Adapted
from Appendix A, from Vietnam and America: A Documented History,
by Marvin E. Gettleman, Jane Franklin, Marilyn B. Young and H.
Bruce Franklin. New York: Grove Press. 1998.
______________________________________________________________________________
- 208 B.C.
- The kingdom of Nam-Việt is found.
- 111 B.C.
- Nam-Việt is incorporated into the Chinese empire, where it
remains for more than a thousand years despite frequent rebellions.
- A.D. 40-43
- The Trưng sisters lead an insurrection against China that
is successful for three years.
- A.D. 544-791
- Insurrections take place but fail to oust the Chinese.
- A.D. 939
- Vietnamese take advantage of the fall of the T'ang dynasty
in China to end direct Chinese rule.
- 1010
- Hanoi (then Thăng-Long) becomes capital of the country.
- 1257
- The first invasion of Vietnam by the Mongolian armies of Kublai
Khan, who had conquered China and much of Europe. The invaders
reach the capital but are driven out.
- 1284
- Kublai Khan launches half a million men against Vietnam, but
the invasion is defeated.
- 1287-1288
- A new Mongolian invasion is defeated by the Vietnamese.
- 1407-1427
- Invasion and occupation by China.
- 1418-1427
- Chinese defeated and driven out by a war led by Lê Lợi; establishment
of the Later Lê dynasty.
- 1535-1540
- Portuguese establish trading port near Đà Nẵng.
- 1616
- Jesuits build first mission in Vietnam.
- 1680
- First French trading post established.
- 1545-1787
- Intermittent warfare between two feudal houses, the Trịnh,
who control the north, and the Nguyễn, who control the south;
both continue to recognize the Lê dynasty as the sole legitimate
rule of Vietnam.
- 1771-1802
- The Tây Sơn movement overthrows both the Trịnh and the Nguyễn
feudal regimes, introduces major reforms, defeats Chinese invasion,
and reunifies the country.
- 1802
- Tây Sơn overthrown by Nguyễn Ánh (Emperor Gia Long), who establishes
Vietnam's last dynasty, the Nguyễn.
- 1804
- The name Việt Nam is officially adopted.
- 1850
- The French navy attacks Đà Nẵng, beginning the colonial conquest
of Vietnam.
- 1883
- France declares the name of Vietnam extinct and divides the
country into Cochin China (southern), Annam (central), and Tonkin
(northern).
- 1890
- Hồ Chí Minh is born. He leaves Vietnam in 1911 as a cabin
boy on a merchant vessel.
- 1914-1919
- World War I.
- 1917
- Russian Revolution.
- 1919
- During the Versailles Conference (France) ending World War
I, Hồ Chí Minh appeals to the Wilson Administration for aid
in securing legal and political rights.
- 1920
- At the French Socialist Party congress, Hồ Chí Minh votes
with the majority that splits to form the French Communist Party.
- 1930
- Formation of the Indochinese Communist Party (ICP). Major
uprisings in Tonkin and Annam.
- 1932
- The French install Bảo Đại as Emperor.
- 1939
- November—The Communist Party decides on revolutionary
struggle during the war and preparation for a general insurrection.
- 1940
- France falls to Germany. The Japanese invade Indochina. Frances
pro-Nazi Vichy government turns French Indochina over to Japan
but continues colonial administration in collaboration with
the Japanese until 1945. Two million Vietnamese are starved
to death as their rice is used to supply Japanese armies throughout
Southeast Asia.
- 1941
- June—Founding of the Revolutionary League for
the Independence of Vietnam (Độc Lập Đồng Minh Hội, known as
the Việt Minh), which leads the resistance war against the French
colonialists and the Japanese occupiers.
- 1945
- March—With the Việt Minh gaining strength,
Japan unilaterally ends French rule in Indochina and establishes
independent Vietnam under Emperor Bảo Đại.
April 12—President Franklin D. Roosevelt dies;
Harry Truman becomes President.
July-August—At the Postdam Conference, the United
States, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union decide that Britain
will occupy Vietnam and disarm Japanese troops south of the
16th parallel, and China will do the same north of the 16th
parallel.
August 15—Japan surrenders.
August 18-28—Việt Minh leads August Revolution;
insurrections throughout Vietnam.
August 30—Bảo Đại abdicates in favor of the Viet
Minh government.
- 1945
- September 2—Proclamation of Independence; founding
of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRV). In mid-September,
British General Douglas Gracey lands, re-arms Japanese and French
colonial forces, and begins restoring French control south of
the 16th parallel.
