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Causes and Effects of the Vietnam War
Causes
The defeat of France in the French Indochina War in 1954, after which Vietnam was divided into the communist-dominated North and the democratic South
An insurgency of communist Vietnamese (known as the Viet Cong) against the South Vietnam army beginning in the late 1950s that grew into an ongoing guerrilla campaign
Increasing financial and military aid from the U.S. to South Vietnam as part of an attempt to contain, or limit, the spread of communism throughout the rest of Southeast Asia
A parallel increase in support to the North from both China and the Soviet Union
Allegedly unprovoked attacks on two U.S. destroyers by North Vietnamese torpedo boats in the Gulf of Tonkin on August 5, 1964; passage of the ensuing Gulf of Tonkin Resolution gave the U.S. president new authority to wage war.
Effects
The collapse of the South Vietnamese government in the spring of 1975, resulting in a communist takeover of the South
The discrediting of the U.S. theory that the emergence of a unified, communist Vietnam would produce a "domino effect" involving the spread of communism throughout the rest of Southeast Asia
The deaths of as many as 2,000,000 Vietnamese civilians, 1,100,000 North Vietnamese soldiers, 250,000 South Vietnamese soldiers, and some 58,000 U.S. troops
Chaos in neighboring Cambodia, where the radical communist movement known as the Khmer Rouge seized power and caused the deaths of at least 1,500,000 Cambodians before being overthrown by Vietnamese troops in 1979
The emigration of some 2,000,000 refugees from Vietnam from the late 1970s to the early ’90s
Key Facts of the Vietnam War
Vietnam War | Key Facts
Vietnam War Timeline
Vietnam War | Timeline