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What the video at: and answer the questions below based upon your understanding of the war and the content of the video. 1. Why did the French request assistance from the United States in Southeast Asia? 2. How is the Domino Theory related to the containment policy? 3. How did President Kennedy attempt to stop the expansion of communism into Vietnam? 4. After which event did President Johnson dramatically increase the number of US troops deployed to Vietnam? a. Why do historians call into questions President Johnson’s justification for sending more troops to Vietman? 5. Who advocated the policy of Vietnamization? Why did this policy fail? 6. How did the Vietnam conflict end? The Cold War in Vietnam Vietnam Before US Intervention Previous Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia had been a French colony since the late 19th century. During World War II, however, Japan occupied French Indochina. After Japan's defeat, France tried to re-establish control, but met opposition from the Viet Minh. After World War II, neither France nor England wanted to see the end of their colonial empires. England was anxious to control Burma, Malaya, and India. France wanted to rule Indochina. Under Franklin Roosevelt, the United States sought to bring an end to European colonialism. As he put it, condescendingly: “There are 1.1 billion brown people. In many Eastern countries they are ruled by a handful of whites and they resent it. Our goal must be to help them achieve independence. 1.1 billion potential enemies are dangerous.” But under Harry Truman, the United States was concerned about its naval and air bases in Asia. The U.S. decided to permit France into Indochina to re-assert its authority in Southeast Asia. The result: the French Indochina War began. From the beginning, American intelligence officers knew that France would find it difficult to re-assert its authority in Indochina. The French refused to listen to American intelligence. To them, the idea of Asian rebels standing up to a powerful Western nation was preposterous. Although Truman allowed the French to return to Indochina, he was not yet prepared to give the French arms, transportation, and economic assistance. It was not until anti-communism became a major issue that the United States would take an active role supporting the French. The fall of China, the Korean War, and the coming of Joe McCarthy would lead policymakers to see the French War in Vietnam, not as a colonial war, but as a war against international communism. Beginning in 1950, the United States started to underwrite the French war effort. For four years, the United States provided $2 billion; however, this had little effect on the war. The French command, frustrated by a hit-and-run guerrilla war, devised a trap. The idea was to use a French garrison as bait, have the enemy surround it, and mass their forces. Then, the French would strike and crush the enemy and gain a major political and psychological victory. The French built their positions in a valley and left the high ground to their adversaries. An American asked what would happen if the enemy had artillery. A French officer assured him that they had no artillery, and even if they did, they would not know how to use it. Yet, as the journalist David Halberstam noted, “They did have artillery and they did know how to use it.” Into the Quagmire Previous On May 7, 1954, a ragtag army of 50,000 Vietnamese Communists defeated the remnants of an elite French force at a network of bases at Dien Bien Phu in northwestern Vietnam. The French, fighting to restore their Indochinese empire, planned to strike at their adversaries from a network of eight bases (surrounded by barbed wire and minefields) that they had built at Dien Bien Phu. The Viet Minh, Vietnamese Nationalists led by Ho Chi Minh, bombarded these bases with artillery from the surrounding hillsides. Heavy rains made it impossible to bomb the rebel Vietnamese installations or to supply the garrisons. The French, trapped, were reduced to eating rats and pleaded for American air support. President Eisenhower decided to stay out. Despite American financial supports, amounting to about three-quarters of France’s war costs, 250,000 veteran French troops were unable to crush the Viet Minh. Altogether, France had 100,000 men dead, wounded, or missing trying to re-establish its colonial empire. In 1954, after French forces were defeated at the battle of Dien Bien Phu, a peace conference was held in Geneva Switzerland. At the conference, the French and the Vietnamese agreed to divide Vietnam temporarily into a non-Communist South and a Communist North, pending re-unification following elections scheduled for 1956. Those elections never took place. South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem, with U.S. backing, refused to participate