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Opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War

Opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War (before) or anti-Vietnam War movement (present) began with demonstrations in 1965 against the escalating role of the United States in the Vietnam War and grew into a broad social movement over the ensuing several years. This movement informed and helped shape the vigorous and polarizing debate, primarily in the United States, during the second half of the 1960s and early 1970s on how to end the war.

Opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War
Part of the Counterculture of the 1960s,
the Vietnam War and the Cold War
Date1965–1973
Caused byAmerican involvement in Vietnam
Goals
Resulted in

Many in the peace movement within the United States were children, mothers, or anti-establishment youth. Opposition grew with participation by the African-American civil rights, second-wave feminist movements, Chicano Movements, and sectors of organized labor. Additional involvement came from many other groups, including educators, clergy, academics, journalists, lawyers, physicians such as Benjamin Spock, and military veterans.

Their actions consisted mainly of peaceful, nonviolent events; few events were deliberately provocative and violent. In some cases, police used violent tactics against peaceful demonstrators. By 1967, according to Gallup polls, an increasing majority of Americans considered military involvement in Vietnam to be a mistake, echoed decades later by the then-head of American war planning, former Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara.[1]

Background

Causes of opposition

 
Vietnam War protesters in Wichita, Kansas, 1967

The draft, a system of conscription that mainly drew from minorities and lower and middle class whites, drove much of the protest after 1965. Conscientious objectors played an active role despite their small numbers. The prevailing sentiment that the draft was unfairly administered fueled student and blue-collar American opposition to the military draft.

Opposition to the war arose during a time of unprecedented student activism, which followed the free speech movement and the civil rights movement. The military draft mobilized the baby boomers, who were most at risk, but it grew to include a varied cross-section of Americans. The growing opposition to the Vietnam War was partly attributed to greater access to uncensored information through extensive television coverage on the ground in Vietnam.

Beyond opposition to the draft, anti-war protesters also made moral arguments against U.S. involvement in Vietnam. In May 1954, preceding the later Quaker protests but "just after the defeat of the French at Dien Bien Phu, the Service Committee bought a page in The New York Times to protest what seemed to be the tendency of the USA to step into Indo-China as France stepped out. We expressed our fear that in so doing, America would back into a war."[2] The moral imperative argument against the war was especially popular among American college students, who were more likely than the general public to accuse the United States of having imperialistic goals in Vietnam and to criticize the war as "immoral."[3] Civilian deaths, which were downplayed or omitted entirely by the Western media, became a subject of protest when photographic evidence of casualties emerged. An infamous photo of General Nguyễn Ngọc Loan shooting an alleged terrorist in handcuffs during the Tet Offensive also provoked public outcry.[4]

Another element of the American opposition to the war was the perception that U.S. intervention in Vietnam, which had been argued as acceptable because of the domino theory and the threat of communism, was not legally justifiable. Some Americans believed that the communist threat was used as a scapegoat to hide imperialistic intentions, and others argued that the American intervention in South Vietnam interfered with the self-determination of the country and felt that the war in Vietnam was a civil war that ought to have determined the fate of the country and that America was wrong to intervene.[4]

Media coverage of the war also shook the faith of citizens at home as new television brought images of wartime conflict to viewers at home. Newsmen like NBC's Frank McGee stated that the war was all but lost as a "conclusion to be drawn inescapably from the facts."[4] For the first time in American history, the media had the means to broadcast battlefield images. Graphic footage of casualties on the nightly news eliminated any myth of the glory of war. With no clear sign of victory in Vietnam, American military casualties helped stimulate opposition to the war by Americans. In their book Manufacturing Consent, Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky reject the mainstream view of how the media influenced the war and propose that the media instead censored the more brutal images of the fighting and the death of millions of innocent people.

Polarization

 
U.S. Marshals dragging away a Vietnam War protester in Washington, D.C. 1967

If America's soul becomes totally poisoned, part of the autopsy must read "Vietnam."

The U.S. became polarized over the war. Many supporters of U.S. involvement argued for what was known as the domino theory, a theory that believed if one country fell to communism, then the bordering countries would be sure to fall as well, much like falling dominoes. This theory was largely held due to the fall of eastern Europe to communism and the Soviet sphere of influence following World War II. However, military critics of the war pointed out that the Vietnam War was political and that the military mission lacked any clear idea of how to achieve its objectives. Civilian critics of the war argued that the government of South Vietnam lacked political legitimacy, or that support for the war was completely immoral.

The media also played a substantial role in the polarization of American opinion regarding the Vietnam War. For example, in 1965 a majority of the media attention focused on military tactics with very little discussion about the necessity for a full scale intervention in Southeast Asia.[6] After 1965, the media covered the dissent and domestic controversy that existed within the United States, but mostly excluded the actual view of dissidents and resisters.[6]

The media established a sphere of public discourse surrounding the Hawk versus Dove debate. The Dove was a liberal and a critic of the war. Doves claimed that the war was well–intentioned but a disastrously wrong mistake in an otherwise benign foreign policy. It is important to note the Doves did not question the U.S. intentions in intervening in Vietnam, nor did they question the morality or legality of the U.S. intervention. Rather, they made pragmatic claims that the war was a mistake. Contrarily, the Hawks argued that the war was legitimate and winnable and a part of the benign U.S. foreign policy. The Hawks claimed that the one-sided criticism of the media contributed to the decline of public support for the war and ultimately helped the U.S. lose the war. Author William F. Buckley repeatedly wrote about his approval for the war and suggested that "The United States has been timid, if not cowardly, in refusing to seek 'victory' in Vietnam."[4] The hawks claimed that the liberal media was responsible for the growing popular disenchantment with the war and blamed the western media for losing the war in Southeast Asia as communism was no longer a threat for them.

History

 
Students demonstrate in Saigon, July 1964, observing the tenth anniversary of the July 1954 Geneva Agreements.

Early protests

Early organized opposition was led by American Quakers in the 1950s, and by November 1960 eleven hundred Quakers undertook a silent protest vigil -- the group "ringed the Pentagon for parts of two days".[2]

Protests bringing attention to "the draft" began on May 5, 1965. Student activists at the University of California, Berkeley marched on the Berkeley Draft board and forty students staged the first public burning of a draft card in the United States. Another nineteen cards were burnt on May 22 at a demonstration following the Berkeley teach-in.[7] Draft card protests were not aimed so much at the draft as at the immoral conduct of the war.[8]

At that time, only a fraction of all men of draft age were actually conscripted, but the Selective Service System office ("Draft Board") in each locality had broad discretion on whom to draft and whom to exempt where there was no clear guideline for exemption. In late July 1965, Johnson doubled the number of young men to be drafted per month from 17,000 to 35,000, and on August 31, signed a law making it a crime to burn a draft card.

On October 15, 1965, the student-run National Coordinating Committee to End the War in Vietnam in New York staged the first draft card burning to result in an arrest under the new law.

Gruesome images of two anti-war activists who set themselves on fire in November 1965 provided iconic images of how strongly some people felt that the war was immoral. On November 2, 32-year-old Quaker Norman Morrison set himself on fire in front of The Pentagon. On November 9, 22-year-old Catholic Worker Movement member Roger Allen LaPorte did the same in front of United Nations Headquarters in New York City. Both protests were conscious imitations of earlier (and ongoing) Buddhist protests in South Vietnam.

Government reactions

The growing anti-war movement alarmed many in the U.S. government. On August 16, 1966, the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) began investigations of Americans who were suspected of aiding the NLF, with the intent to introduce legislation making these activities illegal. Anti-war demonstrators disrupted the meeting and 50 were arrested.

Shifting opinion

 
Protest against the Vietnam War in Helsinki, December 1967
 
Protest against the Vietnam War in Amsterdam, April 1968

In February 1967, The New York Review of Books published "The Responsibility of Intellectuals", an essay by Noam Chomsky, one of the leading intellectual opponents of the war. In the essay Chomsky argued that much responsibility for the war lay with liberal intellectuals and technical experts who were providing what he saw as pseudoscientific justification for the policies of the U.S. government. The Time Inc magazines Time and Life maintained a very pro-war editorial stance until October 1967, when in a volte-face, the editor-in-chief, Hedley Donovan, came out against the war.[9] Donovan wrote in an editorial in Life that the United States had gone into Vietnam for "honorable and sensible purposes", but the war had turned out to be "harder, longer, more complicated" than expected.[10] Donovan ended his editorial by writing the war was "not worth winning", as South Vietnam was "not absolutely imperative" to maintain American interests in Asia, which made it impossible "to ask young Americans to die for".[10]

Draft protests

In 1967, the continued operation of a seemingly unfair draft system then calling as many as 40,000 men for induction each month fueled a burgeoning draft resistance movement. The draft favored white, middle-class men, which allowed an economically and racially discriminating draft to force young African American men to serve in rates that were disproportionately higher than the general population. Although in 1967 there was a smaller field of draft-eligible black men, 29 percent, versus 63 percent of white men, 64 percent of eligible black men were chosen to serve in the war through conscription, compared to only 31 percent of eligible white men.[11]

On October 16, 1967, draft card turn-ins were held across the country, yielding more than 1,000 draft cards, later returned to the Justice Department as an act of civil disobedience. Resisters expected to be prosecuted immediately, but Attorney General Ramsey Clark instead prosecuted a group of ringleaders including Dr. Benjamin Spock and Yale chaplain William Sloane Coffin, Jr. in Boston in 1968. By the late 1960s, one quarter of all court cases dealt with the draft, including men accused of draft-dodging and men petitioning for the status of conscientious objector.[12] Over 210,000 men were accused of draft-related offenses, 25,000 of whom were indicted.[13]

The charges of unfairness led to the institution of a draft lottery for the year 1970 in which a young man's birthday determined his relative risk of being drafted (September 14 was the birthday at the top of the draft list for 1970; the following year July 9 held this distinction). However, popular anti-war speculation that most American soldiers, as well as most of American soldiers killed, during the Vietnam War were draftees was discredited in later years, as the large majority of these soldiers were in fact confirmed to be volunteers.[14]

Developments in the war

On February 1, 1968, Nguyễn Văn Lém, a Vietcong officer suspected of participating in murder of South Vietnamese government officials during the Tet Offensive, was summarily executed by General Nguyễn Ngọc Loan, the South Vietnamese National Police Chief. Loan shot Lém in the head on a public street in Saigon, despite being in front of journalists. South Vietnamese reports provided as justification after the fact claimed that Lém was captured near the site of a ditch holding as many as thirty-four bound and shot bodies of police and their relatives, some of whom were the families of General Loan's deputy and close friend. The execution provided an iconic image that helped sway public opinion in the United States against the war.

The events of Tet in early 1968 as a whole were also remarkable in shifting public opinion regarding the war. U.S. military officials had previously reported that counter-insurgency in South Vietnam was being prosecuted successfully. While the Tet Offensive provided the U.S. and allied militaries with a great victory in that the Vietcong was finally brought into open battle and destroyed as a fighting force, the American media, including respected figures such as Walter Cronkite, interpreted such events as the attack on the American embassy in Saigon as an indicator of U.S. military weakness.[15] The military victories on the battlefields of Tet were obscured by shocking images of violence on television screens, long casualty lists, and a new perception among the American people that the military had been untruthful to them about the success of earlier military operations, and ultimately, the ability to achieve a meaningful military solution in Vietnam.

1968 presidential election

In 1968, President Lyndon B. Johnson began his re-election campaign. Eugene McCarthy ran against him for the nomination on an anti-war platform. McCarthy did not win the first primary election in New Hampshire, but he did surprisingly well against an incumbent. The resulting blow to the Johnson campaign, taken together with other factors, led the President to make a surprise announcement in a March 31 televised speech that he was pulling out of the race. He also announced the initiation of the Paris Peace Negotiations with Vietnam in that speech. Then, on August 4, 1969, U.S. representative Henry Kissinger and North Vietnamese representative Xuan Thuy began secret peace negotiations at the apartment of French intermediary Jean Sainteny in Paris.

After breaking with Johnson's pro-war stance, Robert F. Kennedy entered the race on March 16 and ran for the nomination on an anti-war platform. Johnson's vice president, Hubert Humphrey, also ran for the nomination, promising to continue to support the South Vietnamese government.

Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam

In May 1969, Life magazine published in a single issue photographs of the faces of the roughly 250 or so American servicemen who had been killed in Vietnam during a "routine week" of war in the spring of 1969.[10] Contrary to expectations, the issue sold out with many being haunted by the photographs of the ordinary young Americans killed.[10] On October 15, 1969, hundreds of thousands of people took part in National Moratorium anti-war demonstrations across the United States; the demonstrations prompted many workers to call in sick from their jobs and adolescents nationwide engaged in truancy from school. About 15 million Americans took part in the demonstration of October 15, making it the largest protests in a single day up to that point.[16] A second round of "Moratorium" demonstrations was held on November 15 and attracted more people than the first.[17]

Hearts and Minds campaign

 
The My Lai massacre was used as an example of bad military conduct during the Vietnam War.

The U.S. realized that the South Vietnamese government needed a solid base of popular support if it were to survive the insurgency. To pursue this goal of winning the "Hearts and Minds" of the Vietnamese people, units of the United States Army, referred to as "Civil Affairs" units, were used extensively for the first time since World War II.

Civil Affairs units, while remaining armed and under direct military control, engaged in what came to be known as "nation-building": constructing (or reconstructing) schools, public buildings, roads and other infrastructure; conducting medical programs for civilians who had no access to medical facilities; facilitating cooperation among local civilian leaders; conducting hygiene and other training for civilians; and similar activities.

This policy of attempting to win the hearts and minds of the Vietnamese people, however, often was at odds with other aspects of the war which sometimes served to antagonize many Vietnamese civilians and provided ammunition to the anti-war movement. These included the emphasis on "body count" as a way of measuring military success on the battlefield, civilian casualties during the bombing of villages (symbolized by journalist Peter Arnett's famous quote, "it was necessary to destroy the village to save it"), and the killing of civilians in such incidents as the My Lai massacre. In 1974 the documentary Hearts and Minds sought to portray the devastation the war was causing to the South Vietnamese people, and won an Academy Award for best documentary amid considerable controversy. The South Vietnamese government also antagonized many of its citizens with its suppression of political opposition, through such measures as holding large numbers of political prisoners, torturing political opponents, and holding a one-man election for President in 1971. Covert counter-terror programs and semi-covert ones such as the Phoenix Program attempted, with the help of anthropologists, to isolate rural South Vietnamese villages and affect the loyalty of the residents.

Increasing polarization

 
This man wears a Purple Heart medal as he watches a San Francisco peace march, April 1967.

Despite the increasingly depressing news of the war, many Americans continued to support President Johnson's endeavors. Aside from the domino theory mentioned above, there was a feeling that the goal of preventing a communist takeover of a pro-Western government in South Vietnam was a noble objective. Many Americans were also concerned about saving face in the event of disengaging from the war or, as President Richard M. Nixon later put it, "achieving Peace with Honor." In addition, instances of Viet Cong atrocities were widely reported, most notably in an article that appeared in Reader's Digest in 1968 entitled The Blood-Red Hands of Ho Chi Minh.

However, anti-war feelings also began to rise. Many Americans opposed the war on moral grounds, appalled by the devastation and violence of the war. Others claimed the conflict was a war against Vietnamese independence, or an intervention in a foreign civil war; others opposed it because they felt it lacked clear objectives and appeared to be unwinnable. Many anti-war activists were themselves Vietnam veterans, as evidenced by the organization Vietnam Veterans Against the War.

Later protests

In April 1971, thousands of these veterans converged on the White House in Washington, D.C., and hundreds of them threw their medals and decorations on the steps of the United States Capitol. By this time, it had also become commonplace for the most radical anti-war demonstrators to prominently display the flag of the Viet Cong "enemy", an act which alienated many who were otherwise morally opposed to the war.

Characteristics

As the Vietnam War continued to escalate, public disenchantment grew and a variety of different groups were formed or became involved in the movement.

African Americans

 
Martin Luther King Jr. speaking to an anti-Vietnam War rally at the University of Minnesota, St. Paul on April 27, 1967

African-American leaders of earlier decades like W. E. B. Du Bois were often anti-imperialist and anti-capitalist. Paul Robeson weighed in on the Vietnamese struggle in 1954, calling Ho Chi Minh "the modern day Toussaint L'Overture, leading his people to freedom." These figures were driven from public life by McCarthyism, however, and black leaders were more cautious about criticizing US foreign policy as the 1960s began.[18]

By the middle of the decade, open condemnation of the war became more common, with figures like Malcolm X and Bob Moses speaking out.[19] Champion boxer Muhammad Ali risked his career and a prison sentence to resist the draft in 1966. Soon Martin Luther King Jr., Coretta Scott King and James Bevel of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) became prominent opponents of the Vietnam War, and Bevel became the director of the National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam. The Black Panther Party vehemently opposed U.S. involvement in Vietnam.[20] In the beginning of the war, some African Americans did not want to join the war opposition movement because of loyalty to President Johnson for pushing Civil Rights legislation, but soon the escalating violence of the war and the perceived social injustice of the draft propelled involvement in antiwar groups.[20]

In March 1965, King first criticized the war during the Selma march when he told a journalist that "millions of dollars can be spent every day to hold troops in South Vietnam and our country cannot protect the rights of Negroes in Selma".[21] In 1965, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) became the first major civil rights group to issue a formal statement against the war. When SNCC-backed Georgia Representative Julian Bond acknowledged his agreement with the anti-war statement, he was refused his seat by the State of Georgia, an injustice which he successfully appealed up to the Supreme Court.[22] SNCC had special significance as a nexus between the student movement and the black movement. At an SDS-organized conference at UC Berkeley in October 1966, SNCC Chair Stokely Carmichael challenged the white left to escalate their resistance to the military draft in a manner similar to the black movement. Some participants in ghetto rebellions of the era had already associated their actions with opposition to the Vietnam War, and SNCC first disrupted an Atlanta draft board in August 1966. According to historians Joshua Bloom and Waldo Martin, SDS's first Stop the Draft Week of October 1967 was "inspired by Black Power [and] emboldened by the ghetto rebellions." SNCC appear to have originated the popular anti-draft slogan: "Hell no! We won't go!"[23]

On April 4, 1967, King gave a much publicized speech entitled "Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence" at the Riverside Church in New York, attacking President Johnson for "deadly Western arrogance", declaring that "we are on the side of the wealthy, and the secure, while we create a hell for the poor".[21] King's speech attracted much controversy at the time with many feeling that it was ungrateful for him to attack the president who done the most for civil rights for African Americans since Abraham Lincoln had abolished slavery a century before. Liberal newspapers such as the Washington Post and the New York Times condemned King for his "Beyond Vietnam" speech while the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People disallowed him.[24] The "Beyond Vietnam" speech involved King in a debate with the diplomat Ralph Bunche who argued that it was folly to associate the civil rights movement with the anti-Vietnam war movement, maintaining that this would set back civil rights for African Americans.[24] This speech also showed how bold King could be when he condemned U.S. "aggression" in Vietnam; and this is considered a milestone in King's critiques against imperialism and militarism.[25]

King, during the year of 1966, spoke out that it was hypocritical for Black Americans to be fighting the war in Vietnam, since they were being treated as second-class citizens back home.[25] One of his arguments was that many white middle-class men avoided the draft by college deferments, but his greatest defense was that the arms race and the Vietnam War were taking much needed resources away from the civil rights movement and the War on Poverty.[26] To combat these issues, King selected a strategy of rallying the poor working-class in hopes that the Federal Government would redirect resources toward fighting the War on Poverty.[27] King used the statistic that for the 1967 war budget, the U.S. government underestimated the cost by $10 billion, which was five times the poverty budget.[28]

Black antiwar groups opposed the war for similar reasons as white groups, but often protested in separate events and sometimes did not cooperate with the ideas of white antiwar leadership.[20] They harshly criticized the draft because poor and minority men were usually most affected by conscription.[29] In 1965 and 1966, African Americans accounted for 25 percent of combat deaths, more than twice their proportion of the population. As a result, black enlisted men themselves protested and began the resistance movement among veterans. After taking measures to reduce the fatalities, apparently in response to widespread protest, the military brought the proportion of blacks down to 12.6 percent of casualties.[30]

African Americans involved in the antiwar movement often formed their own groups, such as Black Women Enraged, National Black Anti-War Anti-Draft Union, and National Black Draft Counselors. Some of the differences were how Black Americans rallied behind the banner of "Self-determination for Black America and Vietnam", while whites marched under banners that said, "Support Our GIs, Bring Them Home Now!".[31] Within these groups, however, many African American women were seen as subordinate members by black male leaders.[32] Many African American women viewed the war in Vietnam as racially motivated and sympathized strongly with Vietnamese women.[33] Such concerns often propelled their participation in the antiwar movement and their creation of new opposition groups.

