Australia’s involvement in the Vietnam WarHasan Mohammad
Australia's military involvement in the Vietnam War was the longest in duration of any war in Australia's history.
The arrival of the Australian Army Training Team Vietnam (AATTV) in South Vietnam during July and August 1962 was the beginning of Australia's involvement in the Vietnam War. Australia's participation in the war was formally declared at an end when the Governor-General issued a proclamation on 11 January 1973. The only combat troops remaining in Vietnam were a platoon guarding the Australian embassy in Saigon, which was withdrawn in June 1973.
The Australian commitment consisted predominantly of army personnel, but significant numbers of air force and navy personnel and some civilians also took part.
A brief history about Vietnam, Vietnam War and about Ho Chi Min. present econ...Swaraj Mishra
This PPT show about the Vietnam history including the timeline from its time of origin to the after independence and also the 21st century. It includes the culture and demographics of Vietnam. Here you can find also the world war 2 situations in Vietnam, civil war and about their great leader Ho Chi Min. The economy of Vietnam compare to India. Vietnam political leaders and their government structure. The PPT includes the geographical significance of Vietnam and recent events.
Australia’s involvement in the Vietnam WarHasan Mohammad
Australia's military involvement in the Vietnam War was the longest in duration of any war in Australia's history.
The arrival of the Australian Army Training Team Vietnam (AATTV) in South Vietnam during July and August 1962 was the beginning of Australia's involvement in the Vietnam War. Australia's participation in the war was formally declared at an end when the Governor-General issued a proclamation on 11 January 1973. The only combat troops remaining in Vietnam were a platoon guarding the Australian embassy in Saigon, which was withdrawn in June 1973.
The Australian commitment consisted predominantly of army personnel, but significant numbers of air force and navy personnel and some civilians also took part.
A brief history about Vietnam, Vietnam War and about Ho Chi Min. present econ...Swaraj Mishra
This PPT show about the Vietnam history including the timeline from its time of origin to the after independence and also the 21st century. It includes the culture and demographics of Vietnam. Here you can find also the world war 2 situations in Vietnam, civil war and about their great leader Ho Chi Min. The economy of Vietnam compare to India. Vietnam political leaders and their government structure. The PPT includes the geographical significance of Vietnam and recent events.
Found At:
http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&ved=0CCkQFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fonline-history.org%2Fwc2-docs%2FVietnam-War%2FThe-Vietnam-War.ppt&ei=XgKFU9_sG4WUqAbsyYHIDw&usg=AFQjCNGKRQvdrXQqZNXRZ28c9RRi-jAdyA&sig2=ZAZT3wsTeuVdjWSVCbXkRg&bvm=bv.67720277,d.b2k&cad=rja
Vietnam war for Cambridge IGCSE HistoryJoanie Yeung
Introduction of Vietcong, Why did USA get involved in Vietnam? Why did USA fail to defeat the Vietcong? What were the roles played by the media and public opinion in USA? How did the Vietnam War end?
Found At:
http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=1&ved=0CCkQFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fonline-history.org%2Fwc2-docs%2FVietnam-War%2FThe-Vietnam-War.ppt&ei=XgKFU9_sG4WUqAbsyYHIDw&usg=AFQjCNGKRQvdrXQqZNXRZ28c9RRi-jAdyA&sig2=ZAZT3wsTeuVdjWSVCbXkRg&bvm=bv.67720277,d.b2k&cad=rja
Vietnam war for Cambridge IGCSE HistoryJoanie Yeung
Introduction of Vietcong, Why did USA get involved in Vietnam? Why did USA fail to defeat the Vietcong? What were the roles played by the media and public opinion in USA? How did the Vietnam War end?
Propuesta didáctica para trabajar los Reyes Magos ProfeDeELE.es
Propuesta didáctica para trabajar los Reyes Magos en la clase de ELE. Para todos los niveles. Si estás interesado en descargar esta propuesta, visita: http://www.profedeele.es/profesores/los-reyes-magos/
This is three units combined into one rather long slide show. It covers the basics behind France from 1815-1850, as well as German unification and Italian unification movements.
