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What was the reason for the Vietnam War? |
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Answer
The reason for the Vietnam war or the second Indo China war is complicated but i can give you a few reasons.
American interests in the middle east eg oil rubber and tin, were dangerously close to North Vietnam. A theory called the "domino effect" where a communist country would convert its neighbour to communism was feared to be taking place.
Another reaon is that America saw itself as a protector of freedom and democracy and it saw that South Vietnam would soon come under attack so it sent money and advisors first in the early 60's to "advise" the vietnamese on how to defend theyre country. Later soldiers were sent probably to act as a deterent for aggresors but eventually America got involved in the conflict and the rest is history, they lost and the world was shown that an arogant superpower could be beaten as we would later see in Afghanistan with the Russians.
Answer
Vietnam started a war of independence with French colonial forces before WWII. The war was continued with and against US forces when France withdrew from the country in the 1950s and US forces took their place. US forces replaced French forces because of a so-called 'domino theory' of Communist expansion.
ANSWER
There are really two questions to be asked:
1) What was the reason for the Vietnam War
2) Why did it end the way it did
The U.S. is serious about assisting its allies in times of trouble. Our allies at the time, the South Vietnamese Government, requested assistance in repelling communist aggression from the North and communist sympathizers inside of South Vietnam itself (the Viet Cong). Communist expansion was also of great concern to the U.S. Government. We were in the midst of the cold war with the world's other super powers, the Soviet Union and Communist China. These two countries were backing their allies with funding, military training, and armaments to fight the U.S. and its allies...never becoming directly involved themselves. That is, troops on the ground, other than those serving in an advisory capacity. For example, the Soviet Union provided advisors and training to the North Vietnamese in the use of SAM sites (surface-to-air missiles) to protect themselves from U.S. bombing raids, training pilots in the use of the Soviet MIG aircraft to intercept U.S. aircraft on bombing missions, etc.
Certainly, within the walls of the U.S. Government, there were many other reasons to move ahead with its involvement, self-serving and otherwise. In the end, the U.S. Government failed in its attempts to keep the South free from communist oppression. This was largely due to weak willed and self-serving politicians who cared more about the small but loud American anti-war movement amongst mostly liberal college professors, their idealistic, gullible students, and extreme left-wing agitators who wanted nothing more than to see the destruction of the "establishment", as they called it.
The politicians were also more concerned about their re-elections, as is always the case with politicians. The politicians also prevented the military from utilizing many basic battle strategies, like a sustained bombing of enemy re-supply routes, etc. When public pressure was applied, the politicans would fold. Never-the-less, with all of the limiting rules of engagement that were heaped upon the U.S. military, the armed forces on the ground and in the air soundly beat the enemy in every major military operation.
The U.S. could have forced the North to surrender after the failed 1968 Tet Offensive. This fact was made public in the memoirs of General Giap, the North Vietnamese Military Commander. Giap admitted in his memoirs that news media reporting of the war and the antiwar demonstrations that ensued in America surprised him. Instead of negotiating what he called a "conditional surrender," Giap said they would now go the limit because America's resolve was weakening and the possibility of complete victory was within Hanoi's grasp. Being the first major "television war," Americans watched the carnage in horror and concluded (incorrectly) that it was a military disaster for America. One of America's most trusted newsmen, CBS's Walter Cronkite, even appeared for a standup piece with distant fires as a backdrop. Donning a helmet, Cronkite declared the war lost. This is all General Giap needed to hear. All the NVA needed to do at this point was to hang on just a little longer. The rest, as they say, is history.
First answer by Gavin Ross. Last edit by Papaj56. Contributor trust: 27 [recommend contributor]. Question popularity: 39 [recommend question]
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