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- Background
-
- Indochina is made up of Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam. It was colonized by the French in the
- late 1800's and given up in 1939. Japan tookover FranceÆs loss after that. After JapanÆs
- defeat in 1945, VietnamÆs patriot and communist, Ho Chi Minh and his Viet Minh declared
- Vietnam independent. After that, France came to claim their loss. The US supported France
- fearing the "Domino Theory" would take affect after in 1949 China fell to communism. In
- 1950, the US sent troops to South Korea to prevent the dominos from falling. The
- Vietnamese took fort Dien Bien Phoo in May of 1954, so then the French finally pulled out.
- That set up 2 nations North Vietnam and South Vietnam split at the 17th parallel.
-
- Ho Chi Minh was in the North and was a Communist
- Ngo Dinh Diem was in South and disliked communism.
-
- He argued that if there was an election to choose a leader of 1 unified nation, that Ho
- would not permit fair elections.
- Viet Cong Rebellion
- In 1956, Diem closed all elections, and appointed local officials. That gave him less of
- support. Also he didnÆt win the support of the peasants, that was a major mistake... in
- the south Vietminh members who were located in South Vietnam formed their own communist
- party. Diem called them the Viet Cong meaning Vietnamese Communists. North Vietnam
- supported the rebellion in the early parts. In 1959 the Vietminh set up a supply route to
- South Vietnam through Laos and Cambodia. They were then named the Ho Chi Minh trail. Also
- in 1959, the first American advisors were killed during a battle. By 1960 the Vietcong had
- about 10,000 troops and were threatening to overthrow Diem. Then the US sent
- 15,100(WorldBook) more US advisors in from 1961 - 1963. The BuddhistÆs also had a hard time
- with Diem, they felt he did not give enough religious freedom. The Buddhists also held the
- better part of VietnamÆs population. On June 21, 1963, an old Buddhist Monk Quang Duc lit
- himself on fire as a form of protest. Diem who was a Roman Catholic and his brother,
- performed massive arrests on Buddhists and raided Buddhist temples. Kennedy urged Diem to
- improve relationships with Diem, but he didnÆt take his offering. Then a group of generals
- who were against Diem formed. On Nov. 1, 1963, the generals overthrew Diem and his
- brother, and Diem and Nhu were murdered. Kennedy was not for that to happen. After that,
- South VietnamÆs governments kept changing, and then in 1964 The Vietcong controlled 3/4 of
- South Vietnam. In 1964, 2 American destroyers sitting in the Gulf of Tonkin were blown up,
- the boats were The Maddox and C. Turner Joy. The attacks were never proven, and probably
- will never be proven either. By that time, Kennedy was assassinated and Johnson took power,
- and he sent in troops and had congress pass a bill to let him to fight back if he was first
- attacked. By August 7, 1964 Congress had passed the bill and the Gulf of Tonkin
- resolution, the US did not declare war, but sent troops over. In 1965 the first US ground
- troops were sent to Vietnam. By 1969 the Americans had 543,000 men in, 800,000 south
- Vietnamese and 69,000 from other countries. The Vietcong had around 300,000, but in their
- techniques of Guerrilla warfare and just hit and run, that number was sufficient.
-
- 1965-1967
- During this time, there was a very heavily fought war going on. The US bombed out Vietnam,
- but still didnÆt decrease the enemyÆs will to fight. Also, the USSR and Red China aided
- them. Whenever a ground encountement came up, the US usually won, but still didnÆt change
- the willingness to fight. They would put in a new round of troops to pay for their loss,
- usually to prevent loss, the enemy would flee to Cambodia or Laos. At home the country was
- split into two sections The Hawks & The Doves. The Hawks were the people who supported the
- War, and the Doves who disliked the war. The Hawks though disliked LBJÆs of the slowly
- sending in the troops. When LBJ ran higher taxes to support the war, his public support
- sharply fell.
-
- Tet offensive
- In late January(January 30, the Vietnamese new year, Tet) the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese
- came up with the "Tet offensive" this plan was to bomb out the major south Vietnamese
- cities. The plan did not work too well. The US and South Vietnam recovered quickly. But
- as the mortality that was caused and the US citizens were watching on TV, it caused great
- opposition on the war. The US started to think whether it was worth it or not. In May of
- 1968, LBJ stopped his proposed 207,000 more troops to come in, se up new policies, set up
- peace negotiations, and announced he would not run for presidency the next term. Peace
- talks began in Paris in May.
