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AMST 3100 The 1960s Vietnam 19681973

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Title: AMST 3100 The 1960s Vietnam 19681973


1
AMST 3100 The 1960sVietnam 1968-1973
  • Powerpoint 13
  • Read the web links to Vietnam Opposing Views
    Lessons of Vietnam Interview Death in the Ia
    Drang Valley

2
The War at Home
  • The Tet Offensive of January 1968 weakened
    Johnsons credibility and led the media to take a
    more skeptical view of LBJs characterizations.
  • By the 1960s the mass media, especially TV, was a
    major force in shaping American public opinion.
  • More than 60 million Americans watched the
    nightly TV news, and the television spin became
    somewhat critical of the war by 1968.
  • After the Tet Offensive, about half of all
    Americans opposed the war. The Democratic Party
    especially was divided over war policies. Some
    wanted an immediate pull out, others wanted a
    gradual pull out, and others wanted the U.S. to
    remain committed to maintaining South Vietnam.

The anti-war movement began as a relatively
idealistic movement with faith that government
would respond to their concerns. By 1968 there
was much anger and rising militancy resulting
from frustration with LBJs war policies.
However, as captured by this photo, the peace
movement also included many who believed that one
must demonstrate love and peace in order to
change the world.
3
Anti-War Candidates, 1968
  • In February, 1968, Senator Eugene McCarthy, a
    liberal anti-war Democrat, nearly won the New
    Hampshire presidential primary.
  • The New Hampshire primary is significant because
    it is the first primary of the season.
  • This near-victory secured media attention for
    McCarthy, and the talk was about the popularity
    of his anti-war platform.
  • In March, after seeing McCarthys New Hampshire
    support, Robert Kennedy decided that he too
    would run for President on an anti-war platform,
    splitting the antiwar movement between the two.
  • Robert Kennedy had been questioning U.S. policy
    in Vietnam as early as 1963.

Eugene McCarthy
Robert Kennedy
4
LBJ bows out in March, 1968
  • President Johnson was deeply affected by the Tet
    Offensive and his own staff had become polarized
    over the war. Clark Clifford, a member of his
    inner circle, had shifted against the war.
  • Johnson could see that he had lost his
    popularity.
  • On March 31, 1968, LBJ announced that he would
    seek a real peace in Vietnam through negotiation,
    he would suspend the bombing campaign, and he
    would not run for re-election.
  • Johnson did not want to participate in the bloody
    combat of a polarized election campaign.

LBJs March announcement stunned the country.
Before the Tet Offensive, most considered him the
frontrunner for re-election. However, 1968
brought frequent and dramatic changes every week.
By March, the credibility gap and anti-war
sentiment was too great for LBJ to overcome. His
announcement created much speculation about who
might win the Democratic nomination.
5
MLK and Vietnam
  • The rising momentum against the Vietnam war was
    spurred partly by Martin Luther King, Jr.s
    declaration on April 4, 1967 that he opposed the
    Vietnam War.
  • By 1967, King lent his considerable credentials
    in favor of the antiwar movement.
  • He was also being pressured by black radicals,
    who strongly opposed the war as militant
    imperialism. While King was never a militant, he
    was becoming increasingly frustrated with LBJs
    priorities by this time.
  • King would be assassinated exactly one year after
    publicly condemning Johnsons war policies.

In this photo, King condemns U.S. policy in
Vietnam, thus severing cordial relations with the
executive branch. In public, King was
conspicuously silent on the Vietnam conflict
until April 4, 1967. His silence was probably a
consequence of the relatively cordial
relationship he had with LBJ on civil rights.
6
RFK
  • Robert Kennedys candidacy gained momentum and he
    won the crucial California primary on June 5,
    1968. This meant he had a good chance of winning
    the Democratic nomination for President. At this
    point it was likely that Kennedy, an anti-war
    candidate, would win the nomination as well as
    the Presidency.
  • However, Kennedys assassination by Sirhan Sirhan
    threw the Democratic party and the anti-war
    movement into a deep depression.
  • The murders of both King and Kennedy in 1968
    probably represented the last gasp for liberal
    reforms and perhaps the last chance for a quick
    end to the Vietnam conflict. The future of
    American politics would take a turn to the right
    with the Presidential election of Richard Nixon.

The California primary was held on June 4th and
Kennedy learned he had won by the early morning
of June 5th. However, he was shot just after his
victory speech and died the next day.
7
Hubert Humphrey
  • Humphrey, the Democratic nominee for President in
    1968, was tainted by his association with the
    Johnson administration and its Vietnam policies.
  • As the status quo candidate, he had difficulty
    explaining how he might change U.S. policy in
    Vietnam. He had been loyal to Johnsons Vietnam
    War policies, which were now highly unpopular.
  • Late in the campaign Humphrey said he would agree
    to a unilateral halt to the U.S. bombing
    campaign. While this was a popular move, it was
    not quite enough to overcome Nixon and he lost
    the election.

