Why Did the Vietnam War Break Out? (4K Vietnam War Documentary)

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  • Опубліковано 24 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,6 тис.

  • @realtimehistory
    @realtimehistory  Рік тому +67

    Get Nebula with 40% off annual subscription with my link: go.nebula.tv/realtimehistory
    Watch Red Atoms on Nebula: nebula.tv/redatoms

    • @aliefalyansyah5996
      @aliefalyansyah5996 Рік тому +7

      Do Indonesia national revolution next please.

    • @azimisyauqieabdulwahab9401
      @azimisyauqieabdulwahab9401 Рік тому +2

      Next video about The Tet Offensive

    • @blessnorthamerica7919
      @blessnorthamerica7919 8 місяців тому

      Since great documentary ! ❤ but it doesn’t explain why America scared of communism, if capitalism is that great, why America scared of something less greater and has to borrow money from communism?

    • @rudeawakening3833
      @rudeawakening3833 4 місяці тому

      You blew PAST the most important part ! The free elections that the entire country of Vietnam was promised!

    • @MicheleHill-wv2wc
      @MicheleHill-wv2wc 2 місяці тому

      America should have never got themselves involved in the Korean war and the Vietnam war. America wants to be everyone's big brother and they cannot handle what's going on in their own country. America should have the slogan damn the American people cuz I want to help everybody else. American people go homeless and hungry because America is sending money and military troops to every other country to save them and not the American people. 😢

  • @kalileokalilei
    @kalileokalilei Рік тому +339

    As a Vietnamese who was born during the war and later grew up abroad, information about this war was often one sided and there was no way to be impartial to an event that shaped so profoundly our lives, I greatly appreciate the approach in which this series has been presented. Thank you

    • @jafo766
      @jafo766 Рік тому +3

      CHARLIE DON'T $URF.....does not give up either !

    • @davidmoss2576
      @davidmoss2576 Рік тому +2

      Why don't you go to Vietnam and learn from the source instead of relying on Western propaganda?

    • @Marcfj
      @Marcfj Рік тому +39

      I was asked by a young Vietnamese student in 1965 how I felt about my country's (USA) involvement in the Vietnam war. I told him it was none of our business and that we shouldn't be there. That was my opinion then, and it is my opinion today in 2023.

    • @ElimGarakSpoonHead
      @ElimGarakSpoonHead Рік тому +5

      @@MarcfjOk great, everybody got that? Marc here thought it was a bad idea. Glad that’s settled. We can all relax now, because Marc’s two cents on the ‘nam are in. 🤣🤡

    • @agoodchow
      @agoodchow Рік тому +5

      @@Marcfj As of 2023, Americans still think Taiwan is NOT none of American business. USA Govt and majority of USA public still think USA must get involved in Taiwan.

  • @Kabutoes
    @Kabutoes Рік тому +121

    I appreciate the sincere effort to put a Vietnamese perspective from both sides in this. Not a lot of videos would do this and go straight into the gulf of Tonkin without explaining the precarious political situations in Vietnam. Wish there were more Vietnamese sources, but I understand how difficult it is to translate

    • @neilreynolds3858
      @neilreynolds3858 Рік тому +10

      I have a history of Vietnam written by a Vietnamese historian and published in Saigon in English during the war. There are some used books available. I heard about it from a guy who was stationed in Saigon during the war and had access to books. Where I was, there was nothing in English except comic books. There's a lot in it that I've never seen anywhere else. There's the same problem with Russian histories. About the only time they were published in English was during the days of the USSR and they are obviously biased in a certain way. We're only exposed to histories in English of any place east of Germany that are written from a Western viewpoint. That's really kind of appalling.

    • @tenkloosterherman
      @tenkloosterherman 9 місяців тому +1

      There is a quite detailed description of the Gulf of Tonkin incident. Google it on Wikipedia.

    • @dougmcwhirter419
      @dougmcwhirter419 6 місяців тому

      WELL SAID ! 👍🏻🇺🇸

  • @isaresarchvarin1496
    @isaresarchvarin1496 Рік тому +692

    The US forgot that once upon a time, the American colonies fought for independence against the British.
    The Vietnamese asked the world to recognize their independence. The Western powers not only ignored this, they allowed the French to go back to colonize Vietnam. So the Vietnamese had no choice but fight for their cause.

    • @danielhutchinson6604
      @danielhutchinson6604 Рік тому +33

      Exactumundo!

    • @SantiSomchay
      @SantiSomchay 11 місяців тому +24

      Oh yeah!what south Vietnam and The Laotian that didn't want to be communist

    • @skipmagil
      @skipmagil 11 місяців тому +1

      @@danielhutchinson6604 does exact world mean?

    • @danielhutchinson6604
      @danielhutchinson6604 11 місяців тому +3

      @@skipmagil I believe the origin of the actual meaning is found in Arnold's Diner?
      It was commonly called Fonzie talk.....

    • @lalaboards
      @lalaboards 11 місяців тому +11

      The founders weren’t Communists .

  • @Gauntlet1212
    @Gauntlet1212 Рік тому +270

    Things like this is why you should ALWAYS question official narratives.

    • @flashwashington2735
      @flashwashington2735 Рік тому +1

      You say. Have you questioned in any substantive way?

    • @Gauntlet1212
      @Gauntlet1212 Рік тому +11

      @@flashwashington2735 very. Always. Thanks for asking

    • @flashwashington2735
      @flashwashington2735 Рік тому +1

      @@Gauntlet1212 Yes!? where's the substance? Anybody can just say they have done anything. What was the question. Who did you ask. Librarians and convenience store clerks don't count.

    • @arvinjay336
      @arvinjay336 9 місяців тому

      ​@@flashwashington2735 hey yank, ain't your government putting CIA agents in several countries? especially those in which your government is obsessed with regime change, because your declassified docs confirms it.

    • @HughButler-lb6zs
      @HughButler-lb6zs 9 місяців тому +4

      Including elections.correction, especially elections.

  • @umjackd
    @umjackd Рік тому +229

    I don't often dive into Vietnam war history because my family was part of it. My grandfather was an ARVN soldier and later officer and my parents both grew up in it before being evacuated.
    It's a tough history that's usually told from American perspective, but you guys have my trust to give nuance and a variety of voices from that time.

    • @realtimehistory
      @realtimehistory  Рік тому +35

      we try our best to always include all voices included in a conflict.

    • @toangomo
      @toangomo Рік тому +8

      @@realtimehistory I find that this video is much better than the previous Dien Bien Phu Video. The whole team tried to find more information from North Vietnam and go into detail about each event rather than just talking in general about what happened like other UA-cam channels. Thank you for respecting history.

    • @danreed7889
      @danreed7889 Рік тому +1

      My family was involved as well (on the US side), and I watch this with great interest.

    • @whyjnot420
      @whyjnot420 Рік тому +5

      That is essentially the same reason I first started learning about the Vietnam War when I was young. Before I had any real interest in history, I was learning about the Vietnam War in depth. Simply because my father was in the US Army and served 2 tours there. Initially I just wanted to know about what that would have been like. As I grew up I learned more and more until at some point my interest in Vietnam merged with what had become a keen interest in military history and history in general.

    • @chadhines5804
      @chadhines5804 Рік тому +3

      Respect

  • @daltonweeks6736
    @daltonweeks6736 Рік тому +69

    I'm happy you made this series, not many go so in depth on the region as you guys do. I really enjoy these videos so thank you!

