El Pip: "The Jackrabbit" is a TTL mixture of "The Manchurian Candidate" and "JFK". Since neither of those movies will get made TTL (no Korean War and no JFK Assassination), I came up with "The Jackrabbit" - a title that literally just popped into my head one day - to fill the void of political thrillers.
George W. Romney's infamous TTL mind control comment was inspired by his infamous OTL brainwashing comment. When he was seeking the GOP Presidential nomination in 1968, Romney claimed he had been brainwashed by the military into supporting the Vietnam War. It generated a public backlash from which his campaign never recovered.
It is pretty cool actually.
Unfortunately for the Philippines, they are still in for a bad time.
One of the major plot lines for this AAR is an eventual military conflict between China and the West. I have been building up towards that for years, and the Luzon Strait Incident takes us one step closer towards that conflict.
While you have those within China who wish to avoid going to war with the West, the Chinese government feels that war is necessary. In their view, they have goals to achieve which can only be done by taking military action.
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The Summer of Decision: Part One
(During the summer of 1965, “I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie Honey Bunch)” by the Four Tops spent two non-consecutive weeks at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 – sandwiching “Mr. Tambourine Man” by the Byrds)
In the summer of 1965:
The beginning of that summer found the Americans planning their next move in Vietnam. Throughout the spring, American soldiers and their allies had been fighting North Vietnamese soldiers and their allies in a series of bloody battles. The Americans had stopped their invasion of South Vietnam and had pushed them back to Saravane and Da Nang. The momentum of war, which had been swinging back and forth between the two sides, appeared to be swinging back towards the Americans, but at a price. Both sides had endured heavy casualties, with the Americans losing over 100 men per week. This inflamed the anti-war movement back home, which fervently believed that no victory was worth the cost in lives. Many Americans though were willing to accept the losses in the belief that the United States would ultimately triumph in the Vietnam War; therefore, they just had to be patient and let the war take its’ course. Studying the map, General Maxwell Taylor, the commander of US forces in Vietnam, had to decide which way that course would go. Should he:
After weighing the pros and cons both options offered him, Taylor made his decision on June 5th. He ordered General Alexander Haig to attack Saravane, aided by Boeing B-52 Stratofortress bombings of enemy positions. The enemy, which included Soviet and Chinese forces, put up a tough resistance, making the American and the South Vietnamese forces fight for every square yard. The Battle of Saravane lasted nearly two weeks; it wasn’t until June 17th that the South Vietnamese flag was securely raised over Saravane. With the loss of their main base of operations, the shattered Viet Cong withdrew to their last base at Phu Tho in North Vietnam. The Viet Cong, which once frustrated the Americans by launching surprise attacks across South Vietnam at will, was now just a shell of its’ former self. The guerrillas had been decimated as a fighting force by both the loss of Saravane and their major defeat earlier in the year in the Mekong Delta. According to intelligence, in the immediate wake of the Battle of Saravane, there were 4 enemy divisions in Hue and at least 10 in Da Nang. Having captured Saravane, Taylor turned his attention north to Hue.
(Captured members of the Viet Cong following the Battle of Saravane)
On June 20th, while Taylor allowed his men to get much-needed rest in preparation for an assault on Hue, 35,000 anti-war protesters arrived outside the Pentagon. Built in the early 1940s at a cost of $83 million, the massive five-sided office building is the headquarters of the Department of Defense. As the office of both the Secretary of Defense and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Pentagon was a natural place in which to protest the Vietnam War. In fact, more people showed up for what was dubbed “The March on the Pentagon” than showed up for the Washington, D.C. protest two months earlier. The protestors wanted to demonstrate to those in power that their numbers were getting bigger. Facing them were 2,500 armed soldiers, assigned the task of defending the building. From his office window, Secretary of Defense Paul Nitze saw protestors waving signs and shouting anti-war slogans. He was on the phone with the President at his desk, describing the peaceful protest when one of his secretaries suddenly screamed in horror. When a startled Nitze asked what had happened, his horrified secretary pointed at the window. The Defense Secretary saw what she was pointing at and grew visibly shocked. Norman Morrison, a 31-year-old Quaker from Baltimore, Maryland, devoutly believed that the Vietnam War was immoral and attended the March on the Pentagon with his baby daughter Emily. However, he wasn’t content with expressing his opposition to the war simply with words and signs. Standing within clear view of Nitze’s office, Morrison handed Emily off to a nearby person. He then doused himself in gasoline and set himself on fire. Watching Morrison burn himself to death, Nitze couldn’t believe what he was seeing. “We had so many people opposing the war at the time,” he later recalled, “And here we had these gentlemen who were more than willing to sacrifice themselves in the name of opposing the war.”
