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The Vietnam Era: A Nation in Turmoil

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Title: The Vietnam Era: A Nation in Turmoil


1
The Vietnam Era A Nation in Turmoil
  • Vietnam represented a turning point in American
    politics, society and foreign policy.

2
I. The French Phase of the War
3
A. World War II
  • Japanese invasion of French Indo-China and its
    impact
  • French resistance to giving up Indochina
  • The Vietminh and their desire for independence
  • Ho Chi Minh

4
B. Post-War Fighting
  • French reassert their control of Indochina
  • Vietnam drifts into the Cold War
  • Inconclusive fighting
  • U.S. reaction
  • Ho Chi Minh Nationalist or Communist?
  • Containment leads U.S. to support French in
    Vietnam

5
C. Dien Bien Phu (1954)
  • The location and strategy of Dien Bien Phu
  • Problems with this strategy
  • Apparent French loss creates U.S. dilemma
  • Eisenhowers decision

6
D. The Geneva Conference (1954)
  • 18 nations attended this Conference
  • The Geneva Accords
  • --Temporary division along the 17th parallel
  • --nationwide free elections in 1956
  • No one signed the Accords

7
II. The Beginning of U.S. Involvement
8
A. The Eisenhower Years
  • Post-Geneva U.S. position
  • New leader in the South Ngo Dinh Diem
  • Diems mixed record
  • Diems refusal to participate in 1956 elections
  • Armed resistance against Diem grows in South
    Vietnam

9
A. Eisenhower Years (cont.)
  • Southern resistance fighters are known as the
    Viet Cong (VC)
  • VC use of selective terror
  • VC relatively independent of the North Vietnamese
    army
  • Increasing disorder and confusion in South Vietnam

10
B. The Kennedy Years
  • JFK increases the number of military advisors
  • Diem government became increasingly remote and
    corrupt
  • Vietnamese Buddhist priests protest Diems rule
  • U.S. sanctions assassination of Diem and a change
    in government

11
C. The Johnson Years
  • Johnsons background and political skills
  • -- The Johnson Treatment
  • Fluidity of Vietnam policy in the fall of 1963
  • Vietnam seen as a traditional containment problem

12
C. The Johnson Years (cont.)
  • LBJ keeps all of Kennedys advisors
  • LBJ meets with Henry Cabot Lodge 2 days after
    JFKs death
  • Keeping Vietnam quiet
  • By 1964, NVA troops are moving into South Vietnam

13
III. The 1964 Presidential Election
  • Republican party falls into the hands of the
    conservative right
  • Barry Goldwaters unique ability to frighten
    voters
  • Johnson appears moderate by comparison
  • North Vietnamese attack on the USS Maddox in
    August of 1964

14
III. The 1964 Election (cont.)
  • LBJ bombs torpedo boat bases
  • The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
  • LBJs landslide victory
  • New Liberal Democratic congressmen break the
    conservative stranglehold
  • Johnsons mandate for change

15
IV. The Great Society
  • Johnsons War on Poverty
  • Harringtons The Other America (1962)
  • Great Society programs
  • Medicare, Medicaid and Federal aid to education
  • New immigration laws
  • Problems with the Great Society legislation

16
V. The Commitment of U.S. Ground Forces to
Vietnam
  • The opportunity to get out of Vietnam in 1964
  • The Domino Theory in Southeast Asia
  • U.S. message that would be sent with ground
    troops
  • Rolling Thunder (winter of 1964-1965)
  • Inability to stop bombing

17
V. U.S. Ground Forces (cont.)
  • Need for air bases for bombing campaign
  • Need for marines to protect the air bases (March
    8, 1965)
  • Search and Destroy patrols
  • Escalation of the War on both sides

18
VI. An Overall Strategy in Vietnam?
  • William Westmoreland claims that U.S. has a
    strategy
  • No plans to invade and take over North Vietnam
  • Limited U.S. commitment from the beginning

19
VI. Overall Strategy? (cont.)
  • U.S. support for the war eroded faster than North
    Vietnamese will to fight
  • --Fulbright hearings (1966)
  • Military regrets over the conduct of the war
  • LBJs predicament
  • Vietnam as a limited war of body counts

20
VII. Increasing Costs of the Vietnam War
  • U.S. seen as an international bully
  • Less and less concern for South Vietnam
  • South Vietnamese economy was destroyed
  • War refugees and the unpopularity of the South
    Vietnamese government
  • U.S. military loses prestige
  • Presidential prestige was damaged
  • The Great Society reform was sidetracked

21
VIII. The Awful Realization 1968 Tet Offensive
  • American belief that we were winning the war
  • The Tet Offensive (January, 1968)
  • The consequences of the Tet offensive
  • The American press turns against the war effort
  • --The significance of Walter Cronkites comments

