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Objectives. Explain the reasons for the escalation of US involvement in VietnamDescribe the military tactics and weapons used by US forces and the VietcongExplain the impact of the war on American society. Main Idea and Terms/Names. The United States sent troops to fight in Vietnam, but the war quickly turned into a stalemate..
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1. Vietnam:US Involvement and Escalation Chapter 22, Section 2
Notes
2. Objectives Explain the reasons for the escalation of US involvement in Vietnam
Describe the military tactics and weapons used by US forces and the Vietcong
Explain the impact of the war on American society
3. Main Idea and Terms/Names The United States sent troops to fight in Vietnam, but the war quickly turned into a stalemate. Robert McNamara
Dean Rusk
William Westmoreland
Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN)
Napalm
Agent Orange
Search and destroy mission
Credibility gap
4. Johnson increases Involvement 1965 – Johnson and his foreign policy advisors decide to send troops to fight
Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara
Secretary of State Dean Rusk
Congress strongly supported Johnson’s strategy
Americans supported Johnson’s containment of communism
61% supported
5. Johnson increases Involvement By the end of 1965 – 180,000 Americans were sent to Vietnam
William Westmoreland – American commander in Vietnam
Continued requesting more troops
Was not impressed with the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN)
By 1967 – 500,000 US troops in Vietnam
6. Fighting in the Jungle US thought its superior weaponry would lead it to victory
The Jungle terrain and the enemy’s guerilla tactics turned the war into a stalemate
Vietcong used hit and run and ambush tactics
Knew the jungle terrain – advantage!
Vietcong had a network of elaborate tunnels
Withstand airstrikes and disappear quickly
Connected villages to launch surprise attacks
7. Vietcong Tunnel System Link http://www.diggerhistory.info/pages-conflicts-periods/vietnam/tunnels.htm
8. Fighting in the Jungle The jungle was laced with booby traps and land mines
The US had laid land mines throughout the jungle
Vietcong reused American mines
Nerve-racking for US troops to walk through the jungle
9. A War of Attrition Westmoreland’s strategy was to destroy the Vietcong morale
A war of attrition – gradually wearing down the enemy with continuous harassment
Used a body count to keep track of the number of Vietcong deaths
Vietcong had no intention of quitting
Received supplies from China and USSR
The US misunderstood the Vietcong – it was a battle for existence
10. Battle For Hearts and Minds US began a campaign to win the “hearts and minds” of S.Vietnamese villagers
Would keep them from supporting Vietcong
However, this was a difficult task
US planes dropped napalm
Gasoline based chemical that set fire to the jungle
US sprayed Agent Orange to kill the jungle
These chemicals wounded civilians and left their villages in ruins
11. Battle For Hearts and Minds Search and destroy missions
US troops uproot civilians with suspected ties to the Vietcong and burned their villages
Villagers fled to cities or refugee camps
13. Sinking Morale US troops’ morale sunk
Frustrated with guerilla warfare
Brutal jungle conditions
Failure to make substantial headway against enemy
Some soldiers believed in the cause, but many soldiers were legally required to fight a war they did not support
turned to alcohol and drugs
Corruption of S. Vietnamese government – civil war within a civil war
14. The War at Home Great Society Suffered
The war was costly and the US economy suffered
Inflation rate jumped to 5.5%
Johnson asked for a tax increase to help fund the war and check inflation
Congress agreed, but only if the funding for Great Society programs was reduced
Living Room War – combat footage appeared on the nightly news
Quoted body count statistics
15. The Credibility Gap What the government reported and what was really happened
Americans saw images on TV that did not match up with the optimistic gov. report
Fulbright hearings
Senator Fulbright televised a series of hearing in which the Johnson administration defended their Vietnam policies