Vietnam War, also known as the Second
Indochina War, military struggle fought in Vietnam from 1959 to 1975, involving
the North Vietnamese and the National Liberation Front (NLF) in conflict with
United States forces and the South Vietnamese army. From 1946 until 1954, the
Vietnamese had struggled for their independence from France during the First
Indochina War. At the end of this war, the country was temporarily divided into
North and South Vietnam. North Vietnam came under the control of Vietnamese
Communists who had opposed France and who aimed for a unified Vietnam under
Communist rule. The South was controlled by non-Communist Vietnamese.
The United States became involved in Vietnam
because American policymakers believed that if the entire country fell under a
Communist government, Communism would spread throughout Southeast Asia. This
belief was known as the “domino theory.” The U.S. government, therefore, helped
to create the anti-Communist South Vietnamese government. This government’s
repressive policies led to rebellion in the South, and in 1960 the NLF was
formed with the aim of overthrowing the government of South Vietnam and
reunifying the country.
In 1965 the United States sent in troops to
prevent the South Vietnamese government from collapsing. Ultimately, however,
the United States failed to achieve its goal, and in 1975 Vietnam was reunified
under Communist control; in 1976 it officially became the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam. During the conflict, approximately 3.2 million Vietnamese were killed,
in addition to another 1.5 million to 2 million Lao and Cambodians who were
drawn into the war. Nearly 58,000 Americans lost their lives.
BACKGROUND
|
From the 1880s until World War II (1939-1945),
France governed Vietnam as part of French Indochina, which also included
Cambodia and Laos. Vietnam was under the nominal control of an emperor, Bao
Dai. In 1940 Japanese troops invaded and occupied French Indochina. In May 1941
Vietnamese nationalists established the League for the Independence of Vietnam,
or Viet Minh, seeing the turmoil of World War II as an opportunity to overthrow
French colonial rule. The Viet Minh, a front organization of the Indochinese
Communist Party, sought popular support for national independence, as well as
social and political reform.
The United States demanded that Japan leave
Indochina, warning of military action. The Viet Minh began guerrilla warfare
against Japan and entered an effective alliance with the United States. Viet
Minh troops rescued downed U.S. pilots, located Japanese prison camps, helped
U.S. prisoners to escape, and provided valuable intelligence to the Office of
Strategic Services (OSS), the forerunner of the Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA). Ho Chi Minh, the principal leader of the Viet Minh, was even made a
special OSS agent.
When the Japanese formally surrendered to the
Allies on September 2, 1945, Ho used the occasion to declare the independence
of Vietnam, which he called the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRV). Emperor
Bao Dai had abdicated the throne a week earlier. The French, however, refused
to acknowledge Vietnam’s independence, and later that year drove the Viet Minh
into the north of the country. There they regrouped as the Lien Viet Front,
which sought a broader base of support, including moderates; it was replaced in
1955 by the Fatherland Front, which served as the Communist-front organization
of the DRV. (The NLF later served as the southern front.) However, the term Viet
Minh continued to be commonly used for supporters of the movement for a
unified Vietnam. Also in 1951 some Vietnamese nationalists created the Lao Dong
(Workers’ Party) as the successor to the Indochinese Communist Party, which had
been operating clandestinely since 1945 in the war against the French. The Lao
Dong was conceived as a nationwide, united party, and it was formally based in
the DRV capital of Hanoi. By 1953 most Viet Minh were members of the Lao Dong.
Immediately after Ho declared the formation of the
DRV, he wrote eight letters to U.S. president Harry Truman, imploring him to
recognize Vietnam’s independence. Many OSS agents informed the U.S.
administration that despite being a Communist, Ho Chi Minh was not a puppet of
the Communist-led Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) and that he could
potentially become a valued ally in Asia. Tensions between the United States
and the USSR had mounted after World War II, resulting in the Cold War.
The foreign policy of the United States during the
Cold War was driven by a fear of the spread of Communism. After World War II
Communist governments came to power in Eastern European nations that had fallen
under the domination of the USSR, and in 1949 Communists took control of China.
United States policymakers felt they could not afford to lose Southeast Asia as
well to Communist rule. The United States therefore condemned Ho Chi Minh as an
agent of international Communism and offered to assist the French in
reestablishing a colonial regime in Vietnam.
In 1946 United States warships ferried elite French
troops to Vietnam where they quickly regained control of the major cities,
including Hanoi, Haiphong, Da Nang, Hue, and Saigon (now Ho Chi Minh City),
while the Viet Minh controlled the countryside. The Viet Minh had only 2,000
troops at the time Vietnam’s independence was declared, but recruiting
increased after the arrival of French troops. By the late 1940s, the Viet Minh
had hundreds of thousands of soldiers and were fighting the French to a draw.
In 1949 the French set up a government to rival Ho Chi Minh’s, installing Bao
Dai as head of state.
In May 1954 the Viet Minh mounted a
massive assault on the French garrison at Dien Bien Phu, in northwestern
Vietnam near the border with Laos. The Battle of Dien Bien Phu resulted in
perhaps the most humiliating defeat in French military history. Already tired
of the war, the French public forced their government to reach a peace
agreement at the Geneva Conference.
France asked the other world powers to help draw up
a plan for French withdrawal from the region and for the future of Vietnam.
Meeting in Geneva, Switzerland, from May 8 to July 21, 1954, diplomats from
France, Great Britain, the USSR, the People’s Republic of China, and the United
States, as well as representatives from Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia, attended
delegations to draft a set of agreements called the Geneva Accords. These
agreements provided for a cease-fire throughout Vietnam and a temporary
partition of the country at the 17th parallel. French troops were to withdraw
to the south of the dividing line until they could be safely removed from the
country, while Viet Minh forces were to retreat to the north. Ho Chi Minh
maintained control of North Vietnam, or the DRV, while Emperor Bao Dai remained
head of South Vietnam. Elections were to be held in July 1956 throughout the
North and South under the supervision of the International Control Commission,
comprised of representatives from Canada, Poland, and India. Following these
elections, Vietnam was to be reunited under the government chosen by popular
vote. The Viet Minh reluctantly agreed to the partitioning of Vietnam in the
expectation that the elections would reunify the country under Communist rule.
The United States did not want to allow the possibility
of Communist control over Vietnam. In June 1954, during the Geneva Conference,
the United States pressured Bao Dai to appoint Ngo Dinh Diem prime minister of
the government in South Vietnam. The United States chose Diem for his
nationalist and anti-Communist credentials. With U.S. support, Diem refused to
sign the Geneva Accords. The United States, which acted as an observer during
the delegations, also did not become a signatory. Immediately after the Geneva
Conference, the U.S. government moved to establish the Southeast Asia Treaty
Organization (SEATO), a regional alliance that extended protection to South
Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos in cases of Communist subversion or insurrection.
