jeudi 20 mars 2014

THE WAR OF VIETNAM



the war of Viêt Nam



The war of Viêt Nam opposed, between 1959 and 1975,  Viêt liberal  Nam-of-South (and its principal ally, the United States) in  communist Viêt  Nam-of-North (supported by China and the USSR). This conflict lies  within the scope of the cold war  between the United States and the USSR.
ORIGINS OF THE WAR
A country divided into two
Old French colony under the name of Indo-China, Viêt Nam obtained its  independence in 1954, at the end of a violent war of decolonization against France (1946-1954). According to agreements' of peace signed in Geneva in July 1954, the country  is divided into two zones, north and south, with the height of the 17 E parallel (a line of geographical latitude). This division is supposed temporary  being, the reunification having to be done after  elections planned  for the year 1956.
A zone of international tensions
However, the fracture between north and the south are deeper.  Viêt Nam-of-North, directed by communist  president Hô Chí Minh, is supported by the great communist powers (China and the USSR). The government of  Viêt Nam-of-South,  anticommunist, for its part is supported by the Western powers (in particular by the United States).
In 1956, the South Vietnamese president  (Ngô Ðinh Diêm) refuses to give his capacity to the ballot boxes: he  is opposed to the organization elections, principal clause of the agreements of Geneva. To reverse this dictator and to restore the unit of the country, the Communists of the South who fought for independence ( the Vietcong) take the weapons in February 1959. They receive the support of the government north-Vietnamese in their guerrilla.
UNFOLDING OF THE WAR
The support of the United States
In full cold war  against the communist world, the United States supports Viêt Nam-of-South firmly. They are committed helping the South Vietnamese government, by providing him military money and advisers: in December 1961, 400 Americans unload in Viêt Nam; they are more than 11 000 the following year.
In Viêt Nam-of-South, the intolerance and  the violence of the president-dictator  gradually make pass in the opposition most of the population (even peaceful buddhist monks). The demonstrations multiply. The dictator  is finally reversed by a coup d'etat, in December 1963. During one year and half, political instability reigns in the South. The United States concludes that only a direct and massive intervention of the American army can still save the situation.
The American intervention
In August 1964, American president Lyndon Johnson announces that the Communists of Viêt Nam-of-North have just torpedoed two American ships posted in the gulf of Tonkin, off the coasts Vietnameses. Although distorts (or at least exaggerated), the advertisement of the president makes the effect of a bomb in the United States. Immediately, the Congress (American parliament)  vote the intensification of American engagement  in Viêt Nam. At the end of the year 1965, 200 000 soldiers is deployed in Viêt Nam-of-South; at the height of American engagement (in 1969), they are 541 000.
A conflict without mercy
In spite of their number and their technological equipment, the American soldiers do not manage to assert themselves on Viêt Nam.  The enemy is invisible; the Vietcong know their country perfectly. Dominating the jungle and the villages, they receive their supply of Viêt Nam-of-North by a network of paths, called  the track Hô Chí Minh.
The Americans start a strategy  of terror then: they excavate with violence the villages in the Vietcong search of combatants and of weapons, the tracks and the north-Vietnameses cities bombard, release napalm (a thick gasoline which causes malformations) in the rural zones, etc. This strategy, instead of reaching moral Vietnameses, brings a number of villagers persecuted to help the communist combatants.
At the beginning of the year 1968, the troops north-Vietnameses and viêt-công launch an offensive surprised on more than one hundred of South Vietnamese cities; this operation is called the offensive of the Small fireclay cup. They take the control of the military and administrative buildings, where they are cut off. It is at the end of several weeks of keen combat that the Americans take again the South Vietnamese cities.
Protests against the war
Parallel to enlisement of the American soldiers in Viêt Nam, in the United States, the population discovers with television the extent of the suffering which its army inflicts to the Vietnamese people.  A pacifist movement  develops and, soon, of the thousands of people start to express  against this ashamed war, in the United States and in the whole world.
Vis-a-vis this growing opposition, president Johnson decides not to represent himself with the elections. The dispute still develops after the arrival with the capacity of Richard Nixon, in 1969. The world learns with horror that  500 civil disarmed of the village of My Lai was massacred  by the American soldiers the previous year. However, the new president still hardens the American strategy in Viêt Nam: in 1970, it extends the bombardments to Kampuchea, frontier country being used as a basis to the combatants north-Vietnamese.
END OF THE WAR
While intensifying the bombardments on Viêt Nam-of-North, president Nixon decides "vietnamiser" the conflict: he  starts to repatriate his troops  (to save the life of its soldiers) and lets the South Vietnamese forces play a role growing on the ground. Deprived of the American support since 1973, Viêt Nam-of-South can nothing face the enemy offensive.  The troops of north invade the south  in 1974 and obtain the final victory in April 1975. Saigon (the old capital of the South) is famous  Hô Chí Minh-City. In 1976, Viêt Nam is reunified with, at its head,  a communist mode.
Vietnamese side, the war of Viêt Nam made 2 million died (including one great number of civil) and 3 million casualties. The final victory of the Communists caused the escape of 12 million people, including approximately 1 million by the sea on boats of fortune: they are called  the boat people. American side, the war made 57 000 killed and 153 300 wounded.