In addition to Morrison, Nitze was also referring to Roger Allen LaPorte, a 21-year-old member of the social justice Catholic Worker Movement. Sharing Morrison’s opposition to the Vietnam War on religious grounds, LaPorte was inspired by him to make the ultimate sacrifice for their cause. Four days after the March on the Pentagon, the former seminarian from Geneva, New York doused himself in gasoline in front of the south gates of the White House and set himself on fire. LaPorte died the next day at George Washington University Hospital from severe burns covering 95% of his body, calmly telling people “I’m a Catholic Worker. I’m against war, all wars. I did this as a religious action against all the hatred of the world.”
LaPorte’s death, coming on the heels of Morrison’s death, stunned President Malcolm Forbes. If people were willing to engage in acts of self-immolation to protest the war, how much further were they willing to go?
(Norman Morrison)
On the same day LaPorte set himself on fire, the Americans finally launched their assault on Hue. An ancient city, Hue was the former imperial capital of Vietnam and as such had many old stone buildings. In March 1964, the North Vietnamese captured Hue and had been occupying the city ever since. For the Americans, the Second Battle of Hue was a complicated military operation because it required them to engage in house-to-house fighting in an urban environment. It wasn’t until July 2nd that the enemy had been fully cleared from Hue and the stately city was declared secure. Hue had suffered extensive damages as the two sides intensely fought over it building-by-building. With the liberation of Hue, 6 enemy divisions became trapped in Da Nang. Moving quickly, Taylor ordered General Harold K. Johnson to open up the battle for Da Nang on July 3rd. Facing attacks from multiple directions, the enemy was overwhelmed and destroyed in short order. Da Nang was retaken on July 6th.
(American soldiers taking cover behind a brick wall during the Second Battle of Hue)
With the fall of Da Nang, there wasn’t a single enemy soldier anywhere in South Vietnam. In Hanoi, panic amongst government and military officials set in. Having been driven completely out of South Vietnam, the North Vietnamese believed that the tables were about to turn, and their country was the one that was about to be invaded. On July 11th, North Vietnamese President Ho Chi Minh sent an emergency appeal to the Soviet Union and the Republic of China for additional help. Moscow and Nanjing, sharing Hanoi’s belief that the United States was about to invade North Vietnam, agreed to increase their support of their ally. Reinforcements and military supplies from the two countries were dispatched to North Vietnam at once. The new plan was to make North Vietnam so strong and make an invasion so costly to the Americans that they would be compelled to abandon it. By July 14th, there were 270,000 American soldiers in South Vietnam; the bulk of them were stationed in Hue. This heavy placement of troops near the Demilitarized Zone separating the two Vietnams meant only one thing to the enemy: an invasion was imminent.
(Chinese soldiers during the 1960s, their helmets a relic of the Sino-German military cooperation back in the 1930s)
Soldiers defending Quang Binh braced themselves for the Americans to cross the DMZ and attack them. They waited…and waited…and waited...for an attack that didn’t come. Instead of launching their offensive as expected, the Americans in Hue stayed put, getting much-needed rest after constant tough fighting and awaiting their orders. It was unclear to them at that point what exactly those orders would be. The recapture of Da Nang had triggered a strong debate within the Forbes Administration over what to do next. The Joint Chiefs of Staff urged the President to order a full-scale invasion of North Vietnam. With momentum clearly on America’s side, they contended that this was the perfect time to take the war to the North and capture Hanoi. They could then destroy Communism in Indochina once and for all, unifying the two Vietnams into one aligned with the US. Nitze and Secretary of State Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. opposed this all-in approach. They pointedly reminded the Chiefs that an invasion of North Vietnam was never part of the plan. The plan had always been for the US to defeat the Viet Cong and secure South Vietnam. Having achieved both of those aims, they countered-argued that this was the time to open peace negotiations with North Vietnam and end the war. Nitze furthered warned that an invasion of North Vietnam was likely to elicit a stronger response from China (he had no idea at the time that Nanjing was already sending additional forces to their southern neighbor). “The Chinese are not going to tolerate having a lot of our men near their border.”
He envisioned a worse-case scenario in which the Chinese used an US invasion of North Vietnam as justification to flood Indochina with their troops. “The Chinese have a lot more men available and can get them onto the battlefield a lot quicker than we can.”
He could just imagine wave after wave of Chinese soldiers fighting and overwhelming the American defenders. It was better, he thought, to seek peace now than to push the envelope too far and turn the verge of victory into near-certain defeat.
