Gil Hahn

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The president had made his decision: he would not send Americans to fight in Vietnam. He told his advisers confidentially that he rejected the simplistic idea that “because we might lose Indochina we would necessarily have to lose all the rest of Southeast Asia.” Privately he argued that the domino theory should not force America’s hand. It was possible, he believed, to create a strong Western position in Asia even without Indochina.
The Age of Eisenhower: America and the World in the 1950s
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