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Title: AMST 3100 The 1960s Vietnam 19451963


1
AMST 3100 The 1960sVietnam 1945-1963
  • Powerpoint 9
  • Read Farber Chapter 6

2
Vietnams Significance
  • The Vietnam War grew directly from the policies
    of the Cold War, and the consequences of the U.S.
    role in Vietnam are still being felt today.
  • The youth culture of the 1960s was forced to
    consider a distant struggle that was the
    antithesis of what many thought America stood
    for. The war
  • pitted generations against each other.
  • led to world fears of American imperialism that
    reverberate even now and call into question
    Americas role in the world.
  • crippled LBJs war on poverty and ultimately led
    to his demise.
  • led to the exposure of political leadership in a
    web of lies and deception, crippling American
    faith in politics.
  • contributed to a significant decline in American
    idealism.
  • killed roughly 58,000 American GIs and up to 5
    million Vietnamese.

3
The Starting Point
  • 1940s Cold War Context
  • Climate of anticommunism.
  • Climate of American moralism.
  • Climate of superpower rivalry.
  • Climate of (male) machismo among U.S.
    leadership.
  • 1950s Cold War Context
  • The Korean War containment via confrontation.
  • The domino theory.
  • The U.S. as a nation builder.

Click on the map for a larger view of the U.S.
domino theory perspective in 1950.
4
The Korean War (1950-53)
  • While the North did invade the South, Truman
    mistakenly assumed that the Soviets were
    responsible for the Korean War. He viewed it as a
    test of U.S. resolve to fight communism.
  • In reality it was a civil war over a nation that
    had been divided into two halves by the politics
    of the Cold War. This is significant to the
    Vietnam experience.
  • Aside from Korea, Truman and other U.S.
    presidents lumped many Third World nationalist
    liberation movements as Soviet-run communist
    take-overs. This mistaken assumption would lead
    to numerous U.S. foreign policy blunders during
    the 1940s-1970s.
  • In fact, many insurrections were essentially
    nationalist movements intended to bring
    sovereignty to former colonies of Western
    empires.

U.S. artillery, Korea. In this war, unlike
Vietnam, the U.S. had the support of the United
Nations.
5
Key American Cold War Errors
  • 1. The American failure to understand the effects
    of Western colonialism in the Third World.
  • 2. Due to American Cold War fears, Americans
    misinterpreted post-1945 Third World liberation
    movements (nationalism) as Soviet-led communism.
  • 3. The domino theory did not hold up if
    insurrections were nationalist-inspired more than
    communist-inspired, yet the U.S. clung to the
    domino theory, partly because it sold well.

This is a photo of the Shah of Iran, placed in
power by the U.S. in 1953. In 1953-54, just as
the Korean War was ending, the U.S. thwarted
democracy in Iran and Guatemala and installed
right-wing dictatorships friendly to American
multinational corporations. In both cases, the
CIA-sponsored coups were directed against
legitimately elected leaders who had dared to
speak of nationalizing some of their countrys
resources (oil fields, banana plantations, etc).
In effect the U.S. was a colonial power in the
name of anticommunism.
6
The Korean War Set Precedents
  • It represented a decisive moment in U.S. foreign
    policy by establishing precedents that shaped
    subsequent policy
  • 1. The central belief that military containment
    works.
  • 2. A willingness to support capitalist right-wing
    dictatorships in the name of anti-communism.
  • 3. The feeling that increased brutality was
    necessary during times of war.
  • 4. The idea that Asia was a key battleground in
    the Cold War.
  • 5. The use of executive lies and public deception
    as necessary for national security.
  • 6. The President could by-pass Congress in making
    war.

