The Vietnam War In Tim O Brien's The Things They Carried

1464 Words3 Pages

The Vietnam War began in 1956 after the French Indochina war, which was an anti-colonial war against the French. The French attempted to regain control of Vietnam after World War II, but despite their efforts, Vietnam and the other Indochinese countries gained their independence in 1954 (The Americans, 731). Vietnam’s independence brought a division between the anti-communist south and the communist north. This caused the United States to support of the South’s government because of their democratic ideology. Escalation continued as the Viet Cong led attacks on the South and President Lyndon Johnson sent air strikes and ground forces to the north in hopes of trying to stop the communist spread. By 1968, more than 500,000 American soldiers were
Death was prominent and surrounded the soldiers during the war. By the end of the Vietnam war, over 58,000 causalities were recorded and 382 of these causalities were self-inflicted (“Statistical Information about Fatal Causalities”). The overwhelming amounts of death affected the soldiers psychologically with increasing amounts of fear. Soldiers not only feared their own deaths, they feared the deaths of their fellow soldiers. This fear and anxiety took a toll on the soldiers pushing them into their breaking points. Although many soldiers were desensitized as a result of the war, many turned towards insanity, anger, and frustration. (“Psychological Effects of the Vietnam War”). Edward Wood, a Vietnam Veteran said, “fear changes, it changes from fear to anger very quickly…you were more afraid of being afraid than anything else…”. As a result of the war, soldiers were affected by the death with an increase of fear and anger (“The Whole World Was Watching”). The affects of the war and death on soldiers is depicted with Bob “Rat” Kiley in The Things They Carried. When the platoon was working on the foothills west of Quang Ngai, Kiley started to feel the effects of the war. Seeing the body bags led to an initial reaction of silence, but as time went on, he began talking about the bugs in Vietnam and his own death. One day, when he was talking about
Many soldiers were brought down since the Vietcong soldiers used guerilla tactics that were difficult to predict and avoid, and the conditions of the jungle were unbearable. As a result, morale sunk and soldiers turned to drugs, alcohol, and murder (The Americans, 740). One major attack that brought down the American soldiers was The Tet Offensive. In Janurary 31, 1968, Viet Cong forces led multiple attacks on South Vietnam cities which resulted in the death of many citizens and the seizing of the American Embassies. This organized and successful attack from the Viet Cong resulted in a loss of morale (“The Tet Offensive”). This loss of morale from death and unbearable jungle conditions is displayed in The Things They Carried through Jimmy Cross, the lieutenant of the platoon. One night when the platoon set up camp on a sewage field, mortar rounds started to hit the camp. Once more round landed near the campsite, Kiowa began to sink in sewage of the Song Tra Bong River and Bowker attempted to rescue him, but ultimately failed to. The morning after Kiowa’s death, O’Brien writes, “A crime, Jimmy Cross thought…Jimmy Cross did not want the responsibility of leading these men. He had never wanted it…What he should’ve done, he told himself, was follow his first impulse…A stupid mistake. That’s all it was, a mistake, but it had killed Kiowa…He would

Open Document