SEATO, which came into force in 1955, became the mechanism by which Washington
justified its support for South Vietnam; this support eventually became direct
involvement of U.S. troops.
Meanwhile, Diem announced he had no intention of
participating in the planned national elections, which Ho Chi Minh and the Lao
Dong were favored to win. Instead, Diem held elections only in South Vietnam,
in October 1955. He won the elections with 98.2 percent of the vote, but many
historians believe these elections were rigged, since about 150,000 more people
voted in Saigon than were registered. Diem then deposed Bao Dai, who had been
the only other candidate, and declared South Vietnam to be an independent
nation called the Republic of Vietnam (RVN), with himself as president and
Saigon as its capital. Vietnamese Communists and many non-Communist Vietnamese
nationalists saw the creation of the RVN as an effort by the United States to
interfere with the independence promised at Geneva.
THE BEGINNING OF THE WAR: 1959-1965
|
Diem represented the interests of the urban,
Catholic minority in South Vietnam. Although Diem also found some support in
the countryside among non-Communists, he did not enjoy a broad base of support.
The repressive measures of the Diem government, designed to persecute Viet Minh
activists and gain control of the countryside, eventually led to increasingly
organized opposition within South Vietnam. The United States initially backed
Diem’s government with military advisers and financial assistance to keep it
from collapsing. The political situation in South Vietnam became even more
unstable after Diem was killed in a military coup in 1963, leading to more
direct involvement by the United States. The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution of 1964
gave President Lyndon B. Johnson permission to launch a full-scale military
intervention in Vietnam. The first American combat troops arrived in Vietnam in
March 1965.
Rebellion in South Vietnam
|
When Vietnam was divided in 1954, many Viet Minh
who had been born in the southern part of the country returned to their native
villages to await the 1956 elections and the reunification of their nation.
When the elections did not take place as planned, these Viet Minh immediately
formed the core of opposition to Diem’s government and sought its overthrow.
They were greatly aided in their efforts to organize resistance in the
countryside by Diem’s own policies, which alienated many peasants.
Beginning in 1955, the United States created the
Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) in South Vietnam. Using these troops,
Diem took land away from peasants and returned it to former landlords,
reversing the land redistribution program implemented by the Viet Minh. He also
forcibly moved many villagers from their ancestral lands to controlled
settlements in an attempt to prevent Communist activity, and he drafted their
sons into the ARVN.
Diem sought to undermine the Viet Minh, whom he
derogatorily referred to as Viet Cong (the Vietnamese equivalent of calling
them “Commies”), yet their influence continued to grow. Most southern Viet Minh
were committed to the Lao Dong’s program of national liberation, reunification
of Vietnam, and reconstruction of society along socialist principles. By the
late 1950s they were anxious to begin full-scale armed struggle against Diem
but were held in check by the northern branch of the party, which feared that
this would invite the entry of U.S. armed forces. In 1960, however, widespread
opposition to Diem in rural areas convinced the party leadership to officially
sanction the formation of the National Front for the Liberation of South
Vietnam (commonly known as the National Liberation Front, or NLF). The NLF was
a classical Communist-front organization; although Communists dominated the NLF
leadership, the organization also embraced non-Communists who opposed the South
Vietnamese government. The aim of the NLF was to overthrow the Diem government
and reunify Vietnam. Toward this end, the NLF began to train and equip a guerrilla
force that was formally organized in 1961 as the People’s Liberation Armed
Forces (PLAF).
Diem’s support was concentrated mainly in the
cities. Although he had been a nationalist opposed to French rule, he welcomed
into his government those Vietnamese who had collaborated with the French, and
many of these became ARVN officers. Catholics were a minority throughout
Vietnam, amounting to no more than 10 percent of the population, but they
predominated in government positions because Diem himself was Catholic. Between
1954 and 1955, operatives paid by the CIA spread rumors in northern Vietnam
that Communists were going to launch a persecution of Catholics, which caused
nearly 1 million Catholics to flee to the south. Their resettlement uprooted
Buddhists who already deeply resented Diem’s rule because of his severe
discrimination against them.
In May 1963 Buddhists began a series of
demonstrations against Diem, and the demonstrators were fired on by police. At
least 7 Buddhist monks set themselves on fire to protest the repression. Diem
dismissed these suicides as publicity stunts and promptly arrested 1,400 monks.
He then arrested thousands of high school and grade school students who were
involved in protests against the government. After this, Diem was viewed as an
embarrassment both by the United States and by many of his own generals.
The Saigon government’s war against the NLF was also
going badly. In January 1963 an ARVN force of 2,000 encountered a group of 350
NLF soldiers at Ap Bac, a village south of Saigon in the Mekong River Delta.
The ARVN troops were equipped with jet fighters, helicopters, and armored
personnel carriers, while the NLF forces had only small arms. Nonetheless, 61
ARVN soldiers were killed, as were 3 U.S. military advisers. By contrast, the
NLF forces lost only 12 men. Some U.S. military advisers began to report that
Saigon was losing the war, but the official military and embassy press officers
reported Ap Bac as a significant ARVN victory. Despite this official account, a
handful of U.S. journalists began to report pessimistically about the future of
U.S. involvement in South Vietnam, which led to increasing public concern.
President John F. Kennedy still believed that the
ARVN could become effective. Some of his advisers advocated the commitment of
U.S. combat forces, but Kennedy decided to try to increase support for the ARVN
among the people of Vietnam through counterinsurgency. United States Special
Forces (Green Berets) would work with ARVN troops directly in the villages in an
effort to match NLF political organizing and to win over the South Vietnamese
people.
To support the U.S. effort, the Diem
government developed a “strategic hamlet” program that was essentially an
extension of Diem’s earlier relocation practices. Aimed at cutting the links
between villagers and the NLF, the program removed peasants from their
traditional villages, often at gunpoint, and resettled them in new hamlets
fortified to keep the NLF out. Administration was left up to Diem’s brother
Nhu, a corrupt official who charged villagers for building materials that had
been donated by the United States. In many cases peasants were forbidden to
leave the hamlets, but many of the young men quickly left anyway and joined the
NLF. Young men who were drafted into the ARVN often also worked secretly for
the NLF. The Kennedy administration concluded that Diem’s policies were
alienating the peasantry and contributing significantly to NLF recruitment.
The number of U.S. advisers assigned to the
ARVN rose steadily. In January 1961, when Kennedy took office, there were 800
U.S. advisers in Vietnam; by November 1963 there were 16,700. American airpower
was assigned to support ARVN operations; this included the aerial spraying of
herbicides such as Agent Orange, which was intended to deprive the NLF of food
and jungle cover. Despite these measures, the ARVN continued to lose ground.
