Watergate Scandal In Vietnam

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While back in the U.S., the public was once again thrown into unrest as the Watergate Scandal reinvigorated their distrust in their own government. The scandal in of itself was a product of the assassinations, protests, and the Vietnam War of the 1960s; leading to a more forceful presidential campaign and therefore a more ameliorative election as by means of sabotage and espionage such as harassing the opposition and eavesdropping into their conversations. Nixon was no stranger of these methods as of in mid 1972 five burglars broke into the Watergate hotel, one of which worked for Nixon himself and the CRP or the Committee to Reelect the President. In October the FBI found that the break in was apart of a larger campaign on behalf of the CRP …show more content…

saw a high political cost in the conclusion of the Vietnam War, as the long and weary conflict also brought light onto the distrust of the government and officials. Events such as the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution which lead to U.S. troop deployment in Vietnam, the secret invasion of Cambodia, and the tragic Kent State shooting had put America in a crisis of faith and confidence in its own government. To the American people the ones that lead that nation were no longer credible, and this was further confirmed with the resignation of president Nixon along with the Watergate Scandal. Because of these factors, the Vietnam War changed the views of a generation as they became more and more skeptical in their own government in the wake of the Vietnam War. After the war the U.S. and it’s people were wounded and humiliated. Over 50,000 thousand men gave their lives for a pointless cause: to contain the spread of communism. America’s defeat undermined its superiority, confidence, and ultimately its commitment to internationalism; as future leaders would be wary of any involvement in foreign countries, they were afraid of being stuck in another Vietnam. This reluctance to commit overseas was known as the “Vietnam Syndrome”, were leaders would not send troops to foreign land unless it was in national interest or when there is strong public support. Gradually this syndrome would be shrugged off as America regained its status as a superpower and won relatively quick wars such as the Gulf War shaping the nation we know

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