APUSH 29

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By 1968, the Vietnam War had A) made refugees of nearly 30 percent of the South Vietnamese people. B) infused billions of American dollars into South Vietnamese industries. C) reduced the South Vietnamese government's dependence on foreign aid. D) resulted in the death of nearly 60 percent of the population of South Vietnam.

A

The purpose of the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin Resolution was to A) authorize the president to take all necessary measures to repel any armed attacks against the forces of the United States and to prevent further aggression. B) empower the House of Representatives to pass all necessary measures to repel any armed attacks against the forces of the United States. C) permit the Senate to pass all necessary measures to repel any armed attacks against the forces of the United States. D) acknowledge the president's authority to issue a declaration of war without the consent of Congress in an emergency situation.

A

What did the initiation of Operation Rolling Thunder in February 1965 indicate? A) The war in Vietnam had become America's war. B) The war in Vietnam would soon end. C) The French would increase their role in the Vietnam conflict. D) No additional U.S. troops would be needed in Vietnam.

A

What happened during the Tet Offensive of January 1968? A) The Vietcong and North Vietnamese forces attacked key cities and every major American base in South Vietnam. B) Americans discovered that many of the troops fighting in South Vietnam were actually Chinese. C) Much of Saigon was destroyed in massive bombing raids. D) American bombs destroyed much of Hanoi and killed thousands of civilians.

A

What position did America's hawks take during the Vietnam War? A) They called for the Johnson administration to apply more force and win the war. B) They insisted that the United States should either reduce its presence in Southeast Asia or get out altogether. C) They pressed Johnson to abandon the ground war and bomb the Vietnamese into submission. D) They advocated attacks on North Vietnamese civilians to break their morale.

A

What was the flaw in American officials' assumption that the U.S. military's superior technology and power would defeat the Communist forces in South Vietnam? A) Their advanced weapons were ill suited to the guerrilla warfare practiced by those forces. B) The Communist forces actually had military technology equal to that of the U.S. military. C) American military commanders did not yet understand their own technology. D) The fighting took place in urban areas of South Vietnam and made the technology useless.

A

What was the ultimate impact of the Vietnam War in the United States? A) It contributed to internal disorder and the downfall of two presidents. B) It created a generation of conservative American youth who continued to exert a powerful influence on the nation's culture of the 1960s and 1970s. C) It left a strong antiwar legacy in the United States that led to the dismantling of the militaryindustrial complex. D) It depleted the power of the presidency and made Congress the most powerful branch of the federal government.

A

What were the Pentagon Papers, which became public in 1971? A) A secret government study critical of U.S. policy in Vietnam B) A collection of pro-war propaganda that had been funneled to the New York Times since 1964 C) Top-secret military planning documents that had been leaked to North Vietnam D) A government study that ultimately increased public support for the war in Vietnam

A

Which nation seized the Sinai Peninsula, Gaza Strip, Golan Heights, and West Bank after winning the Six-Day War in 1967? A) Israel B) Egypt C) Syria D) Jordan

A

Which of the following describes the thirteen-day Cuban missile crisis of 1962? A) It brought the world's two superpowers perilously close to nuclear war. B) It followed the accidental firing of a missile at the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo Bay. C) It severely weakened President Kennedy's international standing. D) It ended with Fidel Castro's promise to hold democratic elections in Cuba.

A

Which of the following was one of the practical arguments made by protesters against the Vietnam War? A) The war could not be won at a bearable cost. B) No country has the right to interfere in the government of another. C) The Vietnamese people had suffered unfairly. D) The logic driving the Cold War was fundamentally unsound.

