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Chapter 22

Chapter 22. The Vietnam War 1954-1975. Early Involvement in Vietnam. In the late 1940s and 1950s most Americans new little about Vietnam. During this time American officials came to view the nation as increasingly important in the campaign to halt the spread of communism.

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Chapter 22

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  1. Chapter 22 The Vietnam War 1954-1975

  2. Early Involvement in Vietnam • In the late 1940s and 1950s most Americans new little about Vietnam. • During this time American officials came to view the nation as increasingly important in the campaign to halt the spread of communism. • From the late 1800s until WWII, France ruled Vietnam and neighboring Laos and Cambodia a region known collectively as French Indochina.

  3. By the early 1900s nationalism had become a powerful force in Vietnam. • The Vietnamese formed several political parties to push for independence or reform of the French colonial government. • One of the leaders of the nationalist movement was Nguyen Tat Thanh- better known as his alias Ho Chi Minh or “Bringer of Light.”

  4. Ho Chi Minh was born in central Vietnam in 1890. • Was a strong advocate of communism. • In 1930 he founded the Indochinese Communist Party and worked to overthrow French rule. • His activities made him a wanted man. • He fled Indochina and spent several years in exile in the Soviet Union and China.

  5. In 1941 Ho Chi Minh returned to Vietnam. • The Japanese had seized control of the country in 1941. • Ho Chi Minh organized a nationalist group called the Vietminh- The group united both Communist and non-Communist in the struggle to expel the Japanese from Vietnam. • The United States would get involved by sending aid to the Vietminh.

  6. With the allies victory over Japan the Japanese surrendered control of Indochina. • Ho Chi Minh and his forces announced that Vietnam was independent. • Minh even drew up a declaration of independence. • Archimedes Patti an American officer stationed in Vietnam helped Minh write the document.

  7. Declaration of Independence of the Democratic Republic of VietnamSeptember 2, 1945 • All men are created equal; they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable Rights; among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness. • This immortal statement was made in the Declaration of Independence of the United States of America in 1776. In a broader sense, this means: All the peoples on the earth are equal from birth, all the peoples have a right to live, to be happy and free. • The Declaration of the French Revolution made in 1791 on the Rights of Man and the Citizen also states: "All men are born free and with equal rights, and must always remain free and have equal rights." • Those are undeniable truths. Nevertheless, for more than eighty years, the French imperialists, abusing the standard of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity, have violated our Fatherland and oppressed our fellow citizens. They have acted contrary to the ideals of humanity and justice.

  8. France however had no intention of allowing Vietnam to gain their independence. • Seeking to regain their colonial empire in Southeast Asia, French troops returned to Vietnam in 1946 and drove the Vietminh forces into hiding in the countryside. • By 1949 French officials had set up a new government in Vietnam.

  9. The Vietminh fought back against the French and slowly increased their control. • The French appealed to the United States for help. • The U.S. opposed colonialism. • In Vietnam however the independence movement with the Communist movement. • American officials did not think France should control Vietnam but they did not want Vietnam to be a Communist country.

  10. Two events convinced the Truman administration to help France- fall of China to communism and the outbreak of the Korean War. • Korea in particular convinced American officials that the Soviet Union had begun a major push to impose communism on East Asia. • Shortly after the Korea war began, President Harry S. Truman authorized a massive program of military aid to French forces fighting in Vietnam.

  11. President Eisenhower continued to support the French military campaign against the Vietminh. • By 1954 the United States was paying roughly three-fourths of France’s war cost. • During a news conference in 1954 Eisenhower defended the U.S. policy in Vietnam by stressing what became known as the domino theory- the belief that if Vietnam fell to communism so too would the other nations in Southeast Asia

  12. Despite the aid from the U.S. the French still struggled against the Vietminh who used hit-and- run and ambush tactics. • These are the tactics of guerrillas irregular troops who usually blend into the civilian population and are often difficult for regular armies to fight. • The mounting causalities and inability of the French to defeat the Vietminh made the war very unpopular with the French.

