Johnson Escalates the War 781
1965, American bombers were conducting some
5,000 raids each month.
But the hail of bombs on North Vietnam had little
effect on the struggle in the South. Worse, the
Vietcong expanded the areas under their control. After
a fact-finding mission in the war zone, McGeorge
Bundy concluded that the prospects were grim for
South Vietnam. “The energy and persistence of the
Vietcong are astonishing,” he reported. “They have
accepted extraordinary losses and they come back for
more. They show skill in their sneak attacks and feroc-
ity when cornered.” If the war was to be won,
South
China Sea
Gulf of
Thailand
Gulf of
Tonkin
M
ek
on
g
R.
Re
dR
.
DMZ, 17th parallel: Demilitarized zone
established 1954
South Vietnamese
invasion, 1971
SOUTH
VIETNAM
NORTH
VIETNAM
Hanoi
Hainan
Island
CHINA
CAMBODIA
THAILAND
LAOS
My Lai
Da Nang
Haiphong
Khe Sanh
Bien Hoa
Hue
Dienbienphu
Saigon
Pleiku
Vientiane
Phnom Penh
Major battles
Ho Chi Minh trail, North
Vietnamese supply lines
US and South Vietnamese
troop movements
USinvasion,^1970
The Vietnam War, 1961–1975As American bombing and “search and destroy” missions spread throughout South Vietnam, North Vietnamese
supply lines moved westward, into Laos and Cambodia. U.S. troops and bombers attacked there as well. This destabilized Cambodia, which fell
to the brutal Khmer Rouge communists in 1975.