  • @valdivia1234567
    @valdivia1234567 Рік тому +41

    They should've heeded Gen. Ridgway's advice longterm. He was not only an amazing battlefield general, he was very savvy overall.

    • @alkitzman9179
      @alkitzman9179 9 місяців тому +13

      Yes Ridgway was honest Westmoreland was a blood thirsty fool looking for his own glory

    • @EdwardGatey
      @EdwardGatey 4 місяці тому +3

      Agree. Westmoreland was more incompetent than Monty.

  • @robertortiz-wilson1588
    @robertortiz-wilson1588 Рік тому +78

    Thank you for going over events in such nonhyperbolic detail, no snide joke comments thrown in, etc! Your presentation is so incredibly professional. I can't tell you how valuable I find that.

  • @mike6252
    @mike6252 Рік тому +54

    I find the french involvement in Vietnam and the United States’ early years in the region the most interesting of the conflict. The Gulf of Tonkin incident is such an important event to study to understand the philosophy of our involvement and a warning sign of how uncertain events are used as justification for use of military force. Job very well done as always 👍

    • @davidmoss2576
      @davidmoss2576 Рік тому

      Nothing uncertain about it. Lies were told, blood was shed. Millions paid with their lives, while billions were made by the MIC. Its a pretty simple formula repeated over and over, I just can't believe how easily American public fall for it.

    • @danielhutchinson6604
      @danielhutchinson6604 Рік тому +4

      Tin Can Sailors report close approaches to North Vietnam, on a regular basis.
      The Maddox incident remains as dubious as most of the motivation for the conflict.

    • @vekazanov
      @vekazanov Рік тому +4

      The incident shows clearly the way politicians weave history: once a certain narrative gets written, nothing can change the official line, not even facts. And then reality is forced into submission, not the other way around.
      On the other hand, narratives do fall apart from time to time.

    • @danielhutchinson6604
      @danielhutchinson6604 Рік тому +1

      @@vekazanov The Tin Can Sailors may not have been as numerous as the population of the "Big E" but they did relay stories of delivering raiding groups to Vietnam shores that were clearly inside the territorial waters of North Vietnam.
      The image of protecting the Carrier groups seems to forget the shallow draft of the Ships of the Destroyer Class?
      The idea of delivering troops to the Shores of Nam was a tale told by more than one Sailor.

    • @josef-peterroemer5309
      @josef-peterroemer5309 Рік тому +1

      Basically what the usa does with all the wars they want to start or get involved in. Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan, etc.

  • @Mondo762
    @Mondo762 Рік тому +42

    My father was among the first 10 US Army officers to enter Viet Nam after the French defeat at Dien Bien Phu in 1954. He was later sent back as an Advisor in 1959. The family was to follow him to Saigon but he told us to stay in the States because it was getting hot. He did not need to have his wife and 4 children in a potential war zone.
    Thank you for this more factual presentation of the early days of the US involvment in Viet Nam. My only reservation was the statement about the "16,000 Advisors in Viet Nam when Kennedy was assinated". Those were not "Advisors". In fact I worked with a man that was in the 101st Airborne in Viet Nam in 1962. He was certainly not an "Advisor".It was Kennedy that sent in the first combat troops.

    • @ronwhiteman8892
      @ronwhiteman8892 Рік тому +10

      We had advisors under Eisenhower and they were more than advisors.

    • @gchukma
      @gchukma 8 місяців тому +3

      My friend Bill served during the middle 60s in Viet Nam, when going onto any military base wore a t-shirt that stated "Ours was not a humanitarian mission". Killing was the job, getting home was the reward.

    • @Mondo762
      @Mondo762 8 місяців тому +1

      @@ronwhiteman8892The UN limited the US Advisors to 275. It stayed that way until Kennedy came along and went way over the limit.

    • @vantrinhnguyen987
      @vantrinhnguyen987 4 місяці тому

  • @stevengoodloe3893
    @stevengoodloe3893 Рік тому +54

    My dad was in the Navy during Vietnam and conducted Naval gunfire support for the RVN and US troops. He says we should have backed Ho Chi Minh.

    • @chrishamlin5863
      @chrishamlin5863 Рік тому

      History has vindicated your dad. Vietnam is now an economic partner and strategic ally of the US, which is exactly what Ho Chi Minh wanted back in 1945.

    • @neilreynolds3858
      @neilreynolds3858 Рік тому +12

      We should have stayed out but there were too many officers who needed a war to get their promotions and Johnson was an egomaniac who wanted a war so he'd be remembered as a heroic wartime President like his hero FDR.

    • @ronwhiteman8892
      @ronwhiteman8892 Рік тому +11

      And he was right.

    • @khoabuianh8101
      @khoabuianh8101 Рік тому

      Cộng sản chỉ là bàn đạp để chúng tôi giải phóng dân tộc khỏi ách thực dân , và giá như tổng thống Truman biết được điều đó và đứng về phía Việt Minh thì có lẽ không có những mạng sống của hai bên bị hi sinh vô nghĩa 😢

    • @ucnguyenanh9414
      @ucnguyenanh9414 Рік тому +4

      *Minh.

  • @toddmoss1689
    @toddmoss1689 Рік тому +22

    Ho Chi Min had lived the United States and greatly admired Americans. The Vietnamese would later claim General George Washington as inspiration for their overall strategy versus the United States.

    • @ĐạiLươngTriều
      @ĐạiLươngTriều 9 місяців тому +1

      You're right ! but partly ! Most Vietnamese people at that time did not know who Washington was.

    • @ChetsicaN
      @ChetsicaN 6 місяців тому

      who is G W?, you should do a small research on Vietnam history and you will surely find out why American/ China/ France, Japan or any other super powers can't win over us

    • @MakeSomeNoisePlaylists
      @MakeSomeNoisePlaylists 3 місяці тому +1

      Like Fidel Castro and countless others...

  • @cordial001
    @cordial001 Рік тому +32

    In late 2001, I was in Louisiana in the U.S. Some people I talked to were adamant the "Vietnam War" never took place (to support their main assertion that the USA didn't lose the war) since war was never declared. I've never looked into how widespread that view is in the U.S., but that group was very, very touchy about anyone even referring to the "Vietnam War" by that term at all.

    • @bluedragontoybash2463
      @bluedragontoybash2463 Рік тому

      they probably believe US didn't flee from Afghanistan either. Just let those people be

    • @Oxtocoatl13
      @Oxtocoatl13 Рік тому

      You can still find plenty of Americans cherrypicking minutiae to avoid admitting that Americans are just people and don't always win wars. Probably even in the comments of this video. Evidently the cultural scars of Vietnam run deep.

    • @martijn9568
      @martijn9568 Рік тому +10

      Jup, it's like that 'special military operation' Russia is calling a war right now.
      Some people should just know that real life isn't honourable, and that wars don't have to be declared to be actual wars.

    • @chrishamlin5863
      @chrishamlin5863 Рік тому +16

      Never underestimate the power of denial.

    • @johncehna601
      @johncehna601 Рік тому

      @@martijn9568 Russia call it a SMO because they have a law forbid them to invade neighbor country by an invasion war, also why they do election to annex territories into Russia. That's also the reason they use mostly their arsenal to attack, it limits the human cost so they wont have to recruit more and make this an official war. It's still a war, but at least they dont fly half the earth to support an colonizing attempt and invade a country that never harmed an America fly

  • @fredaaron762
    @fredaaron762 Рік тому +20

    The Commander of the US Fifth Carrier Division at the time of the Gulf of Tonkin incident was Captain George Stephen Morrison, the father of Jim Morrison on the Doors. Despite many conspiracy theorists, Morrison was not at the incident but was at sea near Japan in his flagship USS Bon Homme Richard at the time.

