The Vietnam War and the Protest Against It

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Secretary of State John Kerry once said “I saw courage both in the Vietnam War and in the struggle to stop it. I learned that patriotism includes protest, not just military service.” The Vietnam War was a conflict that lasted from 1956-1975 which the United States participated in along with the South Vietnamese who fought against the Communist North Vietnamese. Many Americans strongly disapproved of the war which caused many protests and riots. The war lasted 25 years killing many people and eventually the North Vietnamese won. The Vietnam War was important to Americans back home because it tested the citizen’s right to free speech, effected future foreign policy, and created many issues for returning veterans.

Every colony had ambitious dreams to become free and independent, Vietnam was no different. Vietnam was a French colony since the 1800’s all the way up to the 1950’s (Pendergast 9). For change there had to be a person to start an uprising. The first man to protest the French government was named Phan Boi Chan who did so in 1908 (Pendergast 10). Chan continued his protests with the hope that the Vietnamese people would soon be liberated. After years of his protests the French government officials within Vietnam decided to put Chan on house arrest in 1925 (Pendergast 11). Chan then remained on house arrest until his death in 1940 (Pendergast 11).

Ho Chi Minh was looking up to his idol Phan Boi Chan throughout his years of protesting and eventually decided that he, Minh, would be the next revolutionist in the wave of Vietnamese nationalism (Pendergast 11). When Minh left his homeland in 1911, he was on a quest to find out what would be the best path to achieve Vietnamese freedom. Minh came home with the notion that the...

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