of the Vietnam-Cambodia relationship.

Although Hanoi was a signatory to the Geneva Agreement of 1962 that upheld the neutrality of Laos, it has failed to observe the agreement in practice. During the Second Indochina War, for example, the North Vietnamese obtained the cooperation of the Lao People's Revolutionary Party (Pathet Lao) in constructing and maintaining the Ho Chi Minh Trail, an unauthorized road communications network that passed through the length of Laos. Thousands of Vietnamese troops were stationed in Laos to maintain the road network and provide for its security. Vietnamese military personnel also fought beside the Pathet Lao in its struggle to overthrow Laos' neutralist government. Cooperation persisted after the war and the Lao communist victory. In 1976, agreements on cooperation in cultural, economic, scientific, and technical fields were signed between the two countries, followed in 1977 by a twenty-five-year Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation. The treaty was intended to strengthen ties as well as sanction Vietnam's military presence in, and military assistance to, Laos. Following Vietnam's invasion of Cambodia, Laos established links with the Vietnamese- supported PRK in Phnom Penh. Meanwhile, Hanoi maintained 40,000 to 60,000 troops in Laos. In 1985 the three governments discussed coordinating their 1986-90 five-year plans, and Vietnam assumed a larger role in developing Lao natural resources by agreeing to joint exploitation of Laotian forests and iron ore deposits. Nevertheless, such growth in cooperation prompted some debate on the Lao side over the country's growing dependence on Vietnam.
http://countrystudies.us/vietnam/59.htm
 
Laos Natural resources: timber, hydropower, gypsum, tin, gold, gemstones
Population:(2012 estimate ) 6,500,000(very low in a large area)
Area Total 236,800 km2 (84th)
RIcefiled in Laos
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Laos forest in Luang prabang
Luang-Prabang-among-forest-and-mountains-Laos-2010.jpg

Statue of VietNam-Pathet Laos soldier in Laos
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Mr.Kaysone Phomvihane Laos leader supported VN in 1979 war against China
Chinese foreign ministry issues warning against gambling in Laos

Last December, according to reports in Chinese media, the Hubei Province Punlic Security Bureau dispatched a rescue team to Mengla in Yunnan on the Lao border to rescue “hostages” held by the Golden Boten City casino in Laos. The rescue team did not cross the border, but conducted negotations that resulted in the release of 10 out of 27 Hubei “hostages.” According to the article, the total number of Chinese “hostages” could be “in the hundreds.”

The head of the rescue team said that although Golden Boten City was in Laos and operating legally under Lao laws, “it is operated by Chinese people, it cheats Chinese people; the casino people organise others to gamble and to cross the border, [so] according to our country’s laws, they can be held responsible for such crimes as organising others to gamble, organising others to cross the border, false imprisonment, debt enforcement by beating 赌场的人涉嫌组织赌博、组织偷越国境、非法拘禁、殴打逼债等多项罪名,按照我国刑法可以追究刑事责任”. The Hubei Public Security Bueau plans to petition the Ministry of Public Security, requesting “to eliminate this border casino that harms people”

On 9 March this year, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a warning to citizens not to gamble in Laos. The text names Golden City and says that it, and other Lao-based casinos, recruit customers in China and “cheat” them into gambling by providing credit at usurious rates. Once they are unable to repay these debts, gamblers are detained, beated, and their families notified with the demand to pay. The ministry and the Chinese embassy in Laos have “repeatedly conducted work with the Lao side, requesting them to close down the casino”

The warning came after several television stations in China reported on Boten. An “escapee” from this “hell on earth” was interviewed on Beijing Television’s Feichang Kanfa (Unusual angle) programme on 12 January. The programme included footage supposedly taken by a victim that shows hostages being beaten and forced to kneel. Hong Kong-based Phoenix TV, owned by Rupert Murdoch and politically aligned with Peking, aired an hour-long programme on the subject on 4 March, using the same footage and featuring escapees (including some who weren’t even there to gamble) telling stories of inhuman treatment. Gamblers told of being lured to Boten by recruiters who offered them air tickets, accommodation, meals, and credit on gambling. Although the programme made it clear that the casino was run by Chinese, it claimed that the special zone’s security force, which was responsible for the mistreatments, was part of Lao police though it employed Chinese personnel — a very unlikely scenario.

