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- Vietnam: Understanding the War
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- Outline
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- I. Introduction
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- II. Common questions asked regarding the Vietnam War.
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- III. Answers to Questions.
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- IV. Additives and Information regarding the War.
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- V. Elaborations by politicians and journalists regarding the War.
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- VI. Conclusion
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- Imagine this, a young boy about 10 years old comes home from school and asks,"Daddy, what
- was the Vietnam War?" The father is at a loss of words to explain to his son the basics of
- the Vietnam War. Not because of his lack of knowledge about the War itself, but moreover
- because of his inability to express his thoughts into words. What should he do? Should he
- take the time and attempt to give his son a rhetorical answer that both evades the question
- while at the same time satisfies his query? Or, should he just take a trip down to the
- nearest Blockbuster Video and rent a movie such as Platoon, or Full Metal Jacket. Well,
- what do parents and teachers in general tell the young people of our society about Vietnam,
- the ones who weren't born until after the U.S. withdrawal? Yes, this is a tricky question
- that must be handled with ca Well, what are some of the questions that the young people
- want to know? Some of these Questions include: What was the cause? When was the war?
- How many Americans were killed? What countries fought in the war? and, Who won?1 These
- questions express a simple, straightforward interest into the basic make-up of the War. It
- may also be surprising that this strain of questions may be answered very effectively by a
- small spectrum of facts regarding the Vietnam War by well-informed people who took part
- i The first thing that young people of the present generation should know is that the
- United States never fielded better armies than those that participated in Vietnam.2 The
- trouble was political in a sense and in another sense came from the upsurge of radicalism
- that swept the country and caused a lot of people to try to disrupt the war effort.3 We
- were in Vietnam for the same reason we had been in Korea: to stop the spread of Communism,
- particularly in areas of vital interest to the United States. Thel use of the area in case
- of a widespread international confrontation.5 Secondly, what about the role of the news
- media in the War? What about it? For example, people often remark that television
- affected the outcome of the War by making the home audience so conscious of the horrors of
- war that large segments of the population marched in the streets to protest it. It's true
- that many people protested the war on the home front, for many diverse reasons, some based
- on a concern for war or for Vietnam, others for more personal or self-serving reasons.6
- But, television almosthowed us war (though not its horrors) and turned the audience against
- it. To some extent, in the safe banality of its coverage (especially in the early years),
- television banalized war and made it seem okay, manageable, winnable." What was a downfall
- of the U.S. cause? Well, first the U.S. government was unwilling or unable to articulate
- effectively goals and objectives for our involvement in Vietnam, thus failing to mobilize
- public support for this sacrifice. Second, the government failed to realize that Dau
- Tranh8 had both military and political applications and that the Vietnamese Communists gave
- equal weight to both sides of this situation. Third, once committed to sacrifice, we did
- not fight to win because of political conschina conflict is that the nations that won the
- war have lost the peace.10 Geography was a decisive factor in the War. Geography and
- political constraints made an allied victory impossible under the ground rules that were in
- effect between 1965 and 1973. Hanoi was able to use Laos and Cambodia freely to reinforce
- the southern battlefield, always protected by U.S. self-constraints. It was in actuality
- an Indochina war, as seen from Hanoi, if not seen from Washington. United States forces
- were not allowed to block the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos and Cambodia. Consequently, as
- l Why did the U.S. get involved in the war? Well, our original motives were good: to help
- the South Vietnamese preserve their independence and freedom from Communist aggression.
- But our strategy was flawed, our Saigon ally corrupt and incompetent.12 "America's motives
- in Vietnam were entirely honorable: to help defend a society under attack. We were not
- there as imperialists or colonialists. We simply wanted to prevent an admittedly imperfect
- system and society from being changed by force into a tota So, What lessons were learned
- from the Vietnam experience? The United States learned in Vietnam that there are limits to
- its power and that to exceed those limits invites tragic consequences. Another principal
- lesson of the Vietnam War is that the United States should not intervene in other countries
- with military forces unless that country is a serious threat to our own security. We
- should not use military force to dictate the political system of another country-especially
- small countries that wish to In Conclusion, what have we now to tell the young people of
- the country when they ask these hard-to-answer questions about the War that has longed to
- be forgotten by the American people? We have these answers to give them; answers that are
- neither out- of-the-blue statements to stop the person from asking, nor are they concocted
- from a Vietnam War movie. They are real facts, straight from the mouth of the
- most-involved persons from that era. However, are we, the elders and the parents, just the
- hypothe 1Bill McCloud, "What Should We Tell Our Children About Vietnam?" American
- Heritage, IXL (May/June, 1988),56.
- 2Ibid.,p.57
- 3John Franks, Vietnam: Causes and Resolutions (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University,
- 1975), 3. 4John Kaplan and Jon R. Waltz, The Reason: A View On the Vietnam War (New
- York: Macmillan, 1983), p.27. 5McCloud, p.57. 6Ibid. 7Ibid., p.58. 8Vietnamese for
- "struggle" 9Kaplan and Waltz, p.33. 10McCloud, p.58. 11Martin Deutsh, A Small Geographic
- Explanation of the Vietnam War (New York: H.W. Wilson, 1976), p.4. 12Kaplan and Waltz,
- p.29 13McCloud, p.68. Quote by Peter R. Kann, Reporter for The Wall Street Journal in
- Vietnam, 1967-68. 14McCloud, p.64.
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