22
VIII. Tet Offensive (cont.)
  • Calls for more troops
  • Growing belief within the Johnson Administration
    that there is no hope for victory
  • Morale of U.S. troops plummets
  • -- fragging incidents
  • -- Increased drug use
  • --My Lai Massacre (1968)

23
IX. The 1968 Presidential Election
  • The Violence of 1968
  • Johnsons Decisions to stop bombing and not to
    run for president
  • A scramble for the Democratic nomination
  • Republicans nominated Richard Nixon
  • -- secret plan to end the Vietnam war

24
IX. 1968 Election (cont.)
  • The third-party candidacy of Governor George
    Wallace
  • -- Segregation now . . Segregation forever
  • The closeness of this election in the last few
    months
  • Final Result and its implications

25
X. Nixon and Vietnam
  • U.S. strategy to get out of Vietnam
  • Vietnamization
  • Bombing to create a bloody balance
  • Changes in the draft reduce public protests of
    the War

26
X. Nixon and Vietnam (cont.)
  • 1970 Invasion of Cambodia and subsequent protests
  • --Kent State
  • --Jackson State
  • Reaction against these anti-war protests
  • -- The Silent Majority
  • Kissingers negotiations with Le Duc Tho
    (1969-1972)

27
X. Nixon and Vietnam (cont.)
  • 1972 election and social divisions at home
    produced shift in U.S. position
  • -- Peace is at hand
  • Savage B-52 raids and mining of harbors make
    North Vietnamese more flexible
  • Truce signed on January 27, 1973

28
X. Nixon and Vietnam (cont.)
  • Post-truce warfare
  • Last Americans leave in 1975
  • Casualties and cost of the Vietnam War
  • Questioning of Containment Policy
  • Remembering the lessons of Vietnam
  • Vietnam War Memorial

29
XI. The Nixon Years at Home
  • Nixons inability to influence a Democratic
    Congress
  • Nixons opposition to Civil Rights laws
  • --The Bakke decision (1978)
  • Nixons appointments to the Supreme Court
  • Getting Tough on Crime and Environmental Issues

30
XI. The Nixon Years at Home (cont.)
  • Economic problems plagued the Nixon White House
  • -- Stagflation
  • Causes of these economic woes
  • The Nixon Recession
  • Wage and Price Controls (1971)

31
XII. The 1972 Presidential Election
  • Nixons election seems assured
  • Main threat seemed to be George Wallace
  • Democrats nominate anti-war candidate George
    McGovern
  • McGoverns campaign problems
  • Election Results
  • The dirty tricks of CREEP

32
XIII. The Watergate Scandal
  • Nixons preference for isolation
  • Nixons sensitivity to criticism
  • Nixons pattern of deceit
  • Agnew as point man and the enemies list
  • The Pentagon Papers

33
XIII. The Watergate Scandal (cont.)
  • Creation of the Plumbers Unit led by G. Gordon
    Liddy and H. Howard Hunt
  • The Ellsberg break-in
  • Plumbers caught breaking into Democratic
    headquarters at the Watergate hotel on June 17,
    1972

34
XIII. The Watergate Scandal (cont.)
  • Nixon had no knowledge of the break-in, but he
    was part of the cover-up from the beginning
  • The cover-up begins to unravel
  • Senate Watergate committee is formed to
    investigate

35
XIII. The Watergate Scandal (cont.)
  • John Deans testimony and the existence of the
    Oval Office tapes
  • Year-long battle for the Nixon tapes
  • -- Saturday Night Massacre
  • Supreme Court rules that Nixon must hand over the
    tapes (July, 1974)

36
XIII. The Watergate Scandal (cont.)
  • Gaps in the tapes are discovered
  • House Judiciary Committee recommends three
    articles of impeachment
  • Nixon resigns on August 9, 1974

37
XIII. The Watergate Scandal (cont.)
  • Agnews resignation in October of 1973
  • Gerald Ford appointed by Nixon to replace Agnew
  • Ford succeeds Nixon as president
  • Controversy over the Nixon pardon

38
XIV. Lessons of Watergate
  • First resignation of a U.S. president
  • Most serious constitutional crisis since 1867
  • Whole episode disclosed the strengths and
    weaknesses of the American political system
  • Changing nature of presidential scandal

39
XIV. Lessons of Watergate (cont.)
  • Presidential prestige was significantly tarnished
  • The good and the bad aspects of investigative
    journalism were displayed
  • --Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein
  • -- All the Presidents Men

40
XIV. Lessons of Watergate (cont.)
  • Crisis displayed the importance of an independent
    federal judiciary
  • Congressional power is rejuvenated
  • -- War Powers Act (1973)
  • --Campaign Finance Reform (1974)
  • Public faith in politicians drops dramatically
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