The Vietnam War, or "the war that the United States won" is a confrontation in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. America was involved in this war because of its policy of containment of communism. But this war is not only for winning or losing, especially for American citizens. Between the war and most of the 1960s American citizens protested several problems. Between the majority of the 1960s and the early 1970s protests on citizenship, women's rights and other issues enhanced tensions between the United States.
The protest against the Vietnam War took place from the late 1960s to the early 1970s. The protest actions were mainly part of the campaign against the Vietnam War in America. (Democratic society student, free speech movement, Jerry Rubin, Abi Hoffman, Young International, Chicago 7). The expanding antiwar movement shocked many of the US government. On August 16, 1966, the House Non-American Activity Committee (HUAC) issued a survey of Americans suspected of assisting the NLF with the aim of enacting legislation to make these activities illegal It was started. Anti-war demonstration team interrupted the meeting and 50 people were arrested
Attentional opposition to the Vietnam War is steadily headed toward mass protests in an attempt to change American public opinion. During the protest against the war, the riot began in the 1968 Democratic National Convention. Following the news report on US military abuse (such as the massacre of My Lai in 1968), several veterans joined the anti-war movement of Vietnam war veterans, bringing new attention and support to the antiwar movement. On October 15, 1969, Vietnam's ban has attracted millions of Americans. In 1970, the fatal shooting of four students at Kent State University led to nationwide university protests. After signing the Paris Peace Agreement in 1973, the anti-war protest faded with the final withdrawal of the army.
The US opposition to the Vietnam War began when the US military continued to escalate in the Vietnam War in 1964 and then evolved into a broad social movement in the next few years. From the late 1960s to the early 1970s, this movement formed a heavily biased argument, mainly in the United States. Many people in the American peace movement are students, mothers, or anti-established hippies. The civil rights of African-American, the liberation of women, the Chicano movement, and the involvement of an organized labor sector strengthened the opposition. Many other groups are also participating, including educators, clergy, scholars, journalists, lawyers, doctors (such as Benjamin Spock), and veterans. Their actions mainly include peace and nonviolence, and there are few deliberate provocative and violent cases.