(Paul Nitze, Secretary of Defense since January 1961)
“But have we really achieved our stated objectives in Vietnam?”
That question was posed by Vice President Everett Dirksen. Dirksen, a World War One veteran who had participated in the September 1918 Battle of Saint-Mihiel (the first large offensive conducted primarily by the American Expeditionary Forces), disagreed with Lodge and Nitze’s assertion that the war at this point had been won. He pointed out that the Viet Cong, while down, wasn’t out. They still had a base of operations in Phu Tho. If the United States sought peace now, it would leave the Viet Cong remaining in the field to rebuild itself to the point that it could once again pose a threat to South Vietnam. “If we do not destroy them before we seek peace, what will have been the point of the war in the first place?”
Destroying the Viet Cong of course would mean invading North Vietnam, since Phu Tho was located above the DMZ. The Joint Chiefs quickly jumped on this fact to support their case. During the course of the invasion versus peace debate, Forbes had said very little. He preferred to let his subordinates hash out their arguments without much input from him. When Chairman of the Joint Chiefs David L. McDonald finally asked the President what he thought, he didn’t really have much of an answer. Forbes recognized that the decision facing him of whether to order an invasion of North Vietnam or seek a peace deal with the enemy would most likely be the most important one of his Presidency. He felt that a decision of this magnitude shouldn’t be made in a rushed manner after a heated debate. Instead, Forbes chose to leave the White House on Friday, July 23rd to spend the weekend at Camp Ewing. Nestled in the wooded hills of Catoctin Mountain Park in Maryland, Camp Ewing provided the President a quiet seclusion in which to make his momentous decision about war and peace in Vietnam.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
What will Forbes decide to do? Find out...after we go to Europe for his previously mentioned summit with Khrushchev.
George W. Romney's infamous TTL mind control comment was inspired by his infamous OTL brainwashing comment. When he was seeking the GOP Presidential nomination in 1968, Romney claimed he had been brainwashed by the military into supporting the Vietnam War. It generated a public backlash from which his campaign never recovered.
It is pretty cool actually.
Unfortunately for the Philippines, they are still in for a bad time.
One of the major plot lines for this AAR is an eventual military conflict between China and the West. I have been building up towards that for years, and the Luzon Strait Incident takes us one step closer towards that conflict.
While you have those within China who wish to avoid going to war with the West, the Chinese government feels that war is necessary. In their view, they have goals to achieve which can only be done by taking military action.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Summer of Decision: Part One
In the summer of 1965:
- Following the end of its’ fifth season, “The Andy Griffith Show” (CBS) announced that star Don Knotts would not be returning to the show next season. Knotts, who played the well-meaning but inept Deputy Barney Fife, had decided to leave the show to pursue a film career. Jerry Van Dyke, whose brother Dick had his own CBS sitcom, would join the cast as the new banjo-playing Deputy of Mayberry, North Carolina at the beginning of the sixth season (which would also see the show go from black-and-white to color).
- While conducting a docking test with an unmanned spacecraft in Earth’s orbit, Gemini 8 (Neil Armstrong and David Scott) experienced NASA’s first in-space emergency when it began spinning rapidly due to a thruster malfunction. It took all of Armstrong’s skill as a pilot to stop the spinning and safely abort the flight.
- In the midst of the British Invasion, the Rolling Stones scored their first #1 hit in the United States with “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction”, which spent four consecutive weeks at the top of the Billboard Hot 100.
- Five days after releasing his latest single “Like a Rolling Stone”, Bob Dylan performed at the Newport Folk Festival in Rhode Island. During his performance, Dylan outraged folk purists by playing an electric guitar instead of the traditional acoustic guitar.
- Jefferson Airplane made its’ debut at the Matrix nightclub in San Francisco, California.
- After releasing their fifth studio album “Help!”, the Beatles opened their second North American tour with a first-of-its-kind performance at Shea Stadium in New York City. The roar of 55,600 screaming fans was so loud and deafening that no one, even the band members, could actually hear what they were playing.

The beginning of that summer found the Americans planning their next move in Vietnam. Throughout the spring, American soldiers and their allies had been fighting North Vietnamese soldiers and their allies in a series of bloody battles. The Americans had stopped their invasion of South Vietnam and had pushed them back to Saravane and Da Nang. The momentum of war, which had been swinging back and forth between the two sides, appeared to be swinging back towards the Americans, but at a price. Both sides had endured heavy casualties, with the Americans losing over 100 men per week. This inflamed the anti-war movement back home, which fervently believed that no victory was worth the cost in lives. Many Americans though were willing to accept the losses in the belief that the United States would ultimately triumph in the Vietnam War; therefore, they just had to be patient and let the war take its’ course. Studying the map, General Maxwell Taylor, the commander of US forces in Vietnam, had to decide which way that course would go. Should he:
- Go after Saravane first?
