VIETNAM
WAR
First a handful of
advisers. Then the Marines. Finally an army of half a million. That was
the Vietnam War. It was an undeclared war. A war without front lines or
clear objectives. A war against an elusive enemy. A war.
"I am only 21. I
do not remember the war when it was happening. But I promise I'll
bring my kids here one day, make them remember, make it somehow more
than just another story."
Racheline Maltese
Commenting on the Vietnam War Memorial
Over 58,000 Americans
killed, 200,000 wounded.
Although difficult to
confirm casualties for the Vietnamese may be approximately 700,00 to
1,600,000
The
war divided a nation and cost it a generation of their children.
Father and son fought one another, citizens fought their government and
hundreds of thousands of young men went to war. Protesting against
war was not new. Every war America has ever fought had its
dissenters. It is not only the right of a citizen in a free
society to disagree with their government's actions, it is a duty of all
free men and women to stand up for what they believe. What seems odd
today is that what most soldiers thought they were fighting for was the
right of their fellow citizens to live in a free country and to be able
to speak out against the policies of their government. The
argument was not against America or its fine young men who fought in the
war. The fight was against the policy that sent them there.
The Americans who fought in Vietnam were citizen soldiers who went
thousands of miles away to fight for the freedom of other men.
There can be no more noble behavior then that. May God hold in
high regard all that fought for what they believed in regardless of the
side they were on. We were then, as we are now, all Americans.
R. A
Guisepi
The Vietnam War was
the longest and most unpopular war in which Americans ever fought. And
there is no reckoning the cost. The toll in suffering, sorrow, in
rancorous national turmoil can never be tabulated. No one wants ever to
see America so divided again. And for many of the more than two million
American veterans of the war, the wounds of Vietnam will never heal.
Fifty-eight thousand
Americans lost their lives.
The losses to the
Vietnamese people were appalling.
The financial cost to
the United States comes to something over $150 billion dollars.
Direct American
involvement began in 1955 with the arrival of the first advisors. The
first combat troops arrived in 1965 and we fought the war until the
cease-fire of January 1973. To a whole new generation of young Americans
today, it seems a story from the olden times.
by David
McCullough
Roots of
a War
The end of World War II opened the way for the return of French rule to
Indochina. Despite the ties he had forged within the American
Intelligence community, and his professed respect for democratic ideals,
Ho Chi Minh was unable to convince Washington to recognize the
legitimacy of his independence movement against the French. French
generals and their American advisors expected Ho's rag-tag Vietminh
guerrillas to be defeated easily. But after eight years of fighting and
$2.5 billion in U.S. aid, the French lost a crucial battle at
Dienbienphu - and with it, their Asian empire.
America's Mandarin
With a goal of stopping the spread of communism in Southeast Asia,
America replaced France in South Vietnam - supporting autocratic
President Ngo Dinh Diem until his own generals turned against him in a
coup that brought political chaos to Saigon.
LBJ Goes to War
With Ho Chi Minh determined to reunite Vietnam, Lyndon Baines Johnson
determined to prevent it, and South Vietnam on the verge of collapse,
the stage was set for massive escalation of the undeclared Vietnam War.
America Takes Charge
In two years, the Johnson Administration's troop build-up dispatched 1.5
million Americans to Vietnam to fight a war they found baffling,
tedious, exciting, deadly and unforgettable.
America's Enemy
The Vietnam War as seen from different perspectives by Vietcong
guerrillas and sympathizers, by North Vietnamese leaders and rank and
file, and by Americans held prisoner in Hanoi.
Tet, 1968
The massive enemy offensive at the lunar new year decimated the Vietcong
and failed to topple the Saigon government but led to the beginning of
America's military withdrawal from Vietnam.
Vietnamizing the War
Richard Nixon's program of troop pull-outs, stepped-up bombing and huge
arms shipments to Saigon changed the war and left GIs wondering which of
them would be the last to die in Vietnam.
Cambodia and Laos
Despite technical neutrality, both of Vietnam's smaller neighbors were
drawn into the war, suffered massive bombings, and, in the case of
Cambodia, endured a post-war holocaust of nightmarish proportions.
Peace Is at Hand
While American and Vietnamese soldiers continued to clash in battle,
diplomats in Paris argued about making peace. After more than four
years, they reached an accord that proved to be a preface to further
bloodshed.
