The Gulf of Tonkin
There was no ONE party in control of Vietnam. Initially it was North and South Vietnam. But after the U.S. and the Soviet Union had left, South Vietnam was converted to communism and a treaty of sorts was created, unifying North and South Vietnam into one country.
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?
If the question is referring to the cold war. There were no battles fought. Cold War means NO FIGHTING. NO KILLING. NO BATTLES. However, there were two "Hot" battles (which were actually wars; so one could say two hot wars fought during the cold war) fought between the powers of Communism and the powers of the Free World: The Korean War (1950-1953) & The Vietnam War (1961-1975). The communists lost the Korean War (they failed to conquer South Korea); but won the Vietnam War (they conquered South Vietnam).
North Vietnam verses South Vietnam. Which is one of the reasons people thought it was a civil war and the US should stay out of it. But that idea is incorrect: A civil war is fought by ONE nation against itself. Just because the word "Vietnam" or "Vietnamese" was in the sentence (North & South Vietnam) does not mean it was one nation. Vietnam was TWO nations; and the North was attacking the South, which was another nation (country), which disqualifies it as a civil war.
YES! North and South Vietnam are now ONE union or country.
The (Republic of) South Vietnam (RVN) ceased to exist when it was conquered by North Vietnam on 30 April 1975. North & South Vietnam merged into one nation...Vietnam.
yes.
As one of two hot battles of the cold war.
North Vietnam conquered South Vietnam and became one nation. The Republic of South Vietnam no longer exists.
yes
The Vietnam War ended in 1975, when North and South Vietnam become one country, Vietnam.
The answer to how many battles the United States army won in the Vietnam War is controversial. The Vietnam war was a political war that was more of an insurgency with many little ambushes and almost no actual defined battles. The most widely accepted belief about the Vietnam war is that no one won or lost.