The US president, Richard Nixon, has appeared on national television to announce “peace with honour” in Vietnam.
Statements issued simultaneously in Washington and Hanoi confirmed the peace deal was signed in Paris at 1230 local time, bringing to an end America’s longest war.
The ceasefire will begin at midnight Hanoi time on Saturday, 27 January, monitored by an international force made up of troops from Canada, Poland, Hungary and Indonesia.
President Nixon’s speech from the Oval office at the White House was broadcast on national radio and television.
He said: “Throughout the years of negotiations, we have insisted on peace with honour, I set forth the goals that we considered essential for peace with honour.
“In the settlement that has now been agreed to, all the conditions that I laid down then have been met.”
The conditions include the release of prisoners of war within 60 days and all American forces to be withdrawn within the same time period.
An international conference will be held within 30 days, probably in Vienna, to guarantee the peace.
American forces have been involved in the conflict in Vietnam for more than a decade. In 1967, there were 500,000 American troops deployed in Vietnam.
For the people of South Vietnam, the president had this message: “By your courage, by your sacrifice, you have won the precious right to determine your own future and you have developed the strength to defend that right.
To the leaders of North Vietnam, the president said: “As we have ended the war through negotiations, let us now build a peace of reconciliation. […]
Courtesy BBC News
In context
The last American troops left Vietnam on 29 March 1973.
The following year there were frequent violations of the peace treaty.
In 1975, fullscale warfare resumed between North and South Vietnam – without American intervention. In 1976 the first elections were held to a National Assembly, finally reuniting North and South.
As for Nixon, he had been re-elected with a landslide majority and sworn in for a second time three days before announcing the 1973 peace deal.
But his honeymoon period did not last. Before Nixon’s re-election, it was known there had been a break-in at the Democratic offices in the Watergate building. By the end of January, it was being linked to his re-election campaign and an inquiry was ordered.
The scandal grew and on 9 August 1974, facing impeachment, he resigned.
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