Bruce Herschensohn offers a concise
history of the Vietnam War and the aftermath in a six-minute video.
You can watch the video via
the below link:
And /or you can read
transcript below:
Decades back, in late 1972,
South Vietnam and the United States were winning the Vietnam War decisively by
every conceivable measure. That's not just my view. That was the view of our
enemy, the North Vietnamese government officials. Victory was apparent when President Nixon
ordered the U.S. Air Force to bomb industrial and military targets in Hanoi,
North Viet Nam's capital city, and in Haiphong, its major port city, and we
would stop the bombing if the North Vietnamese would attend the Paris Peace
Talks that they had left earlier. The North Vietnamese did go back to the Paris
Peace talks, and we did stop the bombing as promised.
On January the 23rd, 1973,
President Nixon gave a speech to the nation on primetime television announcing
that the Paris Peace Accords had been initialed by the United States, South
Vietnam, North Vietnam, the Viet Cong, and the Accords would be signed on the
27th. What the United States and South Vietnam received in those accords was
victory. At the White House, it was
called "VV Day," "Victory in Vietnam Day."
The U.S. backed up that
victory with a simple pledge within the Paris Peace Accords saying: should the
South require any military hardware to defend itself against any North Vietnam
aggression we would provide replacement aid to the South on a piece-by-piece,
one-to-one replacement, meaning a bullet for a bullet; a helicopter for a
helicopter, for all things lost -- replacement.
The advance of communist tyranny had been halted by those accords.
Then it all came apart. And It happened this way: In August of the
following year, 1974, President Nixon resigned his office as a result of what
became known as "Watergate." Three months after his resignation came
the November congressional elections and within them the Democrats won a
landslide victory for the new Congress and many of the members used their new
majority to de-fund the military aid the U.S. had promised, piece for piece,
breaking the commitment that we made to the South Vietnamese in Paris to
provide whatever military hardware the South Vietnamese needed in case of
aggression from the North. Put simply and accurately, a majority of Democrats
of the 94th Congress did not keep the word of the United States.
On April the 10th of 1975,
President Gerald Ford appealed directly to those members of the congress in an
evening Joint Session, televised to the nation.
In that speech he literally begged the Congress to keep the word of the
United States. But as President Ford
delivered his speech, many of the members of the Congress walked out of the
chamber. Many of them had an investment in America's failure in Vietnam. They
had participated in demonstrations against the war for many years. They wouldn't give the aid.
On April the 30th South
Vietnam surrendered and Re-education Camps were constructed, and the phenomenon
of the Boat People began. If the South
Vietnamese had received the arms that the United States promised them would the
result have been different? It already had been different. The North Vietnamese
leaders admitted that they were testing the new President, Gerald Ford, and
they took one village after another, then cities, then provinces and our only
response was to go back on our word. The U.S. did not re-supply the South
Vietnamese as we had promised. It was then that the North Vietnamese knew they
were on the road to South Vietnam's capital city, Saigon, that would soon be
renamed Ho Chi Minh City.
Former Arkansas Senator
William Fulbright, who had been the Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee made a public statement about the surrender of South Vietnam. He said this, "I am no more distressed
than I would be about Arkansas losing a football game to Texas." The U.S. knew that North Vietnam would
violate the accords and so we planned for it. What we did not know was that our
own Congress would violate the accords. And violate them, of all things, on
behalf of the North Vietnamese. That's what happened.
I'm Bruce Herschensohn.
You can also read my Counterterrorism magazine piece on the Vietnam War and the lessons learned for Iraq, Afghanistan and the war on terrorism via the below link:
RT,
ReplyDeleteWell, we're a constitutional representative republic, but those who seek office are not always our best...
Paul
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