September 22—French troops arrive in Saigon;
struggle in south begins.
October—Hồ Chí Minh appeals to President Harry
Truman to support Vietnamese independence.
- 1946
- January—DRV holds elections for the first National
Assembly.
March 6—The French sign agreement with Hồ Chí
Minh recognizing his government and semi-independence of Vietnam
as a Free State in the French Union. The DRVs purpose is to
dislodge Chinese forces. Hồ Chí Minh explains: It is better
to sniff French dung for a while than eat China's all our lives.
November—The French, using US ships, bombard
Haiphong, killing 6,000 civilians. They invade Haiphong and
Hanoi.
December 19—Việt Minh attack French forces; the
war between France and the DRV has begun.
- 1948
- The Truman Administration begins funding the French war.
- 1949
- March—The Élysée Agreement between France and
the State of Vietnam declares Vietnam's independence as an associate
state within the French Union.
April—The French install Bảo Đại as head of state.
October—The Chinese Communists proclaim the establishment
of the People's Republic of China.
- 1950
- China and the Soviet Union recognize the Democratic Republic
of Vietnam headed by Hồ Chí Minh. The United States recognizes
the Bao Dai regime. Both Vietnamese governments claim sovereignty
over all of Vietnam. The US Military Assistance Advisory Group
(MAAG) is sent to Vietnam by the Truman Administration. US advisers
and eventually some 250 US pilots participate with the French
forces in the fighting, and the United States ends up providing
80 percent of the financing of the French war.
- 1954
- March 13—Battle of Điện Biên Phủ begins.
April 16—Vice-President Richard Nixon publicly
proposes sending US troops to Vietnam.
May 7—Fall of Diện Biên Phủ to DRV army.
- 1954
- May 8-July 21—Geneva Conference, which ends
with the Geneva Agreement that all foreign forces will be withdrawn
from Vietnam; the 17th parallel set as the temporary demarcation
line between forces of the French Union and those of the DRV;
Vietnam to hold internationally supervised elections in 1956
to choose the government of the entire country.
June 1—Colonel Edward Lansdale arrives in Saigon
to set up the Saigon Military Mission and coordinate covert
attacks on the DRV.
June 16—Bảo Đại, as head of the State of Vietnam,
appoints Ngô Đình Diệm as his premier.
July 1—Ngô Đình Diệm arrives in Saigon.
September 8—The United States arranges the creation
of the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO), consisting
of the United States, Britain, France, Australia, New Zealand,
Pakistan, Thailand, and the Philippines and mandating the collective
defense of Laos, Cambodia, and the State of Vietnam.
October 23—President Eisenhower pledges to Ngô
Đình Diệm that the United States will support his regime as
the Government of Vietnam (that is, the entire country).
- 1955-1956
- Ngô Đình Diệm gains control over Saigon, rejects national
elections guaranteed by the Geneva Accords, defeats Bao Dai
in a rigged election in the south, proclaims the Republic of
Vietnam with himself as president, and begins repression of
those who had fought with the Viet Minh. The United States finances
his government and trains and equips his security police and
the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN).
- 1956-1959
- Terror campaign extends Saigons rule over the countryside.
Creation of agrovilles or strategic hamlets.
- 1957
- January—The DRV announces a policy of building
socialism in one country.
- 1959
- Ngô Đình Diệm's Law 10/59 legitimizes massive repression.
Scattered resistance breaks out.
- 1960
- March—Nam Bộ (South Vietnam) Veterans of Resistance
proclaim rebellion.
April 17—140 African-American students form Student
Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in Raleigh, NC.
December—Formation of the National Liberation
Front of South Vietnam (NLF), which Saigon and Washington call
the Viet Cong. NLF begins full-scale revolution against the
Saigon regime.
- 1961
- President John F. Kennedy approves secret military plan for
Vietnam and Laos, including covert war against North Vietnam
and Special Forces covert operations in Laos and South Vietnam.
The United States begins chemical defoliation in South Vietnam
(Operation Hades, later Operation Ranch Hand). US military personnel
increased to more than 3,000.
- 1962
- Establishment of US Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (MACV).
US military personnel increased to more than 11,000.
- 1963
- May-August—Buddhist demonstrations violently
repressed by the Saigon government.
August-October—US Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge
plans with Washington and ARVN generals to overthrow Ngô Đình
Diệm.
August 28—More than 250,000 people march in civil
rights demonstration now known as March on Washington for Jobs
and Freedom. Martin Luther King, Jr. gives his famous I Have
a Dream speech.
