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The Paris Peace Accords

DateJanuary 1973
LocationParis
USA negotiatorHenry Kissinger, US National Security Advisor
Vietnam negotiatorLe Duc Tho, Member of the Vietnamese Communist Party Politburo
AimTo negotiate an end to the war in Vietnam
Date
January 1973
Location
Paris
USA negotiator
Henry Kissinger, US National Security Advisor
Vietnam negotiator
Le Duc Tho, Member of the Vietnamese Communist Party Politburo
Aim
To negotiate an end to the war in Vietnam

Negotiations

Negotiations were not straightforward. In October 1972, Henry Kissinger had worked out a peace agreement with the North Vietnamese. However, fearing the Americans were going to abandon his country, Nguyen Van Thieu, the President of South Vietnam refused to sign the agreement and the South Vietnamese pulled out of the talks.

Nixon mounted huge bombing raids on North Vietnam until, in Paris, the North Vietnamese were forced to sign. This is a bit like punching someone while telling them that you want to be friends! Nixon told Nguyen Van Thieu he had to make peace whether he agreed with it or not, and so he was also forced to sign.

Outcomes

Image of Henry Kissinger shaking hands with Le Duc Tho at the Paris Peace Accords, January 1973
Figure caption,
US National Security Adviser Henry Kissinger (R) shakes hand with Le Duc Tho, leader of North Vietnam delegation, after the signing of the Paris Peace Accords on 23 January 1973 in Paris, France.

A ceasefire was agreed, and American forces would leave Vietnam. The city of Saigon fell to the communists on 30 April 1975. The final hours of the American presence in Vietnam were a mad scramble to evacuate US personal and South Vietnamese civilians to US navy ships in the South China Sea. The signal to head for the helicopters was White Christmas by Bing Crosby playing over the speakers of the US Embassy.

Once American forces were out of Vietnam, the way was open for a communist takeover of the South. In April 1975, the forces of North Vietnam entered the southern city of Saigon and the country was unified under communist leadership.

Consequence of the US 'defeat' in Vietnam

A list of reasons the US tactics in Vietnam failed
  1. The policy of had failed militarily: despite the USA鈥檚 superior military strength it could not stop the spread of communism.
  2. The policy of containment had failed politically: not only had the USA failed to stop Vietnam falling to communism, but their actions in the neighbouring countries of Laos and Cambodia had helped to bring communist governments to power there too.
  3. The policy of containment had failed in the war: having presented the war in Vietnam as a moral crusade against communism, the atrocities committed by the US military in Vietnam in terms of the number of civilian deaths and the use of chemical weapons, had tarnished America鈥檚 image at home and abroad.
  4. The war had cost 58,000 American and 1-4 million Vietnamese lives, affected 700,000 American veterans; cost America over one hundred billion dollars, and damaged reputation and morale at home.
  5. After Vietnam, the policy of containment was replaced by a period of , a thawing in the tensions of the Cold War and gradually relations between the USA and the USSR/China improved.