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The United States, Viet-Nam, and the Cold War: A Reappraisal*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 April 2011

Extract

The Viet-Nam War was without qualification the most unpopular war in United States history. By May 1971, 61 per cent of the 1,502 persons interviewed by the Gallup Poll thought it had been a mistake for the United States to become involved in Viet-Nam. (The question asked was, “In view of the developments since we entered the fighting in Viet-Nam, do you think the United States made a mistake sending troops to fight in Viet-Nam?” 28 per cent answered, “No”, and 11 per cent had no opinion.) The significance of the May poll lay in the fact that it marked a complete reversal of public opinion since Gallup first started asking the question in August 1965.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The National University of Singapore 1974

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References

1 New York Times, June 6,1971.

2 Dale, Edwin L., “What Viet-Nam Did to the American Economy,” New York Times, January 28,1973.Google Scholar

3 Statistics were compiled by U.S. Department of Defense, U.S. Agency for International Development, U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Refugees and Escapees, quoted in New York Times, April 1,1973.Google Scholar

4 McCarthy, Eugene J., The Limits of Power: America's Role in the World(N.Y., 1967), 187.Google Scholar

5 For example, see Meeker, Leonard C., “The Legality of United States Participation in the Defense of Viet-Nam,” Department of State Bulletin, LIV (March 28,1966), 477–89Google Scholar; Wright, Quincy, “Legal Aspects of the Viet-Nam Situation,” American Journal of International Law, LX (1966), 750–69CrossRefGoogle Scholar; John N. Moore, “The Lawfulness of Military Assistance to the Republic of Viet-Nam,” ibid, LX1 (1967), 1–34; and Wolfgang Friedmann, “Law and Politics in the Vietnamese War: A Comment,” ibid, 776–85.

6 Halle, Louis J., “After Viet-Nam — Another Witchhunt?” New York Times Magazine, June 6,1971, 36ff.Google Scholar

7 George W. Ball, “The Lessons of Viet-Nam: Have We Learned or Only Failed?” ibid, April 1,1973,12ff.

8 Fulbright, J. William, The Arrogance of Power (N.Y., 1966Google Scholar) and more recently The Crippled Giant: American Foreign Policy and Its Domestic Consequences, (N.Y., 1972).Google Scholar

9 Specifically, refer to Chomsky, Noam, American Power and the New Mandarins, (N.Y., 1967), 258, 313Google Scholar; Kolko, Gabriel, The Roots of American Foreign Policy: An Analysis of Power and Purpose (Boston, 1969), 8485Google Scholar; and Horowitz, David, Empire and Revolution: A Radical Interpretation of Contemporary History (N.Y., 1969), 230–32.Google Scholar

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12 Gelb, Leslie H., “Today's Lessons from the Pentagon Papers,” Life, (September 17, 1971), 34.Google Scholar

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15 Gravel, Senator edition, The Pentagon Papers (4 vols.; Boston, 1971).Google Scholar

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17 Excerpts from this particular study were published in New York Times, April 26, 1972.

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25 Earl of Avon, The Memoirs of Anthony Eden, Earl of Avon: The Reckoning (Boston, 1965), 438.Google Scholar For an earlier statement of U.S. policy, see “The Acting Secretary of State (Welles) to the French Ambassador (Henry-Haye),” April 13, 1942, FRUS: 1942 (Wash., 1962), II, 561–63.Google Scholar

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27 ibid, 1597.

28 ibid

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31 Hull, Memoirs, II, 1597.

32 ibid

33 ibid Also see “Roosevelt — Stalin Meeting, Bohlen Minutes,” February 8,1945, FRUS: The Conferences at Malta and Yalta, 1945 (Wash., 1955), 770.Google Scholar

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37 “The Director of the Office of European Affairs (Dunn) to the Director of the Civil Affairs Division, War Department (Hildering),” March 14, 1944, FRUS: 1944 (Wash., 1965), V, 1205–06.Google Scholar

38 Chennault, Claire Lee, Way of a Fighter: The Memoirs of Claire Chennault (N.Y., 1949), 342.Google Scholar

39 ibid

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41 “The Ambassador in France (Caffery) to the Secretary of State,” March 13,1945, FRUS: 1945 (Wash., 1969), VI, 300.Google Scholar

42 ibid

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44 “The Ambassador in France (Caffery) to the Secretary of State,” January 30, 1945, FRUS: 1945 (Wash., 1968), IV, 668.Google Scholar

45 “Taussig Memorandum,” FRUS: 1945, I, 124.

