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  2. Opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opposition_to_United...

    March 17 – a group of anti-war citizens marched to the Pentagon to protest American involvement in Vietnam. March 25 – Martin Luther King Jr., a leader of the civil rights movement, led a march of 5,000 against the war in Chicago. April 4 – Martin Luther King Jr. gave a speech in New York City.

  3. Draft evasion in the Vietnam War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Draft_evasion_in_the...

    Conservative talk radio show host Rush Limbaugh reportedly avoided the Vietnam draft because of anal cysts. In a 2011 book critical of Limbaugh, journalist John K. Wlson wrote, "As a man who evaded the Vietnam War draft with the help of an anal cyst, Limbaugh is a chickenhawk fond of making hyperbolic attacks on [liberal] foreign policy". [90]

  4. United States in the Vietnam War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_in_the...

    The involvement of the United States in the Vietnam War began in the 1950s and greatly escalated in 1965 until its withdrawal in 1973. The U.S. military presence in Vietnam peaked in April 1969, with 543,000 military personnel stationed in the country. [1] By the end of the U.S. involvement, more than 3.1 million Americans had been stationed in ...

  5. Proclamation 4483 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proclamation_4483

    During the Vietnam War, hundreds of thousands of American men evaded the draft by fleeing the country or failing to register with their local draft board. [3] President Gerald Ford signed a proclamation in 1974 that granted conditional amnesty to draft evaders, provided they work in a public service job for up to two years. Those who had evaded ...

  6. Gulf of Tonkin Resolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gulf_of_Tonkin_Resolution

    By presenting the Vietnam war in these stark terms with the melodramatic claim that the United States would cease to be a world power if South Vietnam was "lost", the "action memorandum" virtually guaranteed American intervention. [23] At the time, Morse was one of the few critics of Johnson's Vietnam policy.

  7. Vietnam War resisters in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vietnam_War_resisters_in...

    Vietnam War resisters in Canada were American draft evaders and military deserters who avoided serving in the Vietnam War by seeking political asylum in Canada between 1965 and 1975. Draft avoiders were typically college -educated and middle class Americans who could no longer avoid conscription. [1] Deserters were usually lower-income and ...

  8. United States–Vietnam relations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States–Vietnam...

    The Vietnam War was a massive undertaking for all involved: North Vietnam and the Viet Cong had around 690,000 soldiers by 1966, South Vietnam had a strength of 1.5 million soldiers by 1972, and the U.S. deployed a total of 2.7 million soldiers over the course of American involvement, peaking at 543,000 in April 1969.

  9. McGovern–Hatfield Amendment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McGovern–Hatfield_Amendment

    The McGovern–Hatfield Amendment (alternately, Hatfield–McGovern Amendment) was a proposed amendment to an appropriations bill in 1970 during the Vietnam War that, if passed, would have required the end of United States military operations in the Republic of Vietnam by December 31, 1970 and a complete withdrawal of American forces halfway through the next year.