Difference between revisions of "Siancong Conflict"

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(Created page with "Initially sparked by the Fourth Indochina War and the end of French colonial rule in the nation, the government was seized by Communist revolutionaries under "Commissar" Chu Q...")
 
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Initially sparked by the Fourth Indochina War and the end of French colonial rule in the nation, the government was seized by Communist revolutionaries under "Commissar" Chu Quang. Internal conflicts within the new ruling party soon arose, with the United States backing the more moderate side of the conflict. U.S. military involvement in Siancong rapidly escalated, and by the early 2000s it was the largest scale conflict since the Vietnam War. The war was officially declared over following the surrender of moderate Siancongese forces in 2015.
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Initially sparked by the Fourth Indochina War and the end of French colonial rule in the nation, the government of [[Siancong]] was seized by Communist revolutionaries under "Commissar" Chu Quang. Internal conflicts within the new ruling party soon arose, with the United States backing the more moderate side of the conflict. U.S. military involvement in [[Siancong]] rapidly escalated, and by the early 2000s it was the largest scale conflict since the Vietnam War. The war was officially declared over following the surrender of moderate Siancongese forces in 2015.
  
 
[[Category: Encyclopedia]]
 
[[Category: Encyclopedia]]

Latest revision as of 12:08, 16 June 2022

Initially sparked by the Fourth Indochina War and the end of French colonial rule in the nation, the government of Siancong was seized by Communist revolutionaries under "Commissar" Chu Quang. Internal conflicts within the new ruling party soon arose, with the United States backing the more moderate side of the conflict. U.S. military involvement in Siancong rapidly escalated, and by the early 2000s it was the largest scale conflict since the Vietnam War. The war was officially declared over following the surrender of moderate Siancongese forces in 2015.