Artists

Many artists during the 1960s and 1970s opposed the war and used their creativity and careers to visibly oppose the war. Writers and poets opposed to involvement in the war included Allen Ginsberg, Denise Levertov, Robert Duncan, and Robert Bly. Their pieces often incorporated imagery based on the tragic events of the war as well as the disparity between life in Vietnam and life in the United States. Visual artists Ronald Haeberle, Peter Saul, and Nancy Spero, among others, used war equipment, like guns and helicopters, in their works while incorporating important political and war figures, portraying to the nation exactly who was responsible for the violence. Filmmakers such as Lenny Lipton, Jerry Abrams, Peter Gessner, and David Ringo created documentary-style movies featuring actual footage from the antiwar marches to raise awareness about the war and the diverse opposition movement. Playwrights like Frank O'Hara, Sam Shepard, Robert Lowell, Megan Terry, Grant Duay, and Kenneth Bernard used theater as a vehicle for portraying their thoughts about the Vietnam War, often satirizing the role of America in the world and juxtaposing the horrific effects of war with normal scenes of life. Regardless of medium, antiwar artists ranged from pacifists to violent radicals and caused Americans to think more critically about the war. Art as war opposition was quite popular in the early years of the war, but soon faded as political activism became the more common and most visible way of opposing the war.[34]

Asian-Americans

Many Asian-Americans were strongly opposed to the Vietnam War. They saw the war as being a bigger action of U.S. imperialism and "connected the oppression of the Asians in the United States to the prosecution of the war in Vietnam."[35] Unlike many Americans in the anti-war movement, they viewed the war "not just as imperialist but specifically as anti-Asian."[36] Groups like the Asian American Political Alliance (AAPA), the Bay Area Coalition Against the War (BAACAW), and the Asian Americans for Action (AAA) made opposition to the war their main focus. Of these organizations, the Bay Area Coalition Against the War was the biggest and most significant. One of the major reasons leading to their significance was that the BAACAW was "highly organized, holding biweekly ninety-minute meetings of the Coordinating Committee at which each regional would submit detailed reports and action plans."[37] The driving force behind their formation was their anger at "the bombing of Hanoi and the mining of Haiphong Harbor." Another aspect of the group's prevalence was the support of the Japanese Community Youth Center, members of the Asian Community Center, student leaders of Asian American student unions, etc. who stood behind it.[38] The BAACAW members consisted of many Asian-Americans and they were involved in antiwar efforts like marches, study groups, fundraisers, teach-ins and demonstrations. During marches, Asian American activists carried banners that read "Stop the Bombing of Asian People and Stop Killing Our Asian Brothers and Sisters."[39] Its newsletter stated, "our goal is to build a solid, broad-based anti-imperialist movement of Asian people against the war in Vietnam."[40]

The anti-war sentiment by Asian Americans was fueled by the racial inequality that they faced in the United States. As historian Daryl Maeda notes, "the antiwar movement articulated Asian Americans' racial commonality with Vietnamese people in two distinctly gendered ways: identification based on the experiences of male soldiers and identification by women."[41] Asian American soldiers in the U.S. military were many times classified as being like the enemy. They were referred to as gooks and had a racialized identity in comparison to their non-Asian counterparts. There was also the hypersexualization of Vietnamese women which in turn affected how Asian American women in the military were treated. "In a Gidra article, [a prominent influential newspaper of the Asian American movement], Evelyn Yoshimura noted that the U.S. military systematically portrayed Vietnamese women as prostitutes as a way of dehumanizing them."[42] Asian American groups realized in order to extinguish racism, they also had to address sexism as well. This in turn led to women's leadership in the Asian American antiwar movement. Patsy Chan, a "Third World" activist, said at an antiwar rally in San Francisco, "We, as Third World women [express] our militant solidarity with our brothers and sisters from Indochina. We, as Third World people know of the struggle the Indochinese are waging against imperialism, because we share that common enemy in the United States."[43] Some other notable figures were Grace Lee Boggs and Yuri Kochiyama. Both Boggs and Kochiyama were inspired by the civil rights movement of the 1960s and "a growing number of Asian Americans began to push forward a new era in radical Asian American politics."[44]

Much Asian-Americans spoke against the war because of the way that the Vietnamese were referred within the U.S. military by the disparaging term "gook", and more generally because they encountered bigotry because they looked like "the enemy".[45] One Japanese-American veteran, Norman Nakamura, wrote in an article in the June/July issue of Gidra, that during his tour of duty in Vietnam of 1969-70 that there was an atmosphere of systematic racism towards all Vietnamese people, who were seen as less than human, being merely "gooks".[45] Because most white Americans did not make much effort to distinguish between Chinese-Americans, Japanese-Americans, Korean-Americans, and Filipino-Americans, the anti-Asian racism generated by the war led to the emergence of a pan-Asian American identity.[45] Another Japanese-American veteran, Mike Nakayama, reported to Gidra in 1971 that he was wounded in Vietnam, he was initially refused medical treatment because he was seen as a "gook" with the doctors thinking that he was a South Vietnamese soldier (who were clothed in American uniforms), and only when he established that he spoke English as his first language that he was recognized as an American.[45] In May 1972, Gidra ran on its cover a cartoon of a female Viet Cong guerrilla being faced with an Asian-American soldier who is commanded by his white officer to "Kill that gook, you gook!".[45]

There were also Asian American musicians who traveled around the United States to oppose the imperialist actions of the American government, specifically their involvement in Vietnam. "The folk trio 'A Grain of Sand' ... [ consisting of the members] JoAnne 'Nobuko' Miyamoto, Chris Iijima, and William 'Charlie' Chin, performed across the nation as traveling troubadours who set the antiracist politics of the Asian American movement to music."[43] This band was so against the imperialistic actions of the United States, that they supported the Vietnamese people vocally through their song 'War of the Flea'.[43] Asian American poets and playwrights also joined in unity with the movement's antiwar sentiments. Melvyn Escueta created the play 'Honey Bucket' and was an Asian American veteran of the war. Through this play, "Escueta establishes equivalencies between his protagonist, a Filipino American soldier named Andy, and the Vietnamese people."[43]

"The Asian American antiwar movement emerged from a belief that the mainstream peace movement was racist in its disregard to Asians ... Steve Louie remembers that while the white antiwar movement had 'this moral thing about no killing,' Asian Americans sought to bring attention to 'a bigger issue ... genocide.' ... the broader movement had a hard time with the Asian movement ... because it broadened the issues out beyond where they wanted to go ... the whole question of U.S. imperialism as a system, at home and abroad."[46]

Clergy

The clergy, often a forgotten group during the opposition to the Vietnam War, played a large role as well. The clergy covered any of the religious leaders and members including individuals such as Martin Luther King Jr. In his speech "Beyond Vietnam" King stated, "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today: my own government. For the sake of those boys, for the sake of this government, for the sake of the hundreds of thousands trembling under our violence, I cannot be silent."[47] King was not looking for racial equality through this speech, but tried to voice for an end to the war instead.

The involvement of the clergy did not stop at King though. The analysis entitled "Social Movement Participation: Clergy and the Anti-Vietnam War Movement" expands upon the anti-war movement by taking King, a single religious figurehead, and explaining the movement from the entire clergy's perspective. The clergy were often forgotten though throughout this opposition. The analysis refers to that fact by saying, "The research concerning clergy anti-war participation is even more barren than the literature on student activism."[48] There is a relationship and correlation between theology and political opinions and during the Vietnam War, the same relationship occurred between feelings about the war and theology.[48] This article basically was a social experiment finding results on how the pastors and clergy members reacted to the war. Based on the results found, they most certainly did not believe in the war and wished to help end it.

Another source, Lift Up Your Voice Like A Trumpet: White Clergy And The Civil Rights And Antiwar Movements, 1954–1973 explains the story of the entire spectrum of the clergy and their involvement. Michael Freidland is able to completely tell the story in his chapter entitled, "A Voice of Moderation: Clergy and the Anti-War Movement: 1966–1967". In basic summary, each specific clergy from each religion had their own view of the war and how they dealt with it, but as a whole, the clergy was completely against the war.[49]

Draft evasion

 
Demonstration against conscription in Martin Place & Garden Island Dock, Sydney in 1966.

The first draft lottery since World War II in the United States was held on December 1, 1969, and was met with large protests and a great deal of controversy; statistical analysis indicated that the methodology of the lotteries unintentionally disadvantaged men with late year birthdays.[50] This issue was treated at length in a January 4, 1970 New York Times article titled "Statisticians Charge Draft Lottery Was Not Random" November 4, 2013, at the Wayback Machine.

Various antiwar groups, such as Another Mother for Peace, WILPF, and WSP, had free draft counseling centers, where they gave young American men advice for legally and illegally evading the draft.

Over 30,000 people left the country and went to Canada, Sweden, and Mexico to avoid the draft.[13] The Japanese anti-war group Beheiren helped some American soldiers to desert and hide from the military in Japan.[51]

To gain an exemption or deferment, many men attended college, though they had to remain in college until their 26th birthday to be certain of avoiding the draft. Some men were rejected by the military as 4-F unfit for service failing to meet physical, mental, or moral standards. Still others joined the National Guard or entered the Peace Corps as a way of avoiding Vietnam. All of these issues raised concerns about the fairness of who got selected for involuntary service, since it was often the poor or those without connections who were drafted. Ironically, in light of modern political issues, a certain exemption was a convincing claim of homosexuality, but very few men attempted this because of the stigma involved. Also, conviction for certain crimes earned an exclusion, the topic of the anti-war song "Alice's Restaurant" by Arlo Guthrie.

Even many of those who never received a deferment or exemption never served, simply because the pool of eligible men was so huge compared to the number required for service, that the draft boards never got around to drafting them when a new crop of men became available (until 1969) or because they had high lottery numbers (1970 and later).

Of those soldiers who served during the war, there was increasing opposition to the conflict amongst GIs,[52] which resulted in fragging and many other activities which hampered the US's ability to wage war effectively.

Most of those subjected to the draft were too young to vote or drink in most states, and the image of young people being forced to risk their lives in the military without the privileges of enfranchisement or the ability to drink alcohol legally also successfully pressured legislators to lower the voting age nationally and the drinking age in many states.

Student opposition groups on many college and university campuses seized campus administration offices, and in several instances forced the expulsion of ROTC programs from the campus.

Some Americans who were not subject to the draft protested the conscription of their tax dollars for the war effort. War tax resistance, once mostly isolated to solitary anarchists like Henry David Thoreau and religious pacifists like the Quakers, became a more mainstream protest tactic. As of 1972, an estimated 200,000–500,000 people were refusing to pay the excise taxes on their telephone bills, and another 20,000 were resisting part or all of their income tax bills. Among the tax resisters were Joan Baez and Noam Chomsky.[53]

Environmentalists

Momentum from the protest organizations and the war's impact on the environment became focal point of issues to an overwhelmingly main force for the growth of an environmental movement in the United States.[citation needed] Many of the environment-oriented demonstrations were inspired by Rachel Carson's 1962 book Silent Spring, which warned of the harmful effects of pesticide use on the earth.[54] For demonstrators, Carson's warnings paralleled with the United States' use of chemicals in Vietnam such as Agent Orange, a chemical compound which was used to clear forestry being used as cover, initially conducted by the United States Air Force in Operation Ranch Hand in 1962.[55]

Musicians

Waist Deep in the Big Muddy; the Big Fool said to push on.

— Pete Seeger, 1963/1967
 
Cornelis Vreeswijk, Fred Åkerström, Gösta Cervin in a protest march against the Vietnam War in Stockholm, 1965

Protest to American participation in the Vietnam War was a movement that many popular musicians shared in, which was a stark contrast to the pro-war compositions of artists during World War II.[56] These musicians included Joni Mitchell, Joan Baez, Phil Ochs, Lou Harrison, Gail Kubik, William Mayer, Elie Siegmeister, Robert Fink, David Noon, Richard Wernick, and John W. Downey.[57] However, of over 5,000 Vietnam War-related songs identified to date, many took a patriotic, pro-government, or pro-soldier perspective.[58] The two most notable genres involved in this protest were Rock and Roll and Folk music. While composers created pieces affronting the war, they were not limited to their music. Often protesters were being arrested and participating in peace marches and popular musicians were among their ranks.[59] This concept of intimate involvement reached new heights in May 1968 when the "Composers and Musicians for Peace" concert was staged in New York. As the war continued, and with the new media coverage, the movement snowballed and popular music reflected this. As early as the summer of 1965, music-based protest against the American involvement in Southeast Asia began with works like P. F. Sloan's folk rock song Eve of Destruction, recorded by Barry McGuire as one of the earliest musical protests against the Vietnam War.[60]

A key figure on the rock end of the antiwar spectrum was Jimi Hendrix (1942–1970). Hendrix had a huge following among the youth culture exploring itself through drugs and experiencing itself through rock music. He was not an official protester of the war; one of Hendrix's biographers contends that Hendrix, being a former soldier, sympathized with the anticommunist view.[61] He did, however, protest the violence that took place in the Vietnam War. With the song "Machine Gun", dedicated to those fighting in Vietnam, this protest of violence is manifest. David Henderson, author of 'Scuse Me While I Kiss the Sky, describes the song as "scary funk ... his sound over the drone shifts from a woman's scream, to a siren, to a fighter plane diving, all amid Buddy Miles' Gatling-gun snare shots. ... he says 'evil man make me kill you ... make you kill me although we're only families apart.'"[62] This song was often accompanied with pleas from Hendrix to bring the soldiers back home and cease the bloodshed.[63] While Hendrix's views may not have been analogous to the protesters, his songs became anthems to the antiwar movement. Songs such as "Star Spangled Banner" showed individuals that "you can love your country, but hate the government."[64] Hendrix's anti-violence efforts are summed up in his words: "when the power of love overcomes the love of power ... the world will know peace." Thus, Hendrix's personal views did not coincide perfectly with those of the antiwar protesters; however, his anti-violence outlook was a driving force during the years of the Vietnam War even after his death (1970).

The song known to many as the anthem of the protest movement was The "Fish" Cheer/I-Feel-Like-I'm-Fixin'-to-Die Rag – first released on an EP in the October 1965 issue of Rag Baby – by Country Joe and the Fish,[65] one of the most successful protest bands. Although this song was not on music charts probably because it was too radical, it was performed at many public events including the famous Woodstock music festival (1969). "Feel-Like-I'm-Fixin'-To-Die Rag" was a song that used sarcasm to communicate the problems with not only the war but also the public's naïve attitudes towards it. It was said that "the happy beat and insouciance of the vocalist are in odd juxtaposition to the lyrics that reinforce the sad fact that the American public was being forced into realizing that Vietnam was no longer a remote place on the other side of the world, and the damage it was doing to the country could no longer be considered collateral, involving someone else."[66]

Along with singer-songwriter Phil Ochs, who attended and organized anti-war events and wrote such songs as "I Ain't Marching Anymore" and "The War Is Over", another key historical figure of the antiwar movement was Bob Dylan. Folk and Rock were critical aspects of counterculture during the Vietnam War[67] both were genres that Dylan would dabble in. His success in writing protest songs came from his pre-existing popularity, as he did not initially intend on doing so. Tor Egil Førland, in his article "Bringing It All Back Home or Another Side of Bob Dylan: Midwestern Isolationist", quotes Todd Gitlin, a leader of a student movement at the time, in saying "Whether he liked it or not, Dylan sang for us. ... We followed his career as if he were singing our songs."[68] The anthem "Blowin' in the Wind" embodied Dylan's anti-war, pro-civil rights sentiment. To complement "Blowin' in the Wind" Dylan's song "The Times they are A-Changin'" alludes to a new method of governing that is necessary and warns those who currently participate in government that the change is imminent. Dylan tells the "senators and congressmen [to] please heed the call." Dylan's songs were designed to awaken the public and to cause a reaction. The protesters of the Vietnam War identified their cause so closely with the artistic compositions of Dylan that Joan Baez and Judy Collins performed "The Times they are A-Changin'" at a march protesting the Vietnam War (1965) and also for President Johnson.[68] While Dylan renounced the idea of subscribing to the ideals of one individual, his feelings of protest towards Vietnam were appropriated by the general movement and they "awaited his gnomic yet oracular pronouncements", which provided a guiding aspect to the movement as a whole.[69]

John Lennon, former member of the Beatles, did most of his activism in his solo career with wife Yoko Ono. Given his immense fame due to the success of the Beatles, he was a very prominent movement figure with the constant media and press attention. Still being proactive on their honeymoon, the newlyweds controversially held a sit-in, where they sat in bed for a week answering press questions. They held numerous sit-ins, one where they first introduced their song "Give Peace a Chance". Lennon and Ono's song overshadowed many previous held anthems, as it became known as the ultimate anthem of peace in the 1970s, with their words "all we are saying ... is give peace a chance" being sung globally.[70]

Military Members

Within the United States military various servicemembers would organize to avoid military duties and individual actors would also carry out their own acts of resistance. The movement consisted of the self-organizing of active duty members and veterans in collaboration with civilian peace activists. By 1971 the United States military would become so demoralized that the military would have severe difficulties properly waging war.[71][72]

Students

 
German students protest against the Vietnam War in 1968

There was a great deal of civic unrest on college campuses throughout the 1960s as students became increasingly involved in the Civil Rights Movement, Second Wave Feminism, and anti-war movement. Doug McAdam explains the success of the mass mobilization of volunteers for Freedom Summer in terms of "Biographical Availability", where individuals must have a certain degree of social, economic, and psychological freedom to be able to participate in large scale social movements.[73] This explanation can also be applied to the Anti-War Movement because it occurred around the same time and the same biographical factors applied to the college-aged anti-war protesters. David Meyers (2007) also explains how the concept of personal efficacy affects mass movement mobilization. For example, according to Meyers' thesis, consider that American wealth increased drastically after World War II. At this time, America was a superpower and enjoyed great affluence after thirty years of depression, war, and sacrifice. Benjamin T. Harrison (2000) argues that the post World War II affluence set the stage for the protest generation in the 1960s.[74] His central thesis is that the World Wars and Great Depression spawned a 'beat generation' refusing to conform to mainstream American values which lead to the emergence of the [Hippies] and the counterculture. The Anti-war movement became part of a larger protest movement against the traditional American Values and attitudes. Meyers (2007) builds off this claim in his argument that the "relatively privileged enjoy the education and affirmation that afford them the belief that they might make a difference."[75] As a result of the present factors in terms of affluence, biographical availability (defined in the sociological areas of activism as the lack of restrictions on social relationships of which most likely increases the consequences of participating in a social movement), and increasing political atmosphere across the county, political activity increased drastically on college campuses. In one instance, John William Ward, then president of Amherst College, sat down in front of Westover Air Force Base near Chicopee, Massachusetts, along with 1000 students, some faculty, and his wife Barbara to protest against Richard Nixon's escalation of offensive bombing in Southeast Asia.[76]

College enrollment reached 9 million by the end of the 1960s. Colleges and universities in America had more students than ever before, and these institutions often tried to restrict student behavior to maintain order on the campuses. To combat this, many college students became active in causes that promoted free speech, student input in the curriculum, and an end to archaic social restrictions. Students joined the antiwar movement because they did not want to fight in a foreign civil war that they believed did not concern them or because they were morally opposed to all war. Others disliked the war because it diverted funds and attention away from problems in the U.S. Intellectual growth and gaining a liberal perspective at college caused many students to become active in the antiwar movement. Another attractive feature of the opposition movement was the fact that it was a popular social event. Most student antiwar organizations were locally or campus-based, including chapters of the very loosely co-ordinated Students for a Democratic Society, because they were easier to organize and participate in than national groups. Common antiwar demonstrations for college students featured attempts to sever ties between the war machine and universities through burning draft cards, protesting universities furnishing grades to draft boards, and protesting military and Dow Chemical job fairs on campus.[77][78] From 1969 to 1970, student protesters attacked 197 ROTC buildings on college campuses. Protests grew after the Kent State shootings, radicalizing more and more students. Although the media often portrayed the student antiwar movement as aggressive and widespread, only 10% of the 2500 colleges in the United States had violent protests throughout the Vietnam War years. By the early 1970s, most student protest movements died down due to President Nixon's de-escalation of the war, the economic downturn, and disillusionment with the powerlessness of the antiwar movement.[79]

Women

 
Woman protesting during the 1972 Republican National Convention.

Women were a large part of the antiwar movement, even though they were sometimes relegated to second-class status within the organizations or faced sexism within opposition groups.[80] Some leaders of anti-war groups viewed women as sex objects or secretaries, not actual thinkers who could contribute positively and tangibly to the group's goals, or believed that women could not truly understand and join the antiwar movement because they were unaffected by the draft.[81] Women involved in opposition groups disliked the romanticism of the violence of both the war and the antiwar movement that was common amongst male war protesters.[82] Despite the inequalities, participation in various antiwar groups allowed women to gain experience with organizing protests and crafting effective antiwar rhetoric. These newfound skills combined with their dislike of sexism within the opposition movement caused many women to break away from the mainstream antiwar movement and create or join women's antiwar groups, such as Another Mother for Peace, Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), and Women Strike for Peace (WSP), also known as Women For Peace. Female soldiers serving in Vietnam joined the movement to battle the war and sexism, racism, and the established military bureaucracy by writing articles for antiwar and antimilitary newspapers.[83]

Mothers and older generations of women joined the opposition movement, as advocates for peace and people opposed to the effects of the war and the draft on the generation of young men. These women saw the draft as one of the most disliked parts of the war machine and sought to undermine the war itself through undermining the draft. Another Mother for Peace and WSP often held free draft counseling centers to give young men legal and illegal methods to oppose the draft.[81] Members of Women For Peace showed up at the White House every Sunday for 8 years from 11 to 1 for a peace vigil.[84] Such female antiwar groups often relied on maternalism, the image of women as peaceful caretakers of the world, to express and accomplish their goals. The government often saw middle-aged women involved in such organizations as the most dangerous members of the opposition movement because they were ordinary citizens who quickly and efficiently mobilized.[85]

Many women in America sympathized with the Vietnamese civilians affected by the war and joined the opposition movement. They protested the use of napalm, a highly flammable jelly weapon created by the Dow Chemical Company and used as a weapon during the war, by boycotting Saran Wrap, another product made by the company.[86]

Faced with the sexism sometimes found in the antiwar movement, New Left, and Civil Rights Movement, some women created their own organizations to establish true equality of the sexes. Some of frustrations of younger women became apparent during the antiwar movement: they desired more radical change and decreased acceptance of societal gender roles than older women activists.[87] Female activists' disillusion with the antiwar movement led to the formation of the Women's Liberation Movement to establish true equality for American women in all facets of life.[88]

Political responses

United Nations intervention

In October 1967 the Senate Foreign Relations Committee held hearings on resolutions urging President Johnson to request an emergency session of the United Nations security council to consider proposals for ending the war.[89]

Dellums (war crimes)

In January 1971, just weeks into his first term, Congressman Ron Dellums set up a Vietnam war crimes exhibit in an annex to his Congressional office. The exhibit featured four large posters depicting atrocities committed by American soldiers embellished with red paint. This was followed shortly thereafter by four days of hearings on "war crimes" in Vietnam, which began April 25. Dellums, assisted by the Citizens Commission of Inquiry,[90] had called for formal investigations into the allegations, but Congress chose not to endorse these proceedings. As such, the hearings were ad hoc and only informational in nature. As a condition of room use, press and camera presence were not permitted, but the proceedings were transcribed.

