Top Banner
33.1 Background to Conflict
46

33.1 Background to Conflict

Jan 05, 2016

Download

Documents

zytka

33.1 Background to Conflict. Vietnam. Vietnam is the easternmost country in Southeast Asia. The country is mostly hills and dense forests. It borders Laos , Cambodia , and China. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: 33.1 Background to Conflict

33.1 Background to Conflict

Page 2: 33.1 Background to Conflict

Vietnam

Vietnam is the easternmost country in Southeast Asia. The country is mostly hills and dense forests. It borders Laos, Cambodia, and China.

Page 3: 33.1 Background to Conflict

In the 1400s the Chinese tired to reassert the power over Vietnam but Vietnamese

military leader Le Loi used guerrilla warfare to defeat

the Chinese.

Loi’s rebels worked as peasants during the day and took up arms to attack the

Chinese by night.

Page 4: 33.1 Background to Conflict

1428 the rebels drove the Chinese out of the country and won independence for Vietnam.

Page 5: 33.1 Background to Conflict

French colonization

Page 6: 33.1 Background to Conflict

Vietnam once again lost independence during a surge of

European imperialism in the mid 1800s. The invaders this time

were the French.

Page 7: 33.1 Background to Conflict

In 1883 the French gained complete control of the country and the combined Vietnam with Laos and Cambodia to form French Indochina.

Page 8: 33.1 Background to Conflict

Like with the Chinese the French had taking control of the land but

not in control of the people’s hearts.

Page 9: 33.1 Background to Conflict

Ho Chi Minh was the country’s best known nationalist.

A Nationalist is a person or group who works to advance the independence and interests of a cultural group in a particular location

He lived in the China and the Soviet Union while working for Vietnamese

independence.

Because of his time spent in these countries he became committed to

the ideals of communism.

Page 10: 33.1 Background to Conflict

In the 1940s during World War II the Japanese occupied Indochina. This was Ho’s chance.

Page 11: 33.1 Background to Conflict

France and Vietnam go to war

Page 12: 33.1 Background to Conflict

Ho retuned to Vietnam in early 1941. He organized a resistance movement called League for Independence of Vietnam or Vietminh.

Page 13: 33.1 Background to Conflict

After the Japanese surrendered to allied forces in August of 1945, Vietnam declared its

independence.

Page 14: 33.1 Background to Conflict

Ho spoke at the celebration for independence; he echoed the language of the U.S. Declaration of Independence in his speech.

Page 15: 33.1 Background to Conflict

In 1946 Vietnam and France were once again interlocked in battle

Page 16: 33.1 Background to Conflict

Ho pleaded for assistance from the U.S. but President Truman

ignored Ho and instead backed the French .

Truman saw France as a powerful ally to stop the spread of communism. Truman was

unwilling to back Ho’s Communist connections.

Page 17: 33.1 Background to Conflict

By the late 1940s communism was spreading through out

Asia: China, North Korea, and Indonesia.

President Eisenhower warned that if Vietnam fell to

communism the rest of Southeast Asia would soon

follow.

Page 18: 33.1 Background to Conflict

This theory became known as the Domino Theory.

Page 19: 33.1 Background to Conflict

By 1954 the United States was paying for much of the cost of the

French war effort.

But the French suffered loss after loss.

Page 20: 33.1 Background to Conflict

Money and military equipment were of limited use against the Vietminh

guerrilla tactics.

The Vietminh would strike with out warning and then disappear back

into the jungle

Page 21: 33.1 Background to Conflict

The French tried to lure the Vietminh into a conventional battle at Dien

Bien Phu.

The plan backfired; 13,000 French troops were outnumbered by 50,000

Vietminh troops.

Page 22: 33.1 Background to Conflict

French commanders told their troops to hold out; “The Americans will not let use down; the free world will not let us down.”

Page 23: 33.1 Background to Conflict

Eisenhower was willing to send money but was reluctant to become directly involved in

another Asian war so soon after the Korean War.

Page 24: 33.1 Background to Conflict

The French were defeated on May 7, 1954.

Page 25: 33.1 Background to Conflict

The Geneva Conference

Page 26: 33.1 Background to Conflict

1) What was the Geneva Conference

2) Who was involved 

3) What did the U.S. and China want

4) What was the outcome

Page 27: 33.1 Background to Conflict

1) International conference to settle Indochina conflict and map out Indochina’s future

2) Cambodia, Great Britain, Laos, China, Soviet Union, United States

3) U.S. Did not want to see Vietnam handed over completely to the communist

China Limit U.S. influence and also wanted to prevent a strong unified Vietnam

4) a) Cease-fire

b) Divide Vietnam at 17th parallel

c) Vietminh forces in the north and France regained control of south

d) General elections set to unify country

e) U.S. refused to support agreement

Page 28: 33.1 Background to Conflict
Page 29: 33.1 Background to Conflict

Ngo Dinh Diem

Page 30: 33.1 Background to Conflict

The U.S. hoped that South Vietnam would remain non-communist; their hopes rested on a former French

government official Ngo Dinh Diem.

Page 31: 33.1 Background to Conflict

Diem was strongly anticommunist, He spent in the United States were he attracted powerful backers.

Page 32: 33.1 Background to Conflict

Diem became president of South Vietnam in 1955.

This election was rigged.

For example in Saigon Diem received 605,000 from just 450,000

registered voters.

Page 33: 33.1 Background to Conflict

General elections to unify the country were suppose to take place in 1956, but Diem knew he could not win a nation wide election against Ho Chi Minh, so when the time

came for a country wide election Diem refused to call an election in the south.

Page 34: 33.1 Background to Conflict

Diem was unpopular from the start due in large part to his religious background.

Page 35: 33.1 Background to Conflict

By the late 1950s armed revolution had started in the

south. Much of the resistance was from Vietminh who had

stayed in the south.

They formed the National Liberation Front or NLF.

Page 36: 33.1 Background to Conflict

The NLF’s main goal was to overthrow Diem’s government. This rebel force was called the Vietcong.

Page 37: 33.1 Background to Conflict

U.S. involvement

Page 38: 33.1 Background to Conflict

President Kennedy agreed fully with the Eisenhower's domino

theory.

He also wanted to improve the U.S. image after the Bay of Pigs and the building of the image of

the U.S.

Page 39: 33.1 Background to Conflict

In December of 1960 there were 900 U.S. military advisors training

ARVN.

With in two years Kennedy had increased the number of U.S.

military advisors to over 16,000.

Page 40: 33.1 Background to Conflict

U.S. military deaths went from 14 in 1961 to nearly 500 in 1963.

Page 41: 33.1 Background to Conflict

Diem’s overthrow

Page 42: 33.1 Background to Conflict

South Vietnam’s Buddhist started to openly oppose

Diem’s rule.

Diem waged a brutal campaign to control the Buddhist.

Page 43: 33.1 Background to Conflict

In responses several Buddhist set themselves on fire.

Page 44: 33.1 Background to Conflict

U.S. ambassador Lodge meet with Diem. Diem refused to discuss any topics that President Kennedy had raised.

Page 45: 33.1 Background to Conflict

U.S. leaders began to encourage a group of South Vietnamese army officers

plotting Diem’s overthrow.

In November of 1963 Diem was murdered.

Page 46: 33.1 Background to Conflict

Diem’s death did not ease growing concerns about the communist expansion in Vietnam.