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Ending
the War (1969-1975)


Promising
an end to the war in Vietnam, Richard Nixon won a narrow victory in
the election of 1968. Slightly more than 30,000 young Americans had
been killed in the war when Nixon took office in January 1969. The
new president retained his predecessor's goal of a non-Communist
South Vietnam, however, and this could not be ensured without
continuing the war. Nixon's most pressing problem was how to make
peace and war at the same time. His answer was a policy called
"Vietnamization." Under this policy, he would withdraw
American troops and the South Vietnamese army would take over the
fighting.

A. Nixon's
Vietnamization

During
his campaign for the presidency, Nixon announced that he had a
secret plan to end the war. In July 1969, after he had become
president, he issued what came to be known as the Nixon doctrine,
which stated that U.S. troops would no longer be directly involved
in Asian wars. He ordered the withdrawal of 25,000 troops, to be
followed by more, and he lowered draft calls. On the other hand,
Nixon also stepped up the Phoenix Program, a secret CIA operation
that resulted in the assassination of 20,000 suspected NLF
guerrillas, many of whom were innocent civilians. The operation
increased funding for the ARVN and intensified the bombing of North
Vietnam. Nixon reasoned that to keep the Communists at bay during
the U.S. withdrawal, it was also necessary to bomb their sanctuaries
in Cambodia and to increase air strikes against Laos.
The
DRV leadership, however, remained committed to the expulsion of all
U.S. troops from Vietnam and to the overthrow of the Saigon
government. As U.S. troop strength diminished, Hanoi's leaders
planned their final offensive. While the ARVN had increased in size
and was better armed than it had been in 1965, it could not hold its
own without the help of heavy U.S. air power.

B. Failed Peace
Negotiations

Johnson
had initiated peace negotiations after the first phase of the Tet
Offensive. Beginning in Paris on May 13, 1968, the talks rapidly
broke down over disagreements about the status of the NLF, which the
Saigon government refused to recognize. In October 1968, just before
the U.S. presidential elections, candidate Hubert Humphrey called
for a negotiated settlement, but Nixon secretly persuaded South
Vietnam's President Nguyen Van Thieu to hold out for better terms
under a Nixon administration. Stating that he would never negotiate
with Communists, Thieu caused the Paris talks to collapse and
contributed to Humphrey's defeat as well.
Nixon
thus inherited the Paris peace talks, but they continued to remain
stalled as each faction refused to alter its position. Hanoi
insisted on the withdrawal of all U.S. forces, the removal of the
Saigon government, and its replacement through free elections that
would include the Provisional Revolutionary Government (PRG), which
the NLF created in June 1969 to take over its governmental role in
the south and serve as a counterpart to the Saigon government. The
United States, on the other hand, insisted that all North Vietnamese
troops be withdrawn.

C. Invasion of
Cambodia

In
March 1969 Nixon ordered the secret bombing of Cambodia. Intended to
wipe out North Vietnamese and NLF base camps along the border with
South Vietnam in order to provide time for the buildup of the ARVN,
the campaign failed utterly. The secret bombing lasted four years
and caused great destruction and upheaval in Cambodia, a land of
farmers that had not known war in centuries. Code-named Operation
Menu, the bombing was more intense than that carried out over
Vietnam. An estimated 100,000 peasants died in the bombing, while 2
million people were left homeless.
In
April 1970 Nixon ordered U.S. troops into Cambodia. He argued that
this was necessary to protect the security of American units then in
the process of withdrawing from Vietnam, but he also wanted to buy
security for the Saigon regime. When Nixon announced the invasion,
U.S. college campuses erupted in protest, and one-third of them shut
down due to student walkouts. At Kent State University in Ohio four
students were killed by panicky national guardsmen who had been
called up to prevent rioting. Two days later, two students were
killed at Jackson State College in Mississippi. Congress proceeded
to repeal the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution. Congress also passed the
Cooper-Church Amendment, which specifically forbade the use of U.S.
troops outside South Vietnam. The measure did not expressly forbid
bombing, however, so Nixon continued the air strikes on Cambodia
until 1973.
Three
months after committing U.S. forces, Nixon ordered them to withdraw
from Cambodia. The combined effects of the bombing and the invasion,
however, had completely disrupted Cambodian life, driving millions
of peasants from their ancestral lands. The right-wing government
then in power in Cambodia was supported by the United States, and
the government was blamed for allowing the bombing to occur. Farmers
who had never concerned themselves with politics now flooded to the
Communist opposition group, the Khmer Rouge. After a gruesome civil
war, the Khmer Rouge took power in 1975 and became one of the
bloodiest regimes of the 20th century.

