Character : Vietnam
• Human Name – Mai Nguyen
• Country – Vietnam
• Nickname – Mai or nam
• Group{Nordic, Axis, Allies} – Asian Family
• Age – 125 ; 19 or 20
• Gender – Female
Main Description :
Vietnam has long dark brown hair tied into a pony tail. She has golden-honey colored eyes. She is about 5'4'' or 5'3''. She wears a green áo dài, and sometimes a nón lá.
• outfits – She wears a traditional green áo dài, and sometimes a nón lá.
accessories – She has a long wooden paddle.
• Personality :
Vietnam is a shy and nervous girl. She tends to stay to herself, but not around her friends. She can get mad and agitated. When she does, she explodes. She yells, slaps, and becomes well...scary.
• Relationships –
Taiwan is her best friend. Though Vietnam doesn't like to take pictures, she lets Taiwan take picture of her. The've been best friends since they met.
Vietnam suspects that Thailand has a small crush on her. He follows her around, and aids her at every moment.
Vietnam has a small crush on China. China kind of raised her when she was small. She tends to blush when he comments her.
Japan doesn't talk that much. So, she ignores him. Taiwan says that she has a small crush on him, but Vietnam doesn't really know...
She and America met at the Vietnam war. Well America came to the rescued, but Vietnam didn't want any help, though she needed it. She is very, very agitated when America tries to talk to her.
• Pairing Preferred – Vietnam and China, or Vietnam and America.
• Like/s – pho, green tea, lets just say food... Farming, theaters.. She's like a nerd
• Dislike/s – America, fast talking, pictures, and she kinda hates France because he took over her for a little bit, but doesn't show it.
• Habits – She tends to curse in Vietnamese. She cleans a lot. She one of those 'neat-freak' people
History :
Well, Vietnam was found by China in a rice field (Vietnam's actually older than China, but China was made a country earlier). He took care of her, and son she grew up. Soon, Vietnam formed dynasties. Each one was destroyed, replaced by new ones. So technically, she was constantly attacked.
Vietnam's independence was gradually eroded by France in a series of military conquests between 1859 and 1885, after which the entire country became part of French Indochina. A Western-style system of modern education was developed. Most of the French settlers in Indochina were concentrated in Cochinchina – the southern third of Vietnam – based around the city of Saigon.
Developing a plantation economy to promote the export of tobacco, indigo, tea and coffee, the French largely ignored increasing call for Vietnam self-government and civil rights.The French maintained control of their colonies until World War II, when the war in the Pacific led to the Japanese invasion of French Indochina in 1941.
With the defeat of France in Europe in 1940, the French Third Republic was replaced by the Vichy Regime, to which the colony remained loyal. Heavily dependent on Nazi Germany, Vichy France was forced to surrender control of French Indochina to Germany's ally, Japan. The natural resources of Vietnam were exploited for the purposes of the Japanese Empire's military campaigns into the British Indochinese colonies of Burma, the Malay Peninsula and India. The Japanese occupation was a key cause of the Vietnamese Famine of 1945, which caused around two million deaths, equivalent to as much as 10% of the contemporary population.
In 1941, she had another war.
First Indochina War:
In 1941, the Viet Minh – a communist and nationalist liberation movement – emerged under the Marxist-Leninist revolutionary Vietnam, who sought independence for herself from France and the end of the Japanese occupation. Following the military defeat of Japan and the fall of its puppet Empire of Vietnam in August 1945, the Viet Minh occupied Hanoi and proclaimed a provisional government, which asserted national independence on 2 September.
A French-marked USAF C-119 flown by CIA pilots over Dien Bien Phu in 1954.
In the same year, the Provisional French sent the French Far East Expeditionary Corps – originally created to fight the Japanese occupation forces – to pacify the Vietnamese liberation movement and to restore French colonial rule. On 23 November 1946, French vessels bombarded the port city of Hai Phong, and the Viet Minh's guerrilla campaign against French forces began soon after. The resulting First Indochina War lasted until 20 July 1954.
Despite taking fewer losses during the course of the war – the Expeditionary Corps suffered one-third of the casualties of the Chinese and Soviet-backed Vietnam – France and Vietnam eventually suffered a major strategic setback at the Siege of Dien Bien Phu, which allowed Ho Chi Minh to negotiate a ceasefire from a favorable position at the Geneva Conference of 1954. The colonial administration ended and French Indochina was dissolved under the Geneva Accords of 1954, which separated the forces of former French supporters and communist nationalists at the 17th parallel north with the Vietnamese Demilitarized Zone. A 300-day period of free movement was given, during which almost a million northerners, mainly Catholic, moved south, fearing persecution by the communists.