This is a photo of American GIs torturing a
Vietnamese captive. The technique is called
water-boarding, where the victim has water poured
through their nose to stimulate the sensation of
drowning. Such techniques were part of the
Korean War lessons that brutality was necessary
in war. The communists tortured Americans, too,
sometimes in the most grotesque techniques
imaginable.
7
Vietnam
  • Vietnam was an extension of the Korean
    involvement.
  • Truman supported the French colonialists during
    the Indochina War (1946-1954).
  • The Indochina War was a conflict between the
    French imperialists, who sought to return Vietnam
    as a colony of France, versus the Vietnamese
    nationalists (most of whom were also communists)
    who sought sovereignty for Vietnam.
  • The U.S. supported the French, while China and
    the USSR supported the nationalist communists.
  • The Indochina War was largely funded and partly
    supplied by the U.S. in exchange for French
    support for the American-desired NATO.
  • The French and Americans sought to carve out the
    southern region of Vietnam and turn it into
    South Vietnam in a nation-building experiment.
    South Vietnam would be a pro-U.S. capitalist
    friend.

Richard Nixon visits Vietnam, 1953.
8
Vietnamese History
  • Vietnam has a long history of invasion and
    colonization by outsiders
  • China occupied Vietnam for 1200 years and was
    finally repelled in 939 AD. Vietnam would be
    largely independent until the 19th century.
  • In the 19th century, France invaded and occupied
    Southeast Asia (including the southern region of
    Vietnam) and for 100 years it was a French
    colony. While Buddhism is Vietnams dominant
    religion, the French preferred Christianity.
  • Japan invaded and occupied Vietnam during WWII.
  • France, devastated by WWII, tried to re-occupy
    Vietnam (with U.S. support) from 1945-54 but was
    driven out.
  • The U.S. stepped in to occupy South Vietnam in
    1954 and was driven out by 1975. The U.S. never
    won over the hearts and minds of the indigenous
    population of the region. They were outsiders,
    just as the French and Japanese were.

Japanese officer surrenders to an Indian officer
in Saigon, 1945. The Vietnamese hoped they had
finally won their independence, but the French,
with American support, re-occupied Vietnam
immediately after WWII. This re-occupation
provoked the First Indochina War.
9
Ho Chi Minh
  • Leader of the Vietnamese nationalist movement to
    bring sovereignty to the region.
  • His most important characteristic is that he was
    a nationalist. This is what made him appealing to
    the Vietnamese. He was beloved.
  • A hero during the Japanese occupation who, with
    British and American support, helped drive them
    out.
  • Grateful to the American liberators and an
    admirer of the American Revolution, as is
    apparent in the Vietnamese Declaration of
    Independence.
  • A Marxist with a proletariat background.
  • Advocate of guerilla warfare tactics against
    foreign occupiers/imperialists.
  • Not a puppet of the USSR or China. Unfortunately,
    Truman and others lumped him as a puppet of the
    Soviets.

10
The First Indochina War 1946-1954
  • In 1945, Vietnam was liberated from Japanese
    occupation.
  • Ho Chi Minh celebrated the Americans as
    liberators and sends a letter to Truman begging
    him to honor the Atlantic Charter principles
    established by FDR.
  • However, FDR caved in to French and British
    demands to return Vietnam as a colony of France.
    FDR felt he needed the French and British as
    allies in the emerging superpower rivalry with
    the Soviets.
  • Truman carried out this policy by supporting the
    French in the Indochina War of 1946-1954..
  • By 1954, the French lost a last stand battle
    (Dien Bien Phu) and signed the Geneva Accord of
    1954.

Medical attention is given to a French soldier
during the battle of Dien Bien Phu in 1954.
11
Geneva Accords, 1954
  • 1. Established the sovereignty of all of
    Vietnam.
  • 2. Allowed for the temporary division of Vietnam
    into two regions (North and South), which were to
    be unified by a national referendum in 1956.
  • This democratic referendum would decide what kind
    of leadership would guide all of Vietnam.
  • 3. Signed by the French and the Vietnamese, but
    the U.S. did not participate in the signing.
  • This gave the U.S. a surface excuse when they
    ultimately refused to obey this accord.