- Go after Da Nang first?

After weighing the pros and cons both options offered him, Taylor made his decision on June 5th. He ordered General Alexander Haig to attack Saravane, aided by Boeing B-52 Stratofortress bombings of enemy positions. The enemy, which included Soviet and Chinese forces, put up a tough resistance, making the American and the South Vietnamese forces fight for every square yard. The Battle of Saravane lasted nearly two weeks; it wasn’t until June 17th that the South Vietnamese flag was securely raised over Saravane. With the loss of their main base of operations, the shattered Viet Cong withdrew to their last base at Phu Tho in North Vietnam. The Viet Cong, which once frustrated the Americans by launching surprise attacks across South Vietnam at will, was now just a shell of its’ former self. The guerrillas had been decimated as a fighting force by both the loss of Saravane and their major defeat earlier in the year in the Mekong Delta. According to intelligence, in the immediate wake of the Battle of Saravane, there were 4 enemy divisions in Hue and at least 10 in Da Nang. Having captured Saravane, Taylor turned his attention north to Hue.

(Captured members of the Viet Cong following the Battle of Saravane)
On June 20th, while Taylor allowed his men to get much-needed rest in preparation for an assault on Hue, 35,000 anti-war protesters arrived outside the Pentagon. Built in the early 1940s at a cost of $83 million, the massive five-sided office building is the headquarters of the Department of Defense. As the office of both the Secretary of Defense and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Pentagon was a natural place in which to protest the Vietnam War. In fact, more people showed up for what was dubbed “The March on the Pentagon” than showed up for the Washington, D.C. protest two months earlier. The protestors wanted to demonstrate to those in power that their numbers were getting bigger. Facing them were 2,500 armed soldiers, assigned the task of defending the building. From his office window, Secretary of Defense Paul Nitze saw protestors waving signs and shouting anti-war slogans. He was on the phone with the President at his desk, describing the peaceful protest when one of his secretaries suddenly screamed in horror. When a startled Nitze asked what had happened, his horrified secretary pointed at the window. The Defense Secretary saw what she was pointing at and grew visibly shocked. Norman Morrison, a 31-year-old Quaker from Baltimore, Maryland, devoutly believed that the Vietnam War was immoral and attended the March on the Pentagon with his baby daughter Emily. However, he wasn’t content with expressing his opposition to the war simply with words and signs. Standing within clear view of Nitze’s office, Morrison handed Emily off to a nearby person. He then doused himself in gasoline and set himself on fire. Watching Morrison burn himself to death, Nitze couldn’t believe what he was seeing. “We had so many people opposing the war at the time,” he later recalled, “And here we had these gentlemen who were more than willing to sacrifice themselves in the name of opposing the war.”
In addition to Morrison, Nitze was also referring to Roger Allen LaPorte, a 21-year-old member of the social justice Catholic Worker Movement. Sharing Morrison’s opposition to the Vietnam War on religious grounds, LaPorte was inspired by him to make the ultimate sacrifice for their cause. Four days after the March on the Pentagon, the former seminarian from Geneva, New York doused himself in gasoline in front of the south gates of the White House and set himself on fire. LaPorte died the next day at George Washington University Hospital from severe burns covering 95% of his body, calmly telling people “I’m a Catholic Worker. I’m against war, all wars. I did this as a religious action against all the hatred of the world.”
LaPorte’s death, coming on the heels of Morrison’s death, stunned President Malcolm Forbes. If people were willing to engage in acts of self-immolation to protest the war, how much further were they willing to go?

(Norman Morrison)
On the same day LaPorte set himself on fire, the Americans finally launched their assault on Hue. An ancient city, Hue was the former imperial capital of Vietnam and as such had many old stone buildings. In March 1964, the North Vietnamese captured Hue and had been occupying the city ever since. For the Americans, the Second Battle of Hue was a complicated military operation because it required them to engage in house-to-house fighting in an urban environment. It wasn’t until July 2nd that the enemy had been fully cleared from Hue and the stately city was declared secure. Hue had suffered extensive damages as the two sides intensely fought over it building-by-building. With the liberation of Hue, 6 enemy divisions became trapped in Da Nang. Moving quickly, Taylor ordered General Harold K. Johnson to open up the battle for Da Nang on July 3rd. Facing attacks from multiple directions, the enemy was overwhelmed and destroyed in short order. Da Nang was retaken on July 6th.

