Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
On 18 February 1954, at the Berlin Conference, participants agreed that "the problem of restoring peace in Indochina will also be discussed at the Conference [on the Korean question] to which representatives of the United States, France, the United Kingdom, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and the Chinese People's Republic and other interested states will be invited."
Geneva II Conference on Syria (2014) Geneva Conference (1932), a continuation of the 1927 naval conference; Geneva Conference (1954), on Korea and Indochina (Vietnam) Geneva Conference (1973), on the Arab–Israeli conflict; Geneva Conference (1976), on Rhodesia; Geneva Peace Conference (1991), on Iraq and Kuwait; Geneva peace talks on Syria ...
1954 1991 1991 2009 1992 Portugal: 1961 1992 1992 2014 1994 Qatar: 1975 1988 2005 — 1991 Romania: 1954 1990 1990 2015 1995 Russia: 1954 1989 1989 S 1989: Conventions I–IV and Protocols I and II ratified as the Soviet Union. Declaration under Article 90 of Protocol 1 withdrawn in 2019. [34] [35] Rwanda: 1964 1984 1984 — 1993 Saint Kitts ...
The Geneva Conference in 1954 which divided Vietnam into two provisional states: North Vietnam and South Vietnam. 17 July. The Battle of Chu Dreh Pass, takes place within the Central Highlands of French Indochina.
The Geneva Conference opened on 8 May 1954, [110] the day after the surrender of the garrison. The resulting agreement in July partitioned Vietnam into two zones: communist North Vietnam and the State of Vietnam, which opposed the agreement, [111] to the south.
Paris Accords, the agreements reached at the end of the London and Paris Conferences in 1954 concerning the post-war status of Germany. [For parallel conferences for peace in Korea and in Indochina, see Berlin Conference (1954) and 1954 Geneva Conference] Paris Peace Accords, in 1973, ending United States involvement in the Vietnam War
The subsequent Geneva Conference (26 April – 20 July 1954) achieved a temporary peace in French Indochina and France's withdrawal from Vietnam, but formal peace in Korea remained elusive. [19] On 23 October 1954 the Soviet Union proposed another Big Four conference to discuss reunification of Germany and withdrawal of the occupying forces. [23]
Indochina after the Geneva Conference. After the Geneva Conference of 1954, as well as becoming fully independent with its departure from the French Union, the State of Vietnam became territorially confined to those lands of Vietnam south of the 17th parallel, and as such became commonly known as Republic of Vietnam. Communist forces entered ...