In addition to [Ron Dellums] (Dem-CA), an additional 19 Congressional representatives took part in the hearings, including: Bella Abzug (Dem-NY), Shirley Chisholm (Dem-NY), Patsy Mink (Dem-HI), Parren Mitchell (Dem-MD), John Conyers (Dem-MI), Herman Badillo (Dem-NY), James Abourezk (Dem-SD), Leo Ryan (Dem-CA), Phil Burton (Dem-CA), Don Edwards (Dem-CA), Pete McCloskey (Rep-CA), Ed Koch (Dem-NY), John Seiberling (Dem-OH), Henry Reuss (Dem-WI), Benjamin Stanley Rosenthal (Dem-NY), Robert Kastenmeier (Dem-WI), and Abner J. Mikva (Dem-IL).[90]

The transcripts describe alleged details of U.S. military's conduct in Vietnam. Some tactics were described as "gruesome", such as the severing of ears from corpses to verify body count. Others involved the killing of civilians. Soldiers claimed to have ordered artillery strikes on villages which did not appear to have any military presence. Soldiers were claimed to use racist terms such as "gooks", "dinks" and "slant eyes" when referring to the Vietnamese.

Witnesses described that legal, by-the-book instruction was augmented by more questionable training by non-commissioned officers as to how soldiers should conduct themselves. One witness testified about "free-fire zones", areas as large as 80 square miles (210 km2) in which soldiers were free to shoot any Vietnamese they encountered after curfew without first making sure they were hostile. Allegations of exaggeration of body count, torture, murder and general abuse of civilians and the psychology and motivations of soldiers and officers were discussed at length.

Fulbright (end to war)

In April and May 1971, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, chaired by Senator J. William Fulbright, held a series of 22 hearings (referred to as the Fulbright Hearings) on proposals relating to ending the war. On the third day of the hearings, April 22, 1971, future Senator and 2004 presidential candidate John Kerry became the first Vietnam veteran to testify before Congress in opposition to the war. Speaking on behalf of Vietnam Veterans Against the War, he argued for the immediate, unilateral withdrawal of U.S. forces from Vietnam. During nearly two hours of discussions with committee members, Kerry related in some detail the findings of the Winter Soldier Investigation, in which veterans had described personally committing or witnessing atrocities and war crimes.

Public opinion

The American public's support of the Vietnam War decreased as the war continued on. As public support decreased, opposition grew.[91]

The Gallup News Service began asking the American public whether it was a "mistake to send troops to Vietnam" in August 1965. At the time less than a quarter of Americans polled, 24%, believed it was a mistake to send troops to Vietnam while 60% of Americans polled believed the opposite. Three years later, in September 1968, 54% of Americans polled believed it was a mistake to send troops to Vietnam while 37% believed it was not a mistake.[92]

A 1965 Gallup Poll asked the question, "Have you ever felt the urge to organize or join a public demonstration about something?"[93] Positive responses were quite low; not many people wanted to protest anything, and those who did want to show a public demonstration often wanted to demonstrate in support of the Vietnam War. However, when the American Public was asked in 1990, "Looking back, do you wish that you had made a stronger effort to protest or demonstrate against the Vietnam War, or not", 25 percent said they wished they had.

Urge to Organize or Demonstrate Yes % No %
U.S. adults 10 90
21 to 29 years old 15 85
30 to 49 years 12 88
50 and older 6 94
College graduates 21 79
High school graduates 9 91
High school nongraduates 5 95
Gallup, Oct. 29 – Nov. 2, 1965 [93]
 
The attitude of Americans towards the Vietnam War between May 1966 and May 1971 according to public opinion polls.

A major factor in the American public's disapproval of the Vietnam War came from the casualties being inflicted on US forces. In a Harris poll from 1967 asking what aspect most troubled people most about the Vietnam war the plurality answer of 31% was "the loss of our young men." A separate 1967 Harris poll asked the American public how the war affected their family, job or financial life. The majority of respondents, 55%, said that it had had no effect on their lives. Of the 45% who indicated the war had affected their lives, 32% listed inflation as the most important factor, while 25% listed casualties inflicted.[94]

As the war continued, the public became much more opposed to the war, seeing that it was not ending. In a poll from December 1967, 71% of the public believed the war would not be settled in 1968.[95] A year later the same question was asked and 55% of people did not think the war would be settled in 1969.[96]

When the American public was asked about the Vietnam-era Anti-War movement in the 1990s, 39% of the public said they approved, while 39% said they disapproved. The last 22% were unsure.[97]

General effects

The opposition to the United States' involvement in the Vietnam War had many effects, which arguably led to the eventual end of the involvement of the United States. Howard Zinn, a controversial historian, states in his book A People's History of the United States that, "in the course of the war, there developed in the United States the greatest antiwar movement the nation had ever experienced, a movement that played a critical role in bringing the war to an end."[98]

An alternative point of view is expressed by Michael Lind. Citing public polling data on protests during the war he claimed that: "The American public turned against the Vietnam War not because it was persuaded by the radical and liberal left that it was unjust, but out of sensitivity to its rising costs."[99]

Fewer soldiers

 
University of San Diego students holding sign saying "bring all the troops home now!".

The first effect the opposition had that led to the end of the war was that fewer soldiers were available for the army. The draft was protested and even ROTC programs too. Howard Zinn first provides a note written by a student of Boston University on May 1, 1968, which stated to his draft board, "I have absolutely no intention to report for that exam, or for induction, or to aid in any way the American war effort against the people of Vietnam ..."[100] The opposition to the United States' involvement in the Vietnam War had many effects, which led to the eventual end of the involvement of the United States.[101] This refusal letter soon led to an overflow of refusals ultimately leading to the event provided by Zinn stating, "In May 1969 the Oakland induction center, where draftees reported from all of Northern California, reported that of 4,400 men ordered to report for induction, 2,400 did not show up. In the first quarter of 1970 the Selective Service System, for the first time, could not meet its quota."[101]

The fewer numbers of soldiers as an effect of the opposition to the war also can be traced to the protests against the ROTC programs in colleges. Zinn argues this by stating, "Student protests against the ROTC resulted in the canceling of those programs in over forty colleges and universities. In 1966, 191,749 college students enrolled in ROTC. By 1973, the number was 72,459."[102] The number of ROTC students in college drastically dropped and the program lost any momentum it once had before the anti-war movement.

College campuses

 
1970 protest at Florida State University.

A further effect of the opposition was that many college campuses were completely shut down due to protests. These protests led to wear on the government who tried to mitigate the tumultuous behavior and return the colleges back to normal. The colleges involved in the anti-war movement included ones such as, Brown University, Kent State University, and the University of Massachusetts.[100] Even at The College of William and Mary unrest occurred with protests by the students and even some faculty members that resulted in "multiple informants" hired to report to the CIA on the activities of students and faculty members.[103]

At the University of Massachusetts, "The 100th Commencement of the University of Massachusetts yesterday was a protest, a call for peace", "Red fists of protest, white peace symbols, and blue doves were stenciled on black academic gowns, and nearly every other senior wore an armband representing a plea for peace."[104] Additionally, "At Boston College, a Catholic institution, six thousand people gathered that evening in the gymnasium to denounce the war."[105] At Kent State University, "on May 4, when students gathered to demonstrate against the war, National Guardsmen fired into the crowd. Four students were killed."[106] Finally, "At the Brown University commencement in 1969, two-thirds of the graduating class turned their backs when Henry Kissinger stood up to address them."[106] Basically, from all of the evidence here provided by the historians, Zinn and McCarthy, the second effect was very prevalent and it was the uproar at many colleges and universities as an effect of the opposition to the United States' involvement in Vietnam.

American soldiers

 
The Fort Hood Three refused orders to go to Vietnam 1966.

Another effect the opposition to the war had was that the American soldiers in Vietnam began to side with the opposition and feel remorse for what they were doing. Zinn argues this with an example in which the soldiers in a POW camp formed a peace committee as they wondered who the enemy of the war was, because it certainly was not known among them.[107] The statement of one of the soldiers reads,

Until we got to the first camp, we didn't see a village intact; they were all destroyed. I sat down and put myself in the middle and asked myself: Is this right or wrong? Is it right to destroy villages? Is it right to kill people en masse? After a while it just got to me.[108]

Howard Zinn provides that piece of evidence to reiterate how all of this destruction and fighting against an enemy that seems to be unknown has been taking a toll on the soldiers and that they began to sense a feeling of opposition as one effect of the opposition occurring in the United States.

Timeline

1964

 
Demonstrators against the Vietnam War holding signs on the boardwalk during the 1964 Democratic National Convention

1965

  • On March 24, organized by professors against the war at the University of Michigan, a teach-in protest was attended by 2,500 participants. This model was to be repeated at 35 campuses across the country.[112]
  • On March 16, Alice Herz, an 82-year-old pacifist, set herself on fire in the first known act of self-immolation to protest the Vietnam War.
  • On April 17, the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), a civil rights activist group, led the first of several anti-war marches in Washington, D.C., with about 25,000 protesters.[112]
  • Draft-card burnings took place at University of California, Berkeley at student demonstrations in May organized by a new anti-war group, the Vietnam Day Committee. Events included a teach-in attended by 30,000, and the burning in effigy of president Lyndon B. Johnson.
  • A Gallup poll in May showed 48% of U.S. respondents felt the government was handling the war effectively, 28% felt the situation was being handled badly, and the rest had no opinion.
  • May – First anti-Vietnam War demonstration in London was staged outside the U.S. embassy.[113]
  • Protests were held in June on the steps of the Pentagon, and in August, attempts were made by activists at Berkeley to stop the movement of trains carrying troops.
  • A Gallup poll in late August showed that 24% of Americans view sending troops to Vietnam as a mistake versus 60% who do not.[114]
  • By mid-October, the anti-war movement had significantly expanded to become a national and even global phenomenon, as anti-war protests drawing 100,000 were held simultaneously in as many as 80 major cities around the US, London, Paris, and Rome.[112]
  • On October 15, 1965, the first large scale act of civil disobedience in opposition to the Vietnam War occurred when approximately 40 people staged a sit-in at the Ann Arbor, Michigan draft board. They were sentenced to 10 to 15 days in jail.
  • On November 2, Norman Morrison, a 31-year-old pacifist, set himself on fire below the third-floor window of Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara at the Pentagon, emulating the actions of the Vietnamese monk Thích Quảng Đức.
  • On November 27, Coretta Scott King, SDS President Carl Oglesby, and Dr. Benjamin Spock, among others, spoke at an anti-war rally of about 30,000 in Washington, D.C., in the largest demonstration to date. Parallel protests occurred elsewhere around the nation.[115] On that same day, President Johnson announced a significant escalation of U.S. involvement in Indochina, from 120,000 to 400,000 troops.

1966

 
Protest in Netherlands in July 1966
  • In February, a group of about 100 veterans attempted to return their military decorations to the White House in protest of the war, but were turned back.
  • On March 26, anti-war demonstrations were held around the country and the world, with 20,000 taking part in New York City.
  • A Gallup poll shows that 59% believe that sending troops to Vietnam was not a mistake. Among the age group of 21–29, 71% believe it was not a mistake compared to 48% of those over 50.[116]
  • On May 15, another large demonstration, with 10,000 picketers calling for an end to the war, took place outside the White House and the Washington Monument.
  • June – The Gallup poll respondents supporting the U.S. handling of the war slipped to 41%, 37% expressed disapproval, and the rest had no opinion.
  • A crowd of 4,000 demonstrated against the U.S. war in London on July 3 and scuffled with police outside the U.S. embassy. 33 protesters were arrested.
  • Joan Baez and A. J. Muste organized over 3,000 people across the nation in an antiwar tax protest. Participants refused to pay their taxes or did not pay the amount designated for funding the war.[117]
  • Protests, strikes and sit-ins continued at Berkeley and across other campuses throughout the year. Three army privates, known as the "Fort Hood Three", refused to deploy in Vietnam, calling the war "illegal and immoral", and were sentenced to prison terms.
  • Heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali – formerly known as Cassius Clay – declared himself a conscientious objector and refused to go to war. According to a writer for Sports Illustrated, the governor of Illinois, Otto Kerner, Jr., called Ali "disgusting" and the governor of Maine, John H. Reed, said that Ali "should be held in utter contempt by every patriotic American."[118] In 1967 Ali was sentenced to 5 years in prison for draft evasion, but his conviction was later overturned on appeal. In addition, he was stripped of his title and banned from professional boxing for more than three years.
  • In June 1966 American students and others in England meeting at the London School of Economics formed the Stop It Committee. The group was prominent in every major London anti-war demonstration. It remained active until the end of the war in April 1975.

1967

The protest on June 23 in Los Angeles is singularly significant. It was one of the first massive war protests in the United States and the first in Los Angeles. Ending in a clash with riot police, it set a pattern for the massive protests which followed[119] and due to the size and violence of this event, Johnson attempted no further public speeches in venues outside military bases.[119][120]

Universal Newsreel about peace marches in April 1967
 
Mounted policemen watch a protest march in San Francisco on April 15, 1967. The San Francisco City Hall is in the background.
 
Vietnam War protests at the Pentagon, October 1967
  • Another Mother for Peace group founded.[112]
  • January 14 – 20,000–30,000 people staged a "Human Be-In" in Golden Gate Park in San Francisco, near the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood that had become the center of hippie activity.
  • In February, about 2,500 members of Women Strike for Peace (WSP) marched to the Pentagon. This was a peaceful protest that became rowdier when the demonstrators were denied a meeting with Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara.[121]
  • February 8 – Christian groups opposed to the war staged a nationwide "Fast for Peace."
  • February 23 – The New York Review of Books published "The Responsibility of Intellectuals" by Noam Chomsky as a special supplement.
  • March 12 – A three-page anti-war ad appeared in The New York Times bearing the signatures of 6,766 teachers and professors. The advertisement spanned two and a quarter pages in Section 4, The Week in Review. The advertisement itself cost around $16,500 and was sponsored by the Inter-University Committee for Debate on Foreign Policy.
  • March 17 – a group of antiwar citizens marched to the Pentagon to protest American involvement in Vietnam.
  • March 25 – Martin Luther King Jr., a leader of the civil rights movement, led a march of 5,000 against the war in Chicago.
  • April 4 – Martin Luther King Jr. gave a speech in New York City. "America rejected Ho Chi Minh's revolutionary government seeking self-determination. ... " (See details here.)
  • On April 15, 400,000 people organized by the Spring Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam marched from Central Park to the UN building in New York City to protest the war, where they were addressed by critics of the war such as Benjamin Spock, Martin Luther King Jr., event initiator and director James Bevel, Harry Belafonte, and Jan Barry Crumb, a veteran of the war. On the same date 100,000, including Coretta Scott King, marched in San Francisco.
  • On April 24, Abbie Hoffman led a small group of protesters against both the war and capitalism who interrupted the New York Stock Exchange, causing chaos by throwing fistfuls of both real and fake dollars down from the gallery.
  • May 2 – British philosopher Bertrand Russell presided over the "Russell Tribunal" in Stockholm, a mock war crimes tribunal, which ruled that the U.S. and its allies had committed war crimes in Vietnam. The proceedings were criticized as being a "show trial."
  • On May 22, the fashionable À L'Innovation department store in Brussels, Belgium burnt down, killing over 300 people amid speculation that the fire was caused by Belgian Maoists against the Vietnam War.
  • On May Jan 30 Crumb and ten like-minded men attended a peace demonstration in Washington, D.C., and on June 1 Vietnam Veterans Against the War was born.
  • In the summer of 1967, Neil Armstrong and various other NASA officials began a tour of South America to raise awareness for space travel. According to First Man: The Life of Neil A. Armstrong, a 2005 biography, during the tour, several college students protested the astronaut, and shouted such phrases as "Murderers get out of Vietnam!" and other anti-Vietnam War messages.
  • June 23, 1967 President Johnson was met in Los Angeles by a massive anti-war protest on the street outside the hotel where he was speaking at a Democratic fundraiser.Progressive Labor Party and SDS protesters. The Riot Act was read and 51 protesters arrested.[122][120] This was one of the first massive war protests in the United States and the first in Los Angeles, Ending in a clash with riot police, it set a pattern for the massive protests which followed.[119] The vigor of the response from the LAPD, initially intended to prevent the demonstrators from storming the hotel where Johnson was speaking, was to a certain extent based on exaggerated reports from undercover agents which had infiltrated the organizations sponsoring the protest. "Unresisting demonstrators were beaten – some in front of literally thousands of witnesses – without even the pretext of and attempt to make an arrest."[123] A crowd the Los Angeles Times reports at 10,000 clashed with 500 riot police outside President Johnson's fundraiser at the Century City Plaza Hotel. Expecting only 1,000 or 2,000 protesters, the LAPD field commander later told reporters he had been 'astounded' by the size of the demonstration. "Where did all those people come from? I asked myself." Scores were injured, including many peaceful middle-class protesters.[119] Some sources put the crowd as high as 15,000 and noted that the police attacked the marchers with nightsticks to disperse the crowd.[123] Due to the size and violence of this event, Johnson attempted no further public speeches in venues outside military bases.[119][120]
  • July 30 – Gallup poll reported 52% of Americans disapproved of Johnson's handling of the war, 41% thought the U.S. made a mistake in sending troops, and over 56% thought the U.S. was losing the war or at an impasse.
  • On August 28, 1967, U.S. representative Tim Lee Carter (R-KY) stated before congress: "Let us now, while we are yet strong, bring our men home, every man jack of them. The Vietcong fight fiercely and tenaciously because it is their land and we are foreigners intervening in their civil war. If we must fight, let us fight in defense of our homeland and our own hemisphere."
  • On September 20, over one thousand members of WSP rallied at the White House. The police used brutal tactics to try to limit it to 100 people (as per the law) or stop the demonstration, and the event tarnished the wholesome and nonviolent reputation of the WSP.[124]
 
Demonstrations in The Hague in the Netherlands by the PSP, 1967. The placards read "USA out of Vietnam" and "USA murder".

1968

 
Olof Palme marching against the Vietnam War in Stockholm, 1968
  • On January 15, 1968, over five thousand women rallied in D.C. in the Jeannette Rankin Brigade protest. This was the first all female antiwar protest intended to get Congress to withdrawal troops from Vietnam.[126]
  • On January 18, 1968, while in the White House for a conference about juvenile delinquency, black singer and entertainer Eartha Kitt yelled at Lady Bird Johnson about the generation of young men dying in the war.[127]
  • January 30, 1968 – Tet Offensive was launched and resulted in much higher casualties and changed perceptions. The optimistic assessments made prior to the offensive by the administration and the Pentagon came under heavy criticism and ridicule as the "credibility gap" that had opened in 1967 widened into a chasm.[128]
  • February – Gallup poll showed 35% approved of Johnson's handling of the war; 50% disapproved; the rest, no opinion. [NYT, 2/14/68] In another poll that month, 23% of Americans defined themselves as "doves" and 61% "hawks."[129]
  • March 12 – anti-war candidate Eugene McCarthy received more votes than expected in the New Hampshire primary, leading to more expressions of opposition against the war. McCarthy urged his supporters to exchange the 'unkempt look' rapidly becoming fashionable among war opponents for a more clean-cut style to in order not to scare voters. These were known as "Clean Genes."
  • March 16 – Robert F. Kennedy joined the race for the US presidency as an anti-war candidate. He was shot and killed on June 5, the morning after he won a decisive victory over McCarthy in the Democratic primary in California.
  • March 17 – Major rally outside the U.S. Embassy in London's Grosvenor Square turned to a riot with 86 people injured and over 200 arrested. Over 10,000 had rallied peacefully in Trafalgar Square but met a police barricade outside the embassy. A UK Foreign Office report claimed that the rioting had been organized by 100 members of the German SDS who were "acknowledged experts in methods of riot against the police."
  • In March, Gallup poll reported that 49% of respondents felt involvement in the war was an error.
  • April 17 – National media films the anti-war riot that breaks out at Columbia University. The over-reaction by the police at Columbia is shown in Berlin and Paris, sparking reactions in those cities.
  • On April 26, 1968, a million college and high school students boycotted class to show opposition to the war.[79]
  • April 27 – an anti-war march in Chicago organized by Rennie Davis and others ended with police beating many of the marchers, a precursor to the police riots later that year at the Democratic Convention.
  • During the 1968 Democratic National Convention, held August 26 – August 29 in Chicago, anti-war protesters marched and demonstrated throughout the city. Chicago mayor Richard J. Daley brought to bear 23,000 police and National Guardsman upon 10,000 protesters.[130] Tensions between police and protesters quickly escalated, resulting in a "police riot" and the chant by protesters "The whole world is watching". Eight leading anti-war activists were indicted by the U.S. Attorney and prosecuted in 1969 for conspiracy to riot; the 1970 convictions of the Chicago Seven were subsequently overturned on appeal.
  • August – Gallup poll shows 53% said it was a mistake to send troops to Vietnam.[131]
  • Among the academic or scholarly groups was the Committee of Concerned Asian Scholars, founded in 1968 by graduate students and junior faculty in Asian studies.