What the video at httpswww.youtube.comwatchv=XgW0o-Ui94k and a.docxtwilacrt6k5
What the video at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XgW0o-Ui94k and answer the questions below based upon your understanding of the war and the content of the video.
1. Why did the French request assistance from the United States in Southeast Asia?
2. How is the Domino Theory related to the containment policy?
3. How did President Kennedy attempt to stop the expansion of communism into Vietnam?
4. After which event did President Johnson dramatically increase the number of US troops deployed to Vietnam?
a. Why do historians call into questions President Johnson’s justification for sending more troops to Vietman?
5. Who advocated the policy of Vietnamization? Why did this policy fail?
6. How did the Vietnam conflict end?
The Cold War in Vietnam
Vietnam Before US Intervention Previous
Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia had been a French colony since the late 19th century. During World War II, however, Japan occupied French Indochina. After Japan's defeat, France tried to re-establish control, but met opposition from the Viet Minh.
After World War II, neither France nor England wanted to see the end of their colonial empires. England was anxious to control Burma, Malaya, and India. France wanted to rule Indochina. Under Franklin Roosevelt, the United States sought to bring an end to European colonialism. As he put it, condescendingly: “There are 1.1 billion brown people. In many Eastern countries they are ruled by a handful of whites and they resent it. Our goal must be to help them achieve independence. 1.1 billion potential enemies are dangerous.”
But under Harry Truman, the United States was concerned about its naval and air bases in Asia. The U.S. decided to permit France into Indochina to re-assert its authority in Southeast Asia. The result: the French Indochina War began.
From the beginning, American intelligence officers knew that France would find it difficult to re-assert its authority in Indochina. The French refused to listen to American intelligence. To them, the idea of Asian rebels standing up to a powerful Western nation was preposterous.
Although Truman allowed the French to return to Indochina, he was not yet prepared to give the French arms, transportation, and economic assistance. It was not until anti-communism became a major issue that the United States would take an active role supporting the French. The fall of China, the Korean War, and the coming of Joe McCarthy would lead policymakers to see the French War in Vietnam, not as a colonial war, but as a war against international communism.
Beginning in 1950, the United States started to underwrite the French war effort. For four years, the United State.
What the video at httpswww.youtube.comwatchv=XgW0o-Ui94k a.docxtwilacrt6k5
What the video at:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XgW0o-Ui94k
and answer the questions below based upon your understanding of the war and the content of the video.
1.
Why did the French request assistance from the United States in Southeast Asia?
2.
How is the Domino Theory related to the containment policy?
3.
How did President Kennedy attempt to stop the expansion of communism into Vietnam?
4.
After which event did President Johnson dramatically increase the number of US troops deployed to Vietnam?
a.
Why do historians call into questions President Johnson’s justification for sending more troops to Vietman?
5.
Who advocated the policy of Vietnamization?
Why did this policy fail?
6.
How did the Vietnam conflict end?
The Cold War in Vietnam
Vietnam Before US Intervention Previous
Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia had been a French colony since the late 19th century. During World War II, however, Japan occupied French Indochina. After Japan's defeat, France tried to re-establish control, but met opposition from the Viet Minh.
After World War II, neither France nor England wanted to see the end of their colonial empires. England was anxious to control Burma, Malaya, and India. France wanted to rule Indochina. Under Franklin Roosevelt, the United States sought to bring an end to European colonialism. As he put it, condescendingly: “There are 1.1 billion brown people. In many Eastern countries they are ruled by a handful of whites and they resent it. Our goal must be to help them achieve independence. 1.1 billion potential enemies are dangerous.”
But under Harry Truman, the United States was concerned about its naval and air bases in Asia. The U.S. decided to permit France into Indochina to re-assert its authority in Southeast Asia. The result: the French Indochina War began.