    • @Mondo762
      @Mondo762 Рік тому +7

      So Jim Morrison was a Navy Brat. That explains a lot.

    • @PeaknikMicki
      @PeaknikMicki Рік тому +8

      And Gulf of Tonkin incident was later admitted as never having happened, by McNamara, on video

    • @lizardgothic4262
      @lizardgothic4262 6 місяців тому +1

      Jim Morrison dad fought in Vietnam war?

  • @edt.5118
    @edt.5118 Рік тому +8

    Ho Chi Minh supported the Allies and fought the Japanese. As the pacific war was reaching the end, Ho Chi Minh asked the US to not give control of Viet Nam back to the French. Ho Chi Minh and Viet Nam were basically abandoned and driven to the USSR. The rest is history.

  • @genaro5766
    @genaro5766 Рік тому +87

    I have never heard the GULF OF TONGKIN INCIDENT , explained with such intricate details . I really appreciate the complete attention to the facts on this and all your videos . Thank you for your hard work and honest respect for history .

    • @robertortiz-wilson1588
      @robertortiz-wilson1588 Рік тому +4

      Same. Almost all other videos I've seen covering it are extremely short on details. Replaced instead with hyperbolic condemnation that it was all preplanned and fake.

    • @rogermartinez78
      @rogermartinez78 Рік тому +2

      Don’t you two watch PBS in the US or read history books about the Vietnam war?

    • @robertortiz-wilson1588
      @robertortiz-wilson1588 Рік тому +5

      @@rogermartinez78 PBS is awful at history topics.

    • @neilreynolds3858
      @neilreynolds3858 Рік тому +2

      Make notes so you'll recognize it when they do it again.

    • @finddeniro
      @finddeniro Рік тому +1

      Big . Night Naval Battle..
      Tonkin..

  • @54032Zepol
    @54032Zepol Рік тому +529

    Never forget that ho chi Minh was trained and armed by the u.s.

    • @aurorathekitty7854
      @aurorathekitty7854 Рік тому

      In the US if you wanna know who will be your enemy tomorrow look who's the government supplying weapons to today.

    • @venkmanny4100
      @venkmanny4100 Рік тому +150

      Because he liked the US and was the last person that wanted war with them.

    • @EternalModerate
      @EternalModerate Рік тому

      @@venkmanny4100 Shame he was a communist.

    • @simonbroberg969
      @simonbroberg969 Рік тому +97

      Nothing surprises us these days, as the CIA asked the SAS to train the Talabahn in Afghanistan to fight the Russian then got kicked out by the ones that the SAS had trained.
      P.S. First thing Churchill was told about Afghanistan is not to bother as no one ever wins there.

    • @pax6833
      @pax6833 Рік тому +100

      Many Americans wanted to work with Ho Chi Mihn but unfortunately more Americans valued the French and feared the Chinese more.
      Luckily US-Vietnam relations have been repaired and are better than ever.

  • @chipschannel9494
    @chipschannel9494 Рік тому +7

    A “strategic hamlet “ was on lock down from dusk until dawn, without the “village heads” permission you were a Cong outside the village after dark . They were work release prisons , in their own country, land , home , so that they couldn’t learn to think differently .

  • @josedavidgarcesceballos7
    @josedavidgarcesceballos7 Рік тому +20

    Have to say it is a shame not seeing in the bibliography any vietnamese source, although I understand the language barrier. Cheers.

    • @phambadien650
      @phambadien650 10 місяців тому

      This video explains from one side

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 10 місяців тому +4

      Using sources in the language you are writing in is generally considered an academic standard, if you use a source in a different language you are expected to translate it to make it available to anyone criticizing you. The only exceptions to this is if you're writing in a field where everyone is expected to know the language in question, like say Norse mythology where everyone is expected to be able to read old norse, or when you're writing in a non-English language and referring to an English source.
      Obviously as you imply there are issues with this as sources in specific languages can still have biases, and there's an obvious bias towards English culture since it's treated as the global standard language.

  • @pop5678eye
    @pop5678eye 9 місяців тому +12

    What happened over and over (Cuba, Korea, Vietnam) is that communism got a foothold _because_ Western powers were propping up repressive dictatorships. (although the average American still thinks we were fighting 'for democracy')

    • @edwinalexis593
      @edwinalexis593 4 місяці тому

      And now they are still repressive dictatorships (Except for Vietnam by now)

    • @winkhantaung8075
      @winkhantaung8075 2 місяці тому

      It's half the truth in Korean case as Kim was popped up by the soviets(also a former red army soldier). In the case of Cuba and Vietnam, it's true. Because of US agony and refusal, Nationalists leaning to the left to gain support from the Soviets

  • @garycole520
    @garycole520 10 місяців тому +3

    One of the best documentaries on this disastrous war.

  • @polosolutions8856
    @polosolutions8856 8 місяців тому +166

    answer: France

    • @Nomaswearefull
      @Nomaswearefull 4 місяці тому +7

      Nope $

    • @angkhoanguyen6114
      @angkhoanguyen6114 3 місяці тому +16

      ​@@NomaswearefullUS helped France against Vietnam, it costed them dearly.

    • @mimikyu-
      @mimikyu- 3 місяці тому +17

      its always the french

    • @morningstar577
      @morningstar577 3 місяці тому +2

      France? What's that?

    • @rjaniaanielsen6314
      @rjaniaanielsen6314 3 місяці тому +2

      Pure and simple 🤠🤠 but if there ever was a communist country this was it. No other countries was or are 🤠 like old soviet, china, or any other are other than tyranies !

  • @jamestakacs
    @jamestakacs Рік тому +9

    You need to look at the war in Laos and in Cambodia. Both were very big parts on the Vietnam War.

  • @shatterquartz
    @shatterquartz Рік тому +46

    4:10 "In order to prevent the Communists from destroying your traditional way of life, we're doing it ourselves!"

    • @pax6833
      @pax6833 Рік тому +26

      "We had to destroy the village to avoid losing the village"

    • @havu-oj4qh
      @havu-oj4qh Рік тому +3

      Brazen aggression cannot be excused as stupid.

    • @toangomo
      @toangomo Рік тому

      Funny thing about strategic hamlets that It is very difficult to convince Vietnamese people to leave their homes and land to live in strategic hamlets. Therefore, in many cases, ARVN and American soldiers had to burn houses to drag them away. This causes great dissatisfaction among Vietnamese people. Because they have a tradition of living in the land left by their ancestors. The South Vietnamese government then had to propagate that the Viet Cong were terrorists and burned people's houses to appease public opinion.

    • @Oxtocoatl13
      @Oxtocoatl13 Рік тому +14

      I love it when people (usually Americans) try to portray Vietnam as a war between communism and democracy. Like... Sure, North Vietnam was a communist dictatorship, but the South was an equally oppressive regime run first by a militant religious minority faction and then, after a violent military coup, by a military junta. There was no democracy in Vietnam and the American government knew and accepted that.

