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Where is Vietnam

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'No event in American history is more misunderstood than the ... booby traps. ambush. How did Vietnamese feel about French rule? Emperor Bao Dai reinstated ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Where is Vietnam


1
Where is Vietnam?
?Starter activity
2
? starter activity
This photograph taken during the height of the
Vietnam War shows a ten-year-old girl who has
torn off her burning clothes following a US
napalm attack on her village. This became one of
the most enduring images of the war. Why?
3
? Your task
  • No event in American history is more
    misunderstood than the Vietnam War.It was
    misreported then, and it is misremembered now.
  • Richard M. Nixon, 1985
  • Why do you Vietnam is misreported and
    misremembered?

4
What were the origins of conflict in Vietnam?
5
? Your task
  • Read p.4-5 in Vietnam by Philip Sauvain
    p.71-2 in Modern World History and try to find
    out the following
  • What is the connection between France and Vietnam
    (Indo-China)?
  • Who were the Vietminh?
  • Who was Ho Chi Minh?
  • Why did America support French rule?

6
What is the connection between France and Vietnam
(Indo-China)?
  • 1870s 1880s, French conquer Indo-China
  • Divided into 3 territories Tongking, Cochin
    China Annam
  • Puppet Emperor, Bao Dai
  • July 1941, French submitted to Japan

What problems do you think the French had in
governing Indo-China?
7
Who were the Vietminh?
  • 1941, Ho Chi Minh founded League for the
    Independence of Vietnam aka Vietminh
  • Broad political membership (men women)
  • Used guerrilla tactics to ambush enemy
  • Led by General Vo Nguyen Giap (former history
    teacher)

Female guerrilla fighters for Vietminh. Why were
they so effective?
8
Who was Ho Chi Minh?
  • Name means, Ho the Enlightener
  • Chef in London, political activist in France US
  • Trained at Stalin School for the Toilers of the
    East
  • Lead independence movement against French
    Japanese

Ho Chi Minh, 1890-1969. Why was he so widely
admired, even in the West?
9
Why did America support French rule?
  • 2 September 1942, Ho Chi Minh announced victory
    over Japan French foundation of Democratic
    Republic of Vietnam
  • domino theory led US to support French
    colonialism

Do you think there was a greater threat from
Communism in Asia compared with Eastern Europe?
10
Why did the French fight the Vietminh between
1946 and 1954?
11
? Your task
  • Read Sauvain, p.6-7 and find out the following
  • What was the Haiphong incident?
  • What sorts of tactics did Giap use against the
    French?
  • How did Vietnamese feel about French rule?
  • How did US involvement increase?

12
What was the Haiphong incident?
  • 29 November 1946, Vietminh attack French troops
    in Haiphong Harbour causing 29 deaths
  • French warship Suffren shelled Haiphong killing
    6,000 Vietnamese
  • Retaliation by Vietminh on colonialists 3 weeks
    later

Haiphong, after
Haiphong, before
13
What sorts of tactics did Giap use against the
French?
  • Guerilla tactics ambush, attacks on isolated
    French outposts
  • Avoided face to face combat
  • Vietminh controlled jungles, French controlled
    cities
  • Giap could use manual labour to move guns and
    ammunitions
  • 1949, Mao Zedong supplied Vietminh with modern
    weapons

ambush
mines., booby traps
14
How did Vietnamese feel about French rule?
  • Emperor Bao Dai reinstated
  • Many Vietnamese preferred French rule (esp.
    Catholics)
  • General De Lattre inflicted series of damaging
    defeats on Vietminh

Emperor Bao Dai
General De Lattre
15
How did US involvement increase?
  • US detested imperialism, but viewed conflict in
    context of domino theory of Cold War politics
  • John Foster Dulles, US Sec. of State, If you
    dont quit, we wont quit
  • Eisenhower refused French request for US aircraft
    servicemen

John Foster Dulles
Eisenhower
16
What happened at Dien Bien Phu (1954)?
17
? Your task
  • Read Sauvain, p.8-9, and answer the following
    questions
  • What was the battle plan?
  • Why were the Vietminh successful in defeating the
    French?
  • What was the impact of Frances defeat?

18
What was the battle plan?
  • 1954, General Navarre wanted to tempt Vietminh
    out of hiding into open combat
  • Dien Bien Phu controlled key routes between
    Vietnam , Cambodia Laos

19
Why were the Vietminh successful in defeating the
French?
  • Vietminh used peasant army to manoeuvre artillery
    into hills
  • Vietminh infantry overran French defences on
    plateau below

20
What was the impact of Frances defeat?
  • Ended French plans to hold onto Indo-China
  • Agreed to Vietminh demands (Geneva Agreement,
    1954)
  • Navarre blamed US for lack of military support
  • US minister for Far East affairs predicted
    increased US involvement

21
How significant were the terms of the Geneva
Agreement (1954)?
22
? Your task
  • Use Sauvain p10-11to research the following
    areas
  • What were the terms?
  • How did the US react?
  • What were the effects?

