- Joseph Mendenhall
Joseph A. Mendenhall (
January 15 1920 ) wasU.S. State Department official, known for his advisory work during theKennedy administration on policy towardsVietnam andLaos . He is best known for his participation in theKrulak Mendenhall mission toSouth Vietnam in 1963, in which he presented divergent conclusions to his partner, GeneralVictor Krulak . Their conclusions led U.S. PresidentJohn F. Kennedy to ask if they had visited the same country. Mendenhall continued his work in the Indochina region afterLyndon B. Johnson assumed the presidency in wake of Kennedy's assassination.Krulak Mendenhall mission
Background
In May, civil unrest broke out in South Vietnam following the
Hue Vesak shootings . Nine Buddhists were gunned down by the Catholic regime of PresidentNgo Dinh Diem after defying a government ban on the flying ofBuddhist flag s onVesak , the birthday ofGautama Buddha and marching in an anti-government protest. Following the shootings, Buddhist leaders began to lobby Diem for religious equality and compensation and justice for the families of the victims. With Diem remaining recalcitrant, the protests escalated. The self-immolation of Buddhist monkThich Quang Duc at a busy Saigon intersection was a public relations disaster for the Diem regime, and as protests continued, theArmy of the Republic of Vietnam Special Forces loyal to his brotherNgo Dinh Nhu , raided pagodas across the country on August 21, killing hundreds and causing extensive damage under the declaration of martial law. Universities and high schools were closed amid mass pro-Buddhist protests. In the meantime, the fight against theVietcong insurgency had began to lose intensity as rumours spread of sectarian infighting amongArmy of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) troops. This was compounded by coup plotting by various ARVN officers which distracted attention from fighting the Vietcong insurgency. In the aftermath of the pagoda raids, the Kennedy administration sentCable 243 to its embassy in Saigon, ordering it to explore alternative leadership possibilities.Expedition
A fact finding expedition dispatched by the
Kennedy administration toSouth Vietnam in early September 1963. The stated purpose of the expedition was to investigate the progress of the war by South Vietnam and the American military advisers against theVietcong insurgency. The mission was led by U.S Marine Corps Major GeneralVictor Krulak and Mendenhall. The four day whirlwind trip was dispatched on the same day of a National Security Council meeting on September 6 and came in the wake of increasingly strained relations between theUnited States andSouth Vietnam . Civil unrest gripped that nation as Buddhist demonstrations against the religious discrimination of PresidentNgo Dinh Diem escalated. Following the raids on Buddhist pagodas on August 21 which left an estimated triple figure death toll, the US had authorised investigations into a possible coup in a cable to US AmbassadorHenry Cabot Lodge, Jr. as South Vietnam descended into chaos. The report of the conclusion was that Krulak presented an extremely optimistic report on the progress of the war, while Mendenhall presented an extremely bleak picture of military failure and public discontent. The divergent reports led US PresidentJohn F. Kennedy to famously ask his two advisers whether they had visited the same country. The inconclusive report saw a follow-up mission sent to Vietnam, theMcNamara Taylor mission , led byU.S. Defense Secretary Robert McNamara andChairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Maxwell Taylor .Later career
In January 1964, Mendenhall became director of the State Department's Vietnam Working Group and in July he became the director of the Office of Far Eastern Regional Affairs. In 1965, he was named director of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) Mission in Laos, then the second largest such agency in the world. In 1968, he returned to Washington as deputy director, and later head of the USAID Vietnam Bureau.
Reference
*cite book|title=Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War| first= Spencer C. |last=Tucker |year=2000 |publisher=
ABC-CLIO | pages =263| isbn=1-57607-040-0
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