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Vietnam: The Big War and the Vietnam Syndrome. Lsn 23. The Big War. Bombing Rolling Thunder Airmobility Ia Drang Search and destroy Junction City Tet Phase III. Defeat Domestic issues Vietnamization Withdrawal Legacy Vietnam Syndrome. Bombing: Rolling Thunder.
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The Big War • Bombing • Rolling Thunder • Airmobility • Ia Drang • Search and destroy • Junction City • Tet • Phase III • Defeat • Domestic issues • Vietnamization • Withdrawal • Legacy • Vietnam Syndrome
Bombing: Rolling Thunder • Sustained bombing campaign designed to • Reduce North Vietnamese/Viet Cong activities by affecting their will • Improve South Vietnamese morale • Provide US and South Vietnam with a bargaining tool • Reduce infiltration of men and material • Demonstrate US resolve to support allies • Gradually expanded from 63,000 tons of bombs in 1965 to 226,000 in 1967 • Bomb tonnage surpassed what had been dropped on Germany, Italy, and Japan in World War II
Bombing: Rolling Thunder • Heavy reliance on air power overestimated the capabilities of strategic bombing and underestimated North Vietnamese will • North Vietnamese were able to rebuild damage, seemingly strengthen their will, and actually increase infiltration in spite of the bombing F-4Cs on a mission over Vietnam
Bombing: Rolling Thunder • Problems • Micromanaged targeting and target restrictions frustrated military planners • Difficulty in finding targets reduced effectiveness • Gradual escalation and frequent interruptions allowed North Vietnamese to recover
Bombing: Rolling Thunder • Restrictions • White House picked targets, strike force size, weapons, and timing of attacks • Most strategic targets were off limits: • 30-mile radius around Hanoi • 10-mile radius around Haiphong • Wide buffer zone along Chinese border • North Vietnamese airfields were off limits • Could not attack SAM sites unless fired upon
Bombing Rolling Thunder • Results • Ineffective • Showed a large disconnect between political considerations and military objectives • “Rolling Thunder had not been built to succeed, and it didn’t.” • John Correll Johnson supposedly said, “I won’t let those Air Force generals bomb the smallest outhouse without checking with me.”
Airmobility: Ia Drang • In 1962 Secretary McNamara tasks the “Howze Board” to study the emerging helicopter technology and develop “a plan for implementing fresh and perhaps unorthodox concepts which will give us a significant increase in mobility.” • In Jan 1963 the Army begins forming and testing the 11th Air Assault Division which will ultimately result in the 1st Cavalry Division (Airmobile) being activated in July 1965 • In Aug the division began arriving in Vietnam
Airmobility: Ia Drang • The airmobility concept was tested in combat when the 1st Cav was ordered to the Ia Drang valley in Oct 1965 • On Nov 14 a US battalion (about 450 men) engaged some 2000 North Vietnamese regulars at LZ X-Ray Lieutenant Colonel Hal Moore on LZ X-Ray
Airmobility: Ia Drang • US relied heavily on airmobility and firepower • Helicopters provided transportation, surprise, firepower, logistical support, evacuation • Artillery, bombers, close air support
Airmobility: Ia Drang • Numerically a huge US victory • 3,000 North Vietnamese killed compared to 300 Americans • Confirms Westmoreland’s “search and destroy” strategy • North Vietnamese return to guerrilla warfare and make tactical adjustments to deal with US firepower
North Vietnamese Settled in for protracted struggle Retreated to sanctuaries Fought only when it was to their advantage to do so Targeted US will and South Vietnamese weakness US Concentrated on large-scale search and destroy missions against enemy base areas “To find and smash each [enemy base camp], one by one, is an essential task, a prime object in conclusively successful campaigning.” (DA Pam 4525-2, 1967) Often meant massive bombing followed by ground troops surrounding the area and helicopter-borne troops flying it to clear it Search and Destroy
Search and Destroy • Search and destroy operations were designed to “find, fix, flush, and finish” the enemy • They came to represent the US trying to fight the “Big War” with large units stomping through the jungle trying to find illusive small guerrilla groups who would fight only on their own terms
Search and Destroy: Junction City • Feb 22 to May 14, 1967 • Largest operation in Vietnam to date • Primary mission was to search for and then destroy the Central Office of South Vietnam (COSVN) and Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army installations
Junction City: Phase 1 • Phase I begins on 22 February with five U.S. brigades forming a horseshoe shaped cordon in the western half of War Zone C. • 25th Division would block on the west along the Cambodian border • 1st Infantry Division (with the 173rd Brigade attached) would block along the border on the north and on the east along Provincial Route 4
Junction City: Phase 1 • One task force of the 173rd Bde conducts an airborne assault and two other battalions assault by helicopter to seal off the Cambodian border
Junction City: Phase 1 • On D plus 1 a brigade of the 25th Division and the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment (attached to the 25th), which had positioned themselves on the southern edge of the horseshoe the previous day, would attack north into the horseshoe. • The horseshoe forces would conduct search and destroy operations in their areas.
