President
Lyndon B. Johnson
Renunciation
Speech
March 31,
1968
Good
evening, my fellow Americans: -Tonight I want to speak to you of peace in
Vietnam and Southeast Asia.
No
other question so preoccupies our people. No other dream so absorbs the 250
million human beings who live in that part
of the world. No other goal motivates American policy in Southeast Asia.
For
years, representatives of our Government and others have traveled the world -
seeking to find a basis for peace talks.
Since
last September, they have carried the offer that I made public at San Antonio.
That
offer was this:
That
the United States would stop its bombardment of North Vietnam when that would
lead promptly to productive discussions
- and that we would assume that North Vietnam would not take military advantage
of our restraint.
Hanoi
denounced this offer, both privately and publicly. Even while the search for
peace was going on, North Vietnam
rushed their preparations for a savage assault on the people, the
government, and the allies of South Vietnam.
Their
attack - during the Tet holidays - failed to achieve its principal objectives.
It did not collapse the elected government of
South Vietnam or shatter its army - as the Communists had hoped.
It did
not produce a "general uprising" among the people of the cities as
they had predicted.
The
Communists were unable to maintain control of any of the more than 30 cities
that they attacked. And they took very
heavy casualties.
But
they did compel the South Vietnamese and their allies to move certain forces
from the countryside into the cities.
They
caused widespread disruption and suffering. Their attacks, and the battles that
followed, made refugees of half a
million human beings.
The
Communists may renew their attack any day.
They
are, it appears, trying to make 1968 the year of decision in South Vietnam -
the year that brings, if not final victory or
defeat, at least a turning point in the struggle.
This
much is clear:
If they
do mount another round of heavy attacks, they will not succeed in destroying
the fighting power of South Vietnam and
its allies.
But
tragically, this is also clear: Many men - on both sides of the struggle - will
be lost. A nation that has already suffered 20
years of warfare will suffer once again.
Armies
on both sides will take new casualties. And the war will go on.
There
is no need for this to be so.
There
is no need to delay the talks that could bring an end to this long and this
bloody war.
Tonight,
I renew the offer I made last August to stop the bombardment of North Vietnam.
We ask that talks begin promptly, that
they be serious talks on the substance of peace. We assume that during those
talks Hanoi will not take advantage of our
restraint.
We are
prepared to move immediately toward peace through negotiations.
So,
tonight, in the hope that this action will lead to early talks, I am taking the
first step to de-escalate the conflict. We are
reducing - substantially reducing the present level of hostilities.
And we
are doing so unilaterally, and at once.
Tonight,
I have ordered our aircraft and our naval vessels to make no attacks on North
Vietnam, except in the area north of
the demilitarized zone where the continuing enemy buildup directly
threatens allied forward positions and where the movements of their troops and supplies are clearly related to
that threat.
The
area in which we are stopping our attacks includes almost 90 percent of North
Vietnam's population, and most of its
territory. Thus there will be no attacks around the principal populated
areas, or in the food-producing areas of North
Vietnam.
Even
this very limited bombing of the North could come to an early end - if our
restraint is matched by restraint in Hanoi. But I cannot in good conscience stop all bombing so long as to do so
would immediately and directly endanger the lives of our men and our allies. Whether a complete
bombing halt becomes possible in the future will be determined by events.
Our
purpose in this action is to bring about a reduction in the level of violence
that now exists.
It is
to save the lives of brave men - and to save the lives of innocent women and
children. It is to permit the contending
forces to move closer to a political settlement.
And
tonight, I call upon the United Kingdom and I call upon the Soviet Union - as
cochairmen of the Geneva Conferences,
and as permanent members of the United Nations Security Council - to do
all they can to move from the unilateral act of de-escalation that I have just announced toward genuine peace in
Southeast Asia.
Now, as
in the past, the United States is ready to send its representatives to any
forum, at any time, to discuss the means of
bringing this ugly war to an end.
I am
designating one of our most distinguished Americans, Ambassador Averell
Harriman, as my personal representative for
such talks. In addition, I have asked Ambassador Llewellyn Thompson, who
returned from Moscow for consultation, to be
available to join Ambassador Harriman at Geneva or any other suitable
place-just as soon as Hanoi agrees to a conference.
I call
upon President Ho Chi Minh to respond positively, and favorably, to this new
step toward peace.
But if
peace does not come now through negotiations, it will come when Hanoi
understands that our common resolve is
unshakable, and our common strength is invincible.
Tonight,
we and the other allied nations are contributing 600,000 fighting men to assist
700,000 South Vietnamese troops in
defending their little country.
