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Operation Rolling Thunder - Political Decision-making that Committed the United States to the Vietnam War (Paperback)
Loot Price: R376
Discovery Miles 3 760
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Operation Rolling Thunder - Political Decision-making that Committed the United States to the Vietnam War (Paperback)
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Loot Price R376
Discovery Miles 3 760
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The assassination of South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem on
November 1, 1963, left a leadership void in Saigon that was never
filled. Heads of state went through Saigon like a revolving door,
yet none of them were able to successfully lead and govern the
people of South Vietnam. On the other side of the globe, President
of the United States John F. Kennedy was assassinated on November
22, 1963. While the U.S. had a line of succession, President
Johnson was relatively new to the Vietnam situation. Even though
Johnson was new, he still had Kennedy's cabinet and advisers to aid
his decisions. Despite this, by early 1964 two new leaders, Nguyen
Khanh and Lyndon Johnson sought a solution to the decades long
struggle in Vietnam. President Johnson inherited a three-front war
in Vietnam. One front was North Vietnamese support of the Viet Cong
(VC) insurgency in South Vietnam, and Johnson had to stop this
support in order to defeat the VC. The insurgency itself
constituted another front that had to be defeated in order to
maintain a free and independent South Vietnam. The third
overarching front was the creation of a stable and legitimate
government in Saigon capable of governing the people of South
Vietnam. The question for his administration was on which of these
aspects to focus. Before Johnson could make that decision, he first
had to decide if the U.S. should continue to aid Saigon; therefore,
he had three options: leave Vietnam, continue in an advisory role,
or escalate U.S. involvement. The political and military situations
in Vietnam deteriorated to such a point through 1964-1965 that by
February 1965 there were no good choices left from which President
Johnson could choose. Johnson desired for there to be a stable
South Vietnamese government before he committed U.S. forces to its
defense; however, no such government emerged. The administration
was unwilling to risk U.S. prestige, resources, and lives unless
they were confident South Vietnam could succeed without U.S.
support. Because of the instability in South Vietnam as well as the
perceived risk of communist aggression, President Johnson decided
that escalatory military actions would be limited and gradual.
Therefore, President Johnson made the least bad decision he could
in February 1965 by initiating Operation ROLLING THUNDER and
committing the United States to the Vietnam War.
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