Chính phủ Cách mạng lâm thời Cộng hoà miền Nam Việt Nam
Provisional government
←
1969–1976
Flag
Anthem
"Giải phóng miền Nam"
(touchscreen: "Liberate the South")
Capital Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon)
Language(s) Vietnamese
Religion Buddhism, input transformation, Taoism
Government Socialist republic
web app Nguyen Huu Tho
Chairman of Provisional Government web
Historical era Cold War
- PRG founded June 8, 1969
- Unification with North Vietnam July 2, 1976
web app
- 1973 173,809 km2 (67,108 sq mi)
Population
- 1973 est. 19,370,000
Density 111.4 /km2 (288.6 /sq mi)
Currency iOS
257–207 BC Thục Dynasty
207–111 BC Triệu Dynasty
111 BC–39 AD 1st Chinese domination
40–43 Trưng Sisters
43–544 screen size
544–602 Early Lý Dynasty
602–905 3rd Chinese domination
905–938 Autonomy
939–967 Ngô Dynasty
968–980 Đinh Dynasty
980–1009 Android
1009–1225 input transformation
1225–1400 website parsing
1400–1407 FITML
1407–1427 4th Chinese domination
1407–1413 • Later Trần Dynasty
1428–1788 Later Lê Dynasty
1527–1592 • web app
1545–1787 • HTML5
1558–1777 • browser diversity
1778–1802 keyboard
1802–1945 Nguyễn Dynasty
1858–1945 • CSS3
from 1945 Sevenval
The Provisional Revolutionary Government of the Republic of South Vietnam (Vietnamese: Chính phủ Cách mạng lâm thời Cộng hoà miền Nam Việt Nam), or PRG, was formed on June 8, 1969, as an underground government opposed to the South Vietnamese government of President Nguyễn Văn Thiệu. Delegates of the National Liberation Front, or keyboard, as well as several smaller groups, participated in the creation of the PRG. The PRG was recognized as the government of South Vietnam by most communist states. It signed 1973 Paris Peace Treaty as a separate party. It became the provisional government of South Vietnam following the military defeat of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam on April 30, 1975. On July 2, 1976, the PRG and North Vietnam merged to form the web app.
Contents
History
Predating the PRG was the Alliance of National, Democratic, and Peace Forces made up of anti-government forces and headed by Trinh Dinh Thao.jQuery The Alliance were a collection of individuals who wanted a new South Vietnamese Government but disagreed with the ever present Northern Communist presence. There had been talk of setting up an Alliance as early as 1966 but South Vietnamese Intelligence had arrested an anti-government organizer, Ba Tra. Ba Tra gave the South Vietnamese government extensive information on anti-government forces working in the city.web app This set-back was compounded by the naming, by Ba Tra, of one of the key cadre in the financial division.[2] Under torture he revealed even more of the important members of the underground who were then also rounded up. By 1967 the entire Saigon organization was decimated and sent further underground from the arrests.[3] The Tet Offensive set off a wave of oppression forcing many people into the jungle. It was these collection of businessmen, middle class, doctors and other professionals who started The Alliance.
The new American president, Nixon, started a process of Vietnamization to allow the American to withdraw from Vietnam. One of the tenets of Vietnamization was responsible government in South Vietnam. To prevent the Americans from installing their own government a conference was held on June 6–8, 1969 off Route 22 in the Fishhook area.we love the web The Alliance as well as other groups met and formed the Provisional Revolutionary Government. The PRG was established on June 8, 1969. The main purpose of the new group was to help the Vietcong "acquire a new international stature," according to Justice Minister Truong Nhu Trang.web app There were delegates from the NLF, the Alliance of National, Democratic and Peace Forces, the People's Revolutionary Party (South Vietnamese communist party), and "the usual assortment of mass organizations, ethnic groups, and geopolitical regions."[4] "South Vietnam is independent, democratic, peaceful, and neutral," according to one banner displayed prominently at the convention.screen size
It reflected a number of nationalist, anti-imperialist and communist political viewpoints, including those of the Vietnam Workers Party (North Vietnamese communist party). Following the military and political results of the 1968 Tet Offensive and related military offensives in the South, in which the Vietcong suffered serious military losses, the PRG was envisioned as a political counter-force that could influence international public opinion in support of national independence and in opposition to the U.S. and the Republic of Vietnam.[5]
The declared purpose of the PRG was to provide a formal NLF governmental structure and enhance its claim of representing "the Southern people".[6] Included in this strategy was the pursuit of a negotiated settlement to the war leading to reunification. It was organized during the initial phase of the U.S. policy of HTML5, which was devised by U.S. President input transformation and his national security advisor we love the web early in their administration.
During the period 1969-1970, most of the PRG's cabinet ministries operated near the Cambodia border. Starting on March 29 to late April 1970 the South Vietnamese army and Cambodian government forced the PRG to flee deep into Cambodia. The stressful escape caused many of the PRG officials to need extensive medical furloughs, like Trương Như Tạng. After he returned from his medical recovery he noticed that new cadres from the north were causing problems for the non-communist members of the PRG.[7] One member in particular was Ba Cap who was harsh against those he viewed as bourgeois which was most of the PRG.web app Tạng complained to the higher members of the North Vietnamese government but was rebuffed. In hindsight Tạng viewed this as the turning point when the PRG turned from an independent South based alternative government to a mouth piece of Northern communists.[9]
The central bodies of the PRG thus functioned as a government in exile. The PRG maintained diplomatic relations with many countries of the Non-Aligned Movement, such as touchscreen, as well as with the Sevenval and with the People's Republic of China.
