THIS DAY IN HISTORY – U.S. withdraws from Vietnam – 1973

Via History.com

Two months after the signing of the Vietnam peace agreement, the last U.S. combat troops leave South Vietnam as Hanoi frees the remaining American prisoners of war held in North Vietnam. America’s direct eight-year intervention in the Vietnam War was at an end. In Saigon, some 7,000 U.S. Department of Defense civilian employees remained behind to aid South Vietnam in conducting what looked to be a fierce and ongoing war with communist North Vietnam.

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In 1961, after two decades of indirect military aid, U.S. President John F. Kennedy sent the first large force of U.S. military personnel to Vietnam to bolster the ineffectual autocratic regime of South Vietnam against the communist North. Three years later, with the South Vietnamese government crumbling, President Lyndon B. Johnson ordered limited bombing raids on North Vietnam, and Congress authorized the use of U.S. troops. By 1965, North Vietnamese offensives left President Johnson with two choices: escalate U.S. involvement or withdraw. Johnson ordered the former, and troop levels soon jumped to more than 300,000 as U.S. air forces commenced the largest bombing campaign in history.

During the next few years, the extended length of the war, the high number of U.S. casualties, and the exposure of U.S. involvement in war crimes, such as the massacre at My Lai, helped turn many in the United States against the Vietnam War. The communists’ Tet Offensive of 1968 crushed U.S. hopes of an imminent end to the conflict and galvanized U.S. opposition to the war. In response, Johnson announced in March 1968 that he would not seek reelection, citing what he perceived to be his responsibility in creating a perilous national division over Vietnam. He also authorized the beginning of peace talks.

In the spring of 1969, as protests against the war escalated in the United States, U.S. troop strength in the war-torn country reached its peak at nearly 550,000 men. Richard Nixon, the new U.S. president, began U.S. troop withdrawal and “Vietnamization” of the war effort that year, but he intensified bombing. Large U.S. troop withdrawals continued in the early 1970s as President Nixon expanded air and ground operations into Cambodia and Laos in attempts to block enemy supply routes along Vietnam’s borders. This expansion of the war, which accomplished few positive results, led to new waves of protests in the United States and elsewhere.

Finally, in January 1973, representatives of the United States, North and South Vietnam, and the Vietcong signed a peace agreement in Paris, ending the direct U.S. military involvement in the Vietnam War. Its key provisions included a cease-fire throughout Vietnam, the withdrawal of U.S. forces, the release of prisoners of war, and the reunification of North and South Vietnam through peaceful means. The South Vietnamese government was to remain in place until new elections were held, and North Vietnamese forces in the South were not to advance further nor be reinforced.

In reality, however, the agreement was little more than a face-saving gesture by the U.S. government. Even before the last American troops departed on March 29, the communists violated the cease-fire, and by early 1974 full-scale war had resumed. At the end of 1974, South Vietnamese authorities reported that 80,000 of their soldiers and civilians had been killed in fighting during the year, making it the most costly of the Vietnam War.

On April 30, 1975, the last few Americans still in South Vietnam were airlifted out of the country as Saigon fell to communist forces. North Vietnamese Colonel Bui Tin, accepting the surrender of South Vietnam later in the day, remarked, “You have nothing to fear; between Vietnamese there are no victors and no vanquished. Only the Americans have been defeated.” The Vietnam War was the longest and most unpopular foreign war in U.S. history and cost 58,000 American lives. As many as two million Vietnamese soldiers and civilians were killed.

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8 Comments
CCRider
CCRider
March 29, 2017 8:43 am

My watershed time came to me when 10 years thereafter VN and most of the Pacific rim nations turned to the free market. All the “Best and Brightest” (David Halberstam’s cynical title for the whiz kids running the foreign policy of the Vietnam era) had clairvoyantly predicted if VN fell the whole area was certain to turn communist. That was why 55,000 of my generation and as many as 2 million civilians lost their lives. And it turned out the dirty murderous bastards were completely and utterly wrong, much like the latter day geniuses who told us Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. It taught me to be confident in my opposition. Those in power just ACT like they know what they’re doing. In the end they’re just over paid bullshit artists doing the bidding of the ruling elite.

Flying Monkey
Flying Monkey
March 29, 2017 8:47 am

It is a good thing we won that war. I would have hated to learn Vietnamese. 😉

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  Flying Monkey
March 29, 2017 11:50 am

I swear, the next person that gives the line “or we would be speaking Japanese and German today” is going to get socked.

BB
BB
March 29, 2017 8:53 am

Nothing to fear ????? I guess when the North Vietnamese started putting people in re education camps that was no big deal.Never trust your enemies.Damn people never seem to learn that lesson.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
March 29, 2017 11:48 am

And yet our illegal and immoral occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq continue. Americans CLEARLY learned nothing from the government lies that got us into Vietnam, the globalist imperatives that got everyone into Vietnam, the false flag events that “justified” the war, or the disgusting pandering to “patriotism” that conned so many thousands into willingly joining the military to do the bidding of the globalists. After 9-11 the patterns repeated themselves all over again.

“We learn from history that we do not learn from history.”
― Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel

Hagar
Hagar
  MrLiberty
March 29, 2017 7:08 pm

Mr Liberty, it is not that no lessons were learned, its that the defense industries need an enemy to maintain and increase their profits. The American Sheeple just follow their leaders as it were. Don’t forget the anger resulting from the false flag 9/11 attack. Most everyone I knew wanted to punch back at someone and Iran and Afghanistan were easy sells.

Boat Guy
Boat Guy
March 29, 2017 6:33 pm

My friend was killed July 4 1973 and his name is on the wall and now I can buy nike shoes made their . Fuck Nike , I would rather have my boyhood friend back to go fishing and tease the grandchildren
Anybody want to go to war and send good people into combat for some foolish cause , you and your children first !

Mike Murray
Mike Murray
March 30, 2017 7:39 pm

I watched on TV from MCB Camp Pendleton as the final chopper lifted off.
I was in 1/5 1st MarDiv, USMC.
Tears ran down my face.
Not much has changed. Men and women sent into combat for questionable reasons, and with no political will to win. It is a huge disservice to the troops, their friends and families, and the country.

A politician is a fellow who will lay down your life for his country.
~ Tex Guinan

One does not export democracy in an armored vehicle.
Jacques Chirac

“An American soldier in a hospital explained how he was wounded: He said ‘I was told that the way to tell a hostile Vietnamese from a friendly Vietnamese was to shout ‘To hell with Ho Chi Minh!’ If he shoots, he’s unfriendly. So I saw this dude and yelled ‘To hell with Ho Chi Minh!’ and he yelled back, ‘To hell with President Johnson!’ We were shaking hands when a truck hit us.” —
-Tuli Kupferburg

“War is an ugly thing. But it is not the ugliest of things. The decayed and degraded state of moral
and patriotic feeling, which thinks that nothing is worth fighting for is much worse.
A man who has nothing for which he is willing to fight, nothing he cares about more than his own personal safety,
is a miserable creature who has no chance of being free, unless made and kept so by the exertions of better men than himself.”
– John Stuart Mill 1862