Opposition to the Vietnam War Protests and Moratoriums.

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Opposition to the Vietnam War Protests and Moratoriums Protests and Moratoriums

Transcript of Opposition to the Vietnam War Protests and Moratoriums.

Page 1: Opposition to the Vietnam War Protests and Moratoriums.

Opposition to the Vietnam

WarProtests and MoratoriumsProtests and Moratoriums

Page 2: Opposition to the Vietnam War Protests and Moratoriums.

Reasons for opposition to Reasons for opposition to the Warthe War

“It’s a civil war – not

our business”

“We can’t win this

war”

“War is immoral – innocent people are

dying”

“Conscription is wrong”

Page 3: Opposition to the Vietnam War Protests and Moratoriums.

The Revolutionary 1960sThe Revolutionary 1960s• The 1960s were a time of social change.

• The new generation was better educated and was questioning past ideas.

• This generation became a strong opponent to the War, with slogans such as “Make Love, Not War”.

Page 4: Opposition to the Vietnam War Protests and Moratoriums.

The First Television WarThe First Television War• There was little censorship of the press during the War.

• Viewers were shown all the horrors of war, including children burnt by napalm, street executions, and body bags containing Australian soldiers.

• Many began to see the war as immoral.

Page 5: Opposition to the Vietnam War Protests and Moratoriums.

Groups opposed to the Groups opposed to the WarWar

Australian Labor Party

Student Organisations

Trade Unions

Save Our Sons

Vietnam Moratorium Movement

Vietnam War

Page 6: Opposition to the Vietnam War Protests and Moratoriums.

The Australian Labor The Australian Labor PartyParty

• Opposed to the War from the beginning.

• 1965, Arthur Calwell, the leader of the Labor Opposition in Canberra responded strongly against the decision to send Australian troops to Vietnam.

•By 1967, the Monash University Labor Club was collecting money for the North Vietnamese war effort.

Arthur Calwell

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Student OrganisationsStudent Organisations

• University students became vocal opponents of the War and formed organisations based on American student anti-war organisations.

• They organised demonstrations and supported young men who refused to register for conscription.

The American organisation, Students for a Democratic

Society, on which Australian student organisations were

based.

Page 8: Opposition to the Vietnam War Protests and Moratoriums.

Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney Morning Herald, May 1971May 1971

“In Canberra’s biggest-ever mass arrest, police today arrested 187

University students during a violent anti-war demonstration. Two policemen are in hospital. One, hit by a rock, has a fractured skull and another has concussion. A third policeman has

suspected broken ribs as the result of a kick, and a fourth has a broken

finger.”

Page 9: Opposition to the Vietnam War Protests and Moratoriums.

Trade UnionsTrade Unions• Trade unions, especially the left-wing unions strongly opposed Australian involvement in the War.

• Example: Waterside Workers Federation Waterside Workers Federation.

• Actions included calling black bans on ships supplying troops in Vietnam.

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Save Our SonsSave Our Sons• An organisation made up of mothers who objected to their sons being conscripted to fight in Vietnam.

• Aim = prevent conscripts being sent to fight overseas.

Source Analysis

What does this photograph of a Save Our Sons protest indicate about the membership of the anti-war and anti-conscription groups on the 1960s?

Page 11: Opposition to the Vietnam War Protests and Moratoriums.

Moratorium MovementMoratorium Movement

Moratoriums = Protests in which people stopped work to protest and march for peace.

Demands:

- Immediate withdrawal of Australian troops from Indochina

- The immediate abolition of conscription

Moratorium in Melbourne 1970

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MoratoriumMoratorium• The first moratorium was held in May 1970 , and 200,000 people across Australia participated.

“It is best for us and for the Vietnamese people if the war is stopped NOW”

Chairman of the Moratorium Committee, Dr Jim Cairns, 1970

Jim Cairns,

Melbourne 1970

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Was opposition Was opposition successful?successful?

• By 1970, the United States was already pulling troops out of Vietnam.

• By 1971, the majority of Australian troops had been withdrawn.

• The Whitlam Labor government took power in December 1972. It withdrew all remaining Australians from Vietnam and ended conscription.

Gough Whitlam