scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

The Essential Domino: American Politics and Vietnam

Leslie H. Gelb
- 01 Apr 1972 - 
- Vol. 50, Iss: 3, pp 459
TLDR
In the case of the war in Vietnam, it was clear that stalemate was the most likely outcome and neither the Americans nor the Vietnamese communists had good odds for a traditional military victory in Vietnam.
Abstract
AS Henry Kissinger has written, public support is "the acid u\ test of a foreign policy." For a President to be successful A? ^in maintaining his nation's security he needs to believe, and others need to believe, that he has solid support at home. It was President Johnson's judgment that if the United States permitted the fall of Vietnam to communism, American politics would turn ugly and inward and the world would be a less safe place in which to live. Later, President Nixon would declare : "The right way out of Vietnam is crucial to our changing role in the world, and the peace in the world." In order to gain support for these judg ments and the objectives in Vietnam which flowed from them, our Presidents have had to weave together the steel-of-war strategy with the strands of domestic politics. Neither the Americans nor the Vietnamese communists had good odds for a traditional military victory in Vietnam. Given the mutual will to continue the war and self-imposed American restraint in the use of force, stalemate was the most likely out come.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The “Essential Domino” of Military Operations: American Public Opinion and the Use of Force

TL;DR: The authors identify the most prominent schools of thought on public opinion and the use of force, and the central factors associated with each school, and present a review to generate policy-relevant guidance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Public Attitudes toward Key Foreign Policy Events

TL;DR: The authors examined the attitudes of Americans toward contemporary foreign affairs and linked these opinions to the literature and theory regarding public opinion and foreign policy that have developed over the last several decades, and measures were operationalized to describe Americans with differing opinions about the means of achieving foreign policy goals.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Missile Crisis: His Finest Hour Now

TL;DR: The model and its inherent assumptions on the meaning of the Cuban Missile Crisis can be challenged as discussed by the authors, as well as its assumption that the domestic sector is not especially critical in crisis management, and that crisis management is the practical ability to reconcile force with negotiation.