U.S. Air Force Bombing Campaigns in the Vietnam War

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The United States of America has participated in over seven wars, and currently participating in three ongoing wars. Many of these wars have been fought overseas, one of the most widely protested wars, was that of the Vietnam war. During the Vietnam War, the United States military decided to not only fight from the ground but also in the clouds. With the Presidents command the United States Air Force created bombing campaigns over Southeast Asia hoping that it would help with defeating the guerilla fighters and cutting off supplies from those aiding them in the North. From what was the start and first appearance of the war for the United States, to those who made the decision, to the operations, and what they wanted to do to help in ending …show more content…

Johnson, it was time to change the way we were distributing our forces to help aid the Southern Vietnamese military forces (History.com, 2010). The use of aircrafts first started out to transport wounded off the battlefield, but quickly turned into the use of different chemicals such as agent orange, to destroy brush for troops to travel through easier. Operation Rolling Thunder started out as just a discussion among those of higher ranking command, but on March 1965 the talk became action (Pike, 2016). “The Operation Rolling Thunder bombing campaign began on March 2, 1965, partly in response to a Viet Cong attack on a U.S. air base at Pleiku. The Johnson administration cited a number of reasons for shifting U.S. strategy to include systematic aerial assaults on North Vietnam. For example, administration officials believed that heavy and sustained bombing might encourage North Vietnamese leaders to accept the non-Communist government in South Vietnam. The administration also wanted to reduce North Vietnam’s ability to produce and transport supplies to aid the Viet Cong insurgency.”(History.com, …show more content…

The United States involvement at first played the middle man, but soon began to aid in supplying weapons and troops. As the United States joined in, it was quickly realized that the war was not going to be won by using just foot soldiers. From President Johnson, creating and leading Operation Rolling Thunder, using the Air Force to help fight on another field. Although Johnson limited troops, later President Nixon, created Operation Linebacker, and left control to those in command of the air force. Both operations were used to cut off supplies to the Guerilla fighters, and Northern Communist forces. From the lush, green, jungle of Vietnam, to the deep blue skies, the United States Air Force and countless others, fought to win a war, that ended with the Treaty of

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