The following essay intends to illustrate, with the help of comparing revisionist and orthodox theory, the reasons for the failed war in Vietnam for the U.S. and whether it is fair to claim that the U.S. lost the war. Furthermore, I intend to show how the war had an impact on the subsequent foreign policy of the U.S.
These questions can be answered in several different ways, depending on which school of thought the field of international relation studies is used in particular are they differing in the perception whether the engagement in Indochina was necessary at all?
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
2. Revisionist and Orthodox Perspectives on the Vietnam War
3. The Use of Arms and Troops: Strategy and Misconceptions
4. Clausewitzian Analysis and the Limited War
5. The Impact of the Vietnam War on Subsequent U.S. Foreign Policy
6. Domestic Consequences and the Vietnam Syndrome
7. Evolution of Post-Vietnam Strategy and the Carter Doctrine
8. Conclusion
Research Objectives and Core Themes
This essay examines the extent to which the American engagement in Vietnam can be classified as a defeat and evaluates how this experience fundamentally transformed subsequent U.S. foreign policy and military doctrine.
- Comparison of revisionist and orthodox historiographical interpretations of the Vietnam War.
- Analysis of military strategy failures, specifically the application of conventional force in a counter-insurgency context.
- The influence of the "Vietnam Syndrome" on American public opinion and political decision-making.
- Examination of the shift toward proxy wars, indirect intervention, and the Nixon and Carter Doctrines.
- The long-term impact on U.S. relations with Third World countries and international military involvement.
Excerpt from the Book
The Use of Arms and Troops
Concerning that point, the orthodox interpretation accuses civilians and military leaders of having fought an immensely destructive war, which relayed on a high “application of firepower, which could not achieve the political objective of an independent South Vietnam” (Hess: 2009 p. 85). The air operation fighting North Vietnam as well as the ground war in South Vietnam footed on misinterpretations of the daunting effect of U.S. power, the loss susceptibility of North Vietnam and the Viet Cong, and the size of the South Vietnamese government and army. The U.S. military officials tried to apply a military strategy which had been successful during WW2 in defeating industrial countries like Japan and Germany. This tactic was bound to fail in Vietnam due to a completely differing system in, for instance, supply chains.
Whereas the revisionist position, which has a subgroup that is called the Clausewitz school, claims that the U.S. was actually taking part in a conventional war. U.S. officials failed to realise the actual circumstances of the combat in Indochina due to that misconception the U.S. forces fought a wrong type of war: a“counter-insurgency.” Following Clausewitz the U.S. powers would have had more success had they concentrated on fighting North Vietnam. Moreover, it seems to have been a mistake that the armed forces were only increased step-by-step and not fully from the very beginning of the war, in order to “conflict a decisive defeat on the enemy”(Hess: 2009 p.92).
Summary of Chapters
1. Introduction: Outlines the research intent to compare revisionist and orthodox theories regarding the Vietnam War's failure and its subsequent policy impact.
2. Revisionist and Orthodox Perspectives on the Vietnam War: Discusses the differing views on whether the engagement in Indochina was a necessary measure for containing Communism or a fundamental strategic error.
3. The Use of Arms and Troops: Strategy and Misconceptions: Examines how U.S. military leaders erroneously applied WWII-era conventional warfare strategies to the unique combat conditions of Vietnam.
4. Clausewitzian Analysis and the Limited War: Applies Clausewitz's theories to explain how the U.S. failed to adapt its military posture, characterizing the conflict as a "limited war of the second type."
5. The Impact of the Vietnam War on Subsequent U.S. Foreign Policy: Analyzes the transition toward demobilization, the end of conscription, and the War Powers Act of 1973.
6. Domestic Consequences and the Vietnam Syndrome: Details the decline in public trust and the rise of the "Vietnam Syndrome," which inhibited future military interventionism.
7. Evolution of Post-Vietnam Strategy and the Carter Doctrine: Explores the shift toward proxy wars, the Nixon Doctrine, and the eventual re-assertion of U.S. interests under the Carter Doctrine.
8. Conclusion: Summarizes that the Vietnam War was unwinnable under prevailing strategies and highlights the lasting cautious approach of U.S. foreign policy.
Keywords
Vietnam War, U.S. Foreign Policy, Revisionism, Orthodoxy, Containment, Vietnam Syndrome, Nixon Doctrine, Clausewitz, Counter-insurgency, War Powers Act, Proxy War, Cold War, Military Intervention, Public Trust, Indochina.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the primary objective of this study?
The study aims to determine if the U.S. truly "lost" the Vietnam War and to analyze how this specific military experience reshaped American foreign policy and intervention strategies for the following decades.
Which theoretical frameworks are used to analyze the war?
The essay utilizes both revisionist and orthodox schools of thought, as well as principles from the Clausewitz school of military strategy, to evaluate the causes and outcomes of the war.
What was the main flaw in the U.S. military strategy?
The author argues that the U.S. military incorrectly attempted to apply conventional, industrial-scale warfare tactics—similar to those used in World War II—against a decentralized, irregular enemy in a counter-insurgency environment.
What is the "Vietnam Syndrome"?
The Vietnam Syndrome refers to the deep-seated public aversion to military intervention abroad, which emerged as a direct consequence of the Vietnam War and influenced American political debates for decades.
How did the war change U.S. military deployment?
The war led to the end of conscription and the implementation of the War Powers Act, shifting the U.S. toward an "indirect strategy" of intervention, such as proxy wars and increased reliance on local defense capacities rather than direct troop deployment.
What role does Charles de Gaulle's perspective play in the study?
De Gaulle’s warnings to the U.S. are used to underscore the belief that the war in Vietnam was a "bottomless quagmire" that no foreign power could win against a determined nationalist movement.
How does the author define the "limited war of the second type"?
It refers to the geopolitical reality where both Cold War superpowers avoided direct confrontation, opting instead to fight for influence in peripheral "frontier districts" without achieving a total decisive victory.
What was the strategic significance of the Carter Doctrine?
The Carter Doctrine represented an attempt to reinvigorate U.S. influence, particularly in the Persian Gulf, after the Vietnam-induced period of hesitation, signaling a shift toward protecting key strategic resources.
- Citar trabajo
- Otto Möller (Autor), 2014, To what extent is it fair to claim that America lost the war in Vietnam and how did the war impact on subsequent foreign policy?, Múnich, GRIN Verlag, https://www.grin.com/document/459781