Objectives Of The Vietnam War

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“No event in America is more misunderstood than the Vietnam War. It was misreported then and is misremembered now.” (Richard Nixon Brainy Quote) The United States entered the Vietnam War in an effort to prevent the spread of Communism into the South Pacific. The Vietnam War is the longest fought war in American history, beginning while President Lyndon Johnson was in office and ending with President Richard Nixon nearly 20 Years Later. (Facts About The Vietnam War You Should Know - The Vietnam War.) As stated by President Johnson, “Our objective is the independence of South Vietnam and its freedom from attack. We will do everything necessary to reach that objective, and we will do only what is absolutely necessary.” (Objectives in Vietnam) With that as the stated objective and purpose of the Vietnam War, seeing the United States on the losing side of the war is rather straightforward. …show more content…

“For Johnson, the decision to continue the Vietnam commitment followed the path of his predecessors. He was committed to maintaining an independent South Vietnam and to achieving success in Southeast Asia. As a senator, he had embraced "containment theory," which predicted that if Vietnam fell to Communists, other Southeast Asian nations would do the same. This would come to be called the Domino Theory; that one nation after another would fall to the communistic expansion of the Soviet Union, China, and others. “The conflict was not a quagmire in the 1950s but rather a noble mission in the eyes of the Eisenhower administration to save Southeast Asia from communism. U.S. leaders were so confident about the righteousness of their cause that on several occasions they failed to ask serious questions about the limits of U.S. power or the legitimacy of the domino theory.” (Brigham, 2008,

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