The Internet reacted angrily, though on a small scale. On Tianya, a poster “strongly suggested” that “the People’s Liberation Army cross the border, attack and burn Golden Boten City and rescue nearly one thousand Chinese hostages!” He then, perhaps to generate more animosity toward Laos. added the Lao government’s protest against the Chinese invasion of 1979, during the China-Vietnam war. Another poster claimed that the casino people take gamblers from China to Laos illegally (toudu). (This charge is hard to evaluate since the casino’s customers never pass the Lao border post, which is located past the casino road.) This poster, too, blames the Lao government for allowing this investment and the continuing mistreatment of Chinese people, including the deaths of three “hostages” in February, and accuses it for closing one eye (he also writes that the Lao authorities have in the past demanded that the casino stop the use of IOUs). He warns that one day the Chinese government just might decide to send forces across the border, because — a familiar refrain — “the Chinese people are kind but they don’t stand for bullying”). He does not mention that the management of the casino as well as the security guards are Chinese. What is interesting is that the poster sees the extraterrioriality of the enclave as a bad thing.

Chinese forces have intervened several years ago to close down border casinos that then operated in Burma. If this happens again, that, too, raises interesting questions about extraterritoriality. On the other hand, if the casino is shut down, will the holders of the lease (30 years wih the option to extend to 90!) implement some of the more ambitious projects they have advertised, such as golf and real estate? And what about the Golden Flower casino on the Burmese border, near Chiang Saen, which is still under construction and farther removed from China?
Chinese foreign ministry issues warning against gambling in Laos « Exporting China’s Development to the World

About Mr.Kaysone Phomvihane
Phomvihane was born Nguyen Cai Song[1] to a Vietnamese father named Nguyen Tri Loan, and a Laotian mother named Nang Dok. He had two sisters: Nang Souvanthong, living in Thailand, and Nang Kongmany in the USA.[2] He was born in Na Seng village, Khanthabouli district (now Kaysone Phomvihane District, Savannakhet Province), Laos. He had one brother and one sister.

Phomvihane attended law school at Hanoi University in Hanoi, Vietnam, with Nouhak Phoumsavan. He dropped out of law school to fight the French colonialists who were in Vietnam. Later, he joined the Pathet Lao, which was also fighting the French colonialists.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaysone_Phomvihane
Mr.Kaysone Phomvihane on 5000 KIP Banknote LAOS 2003

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Vietnam investment in Cambodia hits US$2.5 bil.

Thursday, December 27,2012,23:01 (GMT+7)





Vietnam invests US$5 billion in Laos

By Quoc Hung and Minh Duc - The Saigon Times Daily

HCMC/HANOI – Vietnamese enterprises so far have invested in 124 projects in Cambodia with total registered capital of some US$2.5 billion, four times higher than the figure in 2009.

As such, Vietnam is now among the top five investors in Cambodia, said the Association of Vietnamese Investors in Cambodia (AVIC) at a conference to review three years promoting Vietnam trade and investment in Cambodia held in Phnom Penh this Tuesday

In 2010, Vietnam had 41 foreign direct investment (FDI) projects worth US$566 million in Cambodia. In 2011, the number of projects rose to 90 and investment capital reached US$2 billion.

Cambodia ranks second among 50 nations and territories as destinations of Vietnam’s outbound investment, said AVIC.

Vietnamese investors in Cambodia focus on agriculture, forestry, energy, mineral mining, finance-banking, aviation and telecommunications. Notable investors are BIDV, Viettel, PVN, Vietnam Airlines, HAGL, VinaCapital, Vinafood2, Vinacomin, Saigontourist and Saigon Co.op.

Over the past three years, Vietnamese enterprises have contributed to economic growth and budget revenue of Cambodia. Moreover, local firms have created jobs for more than 30,000 Cambodian laborers and lured tourists to this country, said a report of AVIC.

AVIC sets a goal that Vietnam investment in Cambodia will reach US$3-3.2 billion and the two-way trade turnover will amount to US$5 billion by 2015.

By then, several projects will have been put into operation, including Cho Ray-Phnom Penh Hospital, the sugar-alcohol-power plant 2 and the rubber planting projects of HAGL and CT Group.

AVIC suggested the two countries sign an agreement on double tax avoidance and a cooperation agreement on mining, energy and agriculture.

