vietnam war, part ii

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Vietnam War, part II Ch. 24, Sec 3, 4

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Vietnam War, part II. Ch. 24, Sec 3, 4. Protests against Vietnam. Majority of US wanted to win war, wanted increased action. Vocal minority hated war, wanted US out. Became known as New Left . Believed social problems (war, poverty, racism) required radical, sometimes violent, change. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Vietnam War, part IICh. 24, Sec 3, 4

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Protests against Vietnam• Majority of US wanted to win war, wanted

increased action.• Vocal minority hated war, wanted US out.• Became known as New Left.– Believed social problems (war, poverty, racism)

required radical, sometimes violent, change.• 1960-Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)

created by Tom Hayden. (College movement)– Used protests to draw attention to “illegal war” in

Vietnam.– Financed by Communist Party.

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• Students at UC Berkeley barred from handing out leaflets on campus.– Said 1st Amendments rights being prohibited.– Began to protest, fought police who came to

arrest them.– UC Berkeley leadership pressed charges, students

occupied Administration Building, 700 arrested.• Thousands of students & professors went on strike to

protest college’s actions.

• UC Berkeley was most radical college, but protests occurred on colleges across US.

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UC Berkeley

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Other College Protests

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• College students, professors led protest movement.• Bout 55 U. of Michigan professors held first teach-

in-special session to discuss Vietnam War.– Thousands showed up, led to teach-ins on other

campuses.• Until mid-1960s, only people opposed to draft were

conscientious objectors-opposed fighting on moral/religious grounds.

• 1965-LBJ doubled draft numbers twice.– Led to draft resistance movement-burned draft cards,

tried to get out of draft on physical disability/C. O. status, about 100,000 fled to Canada.

– College students got deferments-not drafted until graduation or dropped out.

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• 1968 was big year for protests.– 200 in first six months alone.– One of biggest was at Columbia in NYC.• SDS tried to get college to quit military research; black

student group protested building new gym in Harlem.• Students took over President’s office, hundreds

arrested; students struck in protest, university closed.

• LBJ realized he was losing public opinion.– “If I’ve lost Cronkite, I’ve lost Middle America.”– Democratic opponents Robert Kennedy, Eugene

McCarthy gaining ground in polls.– March 1968-LBJ announced on tv that he would

not seek second term in office.

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1968 election

• Democrats:– Robert Kennedy, Eugene McCarthy, Vice-President

Hubert Humphrey all wanted nomination.– RFK assassinated, McCarthy seen as too anti-war

Humphrey pro-civil rights, but seen as too supporting of LBJ’s war policies.

• During Democratic National Convention in Chicago, thousands protested war effort.– Chicago riot police beat protestors, reporters,

civilians on live tv.• Humphrey nominated, but Democratic Party

torn apart, anti-war movement gained support.

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• Republicans:– Richard Nixon was easily nominated.– Very law & order, had “secret plan” to end

Vietnam War.– Nixon stayed above campaign, let VP candidate

Spiro Agnew do name calling.• American Independent Party:– George C. Wallace.– Pro-war, anti-communist, anti-hippie, represented

blue collar southerners.– Shot while campaigning.

• Nixon barely won popular vote, easily won electoral vote.

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Final Years of War• Before LBJ left office, he started peace

negotiations with N. Vietnam.• Paris Peace talks came to nothing.• When Nixon took office, he began policy of

Vietnamization.– Removing US soldiers, replacing them with SV soldiers;

turning fighting of war over to S. Vietnam.– By 1972, only 24,000 troops in Vietnam, from high of

568,000.• Nixon also ordered bombings of Hanoi, VC bases

in Cambodia.– Sent SV & US troops into Cambodia.– Led to civil war in Cambodia, more protests in USA.

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• Nixon campaigned on law & order, stop violent protests that majority of USA opposed.

• 1969-Part of SDS split off, formed Weathermen, began campaign of violence.– Riots in streets, letter bombs, attempted

assassinations.• Majority of US opposed violence, protests,

hippies.– Never got press coverage, called silent majority.– Nixon appealed to them, wanted him to bring

order back to USA.

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• Protests peaked in 1970.• Kent State U. in Ohio; students tore up

business district, burned down ROTC building on campus.– Governor ordered National Guard in; students

threw rocks, Guard threw tear gas.– Guards opened fire (first?), four killed, nine

wounded.– Known as Kent State Massacre.

• Jackson State in Mississippi, students rioted, cops came in, two killed, eleven wounded.

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• Paris peace talks continued, still nothing.• 1972-NV began big attack on SV; Nixon

increased bombing of Hanoi, mined NV harbors.

• Jan. 1973, right after Nixon began 2nd term, peace agreement signed.– US would pull out all forces within 60 days.– All POWs released.– All military activity on both sides would end in

Laos, Cambodia.– 17th Parallel would continue to divide NV &SV.

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POW John McCain

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• After US pulled out, NV re-invaded, quickly began defeating SV.

• Spring 1975-NV surrounded Saigon.– US evacuated 1,000 Americans, 6,000 S. Vietnamese

out of SV before Saigon fell.• April 30, 1975-S. Vietnam surrendered, Vietnam

reunited under Communism.– Nixon begged Congress to go back in, Congress refused.

• After Vietnam, Cambodia fell to Communist Khmer Rouge, led by Pol Pot.– Killed 1.5 million Cambodians, 25% of population.

• About 2 million Vietnamese, Laotians, Cambodians fled to US, known as “boat people”.

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Results of Vietnam• 58,000 US dead, 300,000 wounded, 2,500

listed as POW & MIA.– Many have never come home.– No victory parades, no celebrations for returning

troops.• War cost US $150 billion.• Millions of Vietnamese dead.• 1979-Veterans groups began raising funds to

build memorial.– Designed by 21-year old Maya Ling Lin.

• Vietnam Wall completed in 1982.

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Vietnam Nurses’ Memorial