Our
presence there has always rested on this basic belief: The main burden of
preserving their freedom must be carried out by them - by the South Vietnamese themselves.
We and
our allies can only help to provide a shield behind which the people of South
Vietnam can survive and can grow and
develop. On their efforts - on their determination and resourcefulness
the outcome will ultimately depend.
That
small, beleaguered nation has suffered terrible punishment for more than 20
years.
I pay
tribute once again tonight to the great courage and endurance of its people.
South
Vietnam supports armed forces tonight of almost 700,000 men - and I call your
attention to the fact that this is the
equivalent of more than 10 million in our own population. Its people
maintain their firm determination to be free of domination by the North.
There
has been substantial progress, I think, in building a durable government during
these last 3 years. The South Vietnam
of 1965 could not have survived the enemy's Tet offensive of 1968. The
elected government of South Vietnam survived that attack and is rapidly repairing the devastation that it wrought.
The
South Vietnamese know that further efforts are going to be required:
-to
expand their own armed forces, -to
move back into the countryside as quickly as possible, -to increase their taxes, -to select the very best men that they have
for civil and military responsibility,
-to achieve a new unity within their constitutional government, and -to include in the national effort all
those groups who wish to preserve South Vietnam's control over its own destiny.
Last
week President Thieu ordered the mobilization of 135,000 additional South
Vietnamese. He plans to reach - as soon as
possible - a total military strength of more than 800,000 men.
To
achieve this, the Government of South Vietnam started the drafting of
19-year-olds on March 1st. On May 1st, the
Government will begin the drafting of 18-year-olds.
Last
month, 10,000 men volunteered for military service - that was two and a half
times the number of volunteers during the
same month last year. Since the middle of January, more than 48,000
South Vietnamese have joined the armed forces - and nearly half of them volunteered to do so.
All men
in the South Vietnamese armed forces have had their tours of duty extended for
the duration of the war, and reserves
are now being called up for immediate active duty.
President
Thieu told his people last week:
"We
must make greater efforts and accept more sacrifices because, as I have said
many times, this is our country. The
existence of our nation is at stake, and this is mainly a Vietnamese
responsibility."
He
warned his people that a major national effort is required to root out
corruption and incompetence at all levels of
government.
We
applaud this evidence of determination on the part of South Vietnam. Our first
priority will be to support their effort.
We
shall accelerate the reequipment of South Vietnam's armed forces - in order to
meet the enemy's increased firepower. This
will enable them progressively to undertake a larger share of combat
operations against the Communist invaders. On many occasions I have told the American people that we would send to
Vietnam those forces that are required to accomplish our mission there. So, with that as our guide,
we have previously authorized a force level of approximately 525,000.
Some
weeks ago - to help meet the enemy's new offensive - we sent to Vietnam about
11,000 additional Marine and airborne
troops. They were deployed by air in 48 hours, on an emergency basis.
But the artillery, tank, aircraft, medical, and other units that were needed to work with and to support these infantry
troops in combat could not then accompany them by air on that short notice.
In
order that these forces may reach maximum combat effectiveness, the Joint
Chiefs of Staff have recommended to me that
we should prepare to send - during the next 5 months - support troops
totaling approximately 13,500 men.
A
portion of these men will be made available from our active forces. The balance
will come from reserve component units
which will be called up for service.
The
actions that we have taken since the beginning of the year
-to
reequip the South Vietnamese forces,
-to meet our responsibilities in Korea, as well as our responsibilities
in Vietnam, -to meet price increases
and the cost of activating and deploying reserve forces, -to replace helicopters and provide the
other military supplies we need,
all of
these actions are going to require additional expenditures.
The
tentative estimate of those additional expenditures is $2.5 billion in this
fiscal year, and $2.6 billion in the next fiscal year.
These
projected increases in expenditures for our national security will bring into
sharper focus the Nation's need for
immediate action: action to protect the prosperity of the American
people and to protect the strength and the stability of our American dollar.
On many
occasions I have pointed out that, without a tax bill or decreased
expenditures, next year's deficit would again be around $20 billion. l have emphasized the need to set strict
priorities in our spending. l have stressed that failure to act and to act promptly and decisively would raise very
strong doubts throughout the world about America's willingness to keep its financial house in order.
Yet
Congress has not acted. And tonight we face the sharpest financial threat in
the postwar era - a threat to the dollar's role as the keystone of international trade and finance in the world.
Last
week, at the monetary conference in Stockholm, the major industrial countries
decided to take a big step toward
creating a new international monetary asset that will strengthen the
international monetary system. l am very proud of the very able work done by Secretary Fowler and Chairman Martin of
the Federal Reserve Board.
