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The Vietnam War
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The Vietnam War

Sep 09, 2014

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This power point is an educational look at the causes of U.S. involvement in Vietnam through withdrawal.
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Page 1: The Vietnam War

The Vietnam War

Page 2: The Vietnam War

Historical Background• From the late 1800s until WWII,

France ruled most of Indochina

Page 3: The Vietnam War

Historical Background• The people of Indochina resisted French

colonial rule• The Indochinese Communist Party,

founded in 1930, revolted against French rule under the leadership of Ho Chi Minh

Page 4: The Vietnam War

Historical Background

• Ho Chi Minh was sentenced to death but fled Vietnam to the Soviet Union and then China

Page 5: The Vietnam War

Historical Background• The Japanese had begun creating their

own empire in Southeast Asia• In 1940 Japan replaced French rule in

Indochina

Page 6: The Vietnam War

Historical Background

• Ho Chi Minh returns in 1941 and helps form the Vietminh– Vietminh –

an organization whose goal is to win Vietnam’s independence from foreign rule

Page 7: The Vietnam War

Historical Background

• The United States forges an alliance with Ho Chi Minh and supports him with aid to resist the Japanese

Page 8: The Vietnam War

Historical Background

• When Japan is defeated in 1945 Vietnam assumes independence

• Ho Chi Minh based the Vietnamese Declaration of Independence on the U.S. Declaration of Independence

Page 9: The Vietnam War

Historical Background

• France wanted to regain its profitable colony of Vietnam

• The Vietnamese people weren’t willing to allow more colonial rule – Resistance of French rule is passionate

Page 10: The Vietnam War

Historical Background

• The French regain the southern half of Vietnam

• Ho Chi Minh and the Vietnamese freedom fighters maintain control of the north

Page 11: The Vietnam War

Historical Background

• Ho Chi Minh vows to fight for independence, “If ever the tiger pauses, the elephant will impale him on his mighty tusks. But the tiger will not pause, and the elephant will die of exhaustion and loss of blood.”

Page 12: The Vietnam War

U.S. Involvement

• In 1945 Lieutenant Colonel A. Peter Dewey is sent to Indochina to gather intelligence on the situation

• Dewey reported, “Cochinchina (southern Vietnam) is burning, the French and British are finished here, and we (the U.S.) ought to clear out of Southeast Asia.”

Page 13: The Vietnam War

U.S. Involvement

• On his way to the airport Dewey is shot and killed, becoming the first American killed in Vietnam

Page 14: The Vietnam War

1950s

• Despite Dewey’s warning the United States steps onto the slippery slope that is involvement in Vietnam

Page 15: The Vietnam War

1950s

• In 1950 Truman sends $15 million in economic aid to France to aid their fight in Vietnam

• Over the next four years the U.S. provides $1 billion for France’s efforts

Page 16: The Vietnam War

Eisenhower and Vietnam

• Ike continues to supply the French after taking office in 1953

• Domino Theory – Eisenhower believes that if one nation becomes Communist then surrounding nations would also become Communist

Page 17: The Vietnam War

French Lose

• In 1954 the French are defeated and are forced out of the nation

Page 18: The Vietnam War

Geneva Accords • 1954 – Representatives from France, Great

Britain, the Soviet Union, the United States, China, Laos, and Cambodia meet with the Vietminh and with South Vietnam’s anticommunist nationalists to create a peace agreement

Page 19: The Vietnam War

Geneva Accords • They decided to temporarily divide

the nation at the 17th parallel until elections could be held in 1956

Page 20: The Vietnam War

Election of 1956

• Ho Chi Minh’s popularity – Fought the French

colonials and the Japanese

– Broke up large estates and redistributed land to peasants• These things made him

wildly popular in Vietnam

Page 21: The Vietnam War

Election of 1956

• South Vietnam’s president, Ngo Dinh Diem knew he couldn’t win an election

• Ngo Dinh Diem refused to participate in the elections

Page 22: The Vietnam War

Election of 1956• The United States

supported canceling the election because they also knew their guy couldn’t win

• The US instead offers more money and military support to Diem

Page 23: The Vietnam War

Ngo Dinh Diem

• Diem, the U.S. supported president of South Vietnam, was corrupt and brutal

Page 24: The Vietnam War

Ngo Dinh Diem

• Diem also restricted Buddhist practices in a nation with a majority Buddhist population

• Buddhist monks protested Diem’s restrictions

Page 25: The Vietnam War

V.C.