D. Campaign in Laos

The
United States began conducting secret bombing of Laos in 1964,
targeting both the North Vietnamese forces along sections of the Ho
Chi Minh Trail and the Communist Pathet Lao guerrillas, who
controlled the northern part of the country. Roughly 150,000 tons of
bombs were dropped on the Plain of Jars in northern Laos between
1964 and 1969. By 1970 at least one-quarter of the entire population
of Laos were refugees, and about 750,000 Lao had been killed.
Prohibited
by the Cooper-Church Amendment from deploying U.S. troops and
anxious to demonstrate the fighting prowess of the improved ARVN,
Nixon took the advice of General Creighton Abrams and attempted to
cut vital Communist supply lines along the Ho Chi Minh Trail. On
February 8, 1971, 21,000 ARVN troops, supported by American B-52
bombers, invaded Laos. Intended to disrupt any North Vietnamese and
NLF plans for offensives and to test the strength of the ARVN, this
operation was as much a failure as the Cambodian invasion. Abrams
claimed 14,000 North Vietnamese casualties, but over 9000 ARVN
soldiers were killed or wounded, while the rest were routed and
expelled from Laos.
The
success of Vietnamization seemed highly doubtful, since the
Communist forces showed that the new ARVN could be defeated. Instead
of inhibiting the Communist Pathet Lao, the U.S. attacks on Laos
promoted their rise. In 1958 the Pathet Lao had the support of
one-third of the population; by 1973 a majority denied the
legitimacy of the U.S.-supported Royal Lao Government. By 1975 a
Communist government was established in Laos.

E. Bombing of North
Vietnam

In
the spring of 1972, with only 6000 U.S. combat troops remaining in
South Vietnam, the DRV leadership decided the time had come to crush
the ARVN. On March 30 over 30,000 North Vietnamese troops crossed
the Demilitarized Zone, along with another 150,000 PRG fighters, and
attacked Quang Trí Province, easily scattering ARVN
defenders. The attack, known as the Easter Offensive, could not have
come at a worse time for Nixon and his National Security Adviser
Henry Kissinger. A military defeat of the ARVN would leave the
United States in a weak position at the Paris peace talks and would
compromise its strategic position globally.
Risking
the success of the upcoming Moscow summit, Nixon unleashed the first
sustained bombing of North Vietnam since 1969 and moved quickly to
mine the harbor of Haiphong. Between April and October 1972 the
United States conducted 41,000 sorties over North Vietnam,
especially targeting Quang Trí. North Vietnam's Easter
Offensive was crushed. At least 100,000 Communist troops were
killed. The ailing Vo Nguyen Giap, founder of North Vietnam's army,
was forced into retirement and succeeded by Van Tien Dung, who
counseled the renewal of negotiations with the United States.
Further
negotiations were held in Paris between Kissinger and Le Duc Tho,
who represented North Vietnam. Seeking an end to the war before the
U.S. presidential elections in November, Kissinger made remarkable
concessions. The United States would withdraw completely, while
accepting the presence of 14 North Vietnamese divisions in South
Vietnam and recognizing the political legitimacy of the PRG. Hanoi
would drop its insistence on the resignation of Nguyen van Thieu,
who had become president of South Vietnam in 1967. Kissinger
announced on October 27 that "peace was at hand." Thieu,
however, accused the United States of selling him out and Nixon
refused to sign the agreement.
After
the 1972 elections, Kissinger attempted to revise the agreements he
had already made. North Vietnam refused to consider these revisions,
and Kissinger threatened to renew air assaults against North Vietnam
unless the new conditions were met. Nixon then unleashed at
Christmas the final and most intense bombing of the war over Hanoi
and Haiphong.