As the military situation deteriorated in South
Vietnam, the United States sought to blame it on Diem’s incompetence and hoped
that changes in his administration would improve the situation. Nhu’s
corruption became a principal focus; Diem was urged to remove his brother, but
he refused. Many in Diem’s military were especially dissatisfied with Diem’s
government and the ARVN’s inability to rout the NLF, and they hoped for
increased U.S. aid. General Duong Van Minh informed the CIA and U.S. ambassador
Henry Cabot Lodge of a plot to conduct a coup d’état against Diem. Although the
United States wanted to remove Diem from power, it did not give formal support
for a coup. When the military generals finally staged the coup on November 1,
1963, it resulted in the murder of both Diem and Nhu. In the political
confusion that followed, the security situation in South Vietnam continued to
deteriorate. Meanwhile, the CIA was forced to admit that the strength of the
NLF was continuing to grow.
The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
|
Succeeding to the presidency after Kennedy’s
assassination on November 22, 1963, Lyndon B. Johnson felt he had to take a
forceful stance on Vietnam so that other Communist countries would not think
that the United States lacked resolve. Kennedy had begun to consider the
possibility of withdrawal from Vietnam and had even ordered the removal of
1,000 advisers shortly before he was assassinated, but Johnson increased the
number of U.S. advisers to 27,000 by mid-1964. Even though intelligence reports
clearly stated that most of the support for the NLF came from the south,
Johnson, like his predecessors, continued to insist that North Vietnam was
orchestrating the southern rebellion. He was determined that he would not be
held responsible for allowing Vietnam to fall to the Communists.
Johnson believed that the key to success in the war in
South Vietnam was to frighten North Vietnam’s leaders with the possibility of
full-scale U.S. military intervention. In January 1964 he approved top-secret,
covert attacks against North Vietnamese territory, including commando raids
against bridges, railways, and coastal installations. Johnson also ordered the
U.S. Navy to conduct surveillance missions along the North Vietnamese coast. He
increased the secret bombing of territory in Laos along the Ho Chi Minh Trail,
a growing network of paths and roads used by the NLF and the North Vietnamese
to transport supplies and troops into South Vietnam. Hanoi concluded that the
United States was preparing to occupy South Vietnam and indicated that it, too,
was preparing for full-scale war.
On August 2, 1964, North Vietnamese coastal
gunboats fired on the destroyer USS Maddox, which had penetrated North
Vietnam’s territorial boundaries in the Gulf of Tonkin. Johnson ordered more
ships to the area, and on August 4 both the Maddox and the USS Turner
Joy reported that North Vietnamese patrol boats had fired on them. Johnson
then ordered the first air strikes against North Vietnamese territory and went
on television to seek approval from the U.S. public. (Subsequent congressional
investigations would conclude that the August 4 attack almost certainly had
never occurred. In 2005 the release of previously classified documents added
more support to the finding that the August 4 attack never occurred. The
documents included an account by a National Security Agency (NSA) historian who
concluded that NSA intelligence officers “deliberately skewed” the evidence of
an attack and failed to pass on information to officials that would have shown
that no attack occurred.) The U.S. Congress overwhelmingly passed the Gulf of
Tonkin Resolution, which effectively handed over war-making powers to Johnson
until such time as 'peace and security' had returned to Vietnam.
After the Gulf of Tonkin incident Johnson
declared, “We seek no wider war.” United States bombing was significantly
reduced. Meanwhile, North Vietnam began to dispatch well-trained units of its
People’s Army of Vietnam (PAVN) into the south. The NLF guerrillas coordinated
their attacks with PAVN forces. On February 7, 1965, the NLF launched surprise
attacks on the U.S. helicopter base at Pleiku, killing 8 Americans, wounding
126, and destroying 10 aircraft; on February 10 they struck again at Qui Nhon,
killing 23 U.S. servicemen and wounding 21 at the U.S. enlisted personnel’s
quarters there. The attacks coincided with two high-level diplomatic visits:
one in Hanoi by Soviet premier Aleksey Kosygin, and the other in Saigon by U.S.
national security adviser McGeorge Bundy.
Within hours of the attacks, Johnson approved
reprisal air strikes against North Vietnam. In Hanoi, Kosygin abandoned his
initiative to persuade North Vietnamese leaders to consider negotiations with
the United States, and instead promised them unconditional military aid.
Johnson’s advisers, chiefly Bundy and Defense Secretary Robert McNamara,
believed it was imperative to conduct an intensive air campaign against the
North, in part to demonstrate it would pay a price for supporting the NLF.
Johnson authorized a sustained bombing campaign to begin on March 2. Johnson’s
senior planners reached the consensus that U.S. combat forces would be required
to protect U.S. air bases, as the ARVN was considered to be too weak for the
task. On March 8 the first of these forces, 3,500 U.S. Marines, landed at Da
Nang. By the end of April, 56,000 other combat troops had joined them; by June the
number had risen to 74,000.
ESCALATED UNITED STATES INVOLVEMENT: 1965-1969
|
When some of the soldiers of the U.S. 9th
Marine Regiment landed in Da Nang in March 1965, their orders were to protect the
U.S. air base, but the mission was quickly escalated to include
search-and-destroy patrols of the area around the base. This corresponded in
miniature to the larger strategy of General William Westmoreland. Westmoreland,
who took over the Military Assistance Command in Vietnam (MACV) in 1964,
advocated establishing a large American force and then unleashing it in big
sweeps. His strategy was that of attrition—eliminating or wearing down the
enemy by inflicting the highest death toll possible. There were 80,000 U.S.
troops in Vietnam by the end of 1965; by 1969 a peak of about 543,000 troops
would be reached.
Having easily pushed aside the ARVN, both the North
Vietnamese and the NLF had anticipated the U.S. escalation. With full-scale
movement of U.S. troops onto South Vietnamese territory, the Communists claimed
that the Saigon regime had become a puppet, not unlike the colonial
collaborators with the French. Both the North Vietnamese and NLF appealed to
the nationalism of the Vietnamese to rise up and drive this new foreign army
from their land.
DRV and NLF Strategy
|
The strategy developed against the United States was the
result of intense debate between the northern and southern members of the Lao
Dong’s Political Bureau in Hanoi. Truong Chinh, a northerner and the leading
Communist ideologist in Hanoi, argued that the southern Vietnamese must
liberate themselves, in accordance with a “people’s war” strategy that would,
if successful, result in a reunified Vietnam; Le Duan, a southerner who became
secretary general of the Lao Dong, advocated the North’s full support of the
armed struggle in the South, on the premise that Vietnam was one nation and
therefore dependent on all Vietnamese for its independence and reunification.
Ho Chi Minh, revered widely throughout Vietnam as the father of independence,
and other party leaders ultimately sided with Duan’s point of view. Duan’s
triumph represented a major turning point within the party in which southerners
came to dictate party policy in Hanoi. The Central Committee Directorate for
the South (also known as the Central Office for South Vietnam, or COSVN),
formed in 1961 as the leadership group of the newly merged southern and central
branches of the Lao Dong, was able to coordinate a unified strategy. COSVN was
under the direction of Nguyen Chi Thanh, a southerner and a PAVN general, for
most of the war.
