a25fbdfa4d6a72d8cecd873e2a683ddc.ppt
- Количество слайдов: 29
Vietnam: In Search of a Strategy Situation to 1965
Lesson Objectives • Describe the U. S. involvement in Vietnam in the context of the Cold War. • Understand describe the challenges posed by the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRV) against the south. • Understand describe the situation in the Republic of Vietnam (RVN) after 1959 and the RVN reaction to the challenge from the north. . • Describe the doctrine of limited war and counterinsurgency as espoused by the Kennedy Administration. • Relate the timeline of events that led to U. S. involvement in Southeast Asia. • Analyze the early roots of the U. S. search for a strategy for the Vietnam War.
Timeline 1961 2, 530 Kennedy ordered 2, 530 more advisors to South Vietnam
Timeline May 61 11 Dec 61 Mar 62 Kennedy ordered 2, 530 more advisors to South Vietnam US Army helicopters arrived in South Vietnam USAF personnel began “training” ops in VNAF aircraft
US Advisors (to Army of the Republic of Vietnam - ARVN) (first 2: 00)
US Advisors (to Montagnard irregulars) (5: 00)
Early Air Operations Aircraft Markings USAF VNAF
Early Air Operations You. Tube 3: 038: 00
The Vietnam War Operation Ranch Hand Defoliation Spray Missions More
Operation Ranch Hand You. Tube 8: 009: 02
Timeline 1961 11 Dec 61 Kennedy ordered 2, 530 more advisors to South Vietnam US Army helicopters arrived in South Vietnam Mar 62 USAF personnel began “training” ops in VNAF aircraft Mar 62 RVN initiated Strategic Hamlet Relocation Program May 62 VC began battalion-sized operations (Central Highlands) 1 Aug 62 Kennedy signed Foreign Assistance Act of 1962 • Provided assistance to countries under Communist attack 3 Jan 63 Battle of Ap Bac: VC inflicted major defeat on RVN force • Significant setback for US faith in Diem government
Timeline 1961 11 Dec 61 Kennedy ordered 2, 530 more advisors to South Vietnam US Army helicopters arrived in South Vietnam Mar 62 USAF personnel began “training” ops in VNAF aircraft Mar 62 RVN initiated Strategic Hamlet Relocation Program May 62 VC began battalion-sized operations (Central Highlands) 1 Aug 62 Kennedy signed Foreign Assistance Act of 1962 • Provided assistance to countries under Communist attack 3 Jan 63 Battle of Ap Bac: VC inflicted major defeat on RVN force • Significant setback for US faith in Diem government
Timeline May- Aug 63 Aug-Oct 63 1 Nov 63 Buddhist unrest, repression in South Vietnam Kennedy Administration discusses options for Diem CIA-supported ARVN coup overthrows Diem • Diem and this brother killed by ARVN 22 Nov 63 President Kennedy assassinated in Dallas
US Locked In General William C. Westmoreland, who seven months after Diem's assassination replaced General Paul Harkins as commander of MACV, summed up the consequences of President Kennedy's involvement. “In his zeal, the young president made a grievous mistake in assenting to the overthrow of South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem in 1963, ” Westmoreland said. “In my view that action morally locked us in Vietnam. If it had not been for our involvement in the overthrow of President Diem, we could perhaps have gracefully withdrawn our support when South Vietnam's lack of unity and leadership became apparent. ” Why It Was Impossible for the U. S. to Stay Uninvolved Col. William Wilson, USA (Retired) Vietnam Magazine, April 1997
Situation 1964 White House concerned about the 1964 election Staffers realized current advising strategy was not succeeding • Predicted North Vietnamese takeover that year • Hoped to stave off collapse until after election Fredrik Logevall “Lyndon Johnson and Vietnam” Presidential Studies Quarterly, March 2004 Link
Timeline Mar 64 Secret CIA bombing of Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos began • Civilian pilots (Air America) flying old U. S. aircraft May 64 LBJ staff begins drafting Congressional support resolution • Temporarily shelved due to lack of support in Senate Summer 64 Guerilla warfare spreading throughout South Vietnam • Now supported by NVA regulars 2 -4 Aug 64 7 Aug 64 Gulf of Tonkin Incident Gulf of Tonkin Resolution passed by Congress • Authorizes president to use force to protect U. S. forces • President orders retaliatory strikes against North Vietnam 14 Dec 64 US begins secret bombing of HCMT in Laos
Timeline 16 Oct 64 I Nov 64 China explodes its first nuclear weapon VC attack Bien Hoa Air Base • First attack on Americans; five Gis killed 3 Nov 64 Lyndon Johnson elected to presidency by landslide
Attacks on US Airfields I Nov 64 VC attack Bien Hoa Air Base near Saigom • First attack on Americans; five Gis killed 6 Feb 65 VC attack US base at Pleiku (central Highlands) • Eight Americans killed, ten aircraft destroyed 7 Feb 65 President orders air strikes against North Vietnam • Operation Flaming Dart continues to 24 Feb 65 7 Mar 65 President authorizes Operation Rolling Thunder • Progressively escalating air attack against North Vietnam • Dual military and political objectives • Ran until 2 Nov 68
Operation Rolling Thunder
Support for Buildup “Even in the aftermath of the Gulf of Tonkin incident, as the Johnson administration began increasing troop levels in Southeast Asia, … 45 percent of Americans wanted to stay the course in Vietnam, ” … 36 percent wanted to 'step up the war by carrying the fight to North Vietnam, ' for example, through more air strikes against communist territory, … while only 19 percent supported pulling out. In short, by a large A margin, Americans demanded victory of their leaders. . . Lyndon Johnson, then, was acting with the full faith and support of his electorate. Joshua Zeitz "1964 - The Year the Sixties Began" American Heritage, October 2006 Source
LBJ’s Dilemma “In later years [Johnson] lamented: 'I knew from the start that I was bound to be crucified either way I moved. If I left the woman I really loved, the Great Society, in order to get involved in that bitch of a war on the other side of the world, I would lose everything at home. All my programs. . But if I left that war and let the communists take over South Vietnam, then I would be seen as a coward and my nation would be seen as an appeaser, and we would both find it impossible to accomplish anything for anybody anywhere on the entire globe. ’” Joshua Zeitz "1964 - The Year the Sixties Began" American Heritage, October 2006 Source
The Great Society
LBJ’s Dilemma Escalate or Withdraw
Discussions on Escalation Feb 65 – Jul 65 Part 1 Feb-Mar 64 Part 2 May 64 Part 3 Jun-Aug 64 Part 5 Feb-Jun 65 Jun-Jul 65
End
LBJ’s Dilemma “In later years [Johnson] lamented: 'I knew from the start that I was bound to be crucified either way I moved. If I left the woman I really loved, the Great Society, in order to get involved in that bitch of a war on the other side of the world, I would lose everything at home. All my programs. . But if I left that war and let the communists take over South Vietnam, then I would be seen as a coward and my nation would be seen as an appeaser, and we would both find it impossible to accomplish anything for anybody anywhere on the entire globe. '" Joshua Zeitz "1964 - The Year the Sixties Began" American Heritage, October 2006 Source
Buildup In Vietnam Why was our buildup in Vietnam so slow? Vietnam: 1964 - 1968 Gulf War: Aug 1990 - Jan-Mar 1991 Gradual escalation? Fear of Soviet or Chinese intervention? Lack of infrastructure? Probably a little of each!