Vietnam War
Firepower comes to naught
Although
Johnson and his advisers had painstakingly examined the question of committing
military forces to Vietnam—how many should be
sent and when—they had given little thought to the question of what the troops
might do once they arrived. In contrast to the tightly controlled air war in the
North, conduct of the ground war in the South was largely left to the leadership
of General Westmoreland. Westmoreland commanded all U.S. operations in the
South, but he was reluctant to press for a unified U.S. and South Vietnamese
command despite the questionable capabilities of many South Vietnamese generals.
Instead, the two allies depended on “coordination” and a continuation of the
existing advisory relationship, with every South Vietnamese army unit larger
than a company having its complement of U.S. advisers. At the top of the
hierarchy, Westmoreland himself served as senior adviser to the chief of the
Vietnamese Joint General Staff, General Cao Van Vien. The chronic political
instability in Saigon seemed finally to have abated with the installation in
February 1965 of a government headed by the army general Nguyen Van Thieu as
head of state and air force general Nguyen Cao Ky as prime minister. This
arrangement, backed by most of the top military commanders, lasted until 1968,
when Ky was eased out of power, leaving Thieu in sole control.
Whatever
the status of the South Vietnamese forces, they were clearly relegated to a
secondary role as U.S. troops and equipment poured into the country. To support
these forces, the Americans constructed an enormous logistical
infrastructure that included four new jet-capable
air bases with 10,000-foot (3,000-metre) runways, six new deepwater ports, 75
tactical air bases, 26 hospitals, and more than 10,000,000 square feet (900,000
square metres) of warehousing. By the fall of 1965, U.S. Marines and soldiers
had clashed with NVA and VC main-force troops in bloody battles on the Batangan
Peninsula south of Da Nang and in the Ia Drang valley in the central highlands.
The U.S. forces employed their full panoply of firepower, including air strikes,
artillery, armed helicopters, and even B-52 bombers, to inflict enormous losses
on the enemy. Yet the communists believed they had more than held their own in
these battles, and they were encouraged by the fact that they could easily
reoccupy any areas they might have lost once the Americans pulled out.
Westmoreland's basic assumption was that U.S. forces, with their enormous and
superior firepower, could best be employed in fighting the enemy's strongest
units in the jungles and mountains, away from heavily populated areas. Behind
this “shield” provided by the Americans, the South Vietnamese army and
security forces could
take on local Viet Cong
elements and proceed with the job of reasserting government control in the
countryside. Meanwhile, the regular forces of the Viet Cong and the NVA would
continue to suffer enormous casualties at the hands of massive U.S. firepower.
Eventually, went the argument, the communists would reach the point where they
would no longer be able to replace their losses on the battlefield. Having been
ground down on the battlefield, they would presumably agree to a favourable
peace settlement.
That point
seemed very distant to most Americans as the war continued into 1966 and 1967.
Washington declared that the war was being won, but American casualties
continued to mount, and much of what the public could see of the war on
television appeared confusing if not futile. Because Westmoreland's strategy was
based on attrition, one of the ways to measure progress was to track the number
of enemy killed. The resultant “body count,” which was supposed to be carried
out by troops during or immediately after combat, soon became notorious for
inaccuracy and for the tendency of U.S. commanders to exaggerate the figures.
In the
provinces just north and east of Saigon, some large-scale operations such as
Cedar Falls and Junction City, involving up to a thousand U.S. troops supported
by hundreds of sorties by helicopters and fighter-bombers, were mounted to
destroy communist base areas and supplies. Though yielding large quantities of
captured weapons and supplies, they were ultimately indecisive, because the U.S.
forces would invariably withdraw when they had completed their sweeps and in due
course the Viet Cong and NVA would return. In order to deny the NVA and Viet
Cong the use of dense forest to conceal their movements and to hide their supply
lines and bases, the U.S. Air Force sprayed millions of gallons of a herbicide
called
Agent Orange along the Vietnamese border with Laos and Cambodia, in
areas northwest of Saigon, and along major waterways. Agent Orange was effective
in killing vegetation, but only at the price of causing considerable ecological
damage to Vietnam and of exposing thousands of people to potentially toxic
chemicals that would later cause serious and sometimes fatal health problems.
Along the
DMZ separating North and South Vietnam, the Americans established a string of
fortified bases extending from just north of Quang Tri on the South China Sea
westward to the Laotian border. These bases were part of a system that also
included electronic warning devices, minefields, and infrared detectors designed
to check infiltration or outright invasion from the North. The North Vietnamese,
pleased to find that the strong-point obstacle system was within range of their
artillery, carried out periodic attacks by fire and ground forces against U.S.
outposts at Con Thien, Gio Linh, Camp Carroll, and Khe Sanh.
These
larger engagements attracted most of the public's attention, but they were not
in fact typical of the war in South Vietnam. Most “battles” of the war were
sharp, very brief engagements between units of fewer than 200 men. Many of these
lasted only a few hours, often only a few minutes, but nevertheless could result
in heavy casualties. Overall, communist casualties far outnumbered U.S.
casualties, but the North Vietnamese never came close to depleting their
manpower. In any case, the communists could, when necessary, ease the pressure
on themselves by withdrawing their forces to sanctuaries in nearby Laos,
Cambodia, and North Vietnam. Hanoi, not Washington, largely controlled the tempo
of the ground war.
Like the ground
war in the South, the air campaign against the North continued to grow in scope
and destructiveness but remained indecisive. By the end of 1966, the United
States had dropped more bombs on North Vietnam than it had dropped on Japan
during World War II and more than it had dropped during the entire Korean War.
Yet the bombing seemed to have little impact on the communists' ability to carry
on the war. North Vietnam was primarily an agricultural country with few
industries to destroy. Many of the necessities of Hanoi's war effort came
directly from China and the Soviet Union, which competed with each other to
demonstrate support for Ho Chi Minh's “heroic” war against U.S. imperialism. The
Soviets provided an estimated 1.8 billion rubles in military and economic aid
and sent 3,000 military advisers and technicians along with sophisticated
weapons to the North. China spent an estimated two billion dollars in assisting
Hanoi; at the height of its effort, it had more than 300,000 engineering,
medical, and anti-aircraft artillery troops in the Democratic Republic of
Vietnam. Even when bombing knocked out more than 80 percent of the North's
petroleum-storage facilities during the summer of 1966, the CIA reported no
discernible shortages of petroleum or disruption of transportation. While the
air raids continued, North Vietnam progressively strengthened its air defenses
with the help of the latest radars, anti-aircraft guns, missiles, and modern jet
fighters supplied by the Soviets and Chinese. By the end of 1966 the United
States had already lost almost 500 aircraft and hundreds of air crewmen killed
or held as prisoners of war.
end
American Civil War
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