Homefront USA.
Through troubled years of controversy and violence, US casualties
mounted, victory remained elusive, and American opinion moved from
general approval to general dissatisfaction with the Vietnam War.
The End of the Tunnel
South Vietnamese leaders believed that America would never let them go
down to defeat - a belief that died as North Vietnamese tanks smashed
into Saigon on April 30, 1975, and the long war ended with South
Vietnam's surrender.
The History
There were four
countries that were divided during the years after World War II as the
result of global Communist strategy: China, Germany, Korea, and Vietnam.
Until formal reunification in 1976, Vietnam was split at the 17th
parallel of latitude into North Vietnam, with a Communist government,
and South Vietnam, with a republican government. Much of Vietnam had
been controlled by France for over a century as part of French
Indochina.
Following World War II
a bloody seven-and-a-half-year struggle raged between Communist
Vietnamese and the French for control of the land. Finally a peace
conference was held at Geneva, Switzerland, to determine the fate of
Indochina. Concluding in July 1954, the conference determined that
French rule would be ended in Vietnam and that the country would be
temporarily divided politically.
Neighboring Laos and
Cambodia, comprising the rest of Indochina, were prohibited from making
military alliances. Foreign military bases were barred from their
territory and from Vietnam.
Rebels Raid South Vietnam
Not long after the
1954 partition, United States military advisers assumed the task of
training the South Vietnamese army. At the same time, Ho Chi Minh,
president of North Vietnam, pledged to "liberate" South
Vietnam.
Communist guerrillas,
known as the Viet Cong, infiltrated across the border and by way of Laos
in large numbers, supplementing bands of native Communist terrorists in
the south. A chief objective of these rebels--who were directly
controlled by the Vietminh, North Vietnam's governing faction--was to
disrupt South Vietnamese social and economic improvement programs. The
assassination of local administrators was one of the ways in which
guerrillas sought to bring this about. Guerrilla bands also raided
industrial plants, plantations, military installations, and entire
villages. Frequently they attacked at night, withdrawing afterward to
the security of the forest. Seldom were the South Vietnamese forces able
to fight them in the open.
The struggle in
Vietnam was never concentrated along a single front. Patches and strips
of Communist-held territory spread gradually across the map of South
Vietnam. By 1965 much of the coastline and nearly all borderlands had
fallen to the rebels. Most of the Mekong Delta, Vietnam's vital
rice-growing area, had also been seized.
South Vietnam Government
Loses Support
Rebel gains coincided
with the waning popularity of South Vietnam's president, Ngo Dinh Diem.
Elected in 1955, Diem enjoyed great popularity at first, but public
support, as well as that of military officers and cabinet ministers,
gradually disappeared. This stemmed largely from the fact that Diem's
brother and closest adviser, Ngo Dinh Nhu, was able to manipulate
officers and military units at his discretion. Madame Ngo Dinh Nhu,
Diem's bitterly outspoken sister-in-law, also played a unique and
important role in arousing the disfavor of Vietnamese and foreigners
alike.
In October 1961
President John F. Kennedy sent his military adviser, Gen. Maxwell D.
Taylor, to South Vietnam to evaluate that country's economic and
military condition. General Taylor reported that infiltration of the
Viet Cong from the north was increasing, that South Vietnam's economy
had suffered drastically, and that better and more equipment was needed.
American aid was stepped up. During the next two years more than 16,000
military advisers were sent to South Vietnam, and some 400 million
dollars was provided in military aid alone. For the time being, Viet
Cong successes were halted.
A serious setback
occurred in May 1963, when President Diem, a Roman Catholic, prohibited
the flying of the Buddhist flag. Thousands of Buddhists were arrested,
and some were tortured or killed. Buddhist priests publicly burned
themselves to death in protest; national morale was badly shaken. The
Viet Cong attacked with greater fervor. Casualties and desertions from
the South Vietnamese army rose sharply as public displeasure with the
Diem regime mounted. In early November, barely three weeks before
President Kennedy was killed in Dallas, Diem and Nhu were assassinated.
A military junta assumed control. The government remained unstable,
however, with a marked absence of popular support.
