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Full Description
Despite their insistence that the complete withdrawal of U.S. troops was the condition for the release of prisoners of war, the Democratic Republic of Vietnam took little action to account for American POWs at the end of the Vietnam War. Almost two decades would pass following the end of the war before significant internal political changes, shifting regional alignments, changing Western interests, Sino-Soviet rapprochement, a nonmilitary settlement of the Cambodian conflict, and the collapse of the Soviet Union would bring Hanoi to the point of recognizing the importance of mending its relationship with the West. From the Paris peace talks to the U.S. government's decision in 1994 to lift the trade embargo against Vietnam, Hanoi's policy on American MIAs and POWs is examined, with particular focus on the influence of individual decision-makers on the process and the ways the Vietnamese leadership arrived at their negotiating strategies.
Contents
Table of Contents
Preface and Acknowledgments
Introduction
One POW /MIA Negotiations from the Paris Peace Talks to the Fall of South Vietnam, 1971-1975
Two Postwar POW /MIA Contacts and Conflicts, 1975-1981
Three Progress and Accountability During the Reagan Presidency, 1982-1989
Four Expanding POW/ MIA Dialogue and Activity, 1990-1991
Five Making Promises, Moving Forward: POW /MIA Cooperation in 1992
Six POW /MIA Issues and the Trudge Toward Normalization, 1993-1994
Seven Conclusion: Vietnam's Approach to the POW /MIA Issue-Concepts, Negotiating Style, and Decision-Making
Notes
Bibliography l
Index
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