After the United States initiated large-scale
bombing against the DRV in 1964, in the wake of the Gulf of Tonkin incident,
Hanoi dispatched the first unit of northern-born regular soldiers to the south.
Previously, southern-born Viet Minh, known as regroupees, had returned to their
native regions and joined NLF guerrilla units. Now PAVN regulars, commanded by
generals who usually had been born in the south, began to set up bases in the
Central Highlands of South Vietnam in order to gain strategic position.
Unable to cross the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ)
at the 17th parallel separating North from South Vietnam, PAVN regulars moved
into South Vietnam along the Ho Chi Minh Trail through Laos and Cambodia. In
use since 1957, the trail was originally a series of footpaths; by the late
1960s it would become a network of paved highways that enabled the motor
transport of people and equipment. The NLF guerrillas and North Vietnamese
troops were poorly armed compared to the Americans, so once they were in South
Vietnam they avoided open combat. Instead they developed hit-and-run tactics
designed to cause steady casualties among the U.S. troops and to wear down
popular support for the war in the United States.
United States Strategy
|
In June 1964 retired general Maxwell Taylor
replaced Henry Cabot Lodge as ambassador to South Vietnam. A former chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the military advisory group to the president, Taylor
at first opposed the introduction of American combat troops, believing that
this would make the ARVN quit fighting altogether. By 1965 he agreed to the
request of General Westmoreland for combat forces. Taylor initially advocated
an enclave strategy, where U.S. forces would seek to preserve areas already
considered to be under Saigon’s control. This quickly proved impossible, since
NLF strength was considerable virtually everywhere in South Vietnam.
In October 1965 the newly arrived 1st Cavalry
Division of the U.S. Army fought one of the largest battles of the Vietnam War
in the Ia Drang Valley, inflicting a serious defeat on North Vietnamese forces.
The North Vietnamese and NLF forces changed their tactics as a result of the
battle. From then on both would fight at times of their choosing, hitting
rapidly, with surprise if possible, and then withdrawing just as quickly to
avoid the impact of American firepower. The success of the American campaign in
the Ia Drang Valley convinced Westmoreland that his strategy of attrition was
the key to U.S. victory. He ordered the largest search-and-destroy operations
of the war in the “Iron Triangle,” the Communist stronghold in the rural
provinces near Saigon. This operation was intended to find and destroy North
Vietnam and NLF military headquarters, but the campaign failed to wipe out
Communist forces from the area.
By 1967 the ground war had reached a
stalemate, which led Johnson and McNamara to increase the ferocity of the air
war. The Joint Chiefs of Staff had been pressing for this for some time, but
there was already some indication that intensified bombing would not produce
the desired results. In 1966 the bombing of North Vietnam’s oil facilities had
destroyed 70 percent of their fuel reserves, but the DRV’s ability to wage the
war had not been affected.
Planners wished to avoid populated areas, but when
150,000 sorties per year were being flown by U.S. warplanes, civilian casualties
were inevitable. These casualties provoked revulsion both in the United States
and internationally. In 1967 the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General
Earle Wheeler, declared that no more “major military targets” were left. Unable
to widen the bombing to population centers for fear of Chinese and Soviet
reactions in support of North Vietnam, the U.S. Department of Defense had to
admit stalemate in the air war as well. The damage that had already been
inflicted on Vietnam’s population was enormous.
The Tet Offensive and Beyond
|
In 1967 North Vietnam and the NLF decided the time
had come to mount an all-out offensive aimed at inflicting serious losses on
both the ARVN and U.S. forces. They planned the Tet Offensive with the hope
that this would significantly affect the public mood in the United States. In
December 1967 North Vietnamese troops attacked and surrounded the U.S. Marine
base at Khe Sanh, placing it under siege. Westmoreland ordered the outpost held
at all costs. To prevent the Communists from overrunning the base, about 50,000
U.S. Marines and Army troops were called into the area, thus weakening
positions further south.
This concentration of American troops in one spot was
exactly what the COSVN strategists had hoped would happen. The main thrust of
the Tet Offensive then began on January 31, 1968, at the start of Tet,
or the Vietnamese lunar new year celebration, when a lull in fighting
traditionally took place. Most ARVN troops had gone home on leave, and U.S. troops
were on stand-down in many areas. Over 85,000 NLF soldiers simultaneously
struck at almost every major city and provincial capital across South Vietnam,
sending their defenders reeling. The U.S. Embassy in Saigon, previously thought
to be invulnerable, was taken over by the NLF, and held for eight hours before
U.S. forces could retake the complex. It took three weeks for U.S. troops to
dislodge 1,000 NLF fighters from Saigon.
During the Tet Offensive, the imperial capital of
Hue witnessed the bloodiest fighting of the entire war. South Vietnamese were
assassinated by Communists for collaborating with Americans; then when the ARVN
returned, NLF sympathizers were murdered. United States Marines and
paratroopers were ordered to go from house to house to find North Vietnamese
and NLF soldiers. Virtually indiscriminate shelling was what killed most
civilians, however, and the architectural treasures of Hue were laid to waste.
More than 100,000 residents of the city were left homeless.
The Tet Offensive as a whole lasted into the
fall of 1968, and when it was over the North Vietnamese and the NLF had
suffered acute losses. The U.S. Department of Defense estimated that a total of
45,000 North Vietnamese and NLF soldiers had been killed, most of them NLF
fighters. Although it was covered up for more than a year, one horrifying event
during the Tet Offensive would indelibly affect America’s psyche. In March 1968
elements of the U.S. Army’s Americal Division wiped out an entire hamlet called
My Lai, killing 500 unarmed civilians, mostly women and children.
After Tet, Westmoreland said that the enemy was almost
conquered and requested 206,000 more troops to finish the job. Told by
succeeding administrations since 1955 that there was “light at the end of the
tunnel,” that victory in Vietnam was near, the American public had reached a
psychological breaking point. The success of the NLF in coordinating the Tet
Offensive demonstrated both how deeply rooted the Communist resistance was and
how costly it would be for the United States to remain in Vietnam. After Tet a
majority of Americans wanted some closure to the war, with some favoring an
immediate withdrawal while others held out for a negotiated peace. President
Johnson rejected Westmoreland’s request for more troops and replaced him as the
commander of U.S. forces in Vietnam with Westmoreland’s deputy, General
Creighton Abrams. Johnson himself decided not to seek reelection in 1968.
Republican Richard Nixon ran for the presidency declaring that he would bring
“peace with honor” if elected.
