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Chapter 22
The
Vietnam
War
(1954–
1975)
1
Section 1: Moving Towards Conflict
Section 2: U.S. Involvement and Escalation
Section 3: A Nation Divided
Section 4: 1968: A Tumultuous Year
Section 5: The End of the War and its Legacy
2
3
Section One:
Moving Towards Conflict
4
The War Unfolds



What events led to the war between
North Vietnam and South Vietnam?
What were the Vietnam policies of
President Kennedy and Robert
McNamara?
How did President Johnson change
the course of the war?
5
The Players in
Vietnam
South Vietnam
North Vietnam
France
United States
6
American Foreign Policy Rationale
 Domino
theory if one
Southeast Asian nation fell to
communism, others
would soon follow.
7
French Indochina


Historically, the
French had controlled
Vietnam and much of
southeast Asia.
During WWII, the
French lost Vietnam
and after the war they
wanted to regain their
lost colony.
8

Ho Chi Minh, a
pro-Communist
leader in Vietnam.
 Led a group
called the
Vietminh against
French control of
his nation before,
during, and after
World War II.
9
During World War II…


Japan had de facto control
of Vietnam
The Vietminh helped the
Allies:




Provided info on Jap troop
movements
Helped rescue downed Allied
pilots
Ho Chi Minh and the communists
declare their independence when
the war ends
France tries to re-assert its control
10
U.S. Involvement Begins




Truman began providing
economic aid to the
French in Vietnam in
1950.
300,000 small arms/rifles
$1 Billion in aid to the
French
Covers 80% of the cost
of the war, but refuses to
send U.S. troops
11
And Continues Under Ike

Eisenhower
would send
hundreds of
military advisors
to help South
Vietnam’s
struggle against
the North.
12
The French lose at Dien Bien Phu

Dien Bien Phu the
Vietminh successfully
defeated the French
(1954), despite
superior French
firepower.
13
The Geneva Accords




Geneva Accords temporarily
divided Vietnam into
Communist North Vietnam
and anti-Communist
(Nationalist) South Vietnam.
The country would be divided
at the 17th parallel.
A unity election was
scheduled for 1956; whoever
wins unites the country.
Elections were called off by
Diem for fear of losing
14
Ho Chi Minh
led
North Vietnam.
Ngo Dinh Diem
led
South Vietnam.
15
Vietnamese Leaders

Ho Chi Minh





http://upload.wikimedia.org/w
ikipedia/commons/1/17/Ho_C
hi_Minh_1946_cropped.jpg
Communist
North Vietnam
Totalitarian
Popular because he
gave land to peasants
Supported Viet Cong
in South Vietnam.

Ngo Dinh Diem




Anti-communist
South Vietnam
Unpopular because
seen as corrupt, brutal
and favored wealthy.
Refused to partake in
1956 nationwide
election.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia
/commons/9/9b/Ngo_Dinh_Diem__Thumbnail_-_ARC_542189.gif
Why would Buddhist monks perform such an act? The pictures of the monks engulfed
in flames brought international attention to the corruption of Diem’s government. Diem
had imprisoned many clerics and destroyed Buddhist temples. Diem’s wife insensitively
referred to these self-immolations as “Buddhist barbeques”.
17
JFK’s Vietnam Policies
18
JFK’s Policy





Diem must defeat the guerillas, not the U.S.
U.S. CANNOT send combat troops
Problem: South Vietnamese Army
(ARVN) is poorly led, poorly trained and
poorly equipped
Solution: Increase U.S. military advisors
700 to 1,200 to 3,000 to 16,000 in 1963
19
Diem’s Downfall
 During the early 1960s, Ngo Dinh
Diem’s policies lost him the
support of his people.
 Diem was a Catholic controlling
a Buddhist nation.
 Political corruption.
 Political favors for families
20




President Kennedy told South Vietnamese
military leaders that the United States
would not object to Diem’s overthrow.
In November 1963, military leaders seized
control of South Vietnam and assassinated
Diem.
United States was upset over the
assassination of Diem.
Vietnam now becomes LBJ’s war.
21
The irony? JFK assassinated 3
weeks later
22
LBJ’s Vietnam Policies
23


