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America’s “Vietnam Experience”. Background history… French-Indochina. Indochina (Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam): Occupied by France in 1858, Indochina became a French colony in 1887 Indochina has a rich, diverse and predominantly Buddhist culture. Many different ethnic tribal groups
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Background history…French-Indochina • Indochina (Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam): • Occupied by France in 1858, Indochina became a French colony in 1887 • Indochina has a rich, diverse and predominantly Buddhist culture. • Many different ethnic tribal groups • Mainly rural, agrarian; few cities and industry • Villages and “hamlets” (connected villages). • The French are European and Christian (Catholic). • Were repressive, restricted education, religion and culture, tried to “westernize” an ancient , native civilization. • 1919 – Versailles: Vietnamese (represented by Nguyen Ai Quoc – “Ho Chi Minh”) sought self-determination - were denied. France retained its colony. • 1920: Nguyen Ai Quoc (Ho Chi Minh) became a founding member of the French Communist Party. • 1923: HCM studied Marxism in the USSR. • 1930: HCM founded the Vietnamese Communist Party (VCP); vowed to liberate Indochina from France. French charged him with TREASON. • French sentenced him to death in absentia in 1930.
The Conflict in Southeast Asia 55 years of struggle and 35 years of war: • 1919: Wilson snubs Ho Chi Minh at Versailles; France keeps Indochina colony • 1930: Ho Chi Minh pledges to liberate Indochina from French • 1940-1945: As a US ally, Indochinese fought against Japanese occupation • 1945-1954: French-Indochina war/1st War of independence (Vietminh vs. France) • 1955-1964: Civil war in South Vietnam (NLF/Vietcong vs. ARVN) • 1964-1975: 2nd war of independence/Vietnam War • NLF (Vietcong)/NVA vs. USA/South Vietnam Army/ARVN • 30 April 1975, the VC/NVA won the war; independent Vietnam is created. • Was this a war of “national liberation” from a colonial power (France, and then, the United States) or a war fought to stop the spread of communism? • The United States failed to contain communism in Southeast Asia.
Conflict in Southeast Asia30 years of war for America: • FIVE AMERICAN PRESIDENTS: • HARRY S. TRUMAN: 1945 – 1952 • DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER: 1953 – 1960 • JOHN F. KENNEDY: 1961 – 1963 • LYNDON B. JOHNSON: 1964 - 1968 • RICHARD M. NIXON: 1969 - 1974
Indochina: 1940 to 1954 • Japanese occupation of Indochina during WW2 (1940-1945). • 1941: HCM created the communist “Vietminh” in Vietnam. • Allied with US against Japan. • Yalta (Feb. ’45) and Potsdam (July ’45) Agreements: • FDR, Truman supported Vietnamese independence • French wanted to retain the colony • 2 September 1945 – VJ Day and Vietnamese “Declaration of Independence” • Indochina remained a French colony - Independence denied a 2nd time • A war of liberation against France: FRENCH-INDOCHINA WAR • Vietminh vs. France • Vietminh: aid from USSR, China (US weapons) and used what Japanese left behind after WW2; US supported Vietminh • France: Beginning in 1950, US paid for 80% of their war; no combat support • “spread of communism” or “war of national liberation”?
The Results of the French-Indochina War • 1954: Battle of Dienbienphu • Vietminh defeated French • US: “China and USSR will expand into SE Asia” • Vietnam: Finally…independence • Revolutionary movements against colonialism throughout the Third World • 1954: SEATO • THE GENEVA ACCORDS (1955 Peace Treaty) • Created Laos, Cambodia and… • 2 Vietnams: partitioned at the 17th parallel • Independence denied a 3rd time • North Vietnam under Ho Chi Minh. • South Vietnam under Ngo Dinh Diem. • Promised re-unification elections in 1956 • US did not sign the Geneva Peace Accords
US support of Diem in South Vietnam: 1955-1963Why does the experiment fail? • 80% of the South Vietnamese people supported HCM • Diem (a Catholic) realized that he would lose any election. • Repeatedly cancelled elections between 1956 & ‘62 • regime was corrupt in many other ways • This sparked a civil war in South Vietnam by 1959. • 1960: South Vietnamese members of the National Liberation Front (NLF or the ‘Viet Cong’), aided by North Vietnam, fought a civil war against the Diem government. • 1960: Eisenhower sent 900 Green Berets to SV to “advise” and train the ARVN • 1961: JFK sent 16, 000 “advisors” to South Vietnam to train the ARVN and defend Diem govt. • 1963: due to widespread corruption and very little public support, CIA backed a coup of the Diem government and he was assassinated. • JFK’s “withdrawal plan” in 1963. • US troops out of Vietnam by end of 1965 • JFK assassinated on November 22, 1963 • This ended his plan to withdraw US forces from Vietnam • …and changed the direction of US policy in Vietnam under the new American president, Lyndon B. Johnson…the torch has been passed BACK…. NGO DINH DIEM
US Intervention in South Vietnam:The Vietnam War: 1964 to 1975 A war that the US must win quickly or risk losing the support of the American people. A war that the Vietnamese will fight for however long it takes to achieve their goals of unification and independence. How could the United States, a nation with over 200 million citizens and a military second to none in the entire world, be UNABLE to defeat its enemy in Vietnam (the NLF/Vietcong) from South Vietnam and the NVA from North Vietnam, a nation with limited resources and a population of just 17 million?