ENDING THE WAR: 1969-1975
|
Promising an end to the war in Vietnam,
Richard Nixon won a narrow victory in the election of 1968. Slightly more than
30,000 young Americans had been killed in the war when Nixon took office in January
1969. The new president retained his predecessor’s goal of a non-Communist
South Vietnam, however, and this could not be ensured without continuing the
war. Nixon’s most pressing problem was how to make peace and war at the same
time. His answer was a policy called “Vietnamization.” Under this policy, he
would withdraw American troops and the South Vietnamese army would take over
the fighting.
Nixon’s Vietnamization
|
During his campaign for the presidency, Nixon
announced that he had a secret plan to end the war. In July 1969, after he had
become president, he issued what came to be known as the Nixon doctrine, which
stated that U.S. troops would no longer be directly involved in Asian wars. He
ordered the withdrawal of 25,000 troops, to be followed by more, and he lowered
draft calls. On the other hand, Nixon also stepped up the Phoenix Program, a
secret CIA operation that resulted in the assassination of 20,000 suspected NLF
guerrillas, many of whom were innocent civilians. The operation increased
funding for the ARVN and intensified the bombing of North Vietnam. Nixon
reasoned that to keep the Communists at bay during the U.S. withdrawal, it was
also necessary to bomb their sanctuaries in Cambodia and to increase air
strikes against Laos.
The DRV leadership, however, remained committed to
the expulsion of all U.S. troops from Vietnam and to the overthrow of the
Saigon government. As U.S. troop strength diminished, Hanoi’s leaders planned
their final offensive. While the ARVN had increased in size and was better
armed than it had been in 1965, it could not hold its own without the help of
heavy U.S. airpower.
Failed Peace Negotiations
|
Johnson had initiated peace negotiations after the first
phase of the Tet Offensive. Beginning in Paris on May 13, 1968, the talks
rapidly broke down over disagreements about the status of the NLF, which the
Saigon government refused to recognize. In October 1968, just before the U.S.
presidential elections, candidate Hubert Humphrey called for a negotiated
settlement, but Nixon secretly persuaded South Vietnam’s president, Nguyen Van
Thieu, to hold out for better terms under a Nixon administration. Stating that
he would never negotiate with Communists, Thieu caused the Paris talks to
collapse and contributed to Humphrey’s defeat as well.
Nixon thus inherited the Paris peace talks, but
they continued to remain stalled as each faction refused to alter its position.
Hanoi insisted on the withdrawal of all U.S. forces, the removal of the Saigon
government, and its replacement through free elections that would include the
Provisional Revolutionary Government (PRG), which the NLF created in June 1969
to take over its governmental role in the south and serve as a counterpart to
the Saigon government. The United States, on the other hand, insisted that all
North Vietnamese troops be withdrawn.
Invasion of Cambodia
|
In March 1969 Nixon ordered the secret bombing
of Cambodia. Intended to wipe out North Vietnamese and NLF base camps along the
border with South Vietnam in order to provide time for the buildup of the ARVN,
the campaign failed utterly. The secret bombing lasted four years and caused
great destruction and upheaval in Cambodia, a land of farmers that had not
known war in centuries. Code-named Operation Menu, the bombing was more intense
than that carried out over Vietnam. An estimated 100,000 peasants died in the
bombing, while 2 million people were left homeless.
In April 1970 Nixon ordered U.S. troops into
Cambodia. He argued that this was necessary to protect the security of American
units then in the process of withdrawing from Vietnam, but he also wanted to
buy security for the Saigon regime. When Nixon announced the invasion, U.S.
college campuses erupted in protest, and one-third of them shut down due to
student walkouts. At Kent State University in Ohio four students were killed by
panicky national guardsmen who had been called up to prevent rioting. Two days
later, two students were killed at Jackson State College in Mississippi.
Congress proceeded to repeal the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution. Congress also
passed the Cooper-Church Amendment, which specifically forbade the use of U.S.
troops outside South Vietnam. The measure did not expressly forbid bombing,
however, so Nixon continued the air strikes on Cambodia until August 1973.
Three months after committing U.S. forces, Nixon
ordered them to withdraw from Cambodia. The combined effects of the bombing and
the invasion, however, had completely disrupted Cambodian life, driving
millions of peasants from their ancestral lands. The right-wing government then
in power in Cambodia was supported by the United States, and the government was
blamed for allowing the bombing to occur. Farmers who had never concerned
themselves with politics now flooded to the Communist opposition group, the
Khmer Rouge. After a gruesome civil war, the Khmer Rouge took power in 1975 and
became one of the bloodiest regimes of the 20th century.
Campaign in Laos
|
The United States began conducting secret bombing
of Laos in 1964, targeting both the North Vietnamese forces along sections of
the Ho Chi Minh Trail and the Communist Pathet Lao guerrillas, who controlled
the northern part of the country. Roughly 150,000 tons of bombs were dropped on
the Plain of Jars in northern Laos between 1964 and 1969. By 1970 at least
one-quarter of the entire population of Laos were refugees, and about 400,000
Lao had been killed.
Prohibited by the Cooper-Church Amendment from
deploying U.S. troops and anxious to demonstrate the fighting prowess of the
improved ARVN, Nixon took the advice of General Creighton Abrams and attempted
to cut vital Communist supply lines along the Ho Chi Minh Trail. On February 8,
1971, 21,000 ARVN troops, supported by American B-52 bombers, invaded Laos.
Intended to disrupt any North Vietnamese and NLF plans for offensives and to
test the strength of the ARVN, this operation was as much a failure as the
Cambodian invasion. Abrams claimed 14,000 North Vietnamese casualties, but over
9,000 ARVN soldiers were killed or wounded, while the rest were routed and
expelled from Laos.
The success of Vietnamization seemed highly
doubtful, since the Communist forces showed that the new ARVN could be
defeated. Instead of inhibiting the Communist Pathet Lao, the U.S. attacks on
Laos promoted their rise. In 1958 the Pathet Lao had the support of one-third
of the population; by 1973 a majority denied the legitimacy of the
U.S.-supported royal Lao government. By 1975 a Communist government was
established in Laos.
Bombing of North Vietnam
|
In the spring of 1972, with only 6,000 U.S.
combat troops remaining in South Vietnam, the DRV leadership decided the time
had come to crush the ARVN. On March 30 more than 30,000 North Vietnamese
troops crossed the DMZ, along with another 150,000 PRG fighters, and attacked
Quang Trà Province, easily scattering ARVN defenders. The attack, known as the
Easter Offensive, could not have come at a worse time for Nixon and his
national security adviser, Henry Kissinger. A military defeat of the ARVN would
leave the United States in a weak position at the Paris peace talks and would
compromise its strategic position globally.