In South Vietnam, the military leaders who had taken
over the government were unsuccessful and unpopular.
As a result, Communist guerrillas in South Vietnam,
known as the National Liberation Front, made gains in
both territory and loyalty.
 The National Liberation Front was founded in 1960




This South Vietnamese group supported the
unification of Vietnam
It opposed Diem’s corrupt government
It opposed U.S. involvement in Vietnam
The group came to be known as the Viet Cong (VC)
24
At
the same time, popular support for the
Vietcong was growing. Ho Chi Minh strongly
supported the VC with troops and munitions, as
did the Soviet Union and China.
25
Expanding Presidential Power
The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution

LBJ Escalates the War
Causes: “Attack” on the USS Maddox August 2, 1964 in Gulf of Tonkin
“Attack on USS Turner Joy on August 4, 1964
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Uy5RZ70Jkk&t=97s 60 minutes excerpt

When this was first broadcast in 1970, how would you feel as an American citizen?




Were the incidents fabricated?
Release of LBJ tapes in 2001 indicated LBJ mislead the public
In August 1964, Johnson announced that North
Vietnamese torpedo boats had attacked American
destroyers in the Gulf of Tonkin.
Gulf of Tonkin Resolution Congress gave Johnson
authority to send troops to Vietnam.
26
Under
the
resolution, the
President had
authority to “take all
necessary measures
to repel any armed
attack against the
forces of the United
States and to prevent
further aggression.”
27
The War Quickly Escalates



By the end of 1965
LBJ increased U.S.
troop levels to 75,000
The process of the
“Americanization” of
the war begins.
Johnson also unleashed
“Operation Rolling
Thunder”- the first
sustained bombing of
North Vietnam
28
Recap: U.S. Involvement in Vietnam
•
Domino Theory; aided French forces at regaining control after
WWII.
•
Began sending money and weapons to South Vietnam
•
Military advisors sent to train South Vietnamese army
•
Believed in the Domino Theory
•
Increased the number of military advisors and army special forces,
or Green Berets
•
Advisors were not to take part in combat, but many did
•
Believed an expanded U.S. effort was the only way to prevent a
Communist victory in Vietnam
•
Asked Congress to pass the Tonkin Gulf Resolution
•
Escalated war by sending more troops
Eisenhower
Kennedy
Johnson
Ch.22.2 U.S. Involvement and
Escalation

Essential Questions:




What were the reasons behind escalation of U.S.
involvement in Vietnam
What were the military tactics and weapons used
by U.S. forces and the Vietcong?
What were the advantages held by each side in
the war?
What was the impact of the war on American
society?
30
Lyndon Johnson- The first U.S.
President to send combat troops to
Vietnam
31
McNamara’s Role




Robert McNamara, President
Kennedy’s Secretary of Defense
Influential in shaping American
policy toward Vietnam (chief
architect).
McNamara used his strong
business background to cut costs
while modernizing the armed
forces.
In the coming years, McNamara
would push for direct American
involvement in Vietnam.
32
The Big Three

Along with Secretary
of Defense Robert
McNamara, Secretary
of State Dean Rusk
advised President
Johnson to escalate the
war in Vietnam
33
The war escalates…
In 1965, over 61% of Americans
favored escalation of the war and by
the end of 1965 180,000 US soldiers
were in Vietnam
 General William Westmoreland,
leader of American forces in
Vietnam, was unimpressed by the
South Vietnamese allies and
continually asked for more troops.
 By 1967 there were over 500,000 US
soldiers in Vietnam.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/t
humb/9/94/Gen_William_C_Westmoreland.jpg/48
0px-Gen_William_C_Westmoreland.jpg
Movie Intro- “We Were Soldiers”

Setting: 1965, the Central Highlands of South
Vietnam (Ia Drang Valley, aka “The Valley of
Death”)




U.S. Air Mobile Division (7th Cavalry) vs.
regulars of the People’s Army of North Vietnam
(PAVN)
Was supposed to be a search and destroy mission
Up to this point 1,100 Americans had died
(mostly by 2s and 3s as advisors to the ARVN)
305 Americans would die in the 34 day campaign
35
Ia Drang Valley Campaign