The Geneva Convention of 1954 dealt with the
problems of Southeast Asia and established the
sovereignty of Vietnam, which was a major goal of
the Vietnamese nationalists. While the French and
Vietnamese signed the Accord, the Americans
declined to participate. They had their own
agenda for Vietnam.
12
The U.S. Agenda
  • The U.S. had no intention of allowing the
    unification of Vietnam.
  • The national referendum of 1956 would certainly
    have led to Ho Chi Minhs election as leader of
    all of Vietnam, and he was a Marxist.
  • By the mid-1950s, the CIA and other U.S. security
    agencies were trying to destabilize the Vietminh
    (the communist nationalists).
  • The U.S. decided to enter into the region more
    directly to try to prop up South Vietnam as a
    noncommunist state.
  • The U.S. quickly installed a dictator in South
    Vietnam Ngo Dinh Diem. He was expected to be a
    U.S. puppet.
  • The U.S. set up advisors in South Vietnam, and
    proceeded to install the infrastructure necessary
    for stability.
  • South Vietnam became a virtual puppet state of
    the American empire in what the Americans
    labeled nation building.

The U.S. helped oust the former emperor, Bao Dai
, and installed Diem in 1954 as Prime Minister,
just after the Geneva Accords.
13
U.S. Nation Building
  • To the U.S. policy makers, Vietnam was just
    another Third World country with internal dissent
    and with communism threatening to take over.
  • There was not a great deal of debate over what to
    do in the Truman/Eisenhower administrations.
  • In Iran and Guatemala the U.S. set up puppet
    dictators relatively easily at this same time.
  • The U.S. was convinced it could avoid the errors
    of the French.
  • The French were colonialists, but the U.S. had no
    intention of creating a European-style colony.
    They wanted South Vietnam to ultimately stand on
    its own as a friendly-to-U.S. capitalist state.
  • To the American leaders, the French did not know
    how to fight. World War II showed that the
    Americans knew how to fight.

John Foster Dulles, one of the architects of the
U.S. foreign policy that installed Diem, was
celebrated in 1954 by Time Magazine as Man of the
Year.
14
Ngo Dinh Diem an Unlikely Unifier
  • Installed as Prime Minister of South Vietnam by
    the U.S. in 1954-5. In 1955 he became President
    of the new republic in a fraudulent election
    guided by the U.S.. In effect, he was a right
    wing dictator.
  • He was selected largely because he was educated
    in America and not connected to the hated French
    colonial aristocracy. He was fresh at a time
    when it was hard to find someone who was not
    connected to the French regime.
  • Upper class, in a culture of peasants
    (proletariats).
  • An Asian Catholic (in a Buddhist region).
  • An anti-communist.
  • A nationalist.
  • A reluctant puppet of the Americans.
  • Stubborn, aloof, and elitist.

15
Diem
  • Diem was given unlimited support by the U.S. to
    buy off his opponents.
  • With the support of the Americans, Diem proceeded
    to subvert the 1954 Geneva Accords which promised
    to impose unity on the divided nation by 1956.
  • Diem refused to permit the election.
  • Diem proceeded to legitimize his own authority
    and held a rigged referendum in South Vietnam.
  • He received 600,000 votes in Saigon, a city of
    400,000.

This is a photo of Diem in 1957 when he visited
the U.S.. President Eisenhower stands next to
him. Foster Dulles stands behind Eisenhower.
16
Nation Building
  • In the 1950s, the military side of the equation
    always came first.
  • John Foster Dulles (Sec. of State) thought that
    the primary requirement for South Vietnam
    nationhood was the creation of a strong
    military.
  • During the 1950s, virtually all of Americas
    military energy was devoted to building a
    conventional army (the ARVN Army Republic of
    Vietnam), with little effort to develop
    anti-guerrilla tactics.
  • The results
  • 1. The rural country, which was most of Vietnam,
    was never controlled.
  • 2. The military build-up reinforced the image of
    the U.S. as yet another colonial power.

