Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. The CambodianVietnamese War was an armed conflict between Democratic Kampuchea, controlled by Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge, and the Socialist Republic of Vietnam. The war began with repeated attacks by the Liberation Army of Kampuchea on the southwestern border of Vietnam, particularly the Ba Chúc massacre which resulted in the deaths of over ...

  2. Sep 14, 2014 · Vietnam launched an invasion of Cambodia in late December 1978 to remove Pol Pot. Two million Cambodians had died at the hands of his Khmer Rouge regime and Pol Pot's troops had conducted...

  3. Vietnamese intervention. The Khmer Rouge initially had been trained by the Vietnamese, but from the early 1970s they had been resentful and suspicious of Vietnam and Vietnamese intentions. Scattered skirmishes between the two sides in 1975 had escalated into open warfare by the end of 1977. The Cambodians were no match for the Vietnamese forces ...

    • Why Did The U.S. Invade Cambodia?
    • The Cambodian Incursion
    • Public Reaction to The U.S. Invasion of Cambodia
    • Congressional Reaction to The Invasion of Cambodia
    • War Powers Resolution of 1973
    • Did The War Powers Act Work?
    • GeneratedCaptionsTabForHeroSec

    Cambodia was officially a neutral country in the Vietnam War, though North Vietnamese troops moved supplies and arms through the northern part of the country, which was part of the Ho Chi Minhtrail that stretched from Vietnam to neighboring Laos and Cambodia. In March 1969, Nixon began approving secret bombings of suspected communist base camps and...

    Nixon approved the use of American ground forces in Cambodiato fight alongside South Vietnamese troops attacking communist bases there on April 28, 1970. Recent political developments within Cambodia worked in Nixon’s favor. Prince Norodom Sihanouk, who had led the country since its independence from France in 1954, was voted out of power by the Ca...

    Antiwar protests intensified across the country, particularly on college campuses. One hundred thousand people marched on Washington in protest. Approximately 400 schools had strikes while more than 200 closed completely. On May 4, 1970, the protests turned violent: National Guardsmen fired on anti-war demonstrators at Ohio’s Kent State University,...

    Article 8, Section 1 of the U.S. Constitution grants the power to declare war to the legislative branchof the U.S. government—a purposeful departure from the British tradition of granting war-making powers to the king. But the term “declare” has been open to interpretation for centuries. In practice, American presidents have been going to war witho...

    The War Powers Resolution, also known as the War Powers Act, is a congressional resolution that limits the U.S. president’s ability to initiate or mount military actions abroad without the express approval of Congress. It passed in November of 1973 over Nixon’s vetoand requires the president, as Commander-in-Chief, to notify Congress whenever armed...

    “Since it was passed, the War Powers Act has been honored in the breach—that is, presidents have reported to Congress what they intend to do anyway and have mostly ignored the War Powers Act when it would have inconvenienced their plans,” says Andrew Preston, professor of American History at Cambridge University and co-author with Logevall of Nixon...

    Learn how President Nixon's secret bombing and ground operations in Cambodia during the Vietnam War sparked a constitutional crisis and led to the passage of the War Powers Act in 1973. Explore the causes, consequences and controversies of the Cambodian incursion and its impact on U.S. foreign policy.

    • Jessica Pearce Rotondi
    • 2 min
  4. Sep 12, 2017 · Learn about the Khmer Rouge, the brutal communist regime that ruled Cambodia from 1975 to 1979 under Pol Pot. Find out how the Khmer Rouge tried to create a Cambodian \"master race\" and caused the deaths of more than 2 million people, and how Vietnam invaded and overthrew them in 1979.

  5. CambodianVietnamese War. Part of the Third Indochina War, the Cold War in Asia, and the Sino-Soviet split. Vietnamese soldiers entering Phnom Penh in January 1979. Date. 30 April 1977 – 23 October 1991. (14 years, 5 months, 3 weeks and 2 days) Location. Cambodia, Southern Vietnam, eastern Thailand.

  1. People also search for