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Published byEvan Timothy Owen Modified over 8 years ago
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By: Stephanie Cartagena
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Vietnam War Second indochina war – 1954-1975 France and Vietnam - 1954 France forced to leave Vietnam To sides came together - Geneva, Switzerland - events shaped the future – Vietnams modern revolution
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Geneva Peace Accords France and Vietnam – 1954 – international cold war Worst future for Vietnam Pressure – soviet union and peoples republic of china - separate – 17 th parallel - France – face-saving defeat
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Terms of the Geneva Peace Accords 1956 – election to unify the country Division at the 17 th parallel – vanish with elections U.S Sec. John Foster Dulles - no support – Geneva peaces accords - to much power – communist party of Vietnam
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Dulles and President Eisenhower Supported - counter-revolutionary alternative - south of the 17 th parallel U.S – supported - multilateral agreements - Southeast Asia Treaty Organization
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South Vietnam Southeast Asia Treaty Organization – political cover New nation from dust – southern vietnam (republic of Vietnam)
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Republic of Vietnam 1955 – born Help of American - military - political - economic aid Ngo Dinh Diem
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Diems Claims Attack from communists in the North Democratic republic of Vietnam – South Vietnam 1957 – counterattack
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Law 10/59 Series of acts Diem Legal to hold someone in jail if he/she was a suspected Communist without bringing formal charges.
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Diem's Actions Immediate outcry People joined to stop his rule More attacks – more communist were trying to take the south
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kennedy Administration split - peaceful or democratic the Diem regime White house – Vietnam's policy - change in strategy – communists party
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Communists Party of Vietnam From 1956-1960 Reunify the country – political means Accept soviet unions model of political struggle - Diem collapse – political pressure
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15 th Party Plenum Jan. 1959 Revolutionary violence a) overthrow Diem's gov. b) liberate Vietnam south of the 17 th parallel
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May 1959 and sept. 1960 Revolutionary violence Combination political and armed struggle movement Result - creation of broad-based united front - helped mobilize southerners in opposition to the GVN
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United Front Long and historical roots in Vietnam Mobilized anti-French forces Joined communists & non-communists - umbrella organization
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Dec. 20,1960 Party's new united front – “National Liberation Front” - anyone could join 1. must oppose Diem 2. want Vietnam unified
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National Liberation Front Character vs. relationship to communists in Hanoi - debate - scholars - anti-war activists - policymakers Gov. officials – NLF- attack against Saigon regime
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Government “white papers” Washington insiders – NLF - puppet of Hanoi - non-communists elements were communists dupes Washington- discard NLF - calling it Viet Cong ( Vietnamese Communist )
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White Paper Dec. 1961 President Kennedy - sends troops to Vietnam to report conditions of South Vietnam Calls for large scale military build up Kennedy sought a limited accord with Diem
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Kennedy Argued for increase in: - military - technical - economic aid - large scale advisers - stabilize Diem's regime Urged to leave Vietnam - dead-end alley Choose middle route
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Limited Accords U.S – increase level of its military involvement- south Vietnam - more machinery & advisers - would not intervene whole-scale with troops
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Communist party 1960-1964 - military victory in the south - new American military commitment - march 1965 1. Johnson sent first combat troops to Vietnam 2. communists party moved to a protracted strategy
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Strategy Get U.S in a war they could not win militarily Create a unfavorable conditions for political victory Communists party – could prevail in a protracted war
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War in America Washington moved toward limited war in Vietnam Johnson – war in “cold blood” - called for mobilization of resources material and human and caused little disruption in every day life in America - goal never made
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Vietnam War impact Johnson administration forced to consider domestic consequences of its decisions every day Not enough volunteers to continue to fight a protracted war and the government instituted a draft 1968- everybody felt war impact
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1968 Democratic national convention Chicago Famous anti-war movement Police riot
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Tet offensive 1968 – bad to worse for the Johnson administration DVR and NLF – coordinated attacks – major southern cities - tet offensive 1. force Johnson's administration to the bargaining table
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Communist Party American people growing war-weary Continued success in the countryside – balance of forces
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Historians Tet offensive - military defeat - psychological victory - communists
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March 1968 Lyndon Johnson - would not seek the democratic party's re- nomination for president - would go to bargaining table with communists to end the war
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Spring of 1968 Secret negotiations began Paris Americans & Vietnam were discussing plans to end the war
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Richard Nixon Democratic party would not rescue presidency claimed he had a secret plan to end the war
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New President Vietnamization - Vietnamese were not fighting and dying in the jungles of Southern Asia - bought american troops home - increased air over the DRV - relied more on ARVN for ground attacks
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Nixon Years Expansion of the war - Laos - Cambodia Violated international rights – secret campaigns
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April 1970 Intense bombing campaigns & intervention in Cambodia Intense campus protests all across America
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Expanded air war Didnt deter the communist party continued to make hard demands in Paris
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Fall 1972 U.S secretary of state and DRV representatives – preliminary peace draft
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Kissinger-Tho peace draft Leaders in Saigon - rejected
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December 1972 Nixon administration unleashed a series of deadly bombing raids against in the DRV's largest cities - Christmas Bombings
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January 1973 Nixon White House - convinced the Thieu-Ky regime in Saigon that they would not abandon the GVN if they signed onto the peace accords
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Jan. 23 Final draft was initialed - ended open hostility between the U.S and the DRV
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Paris Peace Accords Did not end the conflict in Vietnam
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March 1973 until the fall of Saigon on April 30,1975 ARVN forces – save the south from military and political collapse
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Second Indochina war April 30 Communist forces – presidential palace in Saigon captured - ended the Second Indochina War
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July 2,1976 North Vietnam united North and South Vietnam form the “Socialist Republic of Vietnam”
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South Vietnamese government Supports - executed - imprisoned
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Saigon Renamed - Ho Chi Minh City - honor of former president of North Vietnam Communist rule continues in the Socialist Republic of Vietnam to the present day.
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