Assess The Reasons For American Withdrawal From Vietnam
Assess The Reasons For American Withdrawal From Vietnam
Assess The Reasons For American Withdrawal From Vietnam
Secondary Sources
Assess the Reasons for American withdrawal from Vietnam
Key argument – The US withdrawal was due to military failures which
resulted in an unwinnable stalemate
The United States withdrawing its military out of Vietnam in 1973 was due to a failure of
military tactics against the Viet Cong hence due to a succession of military failures, they
were unable to make progress this meant they were unable to defeat the enemy which
resulted in a prolonged stalemate Therefore withdrawal was the only viable political and
military solution
This is the view of Frances Fitzgerald and Stanley Karnow they argue that US military
doctrine were fundamentally flawed and were exposed by the Tet Offensive.
The US hadn’t effectively prepared for war General Bruce Palmer - the “American forces
found themselves in the unenviable situation of having to react and dance to the enemy’s
tune”.
America underestimated the Viet Cong National security advisor Henry Kissinger
speaking in July 1969 to NSC aides, “I refuse to believe that little fourth-rate power like
North Vietnam doesn’t have a breaking point”
The US were naïve in thinking they could win on foreign terrain Robert J. MCMAHON “It
was rooted in large part in a stubborn refusal to accept that no degree of U.S. military
pressure could alter the prevailing stalemate"
Contemporary American Colonel Robert Heinl claimed “morale, discipline and battle
worthiness of the U.S Armed forces was lower and worse than at anytime in this century ”
Therefore, military failures were to blame
Clarence Wyatt appears to have used the available evidence selectively, publishing those
parts that support his interpretation and ignoring the evidence that contradicts his
position.
The unacceptably selective use of evidence in Paper Soldiers is particularly significant
because Dr George Herring, author of the standard text book used in many university
classes on the Vietnam War, America's Longest War, was Clarence Wyatt's thesis advisor.
In the May 3, 1972, issue Time devoted 63 column inches to an attack on "the reckless
President Nixon [who] risked WWIII by mining Haiphong Harbor .... [It was] the act of an
emperor, a dictator," who acted alone against all advice. Lost in the middle of several
pages of radical anti-war rhetoric Time included three column inches stating that, "A Lou
Harris survey showed that 59% of Americans backed Nixon's mining decision." If 59
percent supported the President's decision, why did Time give only three column inches
to this view, while spending twenty times as much print space condemning, "the act of
an emperor, a dictator," who acted alone against all advice?
Ultimately, whilst it is evident that public support waned throughout the war as a
result of media coverage, support for the government was generally high( A poll in June
1970 showed that 27 percent of the American public were sympathetic to the anti-war
protest demonstrations (53 percent condemned them) . indicates that public pressure
didn’t determine withdrawal.
Paragraph 6 (America withdrew for economic reasons)
Vietnam was America’s longest war and this had profound effects on the domestic
economy The cost of the war meant social programs such as President Johnson’s
“The Great Society” and the “War on Poverty”, which were designed to help and
improve the poor and deprived were abandoned due to the expense of fighting a
prolonged overseas war.
A contemporary article from The New York Times, quoted that “the war in Vietnam
produced what is widely recognised as the greatest blunder in Government
economic policy since WWII”.
The economic impact of the Vietnam war led to inflation and an economic
downturn and Historian Tom Riddel reported that it was responsible for “the
economic difficulties faced by the United States during the 1970’s” and it would also
have a “direct role in creating the massive deficit in the United States balance of
payments”.
Therefore, fighting a prolonged war was having a detrimental effect on the US
economy and also its ability to implement social reforms which was significant since
this reluctancy to implement promised reform would help fuel widespread social
unrest in the cities.
Paragraph 7 (Counter Argument / Evaluation)
Whilst a prolonged overseas war was expensive, Tom Riddel neglects to mention
that the US remained the richest economy in the world and exaggerates the impact
of the War on treasury finances
Riddel underplays the significance of this and selectively chooses economic data to
support his argument when in fact America could’ve afforded to continue the war
Therefore, America was not forced to withdraw from Vietnam for economic reasons
and instead it was military failures. If America hadn’t have failed in a series of
military offensives, it wouldn’t have had to invest more resources to fund a military
victory.