46 ibid

47 ibid

48 ibid

49 Hess, “Franklin Roosevelt and Indo-China,” 365.

50 “The Acting Secretary of State (Grew) to the Ambassador in France (Caffery),” May 9, 1945, FRUS: 1945, VI, 307.

51 “The Acting Secretary of State (Acheson) to the Charge in China (Robertson),” October 5,1945, ibid, 313.

52 ibid (Italics mine).

53 “Report by the Subcommittee on Rearmament to the State — War — Navy Coordinating Committee,” March 21, 1946, FRUS: 1946 (Wash., 1972), 1154.Google Scholar

54 “Policy Paper Prepared in the Department of State,” June 22, 1945, FRUS: 1945, VI, 557. (Hereafter referred to as “Grew Memo.”)

55 ibid, 557–58.

56 ibid, 567.

57 Lippmann, Walter, “After the War Is Over,” Newsweek, December 14, 1970, 3233Google Scholar. For other “lessons” gleaned from America's involvement in Viet-Nam, consult Hans Morgenthau, J., A New Foreign Policy for the United States (London, 1969), 111–56Google Scholar; Hoopes, Townsend, The Limits of Intervention (N.Y., 1970), 132Google Scholar; Cooper, Chester L., The Lost Crusade: America in Viet-Nam (N.Y., 1970), 451–68Google Scholar; Kuklick, Bruce, “History as a Way of Learning,” American Quarterly, XXII (Fall, 1970), 609–28Google Scholar; Ball, “The Lessons of Viet-Nam,” 12ff.; Rostow, Eugene V., Peace in the Balance: The Future of American Foreign Policy (N.Y., 1972), 1123Google Scholar; and Nixon, Richard M., U.S. Foreign Policy for the 1970's: Building for Peace (Wash., 1971), 16.Google Scholar

58 “Grew Memo.,” 567.

59 ibid

60 ibid, 568.

61 Lippmann, Walter, The Cold War: A Study in U.S. Foreign Policy (N.Y., 1947), especially 12, 1416Google Scholar. Lippmann's prediction should be compared with Kennan's, George F. Viet-Nam post mortem in U.S. Senate, Committee on Foreign Relations, 89th Congress, 2nd Session, Supplemental Foreign Assistance Fiscal Year — Viet-Nam (Wash., 1966), 331–33, 337–38, 350–51, 355–58.Google Scholar

62 “Memorandum Prepared by the Joint Chiefs of Staff,” March 27, 1946, FRUS: 1946 I, 1161. This document in its essentials had been approved by the JCS on September 19,1945, and forwarded to the Secretaries of War and Navy, and from there to the Secretary of State and the President.

63 ibid, (Italics mine).

64 ibid, 1163.

65 ibid

66 ibid

67 “Memorandum Prepared for the Secretary's Staff Committee,” November 16, 1945, ibid, 1123–28.

68 “Memorandum Prepared in the Department of State,” December 1,1945, ibid, 1135–36. (Cited subsequently as “State Memo.”)

69 ibid, 1136.

70 See Siracusa, Joseph M., New Left Diplomatic Histories and Historians: The American Revisionists (Port Washington, N.Y., 1973), 76103.Google Scholar

71 “State Memo.,” 1137.

72 ibid, 1138.

73 For example, refer to Adler, Les K. and Paterson, Thomas G., “Red Fascism: The Merger of Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia in the American Image of Totalitarianism, 1930's-1950's,” American Historical Review, LXXV (April, 1970), 1046–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

74 “State Memo.,” 1139.

