Credibility gap is a political term that came into wide use during the 1960s and 1970s. At the time, it was most frequently used to describe public skepticism about the Johnson administration's statements and policies on the Vietnam War. Today, it is used more generally to describe almost any "gap" between the reality of a situation and what politicians and government agencies say about it. "Credibility gap" was originally used in association with the Vietnam War in the New York Herald Tribune in March 1965, to describe then-president Lyndon Johnson's handling of the escalation of American involvement in the war. A number of events—particularly the surprise Tet Offensive, and later the 1971 release of the Pentagon Papers—helped to confirm public suspicion that there was a significant "gap" between the administration's declarations of controlled military and political resolution, and the reality.
The Credibility gap refers to a political term used to describe public skepticism regarding the Lyndon B. Johnson administration's statements and policies on the Vietnam War.
The govornment frequently lied about what was going on
Q who was the victor of the Vietnam war? A I have no idea who won the Vietnam war!!!!
Vietnam war
See website: Moratoriums to end the war in Vietnam.
Vietnam had tigers, not lions.
The Vietnam War
The credibility gap
The difference between the truth and what the administration said during the Vietnam War.
The credibility gap
The govornment frequently lied about what was going on
create a credibility gap
The gulf of tonkin resolution was discovered to be fabricated
Credibility gap
Credibility gap is a political term that came into wide use during the 1960s and 1970s. At the time, it was most frequently used to describe public skepticism about the Johnson administration's statements and policies on the Vietnam War. Today, it is used more generally to describe almost any "gap" between the reality of a situation and what politicians and government agencies say about it. "Credibility gap" was originally used in association with the Vietnam War in the New York Herald Tribune in March 1965, to describe then-president Lyndon Johnson's handling of the escalation of American involvement in the war. A number of events—particularly the surprise Tet Offensive, and later the 1971 release of the Pentagon Papers—helped to confirm public suspicion that there was a significant "gap" between the administration's declarations of controlled military and political resolution, and the reality.
People believed there was a credibility gap between the general public and the White House. For the first time, people could see on television what was happening in the war zone, and the atrocities of war shocked Americans. They demanded answers, and the situation was too complicated for easy answers.
The term "credibility gap" first came into wide usage in the 1960's (1963) and 1970's. It was frequently used to describe public skepticism in the then Lyndon B. Johnson administration's statements on the Vietnam war. Today however it used to describe any "gap" between the reality of a situation and what the government agencies and politicians say about it.
Q who was the victor of the Vietnam war? A I have no idea who won the Vietnam war!!!!