Opening the War

Headline Wednesday: Gulf of Tonkin Incidents, early Vietnam War follows two destroyers into black water where radar echoes and tense crews turn a narrow sea into a global turning point. This episode takes you from the first daylight clash with North Vietnamese patrol boats to the confusing night when sonar pings, radio calls, and bad weather painted enemies onto screens. You will hear how messages raced from those steel decks into the White House and Congress, and how a limited engagement at sea helped unlock sweeping authority for a much larger war. Headline Wednesday is the Wednesday feature of Dispatch: U.S. Military History Magazine, developed by Trackpads.com.
From slow-building patrol missions and coastal raids to frantic maneuvers in the dark, the narrative walks you through the lead-up, the fights, the doubts, and the decisions that followed. You will hear the turning point where uncertainty in the combat information center hardened into certainty in Washington, and how that shift led to air strikes, the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, and a major escalation in Vietnam. It is a clear, story-driven walkthrough you can use as a refresher for your own reading, study group, or staff ride preparation, with an eye on how small incidents become gateways to long wars.
Opening the War
Broadcast by