in the elections for fear of an overwhelming victory by Ho Chi Minh. The failure of the South to fulfill the terms of the Geneva Accord led the North Vietnamese to distrust diplomacy as a way to achieve a settlement. In 1955, the first U.S. military advisers arrived in Vietnam. President Dwight D. Eisenhower justified this decision on the basis of the domino theory--that the loss of a strategic ally in Southeast Asia would result in the loss of others. "You have a row of dominoes set up," he said, "you knock the first one, and others will fall." President Eisenhower felt that with U.S. help, South Vietnam could maintain its independence. In 1957, South Vietnamese rebels known as the Viet Cong began attacks on the South Vietnamese government of Ngo Dinh Diem. In 1959, Hanoi approved armed struggle against Ngo Dinh Diem's regime in Saigon. President Kennedy supported the South Vietnamese government with weapons, supplies and 18,000 military advisors. LBJ and Vietnam Previous President Lyndon Johnson was reluctant to commit the United States to fight in South Vietnam. "I just don't think it's worth fighting for," he told McGeorge Bundy, his national security adviser. The president feared looking like a weakling, and he was convinced that his dream of a Great Society would be destroyed if he backed down on the communist challenge in Asia. Each step in deepening U.S. involvement in Vietnam made it harder to admit failure and reverse direction. President Johnson campaigned in the 1964 election with the promise not to escalate the war. "We are 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," he said. But following reports that the North Vietnamese had attacked an American destroyer (which was engaged in a clandestine intelligence mission) off the Vietnamese coast, Congress passed the Gulf of Tonkin resolution, giving President Lyndon Johnson power to "take all necessary measures." In February 1965, Viet Cong units operating autonomously attacked a South Vietnamese garrison near Pleiku, killing eight Americans. Convinced that the communists were escalating the war, Johnson began the bombing campaign against North Vietnam that would last for 2 ½ years. He also sent the first U.S. ground combat troops to Vietnam. Johnson believed he had five options. One was to blast North Vietnam off the map using bombers. Another was to pack up and go home. A third choice was to stay as we were and gradually lose territory and suffer more casualties. A fourth option was to go on a wartime footing and call up the reserves. The last choice--which Johnson viewed as the middle ground--was to expand the war without going on a wartime footing. Johnson announced that the lessons of history dictated that the United States use its might to resist aggression. “We did not choose to be the guardians at the gate, but there is no one else,” Johnson said. He ordered 210,000 American ground troops to Vietnam. Johnson justified the use of ground forces by stating that it would be brief, just six months. But the Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese were able to match our troop build-up and neutralize the American soldiers. In North Vietnam, 200,000 young men came of draft age each year. It was very easy for our enemy to replenish its manpower. By April 1967, we had a force of 470,000 men in Vietnam. We were learning that there was no light at the end of the tunnel. The Johnson administration's strategy--which included search and destroy missions in the South and calibrated bombings in the North--proved ineffective, though highly destructive. Despite the presence of 549,000 American troops, the United States had failed to cut supply lines from the North along the so-called Ho Chi Minh Trail, which ran along the border through Laos and Cambodia. By 1967, the U.S. goal was less about saving South Vietnam and more about avoiding a humiliating defeat. Then, everything fell apart for the United States. We suddenly learned the patience, durability, and resilience of our enemy. In the past, our enemy had fought in distant jungles. During the Tet Offensive of early 1968, however, they fought in the cities. The size and strength of the 1968 Tet Offensive undercut the optimistic claims by American commanders that their strategy was succeeding. Communist guerrillas and North Vietnamese army regulars blew up a Saigon radio station and attacked the American Embassy, the presidential palace, police stations, and army barracks. Tet, in which more than 100 miles and villages in the South were overrun, convinced many policymakers that the cost of winning the war, was too great. The former Secretary of State Dean Rusk, who had assured Johnson in 1965 that he was "entirely right" on Vietnam, now stated, "I do not think we can do what we wish to do in Vietnam." Two months after the Tet Offensive, Johnson halted American bombing in most of North Vietnam and called