Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth visits Vietnam amid prolonged arms supply talks
US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth is set to meet Vietnamese senior officials on Nov 2 as he visits Hanoi amid prolonged talks over Washington’s potential supply of military equipment to its former foe, including transport planes and helicopters.
Mr Hegseth is expected to arrive in the Vietnamese capital early on the afternoon of Nov 2 after a series of meetings in Malaysia with his Asian counterparts, according to a Vietnamese official briefed on the trip.
Mr Hegseth is expected to meet Communist Party chief To Lam, President Luong Cuong and Defence Minister Phan Van Giang, the official said.
Talks on US arms supplies are expected to dominate the agenda, according to the official and another Vietnamese source briefed on the matter.
Both mentioned Lockheed Martin C-130 Hercules military transport planes as among the items to be discussed. A US official also confirmed that C-130s will come up in the talks.
One of the Vietnamese sources said the supply of US helicopters could also be discussed, specifically Lockheed Martin S-92s and Boeing Chinooks.
The three sources declined to be named as the information is not public.
They all said it is not clear whether any deal or announcement will be made on Nov 2.
Boeing deferred questions on the matter to the Vietnamese and US governments.
The Vietnamese government, the Pentagon and Lockheed Martin did not respond to requests for comment outside business hours.
The South-east Asian country, which relies heavily on Russian weapons, has been looking for years to diversify its arsenal.
Talks with the United States, which lifted an arms embargo in 2016, gained momentum during the Biden administration but have not yet yielded any formal announcement.
Reuters reported in 2024 on discussions for the sale of C-130 planes to Vietnam’s Defence Ministry, and in July on a preliminary deal on two S-92 helicopters after years of talks on the matter with Vietnam’s public security forces.
The possible purchase of two or three Chinook helicopters by Vietnam’s police was also under discussion, said one of the sources briefed on the matter.
In December, a newspaper controlled by the police said a new airport under development near Hanoi would be suitable for Chinook CH-47D helicopters and other models.
The Chinook was the only aircraft mentioned in the report that is not currently in use by Vietnamese forces.
By Francesco Guarascio & Phuong Nguyen – Reuters – November 2, 2025
Articles similaires / Related posts:
- Why the US-Vietnam strategic alliance in the South China Sea is unlikely to last The US and Vietnam are strange bedfellows, with no common culture, ideology, political system or world view, united for now by the ‘China threat’. But with US freedom of navigation operations challenging Vietnam’s claims along with China’s and no deep trust between the two, how long can the alliance last?...
- US, Vietnam ties have never been better Former battlefield foes celebrated 25-year anniversary of relations with high mutual praise and a joint eye on China...
- China’s double wedge against efforts to foster Vietnam-US relations Just as Beijing seeks to coerce Hanoi in the South China Sea, it warns about Washington’s intentions closer to home....
- Vietnam’s F-16s plan : a break from Russia or power play in US tariff talks ? Vietnam’s reported move to buy US F-16 jets could end 70-year defence ties with Russia and risk China’s wrath, analysts say....
- Hegseth in Vietnam to strengthen defense ties and reassure a cautious partner U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth was in Vietnam on Sunday, reaffirming a partnership built on healing the scars of the Vietnam War in a trip that will test whether Washington can reassure a vital but wary partner....