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President Johnson Visits Vietnam Soldiers

Vietnam War

President Johnson Visits Vietnam Soldiers

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Photo Galleries (5)

  • Vietnam War: Leaders
    Vietnam War: Leaders

    15 Photos

    View images of the Presidents, politicians, and military leaders who influenced American involvement in the Vietnam War.

    (15 Photos)
  • Vietnam War
    Vietnam War

    14 Photos

    The Vietnam War lasted longer than any other war in U.S. history and cost 58,000 American lives

    (14 Photos)
  • Lyndon B. Johnson
    Lyndon B. Johnson

    19 Photos

    See pictures from the life and presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson.

    (19 Photos)
  • Richard Nixon
    Richard Nixon

    18 Photos

    See pictures from the life and presidency of Richard Nixon.

    (18 Photos)
  • John F. Kennedy
    John F. Kennedy

    20 Photos

    See pictures from the life and presidency of John F. Kennedy.

    (20 Photos)

Videos (19)

  • A Soldier's Story: Khe Sanh
    A Soldier's Story: Khe Sanh

    Video Clip (3:06)

    Amid a siege that would last 77 days, medic Raymond Torres was dropped into central Vietnam.

    Video Clip (3:06)
  • Tet Offensive
    Tet Offensive

    Video Clip (4:53)

    This massive North Vietnamese surprise attack during the 1968 Tet holiday was a crucial turning point in the war.

    Video Clip (4:53)
  • A Soldier's Story: Hamburger Hill
    A Soldier's Story: Hamburger Hill

    Video Clip (4:41)

    In 1969, Arthur Wiknik found himself in one of the Vietnam War's most notorious battles.

    Video Clip (4:41)
  • The Seawolves
    The Seawolves

    Video Clip (4:56)

    A surprise phone call reunites two Vietnam war veterans, George Heady and Al Billings, with films of their service in the Navy Seawolves helicopter unit.

    Video Clip (4:56)
  • Arthur Wiknik
    Arthur Wiknik

    Video Clip (3:42)

    As an 18-year-old draftee, Arthur Wiknik was rushed through officer candidate's school. After one month in Vietnam he found himself in the middle of the battle of "Hamburger Hill"--one of the most notorious battles of the war.

    Video Clip (3:42)
  • Vietnam
    Vietnam

    Video Clip (1:42)

    Whether they volunteered or were drafted, 1 out of 10 soldiers did not survive Vietnam.

    Video Clip (1:42)
  • Search and Destroy
    Search and Destroy

    Video Clip (3:01)

    Search and Destroy missions were a crucial part of the American war strategy in Vietnam.

    Video Clip (3:01)
  • Karl Marlantes
    Karl Marlantes

    Video Clip (3:26)

    Marine Karl Marlantes left behind a Rhodes scholarship to volunteer for service in Vietnam.

    Video Clip (3:26)
  • Bob Clewell
    Bob Clewell

    Video Clip (3:35)

    Bob Clewell dropped out of college to join the Army, and arrive in Vietnam just weeks after the Gulf of Tonkin incident in 1964. During his third tour, he was trained as a helicopter pilot, providing air support for ground troops during the Lam Son 719 offensive.

    Video Clip (3:35)
  • Keith Connolly
    Keith Connolly

    Video Clip (4:31)

    Air Force pilot Keith Connolly was among the first USAF units to be stationed within South Vietnam. During his second tour, he flew F-4 Phantoms targeting the Ho Chi Minh Trail and witnessed two of his men go missing after his plane had been hit.

    Video Clip (4:31)
  • Raymond Torres
    Raymond Torres

    Video Clip (2:52)

    Navy medic Raymond Torres joined the Navy to attend medical school and was assigned to a Marine Corps company. While tending to wounded Marines during the Khe Sanh battle, Torres was critically injured when a grenade exploded near him.

    Video Clip (2:52)
  • Gery Benedetti
    Gery Benedetti

    Video Clip (3:18)

    Gery Benedetti was a member of the "Brown Water River Rats," whose missions were a crucial but dangerous component of the American combat operation in Vietnam.

    Video Clip (3:18)
  • Joe Galloway
    Joe Galloway

    Video Clip (3:49)

    Reporter Joe Galloway covered the Vietnam War from the frontlines while embedded with the Command Unit of the 1st Cavalry Division.

    Video Clip (3:49)
  • Barry Romo
    Barry Romo

    Video Clip (3:24)

    Fresh out of high school, Barry Romo enlisted in the U.S. Army to serve in Vietnam. Romo was awarded a bronze star for his efforts but grew disillusioned with the war and later joined a controversial group called Vietnam Veterans Against the War.

