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  • 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 Vietnam'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.

Decades back, in late 1972, South Vietnam and the United States were winning the Vietnam War

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ベトナム戦争の真実 (The Truth about the Vietnam War)

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    鄭祐晨 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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