  13. In 1954 the French commander ordered his forces to occupy the mountain town of Dien Bien Phu. • Seizing the town would interfere with Vietminh’s supply line and force them into open battle. • Soon afterward a huge Vietminh force surrounded Dien Bien Phu and began bombarding the town.

  14. Shells rained down on us without stopping like a hailstorm on a fall evening,” recalled on French soldier. • Bunker after bunker trench after trench collapsed burying under them men and weapons.” • On May 7, 1954 the French force at Dien Bien Phu fell to the Vietminh. • The defeat convinced the French to make peace and withdraw from Indochina.

  15. Negotiations to end the conflict were held in Geneva, Switzerland. • The Geneva Accords temporarily divided Vietnam along the 17th parallel with Ho Chi Minh and the Vietminh in control of North Vietnam and pro-Western regime in control of the South. • In 1956 elections were to reunite the country under a single government. • After the Geneva Accords the French finally left Vietnam.

  16. The U.S. almost immediately stepped in to protect the new government in the South led by Ngo Dinh Diem a pro-Western and anti-Communist. • The tension between the North and South Vietnam escalated with the United States in the middle. • President Dwight D. Eisenhower supported Diem and increased American military and economic aid to South Vietnam.

  17. After Ngo Dinh Diem refused to hold national elections, Ho Chi Minh and his followers created a new guerrilla army known as the Vietcong. • The VC’s goal was to reunify North and South Vietnam. • The U.S. continued to send aid to South Vietnam. • The Vietcong's power however continued to grow because many Vietnamese opposed Diem’s government.

  18. President Kennedy continued the nation’s policy of support for South Vietnam, agreeing with past presidents that Southeast Asia was important in the battle against communism. • The unpopularity of South Vietnam’s President Diem increased because his government was corrupt he created strategic hamlets and he discriminated against Buddhism one of the country’s most widely practiced religions. • Diem was overthrown and later executed. • This further weakened South Vietnam’s government, forcing the U.S. to become more involved.

  19. After President Kennedy’s assassination, President Johnson inherited the problem of Vietnam. • At first President Johnson was cautious regarding Vietnam, yet he was determined to prevent South Vietnam from becoming Communist. • Politically, Democrats needed to keep South Vietnam from becoming Communist or Republicans would use it against them.

  20. On August 2, 1964 President Johnson announced that North Vietnamese torpedo boats fired on two American destroyers in the Gulf of Tonkin. • A similar attack reportedly occurred two days later. • The Senate and the House passed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution on August 7, 1964, authorizing the president to take all necessary measures to repel any armed attack on U.S. forces. • Congress had given its war powers to the president.

  21. After the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution was passed the Vietcong began attacking bases where American advisers were stationed in South Vietnam. • After an attack in February 1965, Johnson attacked North Vietnam from the air. • While the polls showed that Johnson’s approval rating had increased some dissenters in the White House warned that if the United States became too involved, it would be difficult to get out.

  22. In March 1965 however Johnson increase American involvement, and American soldiers were fighting alongside the South Vietnamese troops against the Vietcong. • 1965: US orders 50,000 troops to Vietnam. • By the end of 1965 there were some 180,000 American combat troops fighting in Vietnam with the number doubling by 1966. • Many Americans believed they could win in Vietnam.

  23. A Bloody Stalemate Emerges • To take Vietcong’s hiding places away American planes dropped napalm a jellied gasoline that explodes on contact and Agent Orange a chemical that strips leaves from trees and shrubs. • Farmlands and forest were turned into wastelands. • Americans underestimated the Vietcong’s strength, stamina, and morale.

  24. Planes spraying Agent Orange defoliant on Vietnam in 1966. • Over 100,000 tons of herbicides (Agents Blue, Orange, Pink, Purple and White) were dropped on Vietnam in attempt to deprive Viet Cong of food and forest cover. • New study shows 2 to 4 million people were sprayed directly with the chemicals which contained concentrations of dioxin more than 100 times greater than normal. • In additional to killing many thousands, U.S. chemical warfare left legacy of half a million Vietnamese children suffering from birth defects, according to the Wall Street Journal.

