The Vietnam War - EdexcelConsequences of the US 'defeat' in Vietnam

In 1965 the USA launched Operation Rolling Thunder: the bombing of military targets in North Vietnam. Vietnam is a LONG way from America so, why did the US get involved in this conflict?

Part ofHistoryThe Cold War and Vietnam

Consequences of the US 'defeat' in Vietnam

A list of consequences of the USA's defeat in Vietnam
  1. The policy of had failed militarily. Despite the USA’s vast military strength it could not stop the spread of . The guerrilla tactics used by the Vietcong and their absolute commitment to the cause, far outweighed the desire of the Americans to keep going. This was added to the disadvantage of the Americans’ lack of knowledge of the enemy and area they were fighting in.
  2. The policy of containment had failed politically. Not only had the USA failed to stop Vietnam falling to communism, but their actions in the neighbouring countries of Laos and Cambodia had helped to bring communist governments to power there too. Many US politicians were mounting pressure to commit to peace.
  3. The policy of containment had failed in the war. Having presented the war in Vietnam as a moral crusade against communism, the atrocities committed by US military in terms of killing and the use of chemical weapons, had tarnished America’s image at home and abroad.
  4. The war had cost 58,000 American and 1-4 million Vietnamese lives, affected 700,000 American veterans, cost America over one hundred billion dollars, and damaged reputation and morale at home.
  5. The Russians and Chinese had an interest in what happened in Vietnam. Both had pumped money and technology into Vietnam to help the communist forces. After Vietnam, the policy of containment was replaced by a period of , a thawing in the tensions of the Cold War and gradually relations between the USA and the USSR/China improved.