The Geneva Accords, signed in 1954 after the French defeat in Dien Bien Phu, led to a “temporary division” of Vietnam between northern and southern parts at the 17th parallel. A nationwide election and the reunification of the country were planned for the end of 1956. However, Washington opposed this process because it believed that the revolutionaries, led by Ho Chi Minh, would win a democratic poll.
Instead, the US set up a corrupt and dictatorial puppet regime in the South, which was an artificial country in every field. Throughout its two decades of existence, it became totally dependent on American economic and military assistance. When the US withdrew its troops in 1973 the regime, led by General Nguyen van Thieu, collapsed after two years almost without a fight.
The war escalated in 1965 when President Lyndon Johnson ordered to increase the number of US troops, which would exceed 500,000 soldiers by 1968. At the time, the chances of a US defeat appeared very remote. President Lyndon Johnson and his generals regarded as inconceivable the idea that the American Army could be defeated at the hands of a Third World country of 40 million people.
The document warned, however, that such a failure would amount to “a rather dramatic demonstration that there are certain limits on US power, a discovery that would be unexpected for many, disconcerting for some, and encouraging to others.” Above all, the Vietnamese victory would make strikingly clear that the US, “cannot crush a revolutionary movement which is sufficiently large, dedicated, competent, and well-supported.”
However, NLF guerrillas managed to adapt themselves to the American strategy. They avoided fighting large-scale battles, in which superior US firepower would become a decisive factor. Instead NLF forces conducted hit-and-run operations against American troops at the time and the place they chose to do so. This led a huge part of the US and ARVN forces to become tied down defending the American bases and the cities of South Vietnam, which annulled a significant part of the US numerical advantage.
The NLF was supported by the majority of the South population, which provided the guerrillas with food, intelligence and recruits. In many places, both of them were one and the same. The US answer was to use genocidal methods such as extensive bombing, selective assassinations, torture, destruction of villages and rice plantations, massacres and other forms of indiscriminate punishment. As much as a third of the South Vietnamese population was forcibly reallocated in order to deprive the NLF of support.
During the war, the US widely used toxic chemicals, which destroyed a third of the country’s woodlands. Even today, many children are born with awful birth defects and illnesses because their parents or grandparents became exposed to those substances.
More than three million Vietnamese were killed in the war. Millions more were wounded and maimed. As result of the wholesale carpet bombing of the country, the US military dropped 15 million more tons of bombs on the country, more than the total of bombs used by all sides during the Second World War.
The defeat of the US army in Vietnam represented a victory of the oppressed against the deadliest war machine in the world and the culmination of a 30-year struggle for the people of Vietnam. It showed for the first time the limits and constraints of the United States and inspired other countries to fight to achieve their freedom.
Source: Al-Manar Website
03-05-2012 - 15:24 Last updated 03-05-2012 - 16:04
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