JFK got the U.S into Vietnam (not Johnson)

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Online Gerry Down

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Re: JFK got the U.S into Vietnam (not Johnson)
« Reply #14 on: March 15, 2021, 06:17:29 PM »
Stanley Karnow's history: https://www.amazon.com/Vietnam-History-Stanley-Karnow/dp/0140265473/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=stanley+karnow&qid=1615827214&s=books&sr=1-1

And his other works: https://www.amazon.com/Stanley-Karnow/e/B000AQ0432/ref=dp_byline_cont_pop_book_1

He was on the ground reporting at the time of the first American soldier being killed until the very end. The entire time. As he admits though, he didn't have access to North Vietnamese archives or many sources. So he was limited in presenting "their side" of things. But that's true of every historian on the conflict.

Thanks.

Offline Steve M. Galbraith

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Re: JFK got the U.S into Vietnam (not Johnson)
« Reply #15 on: March 15, 2021, 07:48:29 PM »
Thanks.
And the Pentagon Papers (free) here: https://www.archives.gov/research/pentagon-papers

That's a history of US involvement up through 1967 1968. But it has great sections - very detailed - on the Kennedy's Administrations policies. What comes out at you reading the papers is how much the US thought China was behind the North's aggression. They really saw it as an attempt by Beijing to take over SE Asia.
« Last Edit: March 15, 2021, 10:03:23 PM by Steve M. Galbraith »

Offline Jerry Freeman

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Re: JFK got the U.S into Vietnam (not Johnson)
« Reply #16 on: March 16, 2021, 06:11:59 AM »
  JFK was pragmatic enough to realize that if communism couldn't have been stopped on an island some 90 miles from Miami...how could it be stopped 12,000 miles away?
Kennedy had military experience observing the logistics of an overseas war. Bush 41 also.
Now, the US military is being turned into some kind of social experiment. A conventional war just might mean its demise.

https://www.militarytimes.com/news/pentagon-congress/2021/03/15/senator-demands-meeting-with-defense-leaders-over-their-response-to-criticism-of-women-in-the-ranks/

Online Charles Collins

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Re: JFK got the U.S into Vietnam (not Johnson)
« Reply #17 on: March 16, 2021, 01:30:38 PM »
Quite a few years ago I read the book “JFK and Vietnam” by John M. Newman. I don’t remember all of the details but in the book Newman makes a good argument for his ideas. And, if I remember correctly, he shows how the Diem coup support was based on a very hastily made decision which was based upon incomplete information.

Here are a couple of reviews from Amazon:


Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Had he lived, would President Kennedy have committed U.S. troops to Vietnam? According to the evidence marshalled here, the answer is a resounding no. Newman, who teaches international politics at the University of Maryland, argues that when JFK went to Dallas he already intended to withdraw U.S. advisers from Vietnam, but held off to ensure his reelection in 1964. The book traces the president's pullout plan back to April '62, when he stated that the U.S. should seize every opportunity to reduce its commitment to Vietnam. A month later Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara asked U.S. generals in Saigon how soon the South Vietnamese would be ready to take over the war effort. This well-documented study shows that JFK was for a time deceived by Gen. Maxwell Taylor, head of the joint chiefs, and others in a blizzard of briefings that claimed unadulterated progress and success. Newman maintains that although the president paid public lip service to a continued commitment to appease the right, his goal was to abandon a venture that he early recognized as a lost cause. No other study has revealed so clearly how the tragedy in Dallas affected the course of the war in Vietnam, since two days after the assassination Lyndon Johnson signed a National Security Action Memo that opened the way for the fateful escalation of the war. Photos.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Kirkus Reviews
Bold and authoritative revisionist analysis of Kennedy's Vietnam policy, by a US Army major who teaches history at the Univ. of Maryland. What was JFK's real agenda regarding Vietnam? Newman claims that the young President planned to withdraw American forces from that war-torn country--and his case is strong. The author pictures an isolated Kennedy battling both cold war jingoism and a military- industrial lobby avid for a war that would make tens of billions of dollars. Conventional wisdom generally sees JFK's early attacks on Eisenhower's covert liaison with France regarding Vietnam as simple political expediency, and Kennedy as another adherent to the domino theory. JFK's speeches buttress that position, but Newman, working with newly declassified material, argues that these speeches were simply requisite political twistings and turnings--and that Kennedy planned to get the US out of Vietnam despite a hawkish palace clique (led by Lyndon Johnson) that fed him disinformation on this most crucial foreign-policy issue. Document by document, incident by incident, the author reveals Kennedy as stranded within his own Administration, alienated by his desire to avoid this ultimate wrong-time, wrong-place war. Newman's research culminates in two crucial National Security Action Memos. In one, authored several weeks before Kennedy's death, the President formally endorsed withdrawal from Vietnam of a thousand advisors by the end of 1963 (to be followed by complete withdrawal by the end of 1965). In the second, written six days after the assassination, LBJ reversed the withdrawal policy and planned in some detail the escalation to follow. Crucial to any reevaluation of JFK as President and statesman, this electrifying report portrays a wily, stubborn, conflicted leader who grasped realities that eluded virtually everyone else in the US establishment. -- Copyright ©1992, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Offline Steve M. Galbraith

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Re: JFK got the U.S into Vietnam (not Johnson)
« Reply #18 on: March 16, 2021, 04:04:46 PM »
Quite a few years ago I read the book “JFK and Vietnam” by John M. Newman. I don’t remember all of the details but in the book Newman makes a good argument for his ideas. And, if I remember correctly, he shows how the Diem coup support was based on a very hastily made decision which was based upon incomplete information.

