MAPS OF HISTORY · ON THIS DAY · January 30 · 1968
ON THIS DAY · 30 JANUARY 1968
The Tet Offensive

30 Jan 1968 — The NLF attacks 100 cities at once — the Saigon embassy compound, and Hue, held for 26 brutal days. A military defeat for Hanoi; on American television, the end of “light at the end of the tunnel.”
THE MOMENT IN CONTEXT
Start at Dien Bien Phu, 1954 — the marker in the far northwest — where Giap’s army, hauling dismantled artillery up jungle mountains by hand, destroys a French fortress and with it French Indochina. Geneva splits Vietnam at the 17th parallel “pending elections” that Saigon and Washington, certain Ho Chi Minh would win them, never allow. The domino theory takes over from there: if Vietnam falls, runs the logic Eisenhower states and Kennedy and Johnson inherit, all Southeast Asia follows. So American commitment ratchets — advisers under Kennedy, then after the murky Tonkin Gulf incident of August 1964, an open-ended air war (the arrow from the sea) and half a million troops by 1968, fighting an enemy supplied down the Ho Chi Minh Trail through Laos and Cambodia — the long arrow your map shows threading the border.
From Chapter 7 — Vietnam of The Cold War, 1945–1991 (AUG 1968).
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TEACH THIS IN 5 MINUTES
- Why it happened — The domino logic and its critics. The theory treated nationalism as a transmission belt for Moscow and Beijing, when in Vietnam communism was the nationalist movement — Ho had led…
- The turn — Tet, 30 January 1968 — the hinge of perception. An offensive that fails on every military metric succeeds at the only level that ends wars fought by consent: it breaks the story the American…
- What it changed — The costs, counted honestly. Vietnamese military and civilian dead: commonly estimated 1.5–3.6 million across both zones, plus hundreds of thousands in Laos and Cambodia before…
Then ask the room: Could the United States have won in Vietnam — and what would “winning” have had to mean? The argued answer is on the chapter page →
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