1969

  • March polls indicated that 19% of Americans wanted the war to end as soon as possible, 26% wanted South Vietnam to take over responsibility for the war from the U.S., 19% favored the current policy, and 33% wanted total military victory.[129]
  • In March, students at SUNY Buffalo destroyed a Themis construction site.[79]
  • On March 5, Senator J. William Fulbright was prevented from speaking at the first National Convocation on the Challenge of Building Peace by members of the Veterans and Reservists to End the War in Vietnam.[132]
     
    Late 1960s–early 1970s anti-Vietnam War demonstrations in Lund, Sweden.
  • On April 6, a spontaneous anti-war rally in Central Park was recorded and later released as Environments 3.
  • On May 22, the Canadian government announced that immigration officials would not and could not ask about immigration applicants' military status if they showed up at the border seeking permanent residence in Canada.[133]
  • On July 16, activist David Harris was arrested for refusing the draft, and would ultimately serve a fifteen-month prison sentence; Harris' wife, prominent musician, pacifist and activist Joan Baez, toured and performed on behalf of her husband, throughout the remainder of 1969, attempting to raise consciousness around the issue of ending the draft.
  • On July 31, The New York Times published the results of a Gallup poll showing that 53% of the respondents approved of Nixon's handling of the war, 30% disapproved, and the balance had no opinion.
  • On August 15–18, the Woodstock Festival was held at Max Yasgur's farm in Bethel, New York. Peace was a primary theme in this pivotal popular music event.
  • On October 15 the Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam demonstrations took place. Millions of Americans took the day off from work and school to participate in local demonstrations against the war. These were the first major demonstrations against the Nixon administration's handling of the war.
  • In October, 58% of Gallup respondents said U.S. entry into the war was a mistake.
  • In November, Sam Melville, Jane Alpert, and several others bombed several corporate offices and military installations (including the Whitehall Army Induction Center) in and around New York City.
  • On November 15, crowds of up to half a million people participated in an anti-war demonstration in Washington, D.C. and a similar demonstration was held in San Francisco. These protests were organized by the New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam (New Mobe) and the Student Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam (SMC).
  • On December 7, The 5th Dimension performed their song "Declaration" on the Ed Sullivan Show. Consisting of the opening of the Declaration of Independence (through "for their future security"), it suggests that the right and duty of revolting against a tyrannical government is still relevant.
  • In late December, the And babies poster is published – "easily the most successful poster to vent the outrage that so many felt about the war in Southeast Asia."[134]
  • By end of the year, 69% of students identified themselves as doves.[79]

1970

 
Protest in Helsinki, Finland, 1970
  • On March 4, Antonia Martínez, a 21-year-old student at the University of Puerto Rico at Río Piedras was shot and killed by a policeman while watching and commenting on the anti-Vietnam War and education reform student protests at the University of Puerto Rico.
  • On March 14, two merchant seamen, claiming allegiance to the SDS, hijacked the SS Columbia Eagle, a U.S.-flagged merchant vessel under contract with the U.S. government, carrying 10,000 tons of napalm bombs for use by the U.S. Air Force in the Vietnam War. The hijackers forced its master to divert to then-neutral Cambodia (which promptly was taken over by anti-Communists, who eventually returned to the ship to the U.S.).[135][136][137][138][139][140][141]
  • Kent State/Cambodia Invasion Protest, Washington, D.C.: After the Kent State shootings, on May 4, 100,000 anti-war demonstrators converged on Washington, D.C. to protest the shooting of the students in Ohio and the Nixon administration's incursion into Cambodia. Even though the demonstration was quickly put together, protesters were still able to bring out thousands to march in the Capital. It was an almost spontaneous response to the events of the previous week. Police ringed the White House with buses to block the demonstrators from getting too close to the executive mansion. Early in the morning before the march, Nixon met with protesters at the Lincoln Memorial but nothing was resolved and the protest went on as planned.
  • National Student Strike: more than 450 university, college and high school campuses across the country were shut by student strikes and both violent and non-violent protests that involved more than 4 million students, in the only nationwide student strike in U.S. history.
  • A Gallup poll in May shows that 56% of the public believed that sending troops to Vietnam was a mistake, 61% of those over 50 expressed that belief compared to 49% of those between the ages of 21–29.[142]
  • On June 13, President Nixon established the President's Commission on Campus Unrest. The commission was directed to study the dissent, disorder, and violence breaking out on college and university campuses.[143]
  • In July 1970. the award-winning documentary The World of Charlie Company was broadcast. "It showed GIs close to mutiny, balking at orders that seemed to them unreasonable. This was something never seen on television before."[144] The documentary was produced by CBS News.
  • On August 24, 1970, near 3:40 a.m., a van filled with ammonium nitrate and fuel oil mixture was detonated on the University of Wisconsin-Madison in the Sterling Hall bombing. One researcher was killed and three others were injured.
  • Vortex I: A Biodegradable Festival of Life: To avert potential violence arising from planned anti-war protests, a government-sponsored rock festival was held near Portland, Oregon from August 28 to September 3, attracting 100,000 participants. The festival, arranged by the People's Army Jamboree (an ad hoc group) and Oregon governor Tom McCall, was set up when the FBI told the governor that President Nixon's planned appearance at an American Legion convention in Portland could lead to violence worse than that seen at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
  • The Chicano Moratorium: on August 29, some 25,000 Mexican-Americans participated in the largest anti-war demonstration in Los Angeles. Police attacked the crowd with billyclubs and tear gas; two people were killed. Immediately after the marchers were dispersed, sheriff's deputies raided a nearby bar, where they shot and killed Rubén Salazar, KMEX news director and Los Angeles Times columnist, with a tear-gas projectile.

1971 and after

 
Protests against the Vietnam War in Washington D.C. on April 24, 1971
 
Rally in support of the Vietnamese people at the Moskvitch factory, 1973
  • On April 23, 1971, Vietnam veterans threw away over 700 medals on the West Steps of the Capitol building.[145] The next day, antiwar organizers claimed that 500,000 marched, making this the largest demonstration since the November 1969 march.[146]
  • Two weeks later, on May 5, 1971, 1146 people were arrested on the Capitol grounds trying to shut down Congress. This brought the total arrested during the 1971 May Day Protests to over 12,000. Abbie Hoffman was arrested on charges of interstate travel to incite a riot and assaulting a police officer.[147]
  • In August 1971, the Camden 28 conducted a raid on the Camden, New Jersey draft board offices. The 28 included five or more members of the clergy, as well as a number of local blue-collar workers.
  • Beginning December 26, 1971, 15 anti-war veterans occupied the Statue of Liberty, flying a US flag upside down from her crown. They left on December 28, following issuance of a Federal Court order.[148] Also on December 28, 80 young veterans clashed with police and were arrested while trying to occupy the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C.[149]
  • On March 29, 1972, 166 people, many of them seminarians, were arrested in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania for encircling the Federal Courthouse with a chain, to protest the trial of the Harrisburg Seven.[150]
  • On April 19, 1972, in response to renewed escalation of bombing, students at many colleges and universities around the country broke into campus buildings and threatened strikes.[151] The following weekend, protests were held in Los Angeles, New York City, San Francisco, and elsewhere.[152][153]
  • On May 13, 1972, protests again spread across the country in response to President Nixon's decision to mine harbors in North Vietnam[154] and renewed bombing of North Vietnam (Operation Linebacker).
  • On July 6, 1972, four Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur on a White House Tour stopped and began praying to protest the war. In the next six weeks, such kneel-ins became a popular form of protest and led to over 158 protesters' arrests.[155]

Organizations

Slogans and chants

  • "Hell, no, we won't go!" was heard in antidraft and antiwar protests throughout the country.[167]
  • "Bring the troops home now!" was heard in mass marches in Washington D.C., Seattle, San Francisco, Berkeley, New York, and San Diego.
  • "Dow shall not kill." and "Making money burning babies!" were two slogans used by students at UCLA and other colleges to protest the Dow Chemical Company, the maker of napalm and Agent Orange.[13] and it refers to The Ten Commandments
  • "Stop the war, feed the poor." was a popular slogan used by socially conscious and minority antiwar groups, protesting that the war diverted funds that struggling Americans desperately needed.[168]
  • "Girls say yes to men who say no." was an antidraft slogan used by the SDS and other organizations.[169]
  • "War is not healthy for children and other living things" was a slogan of Another Mother for Peace, and was popular on posters.[170]
  • "End the nuclear race, not the human race." was first used by the WSP in antinuclear demonstrations and became incorporated into the antiwar events.[171]
  • "Not my son, not your son, not their sons." was an antiwar and antidraft slogan used by the WSP during protests.[172]
  • "Ho, Ho, Ho Chi Minh, the Viet Cong are gonna win." was a common anti-war chant during anti-war marches and rallies in the later sixties.
  • "Hey, hey, LBJ! How many kids did you kill today?" was especially chanted by students and other marchers and demonstrators in opposition to Lyndon B. Johnson.[173]
  • "One, two, three, four, we don't want your fucking war." was chanted in marches from Brisbane to Boston.
  • "Fuck, fuck, fuck it all. We don't want this anymore." was also chanted in marches from Brisbane to Boston.[174]
  • "আমার নাম তোমার নাম ভিয়েতনাম" (Amar nam tomar nam Bhiẏetnam; lit.'Your name, My Name Vietnam'): Slogans chanted by leftists of Calcutta, including future President of India Pranab Mukherjee, against the American oppression on Vietnam[175]

Gallery

Propaganda

Protests

See also

References

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References

  • DeBenedetti, Charles (1990). An American Ordeal: The Antiwar Movement of the Vietnam Era. contributor Charles Chatfield. Syracuse University Press. ISBN 978-0-8156-0245-3.
  • Aaron Fountain "The War in the Schools: San Francisco Bay Area High Schools and the Anti–Vietnam War Movement, 1965–1973" pp. 22–41 from California History, Volume 92, Issue 2, Summer 2015
  • John Hagan, Northern passage: American Vietnam War resisters in Canada, Harvard University Press, 2001. ISBN 978-0-674-00471-9
  • Mary Susannah Robbins, Against the Vietnam War: Writings by Activists, Rowman & Littlefield, 2007. ISBN 978-0-7425-5914-1
  • Robert R. Tomes, Apocalypse Then: American Intellectuals and the Vietnam War, 1954–1975, NYU Press, 2000. ISBN 978-0-8147-8262-0
  • King, Martin Luther Jr. "Beyond Vietnam". New York. April 4, 1967.
  • Tygart, Clarence. "Social Movement Participation: Clergy and the Anti-Vietnam War Movement." Sociological Analysis Vol. 34. No. 3 (Autumn, 1973): pp. 202–211. Print.
  • Friedland, Michael B. Lift Up Your Voice Like A Trumpet: White Clergy And The Civil Rights And Antiwar Movements, 1954–1973. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1998. eBook Collection (EBSCOhost). Web. December 15, 2013.
  • McCarthy, David. "'The Sun Never Sets on the Activities of the CIA': Project Resistance at William and Mary". Routledge Publishing: September 4, 2012.
  • Patler, Nicholas. Norman's Triumph: the Transcendent Language of Self-Immolation Quaker History, Fall 2105, 18–39.
  • Zinn, Howard. A People's History of the United States. New York: HarperCollins Publishing, 2003. Print.
  • Maeda, Daryl. Chains of Babylon: Rise of Asian America. University of Minnesota Press, 2009.
  • Lee, Erika. The Making of Asian Ameria: A History. Simon & Schuster, 2015.
  • Srikanth, Rajini and Hyoung Song, Min. The Cambridge History of Asian American Literature. Cambridge University Press, 2015.

Further reading

  • Bates, Tom. Rads: The 1970 Bombing of the Army Math Research Center at the University of Wisconsin and Its Aftermath. New York: HarperCollins, 1992.
  • Greene, Bob. Homecoming. Putnam, 1989. ISBN 0399133860
  • Heineman, Kenneth J. Campus Wars: The Peace Movement at American State Universities in the Vietnam Era. New York: New York University Press, 2010.
  • Olson, James S., ed. (1999). "Antiwar Movement". Historical Dictionary of the 1960s. Greenwood. ISBN 978-0-313-29271-2.
  • Patler, Nicholas. "Norman's Triumph: the Transcendent Language of Self-Immolation". Quaker History, Fall 2015, 18–39.

External links

  • Social Activism Sound Recording Project: Anti-Vietnam War Protests in the San Francisco Bay Area & Beyond Includes chronology, texts, online audio and video (via UC Berkeley)
  • Pacific Northwest Antiwar and Radical History Project, multimedia collection of photographs, video, oral histories and essays on Vietnam War resistance.
  • GI resistance during the Vietnam War
  •  – slideshow by Life magazine
  • University of Washington Libraries Digital Collections – Vietnam War Era Ephemera This collection contains leaflets and newspapers that were distributed on the University of Washington campus during the decades of the 1960s and 1970s.
  • As Obama Visits Afghanistan, Tavis Smiley on Rev. Martin Luther King and His Opposition to the Vietnam War – video by Democracy Now!
  • Records of Statement on the War in Vietnam are held by Simon Fraser University's Special Collections and Rare Books
  • The Boys Who Said NO – Documentary on draft resistance and its impact during the Vietnam War.
  • Vietnam Peace Commemoration Committee – Organization of Vietnam War peace activists, including veterans and scholars.
  • Sir! No Sir!, a documentary about GI resistance to the Vietnam War
  • A Matter of Conscience – GI Resistance During the Vietnam War
  • Waging Peace in Vietnam – US Soldiers and Veterans Who Opposed the War
  • Waging Peace in Vietnam Interviews with GI resisters

