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Formally it was two nations: North and South Vietnam. Yes, today it is one unified country (nation)...called Vietnam.
Formally it was two nations: North and South Vietnam. Yes, today it is one unified country (nation)...called Vietnam.
North Vietnam and South Vietnam were declared to be independent countries in July 1954 by the Geneva Accord. They were unified into one country in 1976.
No one. Vietnam was not admitted as a UN member state until 1977, after the Saigon regime had fallen and the country was unified.
1975
North Vietnam hasn't existed since 1975 or there abouts. It's Vietnam since about 1975 (they won the war and united the country into one nation). Hanoi is probably still the capital; as it was during the war.
There was no country called "Vietnam" during the war. There was a country called North Vietnam and another country called South Vietnam, which one are you asking about?
This is the main one- South Vietnam and its supporters were not sufficient enough to defeat Communist North Vietnam, who had the help of China and other Communist countries. So the South was defeated, the North took over the South and combined South and North into one country, Vietnam. Due to the whole country becoming Communist many South Viets fled the country as refugees.
After the U.S. evacuated the American embassy in Saigon, North Vietnam which had already taken over much of South Vietnam invaded Saigon. They met little resistance. The war continued into the 1980s. The South Vietnamese were left under equipped and poorly trained. South Vietnam was united with North Vietnam. Only this time it was a communist country. Saigon was renamed Ho Chi Mihn City after the North's late leader, Ho Chi Mihn
Vietnam became one communist country.
After the war, there was a reunification of Vietnam. So the answer is "One country".
The Vietnam War ended in 1975, when North and South Vietnam become one country, Vietnam.