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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper provides an overview of the war, but focuses on the Johnson administration. Its role in the escalation of the war is highlighted. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA248LBJ.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the escalation had created a great deal of surprise within the confines of the U.S. due to their lack of knowledge of the opposition. Of course, no one could anticipate
the deadly results, even though it was a military action. In essence, the United States underestimated the North Vietnamese. The escalation of the ware is on LBJs back,
but the tactics obviously did not work. The result of that war is the obvious proof, but one also must prove that LBJ was integral in its escalation. Just
what role did LBJ play in the Vietnam War? Richard Hunt is a respected historian and recognized expert in the field. In his book called Pacification Hunt (1993) he examines
the Vietnam era with a fine toothcomb. The author claims that under Lyndon Johnson, the United States of America quite readily embraced a unique nation-building mission in South Vietnam (1998).
He goes on to explain that this had its origins in the same presidential impulses that were responsible for the Great Society phenomenon (1998). He explains that pacification encompassed
military efforts in order to provide security as well as methods of economic and social reform (1998). Such required that both the U.S. Army as well as civilian agencies support
the South Vietnamese (1998). His analysis is intricate and political, suggesting that it was an ideology and a bit of arrogance that perpetuated the pacification efforts. Indeed, just as today,
the U.S. is criticized for perpetuating American values--values that the rest of the world does not want--the actions in Vietnam were equated with the idea of acting as if those
are the only valid ways of thinking. Similarly, in Vietnam, there was the idea that the U.S. was just helping. In fact, although L.B.J. made mistakes by escalating the war,
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