United States Warships
Attacked
On Aug. 2, 1964, the
United States was drawn further into the conflict when the USS Maddox,
a destroyer cruising in the Gulf of Tonkin, was attacked by North
Vietnamese patrol boats 30 miles off the coast of North Vietnam. Two
days later the Maddox and another destroyer were attacked; two
North Vietnamese patrol boats were sunk by return fire. President Lyndon
B. Johnson ordered retaliatory air attacks.
The continuing
instability of the Vietnamese government made United States assistance
more difficult. Coups, attempted coups, or government shake-ups occurred
almost monthly. The State Department warned that unless Vietnamese army
officers kept out of politics, American aid might be discontinued. Mass
demonstrations by Buddhist groups alternated with those of Catholics,
depending upon which of these groups was in power at the time.
CAPTAIN
TED DANIELSEN, May 1966
Come on,
First, come on, let's go! We're falling behind, we might have some-thing
up there. (Gunfire) Just keep going up to the top of the hill, pull up
behind 2-6 maybe...Come on Sergeant Havard, you're overdue. Take a deep
breath. Come on, keep movin'. (Gunfire) If y'all move out up there to
get up on the top, go ahead. Let the second platoon handle it if they
can. (Gunfire)
Terrorist attacks upon
American installations in South Vietnam became frequent. These were
calculated to discourage the United States into complete withdrawal from
Vietnam. Their immediate effect, however, was to increase the tempo of
air raids by American aircraft against North Vietnam. Principal targets
were highways and bridges. In neighboring Laos, bombers also struck the
Ho Chi Minh Trail, an important Viet Cong supply line. United States
warships shelled North Vietnamese coastal installations.
Peace Bids; Civil War
Threatens
In April 1965
President Johnson proposed that "unconditional discussions" be
held for a settlement of the conflict. His peace move was ignored by
North Vietnam. The North Vietnamese insisted that United States forces
first be withdrawn from South Vietnam. They also stipulated that the
United Nations must not intervene and that the internal affairs of South
Vietnam would have to be settled in accordance with the program of the
National Liberation Front, the political arm of the Viet Cong. Johnson
maintained that these matters could not be discussed prior to a peace
conference. In June he urged the United Nations to seek a solution.
An era of relative
stability in South Vietnam's government began in June when a new
military regime was installed. The new regime was led by a ten-man
military junta, which called itself the National Leadership Committee.
Air Force Commander Vice- Marshal Nguyen Cao Ky, a member of the
council, was named premier.
Ky's first crisis in
office followed his dismissal of Lieut. Gen. Nguyen Chanh Thi in March
1966 from the military council and from his post as a regional army
commander. Thi had established himself as virtual warlord of several
provinces in northern South Vietnam. He had also aligned himself with
politically powerful Buddhists, including Thich Tri Quang. When
followers of General Thi publicly protested his dismissal, Tri Quang
encouraged further antigovernment demonstrations. The Buddhists demanded
that civilians be represented on the governing council and that
elections be held for a national assembly.
Civil war threatened
as fighting erupted between government forces and troops loyal to Thi.
Riots instigated by the Buddhists, notably Tri Quang, broke out in
Saigon, Hue, and Da Nang. Again, as in 1963 Buddhists publicly burned
themselves to death. In April Premier Ky acceded to most of the Buddhist
demands; elections were scheduled for later in the year. The unrest
continued, however, as militant Buddhists called for Ky's resignation.
Meanwhile government troops won back control of the cities which had
been taken over by Thi's followers. By mid-1966 the rioting had also
subsided.
United States Role
Accelerates
During 1965 the United
States became even more deeply committed to South Vietnam's struggle for
freedom. In February it was officially revealed that planes raiding
North Vietnam were being flown by American personnel. In June it was
acknowledged that United States troops were engaged in combat with the
Viet Cong. By midyear the size of the United States force in South
Vietnam exceeded 50,000 troops, having doubled in less than six months.
Although contingents had also arrived from South Korea, Australia, and
New Zealand, the military situation in South Vietnam continued to
deteriorate. Military observers theorized that 1965 was the year
scheduled by the Communists for total victory. With the approach of the
summer rainy season and an anticipated Viet Cong offensive, Ky asked for
more American ground forces. Between July and November a fighting force
of an additional 100,000 men was transferred from military bases in the
United States to Vietnam.