Vietnam War
The pro-Hanoi Vietcong began a guerrilla campaign in the late 1950s to overthrow Diem's government, which an official Vietcong statement described as a "disguised colonial regime. In the North, the communist government massacred landowners and peasant rebels in a series of purges, with upper estimates of the death toll ranging between 100,000 and 900,000. Northern collectivization efforts, though broadly successful, also led to a brief famine.[citation needed] In the South, Diem went about crushing political and religious opposition, imprisoning or killing tens of thousands; dissidents were routinely labelled as communists even if they were anti-communist.
A Vietcong soldier stands guard during a prisoner exchange with American forces in 1973.
In 1963, Buddhist discontent with Diem's pro-Catholic regime erupted into mass demonstrations following the banning of the Buddhist flag and the Hue Vesak shootings. With Diem unwilling to compromise, Nhu orchestrated the Xa Loi Pagoda raids; estimates of the death toll range into the hundreds. As a result, America's relationship with Diem broke down, resulting in the 1963 coup that saw Diem and Nhu assassinated.
Diem was followed by a series of corrupt military regimes that often lasted only months before being toppled by other military officers. With South Vietnam paralyzed by instability, the communists began to gain ground. There were more than a dozen South Vietnamese governments between 1961 and 1965, before the pairing of Air Marshal Nguyen Cao Ky and General Nguyễn Văn Thiệu took control in mid-1965. Thieu gradually outmaneuvered Ky and cemented his grip on power in fraudulent elections in 1967 and 1971.
To support South Vietnam's struggle against the communist insurgency, the United States began increasing its contribution of military advisers, using the controversial 1964 Tonkin Gulf incident as a pretext for such intervention. US forces became embroiled in ground combat operations in 1965, and at their peak they numbered more than 500,000. Communist forces attacked major targets in South Vietnam en masse during the 1968 Tet Offensive, and although their campaign failed militarily, it shocked the American establishment, and turned US public opinion against the war. Communist forces supplying the Vietcong carried supplies along the Ho Chi Minh trail, which passed through Laos and Cambodia. US presidents Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon authorized Operation Commando Hunt and Operation Menu, SAC bombing campaigns in Laos and Cambodia, about which only high-ranking Congressional officials were informed.
Its own casualties mounting, and facing opposition to the war at home and condemnation abroad, the US began withdrawing from ground combat roles according to the Nixon Doctrine; the process was subsequently called Vietnamization. The effort had mixed results, ultimately failing to stabilize South Vietnam. The Paris Peace Accords of 27 January 1973 formally recognized the sovereignty of Vietnam "as recognized by the 1954 Geneva Agreements." Under the terms of the accords, all American combat troops were withdrawn by 29 March 1973. Limited fighting continued, before North Vietnam captured the province of Phuoc Long in December 1974 and started a full-scale offensive, culminating in the Fall of Saigon on 30 April 1975. South Vietnam briefly came under the nominal rule of a Provisional Revolutionary Government while under military occupation by North Vietnam. On 2 July 1976, North and South Vietnam were merged to form the Socialist Republic of Vietnam. The war left Vietnam devastated, with the total death toll standing at between 1 million and 4 million.
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vietnam for more.
RP Example :
During the Vietnam War:
Vietnam leaned against a tree. She closed her eyes, exhausted. A blood soaked gun sat on her lap. Cuts and scraps lay on her body. Tares and cuts sliced her dark green uniform. Dirt covered her face. She herd foot steps. She opened her eyes, and pointed her gun at the man. A tall man with dusty blonde hair, blue eyes, and wearing a pair of glasses stood before her.
"Hey don't point that thing at me." He said, taking a bite of a hamburger that magically appeared in his hand. "I'm America, the Hero." He smiled, pointing his left thumb at himself. "I've come to rescue you."
"I don't need you're help." She replied simply. "I can do with out you." Her eyes widened as she coughed up a red liquid. It spattered on the dirt that was already a light red color. It only made the ground darker.
Theme Song : jewel by ayumi hamasaki
[youtube][/youtube]