But to
make this system work the United States just must bring its balance of payments
to - or very close to - equilibrium. We
must have a responsible fiscal policy in this country. The passage of a
tax bill now, together with expenditure control that the Congress may desire and dictate, is
absolutely necessary to protect this Nation's security, to continue our prosperity,
and to meet the needs of our people.
What is
at stake is 7 years of unparalleled prosperity. In those 7 years, the real
income of the average American, after taxes,
rose by almost 30 percent - a gain as large as that of the entire
preceding 19 years.
So the
steps that we must take to convince the world are exactly the steps we must
take to sustain our own economic
strength here at home. In the past 8 months, prices and interest rates
have risen because of our inaction.
We
must, therefore, now do everything we can to move from debate to action - from
talking to voting. There is, I believe-I
hope there is-in both Houses of the Congress - a growing sense of
urgency that this situation just must be acted upon and must be corrected.
My
budget in January was, we thought, a tight one. It fully reflected our
evaluation of most of the demanding needs of this Nation.
But in
these budgetary matters, the President does not decide alone. The Congress has
the power and the duty to determine
appropriations and taxes. The Congress is now considering our proposals
and they are considering reductions in the budget that we submitted.
As part
of a program of fiscal restraint that includes the tax surcharge, I shall
approve appropriate reductions in the January
budget when and if Congress so decides that that should be done.
One
thing is unmistakably clear, however: Our deficit just must be reduced. Failure
to act could bring on conditions that
would strike hardest at those people that all of us are trying so hard
to help.
These
times call for prudence in this land of plenty. l believe that we have the
character to provide it, and tonight I plead
with the Congress and with the people to act promptly to serve the
national interest, and thereby serve all of our people. Now let me give you my estimate of the
chances for peace:
-the
peace that will one day stop the bloodshed in South Vietnam, -that will permit all the Vietnamese people
to rebuild and develop their land,
-that will permit us to turn more fully to our own tasks here at home.
I
cannot promise that the initiative that I have announced tonight will be
completely successful in achieving peace any more than the 30 others that we have undertaken and agreed to in
recent years.
But it
is our fervent hope that North Vietnam, after years of fighting that have left
the issue unresolved, will now cease its
efforts to achieve a military victory and will join with us in moving
toward the peace table.
And
there may come a time when South Vietnamese - on both sides - are able to work
out a way to settle their own
differences by free political choice rather than by war.
As
Hanoi considers its course, it should be in no doubt of our intentions. It must
not miscalculate the pressures within our
democracy in this election year.
We have
no intention of widening this war.
But the
United States will never accept a fake solution to this long and arduous
struggle and call it peace.
No one
can foretell the precise terms of an eventual settlement.
Our
objective in South Vietnam has never been the annihilation of the enemy.
It has
been to bring about a recognition in Hanoi that its objective - taking over the
South by force - could not be achieved.
We
think that peace can be based on the Geneva Accords of 1954 - under political
conditions that permit the South
Vietnamese - all the South Vietnamese - to chart their course free of
any outside domination or interference, from us or from anyone else.
So
tonight I reaffirm the pledge that we made at Manila - that we are prepared to
withdraw our forces from South Vietnam
as the other side withdraws its forces to the north, stops the
infiltration, and the level of violence thus subsides.
Our
goal of peace and self-determination in Vietnam is directly related to the
future of all of Southeast Asia - where much
has happened to inspire confidence during the past 10 years. We have
done all that we knew how to do to contribute and to help build that confidence.
A
number of its nations have shown what can be accomplished under conditions of
security. Since 1966, Indonesia, the fifth
largest nation in all the world, with a population of more than 100
million people, has had a government that is dedicated to peace with its neighbors and improved
conditions for its own people. Political and economic cooperation between
nations has grown rapidly.
I think
every American can take a great deal of pride in the role that we have played
in bringing this about in Southeast Asia.
We can rightly judge as responsible Southeast Asians themselves do -
that the progress of the past 3 years would have been far less likely - if not completely impossible - if America's
sons and others had not made their stand in Vietnam.
At Johns
Hopkins University, about 3 years ago, l announced that the United States would
take part in the great work of
developing Southeast Asia, including the Mekong Valley, for all the
people of that region. Our determination to help build a better land - a better land for men on both
sides of the present conflict - has not diminished in the least. Indeed, the
ravages of war, I think, have made it
more urgent than ever.
So, I
repeat on behalf of the United States again tonight what I said at Johns Hopkins
- that North Vietnam could take its
place in this common effort just as soon as peace comes.