F. United States
Withdrawal

While
many U.S. officials were convinced that Hanoi was bombed back to the
negotiating table, the final treaty changed nothing significant from
what had already been agreed to by Kissinger and Tho in October.
Nixon's Christmas Bombing was intended to warn Hanoi that American
air power remained a threat, and he secretly promised Thieu that the
United States would punish North Vietnam should they violate the
terms of the final settlement. Nixon's political fortunes were about
to decline, however. Although he had won reelection by a landslide
in November 1972, he was suffering from revelations about the
Watergate scandal. The president's campaign officials had
orchestrated a burglary at the Democratic National Committee
headquarters, and Nixon had attempted to cover it up by lying to the
American people about his role.
The
president made new enemies when the secret bombing of Cambodia was
revealed at last. Congress was threatening a bill of impeachment and
in early January 1973 indicated it would cut off all funding for
operations in Indochina once U.S. forces had withdrawn. In
mid-January Nixon halted all military actions against North Vietnam.
On
January 27, 1973, all four parties to the Vietnam conflictˇXthe
United States, South Vietnam, the PRG, and North VietnamˇXsigned
the Treaty of Paris. The final terms provided for the release of all
American prisoners of war from North Vietnam; the withdrawal of all
U.S. forces from South Vietnam; the end of all foreign military
operations in Laos and Cambodia; a cease-fire between North and
South Vietnam; the formation of a National Council of Reconciliation
to help South Vietnam form a new government; and continued U.S.
military and economic aid to South Vietnam. In a secret addition to
the treaty Nixon also promised $3.25 billion in reparations for the
reconstruction of ravaged North Vietnam, an agreement that Congress
ultimately refused to uphold.

G. Cease-fire
Aftermath

On
March 29, 1973, the last U.S. troops left Vietnam. Thieu quickly
showed that he had no desire to honor the terms of the Paris peace
treaty, which he had signed under duress. He issued an order to the
ARVN: "If Communists come into your village, shoot them in the
head." Thieu immediately began offensives against PRG villages,
in open violation of the treaty. Thieu believed the continued
presence of North Vietnamese soldiers on South Vietnamese soil
threatened South Vietnam's existence.
North
Vietnam and the PRG refrained from taking any action against the
ARVN's provocation, keeping carefully to the treaty terms (except
for maintaining troops in Laos and Cambodia). They insisted that
both Saigon and the United States also abide by the treaty. Not
wishing to be caught unprepared by treaty violations, the Communists
concentrated on logistics and infrastructure by building roads to
accommodate the movement of troops.
Meanwhile,
the withdrawal of U.S. personnel had resulted in a collapsing
economy throughout South Vietnam. Millions had depended on the money
spent by Americans in Vietnam. Thieu's government was ill-equipped
to treat the mass unemployment and deepening poverty that resulted
from the U.S. withdrawal. The ARVN still received $700 million from
the U.S. Congress and was twice the size of the Communist forces,
but morale was collapsing. Over 200,000 ARVN soldiers deserted in
1974 in order to be with their families.
Having
no faith that the Paris treaty would be implemented, the North
Vietnamese set 1975 as the year to mount their final offensive. They
believed it would take at least two years; the rapid collapse of the
ARVN was therefore a surprise even to them. After the initial attack
by the North Vietnamese in the Central Highlands northeast of Saigon
on January 7, the ARVN immediately began to fall apart. On March 25
the ancient imperial city of Hue fell; then on March 29, Ð?Nang,
the former U.S. Marine headquarters, was overtaken. On April 20
Thieu resigned, accusing the United States of betrayal. His
successor was Duong Van Minh, who had been among those who overthrew
Diem in 1963. On April 30 Minh issued his unconditional surrender to
the PRG. Almost 30 years after Ho Chi Minh's declaration of
independence, Vietnam was finally unified.

