Sei sulla pagina 1di 36

Essential Question

What events led to U.S.


involvement in the Vietnam
War?

The United States and Vietnam

Vietnam
Controlled by
France until WWII
Seized by Japan
Pushed for
independence after
the war

Ho Chi Minh
Leader of a
nationalist
movement in
Vietnam
Founded the
Vietminh

Domino Theory
The belief that if
Vietnam fell to
communism, all of
southeast Asia
would follow

Division of Vietnam
According to the
Geneva Accords
Divided at the 17th
parallel
Elections to be held
in 1956 to unite the
country

North Vietnam
Ho Chi Minh and
the Vietminh
controlled the north
Communist
supporters

South Vietnam
Pro-western regime
Led by Ngo Dinh
Diem
Supported by the
U.S.

Diems Government
Diem regime
became corrupt
and repressive
Refused to hold
promised elections

Vietnam
Ho Chi Minh formed
the National
Liberation Front
(NLF) to reunite the
country
Guerrilla terrorist
forces known as the
Vietcong

Vietnam
November 1,
1963
Diem
overthrown and
assassinated

Vietnam
Johnson followed
idea of global
containment
I am not going to
lose Vietnam
Intended to
increase troops

Gulf of Tonkin Resolution


August 2, 1964
North Vietnamese
fired on U.S. destroyer
Maddox
Congress gave
Johnson a mandate to
conduct operations in
Vietnam

War Escalates
March 8, 1965
Marines landed at
Da Nang
By 1968, over
500,000 troops
were stationed in
Vietnam

Vietnam Warfare
Vietcong used
ambushes, booby
traps and guerilla
warfare in the thick
Asian jungles

Realities of War
Three quarters of the way through the
tangle, a trooper brushed against a twoinch vine, and a grenade slung chest high
went off, shattering the right side of his
head and body . . . Nearby troopers took
hold of the unconscious soldier and, half
carrying, half dragging him, pulled him the
rest of the way through the tangle.

Vietnam Warfare
U.S. carried out
search and destroy
missions
Get rid of thick
jungle hiding places
by using napalm and
Agent Orange (kills
foliage)

Ho Chi Minh Trail


Main supply line for
the North Vietnamese
Passed through
Cambodia and Laos
Received military
support from China
and Vietnam

Tet Offensive
January 1968
Vietcong launched
assaults on South
Vietnam, nearly
overran Saigon
Americans viewed
war as unwinnable

Antiwar Movement
By 1967 U.S.
public discontent
with the war
Television
coverage, body
counts, carnage

Counterculture Movements
Youth attack on
mainstream
America
Student protests
Revolution against
middle class
respectability

Music

Woodstock

Election of 1968
Democrat
Hubert Humphrey
Republican
Richard Nixon
Independent
George Wallace

Troop Withdrawal
June 1969
Nixon announced
the withdrawal of
25,000 troops

My Lai Massacre
Nov. 1969
Slaughter of 350
Vietnamese villagers
by U.S. troops
Sinking morale
among troops

Mobilization Day
November 16, 1969
million protestors
of the war in
Washington
Anger over news of
Cambodia invasion

Kent State
May 4, 1970
National Guard fired
into an anti-war rally
4 students killed, 11
wounded

Kent State

Kent State

Paris Peace Accords


January 27, 1973
Ceasefire agreement
that accepted North
Vietnamese troops in
South Vietnam
Troop withdrawal
began

Vietnam Reunification
March 1975 final
offensive of North
Vietnamese against
the South
April 29, 1975
Vietnam was reunited
Saigon renamed Ho
Chi Minh City

Fall of Saigon

Fall of Saigon

Fall of Saigon

Potrebbero piacerti anche