Also on Tuesday, Five Star Group inaugurated the Cambodia Five Star International Fertilizer Factory in Kean Svay District, Kandal Province. It is the biggest fertilizer plant in Cambodia with total investment capital of US$79 million.

The plant produces NPK fertilizer with an annual output of 300,000 tons in the first phase and 500,000 tons in the second phase. Its products will meet 50% of the demand for NPK fertilizer in Cambodia.

In the first 11 months, the two-way trade between Vietnam and Cambodia reached US$2.96 billion, which is estimated to rise to US$3.3 billion by the year’s end, up 17.8% year-on-year.

In particular, Vietnam exported US$2.52 billion worth of products to Cambodia, an increase of 17.7% over the same period last year, making Vietnam the second largest trade partner of Cambodia.

Vietnam’s major export items to Cambodia were fuels, iron, steel, textile and garment. Meanwhile, Cambodia mainly exported rubber and tobacco to Vietnam.

In the first ten months of 2012, Cambodia welcomed nearly 640,000 Vietnamese tourist arrivals, up 24% year-on-year, accounting for 23.3% of the total number of foreign tourist arrivals in Cambodia.

For the whole year, the number of Vietnamese tourist arrivals in Cambodia is forecast at over 750,000, or a growth of 25% against 2011, and thus Vietnam would remain the biggest visitor-generating market for Cambodia.

* Local investors have won licenses to develop 415 projects in Laos with the total capital of US$5 billion, said Tran Bac Ha, chairman of the Association of Vietnamese Investors in Laos (AVIL) and Bank for Investment and Development of Vietnam (BIDV).

Speaking to Lao Party General Secretary and State President Choummaly Sayasone during his visit to BIDV on Wednesday, Ha said bilateral trade between the two nations has reached over US$900 million this year, up 22% compared to 2011. This figure is expected to hit US$2 billion in 2015.

Vietnam ranks third among 52 nations and territories investing in Laos, according to the Ministry of Planning and Investment.

Although investors still meet challenges due to economic crisis impacts, projects of Vietnamese firms in Laos have been implemented as scheduled, Ha said. These projects have created jobs to around 20,000 laborers in Laos.

Established in 2011, AVIL has 60 members being large corporations and groups in Vietnam. BIDV is the chair of this association, acting as a bridge between enterprises and managing agencies of the two countries, speeding up investment and economic relationship of both sides.

Ha asked for approval for AVIL to take part in building up investment strategy documents, investment regulations in Laos and assessment of investor capability.

Saigon Times Online - Vietnam investment in Cambodia hits US$2.5 bil. - Vietnam investment in Cambodia hits US$2.5 bil.
 
Its great to see these countries collaborating. What more do you need to realize that working with regional partners is so important.

The pictures posted are beautiful.
 
In your wet dreams...
And it's also sarcastic to see someone who critisizing Chinese‘ bullying at small contries all day advocating on annexing other smaller countries...
It is worth to think of re-establishing of Indochina :D

indochina-1913.jpg

indochina-1913
 
In your wet dreams...
And it's also sarcastic to see someone who critisizing Chinese‘ bullying at small contries all day advocating on annexing other smaller countries...
Laos population is only more than 6 million in a large and fertile land, if she side with China so this land will be flooded with million of hungry people from the North. SO.We don't need to annex Laos but Laotian is very happy when staying in our side cuz we will protect them and their land at all cost:coffee:
 
A sheep protected by a coyote? JOKE OF THE YEAR!
As for the "hungry people", pay more attention to your own please, you viets really have got a great sense of humor.
Laos population is only more than 6 million in a large and fertile land, if she side with China so this land will be flooded with million of hungry people from the North. SO.We don't need to annex Laos but Laotian is very happy when staying in our side cuz we will protect them and their land at all cost:coffee:
 
Vietnamese of Laos

More than 80,000 ethnic Viet people live in Laos. Their population is difficult to gauge, as many of them live scattered throughout the cities and larger towns of Laos, where they are traders, factory owners, and merchants. The Viet have a reputation as skilled and aggressive businessmen, somewhat similar to the Chinese in that regard.

One source states, "Vietnamese can be found in substantial numbers in all the provinces bordering Vietnam and in the cities of Vientiane, Savannakhet and Pakse. For the most part Vietnamese residents in Laos work as traders and small businesspeople, though there continues to be a small military presence in Xiangkhoang and Houaphan provinces."

