Geneva
US
North V South
Impact
Cambodia/
laos
100

In what year was the Geneva Conference held? 

1954

100

Which U.S. President authorised the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution and what year? 

Lyndon B Johnson

1964

100

What do these acronyms stand for? 

ARVN
NVA
NLF

ARVN - Army of the Republic of Vietnam (South)

NVA - North Vietnamese Army (North army)

NLF - National Liberation Front (insurgents - Viet Cong) 

100
Name two cities that were attacked during the TET offensive

Saigon 

Hue

100

Which communist group, led by Pol Pot, took power in Cambodia in 1975?

The Khmer Rouge.

200

Which line of latitude divided Vietnam into North and South?

The 17th Parallel.

200

What was the main purpose of “Operation Rolling Thunder”?

A sustained bombing campaign to weaken North Vietnam’s war effort and morale.

200

Name the leaders of the North and South

North - Ho Chi Minh

South - Ngo Dinh Diem 

200

Outline the My Lai Massacre

My Lai Massacre - 1968, where U.S. troops killed over 300 civilians

200

Which Cambodian leader was overthrown by Lon Nol in 1970?

Prince Norodom Sihanouk.

300

Which two countries were recognised as independent states under the Geneva Conventions?

Laos and Cambodia 

300

What was the Nixon administration’s policy? 

Vietnamisation - to gradually withdraw US troops and transfer responsibility to the South Vietnamese forces

300

What land reform program was implemented in North and South Vietnam (1954–1956) and what were the aims?

North Vietnam’s Land Reform Program - aimed to redistribute land but caused widespread unrest

Strategic Hamlets - relocating peasants into fortified villages to reduce communist influences

300

Why did millions of South Vietnamese become refugees after the war ended in 1975?

Fear of communist reprisals and economic hardship led many to flee

300

What was the name of the Khmer Rouge’s radical vision for Cambodian society?

“Year Zero”  a plan to eliminate urban life, intellectuals, and modern culture to create an agrarian society.

400

What elections were planned under the Geneva settlement, and why did they not occur?

Nationwide elections in 1956 to unify Vietnam; Diem, backed by the U.S., refused due to fear of communist victory.

400

By 1968, how many U.S. troops were stationed in Vietnam?

About 536,000

400

Outline the effective strategies used by the NLF

They blended with civilians, built tunnels, relied on villagers for food and intelligence, and used dense jungles for cover.

400

How did the Tet Offensive influence U.S. public opinion about the Vietnam War?

Despite being a military setback for the Viet Cong, graphic media coverage suggested the war was far from over, undermining U.S. government claims of progress and increasing anti-war sentiment.

400

Which country invaded Cambodia in 1978, overthrowing the Khmer Rouge regime? Why?

Vietnam

  • Pol Pot’s regime (1975–1979) in Cambodia carried out mass killings, forced relocations, and border raids.

  • They attacked Vietnamese border villages, killing civilians, which created tension.

  • Vietnam after 1975) followed a Soviet-aligned, pragmatic communist model, while Pol Pot’s Khmer Rouge followed an extreme Maoist, ultra-radical ideology.

500

Assess the overall significance of the Geneva Conference for Indochina.

It ended French colonial rule, formalised the division of Vietnam, created instability by postponing elections, and set the stage for escalating U.S. intervention and prolonged conflict.

500

Compare the Vietnam policies of Presidents Johnson, Nixon, and Ford. How did their approaches shape the outcome of U.S. involvement in Indochina?

Johnson escalated the war after the Gulf of Tonkin (1964), committing combat troops and authorising large-scale bombing (Operation Rolling Thunder).

Nixon pursued “Vietnamisation,” but expanded bombing into Cambodia and Laos, and negotiated the Paris Peace Accords (1973).

Ford oversaw the final U.S. withdrawal and could not prevent the fall of Saigon in 1975, marking the end of U.S. involvement.

500

Outline two major U.S. military operations in Vietnam (Name, Year and aim) 

Operation Rolling Thunder (1965–1968): Sustained bombing campaign against North Vietnam to weaken morale and infrastructure.

Operation Ranch Hand (1962–1971): The U.S. chemical defoliation program, part of herbicidal warfare. Main tool: Agent Orange (and other herbicides) to destroy forest cover and crops


500

Explain the long-term social and environmental consequences of war in Indochina.

Lasting soil and water contamination, birth defects, ecological damage, unexploded ordnance, displacement, and long-term health issues among civilians.

500

After the 1975 communist victory, what was established in Laos?

The Lao People’s Democratic Republic under Pathet Lao rule.