Gulf of Tonkin Resolution

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    following years include failed national elections, failed unification, escalating tensions, assassinations and military actions. By the time Kennedy is assassinated in 1963 he has raised the number of U.S. troops in Vietnam from 900 to 16,000. The Gulf of Tonkin incident in 1964 provided the U.S. an excuse to roll out a large escalation of the Vietnam War. From the following year until 1968 Operation Rolling Thunder among others is carried out dropping millions of pounds of bombs on North…

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    President Eisenhower first sent troops to Vietnam as advisors in 1955 but our involvement in the region did not begin there. To understand the reasoning that led to the United States involvement requires a look back to the beginnings of the Cold War. The Cold War itself can be traced to the end of World War II. The conclusion of this war left two super powers in the world. The Soviet Union in the East with communist ideology and the United States holding to the foundation of capitalism and…

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    When discussing the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution with Birdall, O’Brien shows how the old man has logos by including a quote from Birdall stating that if you agree for the war, you should fight it or send someone you care for to fight it (278). This furthers the notion that Birdall is wise…

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    Essentially, the domino effect is that if Vietnam was overtaken with communism, then each surrounding country would fall one by one and succumb. It is safe to say this is his main reasoning but it is not consistent with his actions and Gulf of Tonkin resolution. This is commonly known as the slippery slope fallacy. There is no concrete reason to think that the government in Vietnam will cause another and another country to fall to communism The U.S. entered Vietnam with many more troops and…

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    Vietnam War DBQ

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    The Vietnam War could not have occurred at a worse time in Unites States. PRior to the war, the long, grueling, and strenuous Civil Rights Movement resulted in an “unofficial official” divide within the country. As far back as JFK, U.S. interest in Vietnam was made evident. JFK adopted Eisenhower 's fostered idea of the “Domino Theory”. JFK wanted to prevent the South Vietnamese from spreading Communism throughout the rest of the country. Despite the billions of dollars invested, along with the…

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    The Vietnam War and Its Effects on America From 1955 to 1975, a long, hideous war raged on throughout Asia. North Vietnam and their allies, the Viet Cong, faced off against South Vietnam and their U.S. allies over the communist control of North Vietnam (Tran & Fermoyle, 2012). The war ultimately ended with the U.S. withdrawing their forces and South Vietnam surrendering to the communist North. Aside from the loss of millions of lives, the war had costly effects on the face of America. At…

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    Under the O Plan 34-A, the American Navy supported South Vietnamese commando raids against the North, which bought the destroyer Maddox into the Gulf of Tonkin. On August 2, 1964, three North Vietnamese gunboats closed in, the Maddox opened fire, hitting at least one. The North Vietnamese launched torpedoes which missed the destroyer Maddox. On the night of August 4, there was another incident that remains…

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    Cold War Influence

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    Korea, which in turn involved the United States. During the Vietnam war, however, the United States asked the Congress to send troops to South Vietnam because President Johnson claimed that North Vietnam attacked United States destroyers in the Gulf of Tonkin. The United States was attacked first in both wars, entailing the United States to assault the Soviet Union back. In both cases, the United States was…

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    other social reform movements, like abolitionism, and feminists believed in the equality of women to men and equal opportunity for all genders. At the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848, a group of women declared in a “Declaration of Sentiments in Resolutions” that women are equal to men and should be treated as such. The Seneca Falls Convention and the declaration provided major influence for feminists. In 1848, not much changed for women, but as the 19th century progressed, it became obvious that…

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    The initial American support for the French Indochina War evolved into direct intervention following the Gulf of Tonkin incident. The deployment of ground troops marked a significant escalation, leading to large-scale combat operations and the introduction of controversial tactics such as aerial bombing and chemical warfare. However, the conflict soon devolved…

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