https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huston_Plan
(mentioned on page 612 of Karnow)
Surveillance techniques on protesters, democrat party in turmoil:
(page 580)
Operation Rolling Thunder comes to an end:
(page 581)
Nixon setting the table:
(page 587)
Expansion of the war into Cambodia:
(page 590-592)
Vietnamisation / imperialism through local proxies:
(page 593-594)
Weakening of the Vietcong relative to the North Vietnamese troops. Also details about Operation Phoenix.
(page 601-602)
The essential thrust of this chapter is that Nixon is decreasing the amounts of US troops in South Vietnam but also expanding the war into Cambodia (although, as far as I can tell there was already some bombing under LBJ). Karnow also emphasizes the wars decreasing popularity among the American public.
Edited by Chthonic_Goat_666 ()
very tempting...
Opening pages of this chapter are about Kissinger's secret talks with Le Duc Tho. The talks were advantageous for Kissinger in that they could cut out Washington bureaucracy and especially the South Vietnamese. For Le Duc Tho he can bypass the Vietcong (page 624). The talks are deadlocked and go nowhere.
(pages 629-632)
Response to the Pentagon Papers:
(page 634)
Americans losing ground in peace negotiations:
(page 636)
The Americans were right to suspect large military actions from the communists in 1972:
(page 639-640)
(page 642)
Peace talks begin to make progress. Before the main barriers were that the Americans wanted the North Vietnamese soldiers out of South Vietnam, while the North Vietnamese wanted South Vietnamese president Nguyan Van Thieu to resign and for there to be a place for the Vietcong in the political process. Now with less American military support and with Vietcong/North Vietnamese soldiers holding better positions its more likely that both sides can come to an agreement.
(page 647-649)
On October 21 an agreement basically is in place (sorta), when Thieu is told he's enraged (page 650).
(page 651)
Talks break down in December:
(page 652-653)
Talks resumed January 8th, with an agreement reached the next day that barely differs from the one in October - it was formally signed on January 23rd 1973 (page 654). However, with the territory as fragmented and no real political solution between the two Vietnamese sides (only a halt in fighting) it seemed likely that war would again break out (page 654).
Edited by Chthonic_Goat_666 ()
Congress restricts US ability to commit military activites in Indochina:
(page 656)
At this point the South Vietnamese regime controls about 75% of South Vietnamese territory and 85% of the population, and it still receives US aid (page 657). Meanwhile, the communists had not yet recovered from their offensive in 1972 (page 659).
(page 659-661)
(page 662)
There's some pages here about the communists progressively taking over multiple major cities in March and April (page 665-666), clearly taking the upperhand on the way to Saigon.
Americans bail out:
(page 668)
By April 30 the South Vietnamese regime in Saigon has fallen. Just in time for International Workers Day too, don't you love happy endings?
Edited by Chthonic_Goat_666 ()
In some ways it's a historical accident that Vietnam wasn't bombed to hell before reuniting, Watergate was far more influential on the American people's disapproval of major military action than actual war crimes but also the opposition of conservative elites and businessmen (who don't exist anymore) who are represented in Congress actually mattered. I've become more skeptical about the entire historical remembering of that period, there are so many 'truths' on the left which are simply wrong.
There are a bunch of thoughts I have on this but I'm interested in your thoughts having read a bunch about both the anti-war movement in America and the USSR-China cooperation in Vietnam.
babyhueypnewton posted:There are a bunch of thoughts I have on this but I'm interested in your thoughts having read a bunch about both the anti-war movement in America and the USSR-China cooperation in Vietnam.
I'm hesitant to address these questions because so far all I've really read is one account. Take what I'm saying with a grain of salt because at this point I'm essentially a conduit for Karnow's opinion (without Karnow's obvious 'great man of history' trappings). On USSR-China, Karnow argues that while there were all sorts of political disagreements and tensions between USSR & China (and both sides with North Vietnam), both were interested in having ties with North Vietnam so neither were prepared to stop giving aid and risk some sort of falling out. Karnow simply doesn't cover this side of the war in any sort of detail - his discussions of the North Vietnamese is limited to their military strategy and diplomatic bargaining with America... almost no coverage of, say, land reform. I'm hoping that other books I read have a more robust discussion of USSR, Chinese and North Vietnamese relations so that I can cross-reference it with the little that Karnow did write.
Fascinating that 50 percent approval for Nixon was considered low compared to today's regular 20-40% approvals. Obviously there are many reasons for this and the measurement is pretty useless but I think the book accidentally shows something you mentioned earlier: the widespread disapproval of the Vietnam war among the labor aristocracy and petty-bourgeois students appears to be a myth. The entire edifice of new leftism, which is based on May 68, the anti-Vietnam war movement, anti-soviet Maoists, and the rise of identity politics coalitions, appears to be an excuse for petty bourgeois adventurism and postmodern idealism.
In some ways it's a historical accident that Vietnam wasn't bombed to hell before reuniting, Watergate was far more influential on the American people's disapproval of major military action than actual war crimes but also the opposition of conservative elites and businessmen (who don't exist anymore) who are represented in Congress actually mattered. I've become more skeptical about the entire historical remembering of that period, there are so many 'truths' on the left which are simply wrong.
The 50% approval rating was not particularly low, Karnow mentions it because it was slowly slipping coming into an election year (before rising again in time for his election to a second term). I guess it clashes with popular narrative but Nixon was a relatively popular president for the first 4 years or so.
You'll notice the sharp drop in early 1973 and at the end he's hovering at about ~25% - this is Watergate of course. The protests are depicted as having some effect on the Nixon administration, but nothing decisive. Kissinger is depicted as being especially upset by some of them (as he's from the elite academic sphere - Harvard)...
