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The Vietnam War 1954-1975 Background to the War  France controlled “Indochina” since the late 19 th Century  Japan took control during World War II.

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Presentation on theme: "The Vietnam War 1954-1975 Background to the War  France controlled “Indochina” since the late 19 th Century  Japan took control during World War II."— Presentation transcript:

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2 The Vietnam War 1954-1975

3 Background to the War  France controlled “Indochina” since the late 19 th Century  Japan took control during World War II  With US aid, France attempted re-colonization in the postwar period

4 Background to the War  French lost control to Ho Chi Minh’s Viet Minh forces in 1954 at Dien Bien Phu  President Eisenhower declined to intervene on behalf of France

5 Background to War  International Conference at Geneva  Vietnam was divided at 17 th parallel  Ho Chi Minh’s nationalist forces controlled the North  Ngo Dinh Diem, a French-educated, Roman Catholic claimed control of the South

6 Background to the War  A date was set for democratic elections to reunify Vietnam  Diem backed out of the elections, leading to military conflict between North and South

7 US Military Involvement Begins  Repressive dictatorial rule by Diem  Family holds all power  Wealth is hoarded by elites  Buddhist majority persecuted  Torture, lack of political freedom prevail  The US aided Diem’s government  Ike sent financial and military aid  675 US Army advisors sent by 1960

8 Early Protests of Diem’s Government Self-Emulation by a Buddhist Monk

9 US Military Involvement Begins  Kennedy elected in 1960  Increases military “advisors” to 16,000  1963: JFK supports a Vietnamese military coup d’etat – Diem and his brother are Murdered (Nov. 2)  Kennedy was assassinated just weeks later (Nov. 22)

10 Johnson Sends Ground Forces  Remembers Truman’s “loss” of China – Domino Theory revived  “I’m not going to be the president who saw Southeast Asia go the way China went.” - Johnson

11 Johnson Sends Ground Forces  Advised to rout the communists by Secretary of Defense, Robert S. McNamara  Tonkin Gulf Incident, 1964  According to Johnson, the attacks were unprovoked  Tonkin Gulf Resolution  “The Blank Check”

12 US Troop Deployment in Vietnam

13 The Ground War, 1965 - 1968  No territorial goals  Body counts on TV every night  First “living room war”  Viet Cong supplies over the Ho Chi Minh Trail

14 The Air War, 1965-1968  1965: Sustained bombing of North Vietnam  Operation Rolling Thunder  March 2, 1965  1966-68: Ongoing bombing of Hanoi nonstop for 3 years  Targets Ho Chi Minh Trails  Detained Pilots: POWs  Carpet Bombing  napalm

15 The Ground War, 1965-1968  General Westmoreland  Late 1967  “light at the end of the tunnel.”

16 The Tet Offensive, January 1968 The Tet Offensive N. Vienamese Army + Viet Cong attack South simultaneously Take every major southern city US + ARVN beat back the offensive Viet Cong destroyed N. Vietnamese army debilitated Seen as an American defeat by media

17 Impact of the Tet Offensive Domestic U.S. Reaction: Disbelief, Anger, Distrust of Johnson Administration “Hey, Hey LBJ! How many kids did you kill today?”

18 American Morale Drops  Disproportionate representation of poor people and minorities  Severe racial problems  Major drug problems  Mylai Massacre  200 – 500 unarmed villagers

19 Anti-War Demonstrations: Columbia University

20 Anti-War Demonstrations: Kent State University  May 4, 1970  4 students shot dead  11 students wounded

21 Nixon on Vietnam  Peace With Honor  Appealed to the great “silent Majority”  Vietnamization  Expansion of the Conflict – The “Secret War”  Cambodia  Laos  Agent Orange  Chemical Defoliant

22 Pentagon Papers, 1971  Daniel Ellsberg leaked government documents regarding war efforts to New York Times  Documents  Government misled Congress and American People regarding its intentions in Vietnam during mid-60s  Primary reason for fighting not to eliminate communism, but to avoid humiliating defeat  New York Times v. United States

23 The Ceasefire, 1973  Peace if at hand, Kissenger (‘72)  North Vietnam attacked South  Most massive US bombing commences  1973: Ceasefire signed between  US, South Vietnam, North Vietnam

24 The Ceasefire, 1973  Conditions  US to remove all troops  North Vietnam could leave troops already in South Vietnam  North Vietnam would resume war  No provisions for POWs or MIAs  Last American troops left South Vietnam on March 29, 1973  1975: North Vietnam defeats South Vietnam  Saigon renamed Ho Chi Minh City

25 The Fall of Saigon South Vietnamese attempt to flee the country

26 The Cost  3,000,000 Vietnamese killed  58,000 Americans killed; 300,000 wounded  Under-funding of Great Society programs  $150,000,000,000 in U.S. spending  U.S. morale, self-confidence, trust of government, decimated

27 The Impact  26 th Amendment  18 yr old vote  Nixon abolished the draft – all volunteer army  War Powers Act, 1973  Notify congress within 48 hours of deploying military forces  President must withdraw forces unless he gains Congressional approval within 90 days  Disregard for Veterans  Seen as “baby killers”


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