VIETNAM

CHAPTER 5 - WAR ESCALATES

After Congress passed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, which gave President Johnson the authority to conduct the war as he saw fit, the United States developed its "Vietnam Defense Campaign." As more Americans died in Southeast Asia, even more were drafted.

In 1965, the President gave speeches with titles like "We Will Stand in Vietnam" and a "Pattern for Peace in Southeast Asia." But while the President talked at home, trying to address the concerns of an increasingly upset country and to explain his reasons for escalating America’s involvement, bombs exploded overseas. As LBJ predicted:

This will be a disorderly planet for a long time.

Decades later, the pictures and sounds of war are still haunting:

  • Napalm bombs explode on Viet Cong structures south of Saigon.


  • A Marine helicopter is hit by gunfire.


  • "Known Viet Cong prisoners," wired together at the neck, are taken to a regimental collection point on July 25, 1965.


  • "Check point Charlie" at Da Nang.


  • Marines, during search and clear missions in August of 1965, take suspected Viet Cong as prisoners.

In 1966, America launched a "Vietnam Air Campaign." The F-4 Phantom II would soon become the workhorse of the war.

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