The Roles of the Ho Chi Minh Trail for the Victory of the North in the Vietnam War

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During the peak of the Cold War, the US and USSR were the two world superpowers, going head to head in proxy wars around the world. One of the most famous proxy wars was the Vietnam War, in which the technologically superior US army lost to the inferior North Vietnamese Army (NVA). Prior to the Vietnam War, the French IndoChina War ended several years earlier, in which the Viet Minh forces managed to push out the French forces, separating the country into two; the Communist North lead by Ho Chi Minh, and the South led by a French-backed emperor. By then, the US government feared that the fall of North Vietnam to communism would cause neighboring countries in Southeast Asia to follow, creating a chain reaction dubbed as the “Domino Theory”. After the Gulf of Tonkin Incident in which the NVA allegedly engaged US navy ships, the US began sending more troops into Vietnam. The Johnson Administration’s “Americanization” of the conflict led to nearly half a million troops stationed in South Vietnam by the end of 1966 (Banner 25.) This paper will look at how the Ho Chi Minh trail played an intricate role of allowing the Northern Vietnamese to win the war. First, there will be a thorough explanation of the Ho Chi Minh Trail, followed by an analysis looking at its importance to the North Vietnamese. Then, it is followed by the analysis of the Agreement on Laos and how those policies helped protect the trail from direct attack from the US military. Finally, the paper will look into the methods employed by the US military and their effect on the trail and the outcome of the war.

The Ho Chi Minh Trail was created out of the system of trails and roads that have been used by the Viet Minh in their rebellion against the French Colonial rule in ...

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...h a logistics system that is immune to ground attacks. Additionally, the North Vietnamese were receiving large amounts of resources and supplies from nearby communist countries such as China and Russia, through the port of HaiPhong (Rosenau 45). The military bases established in Laos were not just a place for the NVA troops to be immune to US and South Vietnamese military attacks, but also provided the troops with medical care, resupplies, reinforcement, operation centers, fuel depots, and weapons storage. All this meant that the US and South Vietnamese military could only engage the NVA when they crossed the DMZ into South Vietnam. The NVA could dictate the fighting during the war by being able to take advantage of their safe havens in Laos to stage attacks and continually supply their army fighting in South Vietnam without being challenged by the opposing forces.

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