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Vietnam War: The early years 21.1-21.2
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French Rule in Vietnam From the late 1800’s until WWII Took much of the land from the peasants The Vietnamese staged several revolts and strikes during the 1930’s Indochinese Communist Party
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Ho Chi Minh The French had condemned him to death for his rebellious activity, he fled Vietnam Vietminh Group sought Vietnam’s independence from foreign rule
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France Battles the Vietminh Ho Chi Minh vowed to fight from the North to liberate the South from French control The United States paid for much of France’s war During WWII: United States had forged an alliance with Ho Chi Minh Supplying him with aid to resist the Japanese The U.S. now saw their one time ally (Ho Chi Minh) as a Communist aggressor
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The Vietminh drive out the French Domino Theory Likened the countries on the brink of communism to a row of dominoes May of 1954 The Vietminh overran the French outpost at Dien Bien Phu The Geneva Accords temporarily divided Vietnam along the 17 th parallel
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Diem Cancels Elections South Vietnam’s president Ngo Dinh Diem, a strong anti-communist, refused to take part in the countrywide election of 1956 Corrupt Government Restricting Buddhist practices Communist opposition group in the South known as the Vietcong had begun attacks on Diem government Ho Chi Minh began supplying arms to the Vietcong via a network of paths along the border of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia (Ho Chi Minh Trail)
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Ho Chi Minh Trail
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Kennedy and Vietnam Increased financial aid to Diem’s teetering regime and sent thousands of military advisers to help train South Vietnamese troops strategic hamlet program which meant moving all villagers to protected areas Diem administration initiated the strategic hamlet program which meant moving all villagers to protected areas Diem also intensified his attack on Buddhism
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Kennedy and Vietnam To protest, several Buddhist monks and nuns publically burned themselves to death November 1, 1963, a U.S. supported military coup topped Diem’s regime Against Kennedy’s wishes, Diem was executed
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The Tonkin Gulf Resolution August 2, 1964 North Vietnamese patrol boat fired a torpedo at an American destroyer, the U.S.S. Maddox The alleged attack on the U.S. ships prompted Johnson to launch bombing strikes on the North Vietnam
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The Tonkin Gulf resolution August 7, congress adopted the Tonkin Gulf Resolution Not a declaration of war Granted Johnson broad military powers in Vietnam February 1965 Operation Rolling Thunder The first sustained bombing of North Vietnam By June more than 50,000 U.S. soldiers were battling the Vietcong
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Strong support for containment Secretary of Defense, Robert McNamara Secretary of State Dean Rusk President Johnson began dispatching tens of thousands of U.S. soldiers to fight in Vietnam
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Strong support for containment General William Westmoreland continued to request more troops The American commander in South Vietnam, General William Westmoreland continued to request more troops By 1967 the numbers of U.S. troops in Vietnam had climbed to about 500,000
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A war in the Jungle The Vietcong lacked the high-powered weaponry of the American Forces Used hit-and-run and ambush tactics as well as a keen knowledge of the jungle terrain The enemy laced the terrain with countless booby traps and land mines tunnels that allowed the Vietcong to launch surprise attacks then disappear quickly A network of elaborate tunnels that allowed the Vietcong to launch surprise attacks then disappear quickly
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War of Attrition Westmoreland’s strategy destroy their morale through a war of attrition or gradual wearing down of the enemy Westmoreland’s strategy for defeating the Vietcong was to destroy their morale through a war of attrition or gradual wearing down of the enemy Continuous harassment The Vietcong had no intention of quitting their fight
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Battle for “Hearts and Minds” Keep the Vietcong from winning the support of South Vietnam’s rural population Some of the tactics Americans used to battle the Vietcong also harmed the rural population U.S. planes dropped napalm, a gasoline based bomb that set fire to the jungle Sprayed Agent Orange a leaf killing toxic chemical that devastated the landscape Search and destroy missions
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The early war at home In August of 1967 Johnson asked for a tax increased to help fund the war and to keep inflation in check Receiving a $6 billion reduction in funding for the Great Society programs
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Living Room War Footage of combat appeared nightly on the news in millions of homes Repeated television images of Americans in body bags A credibility gap
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