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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
7 pages in length. In assessing how and why the US came to tie its own fate to the creation and maintenance of an American dominated anticommunist regime in Southeast Asia, the student will want to illustrate how government control can sometimes overstep the boundaries of its own best intentions. The shortcomings that plagued America's involvement in Vietnam clearly illustrate that the only reason the United States was influential over the enemy was due to military strength, rather than an appreciation of the political aspects of the war. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCNamEm.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
in Southeast Asia, the student will want to illustrate how government control can sometimes overstep the boundaries of its own best intentions. In Dynamics of Defeat : The Vietnam
War in Hau Nghia Province, Eric M. Bergerud acknowledges the shortcomings that plagued Americas involvement, noting that the only reason the United States was influential over the enemy was due
to military strength, rather than "an appreciation of the political aspects of the war" (Bergerud PG). Norman Podhoretz, who has dedicated his life to educating the masses through his
literary accounts, addresses the very foundation of why the United States became involved in the Vietnam War, a battle that many say should have never entangled American troops (Griffith et
al PG). Podhoretzs intent in Why We Were In Vietnam is to bring to light the events that took place to ultimately embroil America in one of historys bloodiest conflicts.
It is important for the student to consider that through insightful observation, Podhoretz illustrates that as the President Johnson addressed the nation regarding the Vietnam War -- a battle
that is still considered to be part of the Kennedy Administration -- it was clear that his intention all along was to engage in combat with the North Vietnamese.
What was not immediately apparent to President Johnson, however, was the fact that the North Vietnamese were prepared to fight to whatever extent necessary in order to prevent foreign domination.
This is the primary reason why Ho Chi Minh refused President Johnsons offer concerning an enterprising development program worth one billion dollars that promised significant advantage not only for
Vietnam but also the whole of Southeast Asia. The program, which was proposed to be located along the expansive Mekong River, never met with any realization, for Ho Chi
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