Risking the success of the upcoming Moscow summit,
Nixon unleashed the first sustained bombing of North Vietnam since 1969 and
moved quickly to mine the harbor of Haiphong. Between April and October 1972
the United States conducted 41,000 sorties over North Vietnam, especially
targeting Quang TrÃ. North Vietnam’s Easter Offensive was crushed. At least
100,000 Communist troops were killed. Vo Nguyen Giap, head of the PAVN and
chief military strategist, was perceived as too conservative in his use of
force and was compelled to resign. His successor, Van Tien Dung, adopted more
aggressive military tactics but also counseled the renewal of negotiations with
the United States.
Further negotiations were held in Paris between
Kissinger and Le Duc Tho, who represented North Vietnam. Seeking an end to the
war before the U.S. presidential elections in November, Kissinger made
remarkable concessions. The United States would withdraw completely, while
accepting the presence of ten North Vietnamese divisions in South Vietnam and
recognizing the political legitimacy of the PRG. Hanoi also made important
concessions, such as dropping its insistence on the immediate resignation of
Nguyen Van Thieu, who had become president of South Vietnam in 1967. Kissinger
announced on October 27 that “peace was at hand.” The negotiations had not
involved South Vietnam, however, and the Saigon government’s acceptance of the
terms was not set as a precondition. Thieu was outraged by the agreement, and
Nixon subsequently refused to sign it.
After the 1972 elections, Kissinger attempted to
revise the agreements he had already made. North Vietnam refused to consider
these revisions, and Kissinger threatened to renew air assaults against North
Vietnam unless the new conditions were met. Nixon then unleashed at Christmas
the final and most intense bombing of the war over Hanoi and Haiphong.
United States Withdrawal
|
While many U.S. officials were convinced that Hanoi
was bombed back to the negotiating table, the final treaty changed nothing
significant from what had already been agreed to by Kissinger and Tho in
October. Nixon’s Christmas bombings were intended to warn Hanoi that American
air power remained a threat, and he secretly promised Thieu that the United
States would punish North Vietnam should they violate the terms of the final
settlement. Nixon’s political fortunes were about to decline, however. Although
he had won reelection by a landslide in November 1972, he was suffering from
revelations about the Watergate scandal. The president’s campaign officials had
orchestrated a burglary at the Democratic National Committee headquarters, and
Nixon had attempted to cover it up by lying to the American people about his
role.
The president made new enemies when the secret
bombing of Cambodia was revealed at last. Congress was threatening a bill of
impeachment and in early January 1973 indicated it would cut off all funding
for operations in Indochina once U.S. forces had withdrawn. In mid-January
Nixon halted all military actions against North Vietnam.
On January 27, 1973, all four parties to the
Vietnam conflict—the United States, South Vietnam, the PRG, and North
Vietnam—signed the Treaty of Paris. The final terms provided for the release of
all American prisoners of war from North Vietnam; the withdrawal of all U.S.
forces from South Vietnam; the end of all foreign military operations in Laos
and Cambodia; a cease-fire between North and South Vietnam; the formation of a
National Council of Reconciliation to help South Vietnam form a new government;
and continued U.S. military and economic aid to South Vietnam. In a secret
addition to the treaty Nixon also promised $3.25 billion in reparations for the
postwar reconstruction of North Vietnam, an agreement that Congress ultimately
refused to uphold.
Cease-Fire Aftermath
|
On March 29, 1973, the last U.S. troops left
Vietnam. The Paris peace treaty did little to end the bloodshed for the
Vietnamese, however. Problems arose immediately, primarily over the delineation
of two separate zones, as required by the agreement, and the mutual withdrawal
of troops to these respective zones. Northerners in the Lao Dong leadership
wanted to keep hostilities to a minimum in order to keep the United States out
of Vietnam. However, southerners on both sides refused to give up the fight.
Thieu quickly showed that he had no desire to honor the terms of the treaty. In
his view, the continued presence of North Vietnamese soldiers in South Vietnam
absolved him of honoring the cease-fire agreement. Thieu immediately began
offensives against PRG villages, and he issued an order to the ARVN: “If
Communists come into your village…shoot them in the head.” In October Hanoi
authorized southern Communists to strike back against ARVN troops.
Meanwhile, the withdrawal of U.S. personnel resulted in
a collapsing economy throughout South Vietnam. Millions of people had depended
on the money spent by Americans in Vietnam. Thieu’s government was ill-equipped
to treat the mass unemployment and deepening poverty that resulted from the
U.S. withdrawal. The ARVN still received $700 million from the U.S. Congress
and was twice the size of the Communist forces, but morale was collapsing. More
than 200,000 ARVN soldiers deserted in 1974 in order to be with their families.
The apparent weakening of South Vietnam led Hanoi to
believe it could win control over the south through a massive conventional
invasion, and it set 1975 as the year to mount a final offensive. Hanoi
expected the offensive to last at least two years; the rapid collapse of the
ARVN was therefore a surprise even to them. After the initial attack by the
North Vietnamese in the Central Highlands northeast of Saigon on January 7, the
ARVN immediately began to fall apart. On March 25 the ancient imperial city of
Hue fell; then on March 29, Da Nang, site of the former U.S. Marines
headquarters, was overtaken. On April 20 Thieu resigned, accusing the United
States of betrayal. His successor was Duong Van Minh, who had been among those
who overthrew Diem in 1963. On April 30 Minh issued his unconditional surrender
to the PRG. Almost 30 years after Ho Chi Minh’s declaration of independence,
Vietnam was finally unified.
THE TROOPS
|
In the United States, military conscription, or the
draft, had been in place virtually without interruption since the end of World
War II, but volunteers generally predominated in combat units. When the first
U.S. combat troops arrived in Vietnam in 1965 they were composed mainly of volunteers.
The Air Force, Navy, and Marines were volunteer units. The escalating war,
however, required more draftees. In 1965 about 20,000 men per month were
inducted into the military, most into the Army; by 1968 about 40,000 young men
were drafted each month to meet increased troop levels ordered for Vietnam. The
conscript army was largely composed of teenagers; the average age of a U.S.
soldier in Vietnam was 19, younger than in World War II or the Korean War. For
the first time in U.S. military history, tours of duty were fixed in length,
usually for a period of 12 or 13 months, and an individual’s date of estimated
return from overseas (DEROS) was therefore set at the same time as the
assignment date.
Those conscripted were mostly youths from the poorer
section of American society. They did not have access to the exemptions that
were available to their more privileged fellow citizens. Of the numerous
exemptions from military service that Congress had written into law, the most
far-reaching were student deferments. The draft laws effectively enabled most
upper- and middle-class youngsters to avoid military service. By 1968 it was
increasingly evident that the draft system was deeply unfair and
discriminatory. Responding to popular pressures, the Selective Service, the
agency that administered the draft, instituted a lottery system, which might
have produced an army more representative of society at large. Student
deferments were kept by Nixon until 1971, however, so as not to alienate
middle-class voters. By then his Vietnamization policy had lowered monthly
draft calls, and physical exemptions were still easily obtained by the
privileged, especially from draft boards in affluent communities.