    • @johncehna601
      @johncehna601 Рік тому

      @@Oxtocoatl13 i love how most propaganda from US also hide the fact that the South regime was original formed by a resigned monarchy (that no one voted for and had no more power to be in charge), several groups of divergent communists, had literally no democracy in the beginning and was only the puppet for France. Like, poof, a democracy regime everyone voted for from thin air, lmao. My ancestors lived their whole lives in the South with poverty, never heard about a dude tên Diệm that they voted for

  • @SABPDK38
    @SABPDK38 Рік тому +71

    If the Unification Vote happened, Ho Chi Minh would win and there wouldn't be war after that. Viet Minh is the force that defeated French and Japanese, whereas ARVN had been in French side.
    The fact that Diem would win over 98% of the votes was such an obvious joke.

    • @somboonsaetang6380
      @somboonsaetang6380 Рік тому +1

      Yes, Diem won over 98% of the votes like KIM JONG UN of North Korea at present!

    • @khanhmai5006
      @khanhmai5006 Рік тому +15

      Well, the US can even fake a provoke gulf of Tonkin incident so it is kind of normal for Diem to win over even 101% of the votes 😂

    • @ucnguyenanh9414
      @ucnguyenanh9414 Рік тому +1

      Well, Diem won the election for the Power in the South agaisnt Bao Dai, which is a very low bar compare to a voting for reunification against HCM.

    • @havu-oj4qh
      @havu-oj4qh Рік тому

      The Vietnamese have supported the Communist Party since it born in 1930 to defeat France, the US, the Khmer Rouge, and China to protect Vietnam no matter how much the enemy' propaganda machine defames them!

    • @248paul
      @248paul 7 місяців тому

      Actually Diem regime was created by the US.

  • @larsnystrom6698
    @larsnystrom6698 Рік тому +37

    I remember how The Gulf of Tonkin incident was reported in the media at that time.
    American could learn from that how the US goes about getting a war started. But I doubt they actually will learn that.
    That method will work time and again!

    • @lesheinen6116
      @lesheinen6116 8 місяців тому +9

      As in WMDs

    • @barryeck4183
      @barryeck4183 4 місяці тому +1

      Building 7???

    • @LuizAlexPhoenix
      @LuizAlexPhoenix 4 місяці тому

      We are literally seeing Blinken repeat the lines of Powell, saying that Iran can build a nuclear bomb in two weeks, that the smoking gun must not be a mushroom cloud. It has gone beyond tragedy and farce to a satirical tragedy.

  • @kingjoe3rd
    @kingjoe3rd Рік тому +34

    I had never heard about the Catholic minority pogroming the Buddhist majority in Vietnam. That burning Buddhist monk image has always been cast as him doing it for "peace" because of the war and not about the religious persecution.

    • @yevonsama
      @yevonsama Рік тому +32

      It is simple because you don't hear about it.
      It happen frequently in South Vietnam during that period.
      Both French and U.S and even Diem supported Catholic minority very much, because they look more pro-Western" than other Vietnamese.
      One among the famost cases is in Binh Hung - Hai Yen at Ca Mau province. It is actually the village ( fortress) of Catholic minority. During Diem's rule, with the support of South Vietnam government who is pro-Catholic, they received military supplies and weapons, and have the right to do anything against other villages who living around them. Very many citizens are massacred by them. Rape, behead, take girls from other village to build brothel for themselves, we got even report about cannibalism. They can do anything and kill anyone by claming " they are VC".
      However, if you read " Binh Hung - Hai Yen" in English, you maybe just got some writing that it is a peaceful village who fight very hard against VC.

    • @zachjordan7608
      @zachjordan7608 8 місяців тому

      he was doing it because of persecution, but also like the above reply states the persecution was very linked to the war

    • @kindkoun
      @kindkoun 8 місяців тому

      @@yevonsamaSound likes Viet Cong cai's propaganda!

    • @sophiado9002
      @sophiado9002 8 місяців тому +2

      @@yevonsamaI was there and never heard anything you said. You read all the propaganda from Viet Cong, stop spreading the lies. (I am Buddhist and loath that Viet Cong monk Thich Tri Quang)

    • @kindkoun
      @kindkoun 8 місяців тому +1

      @@sophiado9002Sound like Viet Cong cai... I was so surprised to read that comment too, I lived there till 78 but didn't know or hear any of it. How can some people have that "wild" imagination except Viet Cong???

  • @RobertJamesChinneryH
    @RobertJamesChinneryH Рік тому +5

    An intellectual has hit you tube...marvellous I am subscribed and looking forward to more great work!

  • @heintzreckons
    @heintzreckons Рік тому +39

    Tonkin Gulf. Many of us (hippies, war protestors, socialist youth) knew it was fake at the time, and were pretty sure it would lead to a vast waste and a defeat.

    • @franciskiraguri6247
      @franciskiraguri6247 Рік тому +3

      The same way they lied about Hama's killed children

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 10 місяців тому +2

      @@franciskiraguri6247 Who is Hama?

    • @frank1720
      @frank1720 4 місяці тому

      NOW your a retired NYU SO CALLED PROFESSOR? ACTIVIST?

    • @ryandelong2759
      @ryandelong2759 3 місяці тому

      Are you Wumao?

  • @randalllake2785
    @randalllake2785 Рік тому +23

    I watch a lot of documentaries on Vietnam. I was thrilled with this. Extremely well researched. Just the whole thing. Hats off to all of you.

  • @billstapleton1084
    @billstapleton1084 Рік тому +37

    America wanted a war. The economy was starting to slow. The Military Industrial complex saw a way to stimulate the economy and at the same time pad their checkbooks.

    • @trob1731
      @trob1731 11 місяців тому +10

      Our government doesn't even care if our military wins or loses, just so long as the rich get richer. Read 'War is a Racket' by USMC General and Medal of Honor (×2) awardee Smedley Butler.

    • @boondocker7964
      @boondocker7964 10 місяців тому

      Small book, lots of content though.@@trob1731

    • @fizkallnyeilsem
      @fizkallnyeilsem 8 місяців тому +1

      @billstapleton, bro everything US does is for resources like Oil, theres no resources in Vietnam (oil), thats why it was easier to left there (after 20 years tryna save face) in comparison to Germany using U-boats indiscriminant attacks in Atlantic, and Japan gatekeeping pacific oil in Indonesia. Theres no way America "stimilated their economy" on Vietnam that just doesnt make sense, they lost Billions money converted today. Maybe the gulf war, they benefited in that. But in Nam it was a net negative

  • @MrFagedaboudit
    @MrFagedaboudit Рік тому +3

    NamVet here. I recommend Barbara Tuchman's "March of Folly" on this.

  • @martijn9568
    @martijn9568 Рік тому +22

    Wow. This video is a half an hour long rollercoaster!
    I knew bits about the Vietnam war, but not much due to the Dutch school system not being interested in the topic (Not for bad reason mind you). But now I can finally make up for that. 👍thumbs up from me!👍

    • @neilreynolds3858
      @neilreynolds3858 Рік тому +3

      In the US, it was talked about constantly but the point of what was taught was mostly a coverup for just how awful every decision was that was made by our government and how murderously we treated our own troops who were dumped after the war the same way we dumped the South Vietnamese. The Vietnamese were collateral damage from our view and dismissed. When we were told about Calley and MyLai, our reaction was why? They weren't doing anything that we weren't doing every day. They had to shift the blame to the troops so the real war criminals could be promoted instead of punished. Our troops were witnesses and had to be portrayed as crazy and evil so nobody would believe us. They got away with it and that means that every history that's been written is corrupted. If you can't talk about the truth, you can never learn so we never learned the "lessons of Vietnam".

