11/21/1970: Operation Ivory Coast – Son Tay POW Prison Raid

By 1970, the U.S. knew there were at least 350 American prisoners of war in North Vietnamese prison camps, in addition to POWs shuffled between makeshift camps in South Vietnam and Laos. One such camp was in Son Tay, some 23 miles west of Hanoi, North Vietnam’s capital. Despite being only a few miles away [...]

11/15/1969: Second Vietnam Moratorium Protest

During the Fall of 1969 a coordinated campaign of anti Vietnam War protests was held across the U.S. The largest were the nation-wide Moratorium Against the Vietnam War on October 15th, and a second Moratorium on November 15th, preceded by the March Against Death on November 13th. The second Moratorium crowded over half-a-million demonstrators around [...]

11/14/1965: Battle of Ia Drang Valley

The Battle of Ia Drang Valley was the conclusion of a series of engagements that had begun with the North Vietnamese Army laying siege to the Special Forces camp at Plei Me four weeks earlier. At this early stage of direct involvement of U.S. ground troops in the war, no major battle had occurred between [...]

11/13/1969: March Against Death

The March Against Death was conducted over thirty-six hours in Washington D.C. on November 13th-15th 1969, as part of a nationwide campaign of protests conducted in the Fall of 1969. Starting at midnight on Thursday November 13th, a solemn procession of some 45,000 marched single-file from the Arlington National Cemetery, past the White House to [...]

11/12/1969: Story Breaks of My Lai Massacre

The My Lai massacre took place on March 16th 1968, when a unit of U.S. infantry massacred an entire village of over 300 civilians including men, women and children in a collection of hamlets in South Vietnam. Although this atrocity had occurred in March 1968, it took 20 months for the story to reach the [...]

11/11/1967: Viet Cong Releases Prisoners For Racial Propaganda

On Veteran’s Day, 1967, the Viet Cong released three U.S. prisoners of war in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. This was one of several occasions when the communist forces (Viet Cong and North Vietnam) released a handful of prisoners either for propaganda purposes or as part of an exchange. In this case, the Viet Cong was aware [...]

11/09/1967: Lance Sijan’s Heroic Ordeal

Lance Sijan’s story is one of immense bravery, perseverance, and tragedy. On November 9th, 1967, Lt. Col. John Armstrong and 2nd Lt. Lance Sijan flew a bombing mission over North Vietnam in an F-4C Phantom. The F-4C was a fighter-bomber flown by two pilots who sat in tandem, usually with the less experienced pilot in [...]

11/07/1966: “Ugly Demonstration” at Harvard Targets McNamara

The Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) was the major student protest organization in the 60s. With chapters in many colleges and universities across the U.S. its primary focus became the draft and the Vietnam War. In its initial years, it emphasized non-violent forms of protest, but became increasingly radical as the War progressed. Robert [...]

11/07/1973: Congress Passes War Powers Resolution

Towards the end of 1973, the United States’ lengthy and harrowing involvement in the Vietnam War was drawing to a close. As a result of January’s Paris Peace Accords, the U.S. had withdrawn its troops, leaving fewer than 250 in South Vietnam by the end of July. Congress passed the Case-Church Amendment in June, which [...]

11/05/1968: Nixon Elected President

Richard Nixon won the November 5th 1968 Presidential election, and would succeed President Johnson in the Whitehouse. He had outlined his platform at the GOP convention earlier in the year: “Tonight I do not promise the millennium in the morning. I don’t promise that we can eradicate poverty and end discrimination in the space of [...]

11/03/1969: Nixon’s “Silent Majority” Speech

President Richard Nixon had won the 1968 Presidential election on a campaign that included promises to end the Vietnam War. For example, his campaign aired a TV commercial stating: “Never has so much power been used so ineffectively as in Vietnam. If after all of this time and all of this sacrifice and all of [...]

11/03/1967: Battle of Dak To

On November 3rd 1967, a series of engagements collectively known as the Battle of Dak To began in Vietnam’s Central Highlands. In the preceding months, the U.S. 4th Infantry Division and 173rd Airborne Brigade, together with South Vietnamese infantry & airborne units, had pursued heavily engaged North Vietnamese Army (NVA) and Viet Cong forces in [...]

11/02/1963: Oppressive South Vietnamese President Killed

On November 2nd 1963, South Vietnamese Army officers deposed and assassinated President Ngo Dinh Diem. Diem’s government was corrupt and oppressive, but had been supported and tolerated by the U.S. because of its firm anti-communist stance. Diem was a wealthy former member of the French Catholic ruling class. His government was biased towards members of [...]

