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JFK would not have abondoned Vietnam to communists


This is JFK's position on Vietnam just two short months before the assassination. You can Goolge the entire interview and transcript.
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JFK: "If [Diem] does not change it, of course, that is his decision. He has been there 10 years and, as I say, he has carried this burden when he has been counted out on a number of occasions.

"Our best judgment is that he can't be successful on this basis. We hope that he comes to see that, but in the final analysis it is the people and the government itself who have to win or lose this struggle. All we can do is help, and we are making it very clear, but I don't agree with those who say we should withdraw [from Vietnam]. That would be a great mistake. I know people don't like Americans to be engaged in this kind of an effort. Forty-seven Americans have been killed in combat with the enemy, but this is a very important struggle even though it is far away.

"We took all this--made this effort to defend Europe. Now Europe is quite secure. We also have to participate--we may not like it--in the defense of Asia."
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Emphasis on: "...but I don't agree with those who say we should withdraw. That would be a great mistake. I know people don't like Americans to be engaged in this kind of an effort. Forty-seven Americans have been killed in combat with the enemy, but this is a very important struggle even though it is far away.

"We took all this--made this effort to defend Europe. Now Europe is quite secure. We also have to participate--we may not like it--in the defense of Asia."

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JFK may not have had a choice. Many Americans didn't want to be in Vietnam and there was a strong anti-war movement that had gained support.

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Not true. The war had widespread popular support almost throughout its entirety. Electronic media coverage created a distorted perception favoring the relatively small portion of people who opposed the war. This encouraged the communists to send their troops into repeated slaughter (almost one million KIA) in order to wear down the will of Americans years after the war began. That in combination with Nixon's attempt to divert attention from his criminal problems caused him to manipulate a faux peace agreement with the communists. In other words, opposition to the war did not end it but instead extended it.

Now the communists in Vietnam want what they could have had but rejected 50 years ago: The benefits of a free economy.

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[deleted]

Grow up, fool.

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...and you can google this:


In view of these criticisms, readers who actually pick up McNamara’s book may experience a shock when they scan the table of contents and sees this summary of Chapter 3, titled “The Fateful Fall of 1963: August 24–November 22, 1963”:



A pivotal period of U.S. involvement in Vietnam, punctuated by three important events: the overthrow and assassination of South Vietnam’s president Ngo Dinh Diem; President Kennedy’s decision on October 2 to begin the withdrawal of U.S. forces; and his assassination fifty days later. (Emphasis added.)




Eram quod es, eris quod sum

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The October 2nd statement in no way bound Kennedy to abandon South Vietnam. At the most, it was based on wishful thinking. And all the pro-withdrawal commentary since then is nothing more than a patchwork of speculation and hearsay. All for the purpose of deifying Kennedy. As has been the case ever since his death. The Left for over 50 years has been touting him as a savior liberal. He was neither.

On November 22nd, 1963, three hours before his death, Kennedy told an audience that he was increasing support by 600% for counterinsurgency in Vietnam. With no mention of withdrawal. Kennedy was a staunch anti-communist.

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Speculation is all well and good, but we will never know, will we?


Life can be arbitrary and comes without a warranty.

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If your life depended on it, you would easily come to a conclusion.

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Kennedy probably threatened Diem with withdrawal in order to force him to cooperate with the US and tone down his and his sister's harsh rhetoric. Diem's deposal caused widespread chaos as the new government had much difficulty exerting control. The Vietcong rose up and took the place of Diem's henchmen throughout South Vietnam.

The coup and murder of Diem and his brother ended any speculation regarding the withdrawal of the 16,00 "advisors" that Kennedy sent to Vietnam. In essence, Kennedy's decision to remove Diem caused the escalation of the Vietnam War as we know it.

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The overthrow of Diem, his sister-in-law and her husband did not cause the escalation. The Vietcong didn't have to rise up and take the place of "Diem's henchmen." The real attack on the Vietnamese people was at the hands of the Vietcong and the North Vietnamese already, and for decades.

The escalation was a result of billions of dollars in munitions from both Red China and the Soviet Union to the Vietnamese communists. And from the brutal willingness of the communist leaders to regularly send their enslaved troops into a meat grinder. They did this repeatedly after lulls were required to rebuild their devastated ground ground forces. This caused the war to drag on as the communists counted on wearing out the will of Americans who sided with the enemy of South Vietnam and the United States.

Nixon in a bizarre spin-off from his criminality problems sided with the American traitors when he gave a free South Vietnam away to communist terrorists.