The 1995 Lao census did not count the Viet as a distinct ethnic group, but did mention that there were 14,251 Vietnamese citizens within Laos at the time. Many of them prefer to maintain their Vietnamese citizenship while traveling in and out of Laos to conduct business. There has been a Vietnamese influence in Laos for many centuries, but only since the war in north Vietnam in the 1950's have large numbers crossed into Laos and formed their own communities.

By the year 2000 the population of ethnic Vietnamese in Vietnam will be close to 70 million. More than 1.5 million Vietnamese live in over 25 nations on six continents around the world. More than 850,000 Vietnamese live in the United States.

The Vietnamese, who call themselves Kinh or Jing have a long history. It is generally believed they were a collection of Mon-Khmer speaking groups who occupied areas primarily in north Vietnam around the time of Christ. About 500 years ago, the Vietnamese migrated to the southern extremities of the country, destroying the Chamba Kingdom in 1471.

Unlike the Lao, who follow the Theravada sect of Buddhism, the Viet mostly adhere to Mahayana (`Greater Vehicle') Buddhism. They also have a complex mix of religious influence including Daoism, animism, Caodaism and ancestor worship.

About 5,000 Viet in Laos profess to be Christians, of which most are Roman Catholics.
Vietnamese of Laos Ethnic People Profile

VietNamese's skool 'Nguyễn Du' in Vientiane, Laos capital
20121015-091135-1-Truong-Nguyen-Du.jpeg
 
IMPOSSIBLE. Re-establishing of Indochina, another beautiful dream.
Because King Sihanouk pro-China, new King also pro-China, so whole Cambodia pro-China. Cambodian not blind, they'r wise to select who's the most reliable friend between China and Vietnam.

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Is that King Sihanouk importance for Cambodian ppl? Yes,so Cambodia pro-China.
 
The only thing I found interesting in your introduction is the Caodaism, really interesting...

"The three periods of Revelation and Salvation
First period:
The Teachings of Buddhas – Dipankara buddha
The Teachings of Sages
The Teachings of Saints – Fu Xi 伏羲
Second period:
The Teachings of Buddhas – Shakyamuni buddha
The Teachings of Sages – Laozi 老子
The Teachings of Saints – Confucius 孔子 and Jesus
Third period:
God is at the helm. He will not take human form as in the past two periods. Instead, he sends his teachings via sacred seance ceremonies.
The Three Anchors, representatives of the Three Teachings are:
The Teachings of Buddhas – Guan Yin 观音
The Teachings of Sages – Li Bo 李白
The Teachings of Saints – Guan Yu 关羽"--from Wiki
Vietnamese of Laos

More than 80,000 ethnic Viet people live in Laos. Their population is difficult to gauge, as many of them live scattered throughout the cities and larger towns of Laos, where they are traders, factory owners, and merchants. The Viet have a reputation as skilled and aggressive businessmen, somewhat similar to the Chinese in that regard.

One source states, "Vietnamese can be found in substantial numbers in all the provinces bordering Vietnam and in the cities of Vientiane, Savannakhet and Pakse. For the most part Vietnamese residents in Laos work as traders and small businesspeople, though there continues to be a small military presence in Xiangkhoang and Houaphan provinces."

The 1995 Lao census did not count the Viet as a distinct ethnic group, but did mention that there were 14,251 Vietnamese citizens within Laos at the time. Many of them prefer to maintain their Vietnamese citizenship while traveling in and out of Laos to conduct business. There has been a Vietnamese influence in Laos for many centuries, but only since the war in north Vietnam in the 1950's have large numbers crossed into Laos and formed their own communities.

By the year 2000 the population of ethnic Vietnamese in Vietnam will be close to 70 million. More than 1.5 million Vietnamese live in over 25 nations on six continents around the world. More than 850,000 Vietnamese live in the United States.

The Vietnamese, who call themselves Kinh or Jing have a long history. It is generally believed they were a collection of Mon-Khmer speaking groups who occupied areas primarily in north Vietnam around the time of Christ. About 500 years ago, the Vietnamese migrated to the southern extremities of the country, destroying the Chamba Kingdom in 1471.

Unlike the Lao, who follow the Theravada sect of Buddhism, the Viet mostly adhere to Mahayana (`Greater Vehicle') Buddhism. They also have a complex mix of religious influence including Daoism, animism, Caodaism and ancestor worship.