September 21—War Resisters League (WRL) holds
first U.S. demonstration against American war in Vietnam.
November 1—Generals stage coup, assassinating
Ngô Đình Diệm and his brother Ngô Đình Nhu, head of the secret
police.
November 22—Assassination of President Kennedy;
Lyndon B. Johnson becomes President.
November 26—President Johnson issues NSAM 273,
secret plan for a full-scale US war in Vietnam. US military
personnel now between 16,000 and 19,000.
- 1964
- February 1—US Operations Plan 34A (Oplan 34-A)
is implemented, including raids by mercenaries and Saigon commandos
on North Vietnamese coastal installations.
June—General William Westmoreland becomes head
of MACV; General Maxwell Taylor replaces Lodge as ambassador.
August 2—US destroyer Maddox fires on North Vietnamese
PT boats responding to an Oplan 34-A raid on coastal islands.
August 4—US claims, despite a lack of evidence,
that the destroyers Maddox and C. Turner Joy were attacked on
the high seas for four hours by North Vietnamese PT boats. President
Johnson orders retaliatory aerial bombing of North Vietnam.
August 7—Congress passes the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution,
giving the president virtually unlimited power to conduct war
in Southeast Asia. The only dissenting votes are cast by Senator
Wayne Morse (Oregon) and Senator Ernest Gruening (Alaska).
September-November—President Johnson, successfully
campaigning to be elected president, repeatedly promises that
he will never send American boys to fight in Vietnam.
December—US military personnel number more than
23,000.
- 1965
- February 6—NLF attacks US forces at Pleiku.
February 7—Retaliatory bombing of North Vietnam
(Operation Flaming Dart).
February 27—US White Paper alleges that war in
South Vietnam is not indigenous but is a North Vietnam campaign
of aggression.
March-June—Antiwar teach-ins on many US campuses.
March 2—Operation Rolling Thunder, the sustained
US bombing of North Vietnam, begins; it continues until October
31, 1968.
March 8—US Marines, the first officially acknowledged
combat units, go ashore at Da Nang to join the 24,000 US military
advisers already in Vietnam.
April 17—In Washington, 25,000 people march against
the war.
June—The eighth military government since the
overthrow of Ngô Đình Diệm comes to power in Saigon, headed
by Air Vice Marshall Nguyễn Cao Kỳ and General Nguyễn Văn Thiệu.
October-November—Large antiwar demonstrations
in Washington and other US cities.
December—US military personnel number more than
184,000.
- 1966
- January—Senator J. William Fulbright held Foreign
Relations Committee hearings about the war.
By the year end, General Westmoreland commands over
1 million troops, including 362,000 Americans. During 1966,
more than 5,000 Americans are killed and more than 30,000 are
wounded.
September 22—800 Puerto Rican men pledge to refuse
US Vietnam era draft, part of the colonial subjugation of our
country, in Lares, Puerto Rico.
- 1967
- Throughout the year, there are huge antiwar demonstrations.
More than 9,000 American are killed in Vietnam and close to
100,000 are wounded. By the fall, US troop strength is close
to 500,000, and the forces under US command number more than
1.3 million.
April 4—Martin Luther King, Jr., denounces the
war and calls the US government the greatest purveyor of violence
in the world today; and this war is a blasphemy against all
that America stands for.
November 21—General Westmoreland, called back
home to engage in public relations, tells the nation that the
enemys hopes are bankrupt, his forces are declining at a steady
rate, and soon the South Vietnamese army will take charge of
the final mopping up of the Vietcong.
End of 1967—The U.S. troop casualties rose to
16,021.
- 1968
- January 30-February 24—The Tet Offensive: NLF
launches simultaneous attacks on all US military bases in Vietnam
and 110 cities and towns in South Vietnam.
March 1—The frenzied buying of gold, which breaks
through the thirty-five-dollar-an-ounce price held since 1934.
March 12—Antiwar Senator Eugene McCarthy comes
close to beating incumbent President Johnson in the New Hampshire
Democratic primary.
March 16—Antiwar Senator Robert Kennedy enters
the presidential race.
March 16—US soldiers massacre hundreds of villagers
in the hamlet of My Lai.
March 22—Announcement is made that General Westmoreland
is being relieved of his command.
March 31—President Johnson announces a partial
halt of the bombing of North Vietnam and withdraws from the
presidential race.
April 4—Martin Luther King, Jr., is assassinated.
April 4-11—Riots and rebellions in 125 US cities;
Army reserves are called-up.
April 11—The Civil Rights Act.
