Jan
9
12:00am
Profs & Pints Online: The Tet Offensive (A 360-Degree View)
By Profs and Pints
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Profs and Pints Online presents: “The Tet Offensive: A 360-Degree View,” with Erik Villard, military historian, former instructor at the University of Washington, and author of Staying the Course: U.S. Army Combat Operations in Vietnam, Oct. 1967 to Sept. 1968.
[ This talk will remain available in recorded form at the link given here for tickets and access.]
January 30th marks the anniversary of the Tet Offensive, the massive North Vietnamese and Viet Cong military campaign that challenged President Lyndon B. Johnson’s assertions that the US could see a light at the end of the tunnel in Vietnam.
Join Erik Villard, a leading scholar of that offensive, for a talk examining it not just from America’s perspective, but the perspectives of the North Vietnamese, Viet Cong, South Vietnamese, and the civilians caught in the middle.
He’ll discuss in detail the series of military attacks that the Viet Cong and their North Vietnamese allies launched at the end of January 1968. The campaign helped trigger a general uprising in South Vietnam that sowed chaos and destruction across its urban landscape and disrupted allied pacification programs just beginning to take hold in rural areas. It shook the foundation of the South Vietnamese state and forced the United States to reevaluate its military calculations in Southeast Asia.
For the enemy, however, such achievements came at a staggering cost in terms of lives, manpower, and material. The Tet offensive failed to cripple the South Vietnamese government or convince the United States to abandon its ally. As the dust settled, President Johnson ordered his military commanders to press ahead with their current strategy unchanged apart from some short-term tactical adjustments and a modest increase in the U.S. troop deployment.
Drawing upon nearly two decades of research, Dr. Erik Villard will discuss the causes and consequences of the Tet Offensive in a talk that challenges the conventional interpretation of Tet and dispels some of our most stubborn myths about it.
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