Title: The Vietnam War
1Chapter 23
2Section 1
3Vietnam Declares Its Independence
- September 2, 1945
- Ho Chi Minh
- Leader of Vietminh (Vietnamese nationalist
forces)
- Independence from French colonial rule
- U.S. Army officers celebrate with Vietnamese
leaders
4The French War in Indochina
- Indochina (Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam)
- Rice, rubber, tin
- French were unwilling to give independence
- Vietminh
- Communists
- Land reform and independent unified Vietnam
- Support in North Vietnam
5(No Transcript)
6The French War in Indochina (cont.)
- National liberationfreeing a nation from control
by another nation
- November 1946
- War between French in south and Vietminh in the
north
- French gained control of major cities and towns
- Vietminh retreated into the country side
- Gained support of the peasants
7United States Support for the French
- 1950
- Truman did not want to lose an ally (France)
- Wanted to contain communism
- 1950-1954U.S. gave 2.6 billion to France to
save Vietnam from communism
- Containmentthe U.S. policy of securing the peace
by trying to contain communism, or keep it from
expanding beyond its current borders
8The End of French Rule
- May 1954
- Vietminh overthrew French
- Vietnam would temporarily be divided at the 17th
parallel
- Vietminh in north
- French in south
- 1956 national elections to reunify and select a
government
- U.S. refused to sign peace agreement
9(No Transcript)
10The United States Enters the War
- Domino theoryif one country fell to communism,
other countries would also fall
11The Diem Regime
- South Vietnam was in disarray
- Ngo Dinh Diem
- Nationalist and anti-Communist
- Ran South Vietnam as an empire
- Rejected any reforms that weakened the ruling
class
- 1954-1961U.S. gave Diem 1 billion (4 out of
every 5 went to the military)
12Civil War
- 1957
- Diem cancelled national elections
- Diem held a referendum to show he had support
of South Vietnamese
- 98 support
- Brutal policies
- Many Vietnamese were upset with Diem
13Civil War (cont.)
- National Liberation Front
- NLF
- AkaVietcong
- Communist leaders
- Opposed Diem
- Economic reform, reunification, independence
- Campaign of terror
- 1960assassinated 2,000 govt. officials
- Close ties with Ho Chi Minh
14The Kennedy Years
- U.S. had a decision to makeabandon Diem or get
more involved in Vietnam
- JFK greatly expanded the U.S.s role in Vietnam
- 1.) strengthen South Vietnam military
- 2.) force Diem to make political and economic
reforms to end communism
- Diem refused and South Vietnam govt. officials
stole U.S.
15The Overthrow of Diem
- May 8, 1963
- South Vietnamese troops fired upon Buddhists
protesting Diem
- World opinion turned against Diem
- Nov. 1, 1963
- South Vietnamese army officers seized control of
the govt.
- Diem was killed
16Lyndon Johnsons War
- Wanted a non-Communist govt. in South Vietnam
- Anti-Communist stand
- Diems successors were unsuccessful and
unpopular
- Received massive economic aid
17The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
- August 1964
- LBJ said North Vietnamese boats attacked 2 U.S.
destroyers in the Gulf of Tonkin
- Not a declaration of war but it allowed LBJ to
increase U.S. involvement in the war
- http//www.hbci.com/tgort/tonkin.htm
18Operation Rolling Thunder
- Feb. 1965
- Vietcong attacked a U.S. military base in South
Vietnam and killed 8 Americans
- 1st American bombing in North Vietnam
- Attacks on bases, roads, railways, and Ho Chi
Minh Trail
- Raids failed to stop North Vietnamese aid to the
NLF
19Operation Rolling Thunder (cont.)
- 1967
- General Nguyen Van Thieu took over power in South
Vietnam
- Lacked popular support
- NLF continued to grow
20United States Troops in Vietnam
- By end of 1917
- 500,000 U.S soldiers sent to Vietnam
21Fighting the War
- U.S. soldiers were frustrated
- Success of enemy killed
- American officials underestimated the Vietcong
22The Air War
- U.S. relied on air power
- By 1967108,000 bombing raids
- At first limited to military targets and supply
routes in North Vietnam
- Later onbombed roads, railways, factories, homes
in South Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia
23The Air War (cont.)