Junction City: Phase 1 • Simultaneous with the search, a Special Forces and Civilian Irregular Defense Group camp near Prek Klok would be established for future interdiction of enemy supply and infiltration routes in War Zone C. An airstrip capable of handling C-130's would be constructed at the camp and a second similar airfield would be constructed in the vicinity of Katum. These facilities would facilitate future operations in the area.
Junction City: Phase 1 • During the operation, particular attention was to be devoted to searching suspected locations of the political and military elements of the Central Office of South Vietnam. • A thorough interrogation of all persons apprehended was to be conducted. Stars and Stripes photograph of a 1st Infantry Div soldier in the entrance of a tunnel leading to a VC headquarters during Operation Junction City.
Junction City: Phase 2 • During Phase 2, II Field Force elements would focus their attention on the eastern portion of War Zone C, conducting search and destroy operations against COSVN, Viet Cong, and North Vietnamese forces and installations. • The Saigon River was to be bridged at its intersection with Route 246 west of An Loc. • At that site the Special Forces and Civilian Irregular Defense Group camp with an airstrip for C-130’s was to be built.
Junction City: Phase 3 • In Phase 3, Junction City would be reduced to a brigade-size operation in the vicinity of Tay Ninh city in the southern portion of War Zone C • The operational control for this phase would be passed from II Field Force to the 25th Infantry Division CPT George Joulwan shows LTC Alexander Haig radios and other material found during Operation Junction City
North Vietnamese 2,728 enemy killed and 34 prisoners taken. 139 Chieu Hoi ralliers and 65 detainees 100 crew-served weapons, 491 individual weapons, and thousands of rounds of ammunition, grenades, and mines captured More than 5,000 bunkers and military structures were destroyed Over 810 tons of rice and nearly 40 tons of other food-stuffs such as salt and dried fish were uncovered Nearly one-half million pages of assorted documents were taken Junction City: Results
US 282 killed and 1,576 wounded 3 tanks, 21 armored personnel carriers, 12 trucks, 4 helicopters, 5 howitzers, and 2 quad-.50 machine guns and carriers destroyed But the objective of destroying the COSVN forces was not met Junction City: Results
Reasons for COSVN Escape • The proximity of a privileged sanctuary to the reported locations of COSVN and Headquarters, 9th VC Division. • The extreme difficulty of establishing a seal with sufficient troop density to deny infiltration routes to VC units thoroughly familiar with the dense jungle terrain. • The difficulty of gaining complete surprise, as a result of extensive repositioning of troops and logistical support prior to D-Day, in spite of the efforts devoted to deception measures. • Major General John Hay, CG 1st Infantry Division
Junction City • The official Army history concludes “JUNCTION CITY convinced the enemy command that continuing to base main force units in close proximity to the key population areas would be increasingly foolhardy. From that time on the enemy made increasing use of Cambodian sanctuaries for his bases, hospitals, training centers, and supply depots….A turning point in the war had been reached.” • Vietnam Studies: Cedar Falls-Junction City: A Turning Point, Rogers, 1989. President Nixon during a press conference on operations in Cambodia in 1970.
