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Nixon, Ford and the Abandonment of South Vietnam by J. Edward Lee and H.C. “Toby”
Haynsworth South Vietnam fell because of events occurring thousands of miles away from the battlefields—in China, the Soviet Union, Latin America, the Middle East, and Washington’s corridors of power, along protest lines, and around America’s dinner tables. These other wars being fought by American presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford profoundly impacted what happened in Vietnam. This work examines those other conflicts and the political, social, and economic factors involved with them that distracted and crippled the presidencies of Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford and led to the eventual abandonment of the U.S.-supported South Vietnamese regime. The battles that were ongoing within Vietnam during these years are discussed within the context of these distractions. A description of the final invasion of South Vietnam by the North and the efforts to save as many of America’s allies as possible from death or imprisonment is also provided. Nixon entered office with the goal of bringing the world together, but saw that goal ruined by the 1973 war in the Middle East, preoccupations with China and the Soviet Union, a weak economy, Watergate, and his disgraceful exit from the White House. Ford’s presidency was tainted almost from the beginning because of the pardon he granted to Nixon, but the American public, tired of war and concerned about the economy, was ready to hear that the war had come to an end. An argument is presented that the war could have been won if the “other wars” had been fought by presidents willing to honor the American commitment to its allies in South Vietnam. J. Edward Lee is the coauthor of South Carolina in the Civil War: The Confederate Experience in Letters and Diaries (2000, $28.50) and teaches history at Winthrop University. He lives in York, South Carolina. H.C. “Toby” Haynsworth is a retired professor of business administration at Winthrop. He lives in Rock Hill.
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