From the beginning, American intelligence officers knew that France would find it difficult to re-assert its authority in Indochina. The French refused to listen to American intelligence. To them, the idea of Asian rebels standing up to a powerful Western nation was preposterous.
Although Truman allowed the French to return to Indochina, he was not yet prepared to give the French arms, transportation, and economic assistance. It was not until anti-communism became a major issue that the United States would take an active role supporting the French. The fall of China, the Korean War, and the coming of Joe McCarthy would lead policymakers to see the French War in Vietnam, not as a colonial war, but as a war against international communism.
Beginning in 1950, the United States started to underwrite the French war effort. For four years, the United States provided $2 billion; however, this had little effect on the war. The French command, frustrated by a hit-and-run guerrilla war, devised a trap. The idea was to use a French garrison as bait, have the enemy surround it, and mass their forces. Then, the French would strike and .
This is my first lecture on Cold War at National Law University Orissa, Cuttack, India. This lecturer is purely compiled from the web sources just for the use of nluo students. This work is not mine and it shall not be cited.
My Lecture Five on Korean War (1950-53)- Part IIDr. Afroz Alam
This is part II of my lecture on Korean War (1950-53) at National Law University Orissa, Cuttack, India.This lecturer is purely compiled from the web sources just for the use of nluo students. This work is not mine and it shall not be cited.
This is part I of my fourth lecture on Korean War (1950-53) at National Law University Orissa, Cuttack, India. This lecturer is purely compiled from the web sources just for the use of nluo students. This work is not mine and it shall not be cited.
1. MY LECTURES ON “VIETNAM WAR”
2010
NATIONAL LAW UNIVERSITY, ORISSA
B.A. LL.B SEMESTER-III (2010): “GLOBAL POLITICS AND GOVERNANCE”
MY LECTURES ON “VIETNAM WAR”
LECTURE ELEVEN
By
DR. AFROZ ALAM
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF POLITICS
NATIONAL LAW UNIVERSITY, ORISSA
MOBILE: +919438303041
E-MAIL: afrozalam2@gmail.com
afroz@nluo.ac.in
DR. AFROZ ALAM, NATIONAL LAW UNIVERSITY, ORISSA Page 1
2. MY LECTURES ON “VIETNAM WAR”
2010
VIETNAM
Vietnam, officially the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, is the easternmost country on the Indochina Peninsula
in Southeast Asia. It is bordered by People's Republic of China (PRC) to the north, Laos to the northwest, Cambodia to
the southwest, and the South China Sea, referred to as East Sea, to the east. With a population of over 86 million,
Vietnam is the 13th most populous country in the world.
VIETNAM WAR: AN OVERVIEW
In the 19th Century Vietnam became a colony of the French. During World War II the Japanese defeated the French
and occupied Vietnam. Later the French tried to re-impose their colonial rule but failed. From 1946 until 1954, the
Vietnamese Army (Viet Minh) struggled for their independence from France during the First Indochina War.
The second Vietnam War was the longest military battle during cold war that lasted from 1959 to April 30, 1975. This
Vietnam War was also referred to as the Second Indochina War. Over 1.4 million military personnel and an estimated
2 million civilians were killed in the war. Fighting on one side was a coalition of forces including the United States,
the Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam), Australia, New Zealand, and South Korea. Fighting on the other side was a
coalition of forces including the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (North Vietnam) and the National Liberation Front,
a communist-led South Vietnamese guerrilla movement. The USSR provided military aid to the North Vietnamese and
DR. AFROZ ALAM, NATIONAL LAW UNIVERSITY, ORISSA Page 2
3. MY LECTURES ON “VIETNAM WAR”
2010
to the NLF, but was not one of the military combatants. The war ended with the defeat of South Vietnam. Ultimately
Vietnam was unified.
