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Vietnam War. French Vietnam. Vietnam colonized by French in 1700’s…French Indochina Imposed harsh taxes & limited political freedoms No taxation without representation! Wanted to fight for their independence from France. Ho Chi Minh.
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French Vietnam • Vietnam colonized by French in 1700’s…French Indochina • Imposed harsh taxes & limited political freedoms • No taxation without representation! • Wanted to fight for their independence from France
Ho Chi Minh • Vietnamese nationalist/patriot & leader • wanted a communist revolution to combat French colonial imperialism • he organized the Vietminh – the League for the Independence of Vietnam • during WWII, the Japanese fought the French out of Indochina Japanese lose WWII Vietnam becomes independent in 1945 (but French insist its still theirs)
Causes of Vietnam War • fear of communism & the Cold War • domino theory • if Vietnam fell to communism, who would be next • containment • contain communism to this single country • internationalism • communism would broaden to neighboring countries because they share common cultures
Geneva Accords • Geneva Accords – agreement to temporarily divide Vietnam in 2 parts (North & South) • North = communist; South = western culture (but not democratic) • Does this work??? • President Eisenhower supported S. Vietnam (even though very unjust leader)
Vietcong • communist guerilla forces • supported the National Liberation Front in South Vietnam • NLF – organization dedicated to end S. Vietnam’s leader (Diem) rule • Inevitably… CIVIL WAR! • President Kennedy sent more troops over to Vietnam to fight communism & Vietcong • Diem killed by military takeover S. Vietnam got worse
The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution • U.S. ships reported a torpedo attack from a N. Vietnam naval ship in the Gulf of Tonkin (on N. Vietnam coast) • President Johnson declared this attack an act of war & increased U.S. involvement in Vietnam • the resolution gave President Johnson the authority to take all necessary measures to repel any armed attack against U.S. forces
U.S. Military • Operation Rolling Thunder –air strikes to destroy war industries in N. Vietnam • the Ho Chi Minh Trail (a network of paths that supplied the Vietcong with weapons) • goal: crush N. Vietnam’s ability to supply Vietcong war would end • dropped napalm & chemical poisons to burn the trail, which went through the jungle forest • tactic: More bombs, more napalm, more air raids • Search & Destroy Missions • find enemy camps & demolish them
Vietnamese Military • tactic: guerilla warfare & knowledge of geography • moving secretly, they set traps & land mines to kill & injure Americans • surprise attacks • How do Americans find the “enemy?”
American War Effort • TV & media shaped public opinion • saw images of the war & casualties • changed people’s minds from pro war to anti-war • Martin Luther King Jr. = antiwar (focus on home problems) • College kids voice their opinion & protest the draft
Tet Offensive • Tet – Vietnamese New Year; N. Vietnamese & Vietcong attacked American forces • this surprise attack shocked Americans & weakened public confidence in the government’s conduct of the war; however, more troops were sent • … we were losing the war • this event resulted in the increase of American opposition to the war
Vietnamization • President Nixon’s plan to gradually turn over all of the fighting to the South Vietnamese Army & pull out • U.S. would continue to provide supplies & training to S. Vietnam • Nixon threatened nuclear war, but it did nothing • N. Vietnamese determined to unite all of Vietnam
Consequences of War • 1 million N. Vietnamese soldiers dead • 185,000 S Vietnamese soldiers dead • 500,000 Vietnamese civilians dead • Laos & Cambodia became communist countries (neighbors to Vietnam) • 60,000 American soldiers dead • Led to American’s eyes being opened to govt. deception • War Powers Act
Legislation passed because of Vietnam • 26th amendment • War Powers Act of 1973
26th Amendment • lowered the federal voting age from 21 to 18 • if you’re old enough to fight, you’re old enough to vote
War Powers Act of 1973 • required U.S. President to get congressional approval before committing U.S. troops to an armed struggle (i.e. Iraq); limits President’s power • this gave Congress increased responsibility for setting U.S. war policy