    • @Catrinus1
      @Catrinus1 Рік тому +2

      The history of the VietNam war is quite similar to the Dutch Indonesian war. The irony in my family is we fought on the side of the Dutch 1945-1950, got kicked out of Indonesia, went to Holland for 5-10 years, and then emigrated to the US. I have 5 cousins who then served in the US military in VietNam, the second generation fighting an unwinnable war.

    • @nguyenHieu-zo5rd
      @nguyenHieu-zo5rd 6 місяців тому

      ​@@Catrinus1you are fundamentally wrong. Netherlands vs Indonesia is like Vietnam vs France.

    • @The_FatGeneral
      @The_FatGeneral 6 місяців тому

      ​@@nguyenHieu-zo5rdthe type of warfare is similar either way

  • @Jorlaan42
    @Jorlaan42 Рік тому +21

    Another excellent video. I'm loving the Vietnam content and hope it continues.

    • @realtimehistory
      @realtimehistory  Рік тому +9

      yep, we will take a short break until December now but there are quite a few more episodes to come.

    • @Jorlaan42
      @Jorlaan42 Рік тому +5

      @@realtimehistory Awesome!

  • @nextworld9176
    @nextworld9176 10 місяців тому +1

    BEST presentation of the start of the Vietnam War I've ever seen.

  • @absoliutenuds
    @absoliutenuds 10 місяців тому +4

    Subscribed. This channel came across my feed for a reason.

  • @sankarchaya
    @sankarchaya Рік тому +37

    its hard to understand the strategic idea behind supporting a Catholic authoritarian in a mostly Buddhist and Confucian country. the coup seems like an ad hoc attempt to deal with that strategic (to say nothing of moral) error after the fact.

    • @Oxtocoatl13
      @Oxtocoatl13 Рік тому +10

      On the other hand, Americans in the 1950s would probably been biased in the favor of a strong, Christian leader who seemed like he would keep the minorities and commies in check. It might not have occurred to them that a religious extremist from an unpopular minority religion would not easily keep up popular support.

    • @flashwashington2735
      @flashwashington2735 Рік тому +2

      Merely an experiment in karma.

    • @stephendaley266
      @stephendaley266 Рік тому

      From 1945 to 1989, US foreign policy was to fanatically support the most far-right anti-communist leaders around the world, regardless of popular support or human rights violations.
      For roughly 30 years, "democratic" South Korea and Taiwan were basically right-wing dictatorships.
      The CIA allegedly orchestrated upwards of 70 coups over the years.

    • @amkrause2004
      @amkrause2004 Рік тому +2

      The reason why, is because communism in that time was atheist. That's why we strongly support catholic regimes.

    • @flashwashington2735
      @flashwashington2735 Рік тому

      @@amkrause2004John Kennedy broke the mould, before him mist Americans considered Catholicism a subversive divisive cult. Now, please lease tell me of the Christian, Jewish, Islamic cultures that are communist today. To my knowledge, you can have a communist government that gives lio service to honoring faith, but communism remains an authoritarian state of faith intolerant to all others.

  • @MikeHunt-fo3ow
    @MikeHunt-fo3ow Рік тому +3

    those destroyers collided a bunch of times in ur animation lol

  • @nomenicuss2091
    @nomenicuss2091 Рік тому +10

    What is up with vietnam war all of the sudden on all history channels?

    • @flashwashington2735
      @flashwashington2735 Рік тому

      Conspiracy!!! Shhhh-hhh-hh-hhhhhhh!!!!!¡

    • @Historymotion
      @Historymotion Рік тому

      They come to the deal making Vietnam and Usa become total partner...something like that. 😁

  • @robertborglund5783
    @robertborglund5783 Рік тому +7

    Because De Gaulle threatened to side with Eastern bloc if not allowed to recolonize French indo China

  • @davemilke3110
    @davemilke3110 Рік тому +4

    I think what may have helped the war, was the short memory of what happened in the Korean war, a decade earlier.

  • @Kavala76
    @Kavala76 10 місяців тому +4

    I'd be very interested in seeing North and South Vietnamese histories of the Vietnam war.

  • @oregonoutback7779
    @oregonoutback7779 11 місяців тому +7

    One piece of this puzzle that continually keeps getting lost to history, is the Cuban Missile Crisis. There were some in the US government convinced there would be a nuclear strike on the US by Russia. There were not enough stores of morphine to deal with such an attack on the population. A government agency was tasked with creating a smoke screen to bring huge volumes of opium out of the Golden Triangle. Vietnam, next door, provided that smoke screen. It was originally intended to be a short term operation, but typical of so many government's, too much money rolled in and there was no way this agency nor the MIC were letting go of this opportunity. The assignation of Diem was key to solidifying the smoke screen. If you follow the money trail that paid the General to take out Diem, you discover this missing puzzle piece. It's a fascinating story.

  • @32.baotin22
    @32.baotin22 Рік тому +16

    As a vietnamese, thank you for talking about our history

  • @Ed_Stuckey
    @Ed_Stuckey Рік тому +7

    Thank you, sir. Many details I didn't know or had forgotten even though I lived through a portion of this time period in the military (1961-1966).

  • @PatrickLigocki
    @PatrickLigocki 2 місяці тому

    Thank you for filling in so many gaps in my understanding of this tragic war. This is a great documentary, so well done and informative!!

  • @Joel-d3c4d
    @Joel-d3c4d Рік тому +73

    The USA never learned any lessons from the Vietnam War. The USA got involved in the Iraq war on false pretense just like the Vietnam war. And so it got tangled up in these forever wars even to this day. You cannot use so-called superior weapons to defeat the will of people ,especially if it is an unjustified war. The USA should learn to concentrate on its own domestic issues rather going all over the world to be the world's police man. So much lives and money being wasted when it could be used to improve people's lives in the USA and around the world. Its just pathetic

    • @Green-aider
      @Green-aider 6 місяців тому +3

      We were asked to help, we intervened when the French military was attacked by the Vietnamese and the south asked for help

    • @hoebertrabeck1621
      @hoebertrabeck1621 6 місяців тому +8

      it improved the lifes of lockheed sharholders.

    • @Rastaferrari829
      @Rastaferrari829 5 місяців тому +6

      @@hoebertrabeck1621it’s always about the shareholders, never the people.

    • @baddudecornpop7328
      @baddudecornpop7328 5 місяців тому +5

      Yea, well, our government doesn’t do what the public wants. It serves only its own interests.

    • @AzizDoufikar2280
      @AzizDoufikar2280 5 місяців тому

      "Under false pretenses".More like invasions that were whole heartedly support by the public.Stop painting it as if the public weren't the ones to blame.Especially a country that prided itself in "FREEDOM AND DEMOCRACY".

  • @KAISERSCHL8
    @KAISERSCHL8 11 місяців тому +3

    Once again a superb quality in this episode, very in depth and informative. Would love to see more cold war content!

    • @realtimehistory
      @realtimehistory  11 місяців тому +2

      the next Vietnam war video will drop in early January

    • @KAISERSCHL8
      @KAISERSCHL8 11 місяців тому +1

      @@realtimehistory Amazing, can't wait!

  • @chrishamlin5863
    @chrishamlin5863 Рік тому +7

    Thank you for your efforts to present the history of the Vietnam War. America has never recovered from it and never will until they come to grips with what happened.