"Roger Morris, one of the assistants who left his staff, recalled that Kissinger was chronically alarmed by demonstrations, which summoned up the Nazi mobs of Germany during his childhood" (page 611)
(lmao!) (unclear here who's making the Nazi comparison; Morris, Karnow or Kissinger... presumably Kissinger)
While it annoys them, it never seems to make any appreciable change in Nixon's policies. And why would it really, they're hippies and "bums". Let's take for example protests in the context of increasing presence in Cambodia in April/May 1970:
"The antiwar movement at home, which he had skillfully subdued, suddenly erupted again in the biggest protests to date. A large proportion of the American people, traditionally loyal to the president in crucial moments, supported the Cambodian incursions" (page 610)
Interesting that Karnow notes here that despite the largest protests to date, a "large proportion" still support military action (wish he had cited some numbers here). Nixon's response to staff on how to handle congressional critics was "don't worry about divisiveness. Having drawn the sword, don't take it out - stick it in hard... Hit 'em hard in the gut. No defensiveness" (page 612)
Here's a section in which Nixon is not worried by the protests so much, but rather, as you said, elite conservative opinion:
(page 626)
Karnow draws a connection between the Watergate break-in that brought down Nixon and criminality regarding people like Daniel Ellsberg, and it seems only in this tenuous sense that Vietnam could be said to have led to Nixon's downfall.
We can look at LBJs opinion polls to see that he was effected far more by public opinion on Vietnam, reaching about 35% at his lowest:
LBJs decisions regarding Vietnam essentially tore the Democrat party apart - he faced credible challenges in the 1968 Democrat primary from Eugene McCarthy and Bobby Kennedy before dropping his candidacy altogether.
(page 580-581)
But the American people didn't vote for Eugene McCarthy (fringe stubborn pinko apparently), or Bobby Kennedy (assassinated), or even Hubert Humphrey. They voted for Tricky Dick Nixon.
I'll again highlight a section I've posted before in my summary of chapter 14 of Karnow:
That is, while opposition to the war was significant in 1967, a majority wanted tougher action and the amount of American casualties was the only unacceptable part of the war.
In wrapping this up, I'll say that one thing that comes through very strongly in Karnow is that America never really had a chance in Vietnam (short of bombing North Vietnam into complete rubble or occupying South Vietnam with a half million troops indefinitely). The anti-war movement was not the decisive factor, nor was it the politicians "letting our boys down and making them fight with one hand behind their back" or whatever conservative crap (although those factors constrained American military strategy somewhat) - it was the strategic and political superiority of the communist movement in Vietnam that won. All the US could do was delay liberation by a decade or so.
Edited by Chthonic_Goat_666 ()
EmanuelaBrolandi posted:Which edition? I have the grove 2006 Philcox translation but ill try and get another so i can read it w u
does this have the homi bhabha intro? if so, what did you think of that?
babyhueypnewton posted:The entire edifice of new leftism, which is based on May 68, the anti-Vietnam war movement, anti-soviet Maoists, and the rise of identity politics coalitions,
i get what you're saying but to amerikkkan ears this is like saying the 1960s were based on drugs, enstatite chondrites, rock 'n' roll, and pike warfare against armored cavalry. no one in the u.s. really remembers that the new left involved white maoists, that the weathermen had context, etc.
Makeshift_Swahili posted:does this have the homi bhabha intro? if so, what did you think of that?
The intro is Sartre lol
EmanuelaBrolandi posted:The intro is Sartre lol
ah same here. i've read mixed stuff online about the bhabha intro so i was curious.
http://thebaluch.com/documents/0802150837%20-%20FRANTZ%20FANON%20-%20The%20Wretched%20of%20the%20Earth.pdf
Makeshift_Swahili posted:this 'reading group' will be pretty informal, i've seen too many online reading groups fail to try to stick to any strict regimen.
from Fanon's Wretched Of The Earth, pages 70-71
Karnow, pages 539-541
Makeshift_Swahili posted:EmanuelaBrolandi posted:The intro is Sartre lol
ah same here. i've read mixed stuff online about the bhabha intro so i was curious.
that version is available on libgen http://libgen.io/book/index.php?md5=6ec451998b5710068505002306fb6ae9
There is a much longer essay specifically on how Giap pulled off Dien Bien Phu anyway, that I will set into
swampman posted:From military art of people's war
There is a much longer essay specifically on how Giap pulled off Dien Bien Phu anyway, that I will set into
Definitely interested in seeing more of this. Love military strategy. It's surprisingly not entirely material, which is amazing for something that can decisively change history.
http://mashable.com/2016/02/05/another-vietnam-photography/#oWrei1Dz8kqz
Red_Canadian posted:Definitely interested in seeing more of this. Love military strategy. It's surprisingly not entirely material, which is amazing for something that can decisively change history.
what do you mean by "not entirely material"?
Wretched of the Earth page 174
from James Yaki Sayles' "Meditations On Frantz Fanon's Wretched Of The Earth" pages 6-8, from the intro by some anonymous editor.
Edited by Chthonic_Goat_666 ()
Makeshift_Swahili posted:
(page 530)
Notice that Karnow underreports the amount of civilians killed at Mylai, which is at least 347 even by the U.S Army’s own admission (no mention of the gang-rapes either). I might go check a later edition of the book when I get the chance because it seems the most egregious error so far (to my untrained eyes).
Just checked a 1994 edition and the error was not corrected
I'm moving onto other stuff for a while so I might not really update this thread for a few months