Hoàng Văn Hoan

In 1963, when Foreign Minister Ung Văn Khiêm was replaced by the more pro-Chinese Xuân Thủy, Hoan headed the International Liaison Department of the Central Committee of the CPV. In 1965–1966, however, Soviet-Vietnamese relations started to improve, accompanied by increasing tension between Hanoi and Beijing. In the new atmosphere, the leadership found it advisable to replace both Xuân Thủy and Hoan with cadres who had been less conspicuously associated with Lê Duẩn's previous pro-Chinese policies.
Still, Hoan played a prominent role in Sino-Vietnamese relations for some time. In May 1973, he conducted secret talks in Beijing about the Cambodian Civil War and traveled to China for "medical treatment" a year later, but his real mission was probably related to the secret (and unsuccessful) Sino-Vietnamese border negotiations from August to November. He lost most of his influence after the Fourth National Party Congress in 1977, when the Communist Party shifted to a pro-Soviet position. Like Trương Như Tảng, who went into exile in Paris, France, Hoan defected and surfaced in Beijing in July 1979 after shaking off political persecution by Vietnamese authorities.
Hoan stated that Vietnam's abuse of its ethnic Chinese minority was "even worse than Hitler's treatment of the Jews" and that its leaders had become "subservient to a foreign power," referring to the Soviet Union. He also disclosed that in 1982, the CPV's Central Committee had decided that opium production should be increased to raise foreign currency reserves.
Hoan authored his reminiscences as ''Giọt nước trong biển cả'' which is translated into English by the Beijing government as ''A Drop in the Ocean''. He died in Beijing in 1991. Provided by Wikipedia
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by Quoc Hoan, Tran, Duc Thanh, Chu, Van Hoan, Hoang, Sy Hieu, Pham, Philippe, Leclère, Thi Thu Hien, Nguyen, Duc Huy, Tran, Quang Trung, Do, Anh Tuan, Pham, Duy Cuong, Nguyen
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