    Video Clip (3:24)
  • Donald Devore
    Donald Devore

    Video Clip (3:22)

    in the summer of 1968, Donald Devore was drafted and sent off to basic training. Devore was assigned to an artillery unit in Vietnam and after four months, was granted leave to attend the birth of his first child.

    Video Clip (3:22)
  • Veteran's Home Movies
    Veteran's Home Movies

    Video Clip (2:44)

    Find out why more veterans came home with home movies from Vietnam and how they helped give Vietnam in HD a unique perspective of the war.

    Video Clip (2:44)
  • Elizabeth Allen
    Elizabeth Allen

    Video Clip (3:11)

    Psychiatric nurse Elizabeth Allen volunteered for the Army and requested frontline duty in Vietnam.

    Video Clip (3:11)
  • Vietnam War Tactics
    Vietnam War Tactics

    Video Clip (3:24)

    The guerilla warfare tactics of the North Vietnamese required U.S. military leaders to modify their combat strategy during the Vietnam War.

    Video Clip (3:24)
  • The Road to War
    The Road to War

    Video Clip (2:40)

    Over 25 years, the Vietnam conflict escalated from an attempt to stop the spread of communism into a full-scale war.

    Video Clip (2:40)

Speeches & Audio (31)

  • French Defeated in Dien Bien Phu
    French Defeated in Dien Bien Phu

    Audio Clip (3:46)

    Secretary of State John Foster Dulles delivers a statement of support for France after its defeat by the Vietnamese in the 55-day battle of Dien Bien Phu, which ended on May 7, 1954.

    Audio Clip (3:46)
  • Widow of Assassinated South Vietnamese Leader Speaks Out
    Widow of Assassinated South Vietnamese Leader Speaks Out

    Audio Clip (0:32)

    On November 2, 1963, South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem and his closest adviser, his brother Ngo Dinh Nhu, were killed in a U.S.-instigated military coup. Madame Ngo Dinh Nhu speaks out about the assassinations.

    Audio Clip (0:32)
  • John F. Kennedy on Coup in South Vietnam
    John F. Kennedy on Coup in South Vietnam

    Audio Clip (6:06)

    On October 29, 1963, President John F. Kennedy meets with the National Security Council to discuss whether to support the overthrow of South Vietnam's President Ngo Dinh Diem. During the secretly recorded conversation, Secretary of State Dean Rusk and the president craft a detailed plan involving Henry Cabot Lodge, ambassador to South Vietnam, Gen. Paul D. Harkins and the general of the South Vietnamese military, hoping to avoid setting off a civil war in the country.

    Audio Clip (6:06)
  • Robert F. Kennedy Questions South Vietnam Coup
    Robert F. Kennedy Questions South Vietnam Coup

    Audio Clip (4:44)

    On October 29, 1963, in a recorded meeting with President John F. Kennedy and the National Security Council, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy voices his concern about supporting the impending South Vietnamese coup to overthrow Ngo Dinh Diem. Secretary of State Dean Rusk, Gen. Maxwell Taylor, and CIA Director John McCone echo RFK’s doubts.

    Audio Clip (4:44)
  • McNamara Briefs President Johnson on Tonkin Gulf
    McNamara Briefs President Johnson on Tonkin Gulf

    Audio Clip (1:00)

    On August 4, 1964, as events in the Tonkin Gulf unfold, Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara apprised President Lyndon B. Johnson of the situation in a series of phone calls. In the third secretly recorded phone call of the day, McNamara reports that two U.S. destroyers deployed in the Gulf east of Vietnam are under attack. While McNamara did not know it at the time, the information he relayed was later determined to be false.

    Audio Clip (1:00)
  • Gulf of Tonkin Incident
    Gulf of Tonkin Incident

    Audio Clip (2:12)

    An NBC special report describes a second night of North Vietnamese torpedo boat attacks on two U.S. naval destroyers in the Gulf of Tonkin on August 4, 1964.

    Audio Clip (2:12)
  • Arthur Sylvester on the Gulf of Tonkin Incident
    Arthur Sylvester on the Gulf of Tonkin Incident

    Audio Clip (1:08)

    On August 4, 1964, Arthur Sylvester, assistant secretary of defense, makes a press statement about North Vietnam's attack on two U.S. destroyers that were on patrol in the Tonkin Gulf.

    Audio Clip (1:08)
  • Westmoreland on the Vietnam War
    Westmoreland on the Vietnam War

    Audio Clip (2:01)

    On April 28, 1967, Gen. William Westmoreland, commander of U.S. operations in Vietnam, describes to a joint session of Congress the challenges of fighting a relentless enemy.