opposition, united, states, involvement, vietnam, opposition, vietnam, redirects, here, opposition, australian, involvement, opposition, australian, involvement, vietnam, before, anti, vietnam, movement, present, began, with, demonstrations, 1965, against, esc. Opposition to the Vietnam War redirects here For for opposition to Australian involvement see Opposition to Australian involvement in the Vietnam War Opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War before or anti Vietnam War movement present began with demonstrations in 1965 against the escalating role of the United States in the Vietnam War and grew into a broad social movement over the ensuing several years This movement informed and helped shape the vigorous and polarizing debate primarily in the United States during the second half of the 1960s and early 1970s on how to end the war Opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam WarPart of the Counterculture of the 1960s the Vietnam War and the Cold WarAnti war protest at the Pentagon 1967Date1965 1973Caused byAmerican involvement in VietnamGoalsEnd of military conscriptionWithdrawal of troops from VietnamResulted inDisruption of military conscriptionLowered military moraleEnd of the Johnson presidencyVoting age lowered to 18Withdrawal of troops and aid Many in the peace movement within the United States were children mothers or anti establishment youth Opposition grew with participation by the African American civil rights second wave feminist movements Chicano Movements and sectors of organized labor Additional involvement came from many other groups including educators clergy academics journalists lawyers physicians such as Benjamin Spock and military veterans Their actions consisted mainly of peaceful nonviolent events few events were deliberately provocative and violent In some cases police used violent tactics against peaceful demonstrators By 1967 according to Gallup polls an increasing majority of Americans considered military involvement in Vietnam to be a mistake echoed decades later by the then head of American war planning former Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara 1 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Causes of opposition 1 2 Polarization 2 History 2 1 Early protests 2 2 Government reactions 2 3 Shifting opinion 2 4 Draft protests 2 5 Developments in the war 2 6 1968 presidential election 2 7 Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam 2 8 Hearts and Minds campaign 2 9 Increasing polarization 2 10 Later protests 3 Characteristics 3 1 African Americans 3 2 Artists 3 3 Asian Americans 3 4 Clergy 3 5 Draft evasion 3 6 Environmentalists 3 7 Musicians 3 8 Military Members 3 9 Students 3 10 Women 4 Political responses 4 1 United Nations intervention 4 2 Dellums war crimes 4 3 Fulbright end to war 5 Public opinion 6 General effects 6 1 Fewer soldiers 6 2 College campuses 6 3 American soldiers 7 Timeline 7 1 1964 7 2 1965 7 3 1966 7 4 1967 7 5 1968 7 6 1969 7 7 1970 7 8 1971 and after 8 Organizations 9 Slogans and chants 10 Gallery 10 1 Propaganda 10 2 Protests 11 See also 12 References 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksBackground EditCauses of opposition Edit See also United States news media and the Vietnam War Vietnam War protesters in Wichita Kansas 1967 The draft a system of conscription that mainly drew from minorities and lower and middle class whites drove much of the protest after 1965 Conscientious objectors played an active role despite their small numbers The prevailing sentiment that the draft was unfairly administered fueled student and blue collar American opposition to the military draft Opposition to the war arose during a time of unprecedented student activism which followed the free speech movement and the civil rights movement The military draft mobilized the baby boomers who were most at risk but it grew to include a varied cross section of Americans The growing opposition to the Vietnam War was partly attributed to greater access to uncensored information through extensive television coverage on the ground in Vietnam Beyond opposition to the draft anti war protesters also made moral arguments against U S involvement in Vietnam In May 1954 preceding the later Quaker protests but just after the defeat of the French at Dien Bien Phu the Service Committee bought a page in The New York Times to protest what seemed to be the tendency of the USA to step into Indo China as France stepped out We expressed our fear that in so doing America would back into a war 2 The moral imperative argument against the war was especially popular among American college students who were more likely than the general public to accuse the United States of having imperialistic goals in Vietnam and to criticize the war as immoral 3 Civilian deaths which were downplayed or omitted entirely by the Western media became a subject of protest when photographic evidence of casualties emerged An infamous photo of General Nguyễn Ngọc Loan shooting an alleged terrorist in handcuffs during the Tet Offensive also provoked public outcry 4 Another element of the American opposition to the war was the perception that U S intervention in Vietnam which had been argued as acceptable because of the domino theory and the threat of communism was not legally justifiable Some Americans believed that the communist threat was used as a scapegoat to hide imperialistic intentions and others argued that the American intervention in South Vietnam interfered with the self determination of the country and felt that the war in Vietnam was a civil war that ought to have determined the fate of the country and that America was wrong to intervene 4 Media coverage of the war also shook the faith of citizens at home as new television brought images of wartime conflict to viewers at home Newsmen like NBC s Frank McGee stated that the war was all but lost as a conclusion to be drawn inescapably from the facts 4 For the first time in American history the media had the means to broadcast battlefield images Graphic footage of casualties on the nightly news eliminated any myth of the glory of war With no clear sign of victory in Vietnam American military casualties helped stimulate opposition to the war by Americans In their book Manufacturing Consent Edward S Herman and Noam Chomsky reject the mainstream view of how the media influenced the war and propose that the media instead censored the more brutal images of the fighting and the death of millions of innocent people Polarization Edit U S Marshals dragging away a Vietnam War protester in Washington D C 1967 If America s soul becomes totally poisoned part of the autopsy must read Vietnam Martin Luther King Jr 1967 5 The U S became polarized over the war Many supporters of U S involvement argued for what was known as the domino theory a theory that believed if one country fell to communism then the bordering countries would be sure to fall as well much like falling dominoes This theory was largely held due to the fall of eastern Europe to communism and the Soviet sphere of influence following World War II However military critics of the war pointed out that the Vietnam War was political and that the military mission lacked any clear idea of how to achieve its objectives Civilian critics of the war argued that the government of South Vietnam lacked political legitimacy or that support for the war was completely immoral The media also played a substantial role in the polarization of American opinion regarding the Vietnam War For example in 1965 a majority of the media attention focused on military tactics with very little discussion about the necessity for a full scale intervention in Southeast Asia 6 After 1965 the media covered the dissent and domestic controversy that existed within the United States but mostly excluded the actual view of dissidents and resisters 6 The media established a sphere of public discourse surrounding the Hawk versus Dove debate The Dove was a liberal and a critic of the war Doves claimed that the war was well intentioned but a disastrously wrong mistake in an otherwise benign foreign policy It is important to note the Doves did not question the U S intentions in intervening in Vietnam nor did they question the morality or legality of the U S intervention Rather they made pragmatic claims that the war was a mistake Contrarily the Hawks argued that the war was legitimate and winnable and a part of the benign U S foreign policy The Hawks claimed that the one sided criticism of the media contributed to the decline of public support for the war and ultimately helped the U S lose the war Author William F Buckley repeatedly wrote about his approval for the war and suggested that The United States has been timid if not cowardly in refusing to seek victory in Vietnam 4 The hawks claimed that the liberal media was responsible for the growing popular disenchantment with the war and blamed the western media for losing the war in Southeast Asia as communism was no longer a threat for them History Edit Students demonstrate in Saigon July 1964 observing the tenth anniversary of the July 1954 Geneva Agreements Early protests Edit Early organized opposition was led by American Quakers in the 1950s and by November 1960 eleven hundred Quakers undertook a silent protest vigil the group ringed the Pentagon for parts of two days 2 Protests bringing attention to the draft began on May 5 1965 Student activists at the University of California Berkeley marched on the Berkeley Draft board and forty students staged the first public burning of a draft card in the United States Another nineteen cards were burnt on May 22 at a demonstration following the Berkeley teach in 7 Draft card protests were not aimed so much at the draft as at the immoral conduct of the war 8 At that time only a fraction of all men of draft age were actually conscripted but the Selective Service System office Draft Board in each locality had broad discretion on whom to draft and whom to exempt where there was no clear guideline for exemption In late July 1965 Johnson doubled the number of young men to be drafted per month from 17 000 to 35 000 and on August 31 signed a law making it a crime to burn a draft card On October 15 1965 the student run National Coordinating Committee to End the War in Vietnam in New York staged the first draft card burning to result in an arrest under the new law Gruesome images of two anti war activists who set themselves on fire in November 1965 provided iconic images of how strongly some people felt that the war was immoral On November 2 32 year old Quaker Norman Morrison set himself on fire in front of The Pentagon On November 9 22 year old Catholic Worker Movement member Roger Allen LaPorte did the same in front of United Nations Headquarters in New York City Both protests were conscious imitations of earlier and ongoing Buddhist protests in South Vietnam Government reactions Edit The growing anti war movement alarmed many in the U S government On August 16 1966 the House Un American Activities Committee HUAC began investigations of Americans who were suspected of aiding the NLF with the intent to introduce legislation making these activities illegal Anti war demonstrators disrupted the meeting and 50 were arrested Shifting opinion Edit Protest against the Vietnam War in Helsinki December 1967 Protest against the Vietnam War in Amsterdam April 1968 In February 1967 The New York Review of Books published The Responsibility of Intellectuals an essay by Noam Chomsky one of the leading intellectual opponents of the war In the essay Chomsky argued that much responsibility for the war lay with liberal intellectuals and technical experts who were providing what he saw as pseudoscientific justification for the policies of the U S government The Time Inc magazines Time and Life maintained a very pro war editorial stance until October 1967 when in a volte face the editor in chief Hedley Donovan came out against the war 9 Donovan wrote in an editorial in Life that the United States had gone into Vietnam for honorable and sensible purposes but the war had turned out to be harder longer more complicated than expected 10 Donovan ended his editorial by writing the war was not worth winning as South Vietnam was not absolutely imperative to maintain American interests in Asia which made it impossible to ask young Americans to die for 10 Draft protests Edit In 1967 the continued operation of a seemingly unfair draft system then calling as many as 40 000 men for induction each month fueled a burgeoning draft resistance movement The draft favored white middle class men which allowed an economically and racially discriminating draft to force young African American men to serve in rates that were disproportionately higher than the general population Although in 1967 there was a smaller field of draft eligible black men 29 percent versus 63 percent of white men 64 percent of eligible black men were chosen to serve in the war through conscription compared to only 31 percent of eligible white men 11 On October 16 1967 draft card turn ins were held across the country yielding more than 1 000 draft cards later returned to the Justice Department as an act of civil disobedience Resisters expected to be prosecuted immediately but Attorney General Ramsey Clark instead prosecuted a group of ringleaders including Dr Benjamin Spock and Yale chaplain William Sloane Coffin Jr in Boston in 1968 By the late 1960s one quarter of all court cases dealt with the draft including men accused of draft dodging and men petitioning for the status of conscientious objector 12 Over 210 000 men were accused of draft related offenses 25 000 of whom were indicted 13 The charges of unfairness led to the institution of a draft lottery for the year 1970 in which a young man s birthday determined his relative risk of being drafted September 14 was the birthday at the top of the draft list for 1970 the following year July 9 held this distinction However popular anti war speculation that most American soldiers as well as most of American soldiers killed during the Vietnam War were draftees was discredited in later years as the large majority of these soldiers were in fact confirmed to be volunteers 14 Developments in the war Edit Further information News media and the Vietnam War Tet Offensive 1968 Tet Offensive United States and Battle of Huế Impact on American public opinion On February 1 1968 Nguyễn Văn Lem a Vietcong officer suspected of participating in murder of South Vietnamese government officials during the Tet Offensive was summarily executed by General Nguyễn Ngọc Loan the South Vietnamese National Police Chief Loan shot Lem in the head on a public street in Saigon despite being in front of journalists South Vietnamese reports provided as justification after the fact claimed that Lem was captured near the site of a ditch holding as many as thirty four bound and shot bodies of police and their relatives some of whom were the families of General Loan s deputy and close friend The execution provided an iconic image that helped sway public opinion in the United States against the war The events of Tet in early 1968 as a whole were also remarkable in shifting public opinion regarding the war U S military officials had previously reported that counter insurgency in South Vietnam was being prosecuted successfully While the Tet Offensive provided the U S and allied militaries with a great victory in that the Vietcong was finally brought into open battle and destroyed as a fighting force the American media including respected figures such as Walter Cronkite interpreted such events as the attack on the American embassy in Saigon as an indicator of U S military weakness 15 The military victories on the battlefields of Tet were obscured by shocking images of violence on television screens long casualty lists and a new perception among the American people that the military had been untruthful to them about the success of earlier military operations and ultimately the ability to achieve a meaningful military solution in Vietnam 1968 presidential election Edit See also 1968 Democratic National Convention protest activity In 1968 President Lyndon B Johnson began his re election campaign Eugene McCarthy ran against him for the nomination on an anti war platform McCarthy did not win the first primary election in New Hampshire but he did surprisingly well against an incumbent The resulting blow to the Johnson campaign taken together with other factors led the President to make a surprise announcement in a March 31 televised speech that he was pulling out of the race He also announced the initiation of the Paris Peace Negotiations with Vietnam in that speech Then on August 4 1969 U S representative Henry Kissinger and North Vietnamese representative Xuan Thuy began secret peace negotiations at the apartment of French intermediary Jean Sainteny in Paris After breaking with Johnson s pro war stance Robert F Kennedy entered the race on March 16 and ran for the nomination on an anti war platform Johnson s vice president Hubert Humphrey also ran for the nomination promising to continue to support the South Vietnamese government Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam Edit Main article Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam In May 1969 Life magazine published in a single issue photographs of the faces of the roughly 250 or so American servicemen who had been killed in Vietnam during a routine week of war in the spring of 1969 10 Contrary to expectations the issue sold out with many being haunted by the photographs of the ordinary young Americans killed 10 On October 15 1969 hundreds of thousands of people took part in National Moratorium anti war demonstrations across the United States the demonstrations prompted many workers to call in sick from their jobs and adolescents nationwide engaged in truancy from school About 15 million Americans took part in the demonstration of October 15 making it the largest protests in a single day up to that point 16 A second round of Moratorium demonstrations was held on November 15 and attracted more people than the first 17 Hearts and Minds campaign Edit Main article Hearts and Minds Vietnam War The My Lai massacre was used as an example of bad military conduct during the Vietnam War The U S realized that the South Vietnamese government needed a solid base of popular support if it were to survive the insurgency To pursue this goal of winning the Hearts and Minds of the Vietnamese people units of the United States Army referred to as Civil Affairs units were used extensively for the first time since World War II Civil Affairs units while remaining armed and under direct military control engaged in what came to be known as nation building constructing or reconstructing schools public buildings roads and other infrastructure conducting medical programs for civilians who had no access to medical facilities facilitating cooperation among local civilian leaders conducting hygiene and other training for civilians and similar activities This policy of attempting to win the hearts and minds of the Vietnamese people however often was at odds with other aspects of the war which sometimes served to antagonize many Vietnamese civilians and provided ammunition to the anti war movement These included the emphasis on body count as a way of measuring military success on the battlefield civilian casualties during the bombing of villages symbolized by journalist Peter Arnett s famous quote it was necessary to destroy the village to save it and the killing of civilians in such incidents as the My Lai massacre In 1974 the documentary Hearts and Minds sought to portray the devastation the war was causing to the South Vietnamese people and won an Academy Award for best documentary amid considerable controversy The South Vietnamese government also antagonized many of its citizens with its suppression of political opposition through such measures as holding large numbers of political prisoners torturing political opponents and holding a one man election for President in 1971 Covert counter terror programs and semi covert ones such as the Phoenix Program attempted with the help of anthropologists to isolate rural South Vietnamese villages and affect the loyalty of the residents Increasing polarization Edit This man wears a Purple Heart medal as he watches a San Francisco peace march April 1967 Despite the increasingly depressing news of the war many Americans continued to support President Johnson s endeavors Aside from the domino theory mentioned above there was a feeling that the goal of preventing a communist takeover of a pro Western government in South Vietnam was a noble objective Many Americans were also concerned about saving face in the event of disengaging from the war or as President Richard M Nixon later put it achieving Peace with Honor In addition instances of Viet Cong atrocities were widely reported most notably in an article that appeared in Reader s Digest in 1968 entitled The Blood Red Hands of Ho Chi Minh However anti war feelings also began to rise Many Americans opposed the war on moral grounds appalled by the devastation and violence of the war Others claimed the conflict was a war against Vietnamese independence or an intervention in a foreign civil war others opposed it because they felt it lacked clear objectives and appeared to be unwinnable Many anti war activists were themselves Vietnam veterans as evidenced by the organization Vietnam Veterans Against the War Later protests Edit In April 1971 thousands of these veterans converged on the White House in Washington D C and hundreds of them threw their medals and decorations on the steps of the United States Capitol By this time it had also become commonplace for the most radical anti war demonstrators to prominently display the flag of the Viet Cong enemy an act which alienated many who were otherwise morally opposed to the war Characteristics EditAs the Vietnam War continued to escalate public disenchantment grew and a variety of different groups were formed or became involved in the movement African Americans Edit See also Civil rights movement and Black Power movement Martin Luther King Jr speaking to an anti Vietnam War rally at the University of Minnesota St Paul on April 27 1967 African American leaders of earlier decades like W E B Du Bois were often anti imperialist and anti capitalist Paul Robeson weighed in on the Vietnamese struggle in 1954 calling Ho Chi Minh the modern day Toussaint L Overture leading his people to freedom These figures were driven from public life by McCarthyism however and black leaders were more cautious about criticizing US foreign policy as the 1960s began 18 By the middle of the decade open condemnation of the war became more common with figures like Malcolm X and Bob Moses speaking out 19 Champion boxer Muhammad Ali risked his career and a prison sentence to resist the draft in 1966 Soon Martin Luther King Jr Coretta Scott King and James Bevel of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference SCLC became prominent opponents of the Vietnam War and Bevel became the director of the National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam The Black Panther Party vehemently opposed U S involvement in Vietnam 20 In the beginning of the war some African Americans did not want to join the war opposition movement because of loyalty to President Johnson for pushing Civil Rights legislation but soon the escalating violence of the war and the perceived social injustice of the draft propelled involvement in antiwar groups 20 In March 1965 King first criticized the war during the Selma march when he told a journalist that millions of dollars can be spent every day to hold troops in South Vietnam and our country cannot protect the rights of Negroes in Selma 21 In 1965 the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee SNCC became the first major civil rights group to issue a formal statement against the war When SNCC backed Georgia Representative Julian Bond acknowledged his agreement with the anti war statement he was refused his seat by the State of Georgia an injustice which he successfully appealed up to the Supreme Court 22 SNCC had special significance as a nexus between the student movement and the black movement At an SDS organized conference at UC Berkeley in October 1966 SNCC Chair Stokely Carmichael challenged the white left to escalate their resistance to the military draft in a manner similar to the black movement Some participants in ghetto rebellions of the era had already associated their actions with opposition to the Vietnam War and SNCC first disrupted an Atlanta draft board in August 1966 According to historians Joshua Bloom and Waldo Martin SDS s first Stop the Draft Week of October 1967 was inspired by Black Power and emboldened by the ghetto rebellions SNCC appear to have originated the popular anti draft slogan Hell no We won t go 23 On April 4 1967 King gave a much publicized speech entitled Beyond Vietnam A Time to Break Silence at the Riverside Church in New York attacking President Johnson for deadly Western arrogance declaring that we are on the side of the wealthy and the secure while we create a hell for the poor 21 King s speech attracted much controversy at the time with many feeling that it was ungrateful for him to attack the president who done the most for civil rights for African Americans since Abraham Lincoln had abolished slavery a century before Liberal newspapers such as the Washington Post and the New York Times condemned King for his Beyond Vietnam speech while the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People disallowed him 24 The Beyond Vietnam speech involved King in a debate with the diplomat Ralph Bunche who argued that it was folly to associate the civil rights movement with the anti Vietnam war movement maintaining that this would set back civil rights for African Americans 24 This speech also showed how bold King could be when he condemned U S aggression in Vietnam and this is considered a milestone in King s critiques against imperialism and militarism 25 King during the year of 1966 spoke out that it was hypocritical for Black Americans to be fighting the war in Vietnam since they were being treated as second class citizens back home 25 One of his arguments was that many white middle class men avoided the draft by college deferments but his greatest defense was that the arms race and the Vietnam War were taking much needed resources away from the civil rights movement and the War on Poverty 26 To combat these issues King selected a strategy of rallying the poor working class in hopes that the Federal Government would redirect resources toward fighting the War on Poverty 27 King used the statistic that for the 1967 war budget the U S government underestimated the cost by 10 billion which was five times the poverty budget 28 Black antiwar groups opposed the war for similar reasons as white groups but often protested in separate events and sometimes did not cooperate with the ideas of white antiwar leadership 20 They harshly criticized the draft because poor and minority men were usually most affected by conscription 29 In 1965 and 1966 African Americans accounted for 25 percent of combat deaths more than twice their proportion of the population As a result black enlisted men themselves protested and began the resistance movement among veterans After taking measures to reduce the fatalities apparently in response to widespread protest the military brought the proportion of blacks down to 12 6 percent of casualties 30 African Americans involved in the antiwar movement often formed their own groups such as Black Women Enraged National Black Anti War Anti Draft Union and National Black Draft Counselors Some of the differences were how Black Americans rallied behind the banner of Self determination for Black America and Vietnam while whites marched under banners that said Support Our GIs Bring Them Home Now 31 Within these groups however many African American women were seen as subordinate members by black male leaders 32 Many African American women viewed the war in Vietnam as racially motivated and sympathized strongly with Vietnamese women 33 Such concerns often propelled their participation in the antiwar movement and their creation of new opposition groups Artists Edit Many artists during the 1960s and 1970s opposed the war and used their creativity and careers to visibly oppose the war Writers and poets opposed to involvement in the war included Allen Ginsberg Denise Levertov Robert Duncan and Robert Bly Their pieces often incorporated imagery based on the tragic events of the war as well as the disparity between life in Vietnam and life in the United States Visual artists Ronald Haeberle Peter Saul and Nancy Spero among others used war equipment like guns and helicopters in their works while incorporating important political and war figures portraying to the nation exactly who was responsible for the violence Filmmakers such as Lenny Lipton Jerry Abrams Peter Gessner and David Ringo created documentary style movies featuring actual footage from the antiwar marches to raise awareness about the war and the diverse opposition movement Playwrights like Frank O Hara Sam Shepard Robert Lowell Megan Terry Grant Duay and Kenneth Bernard used theater as a vehicle for portraying their thoughts about the Vietnam War often satirizing the role of America in the world and juxtaposing the horrific effects of war with normal scenes of life Regardless of medium antiwar artists ranged from pacifists to violent radicals and caused Americans to think more critically about the war Art as war opposition was quite popular in the early years of the war but soon faded as political activism became the more common and most visible way of opposing the war 34 Asian Americans Edit See also Asian American movement Many Asian Americans were strongly opposed to the Vietnam War They saw the war as being a bigger action of U S imperialism and connected the oppression of the Asians in the United States to the prosecution of the war in Vietnam 35 Unlike many Americans in the anti war movement they viewed the war not just as imperialist but specifically as anti Asian 36 Groups like the Asian American Political Alliance AAPA the Bay Area Coalition Against the War BAACAW and the Asian Americans for Action AAA made opposition to the war their main focus Of these organizations the Bay Area Coalition Against the War