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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper which examines the history of America’s involvement in Vietnam. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAamvtn.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
stances. The United States relationship with Vietnam is often traced back to 1945, just following WWII when the world and political balance was greatly changing. The following paper examines the
relationship between the United States and Vietnam, discussing the various positions the United States has taken in terms of their involvement in Vietnam. American Involvement in Vietnam It was
in the year 1941 that the group of allies signed what is known as the Atlantic Charter. The Atlantic Charter established post-war goals with the United States rejecting colonialism and
supposedly supporting former colonies throughout the world (Schultz; Tishler, 2005). However, after WWII there were several nations that continued to explore colonialism in controlling other nations. This was perhaps the
most primary reason for the United States becoming involved in Asia and in Vietnam. The year 1945 marked Vietnams declaration of independence from the Chinese, the Japanese, and the
French (Schultz; Tishler, 2005). However, the fear of the time was clearly communism and there were powerful forces at work, leading Asian countries to consider and embrace communism. It was
the focus of the allies for the latter part of the 1940s, especially when, in 1949, China became a communist state. This set the stage for the United States
and their determination, along with European allies, to protect other Asian nations from communism. In 1950 we see the following approach: "Dean Acheson states that the United States will concentrate
on protecting a Pacific Rim, extending from Japan to the Philippines, from Communist expansion. The Korean War begins on June 25, 1950. The United States never formally declares war. Although
the war is officially declared a United Nations police action, nine out of every 10 policemen are Americans" (Schultz; Tishler, 2005). Of course the Korean War was not necessarily successful
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