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This article explores the American involvement in the Vietnam War, highlighting the desire to maintain American credibility and the resolve to halt communist aggression. It examines key events, such as the Gulf of Tonkin Incident and the Tet Offensive, as well as the strategies employed by both sides. The impact of the war on American society and the opposition to the conflict are also discussed.
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American involvement Desire to maintain American credibility as having the resolve to halt communist aggression. Part of Containment Policy
France • European country controlled Vietnam as a colony for over 60 years.
Dien Bien Phu • North Vietnam city where a French military outpost was overrun by the communist Vietminh
Ho Chi Minh • Leader of the Vietminh • Fought against the French and then the U.S.
Domino Theory • Theory stating that if South Vietnam fell to communism, the other nations of Southeast Asia would fall • Coined by Eisenhower
1956 Elections • Established by the Geneva Conference • The United States feared a communist victory • Cancelled
Buddhist monks • Set themselves on fire in protestin 1963 • Convinced the Kennedy Administration that Ngo Dinh Diem was an unpopular leader and had to be replaced.
Ngo Dinh Diem • Unpopular leader of South Vietnam • Initially supported by U.S. • Assassinated in November, 1963
The Gulf of Tonkin Incident • Congress granted wide-ranging war power to President Johnson and allowed him to widen the Vietnam conflict as a result of a supposed attack by North Vietnamese forces on US ships.
Operation Rolling Thunder • The massive bombing campaign of North Vietnam. • In response to VC attack at Pleiku
The Vietcong Strategy Preferred to use guerilla warfare tactics Hit and run and ambush Knew they needed to out last the U.S.
Hearts and Minds • Attempt by the U.S. and South Vietnam to win the support of peasants
The Ho Chi Minh Trail • Extended from North Vietnam through “neutral” countries into South Vietnam to supply the Vietcong.
William Westmoreland • Commander of US troops in Vietnam.
U.S. Soldiers • recent high school graduates • single • lower to middle class
Tet Offensive • Viewed as a military failure, but political success for the Communist Forces • More Americans began to doubt the war
Robert McNamara • The Secretary of Defense under Lyndon Johnson until 1968.
Clark Clifford • Became Secretary of Defense after McNamara
Tet Offensive • Media portrayal led to an erosion of support from the American public for the war in Vietnam.
Hubert Humphrey • Johnson’s VP • LBJ attempted to help his presidential campaign by halting bombing of North Vietnam.
War Opposition Some Americans- • Burned their draft cards • Refused to register • Claimed to be conscientious objectors
The My Lai Massacre • The military attempted to cover up the atrocity • Shocked many Americans into believing the U.S. needed to withdraw from Vietnam.
The SDS • A U.S. group that radically opposed the Vietnam War • Responsible for burning the ROTC building at Kent State
Hubert Humphrey • 1968 Democratic Candidate for President • For continuing the war in Vietnam
Doves were against the war Hawks were supportive of the war
Vietnamization Policy of having the South Vietnamese troops taking over more of the fighting Bought time for the Nixon administration to seek a negotiated peace.
Richard Nixon • Wanted to end the war with “Peace with Honor”. • Ordered the secret bombings of Laos and Cambodia.
Da Nang In March of 1965 U.S. ground forces landed.
The Pentagon Papers • Were critical of President Lyndon Johnson’s handling of the Vietnam War.
Kent State Demonstrations • Resulted from the discovery of Nixon’s secret bombings and invasion of Cambodia.
The Paris Peace Talks • The successful negotiations between Henry Kissinger (U.S.) and Le Duc Tho (North Vietnam)
Christmas Bombings • Bombings in late 1972 intended to pressure the North Vietnamese to negotiate.
Silent Majority • Term Richard Nixon, called Americans who supported the War in Vietnam but tended to be less vocal than anti-war activists
Agent Orange The U.S. sprayed on the thick triple canopy jungle of Vietnam so bombers and troops could see the enemy
Ho Chi Minh Trail A network of dirty roads & muddy trails used to supply the enemies of the U.S. in South Vietnam
Vietcong South Vietnamese communists
Charlie The nickname given to South Vietnamese communists.
Deferment A postponement of military service
Henry Kissinger Nixon’s foreign policy advisor who negotiated a peace settlement for the U.S.
Viet Minh North Vietnamese communists that fought the French
Lyndon B. Johnson Used the Gulf of Tonkin Incident as a reason to deepen US involvement in the Vietnam War.
Nixon Doctrine • US would be less willing to send ground troops into foreign conflicts
US Advantages • Mobility • Air Superiority • Artillery and tanks • Wanted large scale battles
Communist advantages • Knowledge of terrain • Support of peasants • Preferred guerilla tactics