Communication and Culture in South East Asia: Week 10 - Conflict & Independence Struggles
Communication and Culture in South East Asia: Week 10 - Conflict & Independence Struggles
Communication and Culture in South East Asia: Week 10 - Conflict & Independence Struggles
EAST ASIA
COLONIALISM
Before World War II, Southeast Asia controlled by major colonial powers
Burma, Malaya controlled by British; Philippines by United States; Indonesia was Dutch colony
Modern day countries of Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia part of French colony, French Indochina
STRUGGLES
Communist rebels in Malaya fought the British before achieving independence
Group known as Vietminh fought French troops to win Vietnamese independence
Vietminh leader, Communist Ho Chi Minh
Received assistance from China, Soviet Union
Major goal was independence, not expansion of communism
After years of fighting, Vietminh defeated France; French control of Indochina ended
Probably the most renowned and remembered regional conflict is that of the Vietnam War.
VIETNAM WAR
Fighting with France was over, but conflict was not.
Ho Chi Minh’s dream of a united, independent Vietnam would be achieved only after years of war.
Is peaceful independence possible?
1954, representatives from France, Vietnam, U.S., Soviet Union, other nations met to establish peace
agreement for Vietnam
Talks reflected Cold War tensions
Worried about spread of communism, Western powers did not want Ho Chi Minh and the Communists, to
have complete control of Vietnam
DOMINO THEORY
• Vietnam temporarily divided into northern, southern halves
• Communists would control north
• Voters to choose government for reunited Vietnam in 1956
• President Eisenhower warned if Vietnam fell to communism, other Southeast Asian nations would quickly
follow
• Belief that communism would spread, the so called domino theory
FIGHTING BEGINS
U.S. supported South Vietnam
• U.S. supported South Vietnam to keep from being taken over by North
• South Vietnam leader Ngo Dinh Diem prevented 1956 election
• Also made enemies with corrupt, brutal rule
VIETCONG
• Diem’s enemies formed Vietcong, “Vietnamese Communist”—not all Vietcong Communists; all shared goal
of overthrowing Diem, reuniting Vietnam
• Soon North Vietnamese entered South Vietnam, fought alongside Vietcong
FIGHTING ESCALATES
• As Vietcong influence spread, U.S. increased aid to South Vietnam
• Also sent thousands of military advisors to help South Vietnamese forces
• August 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson informed Congress two U.S. Navy ships subject of unprovoked
attack by North Vietnamese gunboats
GULF OF TONKIN RESOLUTION
• True, one U.S. ship fired on by North Vietnamese; second attack seems to have been misunderstanding
• Johnson did not mention full facts, Congress passed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
• This gave Johnson the power to expand U.S. involvement without formal declaration of war
AMERICAN PRESENCE
• American military presence in Vietnam grew quickly, hundreds of thousands of combat troops sent to region
• Increased U.S. involvement forced North Vietnam, Vietcong to change military strategy
• Rather than press for quick victory, focused on outlasting enemies
WEEKENED SUPPORT
• American leaders had claimed victory in Vietnam close at hand
• Tet Offensive dramatically showed this was not case
• Attacks greatly weakened American public support for war
OPPOSITION GREW
• After Tet Offensive, war expanded into Laos, Cambodia
• North Vietnamese had supply network—Ho Chi Minh Trail
• U.S. efforts to destroy trail failed
• More Americans opposed war
POLITICAL IDEOLOGY
United States feared Communists would take control of South Vietnam;
The war began and U.S. involvement increased;
American public opposition to the war grew;
United States removed troops;
North Vietnamese took control of South Vietnam.
INDONESIA
• Over 13,000 islands spread across Indian, Pacific oceans
• Had been Dutch colony known as Dutch East Indies before being taken over by Japan during World War II
• Dutch tried to regain control after war
• Dutch faced independence movement led by Sukarno
• 1949, Indonesia finally won independence
• Sukarno became first Indonesian president
• Tried to stay out of the Cold War; eventually allied with Soviet Union, supported growth of Indonesia’s
Communist party
• Sukarno almost bankrupted nation
• In 1965 a group of army officers and Communists tried to seize power in a coup d’état.
• The head of the army, General Suharto, fought back.
• In the struggle for power that followed the attempted coup, hundreds of thousands of Communists and alleged
Communists were murdered.
• Suharto took control of country when struggle ended
• Ruled Indonesia for many years
• Authoritarian regime corrupt, but Indonesian economy revived
• 1980s, some Indonesians turned against Suharto, resented corruption, use of power
• 1997, economy collapsed; protests, riots broke out and he stepped down the following year.
• In subsequent years, a series of democratic governments worked to rebuild the nation’s economy.
• Today Indonesia has fourth-largest population in world and home to over 300 ethnic groups.
• On island of Sulawesi, thousands died in fighting between Christians, Muslims
• In the 2000s, Muslim radicals linked to terrorist attacks in Indonesia
EAST TIMOR
• 1975, Indonesia seized control of East Timor, former Portuguese colony
• East Timorese fought against Indonesian invasion for nearly three decades
• Over 100,000 people died; 2002, finally won independence
CAMBODIA
• Cambodia endured years of struggle after winning independence from France in 1953
• In 1975 Communist Khmer Rouge gained control of country
• Khmer Rouge established Communist government led by Pol Pot
• Renamed the country Kampuchea and began radical program to rebuild Cambodian society
• Goal: country of simple peasants
• To achieve goal, all influences of urban life, modern civilization had to be destroyed
• All opposition destroyed
• Anyone educated killed
• 1.5 million died
• Conflict between Khmer Rouge, Vietnam turned into war
• 1979, Vietnam invaded Cambodia, forced Pol Pot from power
• Pol Pot led Khmer Rouge guerrillas in civil war throughout 1980s
• Now rebuilding
ARE THESE NATIONS BETTER OFF TODAY?
• So how have many of these nations changed?
• Many of its nations have gained independence from colonial rule, but have struggled to build stable,
independent governments.
• Of course does independence bring true independence?
• What is neo-colonialism?
CONFLICT TYPES
Conflicts in South Asia can be broadly put in 4 categories.
1. Those imposed and escalated by the global political, strategic and developmental dynamics, including the role
of great powers;
2. Those inherited and strategically induced in inter-state engagements;
3. Those precipitated and nurtured by the internal political turbulence, socio-cultural fault-lines and
developmental distortions;
4. Those that are caused and covered by the non-state actors.
The first category includes conflicts inflicted by the forces and factors from outside the region.