- Destroyed dozens of cities, killed thousands of
civilians, and destroyed rice fields
- Vietcong was not destroyed
- Used underground tunnels (30,000)
- http//www.diggerhistory.info/pages-conflicts-peri
ods/vietnam/tunnels.htm
24(No Transcript)
25The Ground War
- search-and-destroy missions (U.S. forces)
- Problems
- Heat, mosquitoes, leeches, knee-deep muddy
trials, razor-sharp jungle grasses, flooded rice
fields, hidden mines, not being able to identify
the enemy - All of South Vietnam became a war zone
26Guerrilla Tactics
- Vietcong used guerrilla warfare
- Avoid open battles
- Hit-and-run raids
- Guerrilla warfarefighting by small, independent
bands, using tactics such as sabotage and sudden
ambushes
27Guerrilla Tactics (cont.)
- Advantages of Vietcong guerrilla
- 1.) knew terrain
- 2.) support of many peasants
- Supplied food and shelter
- Gave guerrillas knowledge of U.S. troop movement
28Guerrilla Tactics (cont.)
- Pacification programa policy in which entire
villages are uprooted and the people forced to
move to cities or refugee camps
- U.S. used program to stop peasant support of the
Vietcong
- failed
29The Endless War
- Average soldier was 19 years old
- Some turned to drugs, other snapped, etc.
- 196714,000 soldiers had been killed
- No end in the near future
30Section 2
31Tet Offensive A Turning Point
- Jan. 30, 1968 through Feb. 1968
- Communist forces attacked civilian and military
targets in South Vietnam
- Attacked 100 cities/towns 12 U.S. military
bases and U.S. embassy in Saigon
- 1,100 Americans soldiers killed
- 2,300 South Vietnamese troops
- 12,500 Vietnamese civilians
- 33,000 Vietcong troops
- 1 million Vietnamese became refugees
32Tet Offensive A Turning Point (cont.)
- U.S. defeated Vietcong
- No place in South Vietnam was safe
- Shattered American confidence
- People began to doubt Johnsons Vietnam policies
33(No Transcript)
34Critics of United States Policy
- Many wanted a negotiated settlement and a prompt
withdrawal of American troops
- TV showed brutality and hopelessness of the war
- Was the U.S. really defending democracy in
Vietnam? If so, at what cost?
- Polls showed U.S. public disagreed with LBJ
35Democratic Challengers
- Eugene McCarthy
- MN Senator
- Anti-war platform
- Robert Kennedy
- Antiwar
- Support from minorities, poor, working class, and
wealthy Democrats
36Johnsons Decision
- General Westmoreland requested more troops
- Secretary of Defense Clifford said The military
course we were pursuing was not only endless but
hopeless.
- LBJ rejected Westmorelands request
- Encouraged South Vietnamese to do more of the
fighting
37Johnsons Decision (cont.)
- March 31, 1968
- LBJ said U.S would limit the bombing of North
Vietnam
- Asked Ho Chi Minh for a negotiated war
settlement
- Said he would not run for another term as
president
38Tragedy and Turmoil
- The Democratic Primaries
- Eugene McCarthy, Robert Kennedy, and Hubert
Humphrey
- Kennedy became the front-runner
392 Assassination
- Kings Assassination
- April 1968
- Many African Americans were upset
- Anger and frustration
- Led to rioting, looting, and destruction
- Kennedys Assassination
- June 4, 1968
- Los Angeles
- Death of King and Kennedy shattered the hopes of
antiwar and civil rights activists
40The Election of 1968
- Conservative eraa period in presidential
politics in which the role of government is
limited and individuals depend less on the
government for assistance
41The Democratic Convention
- Turmoil and protest
- Some demonstrators wanted Democrats to adopt an
antiwar platform others wanted to cause violence
- Hubert Humphrey nominated
- Image of Democratic disorder
- Helmeted police clubbed demonstrators and
bystanders
42Nixon and the Republicans
- Republicans were party of stability
- Nixon wanted to bring a kind of Eisenhower calm,
after the pains and shocks, and tragedies of the
Democratic years.
