Studyspark Study Document

Leaders of Vietnam the Vietnam War Has Essay

Pages:2 (580 words)

Sources:3

Subject:World Studies

Topic:Ho Chi Minh

Document Type:Essay

Document:#16952484


Leaders of Vietnam

The Vietnam War has been considered the longest and most controversial one in U.S. history since it spanned over 20 years from 1954 to 1975 and cost many lives in the way of independence. The war was actually between the anti-Communist South and Communist North Vietnam, but it was exaggerated by U.S. who supported the anti-Communist community due to its own strategic interests. The war ended as a result of fall of Saigon, the capital of South Vietnam and the two parts of the same country united again, giving a huge forfeit to anti-Communist alliances. The war was led by two brilliant leaders on both sides; Ho Chi Minh in North while Ngo Dihn Diem in the Southern part of Vietnam. These two persons derived the entire population of Vietnam for a single goal, freedom, although they both differ in ideologies and orientations and were strictly opposed to each other. In this paper, the leadership styles of both the leaders will be discussed in order to understand about their influence in the Vietnamese society and into the hearts and minds of the Vietnamese people.

It is unanimously believed that the personality of Ho Chi Minh was charismatic and mysterious at the same time, which he used politically for the independence of his country and people. Very little is known about his past and therefore, whatever he was, he transformed himself into a man of people. He was in the favor of independence with pride and dignity and this view of him logically inspired the people of North Vietnam. He was a man of emotions who had immense affects upon the friends and enemies as well. There was no reason to hate him or to disregard him because…


Cite this Document

Join thousands of other students and "spark your studies."

Sign Up for FREE
Related Documents

Studyspark Study Document

Vietnam War Explained Through the

Pages: 6 (1569 words) Sources: 5 Subject: Drama - World Document: #51434630

This ability to use the bipolar system to its advantage helped North Vietnam to win its war for independence and to take over South Vietnam in 1975. Realism not only fully explains the actions of each state in this conflict, but it also predicted the outbreak of war as soon as ideology became the focus of the debate on Vietnam. In Conclusion, the Vietnam War was an excellent example of

Studyspark Study Document

Vietnam War As of Today

Pages: 10 (3033 words) Sources: 5 Subject: War Document: #98678534

Vietnam: An Unpopular War VIETNAM WAR 12 The paper takes a look into the unpopularity of the Vietnam War and the failed strategies, which resulted in the defeat of the U.S. army in Vietnam. A lot of news and opinions exist regarding the Vietnam War, which tells us about its unpopularity (Writer Thoughts). Several reasons exist about this specific topic and this paper addresses those reasons. Different scholars have put forward arguments regarding the

Studyspark Study Document

Vietnam War and War

Pages: 2 (734 words) Sources: 2 Subject: War Document: #94205253

Vietnam War Effects The Vietnam war was a game-changer in many ways. Just one of the major ways that things changed was the power of the political machine in Washington DC. Vietnam had very much devolved into a political war whereby the government's civilian leaders were controlling (or trying to) what was going on in Vietnam in terms of what the soldiers were doing and what the goal was. Concurrently, this

Studyspark Study Document

Vietnam War on the Issue of Class

Pages: 3 (1319 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Military Document: #12361928

Vietnam War on the issue of class and race on the Black Americans who participated in the war too. Vietnam War America has in many wars, starting from the Revolutionary era to the war in Vietnam. These wars have inflicted the American society with frequent problems related to paranoia, racial prejudice and discrimination. In any war, the racial groups, ethnic minority or beliefs are discriminated against the enemy from that period,

Studyspark Study Document

Vietnam War What Role the United States

Pages: 1 (351 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: American History Document: #97428810

Vietnam War [...] what role the United States should have played in the Vietnam War. role in the Vietnam War was controversial from the first. Thousands of Americans protested the war while thousands more lost their lives in the fight. The war killed 58,000 Americans, and cost Americans about $150 billion dollars. America first sent troops to the war because leaders felt it was the only way to stop the

Studyspark Study Document

Vietnam War

Pages: 6 (1836 words) Subject: War Document: #83653293

Introduction
The American Vietnam War (1965-1975) was a complex affair that encompassed many themes and issues—from the fight to contain Communism, which was very much on the minds of many Americans especially since Kennedy had been said to have been assassinated by one, to the problem of the draft and rising protests against the war. As perception of the war changed over time with the help of media interventions, both

Join thousands of other students and

"spark your studies".