Both North and South Vietnam also conscripted
troops. Revolutionary nationalist ideology was quite strong in the north, and
the DRV was able to create an army with well-disciplined, highly motivated
troops. It became the fourth-largest army in the world and one of the most
experienced. South Vietnam also drafted soldiers, beginning in 1955 when the
ARVN was created. Although many ARVN conscripts were committed anti-Communists,
the Saigon leadership did little to educate ARVN soldiers on the nature of the
war or boost their morale. In 1965, 113,000 deserted from the ARVN; by 1972,
20,000 per month were slipping away from the war.
Although equipped with high-tech weaponry that far
exceeded the firepower available to its enemies, the ARVN was poorly led and
failed most of the time to check its opponents’ actions. United States troops
came to dislike and mistrust many ARVN units, accusing them of abandoning the
battlefield. The ARVN also suffered from internal corruption. Numerous
commanders would claim nonexistent troopers and then pocket the pay intended
for those troopers; this practice made some units dangerously understaffed.
Some ARVN soldiers were secretly working for the NLF, providing information
that undermined the U.S. effort. At various times, battles verging on civil war
broke out between troops within the ARVN. Internal disunity on this scale was
never an issue among the North Vietnamese troops or the NLF guerrillas.
The armed forces of the United States serving
in Vietnam began to suffer from internal dissension and low morale as well.
Racism against the Vietnamese troubled many soldiers, particularly those who
had experienced racism directed against themselves in the United States. In
Vietnam, Americans routinely referred to all Vietnamese, both friend and foe,
as “gooks.” This process of dehumanizing the Vietnamese led to many atrocities,
including the massacre at My Lai, and it provoked profound misgivings among
U.S. troops. The injustice of the Selective Service system also turned soldiers
against the war. By 1968 coffeehouses run by soldiers had sprung up at 26 U.S.
bases, serving as forums for antiwar activities. At least 250 underground
antiwar newspapers were published by active-duty soldiers.
After Nixon’s troop-withdrawal policy was initiated in
1969, many soldiers became reluctant to risk their lives for a war without a
clear purpose. No soldier wished to be the last one killed in Vietnam.
Especially toward the end of the war, the fixed one-year tours of duty in
Vietnam resulted in a “short-timer” mentality in which combat troops became
more reluctant to engage in risky military operations as their departure date
approached. In some cases, entire units refused to go out on combat patrols,
disobeying direct orders. Soldiers sometimes took out their frustrations and
resentments on officers who put their lives at risk, especially officers they
deemed to be incompetent or overzealous. The term “fragging” came to be used to
describe soldiers attacking their officers, most often by tossing fragmentation
grenades into the officers’ sleeping quarters. This practice, which took place
mostly late in the war, was a clear sign that military discipline had broken
down in Vietnam. As the war dragged on and morale sagged within the U.S. armed
forces, U.S. military personnel in Vietnam found it increasingly difficult to
carry out their service.
Incidents in which soldiers were absent without
leave (AWOL) also became more frequent toward the end of the war. Some soldiers
who were AWOL for 30 days or more were administratively classified as deserters.
Most deserted for personal, rather than political, reasons. Of 32,000 reported
deserters who were assigned to combat duty in Vietnam, 7,000 had failed to
report for deployment to Vietnam, and 20,000 had completed a full tour of duty
in Vietnam but still had obligations of military service; the remaining 5,000
reported desertions occurred in or near Vietnam. Most who went AWOL or deserted
later returned or were found, and they received less-than-honorable discharges.
Consequently, they received fewer veterans benefits and little, if any,
postcombat rehabilitation.
RESPONSE TO THE WAR IN THE UNITED STATES
|
Opposition to the war in the United States
developed immediately after the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, chiefly among traditional
pacifists, such as the American Friends Service Committee and antinuclear
activists. Early protests were organized around questions about the morality of
U.S. military involvement in Vietnam. Virtually every key event of the war,
including the Tet Offensive and the invasion of Cambodia, contributed to a
steady rise in antiwar sentiment. The revelation of the My Lai Massacre in 1969
caused a dramatic turn against the war in national polls.
Students and professors began to organize “teach-ins” on
the war in early 1965 at the University of Michigan, the University of
Wisconsin, and the University of California at Berkeley. The teach-ins were
large forums for discussion of the war between students and faculty members.
Eventually, virtually no college or university was without an organized student
movement, often spearheaded by Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). The
first major student-led demonstration against the war was organized by the SDS
in April 1965 and stunned observers by mobilizing about 20,000 participants.
Another important organization was the Student Non-Violent Coordinating
Committee (SNCC), which denounced the war as racist as early as 1965. Students
also joined The Resistance, an organization that urged its student members to refuse
to register for the draft, or if drafted to refuse to serve. Vietnam Veterans
Against the War was organized in the United States in 1967. By the 1970s the
participation of Vietnam veterans in protests against the war in the United
States had an important influence on the antiwar movement.
While law enforcement authorities usually blamed student
radicals for the violence that took place on campuses, often it was police
themselves who initiated bloodshed as they cleared out students occupying
campus buildings during “sit-ins” or street demonstrations. As antiwar
sentiment mounted in intensity from 1965 to 1970 so did violence, culminating
in the killings of four students at Kent State in Ohio and of two at Jackson
State College in Mississippi.
Stokely Carmichael, Malcolm X, and other black leaders
denounced the U.S. presence in Vietnam as evidence of American imperialism.
Martin Luther King, Jr., had grown increasingly concerned about the racist
nature of the war, toward both the Vietnamese and African American soldiers,
who suffered disproportionately high casualty rates early in the war. In 1967
King delivered a major address at New York’s Riverside Church in which he
condemned the war, calling the United States “the world’s greatest purveyor of
violence.”
On October 15, 1969, citizens across the
United States participated in The Moratorium, the largest one-day demonstration
against the war. Millions of people stayed home from work to mark their
opposition to the war; college and high school students demonstrated on
hundreds of campuses. A Baltimore judge even interrupted court proceedings for
a moment of reflection on the war. In Vietnam, troops wore black armbands in
honor of the home-front protest. Nixon claimed there was a “great silent
majority” who supported the war and he called on them to back his policies.
Polls showed, however, that at that time half of all Americans felt that the
war was “morally indefensible,” while 60 percent admitted that it was a
mistake. In November 1969 students from all over the country headed for
Washington, D.C., for the Mobilization Against the War. More than 40,000
participated in a March Against Death from Arlington National Cemetery to the
White House, each carrying a placard with the name of a young person killed in
Vietnam.