The Troops

In
the United States, military conscription, or the draft, had been in
place virtually without interruption since the end of World War II,
but volunteers generally predominated in combat units. When the
first U.S. combat troops arrived in Vietnam in 1965 they were
composed mainly of volunteers. The Air Force, Navy, and Marines were
volunteer units. The escalating war, however, required more
draftees. In 1965 about 20,000 men per month were inducted into the
military, most into the Army; by 1968 about 40,000 young men were
drafted each month to meet increased troop levels ordered for
Vietnam. The conscript army was largely composed of teenagers; the
average age of a U.S. soldier in Vietnam was 19.
Those
conscripted were mostly youths from the poorer section of American
society, who did not have access to the exemptions that were
available to their more privileged fellow citizens. Of the numerous
exemptions from military service that Congress had written into law,
the most far-reaching were student deferments. The draft laws
effectively enabled most upper- and middle-class youngsters to avoid
military service. By 1968 it was increasingly evident that the draft
system was deeply unfair and discriminatory. Responding to popular
pressures, the Selective Service, the agency that administered the
draft, instituted a lottery system, which might have produced an
army more representative of society at large. Student deferments
were kept by Nixon until 1971, however, so as not to alienate
middle-class voters. By then his Vietnamization policy had lowered
monthly draft calls, and physical exemptions were still easily
obtained by the privileged, especially from draft boards in affluent
communities.
Both
North and South Vietnam also conscripted troops. Revolutionary
nationalist ideology was quite strong in the north, and the DRV was
able to create an army with well-disciplined, highly motivated
troops. It became the fourth-largest army in the world and one of
the most experienced. South Vietnam also drafted soldiers, beginning
in 1955 when the ARVN was created. Most ARVN conscripts, however,
had little personal motivation to fight other than a paycheck. In
1965, 113,000 deserted from the ARVN; by 1972, 20,000 per month were
slipping away from the war.
Although
equipped with high-tech weaponry that far exceeded the fire power
available to its enemies, the ARVN was poorly led and failed most of
the time to check its opponents' actions. United States troops came
to dislike and mistrust many ARVN units, accusing them of abandoning
the battlefield. The ARVN also suffered from internal corruption.
Numerous commanders would claim nonexistent troopers and then pocket
the pay intended for those troopers; this practice made some units
dangerously understaffed. Many ARVN soldiers were secretly working
for the NLF, providing information that undermined the U.S. effort.
At various times, battles verging on civil war broke out between
troops within the ARVN. Internal disunity on this scale was never an
issue among the North Vietnamese troops or the NLF guerrillas.
The
armed forces of the United States serving in Vietnam began to suffer
from internal dissension and low morale as well. Racism against the
Vietnamese troubled many soldiers, particularly those who had
experienced racism directed against themselves in the United States.
In Vietnam, Americans routinely referred to all Vietnamese, both
friend and foe, as "gooks." This process of dehumanizing
the Vietnamese led to many atrocities, including the massacre at My
Lai, and it provoked profound misgivings among U.S. troops. The
injustice of the Selective Service system also turned soldiers
against the war. By 1968 coffeehouses run by soldiers had sprung up
at 26 U.S. bases, serving as forums for antiwar activities. At least
250 underground antiwar newspapers were published by active-duty
soldiers.
Soldiers
sometimes took out their frustrations and resentments on those
officers who put their lives at risk. The term "fragging"
came to be used to describe soldiers attacking their officers, often
tossing fragmentation grenades into the officers' sleeping quarters.
According to one official account, 382 such fragging incidents
occurred between 1969 and 1971. Other sources estimate a higher
number of fraggings, since many went unreported.
By
1971, as Vietnamization proceeded with U.S. troop withdrawals, no
soldier wished to be the last one killed in Vietnam. Consequently,
entire units refused to go out on combat patrols, disobeying direct
orders. The desertion rate in the Army peaked at 73.5 per 1000
soldiers in 1971, noticeably higher than the peak desertion rates
reached during the Korean War and World War II. Another half million
men received less than honorable discharges. Vietnam Veterans
Against the War was organized in the United States in 1967. By the
1970s the participation of Vietnam veterans in protests against the
war in the United States had an important influence on the antiwar
movement.
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