Exercise 1
As you have read, decolonization was one of the most important events to unfold
after World War II. One of the most important figures of this movement was
Jawaharlal Nehru, an associate of Mohandes Gandhi who also served as the first
prime minister of decolonized India. Read this excerpt from Nehru's essay,
Marxism,
Capitalism, and Non-Alignment (1941). Next, consider the
Speech
at the Opening of the Bandung Conference (1955) by President Sukarno of
Indonesia, and some remarks on
Afro-Asian
Solidarity (1957) by Anwar el Sadat, former president of Egypt. How did
these leaders envision the future of their nations after colonial rule? What
role did they see their countries playing in the world? Why do you think so
many postcolonial nations adopted, explicitly or implicitly, a policy of non-alignment?
Exercise 2
During the Cold War, the United States, the Soviet Union, and, to a lesser
extent, China, waged an ideological struggle through a series of regional conflicts.
The conflict that had the deepest affect on American society and national psyche
was the Vietnam War. With intermittent support from the U. S. S. R. and China,
Vietnamese Communists fought, at first, French colonial troops and later U.
S. forces supporting the government of South Vietnam. One of principal figures
in this struggle was Ho Chi Minh, the leader of the Vietnamese Communist party
(the Laodong) who articulated the aims of the movement. Read
Program
for Communists of Indochina (1930),
Vietnamese
Declaration of Independence (1945),
Manifesto
of the Laodong Party (1951), all composed by Ho Chi Minh. According to
these documents, what were the aims of the Vietnamese Communists? What did they
hope to achieve by fighting Western powers? How did they conceive of their relationship
to the major Communist powers of Russia and China?
Now consider some U. S. views of the Vietnamese Communists and the war in Vietnam.
Read Dwight Eisenhower's
Presidential
Press Conference from 1954, a
television
interview given by John F. Kennedy in 1963, and a State Department document
North
Vietnamese aggression released in 1965. What did American officials believe
were the aims of the Vietnamese Communists? What role did they see the Vietnam
struggle playing in larger world events? How did that conception differ from
the Vietnamese Communists' own view of their role in the world?