20230920 Cong Dong Tham Luan Chuyen Di Dem P64
Đọc trong tài liệu nầy sẽ cho chúng ta thấy một kẻ đi
cướp nước cùng một kẻ đi bán đồng minh thảo luận việc ký kết hiệp ước và gạt ra
ngoài kẻ thế cô miền Nam Việt-Nam, cuối cùng cả hai kẻ cướp và bán đồng minh đổ
lỗi việc thất bại của hiệp định là do kẻ yếu thế cô miền Nam Việt-Nam đã không
chịu hợp tác!
Thái độ gian xảo xâm lược miền Nam của cộng sản giặc Hồ
không thay đổi.
Đưa quân đội vào xâm lăng miền Nam nhưng lại từ chối
không nhìn nhận có quân đội Bắc Việt tại miền Nam.
“Le Duc Tho: You have to carry these out.
Let me finish, because this is what we envisage. Vietnam is a poor country
indeed, but we are a poor country, but we are a hardworking people. We have our
two hands to let us. Without your contribution we have assistance from
elsewhere. As human beings we have to find out ways to live on. It is our
desire to have normal relations with you but you are unwilling to do that, then
we have another course to take. We have to [Page
1700] live on. And now as regarding South Vietnam, we
do want peace in South Vietnam, but if the Saigon people
want the fighting then we will fight.
Because when you brought in a half million American troops, we got to fight you. Now if the Saigon forces
want to fight them, we are prepared to cope
with them. We appealed to them to observe the ceasefire and we appealed
to them to adopt peace, but they are unwilling.”
Bảo rằng muốn có hòa bình nhưng cộng sản giặc Hồ cứ
đưa quân từ Cambodia, Lào vào tấn chiếm từng vùng miền của miền Nam sau ngày ký
hiệp định đình chiến rồi đổ lỗi cho miền Nam gân hấn.
Vệ Quốc An Dân
là nhiệm vụ của quân lực Việt-Nam Cộng-Hòa. Khi bị cộng sản tấn công miền Nam
phải tự vệ, nghĩa là ở thế thủ thụ động.
Những hành động của cộng sản giặc Hồ cho thấy việc tấn
chiếm miền Nam chỉ để tạo nhiều cơ hội cho Trung-cộng kiểm soát toàn vùng Đông
Nam Á Châu qua bàn tay của cộng sản giặc Hồ.
Tội cướp nước và bán nước của cộng sản giặc Hồ lộ ra từng
ngày, từng tháng, từng năm cho mải đến hôm nay.
65. Memorandum of Conversation1
Paris, June 9, 1973,
noon–2:40 p.m.
https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v42/d65
https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v42/pg_1696
https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v42/pg_1697
https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v42/pg_1698
https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v42/pg_1699
https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v42/pg_1700
https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v42/pg_1701
https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v42/pg_1702
https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v42/pg_1703
https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v42/pg_1704
https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v42/pg_1705
https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v42/pg_1706
https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v42/pg_1707
https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v42/pg_1708
https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v42/pg_1709
https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v42/d65#fnref:1.7.4.4.32.55.8.2
Lesson in Vietnam
from Kissinger to Nixon:… “when we made it “our war” we would not
let the South Vietnamese fight it; when it again became “their war”, we would
not help them fight it.”
Lesson of Vietnam May 12 1975 by Henry A. Kissinger
https://www.fordlibrarymuseum.gov/library/exhibits/vietnam/032400091-002.pdf
https://thebattleofkontum.com/extras/kissinger.html
Van Ban Hiep Dinh Paris 27011973
http://suthat-toiac.blogspot.com/2008/07/hip-nh-paris-2711973-vn-bn.html
Agreement on ending the war and restoring
peace in Viet-Nam.
Signed at Paris on 27 January 1973
https://treaties.un.org/doc/Publication/UNTS/Volume%20935/volume-935-I-13295-English.pdf
https://treaties.un.org/doc/Publication/UNTS/Volume%20935/v935.pdf
***
NLF=National
Liberation Front=Mặt Trận Dân Tộc Giải Phóng,
PRG=Provisional
Revolutionary Government of Vietnam = Chính phủ Cách mạng
Lâm thời Việt Nam,
DRVN= Democratic
Republic of North Vietnam=Việt Nam Dân Chủ Cộng Hòa=cộng sản Bắc Việt.
DRV (also DRVN), Democratic
Republic of (North) Vietnam
NLF, National
Liberation Front, Communist front organization in South Vietnam acting as
political government of the insurgency; later renamed Provisional Revolutionary
Government of Vietnam
NVA, North
Vietnamese Army, term used by the United States for the People’s Army of
(North) Vietnam
PAVN, People’s
Army of (North) Vietnam
PLAF, People’s
Liberation Armed Forces, Communist forces in South Vietnam, synonymous with
Viet Cong
PRG, Provisional
Revolutionary Government of Vietnam, political wing of the South Vietnamese
Communist movement, replaced the National Liberation Front (NLF), but the terms
are often used interchangeably
Paris Peace Talks, a
loosely defined term that, depending on context, could mean the secret meetings
between Henry Kissinger for the United States and Le Duc Tho for the Democratic
Republic of (North) Vietnam or the 174 meetings of the public talks held from
1968 to 1973 between the United States and the Republic of (South) Vietnam on
one side and the Democratic Republic of (North) Vietnam and the Provisional
Revolutionary Government of Vietnam on the other; the latter were also known as
Plenary or Avénue Kléber talks
Rue
Darthé, 11 Rue Darthé, the address of one of the residences
of the Democratic Republic of (North) Vietnam in the Paris suburb of
Choisy-le-Roi used as a venue for the Kissinger-Le Duc Tho negotiations.
Avenue
Kléber (also Ave. Kléber or Kléber), address
of the International Conference Center at the Hotel Majestic in Paris, the site
of the (plenary) Paris Peace Talks; see also Paris
Peace Talks
SALT, Strategic
Arms Limitation Talks
Seven Points, peace
plan presented by Kissinger on May 31, 1971, at his meeting with Le Duc Tho;
peace plan presented by the NLF Delegation in July 1971 at the (plenary) Paris
Peace Talks
Nine
Points, peace plan presented by Xuan
Thuy on June 26, 1971
Ten Points, peace
plan presented by NLF delegate Madame Binh on May 8, 1969, at the (plenary)
Paris Peace Talks; peace plan presented by Le Duc Tho on August 1, 1972, at his
meeting with Kissinger; peace plan presented by Kissinger on August 14, 1972,
at his meeting with Le Duc Tho
Two-Point Elaboration, elaboration
of the Ten Point peace plan presented by the DRV Delegation on February 2,
1972, at the (plenary) Paris Peace Talks
Twelve Points, peace
plan presented by Kissinger on August 1, 1972, at his meeting with Le Duc Tho
strategic hamlets, a
South Vietnamese Government program to counter Viet Cong control in the
countryside. The government relocated farmers into fortified hamlets to provide
defense, economic aid, and political assistance to residents. The hope was that
protection from Viet Cong raids and taxation would bind the rural populace to
the government and gain their loyalty. The program started in 1962, but was
fatally undermined by over expansion and poor execution. By 1964 it had clearly
failed.
GVN, Government of (South) Vietnam
RVN, Republic
of (South) Vietnam
RVNAF, Republic
of (South) Vietnam Armed Forces
https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1969-76v42/terms
***
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