Here are a couple of reviews from Amazon:


Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Had he lived, would President Kennedy have committed U.S. troops to Vietnam? According to the evidence marshalled here, the answer is a resounding no. Newman, who teaches international politics at the University of Maryland, argues that when JFK went to Dallas he already intended to withdraw U.S. advisers from Vietnam, but held off to ensure his reelection in 1964. The book traces the president's pullout plan back to April '62, when he stated that the U.S. should seize every opportunity to reduce its commitment to Vietnam. A month later Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara asked U.S. generals in Saigon how soon the South Vietnamese would be ready to take over the war effort. This well-documented study shows that JFK was for a time deceived by Gen. Maxwell Taylor, head of the joint chiefs, and others in a blizzard of briefings that claimed unadulterated progress and success. Newman maintains that although the president paid public lip service to a continued commitment to appease the right, his goal was to abandon a venture that he early recognized as a lost cause. No other study has revealed so clearly how the tragedy in Dallas affected the course of the war in Vietnam, since two days after the assassination Lyndon Johnson signed a National Security Action Memo that opened the way for the fateful escalation of the war. Photos.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Kirkus Reviews
Bold and authoritative revisionist analysis of Kennedy's Vietnam policy, by a US Army major who teaches history at the Univ. of Maryland. What was JFK's real agenda regarding Vietnam? Newman claims that the young President planned to withdraw American forces from that war-torn country--and his case is strong. The author pictures an isolated Kennedy battling both cold war jingoism and a military- industrial lobby avid for a war that would make tens of billions of dollars. Conventional wisdom generally sees JFK's early attacks on Eisenhower's covert liaison with France regarding Vietnam as simple political expediency, and Kennedy as another adherent to the domino theory. JFK's speeches buttress that position, but Newman, working with newly declassified material, argues that these speeches were simply requisite political twistings and turnings--and that Kennedy planned to get the US out of Vietnam despite a hawkish palace clique (led by Lyndon Johnson) that fed him disinformation on this most crucial foreign-policy issue. Document by document, incident by incident, the author reveals Kennedy as stranded within his own Administration, alienated by his desire to avoid this ultimate wrong-time, wrong-place war. Newman's research culminates in two crucial National Security Action Memos. In one, authored several weeks before Kennedy's death, the President formally endorsed withdrawal from Vietnam of a thousand advisors by the end of 1963 (to be followed by complete withdrawal by the end of 1965). In the second, written six days after the assassination, LBJ reversed the withdrawal policy and planned in some detail the escalation to follow. Crucial to any reevaluation of JFK as President and statesman, this electrifying report portrays a wily, stubborn, conflicted leader who grasped realities that eluded virtually everyone else in the US establishment. -- Copyright ©1992, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Newman argues that JFK showed in a series of key decisions such as his refusal to send in troops during the Laotian crisis at the beginning of his presidency despite calls from the Pentagon for troops and again during the Bay of Pigs disaster and a third time during the Missile Crisis that he was willing to ignore the suggestions by his military men and advisers and not send in troops.

And that he would have shown this same independence in Vietnam and not send in ground troops. He also says, by the way, that this why why elements in the Pentagon assassinated JFK; they viewed him as being "soft on communism" and that he was a threat to the security of the country.

In any case, maybe JFK would have rejected the suggestions to send in ground troops. Nobody knows. I don't think JFK knew on November 22, 1963 what he was going to do. But I think the evidence is pretty clear - to me - that at that time he had not made that decision to withdraw. It seems clear that at that stage they still thought - even JFK - that American power would win out and prevent the North from overruning the South.

Online Gerry Down

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Re: JFK got the U.S into Vietnam (not Johnson)
« Reply #19 on: March 16, 2021, 04:09:52 PM »
I don't think JFK knew on November 22, 1963 what he was going to do. But I think the evidence is pretty clear - to me - that at that time he had not made that decision to withdraw. It seems clear that at that stage they still thought - even JFK - that American power would win out and prevent the North from overruning the South.

Why do you think JFK authorized on paper in Oct 1963 the withdrawal of 1000 military personal by the end of 1963? To help him win re-election the following year rather than genuinely being sure the US would be pulling out of Vietnam in 1965?

Online Charles Collins

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Re: JFK got the U.S into Vietnam (not Johnson)
« Reply #20 on: March 16, 2021, 04:20:18 PM »
Newman argues that JFK showed in a series of key decisions such as his refusal to send in troops during the Laotian crisis at the beginning of his presidency despite calls from the Pentagon for troops and again during the Bay of Pigs disaster and a third time during the Missile Crisis that he was willing to ignore the suggestions by his military men and advisers and not send in troops.

And that he would have shown this same independence in Vietnam and not send in ground troops. He also says, by the way, that this why why elements in the Pentagon assassinated JFK; they viewed him as being "soft on communism" and that he was a threat to the security of the country.

In any case, maybe JFK would have rejected the suggestions to send in ground troops. Nobody knows. I don't think JFK knew on November 22, 1963 what he was going to do. But I think the evidence is pretty clear - to me - that at that time he had not made that decision to withdraw. It seems clear that at that stage they still thought - even JFK - that American power would win out and prevent the North from overruning the South.


He also says, by the way, that this why why elements in the Pentagon assassinated JFK; they viewed him as being "soft on communism" and that he was a threat to the security of the country

I can’t go along with that assessment. And I don’t have access to the book currently. But if I did I would probably take the time to refresh my memory on the details that Newman documented regarding the decision for supporting the Diem coup. That decision seems to be a major point in the argument that JFK was not going to withdraw from Vietnam.