    Audio Clip (2:01)
  • South Vietnamese Forces at the Battle of An Loc
    South Vietnamese Forces at the Battle of An Loc

    Audio Clip (1:09)

    A mid-battle war report describes the frustration of South Vietnamese forces as they struggle to take control of Highway 13, the main artery into the city of An Loc, in April 1972.

    Audio Clip (1:09)
  • LBJ on Resumption of Air Strikes in North Vietnam
    LBJ on Resumption of Air Strikes in North Vietnam

    Audio Clip (1:16)

    In a broadcast from the White House on January 31, 1966, President Lyndon B. Johnson informs the nation that U.S. airstrikes on Vietnam have resumed after a 37-day pause in bombing.

    Audio Clip (1:16)
  • Lyndon Johnson and Robert McNamara Plan Airstrikes in Vietnam
    Lyndon Johnson and Robert McNamara Plan Airstrikes in Vietnam

    Audio Clip (3:31)

    In a recorded phone call on February 26, 1965, Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara and President Lyndon B. Johnson discuss possible airstrikes in Vietnam.

    Audio Clip (3:31)
  • U.S. Forces Surprised by Tet Offensive
    U.S. Forces Surprised by Tet Offensive

    Audio Clip (1:23)

    A war report describes an attack by the Viet Cong on the Presidential Palace. On January 30, 1968, the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese forces launched a massive surprise attack on key cities in South Vietnam. It was a major turning point in the war.

    Audio Clip (1:23)
  • McNamara on Instability in South Vietnam
    McNamara on Instability in South Vietnam

    Audio Clip (2:19)

    Robert McNamara, the U.S. secretary of defense since 1961, testifies at the Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearings in February 1966 on escalating U.S. military involvement in Vietnam.

    Audio Clip (2:19)
  • McNamara on the Bombing of North Vietnam
    McNamara on the Bombing of North Vietnam

    Audio Clip (1:44)

    The secretary of Defense Robert McNamara appeared before the press to defend the bombing of the Major North Vietnamese cities of Hanoi and Haiphong. The bombings were supposed to deprive the military of essential supplies.

    Audio Clip (1:44)
  • Prospects for Peace in Vietnam
    Prospects for Peace in Vietnam

    Audio Clip (1:06)

    Despite North Vietnam's violation of the New Year ceasefire in 1967, Secretary of State Dean Rusk expresses hope for a peaceful resolution in Vietnam.

    Audio Clip (1:06)
  • Senator Morse Calls for Vietnam Withdrawal
    Senator Morse Calls for Vietnam Withdrawal

    Audio Clip (1:38)

    In an address before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on March 10, 1968, Sen. Wayne Morse, a vehement critic of the war in Vietnam, attacks President Lyndon Johnson's Vietnam policy after Gen. William Westmoreland requested that 200,000 more troops be sent in response to the Tet Offensive.

    Audio Clip (1:38)
  • Lyndon Johnson Considers Troop Increase in Vietnam
    Lyndon Johnson Considers Troop Increase in Vietnam

    Audio Clip (5:02)

    In June 1965, shortly after a coup in South Vietnam led to the 10th change of government in the war torn country, an attack by the North Vietnamese destroyed three U.S. aircraft at Danang. During a recorded telephone conversation with Defense Secretary Robert McNamara on July 2, 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson contemplates whether the war can be won.

    Audio Clip (5:02)
  • Lyndon Johnson Expresses Doubts About Vietnam War
    Lyndon Johnson Expresses Doubts About Vietnam War

    Audio Clip (1:13)

    Speaking to his special assistant for national security, McGeorge Bundy, in a May 27, 1964, recorded telephone conversation, President Lyndon B. Johnson expresses his worry that the war in Vietnam is turning into another Korea.

    Audio Clip (1:13)
  • Adlai Stevenson on Vietnam War
    Adlai Stevenson on Vietnam War

    Audio Clip (4:10)

    As permanent U.S. representative to the United Nations, Adlai Stevenson is interviewed in early 1965 about his view on the developing situation in Vietnam.

    Audio Clip (4:10)
  • USS Pueblo Commander Released by North Korea
    USS Pueblo Commander Released by North Korea

    Audio Clip (1:40)

    The Navy spy ship USS Pueblo was captured off the coast of North Korea in January, 1968. Imprisoned and tortured for 11 months, Cmdr. Lloyd "Pete" Bucher and his crew were released only after he signed a statement conceding that the ship was spying on North Korea. Cmdr. Bucher, who returned to a critical nation, speaks publicly about the experience.

