Yellow is Okay
Registered Member
You want us to remind you about how Merkel openly said the Minsk Agreement was just a stalling tactic and Ukraine was still continuing the murder of ethnic Russians? Try to openly massacre ethnic Chinese in Vietnam today and see what happens.
Vietnam doesn't allow its citizens to own or carry guns and weapons. So if people somehow have them, and not all of them come from the civilian arms market, then someone clearly armed them. And if they were separatists, they would be dealt with, no question. That's the first thing. But the real issue here is that someone obviously had ulterior motives, just waiting for the right moment to invade, whether those people were massacred or not.
And if ethnic Chinese were massacred, China wouldn't do anything. Or maybe you would, but it certainly wouldn't be about saving ethnic Chinese. People always bring up ethnic Chinese in Vietnam, but few mention the ethnic Chinese in Cambodia, who faced the same or even harsher treatment back then. Yet China didn't retaliate against Cambodia either. Cambodia even suppressed Chinese culture and language, and still, you did nothing.
China didn't invade Vietnam in 1979, now, or in the future just to save ethnic Chinese. That was just an excuse, a way to justify the war and rally domestic support. The real motives were to prove that Vietnam and the USSR's defense pact was worthless and to expand China's influence in Southeast Asia.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cambodian_genocideThe massacres ended when the Vietnamese military invaded in 1978 and toppled the Khmer Rouge regime. By January 1979, 1.5 to 2 million people had died due to the Khmer Rouge's policies, including 200,000–300,000 Chinese Cambodians, 90,000–500,000 Cambodian Cham (who are mostly Muslim), and 20,000 Vietnamese Cambodians.
Blood and Soil: Modern Genocide 1500-2000The DK regime thus perpetrated genocide against Cambodia's ethnic Vietnamese population. It also targeted several other ethnoreligious groups in Cambodia. It systematically and forcibly dispersed minority communities, forbade the use of minority and foreign languages, repressed Buddhism, Christianity, and Islam, and directed a fierce extermination campaign against the ethnic Cham Muslim minority, one-third of whom, over 90,000 people, perished in the four years from 1975 to 1979.
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