for negotiations. As a result of the Tet Offensive, Lyndon Johnson lost it all. Senator Eugene McCarthy, who picked up more than 40 percent of the vote, challenged Johnson in the Democratic presidential primary. President Johnson decided not to run for re-election and Richard Nixon won the election of 1968. Nixon and Vietnam In the 1968 election, Republican Richard Nixon claimed to have a plan to end the war in Vietnam, but, in fact, it took him five years to disengage the United States from Vietnam. Indeed, Richard Nixon presided over as many years of war in Indochina as did Johnson. About a third of the Americans who died in combat were killed during the Nixon presidency. Nixon’s plan to bring "peace with honor," mainly involved reducing American casualties by having South Vietnamese soldiers bear more of the ground fighting--a process he called "Vietnamization"--and defusing anti-war protests by ending the military draft. Nixon provided the South Vietnamese army with new training and improved weapons and tried to frighten the North Vietnamese to the peace table by demonstrating his willingness to bomb urban areas and mine harbors. He also hoped to orchestrate Soviet and Chinese pressure on North Vietnam. The most controversial aspect of his strategy was an effort to cut the Ho Chi Minh supply trail by secretly bombing North Vietnamese sanctuaries in Cambodia and invading that country and Laos. The U.S. and South Vietnamese incursion into Cambodia in April 1970 helped destabilize the country, provoking a bloody civil war and bringing to power the murderous Khmer Rouge, a Communist group that evacuated Cambodia's cities and threw thousands into re-education (concentration) camps. Following his election, President Nixon began to withdraw American troops from Vietnam in June 1969 and replaced the military draft with a lottery in December of that year. In December 1972, the United States began large-scale bombing of North Vietnam after peace talks reach an impasse. The so-called Christmas bombings led Congressional Democrats to call for an end of U.S. involvement in Southeast Asia. In late January 1973, the United States, South Vietnam, the Viet Cong, and North Vietnam signed a cease-fire agreement, under which the United States agreed to withdraw from South Vietnam without any comparable commitment from North Vietnam. Historians still do not agree whether President Nixon believed that the accords gave South Vietnam a real chance to survive as an independent nation, or whether he viewed the agreement as a face-saving device that gave the United States a way to withdraw from the war "with honor." The Final Collapse Previous On the morning of April 30, 1975, a column of seven North Vietnamese tanks rolled down Saigon's deserted streets and crashed through the gates of South Vietnam's presidential palace. A soldier leapt from the lead tank and raised a red, blue, and yellow flag. The Vietnam War was over. Tens of thousands of South Vietnamese massed at the dock of Saigon harbor, crowding into fishing boats. In the fall of 1974, President Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam abruptly ordered his commanders to pull out of the central highlands and northern coast. His intention was to consolidate his forces in a more defensible territory. However, the order was given so hastily, with so little preparation or planning, that the retreat turned into an uncontrollable panic. Consequently, North Vietnamese forces were able to advance against little resistance. On April 30, 1975, North Vietnamese soldiers captured Saigon, bringing the Vietnam War to an end. The Cold War in Vietnam Guiding Questions Vietnam Before US Intervention & Into the Quagmire 1. Why did FDR want to end France and Britain’s colonial empires? 2. Why did the US decide to help the French maintain their control over Indochina? 3. What happened to the French in 1954 at Dien Bien Phu? 4. What did France and Ho Chi Minh decide in Geneva in 1954? 5. What was the Domino Theory and how did it guide President Eisenhower’s actions in Vietnam? 6. According to the reading, why did North Vietnam invade South Vietnam in 1957? LBJ and Vietnam 7. How did President Johnson feel about US involvement in Vietnam prior to the Presidential election of 1964? 8. How did the Gulf of Tonkin incident change LBJ’s approach to Vietnam? 9. Describe President Johnson’s strategy for winning the war in Vietnam? Why did it fail? 10. What was the Tet Offensive and when did it occur? 11. How did it change American goals for the Vietnam war? Nixon and the Final Collapse 12. Describe President Nixon’s plan for ending US involvement in the Vietnam war? 13. What was the most controversial part of Nixon’s plan to end the war? How did this plan impact Cambodia? 14. What happened to South Vietnam in April 1975? How did President Nixon’s action in January of 1973 contribute to this outcome?