    • @neilreynolds3858
      @neilreynolds3858 Рік тому

      Yeah, it's been almost 60 years and most of us who were there are dead and what's being called the history is merely a way to make sure we have more cannon fodder for the next time we get pissed off with some regime and decide to topple it. Since that could be in days, it's really too late to learn.

  • @tomkatinokla1
    @tomkatinokla1 Рік тому +4

    Not to be overly picky, but McNamara and the others who were at Ford postwar were the "Whiz Kids", not the :Wise Guys".

    • @marknewton7539
      @marknewton7539 Рік тому +4

      The Whiz Kids were young (relatively speaking) analysts and others McNamara brought into the DoD, from RAND etc. The Wise Men refers to Kennedy/Johnson's cabinet: Walt Rostow, McGeorge Bundy, George Ball, Dean Rusk, John McCone, McNamara etc. They were two separate groups.

  • @wernerheenop
    @wernerheenop Рік тому +9

    I love this Vietnam war series.

  • @Willys-Wagon
    @Willys-Wagon Рік тому +7

    While I am not against presenting the tokin golf incident as frayed nerves, it is subject to heavy debate if there were element of false flag operating or part of a covert operation gone wrong.

    • @extrahistory8956
      @extrahistory8956 Рік тому +7

      I mean, the second incident is up for debate, but the first one did happen, albeit the Vietnamese were justified due to the nearby coastal raids that the US had supported. That said, I personally believe that the US military would have found an excuse sooner or later to get involved.

    • @stanwest3091
      @stanwest3091 Рік тому

      It has been subject to debate but most modern historians worth their weight reject this. I mean, if we think about it for a moment, a false flag operation doesn't make sense for multiple reasons.
      1. Why did they need a second attack? The Tonkin Resolution was as much a response to the first real attack, as the second 'incident'. Why go through the trouble of planning a second fake attack (within about 24 hours), when you will probably already get your Congressional resolution (if that was the goal)?
      2. Why did they send the Turner Joy? If you were planning a false flag operation, why would you double the number of potential witnesses, bring in double the number of officers who presumably are involved/need to maintain secrecy/double the number of people to convince. It's clear the Turner Joy was sent because they were concerned about a real attack. Not to mention the destroyers' air cover from aircraft carriers - who report seeing no enemy ships and add another variable.
      3. Why would Johnson do this? As mentioned, he had no interest in going to war. He thought he was the only man capable of healing America's great domestic issues, like race relations. How does a war in Vietnam promote any of that? Even after gaining the resolution, he doesn't use it. Are we suggesting the military did this behind his back? This seems like even more of a stretch. The Tonkin Resolution gave him the power to intervene, but he didn't use it until North Vietnam ACTUALLY attacked US personnel. Unless we're now also saying Camp Holloway was a false flag?
      4. If it was a false flag operation, it was a pretty lousy one. There was no physical evidence produced, because nothing happened. You'd think the US would plant some ambiguous debris, a Vietnamese corpse or two, put a few superficial holes in the Maddox, do something to make it seem real if it was a false flag. Yet all they had were REAL radio intercepts WRONGLY translated and some dubious eyewitness reports.
      5. The organizations perhaps best placed to plan a false flag operation, like the CIA, were opposed to intervention from the start.
      With many conspiracies theories, there is the tendency to see our governments as masterly, Machiavellian plotters, who can pull this kind of thing off. Maybe that's more reassuring to some than the actual reality. Which is many governments are incredibly incompetent, bungle their way through crises and can barely organise their actual everyday operations with any kind of efficiency, let alone plot and maintain global conspiracies.

    • @Willys-Wagon
      @Willys-Wagon Рік тому +3

      @@extrahistory8956 I agree, US was heading down that path regardless. If not Tokin incident there would have been another.

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 10 місяців тому

      I wouldn't be surprised if it was a combination of frayed nerves and motivated reasoning. These kinds of incidents where overeager soldiers open fire at imaginary enemies happen all the time but usually a thorough investigation would follow to clear up exactly what happened. However clearly no such investigation happened because the people who got the reports were more than happy to recieve these reports, either because it was a false flag or because they didn't want to look a gift horse in the mouth. So even if it wasn't a false flag there was a breach of procedure that helped manufacturer the incident.
      Plus when you have boats consistently clearly breaching a country's territorial waters you shouldn't be surprised when said boats are attacked and after the first incident it should have been obvious that continuing this would lead to an incident. And again one might suspect that whoever was in charge kept up these missions in the full knowledge that this would eventually lead to an incident.

  • @giankperez6377
    @giankperez6377 Рік тому +3

    A clean version.

  • @chriswarburtonbrown1566
    @chriswarburtonbrown1566 7 місяців тому

    Following such grim topics, I've always loved your 'The only history channel that...' conclusions. Thanks for the laughs... And the history.

  • @mohammedsaysrashid3587
    @mohammedsaysrashid3587 Рік тому +8

    It was an informative and wonderful introduction series worked

  • @welcometonebalia
    @welcometonebalia Рік тому +3

    Thank you.

  • @D-B-Cooper
    @D-B-Cooper Рік тому +4

    During the Second World War the US promised Viet Nam freedom if they would keep the Japanese busy there so the soldiers there would not return to Japan to defend it. After the war the US implemented the Marshal plan and gave Nam back to the French, Vichy French. The Vietnamese were treated even worse under the French than the Japanese. The people wanted to fight them but the only help they got was from the communists.

  • @jamesbetker6862
    @jamesbetker6862 8 місяців тому +2

    I knew a guy that was in 26th Infantry Division. They were in the invasion of Cambodia. He always carried extra frags. At night they would camp off the trail and set up Claymore mines along the trail. One night and NVA patrol came thru. They guy on the switch for the Claymores was asleep. He started throwing frags. He was awarded a South Vietnamese medal for killing Communists but he never picked it up.

    • @leecowell8165
      @leecowell8165 4 місяці тому

      Awesome...

    • @williamheyman5439
      @williamheyman5439 Місяць тому

      No 26th Infantry. No switch for Claymores. He told you a story. I was on the border with Cambodia in 1968

    • @jamesbetker6862
      @jamesbetker6862 Місяць тому

      @@williamheyman5439
      I was never in the military. So tell me what the firing mechanism was for Claymore mines.

  • @greorbowlfinder7078
    @greorbowlfinder7078 Рік тому +41

    The French were done with their colonial girl friend. So the USA wanted to take over the relationship rather than have Vietnam date China.

    • @EternalModerate
      @EternalModerate Рік тому

      Ironically Vietnam never wanted to date China.

    • @black10872
      @black10872 Рік тому

      60 years later, Vietnam becomes America's girlfriend.

    • @sentryward8744
      @sentryward8744 Рік тому

      The problem is Vietnam would never want to date China in the first place.
      The US at the time was just too ignorance to see that

    • @hoangphamhuy4241
      @hoangphamhuy4241 2 місяці тому

      Lol, US government did not study our history, we fight china all our time on earth, how can they expected we fall in to china.

  • @kirinheng1153
    @kirinheng1153 8 місяців тому +2

    The Khmer republic at that time struggled to fight the Vietcong too, because King Sihanouk (Khmer king) allowed Vietcong to use the Khmer border. So the King did anything according to his mind. It' was sad that the King did not confess his wrong doing.

  • @NaumRusomarov
    @NaumRusomarov Рік тому +5

    As always great content. Excellent.

