Joint warfare in South Vietnam, 1963–1969

During the Cold War in the 1960s, the United States and South Vietnam began a period of gradual escalation and direct intervention referred to as the "Americanization" of joint warfare in South Vietnam during the Vietnam War. At the start of the decade, United States aid to South Vietnam consisted largely of supplies with approximately 900 military observers and trainers. After the assassination of both Ngo Dinh Diem and John F. Kennedy close to the end of 1963 and Gulf of Tonkin incident in 1964 and amid continuing political instability in the South, the Lyndon Johnson Administration made a policy commitment to safeguard the South Vietnamese regime directly. The American military forces and other anti-communist SEATO countries increased their support, sending large scale combat forces into South Vietnam; at its height in 1969, slightly more than 400,000 American troops were deployed. The People's Army of Vietnam and the allied Viet Cong fought back, keeping to countryside strongholds while the anti-communist allied forces tended to control the cities. The most notable conflict of this era was the 1968 Tet Offensive, a widespread campaign by the communist forces to attack across all of South Vietnam; while the offensive was largely repelled, it was a strategic success in seeding doubt as to the long-term viability of the South Vietnamese state. This phase of the war lasted until the election of Richard Nixon and the change of U.S. policy to Vietnamization, or ending the direct involvement and phased withdrawal of U.S. combat troops and giving the main combat role back to the South Vietnamese military.

Joint warfare in South Vietnam 1963–1969
Part of the Vietnam War, Indochina Wars and Cold War

South Vietnam, Military Regions, 1967
Date1 November 1963 28 January 1969
(5 years, 2 months, 3 weeks and 6 days)
Location
North Vietnam, South Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia
Result Laotian Civil War, Cambodian Civil War
Beginning of Vietnamization
Belligerents

Anti-Communist forces:

 South Vietnam
 United States
 Australia
 Philippines
 South Korea
 New Zealand
Kingdom of Laos
Hmong
 Thailand

Communist forces:

Viet Cong
 North Vietnam
Pathet Lao
Khmer Rouge
Supported by
Supported by
Strength

United States: 409,111 (1969)

ARVN: ~600,000 (1969)
NVA/VC:
420,000 (1969)
Casualties and losses
South Vietnam:
74,416 KIA
United States 47,691 KIA

One of the main problems that the joint forces faced was continuing weakness in the South Vietnamese government, along with a perceived lack of stature among the generals who rose up to lead it after the original government of Diem was deposed. Coups in 1963, January 1964, September 1964, December 1964, and 1965 all shook faith in the government and reduced the trust of civilians. According to General Trần Văn Trà, the [North Vietnamese] Party concluded, the "United States was forced to introduce its own troops because it was losing the war. It had lost the political game in Vietnam." Robert McNamara suggests that the overthrow of Dương Văn Minh by Nguyễn Khánh, in January 1964, reflected differing U.S. and Vietnamese priorities.

And since we still did not recognize the North Vietnamese and Vietcong and North Vietnamese as nationalist in nature, we never realized that encouraging public identification between Khanh and the U.S. may have only reinforced in the minds of many Vietnamese that his government drew its support not from the people, but from the United States.

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