The unrest started decades earlier. For more than a century, Vietnam had been a French colony. Then, from 1946 to 1954, the Vietnamese people fought France for their independence—and won. But who would rule? Communist leaders dominated northern Vietnam. Democratic ones led in the south.
In 1954, an international agreement split the country in two until elections could determine a government for a united Vietnam.But those elections never happened. Instead, a new war broke out—this time, between North Vietnam and South Vietnam. Other nations took sides, turning Vietnam into an international battleground.
North Vietnam was supported by China, the Soviet Union, and other Communist countries. South Vietnam was backed by the United States and other democratic countries.
The U.S. feared that if South Vietnam lost the war, Communism would spread into other parts of Southeast Asia. At first, the U.S. sent military advisers and supplies but no combat troops. That changed in 1964, after North Vietnamese forces attacked two U.S. warships. The U.S. responded by bombing North Vietnam—and, in August 1965, launching Operation Starlite.
That mission involved landing 5,000 Marines in South Vietnam to surround some enemy troops. The operation was successful—but the war would drag on for another decade, with about 58,000 U.S. troops losing their lives. In 1975, North Vietnam won the war.
What was fighting in the war like? To find out, read Thomas Bolitho’s first-person account.