• Vietcong – in 1957 a Communist opposition group in the South began attacking Diem’s government– Vietcong receive aid from Ho Chi Minh

Page 26: The Vietnam War

Ho Chi Minh Trail• The Vietcong were

supplied from Ho Chi Minh’s North Vietnam along an intricate network of paths and tunnels

Page 27: The Vietnam War

Sink or Swim with Diem

• Diem’s South Vietnam was growing more unstable

• Eisenhower decided to Sink or Swim with Diem

Page 28: The Vietnam War

John Fitzgerald Kennedy

• 1961 – Kennedy takes office and continues to support Diem and the South

Page 29: The Vietnam War

Kennedy and Vietnam

• Along with more $$$ the U.S. sent thousands of military advisors

• By 1963, 16,000 U.S. military personnel were in South Vietnam

Page 30: The Vietnam War

Ngo Dinh Diem’s Downfall

• Diem’s Hamlet Program, failure of land reform, corruption and severe crackdown on Buddhism caused his loss of support – Buddhist Monks protested Diem’s rule

Page 31: The Vietnam War

Diem Has to Go

• On November 1, 1963, a U.S. –supported military coup topples Diem’s regime

• Diem is assassinated

• Saigon, South Vietnam’s capital falls to chaos

Page 32: The Vietnam War

The Decision Worth 60,000 American Lives

• Before his death, Kennedy announced a plan to withdraw

• Lyndon Baines Johnson, the new president of the U.S. decides to stay and win

Page 33: The Vietnam War

The Decision Worth 2,000,000 Vietnamese Lives

• With the U.S. maintaining financial and military support it was only a matter of time before Vietnam had its own version of…– The Explosion of the USS Maine – The Capture of the Zimmerman

Telegram – The Attack on Pearl Harbor

Page 34: The Vietnam War

Justifying War

Page 35: The Vietnam War

The Fighting Continues• Before Lyndon

Johnson’s election he claimed he was “not about to send American boys 9 or 10,000 miles away from home to do what Asian boys ought to be doing for themselves.”

Page 36: The Vietnam War

The Fighting Continues

• March 1965 – Lyndon Johnson dispatched tens of thousands of U.S. soldiers to Vietnam

Page 37: The Vietnam War

Sinking Morale

• “When we marched into the rice paddies… we carried, along with our packs and rifles, the implicit convictions that the Vietcong could be quickly beaten. We kept our packs and rifles; the convictions, we lost.” – Lieutenant Philip Caputo

Page 38: The Vietnam War

Sinking Morale

• Fighting an elusive enemy in jungle conditions frustrated the Americans

Page 39: The Vietnam War

Sinking Morale

• Many soldiers turned to drugs and alcohol to cope with their situation

• Some superior officers were even killed by their own soldiers

Page 40: The Vietnam War

Home Sweet Home

• Early on, the American public mostly supported the halting of Communism in Southeast Asia

Page 41: The Vietnam War

Home Sweet Home

• As the cost of war increased the American economy suffered

• To pay for the war LBJ asked for a tax increase

Page 42: The Vietnam War

The Great Society

• Conservatives agreed to the tax increase for the war in exchange for a $6 billion cut in Great Society Programs

Page 43: The Vietnam War

The Great Society

• LBJ’s Great Society was a plan to improve the lives of millions of Americans and end racial injustice– The war became more important

Page 44: The Vietnam War

Almost There…But, Not Really

• Meanwhile, General Westmoreland and Defense Secretary Robert McNamara insist the North is close to surrender

Page 45: The Vietnam War

A Nation Divided

• By 1967, Americans were split over supporting and opposing the war

Page 46: The Vietnam War

The Draft…of the working class

• Many soldiers sent to Vietnam were drafted

Page 47: The Vietnam War

The Draft…of the working class

• Draft Dodging – Enroll in College – Medical Reasons– Conscientious Objector – religious or

moral reasons to not fight in war

Page 48: The Vietnam War

The Draft…of the working class

• 80% of American soldiers sent to Vietnam were from lower economic levels– The draft created a working-class war