A

Why did East Germany erect a wall between East and West Berlin in 1961? A) To stop the mass exodus of East Germans to West Berlin B) To stop large numbers of West Germans going to East Berlin C) To halt the flow of overpriced goods from West Berlin to East Berlin D) To protect East Berliners from U.S. troops stationed in the western part of the city

A

Why, despite $1 billion in aid and seven hundred U.S. military advisers committed by the Eisenhower administration, was the situation in South Vietnam still so unstable when President Kennedy took office? A) The South Vietnamese government and army were ineffective, and their corruption and repression alienated their own countrymen. B) The U.S. Congress was not behind the effort and refused to commit combat troops to the region to finish the job. C) The Green Berets in South Vietnam had not been trained in guerrilla warfare and could not respond to it. D) Leaders of the South Vietnamese army were Communist sympathizers who had no desire to oust the Vietcong.

A

By early 1968, Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara had come to what conclusion about the Vietnam War? A) Ground war had been the wrong approach, and the United States should drop a nuclear bomb on North Vietnam. B) Intensified bombings would never convince the North Vietnamese to give up. C) Prisoners of war and civilians should be treated more harshly in order to demoralize the enemy. D) President Johnson had been waging the Vietnam War in a cynical effort to garner the votes of conservatives.

B

From 1969 to 1972, Nixon and Kissinger pursued a three-pronged approach to Vietnam that included A) the payment of millions of dollars of aid to the North Vietnamese. B) the replacement of U.S. forces with intensified bombing. C) a decrease in the bombing of North Vietnam in order to foster goodwill for negotiations. D) an intensive propaganda campaign in South Vietnamese newspapers and television.

B

How did Americans respond to President Nixon's decision to extend the Vietnam War to Cambodia? A) They generally approved the decision. B) They protested, demonstrated, and rioted. C) They were generally apathetic. D) They were optimistic that this step might finally bring an end to the war.

B

How did President Nixon and his national security advisor, Henry Kissinger, assess the deterioration of Soviet-Chinese relations? A) They saw it as a dangerous step toward global warfare. B) They believed the United States could exploit the conflict between the nations. C) They believed it gave them cause to abandon the policy of containment. D) They viewed it as an impediment to the larger effort to achieve détente with the Soviet Union.

B

How did the Cuban missile crisis affect the leadership of Nikita Khrushchev? A) It left him more powerful than ever in the Soviet Union. B) It contributed to his fall from power two years later. C) It encouraged him to hold open elections to determine his successor. D) It allowed him to pass a number of reform measures.

B

How did the Soviet Union respond to increased U.S. production of intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) and the American nuclear buildup in Europe? A) It backed down, pledging to limit its ICBM program. B) It stepped up its own ICBM program. C) It declared war on the United States. D) It relinquished control of its Eastern European satellite countries.

B

Of the more than 7,500 American women who served in the Vietnam War, most served as A) foot soldiers. B) nurses. C) laborers. D) army cooks.

B

The National Liberation Front in Vietnam was composed of A) North Vietnamese soldiers under the direction of Hanoi. B) South Vietnamese under the direction of the North Vietnamese army. C) Chinese Communists operating covertly in the villages of South Vietnam. D) propagandists operating in South Vietnam.

B

What did the War Powers Act of 1973 stipulate? A) The executive branch no longer had any influence over whether the United States went to war. B) The president had to secure congressional approval for any substantial, long-term deployment of troops abroad. C) The new law required a one-week cooling-off period before the president could send U.S. troops into harm's way. D) The president was required to deploy troops from all branches of the military equally.

B

What happened shortly after peace negotiations for the war in Southeast Asia began in Paris in May 1968? A) Malcolm X was assassinated. B) Senator Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated. C) Violence and protest began to wane in the United States. D) European antiwar protests came to an end.

B

What led Congress to pass the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution in 1964? A) Reliable information that North Vietnamese gunboats had fired on two U.S. destroyers in the Gulf of Tonkin B) Unconfirmed information that North Vietnamese gunboats had fired on two U.S. destroyers in the Gulf of Tonkin C) The destruction of two U.S. ships by the Chinese in the Gulf of Tonkin D) A fabricated story about an attack on U.S. naval vessels by the North Vietnamese in the Gulf of Tonkin

B

What occurred in 1961 that heightened fears and provided a rationalization for President John F. Kennedy's military buildup? A) The People's Republic of China invaded the small country of Vietnam. B) Nikita Khrushchev publicly encouraged wars of national liberation in the third world. C) The Soviet Union's military and nuclear capacities surpassed those of the United States. D) The People's Republic of China obtained nuclear weapons from the Soviet Union and began installing them in Southeast Asia.

