Dem canceled the election because he new he won't win
North Vietnamese are inhabitants of North Vietnam, while Vietcong are Vietnamese warriors during the Viet war.
Not True
The French were a foreign power occupying Vietnam. The Vietnamese wanted their independence.
This example shows it pretty well http://sites.google.com/site/lrnthaccnt/home/vietnamese-accent
The colors of the Vietnamese flag are a red background with a five-point yellow star in the center.
I don't know. They are never supposed to be canceled according to the constitution. If they are canceled there might be a revolution or civil war.
Ngo Dien Diem
im pritty shur its Algeria
South Vietnamese President Diem postponed those elections due to excessive communist influence.
They supported Diem and Diem wouldn't win the elections because they weren't free. Ho would better win the support of the Vietnamese peasants(they knew him as Uncle Ho etc.)
Supposed free elections were held in South Vietnam for South Vietnamese candidates only. However, an election for the unification of Vietnam was refused by the then South Vietnamese government due to the fact that the Communist regime of the North would not allow an International Committee to supervise the ballot. Therefore, the North refused scrutiny of their so called free elections. It is interesting to note that there is a substantial amount of evidence that suggests that the South Vietnamese elections were rigged and the count doctored. Further to this, the North Vietnamese held an election in 1960 where constituents had only one party to choose from, the VFF. Hardly a free election. Unsurprisingly, they won all seats.
canceled
Both are correct. Cancelled/Cancelling is British spelling. Canceled/Canceling is American spelling.
The proper adjective for "Vietnamese" is "Vietnamese." For example, "Vietnamese cuisine" or "Vietnamese culture."
In the scheduled 1956 national elections to unify Vietnam, the communist leader Ho Chi Minh was favored to win. The elections were part of the Geneva Accords, which called for nationwide elections to reunify North and South Vietnam. However, the elections were never held, largely due to the South Vietnamese government, backed by the United States, fearing a communist victory. As a result, the division between North and South Vietnam deepened, leading to further conflict.
In 1956, South Vietnam, with American backing, refused to hold the unification elections. By 1958, Communist-led guerrillas known as the Viet Cong had begun to battle the South Vietnamese government. By; Kenya Z. T. In 1956, South Vietnam, with American backing, refused to hold the unification elections. By 1958, Communist-led guerrillas known as the Viet Cong had begun to battle the South Vietnamese government. By; Kenya Z. T.
Vietnamese Vietnamese