- Protect every American to be free from domestic
violence
- Promised peace with honor
43The Wallace Campaign
- George Wallace
- Governor of AL
- American Independent Party
- Conservative
- Called for victory in Vietnam and he denounced
antiwar protesters
44The Election
- Nixon won about 43 of popular vote
- Humphrey won about 42
- Wallace 14
- 56 supported conservative candidate
- Democrats lost because their social reforms (push
for civil rights) had gone too far and they
failed in Vietnam
45The Election (cont.)
- Coalitiona temporary alliance formed for a
specific action or purpose
- Liberal eraa period when government promoted
social progress
- End of the Liberal Era with Nixons election
46Section 3
47The Student Movement
- 1960s
- College students became outspoken critics of
American society
- Students rights
- Vietnam War
- 8 million college students by 1969
- Peace Corps, VISTA, civil rights movement
- Only a minority of college students joined
protest movements (less than 12)
- Very vocal though
48Students for a Democratic Society
- Earliest radical student group
- 1960
- U of M
- Core of the New Left
- Rebirth of radical American politics
- Racism and war could only be solved through
sweeping changes in American society
- http//www.studentsforademocraticsociety.org/
49Students for a Democratic Society (cont.)
- Port Huron statement
- participatory democracy
- Political awakening
- Beginning of an era of student activism
- Domestic causes, jobs, housing, schools, etc.
50Protesting the War
- 1964
- Planned a march on Washington for April 1965
(20,000 protestors)
- By end of 1965SDS had 150 chapters and 10,000
members
- Spring of 1965
- Teach-ins
- Debated Vietnam War
- Analyzed U.S. foreign policy
51(No Transcript)
52Resisting the Draft
- Drafta system of selecting persons to serve in
the military
- Defermentthe postponement of a persons
induction into military service for reasons such
as health or occupation
- Conscientious objectorsa person who refuses
military service because of moral or religious
principles
53Resisting the Draft (cont.)
- College students received deferments
- Soldiers were often poor, working class, and
minorities
- Many defiant young men challenged the idea that
citizens have a military obligation to their
country
54Resisting the Draft (cont.)
- Forms of resisting
- 1.) conscientious objectors
- 2.) refused to register for the draft
- 3.) burned draft cards
- 4.) went to jail
- 5.) fled the country
55Opposition to the War
- Religious groups, peace groups, antinuclear
groups, civil rights groups, womens groups
- Huge antiwar rallies and protests
- SDS changed from Protest to Resistance
- Martin Luther King, Jr., senators, etc.
- 19662 billion a month into the War
56War Divides the Nation
- Hawksa person who supports the war effort
- Dovea person who supports the withdrawal of U.S.
troops form war and favors a negotiated end to
war
57War Divides the Nation (cont.)
- Most Americans were disturbed by both the War and
the protests
- 70 believed the protests were acts of
disloyalty to the soldiers
- Many were convinced that the U.S.A. was
hopelessly bogged down in an unwinnable war
58Bringing the War Home
- After Tet Offensive, 41 hawks and 42 doves
- Jan. to June 1968college protests and 40,000
students
- Most were peaceful
- Columbia University
- Most violent uprising
- Linked civil rights and Vietnam War
- April 23,1968
- Protesters took over 5 University buildings
59The Media and the War
- Mass media was a powerfully ally for antiwar
protesters
- TV molded public opinion
- Nightly news showed brutal fighting, desperate
refugees, and dying U.S. soldiers
- The military did not censor the press
- 800 reporters covered the Vietnam War
60- Early Reporting on the War
- Fighting to contain communism
- South Vietnam deserved and needed American support
- A More Critical Press
- After Tet Offensive, reporters raised more
????????
- Should the U.S. be in Vietnam?
- Was Vietnam worth the cost?
