Joe
Junior
- Aug 4, 2018
- 563
Background: Amid the 1995 Midterm Elections, the Labor Party had fully consolidated the First National Congress on a platform of pledging to combat communism domestically and abroad. University students and the people of Vietnam took to the streets of Hanoi to protest the presence of what they viewed as Chinese imperialism. More specifically, university students organized what became to be known as the March of 400,000 Hanoians onto the Chinese Embassy, with the intent on ejecting them from the country through any means necessary.
President Ngo, the young President in the throes of his first term, had finally met his first quasi-international crisis. With the Supreme Court of the Republic calling any form of military intervention domestically unconstitutional and illegal, and with President Ngo unwilling to stomach any form of conflict with his neighbors to the North, the President told the Chief of Hanoi Police to quell the protests through any means necessary. A riot police commander, panicked by the hostility of the protesters, ordered his men to open fire on the crowd with live ammunition around half a kilometer from the embassy. This incident only spurred even more unrest in Hanoi.
Current Status: Violent protesters continue to march onto the Chinese Embassy, intent on evicting the Chinese Ambassador and his staff from the country through what appears to be violent means. The Republic of Vietnamese Military are unable to assist, constitutionally barred from taking part in any domestic conflict. While the Constitution does allow for the military to intervene under extraordinary means, whether or not the military will come and aid a country they see as rivals is a question that no one can answer. The Hanoi Police Department, once the pride of the country, are in shambles, disorganized, and will be unable to prevent the masses of Vietnamese citizens from breaching the walls of the Embassy should it come to it. Whether the situation escalates will be the decisions of all the parties involved.
President Ngo, the young President in the throes of his first term, had finally met his first quasi-international crisis. With the Supreme Court of the Republic calling any form of military intervention domestically unconstitutional and illegal, and with President Ngo unwilling to stomach any form of conflict with his neighbors to the North, the President told the Chief of Hanoi Police to quell the protests through any means necessary. A riot police commander, panicked by the hostility of the protesters, ordered his men to open fire on the crowd with live ammunition around half a kilometer from the embassy. This incident only spurred even more unrest in Hanoi.
Current Status: Violent protesters continue to march onto the Chinese Embassy, intent on evicting the Chinese Ambassador and his staff from the country through what appears to be violent means. The Republic of Vietnamese Military are unable to assist, constitutionally barred from taking part in any domestic conflict. While the Constitution does allow for the military to intervene under extraordinary means, whether or not the military will come and aid a country they see as rivals is a question that no one can answer. The Hanoi Police Department, once the pride of the country, are in shambles, disorganized, and will be unable to prevent the masses of Vietnamese citizens from breaching the walls of the Embassy should it come to it. Whether the situation escalates will be the decisions of all the parties involved.