The
Vietnam
Jeopardy
Test
Review
100

helped to overthrow the Cuban government in 1959, and led the country from then until 2008. His communist government and ties to the Soviet Union were a source of conflict between Cuba and the United States.

Fidel Castro

100

1962 conflict between the United States and the Soviet Union resulting from the Soviet installation of nuclear missiles in Cuba

Cuban Missal Crisis 

100

was the commander of U.S. forces in the Vietnam War. he had previously served in World War II and the Korean War.

William Westmoreland

100

communist assault on a large number of South Vietnamese cities in early 1968

Tet Offensive

100

American public’s growing distrust of statements made by the government during the Vietnam War

 “credibility gap”

200

defense policy allowing for the appropriate action in any type of conflict

flexible response

200

direct telephone line between the White House and the Kremlin set up after the Cuban Missile Crisis

Hot Line

200

person who opposed U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War

Dove

200

jellied gasoline dropped in canisters that explode on impact and cover large areas in flame; dropped by U.S. planes during the Vietnam War

napalm 

200

President Nixon’s plan for gradual withdrawal of U.S. forces as South Vietnamese troops assumed more combat duties

Vietnamization

300

American government organization that sends volunteers to provide technical, educational, and medical services to developing countries

Peace Corps

300

served as premier of the Soviet Union from 1958–1964. He initiated policies that sought to roll-back those established by former leader Joseph Stalin. his decisions to build the Berlin Wall and establish nuclear missiles in Cuba further heightened the Cold War with the United States.

 Nikita Khrushchev

300

defensive alliance aimed at preventing communist aggression in Asia

 Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO)

300

Helped his brother during his Presidency as the Attorney General, became a senator and then was the assassinated antiwar candidate for the 1968 Democratic Party presidential nomination.

Robert Kennedy 

300

village in South Vietnam where in 1968 American forces opened fire on unarmed civilians; U.S. soldiers killed between 400 and 500 Vietnamese

 My Lai

400

President Kennedy’s program that gave economic aid to Latin America

Alliance for Progress

400

1963 nuclear-weapons agreement that banned aboveground nuclear tests

Nuclear Test Ban Treaty

400

idea that if a nation falls to communism, its closest neighbors will also fall under communist control

Domino Theory 

400

a young American man drafted into military service

draftees

400

classified U.S. government study that revealed American leaders involved the United States in Vietnam without fully informing the American people; leaked to the New York Times in 1971

Pentagon Papers

500

ailed 1961 invasion of Cuba by a CIA-led force of Cuban exiles

Bay of Pigs Invasion 
500

dividing wall built by East Germany in 1961 to isolate West Berlin from communist-controlled East Berlin

Berlin Wall

500

was one of the most influential anticolonial leaders in Asia. He led North Vietnam’s fight to reunify North and South Vietnam, serving as president of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (North Vietnam) from 1945 to 1969.

Ho Chi Minh

500

organization founded in 1960 at the University of Michigan to fight racism and poverty

Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)

500

1973 law passed by Congress restricting the President’s war-making powers; the law requires the President to consult with Congress before committing American forces to a foreign conflict

 War Powers Act