President Luong Cuong addresses the event. (Photo: Viet Cuong) |
In his remarks, President Luong Cuong affirmed the role of the Vietnamese diplomacy in peacebuilding throughout Vietnam’s history, particularly during the Ho Chi Minh Campaign, which led to national reunification on April 30, 1975.
“The contemporary relevance of the ‘Vietnam story’ continues to shine, embodying the noble values of the journey toward lasting peace, dialogue, healing the wounds of war, national reconciliation, reconstruction, and development. The world is undergoing historic changes. Vietnam is fully aware that the future and destiny of the nation are closely linked to peace, stability, cooperation, and development in the region and the world. Entering a new era of national rise, Vietnam stands ready to proactively contribute to global politics and economy, and the advancement of human civilization,” President Luong Cuong said.
On behalf of the Party and State leadership, the President expressed gratitude to the progressive peoples around the world, including the Americans, who stood in solidarity with the Vietnamese people in the struggle for peace, justice, and the truth that "nothing is more precious than independence and freedom."
At the conference, international friends, diplomats, and scholars affirmed that the historic victory of April 30, 1975, and Vietnam’s vigorous post-war recovery became exemplary models of peace, reconstruction, and development, and the spirit of moving beyond the past and embracing the future, enrooted from its culture of peace, tolerance, and humanity.
Participants clap their hands at the conference (Photo: Viet Cuong) |
John McAuliff, Executive Director of the US Fund for Reconciliation and Development, was an activist in the anti-war movement in the late 1960s and has visited Vietnam many times. He said Vietnam has a unique position. "It’s trusted by people who hate each other, have very warm relations with Vietnam. It’s respected by what we used to call the Global South in part because of its achievements against the US, when the US was powerful, but also because of its economic transformation.”
Many American friends who have worked for decades to mend relations with Vietnam, such as Lady Borton, her Vietnamese name is Út Lý, and Tim Rieser, senior foreign policy aide to former Senator Patrick Leahy, said that their love and support for Vietnam remain unchanged and that they will continue working to advance friendship and cooperation.
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