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Read "Death of a Generation" by Howard Jones. Diem, for better or worse, had that country locked down. When JFK had him "shockingly" assassinated, the Vietcong were able to seize power in the provinces. JFK never figured that even a momentary vacuum would enable the Communist forces to gain control.

Yes, the Russians and the Chinese were able to escalate the war, but it would not have been as successful nor have happened so quickly if we had left Diem (as bad as he was) alone. We got rid of him because he wouldn't cooperate with us and take a subordinate role in the then anti-guerrilla war against the Vietcong.

I was furious at our government's policy in Vietnam. I felt that it was criminal to draft young Americans to fight a war and not put the full weight of our nation's resources behind the effort. Johnson was so afraid of the media's reaction that he didn't call up the reserves and the National Guard. This resulted in our sending into combat a US Army and Marine Corps of privates and 2nd Lieutenants. I am of that generation and drew a high number in the first Draft Lottery.

Lately, I have come to the conclusion that Nixon, LBJ, RFK, McCarthy, Humphrey, McGovern were ALL lying to us. They knew that there was absolutely no incentive for the North to negotiate. They all knew that we were going to lose the war eventually, they just didn't want it to happen on their watch. Since when does stopping the bombing of the enemy convince him to talk peace? It is exactly the other way around. You put pressure on them until they decide that fighting on is a lost cause. "Fight, Fight, Talk, Talk" was just one part of the North's strategy. THAT is the real tragedy of Vietnam, a half-hearted effort that made the fighting drag on and kill many more Americans than if we had fought hard and fast.

For the record, as a teenager, I attended the Nixon For President rally at Madison Square Garden on Halloween, 1968, where former NY Governor Thomas E. Dewey announced to the crowd that President Johnson had decided to suspend the bombing of North Vietnam.

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At worst, JFK only acquiesced to the assassination. The displeasure with Diem was essentially internal among the principal Vietnamese. What JFK thought about a vacuum there is nothing more than speculation. Jones's claim is only another version of the "wrong turn" theory of history. History is mostly too complex for such simplicity. Besides, the communists never had control until the very end of the war. They never gained substantial ground until then--nor did they ever gain political favor. All their major offensives met with devastating failure. They crazily believed before each one that the South Vietnamese people would rise up and join them. That's how nuts they were. Tet in '68 was portrayed as a communist victory even though the Vietcong were almost 100% destroyed. While the NVA took another devastating beating.

I agree that we showed too much restraint. But I also believe that JFK, LBJ, and RFK believed in victory. RFK during his run was not the pacifist of lore. Nixon was just plain nuts about it all. McCarthy was a clueless peacenik without smarts.

I was living in the Bronx in late '68 and don't remember the Nixon event. I do recall seeing Allen Ginsberg and Paul Krasner at a "be-in" in Ft Dix during that time. Both those creatures proved to be unfortunate excesses of democratic largess.

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Riversideriverside, we agree on the basics of the disaster that was the Vietnam War. I disagree with you in that LBJ believed in victory. Every decision he made was half hearted and too late with an eye on the political issues and popular opinion as opposed to victory.

Early on, the powers that be realized that, in the words of McNamara "we may not be able to beat these people", however, if we did not make an effort, our allies would abandon us as our promises under SEATO would mean nothing.

Watch the excellent "Path To War" to see the arguements made by McNamara and Clark Clifford to LBJ regarding Vietnam.

The only way to stop Communist aggression in Southeast Asia after Diem's deposal would have been to fight an-all out conventional war beginning in 1964. This would include bombing Hanoi, mining Haiphong Harbor, stopping infiltration along the DMZ, incursions into Laos and Cambodia and a full-scale implementing of the US Marines CAP program.

Unfortunately, LBJ determined that the American people would not stomach such a war, so we were left with a half-hearted effort, always checking popular opinion before each move. Not calling up the reserves or the National Guard left us with a military devoid of experienced NCOs; the backbone of any combat force.

I don't know what JFK actually thought about creating a vacuum , but "Death of A Generation" states that any possibility of a withdrawal of American advisors ended with the chaos brought upon by Diem's deposal. The book speculates that JFK's threat of withdrawing the advisors was merely a ploy to force Diem to cooperate.

The widely held belief that JFK, the ultimate Cold Warrior, would abandon Southeast Asia to the Communists is nonsense, for if that had come about in 1964, the "Domino Effect" would have come true. Our decade long effort in Vietnam spared several of Vietnam's neighbors from that fate.

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