May 10—Peace talks between US and DRV open in
Paris.
June 4—Robert Kennedy wins the Democratic primary
in California, with 88 percent of the votes going to him and
rival antiwar candidate McCarthy. That night Kennedy is assassinated
in Los Angeles.
July 5—US Marines, proclaiming a major victory,
withdraw under fire from the besieged base of Khe Sanh.
August 5-8—Republican National Convention in
Miami Beach nominates Richard Nixon, who pledges that he will
end the Vietnam War as soon as he takes office. A line of tanks
has sealed off Miami Beach from the riots taking place in Miami.
August 26-29—Democratic National Convention in
Chicago nominates Vice-President Hubert Humphrey, although he
has won only 2.2 percent of the delegates in the state primaries,
which were swept by McCarthy and Kennedy. Outside, police battle
antiwar demonstrators.
End of 1968—The U.S. troop casualties double
in one year to 30,160.
- 1969
- January—The NLF and the Saigon government join
the peace talks.
January-June—President Nixon and H. Ross Perot
secretly plan a massive POW/MIA campaign to build support for
continuing the war.
February—US troops participate in Operation Dewey
Canyon I in Laos.
March—US forces in Vietnam peak at more than
540,000.
May 8—The NLF puts forward its ten-point position
at the Paris negotiations.
May 14—President Nixon in a televised speech
presents his Administrations eight-point negotiation position
and announces the withdrawal of 25,000 US troops.
June 25—The Provisional Revolutionary Government
of South Vietnam (PRG) is announced.
September 2—Hồ Chí Minh dies.
October 15—Millions of Americans participate
in the antiwar Moratorium.
November 15—During the antiwar Mobilization,
a million protesters march in Washington and San Francisco while
many GIs in Vietnam, including entire units, stage antiwar demonstrations.
- 1970
- February—Henry Kissinger and Lê Đức Thọ begin
secret peace talks in Paris.
April 29—US and ARVN troops invade eastern Cambodia.
May 4—Nationwide protest demonstrations erupt,
during which four students are shot to death and 13 wounded
by soldiers at Kent State University.
May 14—Two African-American students killed and
30 wounded by police at Jackson State College, Jackson, MS.
June 24—Senate repeals the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution.
August 29—25,000 Chicanos protest Vietnam war
in streets of Los Angeles.
December—Congress bans US combat troops in Laos
and Cambodia.
- 1971
- January 10—Peoples Peace Treaty between peoples
of the United States and Vietnam, endorsed by 130 organizations
and million of north Americans later.
February-March—Dewey Canyon II: The invasion
of Laos by ARVN troops with US air support turns into a debacle.
April—As part of a massive antiwar demonstration
in Washington, Vietnam veterans stage Dewey Canyon III, during
which several hundred throw their medals and ribbons at the
Capitol.
May 3—May Day Action Against Viet Nam War results
in largest mass arrests in U.S. history. 14,000 people shut
down shut down war machine for 3 days. Washington, DC.
June—The New York Times begins serial
publication of The Pentagon Papers, the top-secret
Pentagon history of the Vietnam War, stolen by Daniel Ellsberg
and Anthony Russo.
October—Nguyễn Văn Thiệu, running unopposed,
is elected president of South Vietnam.
December 26—15 members of Vietnam Veterans Against
the War (VVAW) capture the Statue of Liberty for 43 hours (New
York).
- 1972
- February—President Nixon visits China.
March-May—Major offensive by insurgent forces
in South Vietnam.
May—Nixon orders mining of Haiphong harbor.
June—Nixons Plumbers apprehended during burglary
of the Democratic headquarters in the Watergate apartment and
office complex.
October—Kissinger and Lê Đức Thọ reach agreement
on peace terms; Nixon announces that peace is at hand; Nguyễn
Văn Thiệu rejects terms.
November—Nixon wins re-election in a landslide.
December 13—Peace talks break down when Lê Đức
Thọ rejects changes in the agreement demanded by Nguyễn Văn
Thiệu.
December 18-31—Operation Linebackers II: the
massive Christmas bombing of Hanoi and Haiphong, during which
many B-52s and other planes are shot down.
December 26—Peace talks resume, leading essentially
to reinstatement of the October agreement by January 18, 1973.
- 1973
- January 27—Peace agreement, signed by US, DRV,
ARVN, and PRG, basically implements the terms of the 1969 NLF
ten-point position.
February 1—In a secret letter to Hanois Prime
Minister Phạm Văn Đồng, Nixon pledges over $4 billion in US
aid to North Vietnam.
