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Discussion Questions

Discussion Questions. What did Vietnamese leader Ho Chi Minh want? How and with whom did he make his case? What was President Truman’s response? Why? Explain President Eisenhower’s Domino theory. According to Ike, what is the strategic importance of Indochina?

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Discussion Questions

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  1. Discussion Questions • What did Vietnamese leader Ho Chi Minh want? How and with whom did he make his case? • What was President Truman’s response? Why? • Explain President Eisenhower’s Domino theory. • According to Ike, what is the strategic importance of Indochina? • President Eisenhower's News Conference, April 7, 1954, Public Papers of the Presidents, 1954, p. 382

  2. Southeast Asia

  3. Presidents Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon… Nearly 20 years of involvement… 58,195 American deaths 300,000 Americans wounded… 2.4 million Vietnamese deaths… $120 billion spent between 1965-1973… Pervasive legacy that divided the nation… HOW DID THIS HAPPEN?

  4. The Vietnam Conflict Thinking Skill: State implications of US involvement and the consequences of US escalation

  5. Vietnam

  6. Vietnam History in Brief • 1887 French colonized Indochina (Vietnam/Laos/Cambodia) • 1945 Democratic Republic of Vietnam formed after defeat of Japan in WWII • 1947 Ho Chi Minh fled to the hills, led Vietminh resistance against French (guerilla warfare) • 1954 France suffered great defeat at Diembiemphou; withdrew despite US funding 80% of French war effort • 1954 Geneva Accords temporarily divided N & S;free elections promised for 1956. • Ho Chi Minh (N) v. Ngo Dinh Diem (S)

  7. Ho Chi Minh

  8. Ngo Dinh Diem

  9. Beginnings of US Involvement • Promised countrywide elections never held… • Domino Effect • Ho Chi Minh (communist) would win

  10. Resistance Intensifies • Vietminh/North Vietnamese “regulars” • National Liberation Front (NLF)/Vietcong (VC) blended into civilian populace • JFK deploys 15,000 “advisors” & Green Beret special forces • Buddhist monks protest with self-immolations • Ngo Dinh Diem assassinated Nov. 1963

  11. Gulf of Tonkin Incident • Aug 2, 1964 USS Maddox was attacked by North Vietnamese patrol boats • Aug 4, 1964 2nd round of “attacks” • LBJ authorizes retaliatory airstrikes • LBJ uses outrage to press Congress to pass the Tonkin Gulf Resolution • granted extraordinary war-making powers • “Blank Check” (House 416-0, Senate 88-2)

  12. Dear America: Letters Home From Vietnam (1987) Discussion Questions • How did the soldiers’ views change over the course of the war? • What impact did the environment have on US ability to successfully wage war? • What effect did the American media have on the conflict? • What is the psychological impact of the statement, “We own the day, Charlie owns the night”?

  13. Dear America: Letters Home From Vietnam Discussion Questions • What was the significance of the Tet Offensive? • How did the constant threat of attack impact morale? • Why did the US fail to achieve its military goals in Vietnam? Who is ultimately responsible? • Did LBJ have any realistic alternative to escalation?

  14. Pleiku Attacks • American military base attacked, Feb. 1965 • Effects: • Gen. Westmoreland called for massive retaliatory air strikes against N. Vietnam • Operations Flaming Dart, Rolling Thunder • US ground forces increased from 75,000 to 250,000; 1967- 485,000 and 1969- 543,000 • LBJ made Vietnam an “American War”

  15. General William Westmoreland

  16. President Lyndon Johnson

  17. Foot Soldier’s War A Typical “Grunt”

  18. Women in Vietnam… About 11,000 women served from 1962-1973 (DoD)

  19. Pontoon Boat on patrol

  20. US Air Power

  21. Effective Bombing?

  22. Chinook Helicopter

  23. Huey helicopter

  24. Hitting the “LZ” (landing zone)

  25. On Patrol

  26. Supplies

  27. Jungle Conditions…

  28. Where is the Enemy?

  29. Khe Sahn military outpost

  30. Waiting…

  31. Victims

  32. Who is the Enemy?

  33. Vietnam Conflict – Part II Thinking Skill: Examine information from more than one point of view Objective: Assess the goals of all sides in the conflict through 1968

  34. TET Offensive What was the significance of the Vietnamese New Year in 1968? • N. Vietnamese and V.C. attack virtually all cities in S. Vietnam • Shocks US military, who eventually win • Public in US is demoralized (TV) • V.C. are re-energized and fight escalates • Anti-war protests increase in US

  35. South Vietnamese Soldier shooting a VC prisoner

  36. Napalm Attacks

  37. My Lai Massacre – March 16, 1968 • Lt. William Calley • 347 -504 victims

  38. Student Protests Continue…

  39. LBJ: “How can we get out without losing face?” Answer: “I’m afraid there are few acceptable alternatives…”

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