Opposition existed even among conservatives and business
leaders, primarily for economic reasons. The government was spending more than
$2 billion per month on the war by 1967. Some U.S. corporations, ranging from
beer distributors to manufacturers of jet aircraft, benefited greatly from this
money initially, but the high expense of the war began to cause serious
inflation and rising tax rates. Some corporate critics warned of future costs
to care for wounded veterans. Labor unions were also becoming increasingly
militant in opposition to the war, as they were forced to respond to the
concerns of their members that the draft was imposing an unfair burden on
working-class people.
Another factor that turned public opinion against
the war was the publication of the Pentagon Papers on June 13, 1971, by the
New York Times. Compiled secretly by the U.S. Department of Defense, the
papers were a complete history of the involvement of numerous government
agencies in the Vietnam War. They showed a clear pattern of deception toward
the public. One of the senior analysts compiling this history, Daniel Ellsberg,
secretly photocopied key documents and gave them to the New York Times.
Subsequently, support for Nixon’s war policies plummeted, and polls showed that
60 percent of the public now considered the war “immoral,” while 70 percent
demanded an immediate withdrawal from Vietnam.
The Vietnam War cost the United States $130
billion directly, and at least that amount in indirect costs, such as veterans’
and widows’ benefits and the search for Americans missing in action (MIAs). The
war also spurred serious inflation, contributing to a substantially increased
cost of living in the United States between 1965 and 1975, with continued
repercussions thereafter. Nearly 58,000 Americans lost their lives in Vietnam.
More than 300,000 U.S. soldiers were wounded, half of them very seriously. No
accurate accounting has ever been made of U.S civilians (U.S. government
agents, religious missionaries, Red Cross nurses) killed throughout Indochina.
After returning from the war, many Vietnam veterans
suffered from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, which is characterized by
persistent emotional problems including anxiety and depression. The Department
of Veterans Affairs estimated that 20,000 Vietnam veterans committed suicide in
the war’s aftermath. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, unemployment and rates of
prison incarceration for Vietnam veterans, especially those having seen heavy
combat, were significantly higher than in the general population.
Having felt ignored or disrespected both by the
Veterans Administration (now the Department of Veterans Affairs) and by
traditional organizations such as the Veterans of Foreign Wars and the American
Legion, Vietnam veterans have formed their own self-help groups. Collectively,
they forced the Veterans Administration to establish storefront counseling
centers, staffed by veterans, in every major city. The national organization,
Vietnam Veterans of America (VVA), has become one of the most important service
organizations lobbying in Washington, D.C.
Also in the capital, the Vietnam Veterans
Memorial was dedicated in 1982 to commemorate the U.S. personnel who died or
were declared missing in action in Vietnam. The memorial, which consists of a
V-shaped black granite wall etched with more than 58,000 names, was at first a
source of controversy because it does not glorify the military but invites
somber reflection. The Asian ancestry of its prizewinning designer, Maya Lin,
was also an issue for some veterans. In 1983 a bronze cast was added, depicting
one white, one black, and one Hispanic American soldier. This led to additional
controversy since some argued that the sculpture muted the original memorial’s
solemn message. In 1993 a statue of three women cradling a wounded soldier was
also added to the site to commemorate the service of the 11,000 military nurses
who treated soldiers in Vietnam. Despite all of the controversies, the Vietnam
Veterans Memorial has become a site of pilgrimage for veterans and civilians
alike.
While the United States has been involved in a
number of armed interventions worldwide since it withdrew from Vietnam in 1973,
defense planners have taken pains to persuade the public that goals were
limited and troops would be committed only for a specified duration. The war in
Vietnam created an ongoing debate about the right of the United States to
intervene in the affairs of other nations.
EFFECTS AND RECOVERY IN VIETNAM
|
Although South Vietnam was ostensibly the U.S. ally in
the conflict, far more firepower was unleashed on South Vietnamese civilians
than on northerners. About 10 percent of all bombs and shells went unexploded
and continued to kill and maim throughout the region long after the war, as did
buried land mines. Vietnam developed high rates of birth defects, probably due
to the use of Agent Orange and other chemical defoliants. The defoliants used
during the war also destroyed about 15 percent of South Vietnam’s valuable
timber resources and contributed to a serious decline in rice and fish
production, the major sources of food for Vietnam.
There were 800,000 orphans created in South Vietnam
alone. At least 10 million people became homeless refugees in the south.
Vietnam’s government punished those Vietnamese who had been allied with the
United States by sending thousands to “reeducation camps” and depriving their
families of employment. These measures, combined with economic hardships
throughout Vietnam, led to the exodus of about 1.3 million people, most as
refugees to the United States. The children of U.S. soldiers and Vietnamese
women, often called “Amerasians,” were looked down upon by the Vietnamese, and
many of them immigrated to the United States.
Nixon promised $3.25 billion in reconstruction aid
to Vietnam, but the aid was never granted. Neither Gerald Ford, who became
president after Nixon’s resignation, nor Congress would assume any
responsibility for the devastation of Vietnam. Instead, in 1975 Ford extended
the embargo already in effect against North Vietnam to all of newly unified
Vietnam. In the Foreign Assistance Appropriation Act of 1976, Congress forbade
any assistance for Vietnam or Cambodia.
President Jimmy Carter attempted to resume relations
with Vietnam in 1977, declaring that “the destruction was mutual.” Talks broke
down, however, over the issue of American MIAs and over the promised
reparations, especially after the Vietnamese released a copy of Nixon’s secret
letter of 1973, which promised aid “without any preconditions.” Fearing that
reparations would amount to an admission of wrongdoing, Congress added
amendments to trade bills that also cut Vietnam off from international lending
agencies like the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (World
Bank) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Normalization of relations was
suspended, deepening the economic crisis facing Vietnam in the aftermath of the
war’s destruction. The crisis was worsened by new wars with China and Cambodia
in 1978 and 1979; China canceled any further aid to Vietnam in June 1978.
Cut off from most major sources of aid, the
SRV increasingly relied on the Soviet Union for loans and technical advisers.
Faced with widespread hunger and enormous health problems, the SRV placed an
emphasis on restoring agricultural production. The government vigorously
pursued Communist economic policy, seizing private property, collectivizing
plantations, and nationalizing businesses. About 1 million civilians were
forcibly moved from cities to new economic zones. Mismanagement and corruption
became common, and popular disillusion with the regime grew. At the Sixth Party
Congress in 1986, the SRV leadership declared Communism a failed experiment and
vowed radical change. Calling the reforms doi moi (economic renovation),
the SRV opened Vietnam to capitalism. After the collapse of the USSR in 1991,
the SRV leadership was forced to move further in this direction.
Stepping up efforts to find American MIAs and
cooperating with World Bank and IMF guidelines for economic reform, Vietnam
worked to improve relations with the United States. In 1994 President Bill
Clinton lifted the trade embargo, and in 1995 the United States formally
restored full diplomatic relations with Vietnam. This initiated a process of
normalization that was completed in 2001 when the U.S. Congress approved an
agreement that established normal trade relations with Vietnam.