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The History Place - Vietnam War 1965-1968
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"The Vietnam War
The Jungle War
1965 - 1968
1965
January 20, 1965 -
Lyndon B. Johnson takes the oath as president and declares ,
"We can never again stand aside, prideful in isolation. Terrific dangers
and troubles that we once called "foreign" now constantly live
among us..."
January 27, 1965
- General Khanh seizes full control of South Vietnam's government.
January 27, 1965
- Johnson aides, National Security Advisor McGeorge
Bundy and Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, send a memo to the President
stating that America's limited military involvement in Vietnam is not succeeding,
and that the U.S. has reached a 'fork in the road' in Vietnam and must
either soon escalate or withdraw.
January 1965 - Operation Game Warden begins
U.S. Navy river patrols on South Vietnam's 3000 nautical miles of inland
waterways.
February 4, 1965 - National Security Advisor
McGeorge Bundy visits South Vietnam for the first time. In North Vietnam,
Soviet Prime Minister Aleksei Kosygin coincidentally arrives in Hanoi.
February 6, 1965 - Viet Cong guerrillas
attack the U.S. military compound at Pleiku in the Central Highlands, killing
eight Americans, wounding 126 and destroying ten aircraft.
February 7-8 - "I've had enough of
this," President Johnson tells his National Security advisors. He
then approves Operation Flaming Dart, the bombing of a North Vietnamese
army camp near Dong Hoi by U.S. Navy jets from the carrier Ranger .
Johnson makes no speeches or public statements concerning his decision.
Opinion polls taken in the U.S. shortly after the bombing indicate a 70
percent approval rating for the President and an 80 percent approval of
U.S. military involvement in Vietnam. Johnson now agrees to a long-standing
recommendation from his advisors for a sustained bombing campaign against
North Vietnam.
In Hanoi, Soviet Prime Minister Kosygin is pressured by "
....
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