Ho Chi Minh Vietnam War Analysis

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“No event in American history is more misunderstood than the Vietnam War. It was misreported then, and it is misremembered now,” said the 37th president of the United States, Richard M. Nixon. Deemed as a monumental catastrophe for Americans, the Vietnam War marked the second war The United States were considered “defeated” in history, after the War of 1802 against United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.Most Americans considered it disgraceful for the U.S.’s involvement this foreign affair subject and that five American presidents failed to end the fighting abroad. Nonetheless, this war proved to be one that haunt many Americans for decades.
Prior to the Vietnam War, the U.S’s main objective was to retain the spread of communism, but
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According to a Facts on File's article on "Ho Chi Minh," born Nguyen That Thanh, Ho Chi Minh, before becoming a communist leader, spent many of his earlier years working at manual laborer jobs to gain experience and knowledge. In 1917, Ho Chi Minh became a member of the Socialist Party in France. He was also present at the 1919 Versailles Peace Conference where he petitioned the great powers to pressure France into granting independence to Vietnam. Although it was ignored, it did help establish Ho as a leader of the Vietnamese community in Vietnam and France. Ho Chi Minh was determined to make the government of North Vietnam like that of the Soviet Union and China. Hugely influenced by the two countries, North Vietnam had seeked for aid from both the Soviet Union and China. According to the article, "What countries involved in the Vietnam War?" by the website The Vietnam War, it was actually Moscow that had convinced the Viet Minh to sign the Geneva Peace Accords to halt their opportunity at winning against the …show more content…
presence in Vietnam. President Lyndon was the one who sent in the troops, but was too politically damaged by 1968 that he decided not to run anymore for presidency. And then there was Richard Nixon who with a plan to end the war. Although he promised Americans a peaceful end to the war, he did otherwise by signing a deeply flawed Paris Peace Accord that signaled the end of U.S. involvement but was almost certain to mean victory for the north. The north took control of Vietnam shortly after the U.S. withdrawal and Nixon's resignation.
The aftermath of the Vietnam war was hard on the Americans. The war pierced the myth of American invincibility and divided up the nation. Many returning soldiers faces negative reactions from both the supporters and the opposers as they had lost. They faced many other physical damages due to harmful chemical exposure. The U.S. had entered the war with such invincibility to only return feeling defeated and