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Buoyed by its new American weapons and encouraged by its aggressive and
confident American advisers, the South Vietnamese army took the offensive
against the Viet Cong. At the same time, the Diem government undertook an
extensive security campaign called the
Strategic Hamlet Program. The object of the program was to
concentrate rural populations into more defensible positions where they could be
more easily protected and segregated from the Viet Cong. The hamlet project was
inspired by a similar program in Malaya, where local farmers had been moved into
so-called New Villages during a rebellion by Chinese Malayan communists in
1948–60. In the case of Vietnam, however, it proved virtually impossible to tell
which Vietnamese were to be protected and which excluded. Because of popular
discontent with the compulsory labour and frequent dislocations involved in
establishing the villages, many strategic hamlets soon had as many VC recruits
inside their walls as outside.
Meanwhile, the Viet Cong learned to cope with the ARVN's new array of American
weapons. Helicopters proved vulnerable to small-arms fire, while armoured
personnel carriers could be stopped or disoriented if their exposed drivers or
machine gunners were hit. The communists' survival of many
military encounters was helped by the fact that
the leadership of the South Vietnamese army was as incompetent, faction-ridden,
and poorly trained as it had been in the 1950s. In January 1963 a Viet Cong
battalion near the village of Ap Bac in the Mekong delta south of Saigon, though
surrounded and outnumbered by ARVN forces, successfully fought its way out of
its encirclement, destroying five helicopters and killing about 80 South
Vietnamese soldiers and three American advisers. By now some aggressive American
newsmen were beginning to report on serious deficiencies in the U.S. advisory
and support programs in Vietnam, and some advisers at lower levels were
beginning to agree with them; but by now there was also a large and powerful
bureaucracy in Saigon that had a deep stake in ensuring that U.S. programs
appeared successful. The USMACV commander Paul Harkins and U.S. ambassador
Frederick Nolting in particular continued to assure Washington that all was
going well.
By
the summer of 1963, however, there were growing doubts about the ability of the
Diem government to prosecute the war. The behaviour of the Ngo family, always
odd, had now become bizarre. Diem's brother Nhu was known to smoke opium daily
and was suspected by U.S. intelligence of secretly negotiating with the North.
In May 1963 the Ngos became embroiled in a fatal quarrel with the Buddhist
leadership. Strikes and demonstrations by Buddhists in Saigon and Hue were met
with violence by the army and Nhu's security forces and resulted in numerous
arrests. The following month a Buddhist monk, Thich Quang Duc, publicly doused
himself with gasoline and set himself ablaze as a protest against Diem's
repression. Sensational photographs of that event were on the front pages of
major American newspapers the following morning.
By
now many students and members of the professional classes in South Vietnamese
cities had joined the Buddhists. After a series of brutal
raids by government forces on Buddhist pagodas in
August, a group of South Vietnamese generals secretly approached the U.S.
government to determine how Washington might react to a coup to remove Diem. The
U.S. reply was far from discouraging, but it was not until November, after
further deterioration in Diem's relations with Washington, that the generals
felt ready to move. On November 1, ARVN units seized control of Saigon, disarmed
Nhu's security forces, and occupied the presidential palace. The American
attitude was officially neutral, but the U.S.
embassy maintained contact with the dissident
generals while making no move to aid the Ngos, who were captured and murdered by
the army.
Diem's death was followed by Kennedy's less than three weeks later. With respect
to Vietnam, the assassinated president left his successor, Lyndon B. Johnson, a legacy of indecision, half-measures, and
gradually increasing involvement. Kennedy had relished Cold War challenges;
Johnson did not. A veteran politician and one of the ablest men ever to serve in
the U.S. Senate, he had an ambitious domestic legislative agenda that he was
determined to fight through Congress. Foreign policy crises would be at best a
distraction and at worst a threat to his domestic reforms. Yet Johnson, like
Kennedy, was also well aware of the high political costs of “losing” another
country to communism. He shared the view of most of his advisers, many of them
holdovers from the Kennedy administration, that Vietnam was also a key test of
U.S. credibility and ability to keep its commitments to its allies.
Consequently, Johnson was determined to do everything necessary to carry on the
American commitment to South Vietnam. He replaced Harkins with General William
Westmoreland, a former superintendent of the U.S. Military Academy at West
Point, and increased the number of U.S. military personnel still further—from
16,000 at the time of Kennedy's death in November 1963 to 23,000 by the end of
1964. next
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