Paper For Above instruction

The Vietnam War, often regarded as a defining conflict of the Cold War era, was driven by complex geopolitical, ideological, and colonial factors. The United States' involvement in Southeast Asia was primarily influenced by the desire to contain the spread of communism, which was perceived as a threat to democratic nations and American interests worldwide. This essay explores the catalysts behind U.S. intervention, the strategies employed by American presidents, and the war's ultimate conclusion, with a focus on how Cold War policies shaped the conflict’s trajectory.

The Roots of U.S. Involvement in Southeast Asia

The roots of American intervention trace back to the colonial history of Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia, which had been under French control since the late 19th century. During World War II, Japan occupied French Indochina, creating a power vacuum that Vietnamese nationalists led by Ho Chi Minh sought to fill. Post-war, France aimed to re-establish its colonial empire, while the U.S., under Franklin D. Roosevelt, paradoxically supported decolonization efforts, viewing colonialism as morally problematic. Nonetheless, during Harry Truman’s presidency, American strategic interests, particularly naval and air bases, prompted a tacit endorsement of France's return to Indochina, initially avoiding direct assistance.

The Rise of Cold War Dynamics

The Cold War context intensified U.S. engagement. The fall of China to communists in 1949 and the outbreak of the Korean War heightened American fears of the domino effect, where the fall of one nation to communism could trigger a chain reaction across the region. President Eisenhower famously articulated the Domino Theory, arguing that a communist victory in Vietnam would lead to the fall of neighboring countries. This ideology justified increased American aid, totaling billions of dollars, to bolster South Vietnam’s non-communist government and military.

French Defeat and Geneva Accords

The French efforts culminated at Dien Bien Phu in 1954, where Vietnamese forces led by Ho Chi Minh overwhelmed the French garrison. The decisive victory signaled the end of French colonial ambitions in Indo-China and led to the Geneva Accords, which temporarily divided Vietnam into a communist North and a non-communist South. The agreement included scheduled elections that never took place, primarily because South Vietnamese leader Ngo Dinh Diem and supported U.S. policymakers feared communist victory, thus initiating a period of heightened tension and conflict.

The Escalation of U.S. Involvement

Following the Geneva agreement, the United States increased its involvement, originally providing military advisers under President Eisenhower, justified by the domino theory. Under President Kennedy, aid and advisory support expanded further, with the U.S. backing South Vietnam against communist insurgents, notably the Viet Cong. When Lyndon B. Johnson assumed office, he inherited a fragile situation but dramatically escalated the conflict following the Gulf of Tonkin incident, which provided a congressional mandate for extensive military action.

Johnson’s War Strategies and Failures

President Johnson implemented a multifaceted military strategy, including large-scale bombing campaigns (Operation Rolling Thunder) and deploying hundreds of thousands of ground troops. Despite deploying over 500,000 American soldiers, the U.S. struggled to halt the insurgency, especially with guerrilla tactics employed by the Viet Cong. The Tet Offensive of 1968 was a turning point; despite military victories for the U.S., the offensive’s scale and ferocity eroded American morale and political support, fundamentally shifting U.S. aims from containment to seeking an end to the war.

Nixon’s Promises and Policies

In 1968, Richard Nixon promised to end the war with "peace with honor." His strategy centered around Vietnamization—gradually withdrawing American troops while strengthening South Vietnamese forces. Additionally, Nixon authorized secret bombing campaigns in Cambodia and Laos to cut off the Ho Chi Minh Trail, a vital supply route for North Vietnamese troops. These controversial bombings destabilized Cambodia, leading to the rise of the Khmer Rouge and further complicating regional stability.

The Final Phase and Collapse

Nixon’s negotiations and military withdrawals culminated in the 1973 Paris Peace Accords, which