The first major
American victory took place in August at Chu Lai, where more than 5,000
United States troops defeated an estimated 2,000 Viet Cong. In November
American forces won a decisive victory over a large North Vietnamese
force in the Ia Drang Valley. It was the first time that a major Viet
Cong or North Vietnamese force had abandoned hit-and-run guerrilla
tactics for open combat. Ia Drang was the bloodiest battle of the war to
that date.
In January 1966 some
20,000 American, South Vietnamese, and South Korean troops encircled
four enemy regiments south of Da Nang. A successful allied sweep through
the central coastal province of Binh Dinh took place in the spring.
In February 1965
United States bombers attacked North Vietnam in retaliation for a Viet
Cong raid on the United States helicopter base at Plei Ku. The Viet Cong
bombing raids continued, however.
In May the air strikes
against the North were suspended for five days, following President
Johnson's invitation in April to "unconditional discussions"
of peace. The raids were again suspended in late December 1965 and
throughout January 1966 as a so-called "peace offensive" was
launched by President Johnson and other world leaders. The North
Vietnamese failed to respond to these overtures.
In June 1966 United
States bombers made their first attack on the industrial outskirts of
North Vietnam's two largest cities--Hanoi, the capital, and Haiphong,
the chief port. Subsequent American bombing raids were made on these as
well as other industrial centers and on MiG air bases in North Vietnam.
United States
forces--increased from 190,000 in January 1966 to more than 500,000 by
early 1968--used "search-and-destroy" tactics to expel
National Liberation Front (NLF) forces from the South. In 1967 and 1968,
American troops raided NLF troop concentrations in the demilitarized
zone.
In January 1968 the
NLF launched a large-scale offensive throughout the South during Tet,
the Vietnamese Lunar New Year holiday. The targets included about 30
provincial capitals.
On March 31 President
Johnson--faced with increasing antiwar sentiment--announced a halt in
all bombing north of the 20th parallel and offered to negotiate for
peace with North Vietnam. Peace talks began in Paris in May, but were
quickly deadlocked. After the United States stopped bombing North
Vietnam in early November, the North Vietnamese agreed not to escalate
the war. In January 1969 South Vietnam and the NLF joined the talks.
On April 29, 1970,
American and South Vietnamese ground forces began an assault on North
Vietnamese and NLF sanctuaries in Cambodia. Months later, similar action
was taken by the South Vietnamese on targets in Cambodia and Laos in
1971. (In 1973 the United States government reluctantly admitted that it
had conducted secret bombing missions inside Cambodia in 1969, and in
Laos in 1970.) American troop withdrawals, which had begun in the summer
of 1969, left fewer than 200,000 Americans in South Vietnam at the end
of 1971.
In April 1972 the
United States bombed civilian dwellings and military targets in the
cities of Hanoi and Haiphong. In May of that year, in response to a
drive by the North Vietnamese forces into the South, President Richard
M. Nixon ordered the mining of harbors off North Vietnam. Both the
bombing and the mining provoked sustained antiwar protests within the
United States.
SOLDIER
IN HELICOPTER: ...break left.
CAPT. TED
DANIELSEN: Two calling six, I've got 'em on corral. I've got contact
with some snipers. Over. ...Everybody get off the middle of this L. Z.
Everybody. Move out! Get out there. Four-six get that mortar set up on
the hill, I want fire in one minute.
The End of the Conflict
On Jan. 27, 1973, a
cease-fire was signed in Paris by the United States, South Vietnam,
North Vietnam, and the Provisional Revolutionary Government of the NLF.
A Four-Party Joint Military Commission was set up to implement such
provisions as the withdrawal of foreign troops and the release of
prisoners. An International Commission of Control and Supervision was
established to oversee the cease-fire.
United States ground
troops left Vietnam by the end of March 1973. Fighting continued,
however, as the North and the South accused each other of truce
violations. A second cease-fire was signed in June, but the hostilities
continued through 1974.
The ultimate fall of
South Vietnam began with the capture of Phuoc Long Province in January
1975. Soon more inland provinces were under North Vietnamese control and
the major coastal cities had fallen, with little resistance from
Southern troops. The war in Cambodia ended on April 16, and the South
surrendered on April 30, 1975, as enemy troops entered Saigon
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