http://www.fpif.org/commentary/2005/0506dominoes.html


FPIF Commentary 

Explaining Vietnam 30 Years Later-Asian Dominoes or U.S. Dominance?
By Gareth Porter | May 6, 2005
Editor: Erik Leaver and Emily Schwartz Greco, Institute for Policy Studies (IPS)



Thirty years after the last chopper left the Saigon embassy, Americans still 
don't know why this country fought in Vietnam. 

According to the dominant explanation, U.S. policymakers believed 
unquestioningly in the "domino theory," which held that non-communist countries 
in Southeast Asia would topple one by one if South Vietnam was lost. According 
to the conventional reasoning, U.S. policymakers may have exaggerated the 
communist danger, but they believed their exaggerations. After all, they were 
engaged in a worldwide Cold War struggle with the Soviet bloc for supremacy and 
Vietnam was one front in that conflict. 


The problem with this explanation for U.S. war is that the accumulated evidence 
shows that the Soviet Union and China were too weak to offer any real 
resistance to aggressive U.S. moves there or elsewhere in Asia or Africa. The 
old Cold War image of world communism on the march in Vietnam and Southeast 
Asia could not be farther from the truth. 
It is now clear that both Moscow and Washington knew that the Soviet Union 
lacked even a minimum nuclear deterrent before the latter half of the 1960s. 
After the Geneva settlement, the Soviets and Chinese were so worried about the 
possibility of war with the United States that they pressured the Vietnamese 
communists not to do anything to challenge the consolidation of power by the 
U.S.-sponsored anti-communist regime in South Vietnam. The Eisenhower 
administration could cast aside the provisions of the 1954 Geneva agreement on 
free elections to reunify Vietnam, in the confidence that the communist world 
would not respond militarily. 



Taking advantage of this communist passivity, the United States soon became the 
dominant power in mainland Southeast Asia, with client regimes in South 
Vietnam, Thailand and, briefly, even in Laos. As late as 1960, the Chinese were 
warning the North Vietnamese that they couldn't reunify the country because 
U.S. imperialism wouldn't allow it. 
The myth of the domino theory's hold on U.S. policymakers collapses under the 
weight of the historical evidence. True, before the huge U.S. Korean War 
military buildup, and before China's military weakness was clear, the Truman 
administration feared that the power balance in Southeast Asia was tilting 
toward the communists. 


But after that buildup, the Eisenhower administration understood that the power 
balance had shifted very strongly in favor of the United States. When President 
Dwight Eisenhower first articulated the domino effect publicly in 1954, he no 
longer believed it. He was merely using that argument to strengthen Soviet and 
Chinese fears of a possible U.S. intervention. 

In 1961, when John F. Kennedy's advisers tried to persuade him to send U.S. 
troops to Laos and Vietnam, they argued that the Chinese would not be ready to 
use force beyond their borders for years to come. The CIA estimated that the 
Soviets would still restrain Hanoi from deeper involvement in the South rather 
than risk any broadening of hostilities. 
In the rationale for their recommendation to President Lyndon B. Johnson to 
bomb North Vietnam in late 1964, the nation's top national security officials 
emphasized that the Chinese and North Vietnamese could not be sure that the 
United States would not use nuclear weapons, and would therefore be deterred 
from any major military response. They still hoped that Hanoi might once again 
order the Viet Cong in the South to retreat, at least temporarily, from the 
battlefield in the face of the U.S. threat. 



In the light of the prominent role of U.S. military dominance in the decisions 
for ever-deeper U.S. military intervention in the country, the historical 
parallel between the occupations of Vietnam and Iraq becomes far more 
compelling. In both cases, global U.S. dominance fed ambitions to extend U.S. 
power and influence over an entire region. And in both cases, national security 
managers assumed that they could use military power without great cost or risk 
of a bigger war and counted heavily on its intimidating effect on their foes. 
They were dead wrong on both Vietnam and Iraq. 


The common pattern underlying the military adventures in Vietnam and Iraq 
suggests that there are inherent dangers in having global military dominance. 
Without any other state or states to balance the United States, the national 
security managers are easily tempted to use force to advance the U.S. power 
position. That temptation is far deeper than a particular set of personalities 
or ideological bent, and it will require fundamental reforms to overcome it. 
Gareth Porter is author of Perils of Dominance: Imbalance of Power and the Road 
to War in Vietnam, to be published by University of California Press in June, 
and a Foreign Policy In Focus scholar (www.fpif.org). 

Contact the IRC's webmaster with inquiries regarding the functionality of this 
website.
Published by Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF), a joint project of the 
International Relations Center (IRC, formerly the Interhemispheric Resource 
Center, online at www.irc-online.org) and the Institute for Policy Studies 
(IPS, online at www.ips-dc.org). �2005. All rights reserved.

Recommended citation:
Gareth Porter, "Explaining Vietnam 30 Years Later-Asian Dominoes or U.S. 
Dominance?" (Silver City, NM & Washington, DC: Foreign Policy In Focus, May 6, 
2005). 
Web location:

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