  • @bobbystanley8580
    @bobbystanley8580 8 місяців тому

    This is what I dreamed was possible on UA-cam!!!!

  • @Rajul_Jamil
    @Rajul_Jamil Рік тому +3

    As a Vietnam Vet it is an easy answer....The Military Industrial Complex !!!

  • @originaldownload3955
    @originaldownload3955 Рік тому +2

    And just what makes anyone think that this type of thing isn't constantly happening all the time.... Look at where we are now.....

  • @anhhoanguc6068
    @anhhoanguc6068 Рік тому +12

    Because of the domino theory of the president Truman and several reasons, the GI Joe had invaded into South Vietnam. ( As a Vietnamese person' perspective).

    • @Mondo762
      @Mondo762 Рік тому

      Wrong. The US was invited into Viet Nam.

    • @anhhoanguc6068
      @anhhoanguc6068 Рік тому

      What evidence could you sure that the US was invited? Can you give evidence?

    • @ucnguyenanh9414
      @ucnguyenanh9414 Рік тому +7

      ​​@@Mondo762By separatists who disregarded its territorial integrity, so basically the same.

    • @havu-oj4qh
      @havu-oj4qh Рік тому

      @@Mondo762 US created Diem's puppet government to force them to do anything. When Diem didn't listen, the CIA killed them. Shameless farce.

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 10 місяців тому

      @@Mondo762 Like how Russia was invited into the Donbass and Crimea?

  • @peacepeople9895
    @peacepeople9895 Рік тому +28

    I find it interesting that you rarely hear or see it brought up that Ho Chi Minh was at Versaille asking about independence for his people. Of course he was blown off and colonialism continued, so he turned to who ever would listen to lend support for them to gain independence. Enter the USSR and here is what happens. Quite frankly it's a matter of racism, colonialism and inability of the western powers to listen. You can add that most of what came out Washington at that time was not really to be trusted as they were so bent on being anti communist that they couldn't see the forest for the trees. So from 1919 to 1959 the US, and I'm in the USA, basically decided Vietnam didn't exist, it was just French Indochina and the French's problem until USSR got involved. Then, suddenly, Vietnam was a real country and real people...and communism couldn't grow...so ... well you know the rest

    • @danielhutchinson6604
      @danielhutchinson6604 Рік тому +10

      As French and American Troops are asked to vacate Niger, the concept of Colonial Exploitation appears to be demonstrated once more.

    • @havu-oj4qh
      @havu-oj4qh Рік тому +12

      History has shown that Vietnamese people always lower themselves to avoid war, but the great powers, with their inherent arrogance, forced the Vietnamese people to take up arms to fight back and in the end we won !

  • @Bcbjbo
    @Bcbjbo 6 місяців тому +4

    This wasn’t a war of equal but downright slaughter…

  • @extrahistory8956
    @extrahistory8956 Рік тому +16

    Nice that you made this a series

  • @Т1000-м1и
    @Т1000-м1и Рік тому +3

    Very cool channel

  • @randylahey1822
    @randylahey1822 Рік тому +3

    What caused the Vietnam war? Come on bruuhhh. Korean war, Cold war, Second world war, First world war, Balkan wars etc etc.

  • @amotaba
    @amotaba Рік тому +2

    Excellent video

  • @swig9931
    @swig9931 7 місяців тому +3

    LBJ listened to JFKs advisor's cause he didnt want to end up like him on a Dallas visit 😂😂

  • @Wonderwhoopin
    @Wonderwhoopin Рік тому +9

    Because of THAT one song Fortunate Son by Creedence Clearwater Revival. If we never played it then none of that would have happened

  • @lynnwood7205
    @lynnwood7205 11 місяців тому +1

    @14:28. A Quad 50 mount (M55) on a 2 1/2ton truck (M35) Note the raised bed of the truck

  • @Ben-kw8nb
    @Ben-kw8nb Рік тому +12

    The US needs to issue a formal apology to Vietnam and it’s citizens!!

    • @brucebrand3068
      @brucebrand3068 Рік тому +1

      An apology doesn't do it

    • @ScreenHackTV
      @ScreenHackTV 8 місяців тому

      Vietnam needs to apologise to its own people.

    • @davidgibson3631
      @davidgibson3631 4 місяці тому +1

      @@ScreenHackTV for what to reuninted own country and those who sell country to CIA like you guy say apologise that is no fk way

    • @ScreenHackTV
      @ScreenHackTV 4 місяці тому +1

      @@davidgibson3631 for killing millions in the name of communism only to adopt free market principles 15-20 yrs later?
      Gaining support from villages by using the words freedom and democracy only to become a 1 party state with no general elections right after unification ?

    • @hoangphamhuy4241
      @hoangphamhuy4241 2 місяці тому

      Yet, will still need to pay the debt of the US's puppet

  • @garypiont6114
    @garypiont6114 Рік тому +1

    Excellent vid .

  • @whyjnot420
    @whyjnot420 Рік тому +10

    The opening sentences are more on point than a lot of people will realize. Limited war compared to unlimited war. The latter explicitly means regime change, the former explicitly means no regime change. I.e. the first Gulf War was a limited war, the second Gulf War was an unlimited war.
    The US fought a limited war in Vietnam while the North Vietnamese fought an unlimited war. When thought about in this manner, it really helps to make sense of what happened in Vietnam. At the same time, it makes you aware of the wordplay being used by politicians. Limited and unlimited war, used this way, is within the purview of top level strategic theoreticians. They are not used the way an average person would tend to use them.

    • @flashwashington2735
      @flashwashington2735 Рік тому +4

      Wrong. They were never declared wars. This is the crime and tragic excuse for malevolence causing existential pain, death, and suffering for thousands.

    • @danielhutchinson6604
      @danielhutchinson6604 Рік тому +3

      Vietnam has resources that the US Investors wanted to develop.
      France was looking for the same thing.
      It was colonial expansion that did not offer the profits they intended to discover.
      The 1967 currency crisis seemed to indicate that the contemporary efforts that are beyond the US ability to pay for are similar.

    • @euanreid6682
      @euanreid6682 Рік тому

      Really dropping the equivalent of 600 Hiroshima bombs on a tiny third world country... throw in another 12 million gallons of Agent Orange a biological WMD which severely mutated 150k children.. not forgetting targeting civilians with B52's strikes to save face during negotiations was a "limited war"... but yeah Assad is a bad guy right hypocrite?

    • @amkrause2004
      @amkrause2004 Рік тому +1

      That is correct. Limited wars allow politicians to control said war.

    • @whyjnot420
      @whyjnot420 Рік тому +1

      @@amkrause2004 You realize they control unlimited war as well. At least in the US.

  • @williammccormick966
    @williammccormick966 5 місяців тому

    Wrote my thesis on this my brother did 3 tours 1 silver 1 bronze 3 purple's miss Tillman RIP. 💜

  • @Т1000-м1и
    @Т1000-м1и Рік тому +4

    17:03 made me think about 1984

    • @extrahistory8956
      @extrahistory8956 Рік тому

      The United States literally did a 1984 in Vietnam.

  • @kisstagals
    @kisstagals Рік тому +2

    Robert McNamara and General Westmoreland was the biggest blunder of US for vietnam war.

  • @bigsarge2085
    @bigsarge2085 Рік тому +4

    Informative documentary, thank you.

  • @richardschneller7674
    @richardschneller7674 10 місяців тому +2

    History is so crucial to understanding one’s current situation. Thanks for informing us with such clear information!

