Read the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution and answer the following questions.
Each member of your group should choose one of the following roles. Each role will ask you to look at new artifacts or information from the perspective of the role you will take.
After you have looked at the documents and understand that person's position and opinions on the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, you should be ready to give a short press conference giving your character's main reasons for wanting to vote for or against the resolution. You personally may not agree with these positions, but the purpose of this exercise is for you to understand what this person thought and said at the time, so you need to make your argument as you believe this person would have.
Here is a guide to help you write your press release.




Each member of the group should give their presentations. Listen carefully to the arguments each person makes. As you listen to each presenter, fill in the a chart like the one below.
In the second column, list the one or two arguments you see as the most convincing. When they are finished, write in the third column why you agree or disagree with this person. You may change your answers as you hear other arguments, and you may discuss this with other members of your group.
You should write your own opinion here, not the opinion of the person whose role you took.
| Person | Most convincing arguments | Why do you agree or disagree with this person’s positions? |
|---|---|---|
| President Johnson | ||
| McNamara | ||
| Morse | ||
| Press |
In your group, step out of your roles and vote for whether or not you think Congress should pass the Gulf of Tonkin resolution. Vote your actual opinion here – you don’t have to agree with the role or position that you argued for.
If your group is deadlocked (your vote is a tie), spend a few minutes trying to convince each other to vote your way. If you can't reach a consensus after about 10 minutes, that's okay.