B

What was the final outcome of the Vietnam War in Vietnam itself? A) South Vietnam used a combination of American bombs and negotiation to persuade North Vietnam to retreat. B) North Vietnam occupied Saigon, and the country unified. C) Cambodian refugees joined the South Vietnamese army and helped to achieve a North Vietnamese presence in South Vietnam. D) North Vietnamese troops flooded into South Vietnam and slaughtered millions of civilians.

B

Which of the following describes the Bay of Pigs invasion? A) The mission was incredibly successful. B) The invasion was an unmitigated disaster. C) It canceled when the United Nations intervened. D) It was supported by most Latin American nations.

B

Which statement describes most veterans who returned home to the United States after the Vietnam War? A) They were satisfied with and proud of the job they had done in Southeast Asia and happy to return home. B) They felt betrayed by the government for not allowing them to win the war, and by their countrymen for their lack of support for the war. C) They became some of the primary organizers of antiwar protests and riots in major cities and on many college campuses. D) They became politically active in support of laws that would control U.S. involvement in foreign conflicts.

B

Who organized the first major protest in the United States against the Vietnam War in April 1965? A) The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People B) Students for a Democratic Society C) The National Organization for Women D) The Communist party

B

Who won the Democratic nomination for president in 1968? A) George Wallace B) Hubert Humphrey C) Eugene McCarthy D) Spiro Agnew

B

Why did American military officials begin calculating their progress in body counts and kill ratios in Vietnam in 1965? A) A delegation of American soldiers had asked for concrete measures that they could readily understand. B) It was impossible to measure military success based on territory seized. C) They did not want to reveal the unprecedented number of soldiers they were losing. D) It was the only way they could distinguish between military and civilian deaths.

B

During the Vietnam War, the FBI A) trained peace protesters in nonviolent forms of civil disobedience. B) warned antiwar advocates about possible police raids. C) disrupted antiwar work and spread false information about peace activists. D) assassinated two major leaders of the peace movement and blamed their murders on the Communist party.

C

The 1968 presidential candidacy of George C. Wallace attracted A) both civil rights and antiwar activists. B) New Englanders in particular. C) those who were outraged by assaults on traditional values by students and others. D) black southerners who believed that the War on Poverty had stigmatized them.

C

The Peace Corps was launched by the Kennedy administration in 1961 to A) quell domestic violence in America's major cities. B) teach third world countries' leaders about democracy. C) allow young Americans to work directly with the people in third world countries. D) establish a job program for the growing number of unemployed in the United States.

C

What 1982 event finally gave Vietnam veterans a measure of public respect for their service? A) More than one million of them marched in a parade in Washington, D.C. B) Congress voted to grant them lifetime mental health benefits. C) The Vietnam Veterans Memorial was unveiled in Washington, D.C. D) Congress officially acknowledged its role in their defeat.

C

What made the Tet Offensive an important turning point for President Johnson? A) It revealed that he had ignored intelligence that warned the attack was imminent. B) It revealed his inexperience with military matters and lost him support in the Pentagon. C) It underscored the credibility gap between official statements and the war's actual progress. D) It forced the president to cancel a planned visit to South Vietnam to discuss a cease-fire.

C

What was the impact of the American movement to stop the Vietnam War? A) It got most American adults involved in politics for the first time. B) It created domestic problems that distracted the Johnson administration and prolonged the war. C) It brought the war to the center of media attention and severely limited the Johnson administration's options. D) It upset the majority of Americans and spurred massive protests to show widespread support for Cold War objectives.

C

Which of the following statements describes President Kennedy's flexible-response strategy? A) It allowed him to choose between sending the National Guard and sending the regular army into situations requiring military force. B) It gave Congress the option to choose between raising and lowering defense spending. C) It met his demand for a wider choice than humiliation or all-out nuclear action. D) It pertained to the number of missiles the United States would launch in response to a Soviet attack.