North Vietnamese
soldiers infiltrated
South Vietnam via the
Ho Chi Minh Trail
The U.S. strategy was
quick insertion and
extraction via
helicopters
36
Ia Drang- The Battle that Convinced
Ho Chi Minh He Could Win

In 1965, Defense Secretary McNamara tells
Johnson he has a choice to make

Arrange “diplomatic cover” and get out of
Vietnam or,
Give General Westmoreland the additional
200,000 troops he’s asking for (so that by 1967,
there would be 500,000 U.S. troops in Vietnam,
but,


They would be dying at the rate of 1,000/month (the
eventual # would be 3,000/month in 1968), and
37
There would be no chance of winning, only a draw
War in the Jungle



The US believed its superior weaponry
would lead to victory in Vietnam but
the jungle terrain and guerrilla tactics
used by the enemy turned the war into
a frustrating stalemate.
They used booby traps, land mines and
even American weapons against them.
The Vietcong used hit-and-run tactics and
were interspersed amongst the civilian
population making it hard for American’s to
determine friend from foe.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4a/1
10612-M-EV637-065.jpg/800px-110612-M-EV637-065.jpg
Tunnels

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f0/VietnamCuChiTunnelstrapopen.jpg
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/ad/Tunnel_rats.jpg/476px-Tunnel_rats.jpg
The Vietcong added to
their elusiveness by
constructing elaborate
tunnels that they could
use to launch surprise
attacks and then
quickly disappear.
They could eat, sleep,
store weapons, and
treat their wounded in
the tunnels.
Tunnel Rats and VC tunnels
wwww.Militaryvideo.com, ‘’Tunnel Rats in Vietnam War’’, from youtube.com on May 10, 2012. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q6ZbPqvfvBI
U.S. weaponry and techniques



Westmoreland believed that the superior weapons and
manpower the US possessed would make the
communists crumble. The communists continued to
suffer and resist and were willing to fight to the last to
obtain their freedom.
Americans also tried to win the “hearts and minds” of
the rural population but their tactics to combat the
Vietcong included the use of napalm and Agent
Orange which left the countryside in ruins.
US soldiers also conducted Search-and-Destroy
missions which destroyed villages suspected of ties to
the Vietcong.
NapalmA gasoline based bomb that set fire to the jungle
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/d/d4/TrangBang.jpg/220px-TrangBang.jpg
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/81/French_indochina_napalm_1953-12_1.png
Agent Orange- one of the many
“Rainbow” chemicals used


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/1f/US-Huey-helicopter-spraying-Agent-Orange-in-Vietnam.jpg/800px-USHuey-helicopter-spraying-Agent-Orange-in-Vietnam.jpg
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/6/60/Agent-Orange-dioxin-skin-damage-Vietnam.jpg
a chemical
defoliant used by
the U.S. designed
to eliminate the
canopy cover used
by the enemy
It was later found
to be toxic and to
cause many deaths
and birth defects.
Vietnam vets claim
it also causes
cancer.
Search & Destroy Mission
Click the Link Below to watch a movie on Search and Destroy missions in Vietnam:
http://www.history.com/topics/vietnam-war/videos#search-and-destroy
“Search and Destroy.” 2012. The History Channel website. May 10 2012, 6:44
http://www.history.com/videos/search-and-destroy.
The Soldiers



As the war continues soldiers became disillusioned
with the war effort and morale declined a lot.
Many soldiers turned to alcohol, marijuana, or other
drugs
Some soldiers even resorted to “fragging” their superior officers.
 killing them in the heat of the battle with a fragmentation
grenade.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/02/Chec
king_house_during_patrol.jpg
The Early War at Home

The high cost of the war led to a decline in the economy
and the lack of funds to continue the Great Society
programs President Johnson had initiated.

Johnson and military personnel continually told the American public
that the war was going well. American commanders used the term
“body count” to prove that we were killing more of the enemy than
they were of us, thereby winning the war of attrition.
A credibility gap developed between what Johnson said about the
war and what the public began to believe based on the gruesome
images of US soldiers in body bags that they saw on the nightly
news.