8
Richard Nixon
  • Nixons position on Vietnam was intentionally
    ambiguous. He stated that the war needed to end,
    but that it needed to end with honor.
  • Nixon was in the favorable position of being the
    candidate of change with respect to Vietnam
    policy.
  • Nixon may have started and certainly allowed -
    a rumor that he had a secret plan to end the
    war, but he apparently didnt. He also never
    explained what he would actually do in Vietnam,
    arguing that he did not want to ruin LBJs
    efforts to achieve a peace settlement or let the
    enemy know his own secrets for achieving a
    settlement.
  • Privately, in 1968 Nixon did not want President
    Johnson to be successful with a peace settlement,
    so he secretly approached the leader of South
    Vietnam, President Thieu, and advised him not to
    cooperate with Lyndon Johnsons peace efforts.
  • He told Thieu, who was still seeking sovereignty
    for South Vietnam, that he would be better off
    under a Nixon administration. Thieu embraced
    Nixons advice and refused to participate in
    LBJs peace talks, thus discouraging an early
    settlement of the war. Later, when Nixon embraced
    a similar peace plan with North Vietnam in 1972,
    Thieu felt exploited and abandoned by Nixon.

9
Nixon
  • Like Johnson and Kennedy before him, Nixon
    inherited an unstable situation in Vietnam. South
    Vietnam had been on the verge of collapse from
    the beginning, and there would never be a time
    when South Vietnam was strong enough to stand on
    its own.
  • Johnson had escalated the war to dramatic levels,
    with over 500,000 troops stationed in Vietnam
    when Nixon came into office.
  • American public opinion was deeply polarized over
    what to do there. Most Americans felt the war was
    a mistake, but they did not want to turn tail
    and run.
  • Nixon had chosen Henry Kissinger as his primary
    foreign policy advisor.
  • Like Nixon, Kissinger was a tough hawk on
    Vietnam. But they were also pragmatic and
    flexible in their foreign policy deliberations.

President Nixon with Henry Kissinger on the
Presidential plane.
10
Nixon
  • Both Nixon and Kissinger privately felt that the
    Vietnam War was not winnable by 1969.
  • But they also felt that a unilateral withdrawal
    would be too costly politically and in American
    world prestige.
  • Nixon and Kissinger decided on a plan for slow
    withdrawal.
  • As a political hawk Nixon could not admit any
    sense of defeat or retreat from Vietnam in
    public. Hence, Nixon was secretive and deceptive
    from the beginning in his war policies, and this
    would contribute to great hostility towards his
    administration by the counterculture.

Both Nixon and Kissinger liked to play hard ball
with their opponents, both in domestic and
foreign policy.
11
Nixons Vietnam Policy
  • Nixons Vietnam policy had several aspects. The
    most salient was the planned withdrawal of U.S.
    troops under the policy called Vietnamization.
  • Nixon was committed to reducing U.S. casualties
    in Vietnam. Vietnamization involved turning the
    war over to the ARVN.
  • While they were not likely to win the war on
    their own, the increased reliance on the ARVN
    would buy time for Nixon to gradually withdraw
    American troops.

An ARVN soldier threatens a Viet Cong rebel with
a knife in an effort to get him to talk. With
only a few exceptions, the ARVN were never a
force capable of sustaining South Vietnam,
despite intense efforts by the Americans to
supply and train them. The Viet Cong, on the
other hand, were highly motivated fighters.
12
Vietnamization
  • By the late 60s, the ARVN had improved
    significantly as a fighting force, especially in
    the Catholic and southernmost regions of Vietnam.
    However there were several problems in relying
    upon the ARVN
  • the ARVN were mostly conscripts and their
    desertion rate was high.
  • ARVN officers were generally appointed for
    political loyalties rather than professional
    competence.
  • When called upon to perform solo operations, the
    ARVN did not perform well, as evidenced by the
    1971 invasion of Laos in which the ARVN (without
    direct U.S. troop backing) were routed by the
    communists.
  • Meanwhile Nixon set about trying to convince the
    American public that the ARVN were ready to
    defend South Vietnam on their own. Most serious
    observers understood the flaw in this argument,
    but what most Americans wanted by now was U.S.
    troop withdrawal, regardless of the fate of South
    Vietnam.

