French Prime Minister Édouard Philippe’s official visit to Vietnam from November 2-4 is expected to help bolster the bilateral strategic partnership.
Vietnam and France set up diplomatic ties on April 12, 1973 and signed a joint declaration on the Strategic Partnership 40 years later (2013). Vietnam always attaches importance to its traditional friendship and cooperation with France and exerts its efforts to deepen the bilateral strategic partnership.
In the past years, both sides have maintained the exchange of high-level delegations and bilateral cooperation mechanisms such as a strategic dialogue on defence-security between the two countries’ Foreign and Defence Ministries, and an annual high-level dialogue on economic affairs.
In the field of defence-security, France was the first Western nation to appoint a defence attaché in Vietnam in 1991. The relationship in this field has developed well, reflected through regular delegation exchanges. In recent visits by the two Defence Ministers, both sides agreed on a bilateral strategic partnership in the defence field.
Vietnam imported US$1.27 billion worth of aviation equipment, industrial machines, pharmaceutical and agricultural products, food, and cosmetics.
Bilateral trade in the first six months of this year came to US$2.3 billion.
Last year, France ranked third among European nations and 16th out of 114 nations and territories investing in Vietnam, with 512 valid investments projects worth US$2.8 billion. The country’s direct investments in Vietnam focus on information and communications, and manufacturing and processing, and are spread in 36 localities. To date, Vietnamese investors have run nine projects in France with a total registered capital of US$3.04 million.
France is Vietnam’s leading ODA provider in Europe and Vietnam ranks second among the recipients of France’s ODA in Asia, with a total US$18.4 billion committed from 1993. The Southeast Asian country is also among a few nations receiving assistance from all three financial aid channels of France: namely ODA, preferential loans of the French Development Agency (AFD) and those of the Priority Solidarity Fund (FSP). To date, France has provided Vietnam with 2.2 billion EUR (US$2.49 billion) in aid and preferential loans.
Cooperation in education and training between the two countries has formed and developed since 1980s. France always considers education and training a priority in its cooperation activities in Vietnam, with the focus on the teaching of French language and human resources training in the fields of economic management, banking, finance, law and new technology.
Every year, France provides 80 scholarships for Vietnamese students in order to help Vietnam train high-quality human resources. Over the past decade, the number of Vietnamese students in France has risen by around 40 percent. France ranks third in receiving Vietnamese students, with over 7,000 students.
The two countries’ cultural exchange has been thriving as well. The French Government provides about 5 million EUR (US$5.6 million) for cultural cooperation activities with Vietnam each year. The European nation also ranks seventh among the countries and territories investing in Vietnam’s tourism, with 14 projects worth US$188 million.
Meanwhile, bilateral collaboration in science and technology has been implemented through projects funded by the Priority Solidarity Fund. The two Governments signed an agreement on science and technology cooperation in March 2007, thus creating favourable conditions for experts, offices, and organisations to intensify cooperation.
In November 2009, both sides inked a cooperation agreement on using nuclear energy for peaceful purposes.
Moreover, cooperation between localities has become a typical feature in the Vietnam-France relations. At present, 38 French localities have set up partnership with 18 Vietnamese provinces and cities.
In the field of health, the two countries have 30 cooperation projects with the priority given to training.
Currently, there are around 300,000 Vietnamese people living in France.
The Vietnam visit by PM Édouard Philippe takes place at a time when the two countries are celebrating the 45th anniversary of diplomatic ties and 5th anniversary of Strategic Partnership.
It is expected to boost political and diplomatic ties, expand economic and trade cooperation, and step up collaboration in security defence, education, training, science technology, and energy between Vietnam and France.
Prime Minister Le Minh Hung emphasised the need to further improve institutions and policy frameworks, develop digital infrastructure and data resources, and create the necessary conditions for science, technology, innovation and digital transformation to become new drivers of economic growth.
Prof. Huang Rihan of Huaqiao University in China’s Fujian province said the Vietnamese leader’s address highlighted three major crises currently facing the world - the crisis of the international order, the crisis of development models, and the crisis of strategic trust.
Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of National Defence General Phan Van Giang said that alongside the robust growth of relations between the two countries, defence cooperation has continued to develop extensively and intensively, becoming increasingly practical and effective.
Adopted by the UN General Assembly on December 24, 2024, and opened for signature in Hanoi in October 2025, the convention is the first global multilateral treaty dedicated to combating cybercrime.
The visits also took place at a time when the Philippines is serving as ASEAN Chair in 2026, Singapore is preparing to assume the ASEAN Chairmanship in 2027, and Vietnam is set to host the APEC Economic Leaders’ Meeting in 2027.
Ngo Phuong Ly, spouse of Party General Secretary and State President To Lam, expressed her emotion at seeing the children’s optimism despite difficult circumstances, noting that both Vietnam and the Philippines place children at the centre of their development policies, from education, health care to child protection.
Party General Secretary and State President To Lam, his spouse and a high-level Vietnamese delegation departed Manila on June 1, concluding a successful state visit to the Republic of the Philippines from May 31 to June 1 at the invitation of Philippine President Ferdinand Romualdez Marcos Jr. and his spouse.
Participants reviewed rental housing demand in each area, considering different market segments and target groups. They also examined the gap between supply and demand, and pinpointed issues in policy frameworks.
Vietnam and the Philippines have agreed to elevate their relationship to an Enhanced Strategic Partnership, opening a new phase of cooperation in politics, defence and security, economic ties and other key areas.
Vietnam and the Philippines on June 1 issued a Joint Statement on the Enhanced Strategic Partnership during General Secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam Central Committee and State President To Lam’s state visit to the Philippines.
Economic cooperation between Vietnam and the Philippines should move to a new level, with greater emphasis on quality, depth and substance, as the two countries seek to maximise opportunities under their newly upgraded Enhanced Strategic Partnership.
Party General Secretary and State President To Lam and his spouse are paying state visit to the Philippines from May 31 to June 1 at the invitation of President Ferdinand Romualdez Marcos Jr. and his spouse.
General Secretary and President To Lam encouraged the Vietnamese in the Philippines to remain united, abide by local laws, contribute practically to the homeland and continue fostering friendship and cooperation between the two countries.
By moving from crisis response to proactive risk reduction, Vietnam has positioned itself as a responsible and mature “architect” of regional peace, said a Malaysia-based expert.
The President Ho Chi Minh monument in the ASEAN Garden holds profound historical, cultural, and diplomatic significance, reflecting the friendship between Vietnam and the Philippines, as well as the solidarity within the ASEAN community.
The trip demonstrates Vietnam's high regard for its friendship and cooperation with the Philippines, as well as with ASEAN and the Southeast Asian region.
General Secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam Central Committee and State President To Lam on May 30 met with leaders of major Singaporean corporations, technology companies, financial institutions and banks with long-standing investments and business operations in Vietnam.
General Secretary and President Lam expressed his hope that the community will remain united, preserve the Vietnamese language and cultural identity, and strengthen ties with the homeland.
The two sides agreed to strengthen cooperation in emerging and high-potential fields, including digital transformation, green economy, clean energy transition, new technologies, innovation, smart finance, supply chain resilience, financial centre development and food security.
At the A*STAR Model Factory, one of Singapore’s flagship research and application facilities for smart industry, innovation and digital transformation in production, General Secretary and President Lam expressed his impression of Singapore’s approach in creating conditions for enterprises to directly test technologies before making large-scale investments.