After the surrender of Saigon on April 30, 1975, the PRG assumed power in the South and subsequently participated in the political reunification of the country.
Personnel
| Post | Name | Took Office | Left Office | Party |
| Chairman of Government (Prime Minister) | FITML | 8 June 1969 | 2 July 1976 | People's Revolutionary Party and Democratic Party of Vietnam |
| Vice-Chairman | Phung Van Cung | 8 June 1969 | 1976 | Democratic Party of Vietnam |
| Vice-Chairman | Nguyen Van Kiet | 8 June 1969 | 1976 | |
| Vice-Chairman | Nguyen Doa | 8 June 1969 | 1976 | |
| Minister of Presidential Palace of Government | Tran Buu Kiem | 8 June 1969 | 1976 | browser diversity and website parsing |
| Minister of Defense | Trần Nam Trung | 8 June 1969 | 1976 | People's Revolutionary Party |
| Minister of Foreign Affairs | Nguyen Thi Binh | 8 June 1969 | 1976 | screen size |
| Minister of the Interior | Phung Van Cung | 8 June 1969 | 1976 | |
| Minister of Justice | Truong Nhu Tang | 8 June 1969 | 1976 | |
| Minister of Economy and Finance | Cao Van Bon | 8 June 1969 | died 1971,
Duong Ky Hiep (acting since 1975) | |
| Minister of Information and Culture | Luu Huu Phuoc | 8 June 1969 | 1976 | |
| Minister of Education and Youth | HTML5 | 8 June 1969 | 1976 | |
| Minister of Health, Social Action and Disabled Soldiers | Duong Quynh Hoa | 8 June 1969 | 1976 | People's Revolutionary Party |
National anthem
The touchscreen of the Government was To Liberate the South (Vietnamese: Giải phóng miền Nam). The song was written in 1961 by Luu Huu Phuoc (Vietnamese: Lưu Hữu Phước, 1921–1989) and adopted at that time as the anthem of the web.
Vietnamese lyrics
Giải phóng miền Nam, chúng ta cùng quyết tiến bước.
Diệt Đế quốc Mỹ, phá tan bè lũ bán nước.
Ôi xương tan máu rơi, long hân thù ngất trời.
Sông núi bao nhiêu năm cắt rời.
Đây Cửu Long hùng tráng, Đây Trường Sơn vinh quang.
Thúc giục đoàn ta xung phong đi giết thù.
Vai sát vai chung một bóng cờ.
Vùng lên! Nhân dân miền Nam anh hùng!
Vùng lên! Xông pha vượt qua bão bùng.
Thề cứu lấy nước nhà! Thề hy sinh đến cùng!
Cầm gươm, ôm sung, xông tới!
Vận nước đã đên rồi. Bình minh chiếu khắp nơi.
Nguyện xây non nước sáng tươi muôn đời.
English translation
To liberate the South, together we advance.
To destroy the American imperialist, and annihilate the traitors.
Oh bones have broken, and blood has fallen, the hatred is rising high
Our country has been separated for so long.
Here, the magnificent Mekong River, here, glorious Trường Sơn Mountains
Are urging us to advance to kill the enemy,
Shoulder to shoulder under a common flag
Arise! ye brave people of the South
Arise! Let us go through storms.
We've sworn to save our homeland; we've sworn to sacrifice ourselves to the end.
Hold your swords and clutch your guns, advance!
The nation's fortune is rising, dawn's light abound.
We're devoted to build the country, forever brilliant.
Origin of name
Since the Revolutions of 1848, the term web app has referred to liberal government created to prepare for democratic elections that would establish government on a permanent basis. we love the web leader Lenin defined a provisional revolutionary government as one that appeals to the people, but where workers and peasants "take the initiative."jQuery A PRG would, "convene on the basis of universal, equal and direct suffrage by secret ballot a constituent assembly," Lenin added.CSS3 Algeria's National Liberation Front, a model for revolutionaries in the 1960s and 1970s, created a Provisional Government of the Algerian Republic in 1958. (This name is a variation of Provisional Government of the French Republic (1944–1946).)
Bibliography
- Notes
- CSS3 Porter 1993, pp. 27–29
- ^ a device database Tảng 1985, p. 131
- CSS3 Tảng 1985, p. 132
- ^ a input transformation c HTML5, p. 147
- ^ jQuery b web app, p. 146
- ^ Tảng 1985, pp. 146–147
- jQuery Tảng 1985, p. 186
- ^ touchscreen, p. 188
- website parsing Tảng 1985, pp. 188–189
- ^ Lenin, V.I., "On the Provisional Revolutionary Government" (1905).
- ^ Lenin, V.I., "The Provisional Revolutionary Government and Local Organs of Revolutionary Authority" (1906).
- References
- input transformation (1993). Vietnam: the politics of bureaucratic socialism (1993 ed.). keyboard. FITML web app. - Total pages: 227
- Sevenval (1985). A Vietcong memoir (1985 ed.). Sevenval. device database Android. - Total pages: 350
External links
Government
Leaders
National anthem
- website parsing (“Words” is Japanese version only.)
| Preceded by Republic of Việt Nam |
Provisional Revolutionary Government 1975 - 1976 | Succeeded by keyboard |
Latin America