(American soldiers taking cover behind a brick wall during the Second Battle of Hue)
With the fall of Da Nang, there wasn’t a single enemy soldier anywhere in South Vietnam. In Hanoi, panic amongst government and military officials set in. Having been driven completely out of South Vietnam, the North Vietnamese believed that the tables were about to turn, and their country was the one that was about to be invaded. On July 11th, North Vietnamese President Ho Chi Minh sent an emergency appeal to the Soviet Union and the Republic of China for additional help. Moscow and Nanjing, sharing Hanoi’s belief that the United States was about to invade North Vietnam, agreed to increase their support of their ally. Reinforcements and military supplies from the two countries were dispatched to North Vietnam at once. The new plan was to make North Vietnam so strong and make an invasion so costly to the Americans that they would be compelled to abandon it. By July 14th, there were 270,000 American soldiers in South Vietnam; the bulk of them were stationed in Hue. This heavy placement of troops near the Demilitarized Zone separating the two Vietnams meant only one thing to the enemy: an invasion was imminent.

(Chinese soldiers during the 1960s, their helmets a relic of the Sino-German military cooperation back in the 1930s)
Soldiers defending Quang Binh braced themselves for the Americans to cross the DMZ and attack them. They waited…and waited…and waited...for an attack that didn’t come. Instead of launching their offensive as expected, the Americans in Hue stayed put, getting much-needed rest after constant tough fighting and awaiting their orders. It was unclear to them at that point what exactly those orders would be. The recapture of Da Nang had triggered a strong debate within the Forbes Administration over what to do next. The Joint Chiefs of Staff urged the President to order a full-scale invasion of North Vietnam. With momentum clearly on America’s side, they contended that this was the perfect time to take the war to the North and capture Hanoi. They could then destroy Communism in Indochina once and for all, unifying the two Vietnams into one aligned with the US. Nitze and Secretary of State Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. opposed this all-in approach. They pointedly reminded the Chiefs that an invasion of North Vietnam was never part of the plan. The plan had always been for the US to defeat the Viet Cong and secure South Vietnam. Having achieved both of those aims, they countered-argued that this was the time to open peace negotiations with North Vietnam and end the war. Nitze furthered warned that an invasion of North Vietnam was likely to elicit a stronger response from China (he had no idea at the time that Nanjing was already sending additional forces to their southern neighbor). “The Chinese are not going to tolerate having a lot of our men near their border.”
He envisioned a worse-case scenario in which the Chinese used an US invasion of North Vietnam as justification to flood Indochina with their troops. “The Chinese have a lot more men available and can get them onto the battlefield a lot quicker than we can.”
He could just imagine wave after wave of Chinese soldiers fighting and overwhelming the American defenders. It was better, he thought, to seek peace now than to push the envelope too far and turn the verge of victory into near-certain defeat.

(Paul Nitze, Secretary of Defense since January 1961)
“But have we really achieved our stated objectives in Vietnam?”
That question was posed by Vice President Everett Dirksen. Dirksen, a World War One veteran who had participated in the September 1918 Battle of Saint-Mihiel (the first large offensive conducted primarily by the American Expeditionary Forces), disagreed with Lodge and Nitze’s assertion that the war at this point had been won. He pointed out that the Viet Cong, while down, wasn’t out. They still had a base of operations in Phu Tho. If the United States sought peace now, it would leave the Viet Cong remaining in the field to rebuild itself to the point that it could once again pose a threat to South Vietnam. “If we do not destroy them before we seek peace, what will have been the point of the war in the first place?”
Destroying the Viet Cong of course would mean invading North Vietnam, since Phu Tho was located above the DMZ. The Joint Chiefs quickly jumped on this fact to support their case. During the course of the invasion versus peace debate, Forbes had said very little. He preferred to let his subordinates hash out their arguments without much input from him. When Chairman of the Joint Chiefs David L. McDonald finally asked the President what he thought, he didn’t really have much of an answer. Forbes recognized that the decision facing him of whether to order an invasion of North Vietnam or seek a peace deal with the enemy would most likely be the most important one of his Presidency. He felt that a decision of this magnitude shouldn’t be made in a rushed manner after a heated debate. Instead, Forbes chose to leave the White House on Friday, July 23rd to spend the weekend at Camp Ewing. Nestled in the wooded hills of Catoctin Mountain Park in Maryland, Camp Ewing provided the President a quiet seclusion in which to make his momentous decision about war and peace in Vietnam.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
What will Forbes decide to do? Find out...after we go to Europe for his previously mentioned summit with Khrushchev.
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