  25. Johnson refused to order a full invasion of North Vietnam fearing China would get involved in the war. • President Johnson refused to order a full-scale attack on the Vietcong’s supply line known as the Ho Chi Minh Trail. This made winning difficult. • As American casualties increased many Americans citizens began questioning the United States's involvement in the war.

  26. In March 1965 President Johnson expanded American involvement by shifting his policy to a sustained bombing campaign against North Vietnam. • The campaign was named Operation Rolling Thunder. • March 1965 the president also ordered the first combat troops to Vietnam. • Many Americans troops were frustrated by the Vietcong because they used ambushes, booby traps, and hit and run tactics. • The VC also blended into the general population in cities and country side and would just vanish.

  27. The Viet Cong Rigged All Sorts of Traps Involving Insanely Venomous Snakes There's rigging a trap for your enemy, and then there's rigging a venomous snake to bite your enemy right in the face. IN THE FACE.

  28. The bamboo pit viperof Vietnam is chock full of hemotoxic venom, which works by disrupting the blood's clotting process, destroying red blood cells, and wreaking havoc on your organ tissues. They were known as three-step snakes, because that's as far as you'd make it after getting bit by one. Now, it's bad enough to be burdened with the knowledge of such a creature, much less to have even the remotest possibility of stepping on something like that in the dense underbrush. But during the Vietnam War, the Viet Cong made everything worse when they started using them as natural biological weapons. They hid pit vipers in their packs so that anyone searching through them would get an agonizingly fatal surprise. In the tunnel complexes, they stuffed them into pieces of hollow bamboo and propped them in places where U.S. "tunnel rats" were likely to stick their unwary hands. Worst of all, they tied them into the branches of trees by their tails, right at face height. After a couple days spent hanging in a tree without food, the snake would be mad. And at that point, it would lash out at anything that came within range.

  29. Growing Credibility Gap • When American troops first entered the Vietnam War many Americans supported the war effort. • As the war in Vietnam continued to drag on the public support decreased. • Americans began to question the government and believed a credibility gap and developed making it difficult to believe what the Johnson administration said about the war.

  30. Throughout the early years of the war the American Commander in Vietnam General William Westmoreland reported that the enemy was on the brink of defeat. • In 1967 he confidently declared that the “enemy’s hopes are bankrupt” and added “we have reached an important point where the end begins to come into view.”

  31. The Vietnam War was the first television war combat footage appeared nightly on the evening news.

  32. Antiwar Movement • As casualties increased, Americans especially college students began to publicly protest the war. • In March 1965 faculty and students at the University of Michigan abandoned their classes and formed a teach-in where they informally discussed issues of the war and why they opposed it. • This triggered teach-ins at many college campuses.

  33. Kent State Incident What had merely been a small campus demonstration—one of thousands nationwide, quickly developed into a symbol of the Vietnam era in America. President Richard Nixon's announcement of the U.S. invasion of Cambodia and the need to draft more soldiers for an expansion of the Vietnam War effort provoked massive protests on campuses throughout the country. At Kent State University in Ohio, demonstrators occupied buildings and destroyed the ROTC offices. In response, the governor of Ohio dispatched hundreds of National Guardsmen to the campus. On May 4, the guardsmen open fire on a crowd of protesters, killing four student and wounding nine others.

  34. Young protestors focused their attention on what they felt was an unfair draft system. • While college students could delay military service until graduation, those with low income and limited education were called to serve. • As a result minorities especially African Americans were called to war. • Many draftees refused to serve . • Others moved to Canada and other nations. • No new draft orders were issued after 1972.

  35. THE VIETNAM LOTTERIES A lottery drawing - the first since 1942 - was held on December 1, 1969, at Selective Service National Headquarters in Washington, D.C. This event determined the order of call for induction during calendar year 1970; that is, for registrants born between January 1, 1944, and December 31, 1950. Reinstitution of the lottery was a change from the "draft the oldest man first" method, which had been the determining method for deciding order of call.

  36. There were 366 blue plastic capsules containing birth dates placed in a large glass container and drawn by hand to assign order-of-call numbers to all men within the 18-26 age range specified in Selective Service law.

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