- Began to show the cost of human life
61The My Lai Massacre
- March 1968
- U.S. massacred nearly 350 Vietnamese civilians
- Reported in press in Nov. 1969
- Actions shocked American
62Nixon and the Antiwar Movement
- June 1969, President Nixon announced he would
start bringing U.S. troops home under his plan to
Vietnamize the War
- By end of 1969, doves outnumbered hawks 3 to 1
- Nixon reached out to the silent majority
- The minority threatened the nations security
- http//www.history.com/media.do?actionclipidspe
ech_207
63The War Comes Home
- April 30, 1970U.S. invaded Cambodia
- Led to massive protests
- Kent State
- May 3, 1970
- Students protested Cambodia invasion
- At first violent but were peaceful on May 4
- Police and National Guard marched towards student
protesters and used tear gas on students
- They fired into students
- 9 students wounded
- 4 killed
64Kent State (cont.)
- National Guard was found to use unwarranted and
inexcusable actions
- Some blamed the students and others blamed the
govt.,
- http//www.history.com/media.do?actionclipidtdi
h_may04_broadband
65(No Transcript)
66Jackson State
- May 14, 1970
- 12 students wounded
- 2 killed
67The End of a Decade
- Massive demonstrations failed to end the Vietnam
War which frustrated many students
- CIA and FBI investigated the New Left
- New Left fell apart as Vietnam War wound down
- The antiwar protests helped to force a shift in
U.S. policy
- Radicalism of 1960s would led to conservatism of
1970s and 1980s
68Section 4
69Working Toward Peace
- Vietnamization
- Public pressureAmerican troops home now
- Nixon wanted to keep an independent pro-U.S.A.
govt. in South Vietnam
- May 1969
- South Vietnamese soldiers would be trained and
equipped to take the place of American troops
70Working Toward Peace (cont.)
- Nixon Doctrine
- U.S.A. would no longer step in militarily to
protect its Asian allies from Communist threats
- U.S. would continue to provide weapons and
financial aid
- Vietnamization
71The Paris Peace Talks
- 1968 began
- Neither Communists nor anti-Communists were
willing to compromise
- Henry Kissinger
- National security adviser
- Nixon used Kissinger to negotiate
- Eventually Secretary of State
72The Secret War
- 1969
- Secret U.S. bombing of enemy supply routes and
bases
- Cambodia, Laos, North Vietnam
- Attacks failed to cut supply lines
- It spread the war into Cambodia and Laos
- 3,600 secret bombing missions and 110,000 tons of
bombs
73A Bigger Stick
- April 30, 1970
- U.S. troops into Cambodia to attack North
Vietnamese bases
74The Home Front
- Widespread protests for Cambodia invasion
- Pentagon Papers
- Defense Department
- Secret study of U.S. involvement in Vietnam
- Johnson administration
- Offered evidence that in the past the govt. lied
to the public about the War
- The real reason for sending troops into Vietnam
was to avoid a humiliating defeat
75The Final Years of War
- South Vietnamese troops could not defeat
Communist forces which would continue the War
76Renewed Peace Talks
- October 1972
- Peace settlement fell apart
- Dec. 18, 1972
- Nixon ordered bombing of Hanoi and Haiphong in
North Vietnam
- Christmas Bombings
- Thousands of civilians killed
- diplomacy through terror
77Renewed Peace Talks (cont.)
- January 1973
- North Vietnamese troops remained in South
Vietnam
- President Thieu remained South Vietnams
President
- Vietcong would play role in the political
arrangement
- U.S. troops would leave Vietnam
78Renewed Peace Talks (cont.)
- Negotiateto reach an agreement
- Many Americans believed the peace agreement did
not achieve peace with honor
79The Fall of Saigon
- Peace agreement did not bring peace
- March 1973cease-fire collapsed
- April 1975Communist troops defeated South
Vietnam at capital city of Saigon
80The Cost of War
- 58,000 Americans dead
- 300,000 wounded
- 150 billion
- Social programs at home went under-funded
- U.S. lost a war for the 1st time ever
- 8 million tons of bombs dropped on Southeast
Asia
- 2 million Vietnamese dead
- Uncounted Cambodians and Laotians killed
- Villages ruined
81The Cost of War (cont.)
- Nationalist movementthe activities of a group
focused on freeing a nation from foreign
influence and control