Vietnam’s Divide: Slow Healing, Fewer Prospects for Children of U.S. Allies — Việt Nam vẫn còn chia cách: vết thương chậm hồi phục, ít có triển vọng cho con cái của đồng minh Mỹ

(English and Vietnamese — Song ngữ Anh Việt)

Families who were allied with U.S. barred from Communist Party

December 23, 2015

The Week That Was In Asia Photo Gallery

Photographer: Dita Alangkara/AP
Vu Tien, a university student in Ho Chi Minh City, holds photographs of his father who served in the military of the former Republic of Vietnam that governed the nation's south from 1954 to 1975.
Vu Tien, a university student in Ho Chi Minh City, holds photographs of his father who served in the military of the former Republic of Vietnam that governed the nation’s south from 1954 to 1975.
Source: Bloomberg News

As a graduate from one of Vietnam’s most prestigious schools, 22-year-old Cao would seem to have a bright future ahead of him — if only the past would get out of the way. He’s found his career prospects hemmed in by the lingering legacy of a war that ended nearly two decades before he was born. Tiếp tục đọc “Vietnam’s Divide: Slow Healing, Fewer Prospects for Children of U.S. Allies — Việt Nam vẫn còn chia cách: vết thương chậm hồi phục, ít có triển vọng cho con cái của đồng minh Mỹ”