Third Indochina War

Third Indochina War
Part of the Indochina wars and the Sino-Soviet split
Date25 December 1978 – 23 October 1991
(12 years, 9 months and 4 weeks)
Location
Vietnam, Cambodia, China, with spillovers in Laos and Thailand
Result
Belligerents

China
Khmer Rouge

CGDK (from 1982)

Thailand

Arms supplies, training, or financial aid:
Canada
Malaysia
North Korea
Romania
Singapore
United Kingdom
United States


Lao royalists
Hmong insurgents
FULRO

Vietnam
Laos
People's Republic of Kampuchea (until 1989)
State of Cambodia (from 1989)

Arms supplies, training, or financial aid:
Albania
Bulgaria
Cuba
Czechoslovakia
East Germany
Derg (until 1987)
People's Democratic Republic of Ethiopia (from 1987)
Grenada (until 1983)
Hungary
India
Mongolia
Nicaragua
Poland
South Yemen
Soviet Union
Communist Party of Thailand
Malayan Communist Party
Commanders and leaders
Hua Guofeng
Deng Xiaoping
Ye Jianying
Xu Xiangqian
Zhang Aiping
Yang Dezhi
Xu Shiyou
Pol Pot
Khieu Samphan
Ieng Sary
Son Sen
Ta Mok
Son Sann
Dien Del
Norodom Sihanouk
Kriangsak Chamanan
Casualties and losses
Unknown Vietnam:
105,627 military deaths

The Third Indochina War was a series of interconnected military conflicts among the various communist factions over strategic influence in mainland Southeast Asia after communist victory in South Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia in 1975. The conflict primarily started due to continued raids and incursions by the Khmer Rouge into Vietnamese territory that they sought to retake. These incursions would result in the Cambodian–Vietnamese War in which the newly unified Vietnam overthrew the Pol Pot regime and the Khmer Rouge, in turn ending the Cambodian genocide. Vietnam had installed a government led by many opponents of Pol Pot, most notably Hun Sen, a former Khmer Rouge commander. This led to Vietnam's occupation of Cambodia for over a decade. The Vietnamese push to completely destroy the Khmer Rouge led to them conducting border raids in Thailand against those who had provided sanctuary.

Vietnam-China relations became tense because Vietnam chose to be pro-Soviet after unification in 1976 instead of being neutral as before. China strongly objected to the invasion of Cambodia. Chinese armed forces launched a punitive operation (Sino-Vietnamese War) in February 1979 and attacked Vietnam's northern provinces, determined to contain Soviet/Vietnamese influence and prevent territorial gains in the region.

In order to acquire full control over Cambodia the People's Army of Vietnam needed to dislodge the remaining Khmer Rouge leaders and units, which had retreated to the remote areas along the Thai-Cambodian border. Vietnam became bogged down in the battlefield and isolated from the international community except for the support of the Soviet Union and its allies. Meanwhile, Vietnam and its native ally also faced opposition of other factions and an anti-Vietnamese coalition government was formed in 1982. After the Paris Peace Conference in 1989, the PAVN completely withdrew from Cambodian territory in deadlock. Finally regular troop engagements in the region ended after the conclusion of the 1991 Paris Peace Accords, leading to a transitional process and the restoration of a multi-party constitutional monarchy in 1993.

In Laos, an insurgency is still ongoing, though to a lesser extent since 2007, with the government being supported by both China and Vietnam.