Wrong. The bombing campaign was started by Robert S. McNamara as a way of managing the Vietnam War via "Action-Reaction" theory. He essentially ran it for most of the war with LBJ, trying to "manage" things to show the leaders of North Vietnam american "resolve" via attack, stop attack, attack more. As we all know, A-R is a utter fraud.PainRack wrote:The only contention was that your argument that the US could had easily decleared all those targets on the board immediately is an argument from hindsight. We know now that the Chinese/Soviets wouldn't had responded, however, the fears that this would escalate was a valid one in the 60s when the bombing campaign was first started.
It's not for nothing that major US Military leaders, such as LeMay, agitated for an unlimited war right from the start.
"In Japan we dropped 502,000 tons and we won the war. In Vietnam we dropped 6,162,000 tons of bombs and we lost the war. The difference was that McNamara chose the targets in Vietnam and I chose the targets in Japan."
Not really. North Vietnam's infrastructure was largely untouched until Linebacker I and II. All that bomb tonnage we dropped was on empty spots of trees that we thought held truck depots.Similarly, expanding the bombing campaign earlier than its historical date would had been relatively pointless because at that point in the war, the NLF didn't rely heavily on NVA supplies or manpower. Lastly, on its own, the bombing campaign couldn't end the war by taking North Vietnam out of the equation as it historically endured a long and destructive campaign.