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Vietnam AP US History Mrs. Marshall

Vietnam AP US History Mrs. Marshall. Vietnam is located on the continent of Southeast Asia. From late 1800’s until WWII it was ruled by France. Vietnamese often rebelled. Many of the rebellions were led by Ho Chi Minh of the Communist Party. 1941- Japan conquered Vietnam

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Vietnam AP US History Mrs. Marshall

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  1. Vietnam AP US History Mrs. Marshall

  2. Vietnam is located on the continent of Southeast Asia. • From late 1800’s until WWII it was ruled by France. • Vietnamese often rebelled. Many of the rebellions were led by Ho Chi Minh of the Communist Party.

  3. 1941- Japan conquered Vietnam • 1941- Vietnamese Communist joined with other groups to form an organization called the Vietminh whose goal was to achieve independence for Vietnam.

  4. 1945- Japan defeated in WWII. Japan left Vietnam. The Vietminh claimed independence for Vietnam. • 1946- French troops moved back into the country. They conquered southern half of Vietnam. The Vietminh took control of the north. For the next 8 years the two sides fought for control of the entire country

  5. U.S. supported France-considered the Vietminh to be communists

  6. President Eisenhower’s domino theory. Compared many of the world’s smaller nations to dominos-if one nation fell, the rest would also fall.

  7. 1954- Vietminh defeated the French. Vietminh conquered large French outpost at Dienbienphu

  8. Peace agreement was called the Geneva Accords. • It temporarily split Vietnam in half. The Vietminh controlled North Vietnam and the anti-communist nationalists controlled South Vietnam. • Geneva Accords called for election in 1956 to unify the country

  9. North Vietnam was ruled by Ho Chi Minh • South Vietnam was ruled by Ngo Dinh Diem • 1956 election: • Diem refused to take part because he feared Ho Chi Minh would win and the whole nation would become communists.

  10. U.S. supported Diem’s decision and provided aid. • 1957- a rebel group formed in the south. The Vietcong fought Diem’s rule. Ho Chi Minh supported the Vietcong

  11. Ho Chi Minh Trail • a network of paths that ran between North and South Vietnam. Was used to move weapons/supplies

  12. U.S. continued to support South Vietnam. Diem’s government grew more unstable. Vietcong rebels were gaining greater support from peasants. • Kennedy’s administration decided Diem should step down. • 1963- military leaders overthrew Diem. They executed him

  13. LBJ takes over- he continued to support South Vietnam-determined not to lose it to communism

  14. Gulf of Tonkin • August 1964 • off coast of North Vietnam • A North Vietnamese patrol boat had allegedly fired torpedoes at a US destroyer. • U.S. responded by bombing North Vietnam.

  15. LBJ asked Congress for special military powers to stop any future North Vietnamese attacks on U.S. forces. • Congress passed the Tonkin Gulf Resolution which gave the president broad military powers in Vietnam

  16. LBJ used the power in February 1965 when he launched a major bombing attack on North Vietnam’s cities. • 1965 the U.S. began sending troops to Vietnam to fight the Vietcong

  17. Robert McNamara- LBJ’s Secretary of Defense • Dean Rusk- LBJ’s Secretary of State They backed LBJ-said U.S. must help defeat communism.

  18. General William Westmoreland- American commander in South Vietnam

  19. Factors which turned the war into a bloody stalemate • The Vietcong’s fighting style • The Vietcong’s refusal to surrender • American troops’ inability to win support of Vietnamese peasants

  20. How U.S. troops hurt the peasants: • US planes dropped napalm a gasoline-based bomb that set fire to the jungle • US sprayed Agent Orange which was a leaf-killing chemical that destroyed the landscape Both of these wounded villagers and ruined their villages. U.S. soldiers destroyed villages they believed supported the Vietcong.

  21. By 1967 U.S. was divided into two groups: • Hawks- Americans who supported the war • Doves-Americans who wanted the U.S. to withdraw from the war

  22. January 30- the Vietnamese equivalent of our New Years • Beginning of festivities known as Tet. • During the Tet holiday in 1968 a week-long truce was called.

  23. Peasants crowded into South Vietnam’s cities to celebrate. Many peasants turned out to be Vietcong rebels, launching massive attacks. They attacked U.S. air bases. • Attacks were known as the Tet Offensive. It lasted for about a month before U.S. and South Vietnamese forces gained control of the cities.

  24. Tet Offensive hurt LBJ’s popularity. Many Americans thought we could not win the war. • LBJ announces he will not seek reelection in 1968. • Richard Nixon is elected in 1968.

  25. Election 0f 1968 Republican- Richard M. Nixon- 301 electoral votes Democrats- Hubert H. Humphrey-191 electoral votes American Independent Party- GeorgeWallace- 46 electoral votes

  26. Vietnamization Nixon’s plan to end America’s involvement in Vietnam. Plan called for gradual withdrawal of U.S. troops. Also called for South Vietnamese to do more of the fighting.

  27. As Nixon pulled troops out, he ordered a massive bombing attack against North Vietnam. He also ordered bombs to be dropped on the neighboring countries of Laos and Cambodia which had a number of Vietcong bases.

  28. November 1969- My Lai U.S. troops had massacred more than 100 unarmed Vietnamese

  29. April 1970- Nixon announced that U.S. troops had invaded Cambodia Nixon’s invasion of Cambodia cost him public and political support. Congress, angry over the invasion, repealed the Tonkin Gulf Resolution.

  30. June 1971- Pentagon Papers Documents which showed that plans had never been drawn up to withdraw from Vietnam.

  31. Henry Kissinger- Nixon’s advisor for national security affairs- negotiated a peace settlement with the North Vietnamese. • October 1972 -Kissinger announced peace was close at hand.

  32. Election of 1972 • Republican Party- Richard Nixon • Democrats- George S. McGovern Nixon received 520 electoral votes to McGovern’s 17

  33. Promise of peace in Vietnam did not come. • South Vietnam objected to the proposed peace settlement. • Peace talks broke down. Nixon responded by ordering more bombings against North Vietnam. • Peace talks eventually resumed. • January 1973 a peace agreement was signed and the Vietnam War was over.

  34. Shortly after the U.S. pulled out the peace agreement collapsed and North and South Vietnam resumed fighting. • April 1975 North Vietnamese troops captured south’s capital of Saigon. Soon afterwards, South Vietnam surrendered to North Vietnam,

  35. War Powers Act- passed by Congress in November 1973. Prevented the president from committing troops in a foreign conflict without the approval of Congress. • The war made Americans less willing to become involved in foreign wars. The war also left many Americans with a feeling of mistrust toward their government.

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