Transcript Document
Vietnam
1954 - 1964
At the Geneva
Conference it
was
decided that:
Ho Chi Minh’s
forces were given
control of
the North
Vietnam was to be divided
at the 17th parallel
O
Ngo Dinh Diem, a
French-educated,
Roman Catholic
took over control
of the South
Date was set for democratic
elections to reunify Vietnam
But Diem backed
out of the
elections, leading
to military conflict
between North and
South
U.S. Military Involvement Begins
Diem = Dictator (but an anti-communist one!)
Buddhist majority persecuted
Torture, no political freedom
The U.S. aided Diem’s gov’t
Eisenhower sent financial/
military aid
675 U.S. Army “advisors” sent
by 1960
U.S. Military Involvement Increases
Gen. Maxwell Taylor’s recommendation (Oct. 1961):
--send 8000 troops
Sec. of Defense McNamara’s recommendation (Nov. 1961):
--send 200,000 troops
In 1962, JFK sends 11,000 troops in to train & coordinate
South Vietnamese troops
Americans soon began to suffer casualties
Protests of Diem’s
Government
Self-Emulation by a Buddhist Monk
Assassinations
1963: JFK supports a
Vietnamese military coup
d’etat – Diem murdered
Nov. 2
But then:
Kennedy
assassinated
weeks later
(Nov. 22)
Lyndon Baines Johnson (LBJ)
becomes president
• Incredible Negotiator
• Had served many terms
in Congress
• Huge supporter of civil
rights & helping the poor
Johnson Inherits Most of Kennedy’s Advisors
Sec. of Defense Robert McNamara advises
LBJ to rout the communists
“Unless we can achieve this objective in South Vietnam, almost
all of Southeast Asia [Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia] will
probably fall under Communist dominance . . . Thailand
might hold for a period with our help, but would be under
grave pressure. Even the Philippines would become shaky,
and the threat to India to the west, Australia and New
Zealand to the south, and Taiwan, Korea, and Japan to
the north and east would be greatly increased. . . .
[T]he rest of the world [is watching because]the South
Vietnam conflict is regarded as a test case of U.S. capacity
to help a nation meet a Communist ‘war of liberation.’”
Gearing up for 1964 election, Johnson
wanted congressional support for
involvement in Vietnam
Would give LBJ
• Increased credibility
• Increased flexibility
• Tough image against
his opponent Barry
Goldwater
So he wrote up a statement
asking Congress for power
to use military in Vietnam if
necessary—
and then he waited for the
right time to make his
request
First Tonkin Gulf Incident, August 2, 1964
Context: Two U.S. Operations Were
Being Carried Out:
a) Hit and run strikes on N.
Vietnamese coastal areas
b) Cruising within 8 miles of
Vietnamese coast to trigger and
locate radar stations
On Aug. 2nd the U.S. destroyer
Maddox was attacked by several N.
Vietnamese patrol boats
• No U.S. casualties
• LBJ sent a stern message to
North Vietnamese leaders but did
not order any retaliation at that
time
Second Tonkin Gulf Incident, August 4
• The Maddox and a second
destroyer, the Turner Joy
were immediately ordered
back into the area.
• Another hit and run mission
was conducted.
• That night radar & sonar
readings indicated they were
under attack, but no enemy
boats were actually seen and
no hostile gunfire was heard.
• Both destroyers fired for
several hours at the unseen
attackers. Heavy rain
contributed to the confusion.
On August 5, Johnson publicly
ordered retaliatory measures,
bombing four torpedo boat bases,
and an oil-storage facility .
Several days later analysis of the incident raised doubts that any attack had occurred at all:
Johnson himself said, “Hell, those dumb stupid sailors were just shooting at flying fish.”
The Tonkin Gulf Resolution
“The Blank Check”:
--authorized the President “to
take all necessary measures to
repel any armed attack against
the forces of the United States
and to prevent further
aggression”
House 416-0
Senate 88-2
Separation of Powers Regarding Use of
Military Force
Article I says only
Congress can declare
war and provide
funding to fight a war
Article II says the
President is
Commander
in chief