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Kennedy did not like Diem, but was determined to prevent the spread of communism from the North. The NLF, known as the Vietcong, had grown to 16,000 members. The USA tried to counter its influence by:
• Sending even more military advisers - by 1962, there were 11,000 training the South Vietnamese army, known as the ARVN.
• The 'Strategic Hamlets' policy in which hamlets supporting the Vietcong were moved and replaced by new ones defended by barbed wire and the ARVN. This policy did not work as many South Vietnamese resented having to move. It increased support for the Vietcong.
Diem's unpopularity grew, He imprisoned and killed hundreds of Buddhists, who he claimed were helping the Communists. Some Buddhist monks burned themselves in protest. Diem's anti-Buddhist policy lost him the support of the USA, and in1963 he was assassinated by his army generals.

Vietnamisation: Training the Vietnamese army to fight on its own using US arms and supplies, and withdrawing US troops. Between 1969 and 1971, about 400,000 troops were withdrawn.

US bombing of the North, Laos and Cambodia:
The USA put pressure on North Vietnam by continuing the bombings.North Vietnam was still supplying the Vietcong with weapons along the Ho Chi Minh Trail through Cambodia and Laos, so Nixon ordered the bombing of these countries as well. In 1970, US troops entered Cambodia to destroy the trail.
In 1971 and 1972, there were renewed bombing attacks on North Vietnam, causing great destruction to ports, roads, railways and cities. This massive bombing slowed down the progress of the invasion from the North, which was happening in 1972.
The bombing of the North made both sides realise that a military solution was not imminent, and therefore the North Vietnamese agreed to resume talks in Paris in January 1973.

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Bataan Death March, march in the Philippines of some 66 miles (106 km) that 76,000 prisoners of war (66,000 Filipinos, 10,000 Americans) were forced by the Japanese military to endure in April 1942, during the early stages of World War II.

Mainly starting in Mariveles, on the southern tip of the Bataan Peninsula, on April 9, 1942, the prisoners were force-marched north to San Fernando and then taken by rail in cramped and unsanitary boxcars farther north to Capas. From there they walked an additional 7 miles (11 km) to Camp O’Donnell, a former Philippine army training centre used by the Japanese military to intern Filipino and American prisoners. During the main march—which lasted 5 to 10 days, depending on where a prisoner joined it—the captives were beaten, shot, bayoneted, and, in many cases, beheaded; a large number of those who made it to the camp later died of starvation and disease. Only 54,000 prisoners reached the camp; though exact numbers are unknown, some 2,500 Filipinos and 500 Americans may have died during the march, and an additional 26,000 Filipinos and 1,500 Americans died at Camp O’Donnell. (See Researcher’s Note: Bataan Death March: How many marched and how many died?)

Lead-up to the march

Within hours of their December 7, 1941, attack on the American naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, the Japanese military began its assault on the Philippines, bombing airfields and bases, harbours and shipyards. Manila, the capital of the Philippines, sits on Manila Bay, one of the best deepwater ports in the Pacific Ocean, and it was, for the Japanese, a perfect resupply point for their planned conquest of the southern Pacific. After the initial air attacks, 43,000 men of the Imperial Japanese 14th Army went ashore on December 22 at two points on the main Philippine island of Luzon. Gen. Douglas MacArthur, the supreme commander of all Allied forces in the Pacific, cabled Washington, D.C., that he was ready to repel this main invasion force with 130,000 troops of his own.

MacArthur’s claim was a fiction. In fact, his force consisted of tens of thousands of ill-trained and ill-equipped Filipino reservists and some 22,000 American troops who were, in effect, an amalgam of “spit-and-polish” garrison soldiers with no combat experience, artillerymen, a small group of planeless pilots and ground crews, and sailors whose ships happened to be in port when Japanese forces bombed Manila and its naval yards. At the landing beaches, the Japanese soldiers quickly overcame these defenders and pushed them back and back again until MacArthur was forced to execute a planned withdrawal to the jungle redoubt of the Bataan Peninsula. This thumblike piece of land on the west-central coast of Luzon, across the bay from Manila, measured some 30 miles (48 km) long and 15 miles (24 km) wide, with a range of mountains down the middle.

When fighting in Vietnam, American soldiers brainly

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MacArthur had planned badly for the withdrawal and had left tons of rice, ammunition, and other stores behind him. The Battle of Bataan began on January 6, 1942, and almost immediately the defenders were on half rations. Sick with malaria, dengue fever, and other diseases, living on monkey meat and a few grains of rice, and without air cover or naval support, the Allied force of Filipinos and Americans held out for 99 days. Though they ultimately surrendered, their stubborn defense of the peninsula was a significant propaganda victory for the United States and proved that the Imperial Japanese Army was not the invincible force that had rolled over so many other colonial possessions in the Pacific.

It was against this backdrop that the Bataan Death March—a name conferred upon it by the men who had endured it—began. The forced march took place over some two weeks after Gen. Edward (“Ned”) King, U.S. commander of all ground troops on Bataan, surrendered his thousands of sick, enervated, and starving troops on April 9, 1942. The siege of Bataan was the first major land battle for the Americans in World War II and one of the most-devastating military defeats in American history. The force on Bataan, numbering some 76,000 Filipino and American troops, is the largest army under American command ever to surrender.

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