    Audio Clip (1:40)
  • Johnson Will Not Seek Reelection
    Johnson Will Not Seek Reelection

    Audio Clip (0:38)

    Facing a country sharply divided over the Vietnam War, President Lyndon B. Johnson announces in a national television and radio broadcast on March 31, 1968, that he will not seek reelection to the presidency.

    Audio Clip (0:38)
  • Nixon Orders Invasion of Cambodia
    Nixon Orders Invasion of Cambodia

    Audio Clip (1:02)

    On April 30, 1970, President Richard Nixon asks the American people to support his decision to send troops into Cambodia in response to North Vietnam’s invasion of the country.

    Audio Clip (1:02)
  • Nixon on the Vietnam War
    Nixon on the Vietnam War

    Audio Clip (1:06)

    While campaigning for reelection in 1972, President Richard M. Nixon promises to end the war in Vietnam in such a way as to ensure a "a full generation of peace."

    Audio Clip (1:06)
  • Nixon on Vietnam War
    Nixon on Vietnam War

    Audio Clip (3:34)

    On March 26, 1971, President Richard Nixon holds a meeting in the Oval Office with his National Security Council to discuss the war in Vietnam. The meeting is secretly recorded. Among the many topics he raises, Nixon recounts a prior conversation with House majority leader Hale Boggs on setting a date for the final withdrawal of U.S. forces.

    Audio Clip (3:34)
  • North Vietnam Disregards Ceasefire Agreement
    North Vietnam Disregards Ceasefire Agreement

    Audio Clip (4:44)

    In an October 12, 1973, interview, Col. Le Gran, U.S. deputy director of intelligence, discusses the discovery that North Vietnam installed SA-2 missiles in the southern city of Khe Sanh shortly after a ceasefire agreement prohibiting military incursion in South Vietnam was signed on January 27 of that year.

    Audio Clip (4:44)
  • Nixon Announces Vietnam Peace Agreement
    Nixon Announces Vietnam Peace Agreement

    Audio Clip (3:39)

    On January 23, 1973, President Richard Nixon announces that Henry Kissinger and North Vietnam's chief negotiator, Le Duc Tho, signed an agreement to end U.S. military involvement in Vietnam. The official cease-fire, along with the release of all American prisoners of war, is to go into effect on January 28, though troops would remain in Vietnam until the fall of Saigon in 1975.

    Audio Clip (3:39)
  • U.S. Army Prepares South Vietnam for American Withdrawal
    U.S. Army Prepares South Vietnam for American Withdrawal

    Audio Clip (2:04)

    From his station in Saigon, Vietnam, on October 25, 1973, Col. Gerald M. Steinberg reflects on the difficulties encountered as the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers prepared to transfer jurisdiction to ARVN, Army of the Republic of Vietnam, following the Vietnam War ceasefire signed on January 27.

    Audio Clip (2:04)
  • Impact of U.S. Withdrawal on South Vietnam
    Impact of U.S. Withdrawal on South Vietnam

    Audio Clip (2:47)

    Following the January 27, 1973 signing of a ceasefire agreement to end the Vietnam War and the subsequent departure of U.S. troops, the U.S. military prepared the South Vietnamese to take over operations. A U.S. officer who remained in Vietnam to help with the transition is interviewed on October 11, 1973, about the process of bolstering South Vietnam's economy and self-sufficiency.

    Audio Clip (2:47)
  • U.S. Troops Leave Vietnam
    U.S. Troops Leave Vietnam

    Audio Clip (1:13)

    After the Vietnam War ceasefire was signed on January 27, 1973, the United States had 60 days to withdraw its troops from Vietnam. In an interview on October 9, 1973, Col. Frago, chief of the Army Division of the Defense Attaché, comments on the problems encountered while drawing down the U.S. forces.

    Audio Clip (1:13)
  • Gerald Ford on Resignation of South Vietnam's President
    Gerald Ford on Resignation of South Vietnam's President

    Audio Clip (0:34)

    In April 1975, when North Vietnamese forces reached Xuan Loc, Saigon's last line of defense, President Nguyen Van Thieu announced his resignation. In an interview, President Gerald Ford denies that the U.S. government influenced Thieu's decision.

    Audio Clip (0:34)
  • Vietnam POWs Return Home
    Vietnam POWs Return Home

    Audio Clip (1:07)

    On February 14, 1973, 18 days after the Vietnam peace agreement was signed, the first American prisoners of war returned home from Vietnam. The first man off the plane, Capt. Jeremiah A. Denton Jr., calls for U.S. citizens to unify.

    Audio Clip (1:07)

Interactives (1)

Read More about Vietnam War

From 1954-75, South Vietnam (aided by the United States) battled North Vietnam and its communist allies in the Vietnam War.

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