was the biggest and most significant One of the major reasons leading to their significance was that the BAACAW was highly organized holding biweekly ninety minute meetings of the Coordinating Committee at which each regional would submit detailed reports and action plans 37 The driving force behind their formation was their anger at the bombing of Hanoi and the mining of Haiphong Harbor Another aspect of the group s prevalence was the support of the Japanese Community Youth Center members of the Asian Community Center student leaders of Asian American student unions etc who stood behind it 38 The BAACAW members consisted of many Asian Americans and they were involved in antiwar efforts like marches study groups fundraisers teach ins and demonstrations During marches Asian American activists carried banners that read Stop the Bombing of Asian People and Stop Killing Our Asian Brothers and Sisters 39 Its newsletter stated our goal is to build a solid broad based anti imperialist movement of Asian people against the war in Vietnam 40 The anti war sentiment by Asian Americans was fueled by the racial inequality that they faced in the United States As historian Daryl Maeda notes the antiwar movement articulated Asian Americans racial commonality with Vietnamese people in two distinctly gendered ways identification based on the experiences of male soldiers and identification by women 41 Asian American soldiers in the U S military were many times classified as being like the enemy They were referred to as gooks and had a racialized identity in comparison to their non Asian counterparts There was also the hypersexualization of Vietnamese women which in turn affected how Asian American women in the military were treated In a Gidra article a prominent influential newspaper of the Asian American movement Evelyn Yoshimura noted that the U S military systematically portrayed Vietnamese women as prostitutes as a way of dehumanizing them 42 Asian American groups realized in order to extinguish racism they also had to address sexism as well This in turn led to women s leadership in the Asian American antiwar movement Patsy Chan a Third World activist said at an antiwar rally in San Francisco We as Third World women express our militant solidarity with our brothers and sisters from Indochina We as Third World people know of the struggle the Indochinese are waging against imperialism because we share that common enemy in the United States 43 Some other notable figures were Grace Lee Boggs and Yuri Kochiyama Both Boggs and Kochiyama were inspired by the civil rights movement of the 1960s and a growing number of Asian Americans began to push forward a new era in radical Asian American politics 44 Much Asian Americans spoke against the war because of the way that the Vietnamese were referred within the U S military by the disparaging term gook and more generally because they encountered bigotry because they looked like the enemy 45 One Japanese American veteran Norman Nakamura wrote in an article in the June July issue of Gidra that during his tour of duty in Vietnam of 1969 70 that there was an atmosphere of systematic racism towards all Vietnamese people who were seen as less than human being merely gooks 45 Because most white Americans did not make much effort to distinguish between Chinese Americans Japanese Americans Korean Americans and Filipino Americans the anti Asian racism generated by the war led to the emergence of a pan Asian American identity 45 Another Japanese American veteran Mike Nakayama reported to Gidra in 1971 that he was wounded in Vietnam he was initially refused medical treatment because he was seen as a gook with the doctors thinking that he was a South Vietnamese soldier who were clothed in American uniforms and only when he established that he spoke English as his first language that he was recognized as an American 45 In May 1972 Gidra ran on its cover a cartoon of a female Viet Cong guerrilla being faced with an Asian American soldier who is commanded by his white officer to Kill that gook you gook 45 There were also Asian American musicians who traveled around the United States to oppose the imperialist actions of the American government specifically their involvement in Vietnam The folk trio A Grain of Sand consisting of the members JoAnne Nobuko Miyamoto Chris Iijima and William Charlie Chin performed across the nation as traveling troubadours who set the antiracist politics of the Asian American movement to music 43 This band was so against the imperialistic actions of the United States that they supported the Vietnamese people vocally through their song War of the Flea 43 Asian American poets and playwrights also joined in unity with the movement s antiwar sentiments Melvyn Escueta created the play Honey Bucket and was an Asian American veteran of the war Through this play Escueta establishes equivalencies between his protagonist a Filipino American soldier named Andy and the Vietnamese people 43 The Asian American antiwar movement emerged from a belief that the mainstream peace movement was racist in its disregard to Asians Steve Louie remembers that while the white antiwar movement had this moral thing about no killing Asian Americans sought to bring attention to a bigger issue genocide the broader movement had a hard time with the Asian movement because it broadened the issues out beyond where they wanted to go the whole question of U S imperialism as a system at home and abroad 46 Clergy Edit The clergy often a forgotten group during the opposition to the Vietnam War played a large role as well The clergy covered any of the religious leaders and members including individuals such as Martin Luther King Jr In his speech Beyond Vietnam King stated the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today my own government For the sake of those boys for the sake of this government for the sake of the hundreds of thousands trembling under our violence I cannot be silent 47 King was not looking for racial equality through this speech but tried to voice for an end to the war instead The involvement of the clergy did not stop at King though The analysis entitled Social Movement Participation Clergy and the Anti Vietnam War Movement expands upon the anti war movement by taking King a single religious figurehead and explaining the movement from the entire clergy s perspective The clergy were often forgotten though throughout this opposition The analysis refers to that fact by saying The research concerning clergy anti war participation is even more barren than the literature on student activism 48 There is a relationship and correlation between theology and political opinions and during the Vietnam War the same relationship occurred between feelings about the war and theology 48 This article basically was a social experiment finding results on how the pastors and clergy members reacted to the war Based on the results found they most certainly did not believe in the war and wished to help end it Another source Lift Up Your Voice Like A Trumpet White Clergy And The Civil Rights And Antiwar Movements 1954 1973 explains the story of the entire spectrum of the clergy and their involvement Michael Freidland is able to completely tell the story in his chapter entitled A Voice of Moderation Clergy and the Anti War Movement 1966 1967 In basic summary each specific clergy from each religion had their own view of the war and how they dealt with it but as a whole the clergy was completely against the war 49 Draft evasion Edit Main article Draft evasion in the Vietnam War See also Draft card burning Vietnam War resisters in Canada and Vietnam War resisters in Sweden Demonstration against conscription in Martin Place amp Garden Island Dock Sydney in 1966 The first draft lottery since World War II in the United States was held on December 1 1969 and was met with large protests and a great deal of controversy statistical analysis indicated that the methodology of the lotteries unintentionally disadvantaged men with late year birthdays 50 This issue was treated at length in a January 4 1970 New York Times article titled Statisticians Charge Draft Lottery Was Not Random Archived November 4 2013 at the Wayback Machine Various antiwar groups such as Another Mother for Peace WILPF and WSP had free draft counseling centers where they gave young American men advice for legally and illegally evading the draft Over 30 000 people left the country and went to Canada Sweden and Mexico to avoid the draft 13 The Japanese anti war group Beheiren helped some American soldiers to desert and hide from the military in Japan 51 To gain an exemption or deferment many men attended college though they had to remain in college until their 26th birthday to be certain of avoiding the draft Some men were rejected by the military as 4 F unfit for service failing to meet physical mental or moral standards Still others joined the National Guard or entered the Peace Corps as a way of avoiding Vietnam All of these issues raised concerns about the fairness of who got selected for involuntary service since it was often the poor or those without connections who were drafted Ironically in light of modern political issues a certain exemption was a convincing claim of homosexuality but very few men attempted this because of the stigma involved Also conviction for certain crimes earned an exclusion the topic of the anti war song Alice s Restaurant by Arlo Guthrie Even many of those who never received a deferment or exemption never served simply because the pool of eligible men was so huge compared to the number required for service that the draft boards never got around to drafting them when a new crop of men became available until 1969 or because they had high lottery numbers 1970 and later Of those soldiers who served during the war there was increasing opposition to the conflict amongst GIs 52 which resulted in fragging and many other activities which hampered the US s ability to wage war effectively Most of those subjected to the draft were too young to vote or drink in most states and the image of young people being forced to risk their lives in the military without the privileges of enfranchisement or the ability to drink alcohol legally also successfully pressured legislators to lower the voting age nationally and the drinking age in many states Student opposition groups on many college and university campuses seized campus administration offices and in several instances forced the expulsion of ROTC programs from the campus Some Americans who were not subject to the draft protested the conscription of their tax dollars for the war effort War tax resistance once mostly isolated to solitary anarchists like Henry David Thoreau and religious pacifists like the Quakers became a more mainstream protest tactic As of 1972 an estimated 200 000 500 000 people were refusing to pay the excise taxes on their telephone bills and another 20 000 were resisting part or all of their income tax bills Among the tax resisters were Joan Baez and Noam Chomsky 53 Environmentalists Edit Momentum from the protest organizations and the war s impact on the environment became focal point of issues to an overwhelmingly main force for the growth of an environmental movement in the United States citation needed Many of the environment oriented demonstrations were inspired by Rachel Carson s 1962 book Silent Spring which warned of the harmful effects of pesticide use on the earth 54 For demonstrators Carson s warnings paralleled with the United States use of chemicals in Vietnam such as Agent Orange a chemical compound which was used to clear forestry being used as cover initially conducted by the United States Air Force in Operation Ranch Hand in 1962 55 Musicians Edit Waist Deep in the Big Muddy the Big Fool said to push on Pete Seeger 1963 1967 Cornelis Vreeswijk Fred Akerstrom Gosta Cervin in a protest march against the Vietnam War in Stockholm 1965 Protest to American participation in the Vietnam War was a movement that many popular musicians shared in which was a stark contrast to the pro war compositions of artists during World War II 56 These musicians included Joni Mitchell Joan Baez Phil Ochs Lou Harrison Gail Kubik William Mayer Elie Siegmeister Robert Fink David Noon Richard Wernick and John W Downey 57 However of over 5 000 Vietnam War related songs identified to date many took a patriotic pro government or pro soldier perspective 58 The two most notable genres involved in this protest were Rock and Roll and Folk music While composers created pieces affronting the war they were not limited to their music Often protesters were being arrested and participating in peace marches and popular musicians were among their ranks 59 This concept of intimate involvement reached new heights in May 1968 when the Composers and Musicians for Peace concert was staged in New York As the war continued and with the new media coverage the movement snowballed and popular music reflected this As early as the summer of 1965 music based protest against the American involvement in Southeast Asia began with works like P F Sloan s folk rock song Eve of Destruction recorded by Barry McGuire as one of the earliest musical protests against the Vietnam War 60 A key figure on the rock end of the antiwar spectrum was Jimi Hendrix 1942 1970 Hendrix had a huge following among the youth culture exploring itself through drugs and experiencing itself through rock music He was not an official protester of the war one of Hendrix s biographers contends that Hendrix being a former soldier sympathized with the anticommunist view 61 He did however protest the violence that took place in the Vietnam War With the song Machine Gun dedicated to those fighting in Vietnam this protest of violence is manifest David Henderson author of Scuse Me While I Kiss the Sky describes the song as scary funk his sound over the drone shifts from a woman s scream to a siren to a fighter plane diving all amid Buddy Miles Gatling gun snare shots he says evil man make me kill you make you kill me although we re only families apart 62 This song was often accompanied with pleas from Hendrix to bring the soldiers back home and cease the bloodshed 63 While Hendrix s views may not have been analogous to the protesters his songs became anthems to the antiwar movement Songs such as Star Spangled Banner showed individuals that you can love your country but hate the government 64 Hendrix s anti violence efforts are summed up in his words when the power of love overcomes the love of power the world will know peace Thus Hendrix s personal views did not coincide perfectly with those of the antiwar protesters however his anti violence outlook was a driving force during the years of the Vietnam War even after his death 1970 The song known to many as the anthem of the protest movement was The Fish Cheer I Feel Like I m Fixin to Die Rag first released on an EP in the October 1965 issue of Rag Baby by Country Joe and the Fish 65 one of the most successful protest bands Although this song was not on music charts probably because it was too radical it was performed at many public events including the famous Woodstock music festival 1969 Feel Like I m Fixin To Die Rag was a song that used sarcasm to communicate the problems with not only the war but also the public s naive attitudes towards it It was said that the happy beat and insouciance of the vocalist are in odd juxtaposition to the lyrics that reinforce the sad fact that the American public was being forced into realizing that Vietnam was no longer a remote place on the other side of the world and the damage it was doing to the country could no longer be considered collateral involving someone else 66 Along with singer songwriter Phil Ochs who attended and organized anti war events and wrote such songs as I Ain t Marching Anymore and The War Is Over another key historical figure of the antiwar movement was Bob Dylan Folk and Rock were critical aspects of counterculture during the Vietnam War 67 both were genres that Dylan would dabble in His success in writing protest songs came from his pre existing popularity as he did not initially intend on doing so Tor Egil Forland in his article Bringing It All Back Home or Another Side of Bob Dylan Midwestern Isolationist quotes Todd Gitlin a leader of a student movement at the time in saying Whether he liked it or not Dylan sang for us We followed his career as if he were singing our songs 68 The anthem Blowin in the Wind embodied Dylan s anti war pro civil rights sentiment To complement Blowin in the Wind Dylan s song The Times they are A Changin alludes to a new method of governing that is necessary and warns those who currently participate in government that the change is imminent Dylan tells the senators and congressmen to please heed the call Dylan s songs were designed to awaken the public and to cause a reaction The protesters of the Vietnam War identified their cause so closely with the artistic compositions of Dylan that Joan Baez and Judy Collins performed The Times they are A Changin at a march protesting the Vietnam War 1965 and also for President Johnson 68 While Dylan renounced the idea of subscribing to the ideals of one individual his feelings of protest towards Vietnam were appropriated by the general movement and they awaited his gnomic yet oracular pronouncements which provided a guiding aspect to the movement as a whole 69 John Lennon former member of the Beatles did most of his activism in his solo career with wife Yoko Ono Given his immense fame due to the success of the Beatles he was a very prominent movement figure with the constant media and press attention Still being proactive on their honeymoon the newlyweds controversially held a sit in where they sat in bed for a week answering press questions They held numerous sit ins one where they first introduced their song Give Peace a Chance Lennon and Ono s song overshadowed many previous held anthems as it became known as the ultimate anthem of peace in the 1970s with their words all we are saying is give peace a chance being sung globally 70 Military Members Edit Main article G I movement Within the United States military various servicemembers would organize to avoid military duties and individual actors would also carry out their own acts of resistance The movement consisted of the self organizing of active duty members and veterans in collaboration with civilian peace activists By 1971 the United States military would become so demoralized that the military would have severe difficulties properly waging war 71 72 Students Edit German students protest against the Vietnam War in 1968 There was a great deal of civic unrest on college campuses throughout the 1960s as students became increasingly involved in the Civil Rights Movement Second Wave Feminism and anti war movement Doug McAdam explains the success of the mass mobilization of volunteers for Freedom Summer in terms of Biographical Availability where individuals must have a certain degree of social economic and psychological freedom to be able to participate in large scale social movements 73 This explanation can also be applied to the Anti War Movement because it occurred around the same time and the same biographical factors applied to the college aged anti war protesters David Meyers 2007 also explains how the concept of personal efficacy affects mass movement mobilization For example according to Meyers thesis consider that American wealth increased drastically after World War II At this time America was a superpower and enjoyed great affluence after thirty years of depression war and sacrifice Benjamin T Harrison 2000 argues that the post World War II affluence set the stage for the protest generation in the 1960s 74 His central thesis is that the World Wars and Great Depression spawned a beat generation refusing to conform to mainstream American values which lead to the emergence of the Hippies and the counterculture The Anti war movement became part of a larger protest movement against the traditional American Values and attitudes Meyers 2007 builds off this claim in his argument that the relatively privileged enjoy the education and affirmation that afford them the belief that they might make a difference 75 As a result of the present factors in terms of affluence biographical availability defined in the sociological areas of activism as the lack of restrictions on social relationships of which most likely increases the consequences of participating in a social movement and increasing political atmosphere across the county political activity increased drastically on college campuses In one instance John William Ward then president of Amherst College sat down in front of Westover Air Force Base near Chicopee Massachusetts along with 1000 students some faculty and his wife Barbara to protest against Richard Nixon s escalation of offensive bombing in Southeast Asia 76 College enrollment reached 9 million by the end of the 1960s Colleges and universities in America had more students than ever before and these institutions often tried to restrict student behavior to maintain order on the campuses To combat this many college students became active in causes that promoted free speech student input in the curriculum and an end to archaic social restrictions Students joined the antiwar movement because they did not want to fight in a foreign civil war that they believed did not concern them or because they were morally opposed to all war Others disliked the war because it diverted funds and attention away from problems in the U S Intellectual growth and gaining a liberal perspective at college caused many students to become active in the antiwar movement Another attractive feature of the opposition movement was the fact that it was a popular social event Most student antiwar organizations were locally or campus based including chapters of the very loosely co ordinated Students for a Democratic Society because they were easier to organize and participate in than national groups Common antiwar demonstrations for college students featured attempts to sever ties between the war machine and universities through burning draft cards protesting universities furnishing grades to draft boards and protesting military and Dow Chemical job fairs on campus 77 78 From 1969 to 1970 student protesters attacked 197 ROTC buildings on college campuses Protests grew after the Kent State shootings radicalizing more and more students Although the media often portrayed the student antiwar movement as aggressive and widespread only 10 of the 2500 colleges in the United States had violent protests throughout the Vietnam War years By the early 1970s most student protest movements died down due to President Nixon s de escalation of the war the economic downturn and disillusionment with the powerlessness of the antiwar movement 79 Women Edit See also Women s liberation movement Woman protesting during the 1972 Republican National Convention Women were a large part of the antiwar movement even though they were sometimes relegated to second class status within the organizations or faced sexism within opposition groups 80 Some leaders of anti war groups viewed women as sex objects or secretaries not actual thinkers who could contribute positively and tangibly to the group s goals or believed that women could not truly understand and join the antiwar movement because they were unaffected by the draft 81 Women involved in opposition groups disliked the romanticism of the violence of both the war and the antiwar movement that was common amongst male war protesters 82 Despite the inequalities participation in various antiwar groups allowed women to gain experience with organizing protests and crafting effective antiwar rhetoric These newfound skills combined with their dislike of sexism within the opposition movement caused many women to break away from the mainstream antiwar movement and create or join women s antiwar groups such as Another Mother for Peace Women s International League for Peace and Freedom WILPF and Women Strike for Peace WSP also known as Women For Peace Female soldiers serving in Vietnam joined the movement to battle the war and sexism racism and the established military bureaucracy by writing articles for antiwar and antimilitary newspapers 83 Mothers and older generations of women joined the opposition movement as advocates for peace and people opposed to the effects of the war and the draft on the generation of young men These women saw the draft as one of the most disliked parts of the war machine and sought to undermine the war itself through undermining the draft Another Mother for Peace and WSP often held free draft counseling centers to give young men legal and illegal methods to oppose the draft 81 Members of Women For Peace showed up at the White House every Sunday for 8 years from 11 to 1 for a peace vigil 84 Such female antiwar groups often relied on maternalism the image of women as peaceful caretakers of the world to express and accomplish their goals The government often saw middle aged women involved in such organizations as the most dangerous members of the opposition movement because they were ordinary citizens who quickly and efficiently mobilized 85 Many women in America sympathized with the Vietnamese civilians affected by the war and joined the opposition movement They protested the use of napalm a highly flammable jelly weapon created by the Dow Chemical Company and used as a weapon during the war by boycotting Saran Wrap another product made by the company 86 Faced with the sexism sometimes found in the antiwar movement New Left and Civil Rights Movement some women created their own organizations to establish true equality of the sexes Some of frustrations of younger women became apparent during the antiwar movement they desired more radical change and decreased acceptance of societal gender roles than older women activists 87 Female activists disillusion with the antiwar movement led to the formation of the Women s Liberation Movement to establish true equality for American women in all facets of life 88 Political responses EditSee also List of Congressional opponents of the Vietnam War United Nations intervention Edit In October 1967 the Senate Foreign Relations Committee held hearings on resolutions urging President Johnson to request an emergency session of the United Nations security council to consider proposals for ending the war 89 Dellums war crimes Edit In January 1971 just weeks into his first term Congressman Ron Dellums set up a Vietnam war crimes exhibit in an annex to his Congressional office The exhibit featured four large posters depicting atrocities committed by American soldiers embellished with red paint This was followed shortly thereafter by four days of hearings on war crimes in Vietnam which began April 25 Dellums assisted by the Citizens Commission of Inquiry 90 had called for formal investigations into the allegations but Congress chose not to endorse these proceedings As such the hearings were ad hoc and only informational in nature As a condition of room use press and camera presence were not permitted but the proceedings were transcribed In addition to Ron Dellums Dem CA an additional 19 Congressional representatives took part in the hearings including Bella Abzug Dem NY Shirley Chisholm Dem NY Patsy Mink Dem HI Parren Mitchell Dem MD John Conyers Dem MI Herman Badillo Dem NY James Abourezk Dem SD Leo Ryan Dem CA Phil Burton Dem CA Don Edwards Dem CA Pete McCloskey Rep CA Ed Koch Dem NY John Seiberling Dem OH Henry Reuss Dem WI Benjamin Stanley Rosenthal Dem NY Robert Kastenmeier Dem WI and Abner J Mikva Dem IL 90 The transcripts describe alleged details of U S military s conduct in Vietnam Some tactics were described as gruesome such as the severing of ears from corpses to verify body count Others involved the killing of civilians Soldiers claimed to have ordered artillery strikes on villages which did not appear to have any military presence Soldiers were claimed to use racist terms such as gooks dinks and slant eyes when referring to the Vietnamese Witnesses described that legal by the book instruction was augmented by more questionable training by non commissioned officers as to how soldiers should conduct themselves One witness testified about free fire zones areas as large as 80 square miles 210 km2 in which soldiers were free to shoot any Vietnamese they encountered after curfew without first making sure they were hostile Allegations of exaggeration of body count torture murder and general abuse of civilians and the psychology and motivations of soldiers and officers were discussed at length Fulbright end to war Edit Main article Fulbright Hearing In April and May 1971 the Senate Foreign Relations Committee chaired by Senator J William Fulbright held a series of 22 hearings referred to as the Fulbright Hearings on proposals relating to ending the war On the third day of the hearings April 22 1971 future Senator and 2004 presidential candidate John Kerry became the first Vietnam veteran to testify before Congress in opposition to the war Speaking on behalf of Vietnam Veterans Against the War he argued for the immediate unilateral withdrawal of U S forces from Vietnam During nearly two hours of discussions with committee members Kerry related in some detail the findings of the Winter Soldier Investigation in which veterans had described personally committing or witnessing atrocities and war crimes Public opinion EditThe American public s support of the Vietnam War decreased as the war continued on As public support decreased opposition grew 91 The Gallup News Service began asking the American public whether it was a mistake to send troops to Vietnam in August 1965 At the time less than a quarter of Americans polled 24 believed it was a mistake to send troops to Vietnam while 60 of Americans polled believed the opposite Three years later in September 1968 54 of Americans polled believed it was a mistake to send troops to Vietnam while 37 believed it was not a mistake 92 A 1965 Gallup Poll asked the question Have you ever felt the urge to organize or join a public demonstration about something 93 Positive responses were quite low not many people wanted to protest anything and those who did want to show a public demonstration often wanted to demonstrate in support of the Vietnam War However when the American Public was asked in 1990 Looking back do you wish that you had made a stronger effort to protest or demonstrate