Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

: North Vietnamese-USA struggle (The Strategies)

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: ": North Vietnamese-USA struggle (The Strategies)"— Presentation transcript:

1 1965 - 1969: North Vietnamese-USA struggle (The Strategies)
US Strategies: Force North Vietnam to give up war Make North Vietnam agree to a settlement acceptable to US Protect South Vietnam and win support of South Vietnamese North Vietnam and Viet Cong Strategies: Convince the people of South Vietnam to get rid of their government Destroy the morale of the ARVN (South Vietnam army) Inflict enough damage on US troops to convince it to withdraw Fight until full national liberation and unification of Vietnam was achieved South Vietnam government’s strategies Remove Viet Cong from villages Defend South Vietnam from invasion Rely on US money and support to achieve objectives

2 1965 - 1969: North Vietnamese-USA struggle (The Tactics)
USA/ ARVN North Vietnam/ Viet Cong 7 Feb 1965: USA launched ‘Operation Rolling Thunder’: - Widespread aerial bombing using cluster bombs and Chemical weapons (‘Agent Orange’ and Napalm used) Search and Destroy missions on enemy units (used airmobility to move troops) Bomb and cut off supply routes from North Vietnam to Viet Cong Win hearts and minds (build trust) with South Vietnamese Build support base among local population in South Vietnam. Avoid open battles with enemy – use of guerrilla tactics Booby traps, ambushes and mines Attack at night Use local population to gather information about troop movements NB: 31 January Viet Cong launched an attack on over 100 towns and cities in the south during New Year (or Tet) holiday More bombs dropped by USA on Vietnam than by Allies in whole of WWII. Napalm a form of burning petroleum which burns at 800 degrees ie burns skin to the bone. NB: tet offensive was a key turning point: US public realised that US was NOT winning the war!) NB: Students need to move beyond the description of tactics to thinking about how effective they were

3 The Tet Offensive – 31 January 1968 (A turning point in the war)
Viet Cong launched an attack on over 100 cities in South Vietnam (BBC) Some historians now argue that this offensive was a disaster for the Viet Cong and that after Tet it was largely the North Vietnamese Army which led the struggle in the south. USA also claimed a US victory. BUT… US public were horrified that Viet Cong could launch such an attack which included seizing the US embassy in Saigon. ‘What the hell’s going on here? I thought we were winning this war?’ (TV journalist Walter Conkite)

4 1965 - 1969: North Vietnamese-USA struggle
By 1968 it was clear that the USA was not winning the war. (Stalemate?) March 1968: President Johnson rejected the US army’s request for more troops to be sent to Vietnam + announced he would not stand for re-election. January 20, Richard M. Nixon was inaugurated as the 37th U.S. President. He pledged "peace with honor.”

5 1969 to 1975 – USA withdrawal from Vietnam
1969: ‘Nixon Doctrine’ stated that US would help those who helped themselves – ‘Vietnamisation’ phase of war began. 1970: Congress revoked the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution Nixon’s bombing raids into Cambodia led to intensification of anti-war protest within USA. Reduced US combat from 543,000 in 1968 to 24,200 by 1972. 27 January 1973 ceasefire agreed. Required unilateral withdrawal of all US troops from Vietnam.

6 The Civil war continued until March 1975 when North Vietnam took control of Saigon, renamed it Ho Chi Minh City and Vietnam was re-united.

7 “From , the wealthiest and most powerful nation in the history of the world made a maximum military effort, with everything short of atomic bombs, to defeat a nationalist revolutionary movement in a tiny peasant country – and failed”. (H. Zinn, A People’s History of the USA, (New York, 1980, p460) WHY?

8 Activity: Essay Plan Work in groups of 3 at your tables.
1. Use the images and text from the powerpoint presentation and the ideas conveyed in the You Tube footage to identify the main reasons why a small country like Vietnam was able to defeat the powerful USA. Write these key ideas in the first set of boxes on your Essay Planning Tool. 2. For each ‘General Idea’ identify a few ‘Specific Examples’ which could be used to substantiate the point you have made. Write these in the appropriate boxes.

9 Extract from the Vietnamese Declaration of Independence – 1945
… for more than eighty years, the French imperialists, abusing the standard of Liberty, Equality and Fraternity, have violated our fatherland and oppressed our fellow-citizens. They have acted contrary to the ideals of humanity and justice…we, members of the Provisional Government of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, solemnly declare to the world that Vietnam has the right to be free and independence country…The entire Vietnamese people are determined to mobilise all their physical and mental strength to sacrifice their lives and property to safeguard their independence and liberty.

10

11 Deforestation caused by USA spraying Agent Orange (TCDD Dioxin)
The Vietnamese Red Cross estimates that up to three million Vietnamese have suffered health effects from dioxin exposure, of whom 150,000 are children with birth defects

12 Ten year old Phan Thi Kim Phuc running naked down a street having torn off her burning clothes after an American Napalm attack. The US dropped over 400,000 tons of napalm on Vietnam during the war. (Napalm is a form of petroleum jelly which sticks to anything and burns through houses, forests, human skin…

13 The Massacre at My Lai - 16 March 1968.
Two US platoons responsible for the rape and massacre of c.347 unarmed civilians. Lieutenant Calley only person to stand trial for murder (fall guy for US army). Sentenced to life but served only 3 years. 80% of the US population polled said he should not be convicted. “personally I did not kill any Vietnamese that day. I mean personally. I represented the Us government” (link with previous G11 work on perpetrators, bystanders, upstanders) We huddled the villagers up. We made them squat down. I poured about four clips into the group. The mothers were hugging their children. While we kept on firing .  (An extract from the evidence of Paul Meadlo who was a US soldier at My Lai.) Women and children shot dead by American soldiers lie in the road at the village of My Lai, 1968.

14 Conscripted Soldiers: ‘Cherries’
Of the 3 million Americans involved in Vietnam war – about two-thirds were conscripts (‘cherries’) Average age of conscript = 19 years 12 month – ‘tour of duty’ Anti-conscription campaign in USA Conscripts were inexperienced and made mistakes. Often used to carry equipment and put on ‘point’ (they would be first to be killed by booby traps and mines) 1967: World famous boxer Muhammad Ali refused his draft saying ‘I ain’t got no quarrel with those Viet Cong. They never called me nigger’ He was stripped of his titles, fined $10,000 and give 5 years in prison – he bacame an anti-war hero. A student (illegally) burns his draft card during an anti-war demonstration. Over 200,000 young men dodged the draft.

15 A Soviet cartoon mocking the large number of US casualties in Vietnam.


Download ppt ": North Vietnamese-USA struggle (The Strategies)"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google