Want this question answered?
The United States increased its military involvement in Vietnam.
The United States became less likely to send troops to foreign conflicts.
The United States became less likely to send troops to foreign conflicts.
The United States has had a continuous military presence in South Vietnam since the war in 1950.
The fact that Vietnam was being taken over by a dictator was one of the foreign policy issues that motivated American intervention in Vietnam. At first, the Americans were just there to teach the people of South Vietnam to defend themselves through the establishment of an army. There was also the Containment Policy, which was the United States' foreign policy to prevent more countries from "acquiring the disease of Communism".
The United States Increased aid to the French in Vietnam. (NN) because the US was against Communism.
it led to increased u.s. involvement in vietnam - apex
Robert M. Blum has written: 'The United States and Vietnam: 1944-1947' -- subject(s): Foreign relations, History
Peter A. Poole has written: 'Europe Unites' 'America in world politics' -- subject(s): World politics, Foreign relations 'The expansion of the Vietnam War into Cambodia: action and response by the governments of North Vietnam, South Vietnam, Cambodia, and the United States' -- subject(s): Politics and government, Vietnamese Conflict, 1961-1975, Campaigns, Foreign relations 'The United States and Indochina, from FDR to Nixon' -- subject(s): Foreign relations, Vietnamese Conflict, 1961-1975 'The Vietnamese in Thailand' -- subject(s): Refugees, Vietnamese in Thailand, Vietnamese
Kennedy increased the level of US participation from 900 under Eisenhower to 16,000. But it was Johnson who used the "Gulf of Tonkin incident" to truly escalate the conflict into a full blown war.
To prepare for the United States invasion of Laos.
Yes. A proponent of Realpolitik, Kissinger played a prominent role in United States foreign ...the Paris Peace Accords, ending American involvement in the Vietnam War.