Tet Offensive • On January 30, 1968, the North Vietnamese escalate to Phase III, the War of Movement • Attack gains surprise by coinciding with the Vietnamese lunar new year holiday • Designed to foster antigovernment uprisings against the South Vietnamese
Tet Offensive • 84,000 Viet Cong and North Vietnamese attack 36 of 43 provincial capitals, 5 of 6 autonomous cities, 34 of 242 district capitals, and at least 50 hamlets
Reasons for North Vietnam’s Lack of Tactical Success in Tet • By attacking everywhere, the North Vietnamese had superior strength nowhere (violation of mass) • Inflexible Viet Cong command and control system could not respond to late announcements of timings and objectives from the North Vietnamese Army (unity of command) • North Vietnamese wrongly assumed South Vietnamese were on the verge of a general uprising (objective) Pulitzer Prize winning photograph of the director of the South Vietnamese national police executing a VC prisoner in Saigon during Tet
Reasons for the U.S. Tactical Success in Tet • Technology gave the US a strategic mobility that allowed it to respond to multiple threats (maneuver) • When the North Vietnamese came out and fought en masse in a traditional war of movement, the US could bring to bear its overwhelming firepower in a strategy of annihilation (mass) Helicopters gave the US the ability to cover all types of terrain, maneuver over large areas, react quickly to enemy attacks, reinforce embattled units, and conduct raids into enemy territory
Back to Insurgency Phase II • Previously complacent South Vietnamese population was for the first time made to feel involved in the war effort • Local insurgency movement suffered a devastating loss when it surfaced to assume leadership of a general uprising that never materialized • Clandestine shadow government, years in the building, was largely destroyed • Tactical military defeat for North Vietnam • By coming into the open, the enemy had exposed itself to massive American firepower and lost 137,000 killed in the first nine months of 1968 • Allows US to practice “the American way of war”
Overall Results of Tet • Tactical defeat for North Vietnam • North Vietnamese 32,000 killed and 6,000 captured • US and South Vietnamese 4,000 killed • But a strategic victory • “I thought we were winning this war!” (Walter Cronkite) • Dramatic shift in public opinion in US Returning from Vietnam after Tet, Walter Cronkite reported, “It seems now more certain than ever that the bloody experience of Vietnam is a stalemate” and then urged the government to open negotiations with the North Vietnamese.
Societal Changes Martin Luther King delivers his “I have a dream” speech in 1963 Country Joe McDonald at Woodstock, 1969 Gloria Steinem helped found Ms magazine in 1971
President Johnson President Lyndon B. Johnson listens to tape sent by Captain Charles Robb from Vietnam, July 31, 1968. Democratic delegates protest the Johnson administration's policies in Vietnam at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
President Nixon • Richard Nixon was elected president in 1968 campaigning for “peace with honor” • Under Nixon the process of “Vietnamization”– the gradual transfer of primary responsibility of the war to the South Vietnamese that Johnson had begun on a small scale after Tet– was accelerated • Nixon’s involvement in Watergate, his impeachment, and resignation hamstring his ability to influence peace negotiations through sustained offensive operations Nixon was succeeded by Gerald Ford. By this point the US was traumatized by war-weariness and economic recession. Ford had almost no maneuver room to help the South Vietnamese.
My Lai • On March 16, 1968, an infantry company entered the village of My Lai • They found no insurgents but, being psychologically prepared for battle and poorly disciplined, they proceeded to kill between 347 and 504 mostly old men, women, and children • Word of the massacre did not reach the American public until November 1969 when it then fueled national outrage and further undermined support for the war
Kent State and Jackson State Four students were killed and nine wounded at Kent State and two students were killed at Jackson State during protests against a number of issues to include US operations in Cambodia
Defeat • The US concluded a peace agreement with the North Vietnamese in 1973, but the South Vietnamese continued fighting until April 30, 1975 when the North Vietnamese captured Saigon • Throughout the 1970s and 1980s “boat people” flee Vietnam • Some 823,000 find refuge in the US Americans and South Vietnamese who had worked for the US are evacuated from Saigon
Legacy and Lessons • Sophisticated weaponry and conventional forces have limits in “low intensity conflict” • The restrictive rules of engagement (ROEs) and political considerations of limited war hamper military operations • Domestic support is critical • You can win the battles and lose the war • “Vietnam syndrome” effects military and diplomatic operations until finally exorcised by Desert Storm. • We’ll take about that in the Lesson 25.
Vietnam Today • Vietnam remains communist • However, since 2001, it has committed to economic liberalization and is trying to modernize the economy and to produce more competitive, export-driven industries • An April 28, 2005 article in the Economist was aptly titled “America Lost, Capitalism Won” • If you’re interested, USM has a nationally-acclaimed Vietnam Study Abroad Program
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