ARVN firebase, nine miles inside Laos, 1971.
Nixons approval of the invasion of Laos outraged
the antiwar advocates and helped de-stabilize
this region of Southeast Asia.
13
Nixons Vietnam Policy
  • Another aspect of Nixons Vietnam policy was the
    so-called madman strategy. Nixon allowed Henry
    Kissinger to informally reveal during secret
    negotiations with North Vietnam that President
    Nixon himself was unstable and liable to go to
    extreme lengths (escalating the war, new
    invasions and bombings, hinting at using nuclear
    weapons) if North Vietnam did not agree to peace
    talks.
  • This approach was not very successful in a direct
    way, but Nixon and other hawks believed that his
    heavy bombing of the North perhaps a form of
    this madman rage - ultimately drove the North
    Vietnamese to the peace talks.

Nixon points to a reporter during a press
conference.
14
Nixons Vietnam Policy
  • While Vietnamization and his madman strategy were
    not very effective, Nixon did have one foreign
    policy strategy that was highly successful and
    which helped his Vietnam policy. This was the
    policy of triangulation pursuing détente with
    both the Soviets and (Red) China.
  • Nixon was approached privately by the Red Chinese
    soon after his election to see if he was
    interested in a U.S. - Chinese version of
    détente. The Soviets were already working on
    détente with the U.S.
  • In détente, both sides work toward reducing Cold
    War tensions. They do this by establishing
    communication lines, securing nuclear arms
    limitation treaties, establishing trade, and
    emphasizing diplomacy over military posturing.
  • With rising détente, Nixon could perhaps get the
    Chinese to help him secure a peace agreement with
    the North Vietnamese.
  • Nixon visited China in 1972, signaling an end to
    the old-style Cold War era, and bringing Nixon
    his greatest foreign policy achievement.

This photo captures Nixons visit to China.
Détente helped Nixon persuade the Chinese and
Soviets to be less rigid in their support for
North Vietnam, and this aided his efforts to get
a treaty with the North Vietnamese.
15
Moratorium March, 1969
  • In 1969 the Vietnam Moratorium Committee (MOBE),
    arranged for a massive antiwar protest across the
    country, highlighted by a Peace Moratorium march
    in Washington.
  • On October 15th, between two and ten million
    protestors across the country marched.
  • The March is generally considered a huge success
    in demonstrating massive public support for
    ending the war.

Roughly 250,000-500,000 people participated in
the Washington Peace Moratorium.
16
Nixons Response to the Peace Moratorium
  • Nixon and Agnew used the politics of polarization
    to turn mainstream Americans away from the peace
    movement.
  • An angry Nixon labeled the protestors
    anti-American and engaged in a war of rhetoric
    against them.
  • Vice President Spiro Agnew led the charge,
    labeling the protestors nattering nabobs of
    negativism and professional anarchists.
  • Nixon and other hawks argued that the antiwar
    protestors were harming U.S. efforts in Vietnam,
    thus giving aid to the enemy.
  • Let us be united for peace. Let us also be
    united against defeatNorth Vietnam cannot defeat
    or humiliate the United States. Only Americans
    can do that.
  • At that time (late 1969) Americans were polarized
    over Vietnam, with roughly 40 seeking a complete
    withdrawal within 1 year, and another 40 seeking
    peace with honor regardless of how long it
    took. Only about 10 of Americans wanted to
    escalate the fighting.

Nixon press conference
17
My Lai Massacre
  • News of the My Lai Massacre came out in 1969.
  • This massacre occurred in March of 1968 when a
    search and destroy operation against the Viet
    Cong resulted in an entire South Vietnamese
    village (300-500 people) getting wiped out by
    frustrated American GIs.
  • Even the children were murdered. The army hushed
    it up, but the story eventually got out.
  • Lt. William Calley and another officer were
    brought to military trial and Calley was
    convicted of the murder of civilians and
    sentenced. President Nixon intervened and reduced
    it to house arrest. He was paroled a few years
    later.
  • The other officer was not convicted.

The My Lai massacre occurred in 1968 but was
covered up until 1969. Atrocities occurred on
both sides of the war, but because the Americans
had symbolized themselves as the good guys
against the evils of communism, My Lai was a blow
to American ideals and honor.
18
Nixon Invades Cambodia, 1970
  • In April, 1970, Nixon went on national TV to tell
    Americans that he had widened the war to include
    Cambodia. His goal was to wipe out communist
    sanctuaries within Cambodia being used by the
    North Vietnamese to infiltrate the south.
  • Nixons widening of the war provoked massive
    antiwar protests across the country and
    re-energized the antiwar movement.
  • Four students were shot by the national guard at
    Kent State during a student protest, followed by
    2 more killed by authorities at Jackson State in
    Mississippi.
  • Then 450 colleges went on strike as the national
    guard had to be deployed to dozens of colleges
    across the country. Many colleges simply closed
    for the rest of the year.