About 5,000 Viet in Laos profess to be Christians, of which most are Roman Catholics.
Vietnamese of Laos Ethnic People Profile

VietNamese's skool 'Nguyễn Du' in Vientiane, Laos capital
20121015-091135-1-Truong-Nguyen-Du.jpeg
 
Laos population is only more than 6 million in a large and fertile land, if she side with China so this land will be flooded with million of hungry people from the North. SO.We don't need to annex Laos but Laotian is very happy when staying in our side cuz we will protect them and their land at all cost:coffee:
LOL, the best joke here. Million of hungry ppl from the North?
I have been in North Vietnam twice, i think i know what's life situations in Vietnam, specially in Northern cities many Vietnam girls wanna marry to a Chinese husband. Yep, there'r also many entertainment venues provide sexy for these million of 'hungry' Chinese man from the North .

Do not be a shamed, i just tell the truth.
 
In your wet dreams...
And it's also sarcastic to see someone who critisizing Chinese‘ bullying at small contries all day advocating on annexing other smaller countries...
A quote in the book 'Behind the Bamboo Curtain – China, Vietnam, and the World beyond Asia' part 3, chapter 14: Le Duan and the break with China.
They [the Chinese] vigorously traded with the Americans and compelled us to serve as a bargaining chip in this way. When the Americans realized that they had lost, they immediately used China [to facilitate] their withdrawal [from southern Vietnam]. Nixon and Kissinger went to China in order to discuss this matter.
- Before Nixon went to China, [the goal of his trip being] to solve the Vietnamese problem in such a way as to serve US interests and to lessen the US defeat, as well as to simultaneously allow him to entice China over to the US [side] even more, Zhou Enlai came to visit me. Zhou told me: "At this time, Nixon is coming to visit me principally to discuss the Vietnamese problem, thus I must come to meet you, comrade, in order to discuss [it with you]."

I answered: "Comrade, you can say whatever you like, but I still don't follow. Comrade, you are Chinese; I am a Vietnamese. Vietnam is mine [my nation]; not yours at all. You have no right to speak [about Vietnam's affairs], and you have no right to discuss [them with the Americans]. Today, comrades, I will personally tell you something which I have not even told our Politburo, for, comrade, you have brought up a serious matter, and hence I must speak:
- In 1954, when we won victory at Dien Bien Phu, I was in Hau Nghia [province]. Bac [Uncle] Ho cabled to tell me that I had to go to southern Vietnam to regroup [the forces there] and to speak to the southern Vietnamese compatriots [about this matter]. I traveled by wagon to the south. Along the way, compatriots came out to greet me, for they thought we had won victory. It was so painful! Looking at my southern compatriots, I cried. Because after this [later], the US would come and massacre [the population] in a terrible way.

Upon reaching the south, I immediately cabled Bac Ho to ask to remain [in the south] and not to return to the north, so that I could fight for another ten years or more. [To Zhou Enlai]: "Comrade, you caused me hardship such as this [meaning Zhou's role in the division of Vietnam at Geneva in 1954]. Did you know that, comrade?"

Zhou Enlai said: "I apologize before you, comrade. I was wrong. I was wrong about that [meaning the division of Vietnam at Geneva]." After Nixon had already gone to China, he [Zhou Enlai] once again came to Vietnam in order to ask me about a number of problems concerning the fighting in southern Vietnam.

However, I immediately told Zhou Enlai: "Nixon has met with you already, comrade. Soon they [the US] will attack me even harder." I am not at all afraid. Both sides [the US and China] had negotiated with each other in order to fight me harder. He [Zhou Enlai] did not as yet reject this [view] as unfounded, and only said that "I will send additional guns and ammunition to you comrades."

Then he [Zhou Enlai] said [concerning fears of a secret US-Chinese plot]: "There was no such thing." However, the two had discussed how to hit us harder, including B-52 bombing raids and the blocking of Haiphong [harbor]. This was clearly the case.

