the u.s. focuses on vietnam semester 2 week 11. vietnamese history when the japanese seized power...

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The U.S. Focuses on Vietnam Semester 2 Week 11

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Page 1: The U.S. Focuses on Vietnam Semester 2 Week 11. Vietnamese History  When the Japanese seized power in Vietnam during WWII, it was one more example of

The U.S. Focuses on Vietnam

Semester 2

Week 11

Page 2: The U.S. Focuses on Vietnam Semester 2 Week 11. Vietnamese History  When the Japanese seized power in Vietnam during WWII, it was one more example of

Vietnamese History When the Japanese seized power

in Vietnam during WWII, it was one more example of foreigners ruling the Vietnamese people

China had controlled the region off & on for hundreds of years

From the late 1800s until WWII, France ruled Vietnam, Laos & Cambodia (a region known as French Indochina)

One of the leaders of the nationalist movement was Nguyen Tat Thanh (AKA Ho Chi Minh)

Page 3: The U.S. Focuses on Vietnam Semester 2 Week 11. Vietnamese History  When the Japanese seized power in Vietnam during WWII, it was one more example of

Ho Chi Minh Found the Indochinese Communist Party

& worked to overthrow French rule Ho Chi Minh’s activities made him a

wanted man; fled Indochina & spent several years in exile in the USSR & China

1941, he returned to Vietnam; by then Japan had seized control of the country

Ho Chi Minh organized a nationalist group called the Vietminh united both Communists & non-Communists

in the struggle to expel the Japanese forces U.S. began sending military aid to the

Vietminh

Page 4: The U.S. Focuses on Vietnam Semester 2 Week 11. Vietnamese History  When the Japanese seized power in Vietnam during WWII, it was one more example of

Vietnam After WWII 8/1945, w/ the Allies’ victory over Japan

the Japanese surrendered control of Indochina

Ho Chi Minh & his forces quickly announced that Vietnam was an independent nation

France had no intention of seeing Vietnam become independent

Seeking to regain their colonial empire in SE Asia, French troops returned to Vietnam in 1946 & drove the Vietminh forces into hiding in the countryside

1949, France set up a new gov’t in Vietnam

Page 5: The U.S. Focuses on Vietnam Semester 2 Week 11. Vietnamese History  When the Japanese seized power in Vietnam during WWII, it was one more example of

United States Opposes Colonialism the independence movement had become entangled w/ the

Communist movement in Vietnam U.S. officials did not think France should control Vietnam, but

they didn’t want Vietnam to be Communist either 2 events convinced the Truman administration to help France:

1. the fall of China to communism2. the outbreak of the Korean War

Korea convinced American officials that the USSR had begun a major push to impose communism on East Asia

Shortly after the Korean War began, Truman authorized a massive program of military aid to French forces fighting in Vietnam

IKE defended U.S. policy in Vietnam by stressing what became known as the domino theory (the belief that if Vietnam fell to communism, so too would the other nations of SE Asia)

Page 6: The U.S. Focuses on Vietnam Semester 2 Week 11. Vietnamese History  When the Japanese seized power in Vietnam during WWII, it was one more example of

French Can’t Control the Vietminh The French struggled against the Vietminh, who

consistently frustrated the French w/ hit-and-run & ambush tactics

These are the tactics of guerrillas, irregular troops who usually blend into the civilian population & are often difficult for regular armies to fight

1954, the French commander ordered his forces to occupy Dien Bien Phu

A huge Vietminh force surrounded Dien Bien Phu & began bombarding the town

5/7/1954, the French force at Dien Bien Phu fell to the Vietminh

The defeat convinced the French to make peace & w/draw from Indochina

Page 7: The U.S. Focuses on Vietnam Semester 2 Week 11. Vietnamese History  When the Japanese seized power in Vietnam during WWII, it was one more example of

Geneva Conference Negotiations to end the

conflict were held in Geneva, Switzerland

The Geneva Accords temporarily divided Vietnam along the 17th parallel

Ho Chi Minh & the Vietminh controlled North Vietnam

a pro-W’rn regime controlled the South

1956 elections were to be held to reunite the country under a single gov’t

Page 8: The U.S. Focuses on Vietnam Semester 2 Week 11. Vietnamese History  When the Japanese seized power in Vietnam during WWII, it was one more example of

U.S. Involvement in Vietnam After the Geneva Accords partitioned Vietnam, the

French finally left The U.S. almost immediately stepped in & became

the principal protector of the new gov’t in the South, led by a nationalist leader named Ngo Dinh Diem.

1956, Diem refused to hold countrywide elections, as called for by the Geneva Accords

He knew that the Communist-controlled north would not allow genuinely free elections, and that Ho Chi Minh would almost certainly have won as a result

IKE supported Diem & increased U.S. military & economic aid to South Vietnam

Page 9: The U.S. Focuses on Vietnam Semester 2 Week 11. Vietnamese History  When the Japanese seized power in Vietnam during WWII, it was one more example of

PREPARE FOR QUIZ TAKE OUT A SEPARATE SHEET OF PAPER

NUMBER 1-5

Page 10: The U.S. Focuses on Vietnam Semester 2 Week 11. Vietnamese History  When the Japanese seized power in Vietnam during WWII, it was one more example of

QUIZ

1. What countries make up French Indochina? (France is not one of the countries)

2. Who organized a nationalist group called the Vietminh?

3. What 2 events convinced the Truman administration to help France?

4. The Geneva Accords temporarily divided Vietnam along the?

5. Who was the leader in South Vietnam?