The Kent State shootings, 1970.
19
Laos Invasion, 1971
  • By the end of 1970 there were 335,000 troops in
    Vietnam, down from more than 500,000 in 1968.
  • But the war was still going on, and Americans
    were still polarized over what to do about it.
  • In February of 1971, Nixon publicly admitted he
    had widened the war to Laos for reasons similar
    to his Cambodian invasion. Most of this invasion
    consisted of the ARVN backed by American air
    support. This invasion went well in the beginning
    but was pushed back by a North Vietnamese
    counter-invasion, and the U.S. had to airlift out
    the remainder of ARVN. This invasion was an
    embarrassment.
  • This incident revealed what most observers
    understood already. The ARVN were incapable of
    being a stabilizing force for South Vietnam.

ARVN troops leap from an American helicopter as
they invade southern Laos in 1971.
20
The Veterans Protest of April, 1971
  • While there were many antiwar protests this year,
    the most notable was when the Vietnam Veterans
    Against the War (VVAW) held a protest at the
    Capitol Building and the veterans threw their
    medals away in protest of Nixons war policies.
  • The 2004 Democratic Presidential contender, John
    Kerry, was one of these angry veterans. Kerry had
    volunteered and served honorably in Vietnam and,
    like so many other GIs, had become disillusioned
    with U.S. war policy by the early 1970s.
  • Meanwhile, Nixon continued to remove troops from
    Vietnam (as he increased the bombing). By the end
    of 1971 there would be 157,000 troops in Vietnam,
    and Nixon spared no effort to advertise this
    achievement.

John Kerry is circled in red.
21
1972
  • By 1972, the monthly Vietnam casualty rate had
    fallen to only a few dozen people.
  • In November, 1972 there were 27,000 troops
    stationed in Vietnam.
  • During 1972, Nixon authorized bombing raids on
    strategic targets in North Vietnam, including
    parts of Hanoi. He also mined harbors in North
    Vietnam. His goal was to secure a peace agreement
    with the North Vietnamese.
  • Ironically one of his problems was South Vietnam
    President Nguyen Van Thieu, who refused to sign
    any agreement with North Vietnam unless they
    recognized the sovereignty of South Vietnam.

A B-52 takes off to strike North Vietnam as
soldiers watch.
22
End of Vietnam War
  • Immediately following his landslide victory in
    November of 1972, Nixon again sought to put
    pressure on the North Vietnamese to sign a peace
    treaty.
  • This time he ordered a new bombing campaign
    against North Vietnam called Linebacker 1.
  • It was otherwise known as the Christmas bombing
    campaign because he ordered the bombing to
    continue through the holidays with the only pause
    on the day of Christmas itself.
  • Meanwhile, Nixon pressured Thieu to accept the
    terms of the draft treaty and Thieu whose South
    Vietnam was entirely dependent upon the U.S. -
    had no choice. The draft treaty essentially
    allowed all North Vietnamese troops to remain in
    those areas of South Vietnam they controlled,
    which was nearly everywhere except the major
    cities in the South.

B-52s waiting to be loaded with 500lb bombs.
23
End of Vietnam War
  • On January 23, 1973 Nixon announced that he had
    reached an accord with the North Vietnamese. This
    agreement
  • 1. Set up a cease fire for Vietnam, Laos, and
    Cambodia.
  • 2. Stated that the U.S. would withdraw from
    Vietnam.
  • 3. Stated that North Vietnam would release all
    American prisoners of war.
  • 4. Recognized the Thieu government while also
    recognizing that North Vietnamese troops could
    stay in the South.

An American POW is returned to his family in
March, 1973.
24
End of Vietnam War
  • The war was essentially over for the United
    States by 1973.
  • However the U.S. would have a skeleton staff in
    Saigon until 1975, when the North Vietnamese
    troops entered the city.
  • It took Richard Nixon exactly 4 years to secure
    the treaty of 1973. The cost over these four
    years totaled roughly 21,000 U.S. lives. This
    treaty did little for the U.S. other than secure
    American POWs.
  • It was clear that the Americans lost in their
    goal of nation-building. There were lessons to
    consider for any future wars, including resorting
    to an all-volunteer army, media coverage of war,
    the war-making powers of the President, the
    popularity of war at home, war goals and
    strategies, American imperialism in a
    post-colonial world, and issues involving
    securing the hearts and minds of the indigenous
    population.

These South Vietnamese refugees have found
temporary safe haven aboard a Huey helicopter.
The final death toll of the Vietnam War was
roughly 1 million Vietnamese combatants killed, 4
million Vietnamese civilians killed, and roughly
58,000 U.S. soldiers killed.
25
AMST 3100
End
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