Vietnam War
The Vietnam War was a military struggle
starting in 1959 and ending in 1975. It
began as an attempt by the Vietcong
(Communist Guerrillas) to overthrow the
Southern Vietnam Government. This
research paper will discuss the Vietnam War,
US involvement in this war,
and significant battles. Following the surrender of
Japan to the Allies
in August 1945, Vietminh guerrillas seized the capital city
of Hanoi and
forced the abdication of Emperor Bao Dai. On September 2 they
declared
Vietnam to be independent and announced the creation of the
Democratic
Republic of Vietnam, commonly called North Vietnam, with Ho
Chi Minh as
president. France officially recognized the new state, but the
subsequent
inability of the Vietminh and France to reach satisfactory
political and
economic agreements led to armed conflict beginning in December
1946.
"Northern Vietnam was determined to gain it's freedom" (Davis
12).
With French backing Bao Dai set up the state of Vietnam, commonly
called South
Vietnam, on July 1, 1949, and established a new capital at
Saigon (now Ho Chi
Minh City). "Where as the Southern Vietnam government
seemed content to be
a sort of a colony" (Davis 12). The following year, the
U.S. officially
recognized the Saigon government, and to assist it. President
Harry S. Truman
dispatched a military assistance advisory group to train
South Vietnam in the
use of U.S. weapons. In April 1961, a treaty of amity
and economic relations was
signed with South Vietnam, and in December,
President John F. Kennedy pledged to
help South Vietnam maintain its
independence. Subsequently, U.S. economic and
military assistance to the Diem
government increased significantly. In December
1961, the first U.S.
troops, consisting of 400 uniformed army personnel, arrived
in Saigon in
order to operate two helicopter companies; the U.S. proclaimed,
however, that
the troops were not combat units as such. A year later, U.S.
military
strength in Vietnam stood at 11,200. By the end of 1965 American
combat
strength was nearly 200,000. In February 1965, U.S. planes began
regular bombing
raids over North Vietnam. A halt was ordered in May in the
hope of initiating
peace talks, but when North Vietnam rejected all
negotiations, the bombings were
resumed. From February 1965 to the end of
all-out U.S. involvement in 1973,
South Vietnamese forces mainly fought
against the Vietcong guerrillas. While
U.S. and allied troops fought the
North Vietnamese in a war of attrition marked
by battles in such places as
the Ia Dang Valley, Dak To, Loc Ninh, and Khe Sanh-all
victories for the
non-Communist forces. During his 1967-68 campaign, the North
Vietnamese
strategist, Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap, launched the famous Tet offensive,
a
coordinated series of fierce attacks on more than 100 urban targets.
Despite its
devastating psychological effect, the campaign, which Giap hoped
would be
successful, failed, and Vietcong forces were ultimately driven back
from most of
the positions they had gained. In the fighting, North Vietnam
lost 85,000 of its
best troops. In 1969, within a few months after taking
office, Johnson's
successor, President Richard M. Nixon, announced that
25,000 U. S. troops would
be withdrawn from Vietnam by August 1969. Another
cut of 65,000 troops was
ordered by the end of the year. The program, known
as Vietnamization of the war,
came into effect, as President Nixon emphasized
additional responsibilities of
the South Vietnamese. Neither the U.S. troop
reduction nor the death of North
Vietnamese President Ho Chi Minh, on
Sept. 3, served to break the stalemate in
Paris; the North Vietnamese
delegates insisted upon complete U.S. withdrawal as
a condition for peace. In
April 1970, U.S. combat troops entered Cambodia
following the occurrence
there of a political coup. Within three months, the
U.S. campaign in
Cambodia ended, "It was as if the American military had
just gone into
Cambodia to waist time" (Davis 53), but air attacks on North
Vietnam were
renewed. By 1971 South Vietnamese forces were playing an increasing
role in
the war, fighting in both Cambodia and Laos as well as in South
Vietnam.
At this point, however, the Paris talks and the war itself were
overshadowed by
the presidential election in South Vietnam. The chief
contestants were Nguyen
Van Thieu, who was running for reelection,
Vice-President Nguyen Cao Ky, and
Gen. Duong Van Minh. Both Ky and Minh,
after charging that the election had been
rigged, withdrew, and Thieu won
another 4-year term. Through the later months of
1971, American
withdrawal continued so rapidly that "it seemed like there
was a plague in
Vietnam" (Sims 83). It coincided, however, with a new
military buildup in
North Vietnam, thought to be in preparation for a major
drive down the Ho Chi
Minh Trail into Laos and Cambodia. "You could just
tell the Northern Vietnam
Army was getting ready for the last great drive of the
war" (Sims 85). Heavy
U.S. air attacks followed throughout the Indochina
war sector. On the ground,
meanwhile, Vietnamese Communist forces had launched
massive effective attacks
against government forces in South Vietnam, Cambodia,
and Laos. "The hearts
and souls of the Southern soldiers were beginning to
break" (Sims 90). It was
feared also that Hanoi might launch a major
offensive in South Vietnam's
central highlands, timing the operating for the Tet
observance. Casualty
figures in 1971 reflected the intensification of South
Vietnam's own
fighting efforts against the Communists. While U.S. deaths in
Vietnam
declined dramatically to 1380, compared to 4221 in 1970, the Saigon
forces,
on the other hand, suffered about 21,500 dead, some in Cambodia and Laos
but
the majority in South Vietnam. The South Vietnamese claimed the enemy
death
toll to be 97,000. "The war was over and for the first time the
military
forces of the United States of America wasn't sure whether it had
won or lost
this war, it would change America forever" (Davis 110).