Initially, the United States had little interest in Vietnam and Southeast Asia, however as it became clear that the post-
World War II world would be dominated by the US and its allies and the Soviet Union and theirs, isolating communist
movements took an increased importance. These concerns were ultimately formed into the doctrine of containment and
domino theory. First spelled out 1947, containment identified that the goal of Communism was to spread to capitalist
states and that the only way to stop it was to “contain” it within its present borders. Springing from containment was
the concept of domino theory which stated that if one state in a region were to fall to Communism, then the
surrounding states would inevitably fall as well. These concepts were to dominate and guide US foreign policy for
much of the Cold War. In 1950, to combat the spread of Communism, the United States began supplying the French
military in Vietnam with advisors and funding its efforts against the “red” Viet Minh. These efforts continued in 1956,
when advisors were provided to train the army of the new Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam). Despite their best
efforts, the quality of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) was to remain consistently poor throughout its
existence.
Domino Theory
THE GENEVA AGREEMENT AND AFTERMATH
The Geneva accords of 1954 partitioned the country into two at the 17th parallel and promised to hold democratic
elections throughout the country in 1956 to reunite the country. Under the terms of the Geneva Convention, civilians
were to be given the opportunity to freely move between the two provisional states for a 300-day period.
In 1954, the Viet Minh forces took over North Vietnam according to the Geneva Accord. Nearly one million North
Vietnamese fled to South Vietnam. North Vietnam’s capital was Hanoi. The leader of North Vietnam was Ho Chi
Minh.
THE DIEM REGIME
Ngo Dinh Diem was the president of South Vietnam. Diem was a Christian and an avowed anti-communist. He
refused to hold elections. The United States refused to sign the Geneva agreement. A year after the Geneva Accords,
Prime Minister Diem commenced a “Denounce the Communists” campaign in the south. Throughout the summer of
DR. AFROZ ALAM, NATIONAL LAW UNIVERSITY, ORISSA Page 3
4. MY LECTURES ON “VIETNAM WAR”
2010
1955, communists and other oppositionists were imprisoned, arrested, tortured, or executed. In addition to attacking
the communists, Diem assaulted Buddhist sects and organized crime, which further alienated the largely Buddhist
Vietnamese people.
Diem’s brutal repression and incompetent administration angered large parts of the South Vietnamese population and
finally eroded his support. Later that year, Diem rigged a referendum on the future of the country and declared the
formation of the Republic of Vietnam, with its capital at Saigon.
Despite this, the US actively supported the Diem regime as a buttress against Ho Chi Minh’s communist forces in the
north. In 1957, a low-level guerrilla movement began to emerge in the south, conducted by Viet Minh units that had
not returned north after the accords. Two years later, these groups successfully pressured Ho’s government into issuing
a secret resolution calling for an armed struggle in the south. Military supplies began to flow into the south along the
Ho Chi Minh Trail and the following year the National Front for the Liberation of South Vietnam (Viet Cong) was
formed to carry out the fight.
FAILURE AND DEPOSING DIEM
The situation in South Vietnam continued to deteriorate with corruption rife throughout the Diem government and the
ARVN unable to effectively combat the Viet Cong. In 1961, the newly elected Kennedy Administration promised
more aid and additional money, weapons, and supplies were sent with little effect. Discussions then began in
Washington regarding the need to force a regime change in Saigon. This was accomplished on November 2, 1963,
when the CIA aided a group of ARVN officers to overthrow Diem. To help deal with the post-coup chaos, Kennedy
increased the number of US advisors in South Vietnam to 16,000.
Chaos ensued following the coup. Taking advantage of the situation, Hanoi increased its support for the guerrillas.
Between 1963 and 1967, South Vietnam entered a period of instability as no government lasted for long. The NLF
scored some important military victories. In 1965 the US, decided to send troops to South Vietnam to secure the
country and started to bomb North Vietnam. However, in 1968, the NLF launched a massive and surprise “Tet
offensive” attacking almost all major cities in South Vietnam over the Vietnamese New Year. In the months following
the “Tet Offensive”, an American unit massacred civilian villagers, suspected to be sheltering Viet Cong (NLF
guerillas), in the village of My Lai causing worldwide condemnation. In 1969, Ho Chí Minh died. Even though the Tet
Offensive was a disastrous military defeat for the Viet Cong, it led many Americans to think that the war was not
winnable.