11/02/1965: Norman Morrison Sets Himself On Fire At Pentagon

On the afternoon of November 2nd 1965, 31-year-old Norman Morrison went to a garden area outside the Pentagon, drenched himself in kerosene and set himself on fire in a suicide protest against the Vietnam War. The ghastly scene was witnessed by Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, as it took place below his third-floor office window. In [...]

11/01/1964: Viet Cong Escalates with Mortar & Rocket Attack on Bien Hoa Air Base

In the early hours of November 1st 1964, the Bien Hoa Air Base, situated 12 miles North of Saigon, came under fierce rocket and mortar fire from the Viet Cong. A squadron of B-57 bombers was immobilized, with 5 destroyed, and a further 15 damaged. Four U.S. servicemen and two Vietnamese were killed, and a [...]

11/01/1968: Accelerated Pacification Campaign and Phoenix Program Begin to Combat Viet Cong

The Accelerated Pacification Campaign was launched on November 1st 1968. In the wake of the Tet offensive at the beginning of 1968, the goal of the Accelerated Pacification Campaign was to strengthen the security of at least 1,000 hamlets, and to significantly weaken the Viet Cong presence and influence in South Vietnam over a period [...]

10/28/1965: Viet Cong Commando Attacks on U.S. Air Bases

During the night between October 27th and 28th 1965, the Viet Cong launched simultaneous attacks on the U.S. air bases at Chu Lai and the Marble Mountains (near Da Nang), using explosive charges to attempt to destroy aircraft. The Chu Lai attack resulted in two fixed wing aircraft being destroyed. The Marble Mountain attack resulted [...]

10/16/1964: China Tests Atomic Bomb

China, an ally of North Vietnam, triggered a 22 kiloton atomic bomb on October 16th 1964. In doing so, it became the world’s 5th nuclear power. The project was started in June 1959 (hence codenamed “596″) after the Soviets ceased assisting the Chinese in nuclear weapons development. Two years later, China would develop a nuclear [...]

10/15/1965: First Draft Card Burned

David Miller became the first protestor to burn his draft card. This was a federal crime, for which he served 22 months in prison between 1968 and 1970, after losing the case in the Supreme Court.  Miller was a speaker at a rally in New York, which was one of many rallies held in 40 cities [...]

10/14/1964: US to Accompany Laotian Air Force

1964: The Pentagon authorizes U.S. fighters from Navy aircraft carriers at “Yankee Station” off the coast in the Gulf of Tonkin to fly escort for Laotian Air Force T-28 fighter-bombers on bombing missions against Viet Cong and North Vietnamese targets in Laos, protecting the T-28s from North Vietnamese MiGs. (Article for “Vietnam War Timeline” / [...]

10/14/1968: 24,000 Sent Back to Vietnam for 2nd Tours

The U.S. Department of Defense announces that 24,000 troops from the Army and the Marines will be sent back to Vietnam for involuntary second tours. This was due to the high troop turnover and the scarce supply of soldiers for what was proving to be a long war with very high personnel requirements: by January [...]

10/14/1968: Australia’s First Draft Dodger Conviction

John Zarb becomes the first Australian conscientious objector convicted of failing to comply with his draft notice. He’s sentenced to two years’ prison time. He was 21 years old, and had previously been refused official conscientious objector status. Publicity of his conviction increased public opposition to conscription, and he became a poster child for the anti-war [...]

10/13/1966: McNamara: War “progressed very satisfactorily”

1966: Defense Secretary Robert McNamara states military operations have “progressed very satisfactorily since 1965” during a news conference in Saigon.  Secretary McNamara was visiting South Vietnam on a fact-finding mission, his eighth so far.  While he publicly portrayed that he was pleased with the progress of the war, he later confided with President Johnson that [...]

10/12/1970: Nixon: 40,000 Troops Withdrawn by XMAS

1970: President Nixon announces that 40,000 more U.S troops would be withdrawn from Vietnam before Christmas. This was part of the Vietnamization program, and the second phase of troop withdrawals totaling 150,000 that were announced earlier in the year on April 20. (Article for “Vietnam War Timeline” / “Vietnam Timeline” for October 12th 1970)

10/12/1972: Racial Brawl, U.S.S. Kitty Hawk

A racial brawl on the aircraft carrier U.S.S. Kitty Hawk involves more than 100 sailors, resulting in 46 injured. The brawl started when a black sailor refused to make a statement when summoned for questioning about an incident.  Racial tensions were also present in other services, although the Navy lagged behind in adopting policies that [...]