Page 49: The Vietnam War

Something’s Amiss

• 20% of the combat deaths were African Americans

• 10% of the American population was African American

Page 50: The Vietnam War

African Americans in ‘Nam

• “We were taking the young black men who had been crippled by our society and sending them 8,000 miles away to guarantee liberties in Southeast Asia which they had not found in Southwest Georgia and East Harlem…We have been repeatedly faced with cruel irony of wacthing Negro and white boys on TV screens as they kill and die together for a nation that has been unable to seat them together in the same schools.” – Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

Page 51: The Vietnam War

Opposition Grows

• College Students become vocal against the war

• As the war grew so did opposition

Page 52: The Vietnam War

Reasons for Opposition

• The belief the Vietnam War was a civil war

• The belief that the South Vietnam government was no better than the North Vietnam government

Page 53: The Vietnam War

Reasons for Opposition

• The belief that the U.S. cannot police the entire globe

• The belief that war is immoral

Page 54: The Vietnam War

Reasons for Opposition

• 18 years old = eligible to fight• 21 years old = eligible to vote• “The Eastern World, it is explodin’ Violence flaring, bullets loadin’ You’re old enough to kill, but not for votin’ You don’t believe in war, but what’s that

gun you’re totin’?”-Singer Barry McGuire

Page 55: The Vietnam War

Opposition Rhetoric

• “Burn cards, not people!”• “Hell, no, we won’t go!”• “Hey, Hey LBJ, How many kids did

you kill today!?”

Page 56: The Vietnam War

Draft Resistance

• 200,000 accused of draft offenses• 4,000 imprisoned for draft dodging • 10,000 fled to Canada

Page 57: The Vietnam War

Hawks

• A 1967 poll showed that 70% of Americans believed war protests were “acts of disloyalty”

Page 58: The Vietnam War

Hawks

• Americans also supported the government’s policy– “Support our men in Vietnam”– “America – love it or leave it”

Page 59: The Vietnam War

Hawks

• “…you can’t have freedom without defending it.” – Lyndon B. Johnson

Page 60: The Vietnam War

Happy New Year!!!

Page 61: The Vietnam War

1968

• The Tet Offensive brought the war into America’s homes

• Before Tet 28% of Americans called themselves Doves and 56% called themselves Hawks

Page 62: The Vietnam War

1968

• After the Tet Offensive, both sides tallied 40%

Page 63: The Vietnam War

1968

• Famed and popular reporter Walter Cronkite speaks out against the war

Page 64: The Vietnam War

1968

• Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara resigns

Page 65: The Vietnam War

1968

• March 31, 1968 – Lyndon Baines Johnson makes shocking announcements– The U.S. would seek negotiations to end

the war– “I shall not seek, and I will not accept,

the nomination of my party for another term as your president.”

Page 66: The Vietnam War

1968

• April 4, Martin Luther King Jr. is assassinated

• June 5, Robert Kennedy is assassinated

Page 67: The Vietnam War

1968

• At the Democratic National Convention riots break out as news cameras caught the violence

Page 68: The Vietnam War

1968

• “There are people today who are afraid, in a sense, to hope or to have hope again, because of what happened in…1968. Something was taken from us. The type of leadership that we had in a sense invested in, that we had helped to make and to nourish, was taken from us… Something died in all of us with those assassinations.” – Georgia Congressman John Lewis

Page 69: The Vietnam War

Richard Millhouse Nixon

• In 1969 Nixon enters the Whitehouse and says, “We have to get rid of the nightmares we inherited. One of the nightmares is war without end.”

Page 70: The Vietnam War

Richard Millhouse Nixon

• As many troops were pulled out of Vietnam, the fighting and bombing continued for several more years

Page 71: The Vietnam War

My Lai, Vietnam

• In November 1969 a story breaks about a massacre that had taken place on March 16, 1968

Page 72: The Vietnam War

My Lai, Vietnam

• Under the command of Lieutenant William Calley Jr., over 200 women, children and elderly men were massacred

Page 73: The Vietnam War

My Lai Massacre

• “We all huddled them up. I poured about four clips into the group…The mothers hugging their children…Well, we kept right on firing.” – Private Paul Meadlo

Page 74: The Vietnam War

My Lai Massacre

• When asked what his directive had been, one solder answered, “Kill anything that breathed.”

Page 75: The Vietnam War

The Easter Offensive and Calculated Barbarism

Page 76: The Vietnam War

Ghosts of Vietnam