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GUINEA



Guinea

Guinea is a country of West Africa, giving on the Atlantic Ocean.
Guinea consists of  four natural areas:  a marshy coastal plain, in the west of the country, on the Atlantic Ocean;  the plate of Fouta-Djalon, which dominates the coastal plain;  the plate mandingue, which rises with the northern periphery of the country, at the border with Mali; and  the dorsal guinéenne, in south-east, where are drawn up the Nimba mounts (climax of the country with 1 752 m of altitude). The source of some of the large rivers of West Africa (Gambia and Niger for example) is on the territory guinéen.
The country counts four groups of population:  Mandingues  (originating in the plate mandingue),  Peul  (gathered in the area of Fouta-Djalon),  Soussou  (on the coast) and  people of the forest  (in the mountains of south-east). Islam  is the principal religion of Guinea.
The economy of Guinea rests mainly on the agriculture, which employs nearly 90 % of the working population, but the country is not self-sufficing in this field. On the other hand, its  mining resources  are very significant: the country is the second world bauxite producer, which constitutes its principal source of income. The hydroelectricity represents a significant source of energy; thanks to the rivers of Fouta-Djalon and Nimba mounts, Guinea is regarded as  the "water tower" of West Africa.


Guinea

Population
9 947 814 inhabitants in 2007
Capital
Conakry (1 365 778 inhabitants in 2003)
Surface
245 857 km²
Official language
French (official language);malinké, peul, soussou, kissi, bassari, loma, koniagi and kpelle (national languages)
Currency
frankly guinéen




TO GO FURTHER

?
Africa




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TRADITIONNAL HABITATS IN THE WORLD



traditional habitats in the world

The habitat indicates  the place of life  of the men. That corresponds to the house, but also with space around, where the men circulate, work, divert themselves. In many areas of the world, the men employ  the same techniques of construction from generation to generation, and the buildings preserve the same aspect since centuries. It is what is called  the traditional habitat.

Several reasons explain  the diversity of the traditional habitats in the world. First of all,  the materials  used depend on those which exist on the spot: stone, wood, the bamboo, ground, but also skins animal or snow in the case of the igloo.

The climate  also plays a significant role. In the cold and been windy areas, as in Europe, the traditional houses the often low and are gathered ones near the others. In the hot zones and dry, as in Africa, the house is protected from the sun. It comprises few windows and a small door. The materials employed keep heat for the night and freshness for the day. In the hot and wet zones, as in the south of Asia, the house large is opened, to let pass the air. Sometimes, it is even deprived of walls (at the Waraos Indians in South America). If it rains much, the building is covered with a conical roof, on which the rain slips. If, on the contrary, the rain is rare, the house comprises a platform roof (i.e. flat).

Lastly, of  the corporate names,  religious  or  symbolic systems  can influence the habitat. Thus, the villages of the people of Dogon of Mali (a country of West Africa) reproduce their vision of the world.


TO GO FURTHER 

for better knowing some people of the world: 

? 
Dogon
? 
Massaïs
?
Touareg
?
Mongols
?
Aboriginals
?
Sioux
?
Yanomami
?
Rom
?
Inuit




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