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Vietnam, Why Did We Go?

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5 comments

  • RevolutionJim
    Besides the religious leverage and motive for the war one of many financial incentives used to get all players on the field was oil.

    The Vietnam Standard Oil War

    The Rockefeller controlled Pentagon used the excuse of the war to drop bombs in the water and listen to the echo in order to locate the underwater oilfields.

    Herbert Hoover, later to become President of the United States did a study that showed that one of the world's largest oil fields ran along the coast of the South China Sea right off French Indo-China, now known as Vietnam. This was before offshore drilling had been invented and before a man named George Herbert Walker Bush was to become the CEO of a world-wide offshore drilling company.

    In 1945, Vietnam was still a colony of the French. Laurence Rockefeller, it appears, had given the extensive store of weapons to Ho Chi Minh with the hope that Vietnam would drive out the French so that Standard Oil would be able to take over the as yet undeveloped offshore fields. But in 1954, Vietnamese General Giap finally defeated and drove out the French at Dien Bien Phu with weaponry provided by the U.S. Ho Chi Minh reneged on the deal since he could read too, and he was well aware of the Hoover resource report and knew there was a vast supply of oil off the Vietnamese coast.

    In the 1950's a method of undersea oil exploration was perfected which used small explosions deep in the water and then recorded the sound echoes bouncing off the various layers of rock below. The surveyor could then determine the exact location of the arched salt domes which hold the accumulated oil beneath them. But if this method were used off the Vietnam coast on property Standard didn't own or have the rights to, the Vietnamese, the Chinese, the Japanese and probably even the French would quickly run to the United Nations and complain that America was stealing the oil, and that would shut down the operation.


    In 1964, after Vietnam was divided into North and South, and the contrived Gulf of Tonkin incident, several U.S. aircraft carriers were stationed offshore of Vietnam and the 'war' was started. Every day jet planes would take off from the carriers, bomb locations in North and South Vietnam, and then using normal military procedure when returning would dump their unsafe or unused bombs in the ocean before landing back on the carriers. Safe ordnance drop zones were designated for this purpose away from the carriers.

    Even close-up observers would only notice many small explosions occurring daily in the waters of the South China Sea and thought it was only part of the 'war.' The U.S. Navy carriers had begun Operation Linebacker One, and Standard Oil had begun its ten year oil survey of the seabed off of Vietnam. And the Vietnamese, Chinese and everybody else around, including the Americans, were none the wiser. The oil survey hardly cost Standard Oil a nickel, the U.S. taxpayers paid for it.
    www.reformation.org/rockefeller-investigates-bush.html
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  • woodshermit
    Disrespectful comment removed. Play politics in the political forum.
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  • Smoky14
    It was a democrat conspiricy to get Carter elected, which leans to Hillery.[xx(]
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  • woodshermit
    Disrespectful? In your opinion. Remove the post rather than leave everyone who reads this thread with the idea that I have been "disrespectful" to anyone who served. Which I have not.

    He served, and your comment was disrespecful. I stated in the beginning that no ones service would be disrespected. End of argument.
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  • machine gun moran
    RevolutionJim brings up a point that I had all but forgotten, about the many reasons for our VN involvement. I recall that at one time, John Kennedy told Standard Oil that if they wanted their Corporate interests in SE Asia protected, they would have to hire their own mercenaries. He seemed to be somewhat of a reluctant warrior on that. It was real early in the Johnson Presidency that the IX Corps units in the Ryukyus, including mine, got orders to paint white stars on all of their vehicles - aerial recognition signals, meaning a theater was about to open up and units were about to start moving.

    Whatever the politics were, we can guess at them all day long and possibly never be right, and not necessarily ever be wrong, either. One fact remains, and that is, that within a relatively short time in the 25 years prior to 1965, we used only a fraction of our military capabilities to clear the entire Pacific of the Imperial Japanese juggernaught. In 1965, virtually every senior Officer and senior NCO had experience in Europe or the Pacific, and in Korea as well, as well as did a lot of those of lower rank. My own assistant driver had won a Silver Star on Guadalcanal with the 1st Marine Div. And then, even given ten years to do it, we somehow couldn't militarily handle one small country that was hard put to manufacture its own bicycles. It has become my personal feeling that Corporate America was running the war, because even when the North lost the war during Tet, they still didn't - couldn't - lose. It amounted to a ten-year transfer of wealth, from taxpayers to Corporate contractors, which very callously also involved the transfer of 85,000 - not 55,000 - of our bravest, into body bags. Don't put a quarter in me on this one boys, you'll get 20 bucks worth.
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