75 ibid

76 ibid

77 ibid

78 Hess, “Franklin Roosevelt and Indo-China,” 367.

79 United States — Viet-Nam Relations, I, sec. I, C-4, C-60, C-62, C-96, C-97.

80 Colbert, Evelyn, “The Road Not Taken: Decolonization and Independence in Indonesia and Indo-China,” Foreign Affairs, LI (April, 1973), 608–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

81 “Declaration of Independence of the Democratic Republic of Viet-Nam,” in Ho Chi Minh on Revolution: Selected Writings, 1920–66, ed. by Fall, Bernard B., (N.Y., 1967), 141–43.Google Scholar

82 Abbot Memorandum, September 12, 1946, United States — Viet-Nam Relations, I, sec. I.C-103–104.

83 ibid

84 ibid

85 ibid

86 ibid, C-3.

87 Acheson Tel., December 5,1946, ibid, VIII, 85.

88 “The Secretary of State to the Embassy in France,” February3, 1947, FRUS: 1947 (Wash., 1972), VI, 6768. (Hereafter cited as “Marshall Memo.”)Google Scholar

89 ibid

90 ibid

91 Marshall Tel, July 2,1948, United StatesViet-Nam Relations, VIII, 127. (Italics mine).

92 ibid, I, sec. I, A-50.

93 Acheson Tel., May 20,1949, ibid, VIII, 196–97.

94 “The Consul General at Singapore (Josselyn)’ to the Secretary of State,” January 7, 1947, FRUS: 1947, VI, 55.Google Scholar

95 “Department of State Policy Statement of Indo-China,” September 27, 1948, United States — Viet-Nam Relations, VIII, 145, 148–49. (Hereafter referred to as “Indo-China Statement.”)

96 “Marshall Memo.”

97 “Indo-China Statement.”

98 ibid

99 “The Position of the United States with respect to Asia,” December 23, 1949, ibid, 248.

100 ibid

101 “Report by the National Security Council on the Position of the United States with respect to Asia,” December 30, 1949, ibid, 267.

102 “Special Message to the Congress on Greece and Turkey: The Truman Doctrine,” March 12, 1947, in Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: Harry S. Truman, 1947 (Wash., 1963), III, 176–80. (Citations from this source will subsequently be referred to as Presidential Papers.)Google Scholar

103 For the controversy over the meaning of “containment” compare Kennan's, George F. anonymous “The Sources of Soviet Conduct,” Foreign Affairs, XXV (July, 1947), 566–82Google Scholar, with his Memoirs, 1925–1950 (Boston, 1967), 354–67.Google Scholar

104 Department of State Bulletin, XX (February 13, 1950), 244.

105 ibid

106 Paris Tel., February 22, 1950, cited in United States — Viet-Nam Relations, I, sec. IV A.2, 7,22.

107 ibid

108 ibid VIII, 145–46.

109 Department of State Bulletin, XX (May 22,1950), 821.

110 “The Position of the United States with respect to Indo-China,” February 27, 1950, United States — Viet-Nam Relations, VIII, 285.

111 ibid

112 ibid

113 ibid

114 Truman, Harry S., Memoirs: Years of Trial and Hope (2 vols.; Garden City, N.Y., 1956), II, 380.Google Scholar

115 ibid

116 Presidential Papers: Dwight D. Eisenhower, 1953 (Wash., 1960), I, 16Google Scholar. For another, ironically more “realistic” view see Dulles, John Foster, War or Peace (London, 1950), 231.Google Scholar

117 Presidential Papers: Kennedy, John F., 1963 (Wash., 1963), III, 412.Google Scholar

118 ibid

119 For example, see Secretary of State Dean Rusk, “Background of U. S. Policy in Southeast Asia,” Department of State Bulletin, LIV (May 30, 1966), 830–34, and President Johnson, “Viet-Nam: The Struggle To Be Free,”Google Scholaribid, LIV (March 14, 1966), 390–96.

120 Johnson, Lyndon Baines, The Vantage Point: Perspectives of the Presidency, 1963–1969 (London, 1971), 134.Google Scholar

121 ibid, 136.

122 ibid

123 Quoted in New York Times, May 9,1972.

124 For a perceptive comment on this point, consult Dick Wilson, “The American Quarter-Century in Asia,” Foreign Affairs, LI (July, 1973), 821–22.Google Scholar