against the Vietnam War or not 25 percent said they wished they had Urge to Organize or Demonstrate Yes No U S adults 10 9021 to 29 years old 15 8530 to 49 years 12 8850 and older 6 94College graduates 21 79High school graduates 9 91High school nongraduates 5 95Gallup Oct 29 Nov 2 1965 93 The attitude of Americans towards the Vietnam War between May 1966 and May 1971 according to public opinion polls A major factor in the American public s disapproval of the Vietnam War came from the casualties being inflicted on US forces In a Harris poll from 1967 asking what aspect most troubled people most about the Vietnam war the plurality answer of 31 was the loss of our young men A separate 1967 Harris poll asked the American public how the war affected their family job or financial life The majority of respondents 55 said that it had had no effect on their lives Of the 45 who indicated the war had affected their lives 32 listed inflation as the most important factor while 25 listed casualties inflicted 94 As the war continued the public became much more opposed to the war seeing that it was not ending In a poll from December 1967 71 of the public believed the war would not be settled in 1968 95 A year later the same question was asked and 55 of people did not think the war would be settled in 1969 96 When the American public was asked about the Vietnam era Anti War movement in the 1990s 39 of the public said they approved while 39 said they disapproved The last 22 were unsure 97 General effects EditSee also Vietnam stab in the back myth The opposition to the United States involvement in the Vietnam War had many effects which arguably led to the eventual end of the involvement of the United States Howard Zinn a controversial historian states in his book A People s History of the United States that in the course of the war there developed in the United States the greatest antiwar movement the nation had ever experienced a movement that played a critical role in bringing the war to an end 98 An alternative point of view is expressed by Michael Lind Citing public polling data on protests during the war he claimed that The American public turned against the Vietnam War not because it was persuaded by the radical and liberal left that it was unjust but out of sensitivity to its rising costs 99 Fewer soldiers Edit University of San Diego students holding sign saying bring all the troops home now The first effect the opposition had that led to the end of the war was that fewer soldiers were available for the army The draft was protested and even ROTC programs too Howard Zinn first provides a note written by a student of Boston University on May 1 1968 which stated to his draft board I have absolutely no intention to report for that exam or for induction or to aid in any way the American war effort against the people of Vietnam 100 The opposition to the United States involvement in the Vietnam War had many effects which led to the eventual end of the involvement of the United States 101 This refusal letter soon led to an overflow of refusals ultimately leading to the event provided by Zinn stating In May 1969 the Oakland induction center where draftees reported from all of Northern California reported that of 4 400 men ordered to report for induction 2 400 did not show up In the first quarter of 1970 the Selective Service System for the first time could not meet its quota 101 The fewer numbers of soldiers as an effect of the opposition to the war also can be traced to the protests against the ROTC programs in colleges Zinn argues this by stating Student protests against the ROTC resulted in the canceling of those programs in over forty colleges and universities In 1966 191 749 college students enrolled in ROTC By 1973 the number was 72 459 102 The number of ROTC students in college drastically dropped and the program lost any momentum it once had before the anti war movement College campuses Edit 1970 protest at Florida State University A further effect of the opposition was that many college campuses were completely shut down due to protests These protests led to wear on the government who tried to mitigate the tumultuous behavior and return the colleges back to normal The colleges involved in the anti war movement included ones such as Brown University Kent State University and the University of Massachusetts 100 Even at The College of William and Mary unrest occurred with protests by the students and even some faculty members that resulted in multiple informants hired to report to the CIA on the activities of students and faculty members 103 At the University of Massachusetts The 100th Commencement of the University of Massachusetts yesterday was a protest a call for peace Red fists of protest white peace symbols and blue doves were stenciled on black academic gowns and nearly every other senior wore an armband representing a plea for peace 104 Additionally At Boston College a Catholic institution six thousand people gathered that evening in the gymnasium to denounce the war 105 At Kent State University on May 4 when students gathered to demonstrate against the war National Guardsmen fired into the crowd Four students were killed 106 Finally At the Brown University commencement in 1969 two thirds of the graduating class turned their backs when Henry Kissinger stood up to address them 106 Basically from all of the evidence here provided by the historians Zinn and McCarthy the second effect was very prevalent and it was the uproar at many colleges and universities as an effect of the opposition to the United States involvement in Vietnam American soldiers Edit The Fort Hood Three refused orders to go to Vietnam 1966 Another effect the opposition to the war had was that the American soldiers in Vietnam began to side with the opposition and feel remorse for what they were doing Zinn argues this with an example in which the soldiers in a POW camp formed a peace committee as they wondered who the enemy of the war was because it certainly was not known among them 107 The statement of one of the soldiers reads Until we got to the first camp we didn t see a village intact they were all destroyed I sat down and put myself in the middle and asked myself Is this right or wrong Is it right to destroy villages Is it right to kill people en masse After a while it just got to me 108 Howard Zinn provides that piece of evidence to reiterate how all of this destruction and fighting against an enemy that seems to be unknown has been taking a toll on the soldiers and that they began to sense a feeling of opposition as one effect of the opposition occurring in the United States Timeline EditSee also Lists of protests against the Vietnam War 1964 Edit Demonstrators against the Vietnam War holding signs on the boardwalk during the 1964 Democratic National Convention On May 12 twelve young men in New York publicly burned their draft cards to protest the war 109 110 August Prompted by the Gulf of Tonkin incident Congress passed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution In December 1964 Joan Baez leads six hundred people in an antiwar demonstration in San Francisco 111 1965 Edit On March 24 organized by professors against the war at the University of Michigan a teach in protest was attended by 2 500 participants This model was to be repeated at 35 campuses across the country 112 On March 16 Alice Herz an 82 year old pacifist set herself on fire in the first known act of self immolation to protest the Vietnam War On April 17 the Students for a Democratic Society SDS and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee SNCC a civil rights activist group led the first of several anti war marches in Washington D C with about 25 000 protesters 112 Draft card burnings took place at University of California Berkeley at student demonstrations in May organized by a new anti war group the Vietnam Day Committee Events included a teach in attended by 30 000 and the burning in effigy of president Lyndon B Johnson A Gallup poll in May showed 48 of U S respondents felt the government was handling the war effectively 28 felt the situation was being handled badly and the rest had no opinion May First anti Vietnam War demonstration in London was staged outside the U S embassy 113 Protests were held in June on the steps of the Pentagon and in August attempts were made by activists at Berkeley to stop the movement of trains carrying troops A Gallup poll in late August showed that 24 of Americans view sending troops to Vietnam as a mistake versus 60 who do not 114 By mid October the anti war movement had significantly expanded to become a national and even global phenomenon as anti war protests drawing 100 000 were held simultaneously in as many as 80 major cities around the US London Paris and Rome 112 On October 15 1965 the first large scale act of civil disobedience in opposition to the Vietnam War occurred when approximately 40 people staged a sit in at the Ann Arbor Michigan draft board They were sentenced to 10 to 15 days in jail On November 2 Norman Morrison a 31 year old pacifist set himself on fire below the third floor window of Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara at the Pentagon emulating the actions of the Vietnamese monk Thich Quảng Đức On November 27 Coretta Scott King SDS President Carl Oglesby and Dr Benjamin Spock among others spoke at an anti war rally of about 30 000 in Washington D C in the largest demonstration to date Parallel protests occurred elsewhere around the nation 115 On that same day President Johnson announced a significant escalation of U S involvement in Indochina from 120 000 to 400 000 troops 1966 Edit Protest in Netherlands in July 1966 In February a group of about 100 veterans attempted to return their military decorations to the White House in protest of the war but were turned back On March 26 anti war demonstrations were held around the country and the world with 20 000 taking part in New York City A Gallup poll shows that 59 believe that sending troops to Vietnam was not a mistake Among the age group of 21 29 71 believe it was not a mistake compared to 48 of those over 50 116 On May 15 another large demonstration with 10 000 picketers calling for an end to the war took place outside the White House and the Washington Monument June The Gallup poll respondents supporting the U S handling of the war slipped to 41 37 expressed disapproval and the rest had no opinion A crowd of 4 000 demonstrated against the U S war in London on July 3 and scuffled with police outside the U S embassy 33 protesters were arrested Joan Baez and A J Muste organized over 3 000 people across the nation in an antiwar tax protest Participants refused to pay their taxes or did not pay the amount designated for funding the war 117 Protests strikes and sit ins continued at Berkeley and across other campuses throughout the year Three army privates known as the Fort Hood Three refused to deploy in Vietnam calling the war illegal and immoral and were sentenced to prison terms Heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali formerly known as Cassius Clay declared himself a conscientious objector and refused to go to war According to a writer for Sports Illustrated the governor of Illinois Otto Kerner Jr called Ali disgusting and the governor of Maine John H Reed said that Ali should be held in utter contempt by every patriotic American 118 In 1967 Ali was sentenced to 5 years in prison for draft evasion but his conviction was later overturned on appeal In addition he was stripped of his title and banned from professional boxing for more than three years In June 1966 American students and others in England meeting at the London School of Economics formed the Stop It Committee The group was prominent in every major London anti war demonstration It remained active until the end of the war in April 1975 1967 Edit The protest on June 23 in Los Angeles is singularly significant It was one of the first massive war protests in the United States and the first in Los Angeles Ending in a clash with riot police it set a pattern for the massive protests which followed 119 and due to the size and violence of this event Johnson attempted no further public speeches in venues outside military bases 119 120 source source source source source source source source source source Universal Newsreel about peace marches in April 1967 Mounted policemen watch a protest march in San Francisco on April 15 1967 The San Francisco City Hall is in the background Vietnam War protests at the Pentagon October 1967 Another Mother for Peace group founded 112 January 14 20 000 30 000 people staged a Human Be In in Golden Gate Park in San Francisco near the Haight Ashbury neighborhood that had become the center of hippie activity In February about 2 500 members of Women Strike for Peace WSP marched to the Pentagon This was a peaceful protest that became rowdier when the demonstrators were denied a meeting with Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara 121 February 8 Christian groups opposed to the war staged a nationwide Fast for Peace February 23 The New York Review of Books published The Responsibility of Intellectuals by Noam Chomsky as a special supplement March 12 A three page anti war ad appeared in The New York Times bearing the signatures of 6 766 teachers and professors The advertisement spanned two and a quarter pages in Section 4 The Week in Review The advertisement itself cost around 16 500 and was sponsored by the Inter University Committee for Debate on Foreign Policy March 17 a group of antiwar citizens marched to the Pentagon to protest American involvement in Vietnam March 25 Martin Luther King Jr a leader of the civil rights movement led a march of 5 000 against the war in Chicago April 4 Martin Luther King Jr gave a speech in New York City America rejected Ho Chi Minh s revolutionary government seeking self determination See details here On April 15 400 000 people organized by the Spring Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam marched from Central Park to the UN building in New York City to protest the war where they were addressed by critics of the war such as Benjamin Spock Martin Luther King Jr event initiator and director James Bevel Harry Belafonte and Jan Barry Crumb a veteran of the war On the same date 100 000 including Coretta Scott King marched in San Francisco On April 24 Abbie Hoffman led a small group of protesters against both the war and capitalism who interrupted the New York Stock Exchange causing chaos by throwing fistfuls of both real and fake dollars down from the gallery May 2 British philosopher Bertrand Russell presided over the Russell Tribunal in Stockholm a mock war crimes tribunal which ruled that the U S and its allies had committed war crimes in Vietnam The proceedings were criticized as being a show trial On May 22 the fashionable A L Innovation department store in Brussels Belgium burnt down killing over 300 people amid speculation that the fire was caused by Belgian Maoists against the Vietnam War On May Jan 30 Crumb and ten like minded men attended a peace demonstration in Washington D C and on June 1 Vietnam Veterans Against the War was born In the summer of 1967 Neil Armstrong and various other NASA officials began a tour of South America to raise awareness for space travel According to First Man The Life of Neil A Armstrong a 2005 biography during the tour several college students protested the astronaut and shouted such phrases as Murderers get out of Vietnam and other anti Vietnam War messages June 23 1967 President Johnson was met in Los Angeles by a massive anti war protest on the street outside the hotel where he was speaking at a Democratic fundraiser Progressive Labor Party and SDS protesters The Riot Act was read and 51 protesters arrested 122 120 This was one of the first massive war protests in the United States and the first in Los Angeles Ending in a clash with riot police it set a pattern for the massive protests which followed 119 The vigor of the response from the LAPD initially intended to prevent the demonstrators from storming the hotel where Johnson was speaking was to a certain extent based on exaggerated reports from undercover agents which had infiltrated the organizations sponsoring the protest Unresisting demonstrators were beaten some in front of literally thousands of witnesses without even the pretext of and attempt to make an arrest 123 A crowd the Los Angeles Times reports at 10 000 clashed with 500 riot police outside President Johnson s fundraiser at the Century City Plaza Hotel Expecting only 1 000 or 2 000 protesters the LAPD field commander later told reporters he had been astounded by the size of the demonstration Where did all those people come from I asked myself Scores were injured including many peaceful middle class protesters 119 Some sources put the crowd as high as 15 000 and noted that the police attacked the marchers with nightsticks to disperse the crowd 123 Due to the size and violence of this event Johnson attempted no further public speeches in venues outside military bases 119 120 July 30 Gallup poll reported 52 of Americans disapproved of Johnson s handling of the war 41 thought the U S made a mistake in sending troops and over 56 thought the U S was losing the war or at an impasse On August 28 1967 U S representative Tim Lee Carter R KY stated before congress Let us now while we are yet strong bring our men home every man jack of them The Vietcong fight fiercely and tenaciously because it is their land and we are foreigners intervening in their civil war If we must fight let us fight in defense of our homeland and our own hemisphere On September 20 over one thousand members of WSP rallied at the White House The police used brutal tactics to try to limit it to 100 people as per the law or stop the demonstration and the event tarnished the wholesome and nonviolent reputation of the WSP 124 Demonstrations in The Hague in the Netherlands by the PSP 1967 The placards read USA out of Vietnam and USA murder In October 1967 Stop the Draft Week resulted in major clashes at the Oakland California military induction center and saw more than a thousand registrants return their draft cards in events across the country The cards were delivered to the Justice Department on October 20 Singer musician activist Joan Baez a longtime critic of the war in Vietnam was among those arrested in the Oakland demonstrations On October 18 300 students at the University of Wisconsin Madison attempted to prevent Dow Chemical Company the maker of napalm from holding a job fair on campus The police eventually forced the demonstration to end but Dow was banned from the campus Three police officers and 65 students were injured in the event dubbed Dow Day 77 78 79 On October 21 1967 the March on the Pentagon took place A large demonstration organized by the National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam a crowd of nearly 100 000 met at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington D C and at least 30 000 people then marched to the Pentagon for another rally and an all night vigil Some including Abbie Hoffman Jerry Rubin and Allen Ginsberg attempted to exorcise and levitate the building while others engaged in civil disobedience on the steps of the Pentagon These actions were interrupted by clashes with soldiers and police In all 647 arrests were made When a plot to airdrop 10 000 flowers on the Pentagon was foiled by undercover agents some of these flowers ended up being placed in the barrels of MP s rifles as seen in famous photographs of the event such as Flower Power and The Ultimate Confrontation The Flower and the Bayonet Norman Mailer documented the events surrounding the march and the march on the Pentagon itself in his non fiction novel The Armies of the Night In November 1967 a non binding referendum was voted on in San Francisco California which posed the question of whether there should be an immediate withdrawal of American troops from Vietnam The vote was 67 against the referendum 125 which was taken by a Johnson administration official as support for the war citation needed 1968 Edit Olof Palme marching against the Vietnam War in Stockholm 1968 On January 15 1968 over five thousand women rallied in D C in the Jeannette Rankin Brigade protest This was the first all female antiwar protest intended to get Congress to withdrawal troops from Vietnam 126 On January 18 1968 while in the White House for a conference about juvenile delinquency black singer and entertainer Eartha Kitt yelled at Lady Bird Johnson about the generation of young men dying in the war 127 January 30 1968 Tet Offensive was launched and resulted in much higher casualties and changed perceptions The optimistic assessments made prior to the offensive by the administration and the Pentagon came under heavy criticism and ridicule as the credibility gap that had opened in 1967 widened into a chasm 128 February Gallup poll showed 35 approved of Johnson s handling of the war 50 disapproved the rest no opinion NYT 2 14 68 In another poll that month 23 of Americans defined themselves as doves and 61 hawks 129 March 12 anti war candidate Eugene McCarthy received more votes than expected in the New Hampshire primary leading to more expressions of opposition against the war McCarthy urged his supporters to exchange the unkempt look rapidly becoming fashionable among war opponents for a more clean cut style to in order not to scare voters These were known as Clean Genes March 16 Robert F Kennedy joined the race for the US presidency as an anti war candidate He was shot and killed on June 5 the morning after he won a decisive victory over McCarthy in the Democratic primary in California March 17 Major rally outside the U S Embassy in London s Grosvenor Square turned to a riot with 86 people injured and over 200 arrested Over 10 000 had rallied peacefully in Trafalgar Square but met a police barricade outside the embassy A UK Foreign Office report claimed that the rioting had been organized by 100 members of the German SDS who were acknowledged experts in methods of riot against the police In March Gallup poll reported that 49 of respondents felt involvement in the war was an error April 17 National media films the anti war riot that breaks out at Columbia University The over reaction by the police at Columbia is shown in Berlin and Paris sparking reactions in those cities On April 26 1968 a million college and high school students boycotted class to show opposition to the war 79 April 27 an anti war march in Chicago organized by Rennie Davis and others ended with police beating many of the marchers a precursor to the police riots later that year at the Democratic Convention During the 1968 Democratic National Convention held August 26 August 29 in Chicago anti war protesters marched and demonstrated throughout the city Chicago mayor Richard J Daley brought to bear 23 000 police and National Guardsman upon 10 000 protesters 130 Tensions between police and protesters quickly escalated resulting in a police riot and the chant by protesters The whole world is watching Eight leading anti war activists were indicted by the U S Attorney and prosecuted in 1969 for conspiracy to riot the 1970 convictions of the Chicago Seven were subsequently overturned on appeal August Gallup poll shows 53 said it was a mistake to send troops to Vietnam 131 Among the academic or scholarly groups was the Committee of Concerned Asian Scholars founded in 1968 by graduate students and junior faculty in Asian studies 1969 Edit March polls indicated that 19 of Americans wanted the war to end as soon as possible 26 wanted South Vietnam to take over responsibility for the war from the U S 19 favored the current policy and 33 wanted total military victory 129 In March students at SUNY Buffalo destroyed a Themis construction site 79 On March 5 Senator J William Fulbright was prevented from speaking at the first National Convocation on the Challenge of Building Peace by members of the Veterans and Reservists to End the War in Vietnam 132 Late 1960s early 1970s anti Vietnam War demonstrations in Lund Sweden On April 6 a spontaneous anti war rally in Central Park was recorded and later released as Environments 3 On May 22 the Canadian government announced that immigration officials would not and could not ask about immigration applicants military status if they showed up at the border seeking permanent residence in Canada 133 On July 16 activist David Harris was arrested for refusing the draft and would ultimately serve a fifteen month prison sentence Harris wife prominent musician pacifist and activist Joan Baez toured and performed on behalf of her husband throughout the remainder of 1969 attempting to raise consciousness around the issue of ending the draft On July 31 The New York Times published the results of a Gallup poll showing that 53 of the respondents approved of Nixon s handling of the war 30 disapproved and the balance had no opinion On August 15 18 the Woodstock Festival was held at Max Yasgur s farm in Bethel New York Peace was a primary theme in this pivotal popular music event On October 15 the Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam demonstrations took place Millions of Americans took the day off from work and school to participate in local demonstrations against the war These were the first major demonstrations against the Nixon administration s handling of the war In October 58 of Gallup respondents said U S entry into the war was a mistake In November Sam Melville Jane Alpert and several others bombed several corporate offices and military installations including the Whitehall Army Induction Center in and around New York City On November 15 crowds of up to half a million people participated in an anti war demonstration in Washington D C and a similar demonstration was held in San Francisco These protests were organized by the New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam New Mobe and the Student Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam SMC On December 7 The 5th Dimension performed their song Declaration on the Ed Sullivan Show Consisting of the opening of the Declaration of Independence through for their future security it suggests that the right and duty of revolting against a tyrannical government is still relevant In late December the And babies poster is published easily the most successful poster to vent the outrage that so many felt about the war in Southeast Asia 134 By end of the year 69 of students identified themselves as doves 79 1970 Edit Protest in Helsinki Finland 1970 On March 4 Antonia Martinez a 21 year old student at the University of Puerto Rico at Rio Piedras was shot and killed by a policeman while watching and commenting on the anti Vietnam War and education reform student protests at the University of Puerto Rico On March 14 two merchant seamen claiming allegiance to the SDS hijacked the SS Columbia Eagle a U S flagged merchant vessel under contract with the U S government carrying 10 000 tons of napalm bombs for use by the U S Air Force in the Vietnam War The hijackers forced its master to divert to then neutral Cambodia which promptly was taken over by anti Communists who eventually returned to the ship to the U S 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 Kent State Cambodia Invasion Protest Washington D C After the Kent State shootings on May 4 100 000 anti war demonstrators converged on Washington D C to protest the shooting of the students in Ohio and the Nixon administration s incursion into Cambodia Even though the demonstration was quickly put together protesters were still able to bring out thousands to march in the Capital It was an almost spontaneous response to the events of the previous week Police ringed the White House with buses to block the demonstrators from getting too close to the executive mansion Early in the morning before the march Nixon met with protesters at the Lincoln Memorial but nothing was resolved and the protest went on as planned National Student Strike more than 450 university college and high school campuses across the country were shut by student strikes and both violent and non violent protests that involved more than 4 million students in the only nationwide student strike in U S history A Gallup poll in May shows that 56 of the public believed that sending troops to Vietnam was a mistake 61 of those over 50 expressed that belief compared to 49 of those between the ages of 21 29 142 On June 13 President Nixon established the President s Commission on Campus Unrest The commission was directed to study the dissent disorder and violence breaking out on college and university campuses 143 In July 1970 the award winning documentary The World of Charlie Company was broadcast It showed GIs close to mutiny balking at orders that seemed to them unreasonable This was something never seen on television before 144 The documentary was produced by CBS News On August 24 1970 near 3 40 a m a van filled with ammonium nitrate and fuel oil mixture was detonated on the University of Wisconsin Madison in the Sterling Hall bombing One researcher was killed and three others were injured Vortex I A Biodegradable Festival of Life To avert potential violence arising from planned anti war protests a government sponsored rock festival was held near Portland Oregon from August 28 to September 3 attracting 100 000 participants The festival arranged by the People s Army Jamboree an ad hoc group and Oregon governor Tom McCall was set up when the FBI told the governor that President Nixon s planned appearance at an American Legion convention in Portland could lead to violence worse than that seen at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago The Chicano Moratorium on August 29 some 25 000 Mexican Americans participated in the largest anti war demonstration in Los Angeles Police attacked the crowd with billyclubs and tear gas two people were killed Immediately after the marchers were dispersed sheriff s deputies raided a nearby bar where they shot and killed Ruben Salazar KMEX news director and Los Angeles Times columnist with a tear gas projectile 1971 and after Edit Protests against the Vietnam War in Washington D C on April 24 1971 Rally in support of the Vietnamese people at the Moskvitch factory 1973 On April 23 1971 Vietnam veterans threw away over 700 medals on the West Steps of the Capitol building 145 The next day antiwar organizers claimed that 500 000 marched making this the largest demonstration since the