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Vietnam : 1945-1979
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Page 1: Vietnam

Vietnam:1945-1979

Vietnam:1945-1979

Page 2: Vietnam

French Indochina

• When Ho Chi Minh and the Communists in Indochina resisted the Japanese occupation, they were not fighting to return to colonization under the French.

• At Potsdam it was decided Vietnam would be split between the Chiang’s China in the north and Britain in the south. Why would 1949 be an important date for Ho’s forces?

• When the war ended, the Viet Minh started fighting the French who had returned.

Page 3: Vietnam

Ho Chi Minh

• Communist / nationalist

• Had been at Paris, 1919• Had worked in the kitchens of the Carlton Hotel,

London

"It is the fight between tiger and elephant. If the tiger stands his ground, the elephant will crush him with its mass. But, if he conserves his mobility, he will finally vanquish the elephant, who bleeds from a multitude of cuts."

Page 4: Vietnam

General Nguyen Giap

• Led Viet Minh against the FrenchViet Minh = League for Vietnamese Independence

• Studied Sun Tsu, Mao and Napoleon

• Continued the war against the USA

Page 5: Vietnam

The 1945 - 54 War• The French were spending more on the war

than they were receiving in Marshall Aid.• The French underestimated the ability of

the Vietnamese. The Viet Minh had the support of the peasants AND the non-communists.

• The guerillas treated the peasants well.• French tactics were not winning the war;

they tried a hedgehog approach.

Page 6: Vietnam

• A French hedgehog base 200 miles out from nearest support

• Take the fight to the Viet Minh & bring them out in a pitched battle

• Foreign Legion and colonial troops (ex. Algerians)

• Inability of the French air force to adequately re-supply (Stalingrad?)

• Underestimated the Vietminh’s ability to bring artillery through the jungle.

• The USA gave France $1.2 billion to fight the war; after 1950 Ho had Mao’s support.

This defeat broke the French will to fig

ht

Page 7: Vietnam

Operation Castor

Page 8: Vietnam

A valiant stand, but the outposts were picked off in turn; think of the Alamo!

Page 9: Vietnam
Page 10: Vietnam

Geneva Agreement,

1954

• French Indochina was split into its 3 parts: Laos / Cambodia / Vietnam.

• Vietnam was temporarily split at 17°N with the promise of elections (never held - most of the population in North = election would be done deal).

• Ho and the Communists took the north, Emperor Bao Dai took the South, but was replaced by Ngo Dinh Diem, 1955 (a Catholic governing mostly Buddhists?).

Elections in the south were never held;

The USA was okay with that - dominoes

Page 11: Vietnam
Page 12: Vietnam

BURMA/

Page 13: Vietnam

Ngo Denh Diem was corrupt. It was obvious he needed help and Ike gave it: $ + 500 “military advisors.”

In 1962, JFK raised the number to 10,000.

In 1963, the CIA helped over-throw Diem and he “committed suicide.”

IKE DIEM

Page 14: Vietnam

In Context…• Cold War - dominoes can fall anywhere in

the world…think of Korea (incidentally, Korea sent

the 2nd most troops to fight in Vietnam).

• 1954 SEATO: USA, France, Australia, New Zealand, UK, Thailand, Pakistan, Philippines.

You see, it’s not just Western powers! Oh, we’re keen for

more action here!

US protectorate

US aid vs. IndiaOld ANZUS allies: US guaranteed their independence

Malaya’s in SE Asia

Page 15: Vietnam

Who’s WhoHo’s Vietminh: North Vietnam - fought for independence from French - become NV Army.

National Liberation Front: Political movement in the South. (P.R.G. = Provisional Rev Gov’t - at Peace talks)

Vietcong: N.L.F. guerilla fighters in the South.

17°N

N.V.A.

Regulars

N.L.F.

V.C.

Page 16: Vietnam

Gulf of Tonkin IncidentNVA torpedo boats attackUSS Maddox (acting as an intelligence ship)

02 August, 1964

Page 17: Vietnam

Gulf Of Tonkin Resolution(Southeast Asia Resolution)

= ESCALATION!

LBJ seeks “all necessary powers” and “all necessary measures.”– Changed “advisors” to “troops”– From 100,000 in 1962 to 200,000 in 1965– Raised to 600,000 in 1968

Page 18: Vietnam
Page 19: Vietnam

Op Rolling Op Rolling Thunder Thunder

1965 - 19681965 - 1968 More dropped on

North Vietnam than on Germany

and Japan in WW2

Page 20: Vietnam

Tet Offensive Jan – Feb 1968

• Initially very successful

• Over time, US and ARVN forces proved superior in the conventional battles that followed

• 10 VC deaths for every US/ARVN one

• This event was the turning point in US public opinion.

Page 21: Vietnam
Page 22: Vietnam
Page 23: Vietnam

The US was never able to cut the Ho Chi Minh Trail

Ho Chi Minh Trail

Page 24: Vietnam

Agent Orange (Purple, Green, etc.)

Page 25: Vietnam

Iconic American Images

• Anti-war protesters / Kent State / Civil Rights• Draft Dodgers• Helicopters• Napalm• Peace signs / hippies / free love / flower power• Folk/protest songs• 6 o’clock news / body counts• Bombing campaigns• POWs / MIAs• Watergate / Impeachment

S O S

Page 26: Vietnam

VCSaigon Police

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Page 28: Vietnam

My Lai, March 1968: Lt Wm. Calley

Censor

ed

Page 29: Vietnam

Huey helicopter / defoliation

Page 30: Vietnam

John Kerry, 2004 Democratic candidate / John Lennon

Some other guy

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Page 32: Vietnam

Kent State University:Four dead in Ohio

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Page 34: Vietnam

Not embedded:

what’s the difference?

'Vietnam syndrome' "Television brought the brutality of war into the comfort of the living room. Vietnam was lost in the living rooms of America - not on the battlefields of Vietnam." Marshall McLuhan, 1975

Page 35: Vietnam

Gaining Public Support for bombing in Cambodia (no incursions - right)

VIETNAMIZATION 1969

Page 36: Vietnam

Nixon Doctrine: in Nixon's own

words (Address to the Nation on the War in Vietnam November 3, 1969)

• First, the United States will keep all of its treaty commitments.

• Second, we shall provide a shield if a nuclear power threatens the freedom of a nation allied with us or of a nation whose survival we consider vital to our security.

• Third, in cases involving other types of aggression, we shall furnish military and economic assistance when requested in accordance with our treaty commitments. But we shall look to the nation directly threatened to assume the primary responsibility of providing the manpower for its defense.

Page 37: Vietnam

Watergate: Downfall of a President

Page 38: Vietnam

Summary etc. See page 160 - 162 in the Handbook

• Oct 1972: the North’s Easter Offensive was slowing and they feared Nixon’s détente with other communist nations would isolate Vietnam, so they moved past their impasse (USSR + China = $).

• 1973: Henry Kissinger completed on-going Paris peace talks (60 days US out + POWs returned).

• After the USA left, the North fought to take the South - successful in 1975 = first round of boat people.

• 1978 Vietnam invaded Kampuchia (Cambodia).• 1979 China retaliated and invaded Vietnam =

second round of boat people (many to Canada).

Page 39: Vietnam

Boat People: Refugees

Page 40: Vietnam

Conclusions:• Limitations of even a superpower• Ineffectiveness of bombing campaigns• Need for popular support in a democracy• Difficulty in fighting a popular nationalist uprising• Unreliability of a conscript army• Need for limitations on Presidential power to wage

war• Untruthfulness of political rhetoric about dominoes• Maybe it wasn’t worth trying to STOP the spread of

communism