March—The last US combat troops are withdrawn
from Vietnam. The last US prisoners of war are released; they
are made the heroes of the war in the Nixon Administrations
Operation Homecoming. US draft ended.
July 1—Congress passes a law forbidding the use
of any funds for combat in, over, or off the shores of Cambodia,
Laos, North Vietnam, and South Vietnam as of August 15, 1973.
November—Congress passes the War Power Act over
presidential veto.
- 1974
- January-May—Cease-fire breaks down, and Saigon
launches major offensive.
May—House Judiciary Committee begin impeachment
hearings.
August-September—Nixon resigns. He is replaced
by Gerald Ford, whom he had appointed vice-president after Vice-President
Spiro Agnew resigned in 1973 while being indicted for several
felonies, for which he was later convicted. President Ford pardons
Nixon for any and all crimes he may have committed while president.
- 1975
- January-April—Major offensive by NLF and army
of the DRV. Saigons army collapses. Nguyễn Văn Thiệu resigns.
April 30—Saigon surrenders to the revolutionary
forces. Last US personnel leave in an emergency helicopter airlift
from the roof of the US Embassy.
May 16—The United States imposes a trade embargo
on Vietnam.
- 1976
- Vietnam unifies as the Socialist Republic of Vietnam (SRV)
with Hanoi as its capital. After fifteen months of hearings
and investigations, the House Select Committee on Missing Persons
in Southeast Asia reports that there is no credible evidence
that any US POWs are being held against their will in Vietnam.
- 1977
- Khmer Rouge, now rulers of Kampuchea (Cambodia), launch attacks
on Vietnamese villages in Tay Ninh province. Vietnam is admitted
to the United Nations. Vietnam counterattacks Khmer Rouge forces.
- 1978
- November—Vietnam signs friendship pact with
the Soviet Union.
December—President Jimmy Carter normalizes relations
with China. Vietnam, allied with dissident Khmer Rouge forces,
invades Cambodia.
- 1979
- January—Vietnamese forces defeat Khmer Rouge
and help install a friendly government in Cambodia.
February—China invades northern Vietnam but is
defeated by mid-March.
- 1981
- President Ronald Reagans Administration sets up covert operations
in Laos, Thailand, and the United States to promote the POW/MIA
issue.
- 1982
- Vietnam Veterans Memorial is unveiled in Washington. President
Reagan sets up POW/MIA Interagency Group with leading POW/MIA
activists in key positions.
- 1983
- January 23—President Reagan declares that from
now on, the POW/MIA issue will be the highest national priority.
- 1989
- After eight years of fomenting the POW/MIA issue, the Reagan
Administrations final report on the question admits that it
has found no reliable evidence of any US POWs alive in Southeast
Asia. The last Vietnamese troops are withdrawn from Cambodia.
The first year Vietnam is self-sufficient in food over 150 years.
- 1991
- April 9—President George Bush announces a road
map for full normalization of relations with Vietnam in two
years.
July—Phony pictures of alleged US POWs in Vietnam
unleash POW/MIA media blitz.
August 2—Creation of the Senate Committee on
POW/MIA Affairs, which begins eighteen months of hearings.
- 1993
- January—Senate Committee on POW/MIA Affairs
releases an inconclusive final report.
July—President Bill Clintons Administration announces
that it will no longer block International Monetary Fund (IMF)
loans to Vietnam.
September—Clinton Administration maintains the
US trade embargo against Vietnam that has been in effect since
1975, but allows US companies to begin bidding on future contracts
for projects in Vietnam funded by international development
agencies.
- 1994
- February 3—President Clinton announces that
he is lifting the trade embargo on Vietnam because of one factor
and one factor only: This will help achieve the fullest possible
accounting for our prisoners of war and our missing in action.
- 1995
- April 9—We were terribly wrong, former Secretary
of Defense Robert McNamara on Vietnam.
July 11—The United States normalizes relations
with Vietnam.
- 2000
- February 28—Vietnam announces for the first
time that it will pay compensation for soldiers (1961-1975)
and their children (about 2 millions) affected by Agent Orange
during the war with the United States.
March 30—The Air Force (Ranch Hand Study) has
found the strongest evidence to date that exposure to Agent
Orange is linked to diabetes.
April 19—South Korean veterans (of the U.S. allied
forces) admit to many cases of massacre of civilians in Vietnam
in 1966. South Korea sent 320,000 troops to support the U.S.
in Vietnam during the period of 1965-19734,960 killed and 11,000
injured.
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