Origins of Vietnam War and Reasons for US Involvement Flashcards

1
Q

Who ruled Vietnam between 1945 and 1954?

A

The French

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2
Q

Which country came communist in 1949?

A

China

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3
Q

Which communist country began financially supporting Ho Chi Minh (the leader of the Viet Minh) from 1949?

A

China

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4
Q

What did the USA do to counter the Chinese funding of Ho Chi Minh?

A

The USA funded the French war effort with $500 million per year

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5
Q

What percentage of funding did the Americans provide for the French war effort?

A

80%

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6
Q

What did the Viet Minh fight for?

A

Vietnamese independence (i.e. to be free from foreign rule)

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7
Q

After what battle did the French withdraw from Vietnam?

A

Dien Bien Phu

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8
Q

What was agreed at a 1954 peace conference in Geneva?

A
  • Vietnam was split into North and South Vietnam

- That elections would be held within two years to reunite the country

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9
Q

Why did the Americans not allow the elections in Vietnam to happen?

A

They feared the communists would win

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10
Q

Why did the Americans worry about Vietnam falling to communism?

A

The believed in the Domino Theory and believed it would start a chain reaction where other countries (like Laos, Cambodia and Thailand) would also become communist.

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11
Q

What was the American policy towards communism known as?

A

Containment Theory

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12
Q

Who did the USA support in South Vietnam from 1955 onwards?

A

Ngo Dinh Diem

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13
Q

Why did the Americans support Diem?

A

Diem was fiercely anti-communist and would imprison or exile (send out the country) communists

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14
Q

Why was Diem so unpopular with people in Vietnam?

A

1) LANDLORD He belonged to the landlord class, which treated peasants with contempt
2) CATHOLIC He was a Catholic and showed little respect for the Buddhist religion (of which the vast majority of Vietnamese people followed)
3) CORRUPT Diem’s regime was corrupt. He gave key jobs to family and supporters

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15
Q

What did the Dulles, US Secretary of State, say about Diem?

A

“We know of no one better.”

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16
Q

Roughly how much money did the US send to Diem’s regime during the 1950s?

A

$1.6 billion

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17
Q

When was Diem overthrown?

A

In November 1963, shortly before Kennedy’s assassination

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18
Q

Did Diem’s removal in 1963 improve the situation?

A

No - the Americans continued to support corrupt, but anti-communist, regimes in South Vietnam

19
Q

What did the actions of anti-Communists governments lead to?

A

A massive increase in support for the Vietcong

20
Q

When was the Vietcong established?

A

In December 1960

21
Q

Who made up the Vietcong?

A
  • South Vietnamese opponents of the government

- Communists from North Vietnam, acting on Ho Chi Minh’s orders

22
Q

What did the Vietcong use to supply their soldiers?

A

The Ho Chi Minh trail

23
Q

What did Vietcong troops target?

A
  • South Vietnamese forces, officials, and buildings

- American supply bases

24
Q

How did the South Vietnamese government initially try and deal with the Vietcong?

A

Using the Strategic Hamlet programme

25
Q

How was the Strategic Hamlet programme supposed to work?

A

Peasants living in Vietcong controlled areas were moved to villages in areas controlled by the South Vietnamese government

26
Q

Why did the Strategic Hamlet not really work?

A

It backfired because peasants resented it (they had been removed from their homes) and corrupt officials pocketed money meant for the villagers.

27
Q

When did JFK start sending military personnel to help the South Vietnamese government defeat the Vietcong?

A

1962 (he called them ‘advisers’)

28
Q

What did JFK say about Vietnam?

A

That the USA would not ‘blunder into war’

29
Q

What key event happened in America in November 1963?

A

JFK was assassinated

30
Q

Who succeeded JFK as president?

A

Lyndon Baines Johnson

31
Q

What was LBJ’s attitude towards Vietnam?

A

He was more aggressive (he referred to it as a ‘damned little pissant country’) and fiercely anti-communist

32
Q

What was the Gulf of Tonkin incident?

A

In 1964, North Vietnamese patrol boats fired on US ships. This produced a furious response from the USA.

33
Q

What did the Tonkin Gulf Resolution, passed by Congress in 1964, give to the President?

A

The power to ‘take all necessary measures to…achieve peace’

34
Q

What did the Tonkin Gulf Resolution really mean?

A

It gave President Johnson the power to take the USA into a full scale war

35
Q

When did Operation Rolling Thunder begin?

A

In February 1965

36
Q

What was Operation Rolling Thunder?

A

A huge bombing campaign against North Vietnamese cities, factories, army bases and the Ho Chi Minh Trail

37
Q

How long was Operation Rolling Thunder supposed to last?

A

8 weeks

38
Q

How long did Operation Rolling Thunder actually last?

A

3 years

39
Q

When did 3,500 marines land in Vietnam?

A

8 March 1965

40
Q

Why was it significant that marines rather than advisers were in Vietnam?

A

It meant the USA was now officially at war with Vietnam.

41
Q

What did the Eisenhower warn of in 1961?

A

A ‘military-industrial complex’

42
Q

What was the military industrial complex?

A

The idea that due to big budgets given to military departments - which were then spent on military contracts - both the armed forces and businesses benefited from a war.

43
Q

Do all historians agree that the military industrial complex was why the USA got involved in Vietnam?

A

No - in fact the military industrial complex is especially controversial.