Vietnam War conflict in Southeast Asia, primarily fought
in South Vietnam between government forces aided by the United States
and guerrilla forces aided by North Vietnam. The war began soon after
the Geneva Conference provisionally divided (1954) Vietnam at 17° N lat.
into the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (North Vietnam) and the Republic
of Vietnam (South Vietnam). It escalated from a Vietnamese civil war
into a limited international conflict in which the United States was
deeply involved, and did not end, despite peace agreements in 1973, until
North Vietnam's successful offensive in 1975 resulted in South Vietnam's
collapse and the unification of Vietnam by the North.
In 1961, South Vietnam signed a military and economic aid
treaty with the United States leading to the arrival (1961) of U.S. support
troops and the formation (1962) of the U.S. Military Assistance Command.
Mounting dissatisfaction with the ineffectiveness and corruption of Diem's
government culminated (Nov., 1963) in a military coup engineered by Duong
Van Minh ; Diem was executed. No one was able to establish control in
South Vietnam until June, 1965, when Nguyen Cao Ky became premier, but
U.S. military aid to South Vietnam increased, especially after the U.S.
Senate passed the Tonkin Gulf resolution (Aug. 7, 1964) at the request
of President Lyndon B. Johnson .
In early 1965, the United States began air raids on North
Vietnam and on Communist-controlled areas in the South; by 1966 there
were 190,000 U.S. troops in South Vietnam. North Vietnam, meanwhile,
was receiving armaments and technical assistance from the Soviet Union
and other Communist countries. Despite massive U.S. military aid, heavy
bombing, the growing U.S. troop commitment (which reached nearly 550,000
in 1969), and some political stability in South Vietnam after the election
(1967) of Nguyen Van Thieu as president, the United States and South
Vietnam were unable to defeat the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese forces.
Optimistic U.S. military reports were discredited in Feb., 1968, by the
costly and devastating Tet offensive of the North Vietnamese army and
the Viet Cong, involving attacks on more than 100 towns and cities and
a month-long battle for Hue in South Vietnam.
Serious negotiations to end the war began after U.S. President
Lyndon Johnson's decision not to seek reelection in 1968. Contacts between
North Vietnam and the United States in Paris in 1968 were expanded in
1969 to include South Vietnam and the NLF. The United States, under the
leadership of President Richard M. Nixon , altered its tactics to combine
U.S. troop withdrawals with intensified bombing and the invasion of Communist
sanctuaries in Cambodia (1970).
The length of the war, the high number of U.S. casualties,
and the exposure of U.S. involvement in war crimes such as the massacre
at My Lai helped to turn many in the United States
against the war. Politically, the movement was led by Senators James
William Fulbright , Robert F. Kennedy , Eugene J. McCarthy , and George
S. McGovern ; there were also huge public demonstrations in Washington,
D.C., as well as in many other cities in the United States and on college
campuses.
Even as the war continued, peace talks in Paris progressed,
with Henry Kissinger as U.S. negotiator. A break in negotiations followed
by U.S. saturation bombing of North Vietnam did not derail the talks,
and a peace agreement was reached, signed on Jan. 27, 1973, by the United
States, North Vietnam, South Vietnam, and the NLF's provisional revolutionary
government. The accord provided for the end of hostilities, the withdrawal
of U.S. and allied troops (several Southeast Asia Treaty Organization
countries had sent token forces), the return of prisoners of war, and
the formation of a four-nation international control commission to ensure
peace.
Fighting between South Vietnamese and Communists continued
despite the peace agreement until North Vietnam launched an offensive
in early 1975. South Vietnam's requests for aid were denied by the U.S.
Congress, and after Thieu abandoned the northern half of the country
to the advancing Communists, a panic ensued. South Vietnamese resistance
collapsed, and North Vietnamese troops marched into Saigon Apr. 30, 1975.
Vietnam was formally reunified in July, 1976, and Saigon was renamed
Ho Chi Minh City . U.S. casualties in Vietnam during the era of direct
U.S. involvement (1961-72) were more than 50,000 dead; South Vietnamese
dead were estimated at more than 400,000, and Viet Cong and North Vietnamese
at over 900,000.
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