VIETNAMIZATION
The serving US president Richard Nixon proposed “Vietnamization” of the war, with South Vietnamese troops taking
charge of the fighting, yet still receiving American aid and, if required, air and naval support. This new strategy started
to show some effects. In 1970, South Vietnamese troops successfully conducted raids against North Vietnamese bases
in Cambodia. Vietnamization was tested by the Easter Offensive of 1972, a massive conventional invasion of South
Vietnam. The VPA(Vietnams People’s Army) a part of the North Korean army and NLF quickly overran the northern
provinces and in coordination with other forces attacked from Cambodia, threatening to cut the country in half. U.S.
troop withdrawals continued. But American airpower came to the rescue with "Operation Linebacker" and the invasion
was halted. However, it was apparent that without American airpower South Vietnam could not survive. The last
remaining American ground troops were withdrawn by August.
DR. AFROZ ALAM, NATIONAL LAW UNIVERSITY, ORISSA Page 4
5. MY LECTURES ON “VIETNAM WAR”
2010
THE PARIS AGREEMENT
The Paris Peace Accord, agreed between North Vietnam’s Le Duc Tho and Henry Kissinger was reluctantly signed in
January 1973 by President Thieu of South Vietnam. This produced a ceasefire and allowed for the exchange of
prisoners of war. On December 13, 1974, North Vietnam attacked the South violating the Paris peace treaty. By 1975
the South Vietnamese Army faced a, highly motivated, well-organized and well-funded North Vietnam. Much of the
North's material and financial support came from the communist countries (mainly the Soviet Union and China).
Within South Vietnam, there was chaos. Their abandonment by the American military had weakened an economy
dependent on U.S. financial support and the presence of large numbers of U.S. troops. In early 1975, the North
Vietnamese military launched a massive attack against the Central Highland province of Buon Me Thuot. The South
Vietnamese troops previously anticipated attack against the neighbouring province of Pleiku, and were caught off
guard. President Nguyen Van Thieu ordered the moving of all troops from the Central Highland to the coastal areas, as
with ever reducing American aid, South Vietnamese forces could not afford to spread too thin. However, whole South
Vietnamese Second Corp got stuck on narrow mountain roads, flooded with thousands of civilian refugees, and was
frequently ambushed.
END OF THE WAR
Although many South Vietnamese units were ready to defend Saigon, the serving president Duong Van Minh ordered
surrender on April 30 1975. This spared Saigon from destruction. Hundreds of thousands of South Vietnamese fled the
country by all means: ships, fishing boats, barges, airplanes, helicopters, etc. Most were picked up by the U.S Seventh
fleet in the South China Sea or landed in Thailand.
CASUALTIES OF THE VIETNAM WAR
During Vietnam War, the United States suffered 58,119 killed, 153,303 wounded, and 1,948 missing in action.
Casualty figures for the Republic of Vietnam are estimated at 230,000 killed and 1,169,763 wounded. Combined the
North Vietnamese Army and the Viet Cong suffered approximately 1,100,000 killed in action and an unknown number
of wounded. It is estimated that between 2 to 4 million Vietnamese civilians were killed during the conflict.
AFTERMATH
North and South Vietnam were unified into a single country. The Vietnamese Communists did not commit a “blood
bath” or effected radical changes. The social order in South Vietnam was preserved. Most technocrats or low ranking
government workers retained their jobs. Some North Vietnamese soldiers and cadres began to realize that they had
been indoctrinated into thinking that the South Vietnamese people were very poor and exploited by the imperialists
and foreign capitalists. Contradictory to what they were taught, they saw an abundance of food and consumer goods,
fashionable clothes, plenty of books and music; things that were scarce in the North. From the mid-1980s, Vietnam has
enjoyed substantial economic growth and some reduction in political repression.
DR. AFROZ ALAM, NATIONAL LAW UNIVERSITY, ORISSA Page 5