President Lyndon B. Johnson (1963-1968): • McCarthy Era: US Asian “experts” purged from government • Therefore, LBJ had very few advisors Asian advisors • LBJ: conflict in Vietnam was more “domino theory” than “war of liberation” • was convinced that the US could easily win a war in Vietnam • needed a way to convince Congress and the American people that the US should wage war in Vietnam to contain communism. • August 2, 1964: Gulf of Tonkin Incident • August 4, 1964: Gulf of Tonkin Resolution • Operation Rolling Thunder • Military superiority of US, in escalating amounts of force, would convince enemy to give up • 7 million tons of US bombs were dropped on Vietnam during this operation • 1964: US Marines sent to Vietnam • Early 1965: US Army combat forces in South Vietnam • 1965 to 1967: • “Escalation”: “rural pacification” plus “search and destroy” strategy; • growing anti-war movement in US – as more people protested the war, LBJ would send more troops to Vietnam • “light at the end of the tunnel” (Westmoreland) • 1968: • Tet offensive, “credibility Gap” • the anti-war movement; counter-culture (end of “conformity”); a year of “chaos” • Presidential election: Nixon (R) vs. Humphrey (D)
Nixon’s Vietnam: 1969-1974(Public support for the war virtually non-existent) • His Strategy: “Vietnamization” • Turn the war over to ARVN…gradually • “De-escalation” of US involvement • Reduce ground troops…gradually • Secret “incursions” into Cambodia and Laos broadened the war/angered Americans • Achieve “Peace with Honor” • US encouraged North Vietnam and Viet Cong to negotiate an end to the war in 1968. • US bombing of NV kept NV/VC from negotiating • Nixon increased bombing of North Vietnam • 1971: “The Pentagon Papers” • Paris Accords – US out by end of 1973 • April 30, 1975: • Communists (NVA and VC) finally win their war against government of South Vietnam • Vietnam is finally re-united and independent after years of colonial rule. Pres. Richard Nixon
The Vietnam War • Why was the United States, a nation with over 200 million citizens and a military second to none in the entire world, UNABLE to defeat its enemy in Vietnam (the NLF from South Vietnam and the NVA from North Vietnam), a nation with limited resources and a population of just 17 million?
Important Vietnam War Timeline • 1887-Indochina became a French colony • 1919-France kept Indochina (post war power balance ) • 1940-Japanese occupation during WW 2 • 1945-France kept Indochina (Domino Theory) • 1954-Defeated French at Dienbienphu • 1955-Geneva Accords • 1960-US “advisors” in South • 1963-JFK & Diem Killed • 1964-Gulf of Tonkin • 1965-US combat troops in SV • 1968-Tet Offensive (500K US troops in Vietnam) • 1970-Vietnamization and Paris Peace Talks begin • 1973-Last US troops out of South Vietnam • 1975-Fall of Saigon - Vietnam’s Independence
Vietnam War Terminology • NVA, ARVN, Viet Minh, Viet Cong,/NLF • Ho Chi Minh, Ngo Dinh Diem • Gulf of Tonkin Incident and Resolution • Operation Rolling Thunder • Tet Offensive/KheSanh -1968 • Ho Chi Minh Trail • Rural Pacification/StrategicHamlets/Hearts and Minds, Search and Destroy, Vietnamization, PeacewithHonor • Cambodian Incursion • My Lai Massacre • The PentagonPapers (Daniel Ellsberg) • The Free Speech/Anti-WarMovement • Vietnam underPresidents Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon • Was US involvement in Vietnam consistent withcontainmentpolicy?
IMPORTANT DOCUMENTS IN COLD WAR HISTORY • During the Truman Administration: • “Iron Curtain Speech” and Josef Stalin’s Response to it • The LONG TELEGRAM • X ARTICLE/CONTAINMENT and NOVIKOV TELEGRAM • TRUMAN DOCTRINE/MARSHALL PLAN and SOVIET REACTION • NATIONAL SECURITY ACT • NSC-68 • NATO CHARTER AND OTHER ALLIANCES • During the Eisenhower and Kennedy Administrations: • BRINKSMANSHIP AND MASSIVE RETALIATION • NEW LOOK POLICY AND EISENHOWER DOCTRINE • IKE’S FAREWELL & JFK’S INAUGURAL ADDRESSES • FLEXIBLE RESPONSE
IMPORTANT DOCUMENTS IN COLD WAR HISTORY • X ARTICLE • TRUMAN DOCTRINE/MARSHALL PLAN • NATIONAL SECURITY ACT • NSC-68 • NATO AND OTHER ALLIANCES • BRINKSMANSHIP AND MASSIVE RETALIATION • NEW LOOK POLICY AND EISENHOWER DOCTRINE • IKE’S FAREWELL & JFK’S INAUGURAL ADDRESSES • FLEXIBLE RESPONSE • GULF OF TONKIN RESOLUTION