Vietnam Revision Notes
Vietnam Revision Notes
Vietnam Revision Notes
1963-75
Revision Notes
Part 1; Reasons for the US
involvement in Vietnam
Vietnam was ruled by the French till 1954. Then it was divided into two
countries.
The communist ruler of North Vietnam, Ho Chi Minh, wanted to unite
the North and South under his control. He supported the Vietcongin
South Vietnam.
President Diemruled South Vietnam. He was strongly anti-
communist, but was also a brutal and unpopular leader.
America said it wanted to ‘save’ the South Vietnamese people from the
evils of communism.
But, remember that this was the time of the Cold War. Americans
were obsessed with stopping Communism, both abroad and at home in the
USA.
The Americans wanted to "contain"(stop) the spread of Communism in
the world (the Truman Doctrine). The USA wanted to support non-
Communist governments which were threatened by Communists. It knew
that the USSR and China, both Communist-ruled, were sending aid to
Communist North Vietnam.
The Americans also believed in the "domino theory". If Vietnam
became Communist, they were sure that neighbouring countries (e.g.
Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, Indonesia) would do so too.
Diem was a corrupt and brutal leader, who was very unpopular. He was a
Catholic ruling a mainly Buddhist country and gave Catholics all the best
jobs. This meant lots of South Vietnamese people did not like him and
were more likely to start supporting the Vietcong.
What did the Americans do to help Diem?
Army units were sent out into the villages and countryside to search
for and kill any Vietcongthey could find.
This led to much brutalityagainst the Vietnamese, partly because the
US soldiers were so afraid and angry when their friends were killed by
the Vietcong.
The US Army High Command measured the success or failure of a search
and destroy mission by the "body count",meaning the number of
Vietcongkilled.
Search and destroy missions were backed up by helicopters, which
were used to carry troops, arms and supplies. Helicopters were the best
form of transport in the thick rainforests and swamps of Vietnam.
Helicopters were also used as gunships armed with rocket launchers and
machine guns
What did General Westmoreland mean by a "war of
attrition"?
On the one hand, the Tet Offensive could be seen as a huge failure for the
North Vietnamese and Vietcong;
47% of the people killed during the Tet Offensive were Vietcong, 24%
were NVA and 22% were civilians. Just 5% were ARVN and 2% were US
troops. This seems to show it was a massive success for the Americans
(but see below!).
As a result of what they saw as a failure, the North Vietnamese agreed to
peace talkssoon after the Tet Offensive ended.
From now on, the NVA did most of the fighting, as the Vietcong
never recovered from the setback of Tet.
On the other hand, the Tet Offensive was a huge turning point and was a
major reason why more and more Americans turned against the war;
Before the Tet Offensive, the Americans had been quite confident -
maybe complacent - about the way the war was going. The US media had
given the Americans back home the impression that the war would soon
end.
But, when the news of Tet appeared, many Americans felt that they had
been deceived by the army. Vietcong troops were shown inside the US
embassy in Saigon, which seemed to show that the war could not be won,
or at least not for a long time.
Most Americans became convinced that the war had to be ended as soon
as possible. General Westmoreland, who saw Tet as a victory over the
Vietcong and NVA, was refused more troops.
Tet also played a large part in Johnson's decision to give up hopes of
standing as President again. Richard Nixon, the Republican candidate,
promised to end the war and was elected as President.
The truth about the massacre did not come out for eighteen months. Only
Lieutenant Calley was convicted of war crimes; he only served three years
of his life sentence.
Pictures of the massacre were shown around the word and people were
appalled.It was another reason why many Americans began to turn against the
war.
On the other hand, some Americans refused to believe the story and
some even approved of the massacre.
Part 5: The reunification of
Vietnam
Nixon ordered the invasion of Cambodia in 1970 and then Laos in 1971. The
aim was to disrupt the Ho Chi Minh Trail and to destroy Vietcong bases in these
countries.
The ARVN failed in their attempts and this seemed to prove that they could
not cope without US troops.
The invasions also led to more protests against the war back in the USA. It
seemed as if Nixon was escalating the war, not trying to bring about peace.
4 American students were shot dead by police in a demonstration at Kent
State University. This made even more people angry about US
involvement in Vietnam.
After the war ended the new Communist government acted in a very
brutal way, imprisoning and "re-educating" the supporters of the old
South Vietnamese regime. Peasants became disillusioned when their land
was taken from them and collectivised (run by the state). This was much
like Communist China, which you have also studied!
After the reunification of Vietnam in 1976 as a Communist republic, high
unemployment and starvation occurred. The economy collapsed .
Many Vietnamese left their country to emigrate illegally, by boat, to
other countries. Many of these "boat people " drowned or were
attacked and murdered by pirates.
What were the effects of the war on the United
States?
During the fighting, many Americans began to oppose the war . A
protest movement started and many young American men avoided or
refused the draft (conscription into the armed forces). Some fled to
Canada or Europe, others tore up or burnt their draft papers.
There was widespread resentment that many well-off young men
managed to avoid the draft, forexample by going to university. Poorer
Americans, many of them black, did most of the fighting.
The protest movement started in 1964, grew quickly after 1965 and
became bigger after the bombing of Cambodia in 1970.
Marches and demonstrations were common, especially on university
campuses. The worst incident took place at Kent State University in May,
1970, when National Guardsmen shot four students dead.
Young people were especially critical of the war. The late 1960's and
early 1970's were a period of rebellion and "dropping out". Hippies told
people to "make love, not war".
Some war veterans opposed the war, too. At the Veterans' March in
Washington in 1971, some ex-soldiers threw away the medals they had
won for bravery during the war.
The reasons why the USA lost can be divided into American weaknesses and
Vietnamese strengths.