- If the Soviet Union and China had not been at odds with each other, then the US could not have struck us as fiercely as they did. As the two [powers of China and the Soviet Union] were in conflict, the Americans were unhampered [by united socialist bloc opposition]. Although Vietnam was able to have unity and solidarity both with China and the USSR, to achieve this was very complicated, for at that time we had to rely on China for many things. At that time, China annually provided assistance of 500,000 tons of foodstuffs, as well as guns, ammunition, money, not to mention dollar aid. The Soviet Union also helped in this way. If we could not do that [preserve unity and solidarity with China and the USSR], things would have been very dangerous. Every year I had to go to China twice to talk with them [the Chinese leadership] about [the course of events] in southern Vietnam. As for the Soviets, I did not say anything at all [about the situation in southern Vietnam]. I only spoke in general terms. When dealing with the Chinese, I had to say that both were fighting the US. Alone I went. I had to attend to this matter. I had to go there and talk with them many times in this way, with the main intention to build closer relations between the two sides [meaning Chinese and Vietnamese]. It was precisely at this time that China pressured us to move away from the USSR, forbidding us from going with the USSR's [side] any longer.

They made it very tense. Deng Xiaoping, together with Kang Sheng, came and told me: "Comrade, I will assist you with several billion [presumably yuan] every year. You cannot accept anything from the Soviet Union."

I could not allow this. I said:
"No, we must have solidarity and unity with the whole [socialist] camp."

In 1963, when Khrushchev erred, [the Chinese] immediately issued a 25-point declaration and invited our Party to come and give our opinion. Brother Truong Chinh and I went together with a number of other brothers. In discussions, they [the Chinese] listened to us for ten or so points, but when it came to the point of "there is no abandonment of the socialist camp," they did not listen...Deng Xiaoping said, "I am in charge of my own document. I seek your opinion but I do not accept this point of yours."

Before we were to leave, Mao met with Brother Truong Chinh and myself. Mao sat down to chat with us, and in the end he announced: "Comrades, I would like you to know this. I will be president of 500 million land-hungry peasants, and I will bring an army to strike downwards into Southeast Asia." Also seated there, Deng Xiaoping added: "It is mainly because the poor peasants are in such dire straits!"

Once we were outside, I told Brother Truong Chinh: "There you have it, the plot to take our country and Southeast Asia. It is clear now." They dared to announce it in such a way. They thought we would not understand. It is true that not a minute goes by that they do not think of fighting Vietnam!

I will say more to you comrades so that you may see more of the military importance of this matter. Mao asked me:

In Laos, how many square kilometers [of land] are there?

I answered:
About 200,000 [sq. km.].

What is its population? [Mao asked]:

[I answered]: Around 3 million!

[Mao responded:] That's not very much! I'll bring my people there, indeed!

[Mao asked:] How many square kilometers [of land] are there in Thailand?.

[I responded]: About 500,000 [sq. km.].

And how many people? [Mao asked].

About 40 million! [I answered].

My God! [Mao said], Szechwan province of China has 500,000 sq. km., but has 90 million people. I'll take some more of my people there, too [to Thailand]!

As for Vietnam, they did not dare to speak about moving in people this way. However, he [Mao] told me: "Comrade, isn't it true that your people have fought and defeated the Yuan army?" I said: "Correct." "Isn't it also true, comrade, that you defeated the Qing army?" I said: "Correct." He said: "And the Ming army as well?" I said: "Yes, and you too. I have beaten you as well. Did you know that?" I spoke with Mao Zedong in that way. He said: "Yes, yes!" He wanted to take Laos, all of Thailand – as well as wanting to take all of Southeast Asia. Bringing people to live there. It was complicated [to that point].

In the past [referring to possible problems stemming from the Chinese threat during these times], we had made intense preparations; it is not that we were unprepared. If we had not made preparations, the recent situation would have been very dangerous. It was not a simple matter. Ten years ago, I summoned together our brothers in the military to meet with me. I told them that the Soviet Union and the US were at odds with each other. As for China, they had joined hands with the US imperialists. In this tense situation, you must study this problem immediately. I was afraid that the military did not understand me, so I told them that there was no other way to understand the matter. But they found it very difficult to understand. It was not easy at all. But I could not speak in any other way. And I did not allow others to grab me.
Virtual Archive : Comrade B on the Plot of the Reactionary Chinese Clique Against Vietnam
Mr. Mao really wanted to send hungry Chinese to Laos and Thailand:coffee:
 
We can endorse Cambodia led Indochina,Cambodia is our best friend if not an agent in Southeast Asia.
 

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