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etween 1945 and 1954, the Vietnamese waged an anti-colonial
war against France, which received $2.6 billion in financial
support from the United States. The French defeat at
the Dien Bien Phu was followed by a peace conference
in Geneva, in which Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam received
their independence and Vietnam was temporarily divided
between an anti-Communist South and a Communist North.
In 1956, South Vietnam, with American backing, refused
to hold the unification elections. By 1958, Communist-led
guerrillas known as the Viet Cong had begun to battle
the South Vietnamese government.
To support the South's government, the United States
sent in 2,000 military advisors, a number that grew
to 16,300 in 1963. The military condition deteriorated,
and by 1963 South Vietnam had lost the fertile Mekong
Delta to the Viet Cong. In 1965, Johnson escalated the
war, commencing air strikes on North Vietnam and committing
ground forces, which numbered 536,000 in 1968. The 1968
Tet Offensive by the North Vietnamese turned many Americans
against the war. The next president, Richard Nixon,
advocated Vietnamization, withdrawing American troops
and giving South Vietnam greater responsibility for
fighting the war. His attempt to slow the flow of North
Vietnamese soldiers and supplies into South Vietnam
by sending American forces to destroy Communist supply
bases in Cambodia in 1970 in violation of Cambodian
neutrality provoked antiwar protests on the nation's
college campuses.
From 1968 to 1973 efforts were made to end the conflict
through diplomacy. In January 1973, an agreement reached
and U.S. forces were withdrawn from Vietnam and U.S.
prisoners of war were released. In April 1975, South
Vietnam surrendered to the North and Vietnam was reunited.
Consequences
1. The Vietnam War cost the United States 58,000 lives
and 350,000 casualties. It also resulted in between
one and two million Vietnamese deaths.
2. Congress enacted the War Powers Act in 1973, requiring
the president to receive explicit Congressional approval
before committing American forces overseas.
Background
It was the longest war in American history and the most
unpopular American war of the twentieth century. It
resulted in nearly 60,000 American deaths and an estimated
2 million Vietnamese deaths. Even today, many Americans
still ask whether the American effort in Vietnam was
a sin, a blunder, a necessary war, or a noble cause,
or an idealistic, if failed, effort to protect the South
Vietnamese from totalitarian government.
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