The primary architects of nation-building,
Eisenhower and Dulles, meet in 1956. Dulles had
an almost religious fever against communism. He
felt if South Vietnam was made into a right-wing
dictatorship it would be better for U.S.
interests than if it was to become communist,
even if Ho Chi Minh was open to a democratic
system.
17
Nation Building
  • Nevertheless, most Americans believed they were
    being successful.
  • The ARVN was getting bigger.
  • Diem had entrenched his power.
  • Western goods flowed into Saigon.
  • The U.S. corporate media routinely echoed
    political and military authority without question.

The mainstream American media did not challenge
the basic assumptions behind U.S.
nation-building. Americans were deeply concerned
about the spread of communism.
18
Diem
  • Most Americans were a bit naïve. In fact, Diem
    was no hero.
  • The CIA knew he was hated by the Vietnamese
    people and advised Diem to break up the huge land
    estates of the corrupt aristocracy land reform
    was essential. Yet Diem resisted this advice.
  • In 1961 Diem and his American advisors initiated
    a highly unpopular peasant relocation program,
    the Strategic Hamlet Program.
  • What property Diem did redistribute went from
    local Buddhists to Catholics migrating down from
    the north.
  • Diems brother jailed and murdered thousands of
    political dissenters in Diems repressive and
    authoritarian regime.
  • The result was that the Vietnamese people felt
    alienated from Diem and his South Vietnamese
    system. This provided fertile soil for dissent.

The Strategic Hamlet program, begun in 1961,
uprooted peasants from their traditional farming
and ancestor areas and placed them in compounds
protected by spiked fences and armed guards. This
program was so unpopular it drove many peasants
to side with the communist nationalists. More on
this later.
19
The Vietminh Mobilize
  • By 1957, the Vietminh mobilized a campaign of
    discontent against Diem in the South.
  • They encountered very receptive peasants.
  • By 1959, with very little resource support from
    the north, the Vietminh succeeded in galvanizing
    support against Diems corrupt government.
  • A similar event was happening in Cuba as Castro
    was over-throwing the U.S.-backed right-wing
    dictator, Batista.
  • In late 1959, North Vietnam began a campaign of
    arming the rebels in the south, and they found
    that local rebels were already in control of the
    rural infrastructure.
  • The rebels were now ready for full-scale attacks
    on the ARVN.
  • The ARVN consisted of reluctant draftees who had
    little loyalty to the Diem regime. Unlike the
    Vietminh, they were not motivated fighters. It
    was largely a puppet army.

ARVN soldiers were typically Vietnamese
conscripts who were trained in conventional
warfare. Generally they were a poor army, but
there were some exceptions by the early 1970s.
20
Which way does the wind blow?
  • Ironically, by 1959 Eisenhower was showcasing
    South Vietnam as a model of communist
    containment.
  • In effect, the U.S. had made itself hostage to
    the Diem regime, and by 1960 the U.S. had
    repeated most of the French errors that it had
    confidently stated it would avoid.
  • Yet most Americans believed what they were told
    that South Vietnam was a model for nation
    building and successful containment.
  • Americas Cold War assumptions had blinded it to
    the reality of the situation. Imperialism in the
    service of Cold War containment was unpopular
    among the Vietnamese, especially given the
    post-WWII rush by former colonies of Europe
    toward sovereignty.

President Diem watches an honor guard ceremony in
Saigon. Diem was aloof from the peasants.
21
American Imperialism
  • In the name of communist containment, the U.S.
    had subverted
  • The sovereignty rights of the southern
    Vietnamese.
  • Democracy in the region, as promoted by the
    Geneva Accords.
  • No truly free elections were permitted in South
    Vietnam under American policy.
  • After all, how would the peasants likely have
    voted if they had been given an opportunity to
    participate in the Geneva Accord referendum
    slated for 1956?
  • Freedom. South Vietnam was not a free society
    under the American system.
  • To American policy makers, a right-wing
    dictatorship was preferable and even desirable
    over a free, truly democratic, and sovereign
    South Vietnam. American leaders did hope that
    maybe someday in the future after the peasants
    came around democracy and freedom could be
    considered.