23
What were the terms?
  • Independence to Laos, Cambodia Vietnam
  • Vietnam temporarily split along 17th parallel,
    with demilitarized zone
  • Armistice
  • Democratic elections

24
How did the US react?
  • US very critical of French
  • French PM, Pierre Mendes-France, described as a
    peace-at-any-price-man by US
  • US South Vietnamese (French supporters during
    conflict against Vietminh) refused to sign, but
    agreed to support armistice elections

Do you think the French really had an alternative?
25
What were the effects of the Geneva Agreement?
  • North Vietnam controlled by Ho Chi Minh
    Vietminh
  • South Vietnam controlled by Bao Dai (President),
    Ngo Dinh Diem (PM)
  • 1957, Ngo Dinh Diem became President of
    S.Vietnam, but refused elections since N. Vietnam
    would not hold them

26
Containing the spread of Communism
  • How and why did the US become involved in
    Vietnam, 1954-64

27
  • Read p. 12 15 and take notes on the following
    areas
  • US attitudes to Communism
  • Who was Ngo Dinh Diem and why were his methods of
    governing so unpopular?
  • How did US increase its support in this period?
  • What was the Domino theory?
  • Who were the Vietcong?

28
US attitudes to Communism
  • Communist witchhunts (Senator McCarthy)
  • 30,000 US troops killed in Korea in fight against
    Communism (parallels with Vietnam)
  • SEATO (South-East Asia Treaty Organisation)
    pledged to protect SE Asian countries against
    spread of Communism

SEATO leaders in Philippines, 1966
29
Ngo Dinh Diem
  • Ousted Emperor Bao Dai appointed himself
    Presdient
  • Refused to hold elections
  • Crushed suspected Communists mercilessly
  • Appointed relatives to positions of power
  • Limited rights of Buddhists

Ngo Dinh Diem, President of Republic of South
Vietnam
30
Ngo Dinh Diem
  • Failure of strategic hamlets programme
  • Policies favouring Roman Catholics rather than
    Buddhists
  • 1963, Diem his brother assassinated by ARVN

Ngo Dinh Diem
Buddhist monk in flames in protest at Diems
oppressive policies towards religion
31
US support
  • Nov. 1954, Eisenhower sent 17 officers to Saigon
    (capital of S.Vietnam) to train ARVN (Army of
    Republic of Saigon)
  • By Jan. 1961, 685
  • By 1963, 16,000 advisers

ARVN troops
32
Domino theory
  • Theory that when one country turns Communist its
    neighbours follow suit
  • US feared Thailand Malaya risked turning
    Communist
  • 1949, Chinese Revolution had NOT caused
    neighbouring countries to turn Communist
    immediately

33
Vietcong
  • Communists in south forned Vietcong
  • By 1961, 20,000 soldiers
  • By 1964, 100,000
  • ARVN unable to provide adequate security for S.
    Vietnam

Member of National Front for the Liberation of
South Vietnam, NLF, aka Vietcong (Vietnamese
Communists)
34
How did the war escalate between 1964-67?
  • Gulf of Tonkin incident

USS Maddox
35
  • Read p.16-17 and answer the following questions
  • How did President Johnsons views on the war
    change?
  • Why was the attack on Pleiku significant?
  • What was Operation Rolling Thunder?
  • Who were the NVA?

36
President Johnson
  • Knew little about conflict (took over presidency
    after assassination of Kennedy, 1963)
  • Vietnam was the biggest damn mess I ever saw!
  • Aug. 1964, Gulf of Tonking resolution enable US
    to take all necessary measures to defend US
    interests in Vietnam

US President, Lyndon B. Johnson
37
Pleiku
Aftermath of the attack, Feb. 1965
  • Vietcong attack US airbase
  • 10 aircraft destroyed, 8 US advisers killed,
    100 casualties
  • US public opinion supported direct retaliation

38
Rolling thunder
  • Joint attack by US ARVN on key military
    industrial targets in North Vietnam
  • Hanoi Haiphong initially excluded for fear of
    aggravating USSR
  • 3,500 US marines sent to Danang (no longer
    described as advisers)

Phantom fighter, one of the types of strike
planes used by the US
39
NVA
  • Regular North Vietnam Army
  • Fought in larger units than Vietgong guerrillas
  • Less successful, suffered significant defeats at
    hands of US AVRN

NVA tank unit attacking US embassy in Saigon
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