C

Who constituted about 80 percent of American troops in Vietnam? A) Middle-class Americans B) Upper-class Americans C) Poor and working-class Americans D) African Americans

C

Why did President Lyndon B. Johnson's Latin American policy generate a new surge of antiAmericanism in that region in 1965? A) Higher tariffs made it difficult for Latin American nations to profit from the goods they exported to the United States. B) The United States seemed to be relinquishing its oversight in the region. C) The United States suppressed an uprising that sought to oust the military dictator of the Dominican Republic. D) The United States turned away thousands of desperate Haitian refugees seeking asylum in Florida that year.

C

Why did the U.S. military adjust its personnel assignments in Vietnam in 1966? A) A high number of North Vietnamese soldiers were being killed in battle. B) There was a disproportionately high death rate among white soldiers who were serving in Vietnam. C) There was a disproportionately high death rate among black soldiers who were serving in Vietnam. D) More officers than enlisted men were being killed in combat in Vietnam

C

Why were the Helsinki accords of 1975 controversial? A) Canada refused to sign the agreement. B) The Soviet Union refused to sign the agreement. C) The accords acknowledged Soviet domination over Eastern Europe. D) The accords did not formally recognize post-World War II boundaries in Europe.

C

How did candidates Hubert Humphrey and Richard Nixon differ on the central issue of the war in Vietnam in 1968? A) Humphrey supported Johnson's policies, and Nixon pledged to use nuclear weapons. B) Humphrey promised to end the war immediately, and Nixon wanted to achieve an honorable end to the war. C) Nixon promised to end the war with honor, and Humphrey argued for further escalation. D) Nixon and Humphrey differed little on the central issue of Vietnam.

D

How did the theory that a Communist victory in South Vietnam would cause all of Southeast Asia to fall to communism pan out? A) Thailand, Burma, Malaysia, and the rest of Southeast Asia joined the Communist camp. B) The spread of communism never materialized because the Army of the Republic of Vietnam eventually secured a victory over North Vietnam. C) China and Vietnam formed a Communist coalition to take over the rest of Southeast Asia. D) The theory proved to be unsound, although Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia all fell within the Communist camp.

D

In 1961, a Soviet astronaut became the first human to A) land on the moon. B) enter outer space. C) orbit the moon. D) orbit the earth.

D

Lieutenant William Calley dealt a severe blow to the Nixon administration's Vietnam policy by A) publicly criticizing the war in Vietnam and calling for peace negotiations. B) melting his medals on national television to protest the war. C) failing to achieve a military victory in the village of My Lai. D) massacring more than 400 Vietnamese civilians in the hamlet of My Lai.

D

The Arab nations launched an oil embargo against the United States in 1973 because the Nixon administration A) supported the shah of Iran. B) overthrew Salvador Allende. C) turned over control of Vietnam to the Vietnamese. D) supported Israel following the Yom Kippur War.

D

The U.S. policy of détente with the Soviet Union entailed the United States A) abandoning its policy of containment. B) ceding to Soviet demands for control of Eastern Europe. C) rejecting the terms of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. D) beginning new discussions with the Soviet Union on arms control and trade.

D

What did the "Vietnamization" of the Vietnam War in 1968 demonstrate about the United States? A) It had abandoned its goal of a democratic South Vietnam. B) It had decided not to oppose the new Communist leader in North Vietnam. C) It had decided to allow North and South Vietnam to begin peace talks without a U.S. representative at the conference. D) It now hoped to achieve its objective of a non-Communist South Vietnam by relying more heavily on the South Vietnamese.

D

What was the objective of the Bay of Pigs invasion in 1961? A) To remove Communist insurgents from southern Florida B) To eradicate a Communist training camp in the Dominican Republic C) To shut down major ports in unstable Latin American dictatorships D) To overthrow Cuban nationalist Fidel Castro's socialist government

D


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