Abstract

This article explores the violent geographies of the Vietnam War. It argues that the conflict is crucial for understanding the security logics and spatialities of U.S. state violence in the war on terror. An overarching theme is that U.S. national security has inherited and intensified the atmospheric forms of power deployed across Southeast Asia, including ecological violence, the electronic battlefield, counterinsurgency (the Phoenix Program), and drone surveillance. All of these attempted to pacify and capture hostile circulations of life and place them within the secured and rationalized interiors of the U.S. war machine. The article thus expands on the concept of atmospheric warfare. This is defined as a biopolitical project of enclosure to surveil, secure, and destroy humans and nonhumans within a multidimensional warscape. Since modern state power is becoming ever more atmospheric—particularly with the rise of drone warfare—dissecting the origins of that violence in the Vietnam War is a vital task.

Highlights

  • This article explores the violent geographies of the Vietnam War

  • It argues that the conflict is crucial for understanding the security logics and spatialities of U.S state violence in the war on terror

  • An overarching theme is that U.S national security has inherited and intensified the atmospheric forms of power deployed across Southeast Asia, including ecological violence, the electronic battlefield, counterinsurgency, and drone surveillance

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Summary

Annals of the American Association of Geographers

ISSN: 2469-4452 (Print) 2469-4460 (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/raag. An overarching theme is that U.S national security has inherited and intensified the atmospheric forms of power deployed across Southeast Asia, including ecological violence, the electronic battlefield, counterinsurgency (the Phoenix Program), and drone surveillance. The first form of atmospheric warfare this article investigates is the use of ecological weapons—such as Agent Orange and napalm—to poison, burn, and destroy the lived environment This is important for establishing the centrality of geography to the conduct of U.S military strategy in Vietnam. By expanding on what we think of as an atmosphere—to include technical forms of enclosure and immersion—the article concludes by arguing that drone warfare has come to symbolize a fundamentally enclosed technological civilization

Enclosing Life
The Colonial Inheritance
Electronic Enclosure
Counterinsurgency and the Phoenix Program
The Phoenix Rises in the War on Terror
The Crystallization of Drone Warfare
Findings
An Enclosed Technological Civilization
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