22
U.S. Motivations in Vietnam
  • To the U.S., the primary motivation for getting
    involved in Vietnam was to contain communism. But
    there was another, lesser motivation to open up
    new markets for capitalist expansion.
  • This latter motivation is entirely
    self-interested.
  • By the late 19th century, American foreign policy
    blurred these motivations together because of the
    influence of powerful multinational corporations
    and the military industrial complex on U.S.
    foreign policy.
  • As an empire, the U.S. declares certain regions
    of the world of strategic interest to its
    survival, and this includes both political and
    economic considerations. At this time Southeast
    Asia was of strategic interest, especially in a
    political sense and to a lesser extent in an
    economic sense.

Even President Eisenhower, whose cabinet
consisted of one corporate executive after
another, warned Americans as he left office about
the dangerously growing influence of the military
industrial complex.
23
The Reaction at Home
  • Americans were socialized to believe that their
    country stood for sovereignty, freedom and
    democracy.
  • Americans were also socialized to be fairly
    moralistic we learned to view people and
    policies as good or evil.
  • Students were socialized to view America as a
    sort of holy land of freedom, while communism
    (tyranny) was evil.
  • When college students examined Vietnam closely
    many were morally outraged that U.S. policy
    subverted these basic American values in favor of
    a right-wing dictatorship.
  • Similarly for Iran, Guatemala, Cuba, and other
    regions.
  • Students became angry. They had been lied to.
    American foreign policy was not living up to its
    ideals, and it appeared to many by the early
    1960s that American domestic policy did not live
    up to its ideals either, given the legacy of
    racism.

24
John Kennedy
  • By the time Kennedy took office, the Vietminh had
    already turned to reunifying Vietnam via the
    countryside.
  • Their campaign was not noble. Assassination was
    common. Both sides employed despicable tactics,
    including murder and torture.
  • Diem appointed his puppets as village mayors. The
    Vietminh targeted these puppets who were
    unpopular - for assassination.
  • By October, 1961, most of the South Vietnamese
    countryside was under the control of the
    Vietminh.
  • In 1961, Kennedy believed that America could and
    should shape the structure of developing nations.

  • JFK believed that political/economic instability
    was one of the sources of communist appeal among
    peasants.
  • He believed the U.S. could help the Third World
    modernize and thus bring stability. This help
    could be economic or military.

Vietminh peasants in South Vietnam, near the DMZ,
with rifles stacked to be used against the ARVN.
25
Kennedy
  • Kennedy realized the mistake of building up the
    ARVN a conventional army to fight a guerilla
    army, so he proposed a counterinsurgency force of
    guerillas called the Green Berets.
  • However, like Eisenhower, JFK refused to see the
    Vietminh as nationalist fighters legitimately
    fighting for sovereignty.
  • And like Eisenhower, JFKs administration had its
    share of ethnocentric arrogance North Vietnam
    cant beat us. They cant even make ice cubes.
  • Only one of JFKs key advisors opposed the war
    George Ball (Under Sec. of State for Economic
    Affairs).
  • Ball knew about Vietnamese history and their
    drive for sovereignty. He said that if the U.S.
    maintained the fiction of South Vietnam it
    would blow up into a military war.

Undersecretary of State, George Ball. One of the
few Kennedy advisors who opposed American war
policy in Vietnam.
26
Kennedy initially escalates the war
  • In May, 1961, Kennedy sent 500 advisors to
    Vietnam, bringing the total to 1400.
  • The military wanted a force of 13,000 and put
    great pressure on Kennedy. He wavered at first,
    but began to escalate U.S. involvement over the
    next year.
  • By the end of 1962, there were 11,300 advisors
    in Vietnam and napalm was being used on rural
    villages.
  • Increasingly, hawks portrayed Vietnam in terms of
    American machismo. Doves were sissies and
    cowards.
  • Kennedy and most other politicians played to the
    hawks, but Kennedy was also determined not to
    make Vietnam a full blown war.
  • He would not bomb the North.
  • He would not send troops to South Vietnam.

