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Vietnam (1950-1975) I.Why? II.Beginnings (1950-63) A.Truman B.Eisenhower & JFK III.Escalation (1964-68) A.LBJ B.Tonkin C.Increase D.Tet E.Students IV.Out.

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Presentation on theme: "Vietnam (1950-1975) I.Why? II.Beginnings (1950-63) A.Truman B.Eisenhower & JFK III.Escalation (1964-68) A.LBJ B.Tonkin C.Increase D.Tet E.Students IV.Out."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Vietnam (1950-1975) I.Why? II.Beginnings (1950-63) A.Truman B.Eisenhower & JFK III.Escalation (1964-68) A.LBJ B.Tonkin C.Increase D.Tet E.Students IV.Out (1969-1973) A.Nixon V.Legacy…? Key Terms Nation-Building Tonkin Resolution Tet Offensive “Counterculture” Vietnamization

3 Themes How/why did US become involved? Trace escalation of US involvement-each President

4 Why Become Involved? Containment of Communism

5 Containment (1947-1989) 1.US could do nothing about removing the Soviets from areas already under their control. George F. Kennan Mr. X 2.US MUST contain any/all expansion by USSR. 3.Negotiate first; use force as a last resort. Foundation of US foreign policy for entire Cold War.

6 Vietnam War: Background It had been a colony of France, but was divided after WWII: North Vietnam-USSR South Vietnam-US Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

7 Beginnings In 1950 US gave $20 million to support anti-communists in South Vietnam. Harry S Truman (1945-1953)

8 Nation-Building (1953-1963) US policy to prevent South Vietnam from becoming Communist. Eisenhower- “Domino Theory” JFK- “Middle Course” Dwight Eisenhower (1953-1961) John Kennedy (1961-1963) 1961: 600 US “Advisors” 1963: 16,000 US Troops

9 Tonkin Incident (1964) US ship Maddox was in Gulf of Tonkin Apparently it was attacked LBJ asked for authority to retaliate Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

10 Tonkin Resolution (1964) 1.Authorized President to “take all necessary measures” to prevent communist aggression in Vietnam. 2.Gave legal justification to send troops into combat—but no declaration of war. 3.Passed overwhelmingly: House: 416-0 Senate: 88-2

11 Text of Joint Resolution Authorizing Use of Force: 9/15/01 “A) That the President is authorized to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September, 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons, in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by any such nations, organizations or persons.” Passed 96-0 in Senate and 420-1 in House of Representatives

12 Text of Joint Resolution Authorizing the Use of Force against Iraq. Passed 10/11/02 Passed 77-23 in Senate & 296-133 in House “Authorizes the President to use the U.S. armed forces to: (1) defend U.S. national security against the continuing threat posed by Iraq; and (2) enforce all relevant Security Council resolutions regarding Iraq.” It also directs the President to inform the Speaker of the House and the Senate President pro-tem within 48 hours of having used this authority. President must also report to Congress at least every 60 days on relevant matters.

13 Vietnam War: Background It had been a colony of France, but was divided after WWII: North Vietnam-USSR South Vietnam-US Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. In 1965 a US base in South Vietnam was attacked

14 Escalation (1965-1968) 1965: “Rolling Thunder” (50,000 troops) By 1968: 500,000 US troops President Lyndon Johnson

15 Students (Only) Begin To Protest 1965 Protest in WA DC Burning Draft Cards

16 Tet Offensive (January, 1968) Major North Vietnamese Offensive-caught US by surprise Initially military success for North, but they were pushed back Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Turning Point: Opposition to the war grew dramatically

17 Counter-Culture Parent’s Generation Three piece suit Crew Cut Monogamous relationships Alcohol as drug of choice Baby-Boom Generation Jeans Long hair Free love Illegal drugs

18 Vietnamization (1970s) 1.US would gradually withdraw from Vietnam. 2.US would train & equip South Vietnamese to fight themselves. 3.US began negotiations to end war. Richard M. Nixon (1969-1974)

19 Nixon & Out… North Vietnamese refused to negotiate US increased bombing & invaded neutral countries of Cambodia & Laos Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

20 Student Movement-Protests Lead To Violence Kent State, 1970

21 Nixon & Out… North Vietnamese refused to negotiate US increased bombing & invaded neutral Cambodia & Laos Following the “Christmas bombings” in 1972-73 a peace settlement was reached Image Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

22 Vietnam: The End 1973-last US troops leave Vietnam. 1975-Vietnam “falls” to communism. The last Americans leaving Saigon in 1975

23 Legacy Of Vietnam 1.Global containment was flawed-a failure 2.Undermined US self- confidence (was US a “Second Rate” world power?) 3.About 55,000 Americans & possibly 2 million Vietnamese died 1972 Photo

24 Vietnam (1950-1975) I.Why? II.Beginnings (1950-63) A.Truman B.Eisenhower & JFK III.Escalation (1964-68) A.LBJ B.Tonkin C.Increase D.Tet E.Students IV.Out (1969-1973) A.Nixon V.Legacy…? Key Terms Nation-Building Tonkin Resolution Tet Offensive “Counterculture” Vietnamization


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