November 1969 march 146 Two weeks later on May 5 1971 1146 people were arrested on the Capitol grounds trying to shut down Congress This brought the total arrested during the 1971 May Day Protests to over 12 000 Abbie Hoffman was arrested on charges of interstate travel to incite a riot and assaulting a police officer 147 In August 1971 the Camden 28 conducted a raid on the Camden New Jersey draft board offices The 28 included five or more members of the clergy as well as a number of local blue collar workers Beginning December 26 1971 15 anti war veterans occupied the Statue of Liberty flying a US flag upside down from her crown They left on December 28 following issuance of a Federal Court order 148 Also on December 28 80 young veterans clashed with police and were arrested while trying to occupy the Lincoln Memorial in Washington D C 149 On March 29 1972 166 people many of them seminarians were arrested in Harrisburg Pennsylvania for encircling the Federal Courthouse with a chain to protest the trial of the Harrisburg Seven 150 On April 19 1972 in response to renewed escalation of bombing students at many colleges and universities around the country broke into campus buildings and threatened strikes 151 The following weekend protests were held in Los Angeles New York City San Francisco and elsewhere 152 153 On May 13 1972 protests again spread across the country in response to President Nixon s decision to mine harbors in North Vietnam 154 and renewed bombing of North Vietnam Operation Linebacker On July 6 1972 four Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur on a White House Tour stopped and began praying to protest the war In the next six weeks such kneel ins became a popular form of protest and led to over 158 protesters arrests 155 Organizations EditThis article contains a list that has not been sorted See Help Sorting for more information Please improve this article if you can July 2022 Committee for NonViolent Action CNVA radical pacifist organization that blended philosophical anarchism with Gandhian pacifism 156 The organization used civil disobedience in direct action against military action Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy SANE liberal international organization that was founded in 1957 by a group of nuclear pacifists They attempted to increase public opinion in favor of their cause in an attempt to influence policy makers to halt atmospheric nuclear testing and reversing the arms race and the Cold War 156 Another committee was called SNCC Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee Black Women Enraged a Harlem antiwar movement 32 National Black Anti War Anti Draft Union NBAWADU led by Gwen Patton and formed from black members of SNCC and socialist parties 32 National Black Draft Counselors NBDC led by and created to help young black men avoid being drafted 32 Women s International League for Peace and Freedom WILPF founded in 1919 after World War I and provided women with an early entry into the antiwar movement 157 The League of Women Voters founded in 1920 was one of the first groups to call for an end to military involvement in Vietnam 158 Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur popularized the use of kneel ins and prayer to end the war and stop its escalation 155 Bay Area Asian Coalition Against the War BAACAW 159 Asian American Political Alliance AAPA 159 Asian Americans for Action AAA 159 Third World Liberation Front TWLF Some Asian American student organizations under this were Filipino American Collegiate PACE Asian American Political Alliance AAPA and Chinese for Social Action ICSA Vietnam Veterans Against the War 160 Concerned Officers Movement an organization of officers formed within the U S military Movement for a Democratic Military an antiwar and GI rights organization during the Vietnam War GI Coffeehouses coffeehouses created by antiwar activists as a method of supporting antiwar and anti military sentiment among GIs GI s Against Fascism an organization of antiwar and anti military GIs formed within the U S Navy in San Diego CA American Writers Against the Vietnam War 161 Americans for Democratic Action 162 FTA a group whose initials either stand for Free the Army or Fuck the Army depending on the situation was led by Jane Fonda and Donald Sutherland 163 Clergy and Laymen Concerned about Vietnam CALCAV 164 WIN Workshop in Nonviolence Magazine editors and staff included Maris Cakars Marty Jezer Paul Johnson Susan Kent Cakars and Tad Richards Published authors such as Grace Paley Barbara Deming Andrea Dworkin and Abbie Hoffman The Student Libertarian Movement Libertarian organization that was formed in 1972 The guiding principles of this organization were opposition to the war in Vietnam and opposition to the draft The organization did not take a strong stand on racial issues For example In virtually hundreds of issues of libertarian newspapers bulletins and journals the civil rights movement Black nationalism or race in general composed no more than 1 percent of all articles surveyed 165 Students for Democratic Society SDS founded in 1960 and was seen as one of the most active college campus groups of the New Left and the antiwar movement 79 Student Peace Union 79 Furman University Corps of Kazoos FUCK created to make fun of the military and campus ROTC program at Furman University in South Carolina Such anti campus ROTC groups were common throughout the U S 79 Traditional peace groups like Fellowship of Reconciliation American Friends Service Committee the Bruderhof War Resisters League and the Catholic Workers Movement became involved in the antiwar movement as well 166 Various committees and campaigns for peace in Vietnam came about including Campaign for Disarmament Campaign to End the Air War Campaign to Stop Funding the War Campaign to Stop the Air War Catholic Peace Fellowship and Central Committee for Conscientious Objectors 166 Concerned Americans Abroad London based group established by Heinz NordenSlogans and chants Edit Hell no we won t go was heard in antidraft and antiwar protests throughout the country 167 Bring the troops home now was heard in mass marches in Washington D C Seattle San Francisco Berkeley New York and San Diego Dow shall not kill and Making money burning babies were two slogans used by students at UCLA and other colleges to protest the Dow Chemical Company the maker of napalm and Agent Orange 13 and it refers to The Ten Commandments Stop the war feed the poor was a popular slogan used by socially conscious and minority antiwar groups protesting that the war diverted funds that struggling Americans desperately needed 168 Girls say yes to men who say no was an antidraft slogan used by the SDS and other organizations 169 War is not healthy for children and other living things was a slogan of Another Mother for Peace and was popular on posters 170 End the nuclear race not the human race was first used by the WSP in antinuclear demonstrations and became incorporated into the antiwar events 171 Not my son not your son not their sons was an antiwar and antidraft slogan used by the WSP during protests 172 Ho Ho Ho Chi Minh the Viet Cong are gonna win was a common anti war chant during anti war marches and rallies in the later sixties Hey hey LBJ How many kids did you kill today was especially chanted by students and other marchers and demonstrators in opposition to Lyndon B Johnson 173 One two three four we don t want your fucking war was chanted in marches from Brisbane to Boston Fuck fuck fuck it all We don t want this anymore was also chanted in marches from Brisbane to Boston 174 আম র ন ম ত ম র ন ম ভ য তন ম Amar nam tomar nam Bhiẏetnam lit Your name My Name Vietnam Slogans chanted by leftists of Calcutta including future President of India Pranab Mukherjee against the American oppression on Vietnam 175 Gallery EditPropaganda Edit Leaflet targeting Veterans and GIs Stop the Hawk protest sticker Ad for an FTA Show 1975 flyer for a protest march West German protest poster Poster advertising the Student strike of 1970 Fatigue Press GI Underground Newspaper May 1970 1000 GIs march against the war Protests Edit 1965 protest in Sydney Australia Anti Vietnam War protest Vancouver British Columbia Canada 1968 Anti Vietnam War protest Vancouver B C Canada 1968 National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam s march on the Pentagon October 21 1967 1968 protests in Chicago 1970 protest in Boston See also Edit Society portal Vietnam stab in the back myth Lists of protests against the Vietnam War Bed in Civil disobedience Congressional opponents of the Vietnam War Legality of the Vietnam War Canada and the Vietnam War Nonviolence Opposition to the Iraq War Pacifism in the United States List of peace activists List of anti war organizations List of protest marches on Washington D C May Day Protests 1971 People s Peace Treaty Sir No Sir a 2005 documentary about the anti war movement in the ranks of the U S Armed Forces Sterling Hall bombing Soviet influence on the peace movement Teach in The Spitting Image a 1998 book by Vietnam veteran and sociology professor Jerry Lembcke which argues against the widely believed narrative that American soldiers were spat upon and insulted by antiwar protesters United States Servicemen s Fund Writers and Editors War Tax Protest GI s Against Fascism GI Coffeehouses GI Underground Press Movement for a Democratic Military Presidio mutiny Stop Our Ship SOS anti Vietnam War movement in and around the U S Navy Vietnam Veterans Against the War Waging Peace in Vietnam Winter Soldier Investigation Concerned Officers Movement Donald W Duncan Fort Hood Three Court martial of Howard LevyReferences Edit Robert S McNamara Architect of a Futile War Dies at 93 The New York Times July 7 2009 a b Colin W Bell 1973 Where Service Begins Wider Quaker Fellowship 152 A North 15th Street Philadelphia 19102 p 12 and 14 Schuman Howard 2000 Two Sources of Antiwar Sentiment in America in Hixson Walter L ed The United States and the Vietnam War Significant Scholarly Articles New York Garland Publishing pp 127 150 a b c d Guttmann Allen 1969 Protest against the War in Vietnam Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 382 pp 56 63 Life magazine Remembering Martin Luther King Jr 40 Years Later Time Inc 2008 p 139 a b Herman Edward S amp Chomsky Noam 2002 Manufacturing Consent The Political Economy of the Mass Media New York Pantheon Books UC Berkeley Library Social Activism Sound Recording Project Anti Vietnam War Protests San Francisco Bay Area Lib berkeley edu Retrieved March 7 2011 Flynn George Q 1993 The Draft 1940 1973 Modern war studies University Press of Kansas p 175 ISBN 978 0 7006 0586 6 Karnow Stanley Vietnam pp 488 489 a b c d Karnow Stanley Vietnam p 489 Graham III Herman 2003 The Brothers Vietnam War Black Power Manhood and the Military Experience Gainesville University of Florida Press pp 16 17 Small 1992harvnb error no target CITEREFSmall1992 help a b c Fry 2007 p 228 Five myths about the Vietnam War Washington Post September 29 2017 Retrieved June 26 2022 Karnow Stanley Vietnam Fountain Aaron The War in the Schools San Francisco Bay Area High Schools and the Anti Vietnam War Movement 1965 1973 p 33 Karnow Stanley Vietnam p 600 Lucks Daniel S 2014 Selma to Saigon The Civil Rights Movement and the Vietnam War University Press of Kentucky pp 9 10 ISBN 9780813145099 Lucks Daniel S 2014 Selma to Saigon The Civil Rights Movement and the Vietnam War University Press of Kentucky pp 83 84 ISBN 9780813145099 a b c Small 1992 pp 57 60harvnb error no target CITEREFSmall1992 help a b Beyond Vietnam Stanford University Retrieved October 30 2019 Lucks Daniel S 2014 Selma to Saigon The Civil Rights Movement and the Vietnam War University Press of Kentucky pp 113 120 ISBN 9780813145099 Joshua Bloom and Waldo E Martin Black Against Empire The History and Politics of the Black Panther Party University of California Press 2013 pp 29 41 42 102 103 128 130 a b Beyond Vietnam Stanford University Retrieved October 30 2019 a b Jackson Thomas 2007 From Civil Rights to Human Rights Martin Luther King Jr and the Struggle for Economic Justice Philadelphia Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania Press p 309 ISBN 978 0 8122 2089 6 Jackson Thomas 2007 From Civil Rights to Human Rights Martin Luther King Jr and the Struggle for Economic Justice Philadelphia Pennsylvania University Of Pennsylvania Press p 309 ISBN 978 0 8122 2089 6 Jackson Thomas 2007 From Civil Rights to Human Rights Martin Luther King Jr and the Struggle for Economic Justice Philadelphia Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania Press p 310 ISBN 978 0 8122 2089 6 Jackson Thomas 2007 From Civil Rights to Human Rights Martin Luther King Jr and the Struggle for Economic Justice Philadelphia Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania Press p 319 ISBN 978 0 8122 2089 6 Gills 1992 p 188 Appy Christian G 2015 American Reckoning The Vietnam War and Our National Identity Penguin ISBN 9780698191556 Thomas Jackson 2007 From Civil Rights to Human Rights Martin Luther King Jr and the Struggle for Economic Justice Philadelphia Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania Press p 328 ISBN 978 0 8122 2089 6 a b c d Gills 1992 pp 177 195 Gills 1992 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Asian America A History Simon amp Schuster pp 301 303 a b c d e Ishizuka Karen L May 7 2019 Looking Like the Enemy Political Identity amp the Vietnam War Pacific Council on International Affairs Maeda Daryl 2009 Chains of Babylon Rise of Asian America University of Minnesota Press pp 123 124 King Beyond Vietnam a b Tygart Social Movement Participation Clergy and the Anti Vietnam War Movement Friedland Lift Up Your Voice Like A Trumpet White Clergy And The Civil Rights And Antiwar Movements 1954 1973 Nonrandom Risk The 1970 Draft Lottery Archived January 1 2005 at the Wayback Machine Norton Starr Journal of Statistics Education v 5 n 2 1997 Antiwar campaigners to donate documents to Vietnamese museum Archived September 28 2007 at the Wayback Machine Keiji Hirano Kyodo News The Japan Times February 16 2002 Web edition hosted by lbo talk under the title What Japanese Anti Vietnam War activists are up to 1961 1973 GI Resistance in the Vietnam War Archived October 20 2005 at the Wayback 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2018 12 15 at the Wayback Machine Journal of American Studies 26 3 1992 352 JSTOR Web January 26 2011 McCormick Anita Louise The Vietnam Antiwar Movement in American History Berkeley Heights New Jersey Enslow 2000 Kindig Jessie GI Movement 1968 1973 Special Section washington edu Seidman Derek June 2016 Vietnam and the Soldiers Revolt The Politics of a Forgotten History monthlyreview ord Meyer David S 2007 The Politics of Protest Social Movements in America New York Oxford University Press Harrison Benjamin T 2000 Roots of the Anti Vietnam War Movement in Hixson Walter ed the Vietnam Antiwar Movement New York Garland Publishing p 49 Brown James Patrick 2006 The Disobedience of John William Ward Myth Symbol and Political Praxis in the Vietnam Era American Studies 47 2 5 22 JSTOR 40643909 a b University of Wisconsin Madison 2017 A Turning Point Retrieved October 26 2017 a b Worland Gayle October 8 2017 50 years ago Dow Day left its mark on Madison Wisconsin State Journal Madison WI John Humenik Archived from the original on October 27 2017 Retrieved October 26 2017 a b c d e f g h Fry Joseph 2007 David Anderson John Ernst eds The War That Never Ends Student Opposition to the Vietnam War University of Kentucky pp 219 243 Adams Nina 1992 Barbara Tischler ed Sights on the Sixties Rutgers the State University Press pp 149 161 a b Swerdlow 1992 pp 159 170 Rosen Ruth 2006 The World Split Open How the Modern Women s Movement Changed America New York Penguin Books ISBN 9780140097191 Tischler Barbara 1992 Barbara Tischler ed Sights on the Sixties Rutgers the State University Press pp 197 209 Small 1992 p 92harvnb error no target CITEREFSmall1992 help Small 1992 p 56harvnb error no target CITEREFSmall1992 help Small 1992 p 44harvnb error no target CITEREFSmall1992 help Rosen 2006 p 201 Adams 1992 pp 182 195 Chicago Tribune Give Viet Cong Voice In Peace Talks Cohen October 27 1967 a b Uhl Michael 2007 Vietnam Awakening Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company pp 203 207 ISBN 978 0 7864 3074 1 Lunch William March 1979 American Public Opinion and the War in VietnamWar The Western Political Quarterly 32 1 21 44 doi 10 2307 447561 JSTOR 447561 Iraq Versus Vietnam A Comparison of Public Opinion Gallup com Retrieved April 19 2018 a b Gallup Vault The Urge to Demonstrate Gallup com Retrieved October 23 2017 Lorell Mark March 1985 Casualties Public Opinion and Presidential Policy during the Vietnam War PDF Casualties Public Opinion and Presidential Policy During the Vietnam War 27 Archived PDF from the original on April 27 2018 Retrieved October 30 2017 via Rand Corporation Berhe Solomon Doran Derek De la Rosa Algaran Alberto Hart Darlene Maynard Marc Stout Meena 2008 The Roper Center for Public Opinion Research ropercenter cornell edu Retrieved November 13 2017 Berhe Solomon Doran Derek De la Rosa Algaran Alberto Hart Darlene Maynard Marc Stout Meena 2008 The Roper Center for Public Opinion Research ropercenter cornell edu Retrieved November 13 2017 Berhe Solomon Doran Derek De la Rosa Algaran Alberto Hart Darlene Maynard Marc Stout Meena 2008 The Roper Center for Public Opinion Research ropercenter cornell edu Retrieved November 13 2017 Howard Zinn A People s History of the United States p 469 Lind Michael 1999 Vietnam The Necessary War A Reinterpretation of America s Most Disastrous Military Conflict Free Press p 137 ISBN 0 684 84254 8 a b Howard Zinn A People s History of the United States a b Howard Zinn A People s History of the United States p 486 Howard Zinn A People s History of the United States p 491 David McCarthy The Sun Never Sets on the Activities of the CIA Project Resistance at William and Mary Howard Zinn A People s History of the United States p 491 Howard Zinn A People s History of the United States p 490 a b Howard Zinn A People s History of the United States p 490 Howard Zinn A People s History of the United States p 496 Howard Zinn A People s History of the United States p 496 Flynn George Q 1993 The Draft 1940 1973 Modern war studies University Press of Kansas p 175 ISBN 978 0700605866 Gottlieb Sherry Gershon 1991 Hell no we won t go resisting the draft during the Vietnam War Viking p xix ISBN 978 0670839353 1964 May 12 Twelve students at a New York rally burn their draft cards DeBenedetti Charles Chatfield Charles 1990 An American Ordeal The Antiwar Movement of the Vietnam Era Syracuse New York Syracuse University Press a b c d Ronald B Frankum Jr 2011 Chronology Historical Dictionary of the War in Vietnam Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 7956 0 IV Library law ua edu Archived from the original on August 28 2012 Retrieved March 7 2011 Usa Today Cnn Gallup Poll USA Today November 15 2005 Archived from the original on April 23 2009 Retrieved May 20 2010 DeBenedetti 1990 p 132 Commentaries for 2011 Pew Research Center for the People amp the Press People press org October 17 2002 Retrieved March 7 2011 Small Melvin 2002 Antiwarriors The Vietnam War and the Battle for America s Hearts and Minds Delaware Scholarly Resources Inc Gale Free Resources Black History Biographies Muhammad Ali Gale cengage com Retrieved March 7 2011 a b c d e Crowd Battles LAPD as War Protest Turns Violent http latimesblogs latimes com thedailymirror 2009 05 crowd battles lapd as war protest turns violent html Archived July 22 2017 at the Wayback Machine a b c Dann Jim Dillon Hari 2 The Retreat From the Anti War Movement 1967 1968 The Five Retreats A History of the Failure of the Progressive Labor Party Marxist org Archived from the original on June 23 2015 Retrieved December 12 2016 On June 23 1967 President Johnson came to Century City Los Angeles to speak The Mobe got permission to march past his hotel without stopping PLP SDS the War Resisters League and other left forces determined to stop in front of the hotel Leadership of the march of 20 000 was wrested from the hands of the Mobe s marshals by the PL led militants A four hour bloody battle ensued after the police attacked the march with injuries on both sides and a partial victory for the anti war movement because LBJ never dared speak in public again DeBenedetti 1990 p 172 Hill Gladwin June 24 1967 51 Protesters Arrested The New York Times Retrieved December 12 2016 a b ACLU Southern California Branch Day of Protest Night of Violence The Century City Peace March a Report Los Angeles Sawyer Press 1967 on Scribd Archived December 20 2016 at the Wayback Machine Swerdlow Amy 1992 Melvin Small William Hoover eds Give Peace A Chance Exploring the Vietnam Antiwar Movement Syracuse New York Syracuse University Press pp 159 170 Davies Lawrence E November 8 1967 The New York Times Voters in San Francisco Reject Immediate Vietnam Cease Fire San Franciscans Reject Proposal for a Cease Fire and Withdrawal of Troops pp 1 3 Echols Alice 1992 Women Power and Women s Liberation Exploring the Relationship between the Antiwar Movement and the Women s Liberation Movement In Melvin Small William Hoover ed Give Peace A Chance Exploring the Vietnam Antiwar Movement Syracuse New York Syracuse University Press pp 171 181 Gills Gerald 1992 Barbara Tischler ed Sights on the Sixties Rutgers the State University of New Jersey pp 177 195 Clark Clifford Counsel to the President A Memoir pp 47 55 a b Bowman Karlyn October 18 2001 Articles amp Commentary Aei org Archived from the original on June 10 2011 Retrieved March 7 2011 Jennings amp Brewster 1998 413 Gallup Alec 2006 The Gallup Poll Public Opinion 2005 Rowman amp Littlefield pp 315 318 ISBN 978 0742552586 At Peace Meal Protestors Drown Out Fulbright Lubbock Avalanche Journal Lubbock Texas March 6 1969 p 10 A Retrieved December 18 2016 Keung Nicholas August 20 2010 Iraq war resisters meet cool reception in Canada Toronto Star Archived from the original on August 26 2010 Retrieved August 24 2010 M Paul Holsinger And Babies in War and American Popular Culture Greenwood Press 1999 p 363 Andrews Evan 6 Famous Naval Mutinies Archived March 1 2018 at the Wayback Machine November 6 2012 History in the Headlines newsletter retrieved March 1 2018 from History com Cronkite Walter and Nelson Benton Columbia Eagle Mutiny Cambodia segment 208707 Archived March 1 2018 at the Wayback Machine in transcript CBS Evening News for 1970 03 16 from the Vanderbilt Television News Archive Vanderbilt University retrieved March 1 2018 Emery Fred Two Who Say They Support S D S Tell How They Hijacked Ship Archived March 1 2018 at the Wayback Machine March 26 1970 New York Times archives retrieved March 1 2018 U S Asks Return of Ship Archived March 1 2018 at the Wayback Machine March 25 1970 New York Times archives retrieved March 1 2018 Mutiny Involved 5 Captain Archived March 1 2018 at the Wayback Machine March 19 1970 Nashville Tennessean Page 13 retrieved March 1 2018 from OCR transcription in Newspapers com Hoffman Fred S Associated Press U S Bomb Ship Seized in Mutiny Anchored Off Cambodia Archived March 1 2018 at the Wayback Machine March 16 1970 San Bernardino Sun San Bernardino California Volume 76 Number 137 pp 1 2 photocopy at retrieved March 1 2018 from OCR transcription in California Digital Newspaper Collection Associated Press 2 American Ship Hijackers Want to Quit Cambodia Archived March 1 2018 at the Wayback Machine written July 3 1970 published July 4 1970 New York Times retrieved March 1 2018 from the Harold Weisberg Archive Archived March 5 2018 at the Wayback Machine Hood College Maryland Pew Research Center Generations Divide Over Military Action in Iraq People press org October 17 2002 Retrieved March 7 2011 The Report of the President s Commission on Campus Unrest Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 1970 Retrieved April 16 2007 This book is also known as The Scranton Commission Report Bliss Edward Jr 1991 Now the news p 349 Veterans Discard Medals In War Protest At Capitol New York Times April 24 1971 P 1 Reports of Its Death Have Been Greatly Exaggerated James Buckley New York Times April 25 1971 P E1 Protesters Fail to Stop Congress Police Seize 1 146 James M McNaughton New York Times May 6 1971 P 1 Blumberg Barbara 1985 Statue of Liberty NM An Administrative History Chapter 1 STATUE OF LIBERTY Celebrating the Immigrant An Administrative History of the Statue of Liberty National Monument 1952 1982 United States National Park Service pp Ch 1 Archived from the original on November 2 2012 Retrieved January 20 2013 1973 World Almanac p 996 Students Picket Harrisburg Trial Eleanor Blaus New York Times March 30 1972 p 15 Campus Outbreaks Spread Martin Arnold New York Times April 19 1972 p 1 War Foes March in the Rain Here Martin Arnold New York Times April 23 1972 p 1 James Stuart Olson ed 1999 Chronology Historical Dictionary of the 1970s Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 30543 6 Peaceful Antiwar Protests Held Here And in Other Cities Across the Nation John Darnton New York Times May 14 1972 p 30 a b DeBenedetti 1990 p 360 a b Debenedette Charles 2000 On the Significance of Citizen Peace Activism America 1961 1975 in Hixson Walter ed the Vietnam Antiwar Movement New York Garland Publishing DeBenedetti 1990 p 14 DeBenedetti 1990 p 329 a b c Maeda Daryl 2009 Chains of Babylon Rise of Asian America University of Minnesota Press Anderson Terry 2007 David Anderson John Ernst ed The War That Never Ends Student Opposition to the Vietnam War University of Kentucky pp 245 264 DeBenedetti 1990 p 146 DeBenedetti 1990 p 18 Small 1992 p 150harvnb error no target CITEREFSmall1992 help DeBenedetti 1990 p 144 Schoenwald Jonathan 2001 No War No Welfare and No Damm Taxation The Student Libertarian Movement 1968 1972 in Gilbert Marc Jason ed The Vietnam War on Campus Other Voices More Distant Drums Westport Connecticut Praeger pp 1 20 a b DeBenedetti 1990 Hell no we won t go The infamous chant is shouted by draft opponents in the streets of New York City December 6 1967 Retrieved November 25 2012 Gills 1992 p 192 Adams 1992 p 185 DeBenedetti 1990 p 185 DeBenedetti 1990 p 54 Swerdlow 1992 p 159 Hey Hey LBJ The Economist October 3 2013 Archived from the original on May 21 2017 Retrieved September 7 2017 Walker Frank 2013 Ghost Platoon Hachette Australia p 69 ISBN 978 0733628009 A LONG FRIENDSHIP Why Vietnam made the president of India nostalgic www telegraphindia com References EditDeBenedetti Charles 1990 An American Ordeal The Antiwar Movement of the Vietnam Era contributor Charles Chatfield Syracuse University Press ISBN 978 0 8156 0245 3 Aaron Fountain The War in the Schools San Francisco Bay Area High Schools and the Anti Vietnam War Movement 1965 1973 pp 22 41 from California History Volume 92 Issue 2 Summer 2015 John Hagan Northern passage American Vietnam War resisters in Canada Harvard University Press 2001 ISBN 978 0 674 00471 9 Mary Susannah Robbins Against the Vietnam War Writings by Activists Rowman amp Littlefield 2007 ISBN 978 0 7425 5914 1 Robert R Tomes Apocalypse Then American Intellectuals and the Vietnam War 1954 1975 NYU Press 2000 ISBN 978 0 8147 8262 0 King Martin Luther Jr Beyond Vietnam New York April 4 1967 Tygart Clarence Social Movement Participation Clergy and the Anti Vietnam War Movement Sociological Analysis Vol 34 No 3 Autumn 1973 pp 202 211 Print Friedland Michael B Lift Up Your Voice Like A Trumpet White Clergy And The Civil Rights And Antiwar Movements 1954 1973 Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 1998 eBook Collection EBSCOhost Web December 15 2013 McCarthy David The Sun Never Sets on the Activities of the CIA Project Resistance at William and Mary Routledge Publishing September 4 2012 Patler Nicholas Norman s Triumph the Transcendent Language of Self Immolation Quaker History Fall 2105 18 39 Zinn Howard A People s History of the United States New York HarperCollins Publishing 2003 Print Maeda Daryl Chains of Babylon Rise of Asian America University of Minnesota Press 2009 Lee Erika The Making of Asian Ameria A History Simon amp Schuster 2015 Srikanth Rajini and Hyoung Song Min The Cambridge History of Asian American Literature Cambridge University Press 2015 Further reading EditBates Tom Rads The 1970 Bombing of the Army Math Research Center at the University of Wisconsin and Its Aftermath New York HarperCollins 1992 Greene Bob Homecoming Putnam 1989 ISBN 0399133860 Heineman Kenneth J Campus Wars The Peace Movement at American State Universities in the Vietnam Era New York New York University Press 2010 Olson James S ed 1999 Antiwar Movement Historical Dictionary of the 1960s Greenwood ISBN 978 0 313 29271 2 Patler Nicholas Norman s Triumph the Transcendent Language of Self Immolation Quaker History Fall 2015 18 39 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Opposition to the Vietnam War Social Activism Sound Recording Project Anti Vietnam War Protests in the San Francisco Bay Area amp Beyond Includes chronology texts online audio and video via UC Berkeley Pacific Northwest Antiwar and Radical History Project multimedia collection of photographs video oral histories and essays on Vietnam War resistance GI resistance during the Vietnam War Book excerpt of student seizure of WSU in Detroit Vietnam War Disturbing Images slideshow by Life magazine University of Washington Libraries Digital Collections Vietnam War Era Ephemera This collection contains leaflets and newspapers that were distributed on the University of Washington campus during the decades of the 1960s and 1970s As Obama Visits Afghanistan Tavis Smiley on Rev Martin Luther King and His Opposition to the Vietnam War video by Democracy Now Records of Statement on the War in Vietnam are held by Simon Fraser University s Special Collections and Rare Books The Boys Who Said NO Documentary on draft resistance and its impact during the Vietnam War Vietnam Peace Commemoration Committee Organization of Vietnam War peace activists including veterans and scholars Sir No Sir a documentary about GI resistance to the Vietnam War A Matter of Conscience GI Resistance During the Vietnam War Waging Peace in Vietnam US Soldiers and Veterans Who Opposed the War Waging Peace in Vietnam Interviews with GI resisters Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War amp oldid 1123160588, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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