  • @Jazzfestn
    @Jazzfestn Рік тому +5

    At the time they never told us what the war was FOR. Additionally, US troops were NOT trained to fight in those CONDITIONS, neither did they have the TECHNOLOGY to fight such an enemy. Its no wonder that so many troops got killed, wounded, and returned with PERMANENT MAJOR PTSD conditions.

    • @maddogpham9815
      @maddogpham9815 Рік тому

      Does not matter how well you train the troops, even if sending Bristish Bear Grylls there, he would NOT last a month in Vietnam jungles.

    • @HughButler-lb6zs
      @HughButler-lb6zs 11 місяців тому

      The war wasn't fought with the goal to win. It was fought as a police action. That means it was reactive giving the enemy a big advantage. The Vietnamese army wasn't on the defensive.

    • @keiko909
      @keiko909 9 місяців тому

      The U.S. has not experienced guerrilla warfare. Maybe they did in Korea, but come Vietnam that has been forgotten.
      Vietnam was their wake up call.
      Same with air combat. Pilots had lost their aerial combat skills (hence the birth of “top gun”).

    • @HughButler-lb6zs
      @HughButler-lb6zs 9 місяців тому

      @keiko909 yes they have. The FBI attacked a family in Ruby Ridge using guerilla warfare, and in Waco Texas using seige tactics.

    • @keiko909
      @keiko909 9 місяців тому

      @@HughButler-lb6zsI stand corrected. I wonder why this type of combat was not implemented by troops? IF that was the case?

  • @binhha4307
    @binhha4307 Рік тому +1

    Hello youtube wishing all you have a great week

  • @jackknife89actual
    @jackknife89actual Рік тому +9

    My father was there on the USS Ticonderoga. He tells a different story about the night of August 1st.
    His close friend, a specialist in electronic warfare, was transferred to the Maddox. That night it went close into shore, "steaming among the junks" was how he put it, to listen in on North Vietnamese communications. They got reports of PT boats headed their way and tried to steam out beyond the 14 mile mark but (if I remember correctly) they lost a boiler and couldn't make full speed. Apparently the "one hit" on a PT boat the video mentioned was scored by the ship's cook.

  • @NigelDeForrest-Pearce-cv6ek
    @NigelDeForrest-Pearce-cv6ek Рік тому +2

    Brilliant!!!

  • @bob456fk6
    @bob456fk6 Рік тому +5

    Knowing how to build Ford automobiles didn't really carry over to nation-building...did it?
    I always said "let the Vietnamese settle their own matters".
    The domino theory turned out to be rubbish. Asia didn't collapse.
    After Vietnam united, the country became prosperous and US companies are doing business there.

    • @Dr.Pepper001
      @Dr.Pepper001 Рік тому

      And at the cost of over 55,000 Americans dead.

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 10 місяців тому +1

      He might have been an experienced union buster and that's why they thought he could suppress other groups fighting for their rights.

  • @wendyshoowaiching4161
    @wendyshoowaiching4161 8 місяців тому +1

    Its a sad and hardship chapter of the history of Vietnam

  • @PAPITO_49
    @PAPITO_49 Рік тому +10

    What caused the Vietnam war, let me think about what Eisenhower said. "Beware of the Military INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX."

    • @MichaelGaley-z6c
      @MichaelGaley-z6c Рік тому

      Eisenhower told Kennedy that American Advisers where assisting the Vietnamese Army and the CIA trained a Brigade of Cuban patriots to fight Che and Fidel. Kennedy left the Cubans to themselves and to support the "Advisers" in Indochina. Also General of the Army (5 stars) MacArthur that it would by the greatest folly interfere in Indochina.

  • @tubuianh3517
    @tubuianh3517 4 місяці тому

    The article is detailed and wonderful

  • @SuperMookles
    @SuperMookles Рік тому +3

    The Ken Adams documentary on the war is an unrivalled masterpiece.

    • @marianotorrespico2975
      @marianotorrespico2975 Рік тому

      --- SURE the COURT VIDEOGRAPHER SAYS THAT . . . if you insist upon pretending to see "both sides", the uninvited Foreigner and the Native, as each possessing the right to rule an Asian country.

  • @chrismccurry988
    @chrismccurry988 5 місяців тому +1

    At 7:28... buddy was looking down the barrel of a gun.. 😅

  • @andreoates8405
    @andreoates8405 Рік тому +4

    So you mean to tell me the Navy shot 300 shells at invisible monsters with no debris or floating bodies😮, somebody lying just a waste😡

    • @maddogpham9815
      @maddogpham9815 Рік тому

      That was North Vietnamese Weapon of Mass Destruction. 🤣🤣🤣🤣
      US didn't just sent two destroyers there deep in enemy water for nothing. They needed something to justify the killing innocent civilians. That was how the Rolling Thunder bombing campaign, and the Agent Orange took place thereafter.

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 10 місяців тому

      It happens surprisingly often.

  • @oldreprobate2748
    @oldreprobate2748 Рік тому +2

    May I suggest that you comsider reading, or listening to Marine Smedley D Butler's book War Is A Racket.

  • @Jim-nt7xy
    @Jim-nt7xy Рік тому +13

    What , Vietnam didn't have Weapons of Mass Destruction either?

    • @ucnguyenanh9414
      @ucnguyenanh9414 Рік тому +3

      We're considering to have some now.

    • @monkeyking-self-proclaimed7050
      @monkeyking-self-proclaimed7050 Рік тому +2

      @@ucnguyenanh9414 You didn't get the point of his comment.

    • @ucnguyenanh9414
      @ucnguyenanh9414 Рік тому +4

      @@monkeyking-self-proclaimed7050 And you failed to get mine

    • @maddogpham9815
      @maddogpham9815 Рік тому

      LMFAO. Yes, that was why 2 USS destroyers were sent there, deep in the North Vietnamese water to look for WMD, and they found the North VN had secret WMD that can shoot many torpedoes from all directions and radar could not see them, even they thought they got them but found nothing the day after, no debris, no torpedoes, not even any Vietnamese fishing boat nearby. That was enough for Johnson to call in for Rolling Thunder bombing campaign and Agent Orange to change the jungles color in VN.
      Why didn't JFK come up with that WMD bs excuse and finish Cuba instead of sending Johnson and the CIA to arrange the coup to kill Diem and Nhu, and later sent US troops to South VN for meat grinder?
      So what if Russia bluffed and withdrew their missiles from Cuba, invade it anyway and made it a 51th state and called it a "Sugarcanes and Cigars" state.

    • @pantzOU812
      @pantzOU812 9 місяців тому

      remember the Maine ..

  • @miloudbouzelif
    @miloudbouzelif 10 місяців тому

    thank you very much for your informations

  • @nukataco
    @nukataco Рік тому +8

    Thank you so much for diving deep into the interwar period. Mainstream history often glosses this over, and basically skips from Dien Bien Phu to Gulf of Tonkin and calls it a day. It's important to highlight the complexities at play.

    • @PeaknikMicki
      @PeaknikMicki Рік тому

      And Gulf of Tonkin incident was later admitted as never having happened, by McNamara, on video

  • @Taporeee
    @Taporeee Рік тому +1

    Yhe background is incredibly important

  • @LaikaIvanova
    @LaikaIvanova Рік тому +4

    Really appreciate the way you present these topic. Would be interesting to see videos about the conflict revolving Israel, especially how history lead up to it's creation in the decades prior.