This photo, taken around 1970, depicts Americans
consulting a map as they help the ARVN. In the
JFK era, the President was not authorized to have
troops in Vietnam. Hence, advisors were sent to
train and increase the combat readiness of the
ARVN.
27
Strategic Hamlet Program
  • Rural areas were increasingly controlled by the
    Vietminh (now called Viet Cong cong means
    communist). To prevent this, the U.S. initiated
    the Strategic Hamlet program between 1961-63.
  • This was a program of forced removal of civilians
    away from their ancestral region to new villages
    controlled by the ARVN. A stockade was built
    around the village and patrolled by soldiers
    sort of like a concentration camp only it was to
    protect the villagers. The program was
    ultimately run by Nhu Diem, the unpopular brother
    of the President.
  • This strategy failed and actually led to an
    increase in peasants joining the Viet Cong. As
    was pointed out "Peasants resented working
    without pay to dig moats, implant bamboo stakes,
    and erect fences against an enemy that did not
    threaten them but directed its sights against
    government officials."

Americans inspect punji stakes at a Vietnamese
hamlet constructed under the Strategic Hamlet
Program.
28
The Situation Deteriorates
  • Despite the failure of American policies, the
    military elite reported that the war was fast
    being won and some predicted victory by 1965.
  • The American corporate press echoed this spin,
    and the average American was not well informed
    about Vietnam.
  • In reality, the war was being won by the Viet
    Cong all along.
  • The Strategic Hamlet program, the U.S. use of
    napalm, and the U.S. bombing of southern villages
    had turned most peasants against the U.S..
  • Many were joining the Viet Cong cause of
    liberation.

This photo depicts a napalm attack on a South
Vietnam village. Napalm is usually gasoline
based. When it has contact with skin it burns it
off. The American military continues to use
napalm, or variants of it.
29
Kennedy tries to de-escalate
  • By 1963 the situation was even worse.
  • There were now 16,500 advisors in Vietnam.
  • Diem had refused to implement land reform for the
    peasants and his policies were not popular.
    Kennedy knew that Diem was a disaster and
    searched for alternative policies.
  • JFK, determined not to let Vietnam blow up into
    an all out war, decided by the Fall of 1963 to
    begin the withdrawal of the U.S. advisors. About
    1000 of the 16,500 advisors had been removed by
    the time he was assassinated on Nov. 22, 1963.
  • Had he lived, some say it is likely the rest
    would have been pulled out, leaving only a force
    large enough to guard the U.S. embassy. That is
    one view, at least.
  • The National Security Action Memorandum No. 263
    suggests he intended the U.S. to remain in
    Vietnam, but cautiously.

30
Events of 1963
  • In the summer of 1963, the CIA approved the
    assassination of Diem, with Kennedys tacit
    approval.
  • Diem was killed in a coup detat on Nov. 2, 1963.

  • Meanwhile, Kennedy lacked a clear policy to
    pursue in Vietnam.
  • JFK felt, at least during the early part of his
    administration, that the U.S. could not show
    weakness, lest the communists exploit it.

These South Vietnamese generals were behind the
coup that assassinated Diem. It is believed they
were paid with CIA funds.
31
Chafe Four Interrelated Themes in JFKs Cold War
Vietnam Policy
  • 1. JFK believed that communism was a monolithic
    conspiracy spearheaded by Russia and China to
    take over the world. Vietnam was a domino in this
    plan.
  • 2. Khruschev seemed to endorse communist
    expansion.
  • 3. Due to a series of reversals elsewhere (Cuba
    and Laos), JFK felt he needed to take a strong
    stand somewhere. U.S. credibility was at stake.
  • 4. Vietnam was a laboratory to test the U.S.
    strategy of flexible response the Green
    Berets.
  • Chafe argues that for these reasons, Kennedy
    was responsible for escalating the Vietnam
    conflict, just as Eisenhower had done when he
    committed the U.S. to nation-building in Vietnam
    in 1954.

32
AMST 3100
End
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