- Nixon couldnÆt organize any peace treaties, and he called for a new policy of
- Vietnamization, this caused for a greater deal of training troops in South Vietnam. This
- allowed for a greater withdrawal of troops that began in July of 1969. After the US pulled
- out of the war, the invasion of Cambodia took place. This is where the US had to go and
- capture large stores of arms that were in military storage for North Vietnam. The US
- thought that this would only widen the war. Then major protests came about. A famous one
- was the one in Kent state, where a group of Ohio students were "shot over" by soldiers, but
- they ended up killing students on the other side of the campus. They killed 4 students and
- wounded 9 others. This called for the dissolving of the Gulf of Tonkin resolution. The US
- troops in Cambodia were to be pulled out by June 30,1970.
- War Crimes
- In March of 1979, Lieutenant William Calley Jr. was convicted of War Crimes. His unit were
- charged of slaughtering 100 - 200 civilians in a small town of My Lai in South Vietnam.
- Calley was sentenced to 10 years. Also pointed out was the USÆ bombing of innocent
- civilians and using pesticides to reveal communist hideouts and destroy the food crops.
- Also the publishing of the Pentagon Papers, which were actions taken in Vietnam secretly by
- the government, caused the US population to distrust the government. In 1972 another
- invasion of the south occurred, North Vietnam began to organize a major invasion of South
- Vietnam. Nixon then responded with renewing the bombing. He also made a very strategic
- move that prevented another major invasion. He set explosives in the harbor of Haiphong.
- That destroyed a critical port for supplies. That helped stop the invasion. That again
- lead to more peace negotiations Henry Kissinger, one of NixonÆs major foreign advisors and
- Le Duc Though of North Vietnam. A cease fire agreement was signed on January 27,1963. It
- was signed by the US, South Vietnam, North Vietnam, and the Viet Cong. It set up that the
- US would pull it out, and North Vietnam could leave 150,000 of their troops in South
- Vietnam. Also supervised elections were set up in South Vietnam. March 23, 1973, was the
- day that the last US ground troops left Vietnam. But another war broke out. The US did
- not involve themselves again. North Vietnam and the Viet Cong invaded South Vietnam. They
- easily took Phouc Long a city north east of Saigon, and they forced the South Vietnamese
- troops back to a region named the Central Highlands around 200 miles away. Thousands of
- people fled and died in the attacking or from starvation. They called the retreat Convoy
- of Tears. Gerald Ford then went to congress and asked for $722 million for support to
- South Vietnam. Congress only supplied $300 million. Then on April 30,1975 the South
- Vietnamese surrendered at Saigon, and renamed it to Ho Chi Minh City.
- Casualties
- About 58,000 American men and women died in the war and about 365,000 were wounded. South
- Vietnamese had topped off 1,000,000 deaths. The civilians in both the north and south were
- countless. In the was the US spent over $150 billion. The bombing was the most in any
- war. Most of North VietnamÆs industry and transportation system was destroyed in the war.
- The south suffered the most, because that is where the fighting basically took place. The
- amount of war refugees amounted to half of the population, 10 million. Because of the
- pesticides, the southÆs cropland was destroyed permanently. Effects in Southeast Asia The
- communistic half of Vietnam helped to set up LaosÆ and CambodiaÆs communistic governments.
- In 1976 it was officially reunited into one nation. The Northern half imprisoned about one
- million of the South Vietnamese due to not following cultural and social rules that were
- set up by the north. Around one million Vietnamese have fled since the end of the war. Up
- until the breakup of the USSR Vietnam relied on Russia for aid. Nowadays they rely on
- foreign investment and are liberalizing .
- Effects on the United States
- The effects on the United States are of a broad range. For the most part, the Vietnam War
- was the first war where the US did not achieve on what they had set up for. That had many
- AmericanÆs loosing pride on the United States. It also left painful memories on the
- 2,700,000 people who served in the war from America. Some American veterans, when they
- came back suffered major psychological problems. Others suffered from drug abuse, divorce
- and other problems. In contrast to World Wars 1 and 2 the soldiers who came back were
- basically ignored. Today this war set up the fact that congress will now challenge the
- president on foreign moves. The war also set up comparisons on wars for the future. Today,
- it is argued that we shouldnÆt have jumped into the war. They feel that it was a war that
- would not have affected the USÆ security or vital interests in any way. But others felt it
- did help in the stopping the spread of communism in South East Asia.
-