How did President Nixon`s policies widen US involvement in the war?
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Transcript How did President Nixon`s policies widen US involvement in the war?
The War Ends
The Main Idea
President Nixon eventually ended U.S. involvement in
Vietnam, but the war had lasting effects on the United
States and in Southeast Asia.
Reading Focus
• How did President Nixon’s policies widen U.S. involvement in the
war?
• How and why did protests against the war increase?
• How did Nixon achieve an end to U.S. involvement in Vietnam?
• What was the war’s legacy in the United States and in Vietnam?
How did President Nixon’s policies widen U.S.
involvement in the war?
• During his 1968 campaign, Nixon pledged to end
the war in Vietnam.
• Nixon and his National Security Advisor Henry
Kissinger devised plans to end the war.
• In 1969 Kissinger began secret peace
negotiations in Paris with North Vietnamese
revolutionary Le Duc Tho.
• The U.S. strategy aimed at achieving “peace
with honor.”
– Vietnamization
– Laos and Cambodia
Widening the War
Vietnamization
• Strategy of turning over more
of the fighting in Vietnam to
the South Vietnamese while
gradually bringing U.S. ground
troops home
• Nixon hoped this would give
South Vietnamese leaders
time to create a stable, nonCommunist government.
• Nixon began to slowly
withdraw U.S. forces from
South Vietnam.
• Nixon believed he had the
backing of the silent
majority of Americans.
Laos and Cambodia
• At the same time, Nixon was
secretly expanding the war.
• He ordered the bombing of
Cambodia to disrupt the flow
of supplies on the Ho Chi Minh
trail.
• Concealed the air strikes from
the American people—including
members of Congress
• Nixon hoped to force North
Vietnam to seek peace.
War Protests
• In 1970 Nixon announced that he had ordered troops into
Cambodia.
• Antiwar protests intensified—especially on college
campuses.
• Antiwar protests erupted into violence.
• Nixon believed that antiwar protesters represented only a
minority of Americans.
• More and more Americans began to oppose the war when
they learned about the My Lai massacre and the
Pentagon Papers.
Increasing Protests
Campus Violence
• Kent State
University in Ohio
• 4 students
were killed and
9 injured
• Jackson State
College in
Mississippi
• 2 students
were killed and
9 wounded
Antiwar Movement
• Polls showed that
fifty percent of
Americans opposed
the war.
• Coalition of clergy,
trade unionists, and
veterans established
a nationwide day of
protest called
Moratorium Day.
• 250,000 protesters
made up the largest
antiwar
demonstration in
U.S. history.
Radical Protests
• Some antiwar
groups turned to
violent measures.
• The Weathermen
set off more than
5,000 bombs and
carried out the
Days of Rage.
• Most antiwar
protesters did not
support extremist
groups or
terrorist
measures.
Increasing Protests
My Lai Massacre
Pentagon Papers
• Troops under Lieutenant
William Calley killed at least
450 men, women, and children
in the village of My Lai while
on a search-and-destroy
mission.
• A collection of secret
government documents that
traced the history of U.S.
military involvement in
Vietnam since the Truman
years
• The My Lai massacre was kept
quiet at first, but former
soldiers began talking about it.
• Revealed that government
officials had been misleading
the American people about the
war for years
• Calley was convicted of murder
and sentenced to life in prison;
he was paroled in 1974.
• Daniel Ellsberg leaked the
papers to the press.
U.S. Involvement in Vietnam Ends
George
McGovern
• Senator from South Dakota who criticized war
• Insisted that the Vietnam War be brought to an
immediate end
• Lowered the voting age from 21 to 18
26th
• McGovern hoped the ratification of this
Amendment
amendment would boost his election chances.
• Nixon stressed law and order at home and told
voters he would end the war.
1972
Election
• Kissinger announced a breakthrough in the peace
talks just weeks before the election.
• The announcement helped Nixon win by a
landslide.
A Peace Agreement
Nixon tried to force North Vietnam to make peace
concessions by ordering the so-called Christmas
bombing. It failed to work.
Officials from North Vietnam, South Vietnam, and the
United States finally reached an agreement in January
1973.
The United States agreed to withdraw all of its troops and
help rebuild Vietnam. Both sides agreed to release all
prisoners of war.
The agreement did not settle the political future of South
Vietnam—the key issue behind the war from the start.
The Vietnam War’s Legacy
• Two years after U.S. troops were withdrawn, North
Vietnamese troops invaded South Vietnam.
• After a short amount of fighting, South Vietnam surrendered.
– The U.S. military rushed to evacuate Americans still working in
Saigon.
– Some 130,000 South Vietnamese were also evacuated and
flown to the United States.
• After two decades of “temporary” division, Vietnam was
reunited under a Communist government.
• In 1975, Communist forces called the Khmer Rouge gained
control of Cambodia.
– Vietnam forces invaded Cambodia in 1979, overthrew the
Khmer Rouge, and occupied the country till 1989.
The Legacy of the War
Southeast Asia
Veterans
Political Impact
• 635,000 South
Vietnamese died;
Vietcong and NVA
war dead equaled
1 million
• 58,000 Americans
were killed; 600
were held as
POWs; 2,500
soldiers reported
MIA; 300,000
wounded
• United States failed
to prevent
Communists from
taking over South
Vietnam.
• Severe
environmental
damage from
bombs and
defoliants
• More than 1.5
million South
Vietnamese fled
the country after
the fall of Saigon.
• Experienced a
negative reception
upon return
• Trouble
readjusting to
civilian life (posttraumatic stress
disorder)
• Spent more than
$150 billion on the
war
• Changed how many
Americans viewed
government
• Congress passed
the War Powers
Act in 1973.