Over
time, a wider framework of peace and security in Southeast Asia may become
possible. The new cooperation of the
nations of the area could be a foundation-stone. Certainly friendship
with the nations of such a Southeast Asia is what the United States seeks and that is all that the United States seeks.
One
day, my fellow citizens, there will be peace in Southeast Asia.
It will
come because the people of Southeast Asia want it - those whose armies are at
war tonight, and those who, though
threatened, have thus far been spared. Peace will come because Asians
were willing to work for it - and to sacrifice for it - and to die by the thousands for it.
But let
it never be forgotten: Peace will come also because America sent her sons to
help secure it.
It has
not been easy - far from it. During the past 4 1/2 years, it has been my fate
and my responsibility to be Commander in
Chief. I have lived - daily and nightly - with the cost of this war. l
know the pain that it has inflicted. I know, perhaps better than anyone, the misgivings that it has
aroused.
Throughout
this entire, long period, I have been sustained by a single principle:
that
what we are doing now, in Vietnam, is vital not only to the security of
Southeast Asia, but it is vital to the security of every American.
Surely
we have treaties which we must respect. Surely we have commitments that we are
going to keep. Resolutions of the
Congress testify to the need to resist aggression in the world and in
Southeast Asia.
But the
heart of our involvement in South Vietnam - under three different Presidents,
three separate administrations - has
always been America's own security.
And the
larger purpose of our involvement has always been to help the nations of
Southeast Asia become independent and
stand alone, self-sustaining, as members of a great world community - at
peace with themselves, and at peace with all others.
With
such an Asia, our country-and the world will be far more secure than it is
tonight.
I
believe that a peaceful Asia is far nearer to reality because of what America
has done in Vietnam. l believe that the men
who endure the dangers of battle fighting there for us tonight - are
helping the entire world avoid far greater conflicts, far wider wars, far more destruction, than this
one.
The
peace that will bring them home someday will come. Tonight I have offered the
first in what I hope will be a series of
mutual moves toward peace.
I pray
that it will not be rejected by the leaders of North Vietnam. I pray that they
will accept it as a means by which the
sacrifices of their own people may be ended. And I ask your help and
your support, my fellow citizens, for this effort to reach across the battlefield toward an early
peace.
Finally,
my fellow Americans, let me say this:
Of
those to whom much is given, much is asked. l cannot say and no man could say
that no more will be asked of us.
Yet, l
believe that now, no less than when the decade began, this generation of
Americans is willing to "pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe
to assure the survival and the success of liberty."
Since
those words were spoken by John F. Kennedy, the people of America have kept
that compact with mankind's noblest
cause.
And we
shall continue to keep it.
Yet, I
believe that we must always be mindful of this one thing, whatever the trials
and the tests ahead. The ultimate strength
of our country and our cause will lie not in powerful weapons or
infinite resources or boundless wealth, but will lie in the unity of our people.
This I
believe very deeply.
Throughout
my entire public career I have followed the personal philosophy that I am a
free man, an American, a public
servant, and a member of my party, in that order always and only.
For 37
years in the service of our Nation, first as a Congressman, as a Senator, and
as Vice President, and now as your
President, l have put the unity of the people first. l have put it ahead
of any divisive partisanship.
And in
these times as in times before, it is true that a house divided against itself
by the spirit of faction, of party, of region, of religion, of race, is a house that cannot stand.
There
is division in the American house now.
There
is divisiveness among us all tonight. And holding the trust that is mine, as
President of all the people, l cannot
disregard the peril to the progress of the American people and the hope
and the prospect of peace for all peoples.
So, I
would ask all Americans, whatever their personal interests or concern, to guard
against divisiveness and all its ugly
consequences.
Fifty-two
months and 10 days ago, in a moment of tragedy and trauma, the duties of this
office fell upon me. I asked then for
your help and God's, that we might continue America on its course,
binding up our wounds, healing our history, moving forward in new unity, to clear the American agenda and to keep
the American commitment for all of our people.
United
we have kept that commitment. United we have enlarged that commitment.
Through
all time to come, l think America will be a stronger nation, a more just
society, and a land of greater opportunity
and fulfillment because of what we have all done together in these years
of unparalleled achievement.
Our
reward will come in the life of freedom, peace, and hope that our children will
enjoy through ages ahead.
What we
won when all of our people united just must not now be lost in suspicion,
distrust, selfishness, and politics among
any of our people.
Believing
this as I do, I have concluded that I should not permit the Presidency to
become involved in the partisan divisions
that are developing in this political year.
With
America's sons in the fields far away, with America's future under challenge
right here at home, with our hopes and
the world's hopes for peace in the balance every day, l do not believe
that I should devote an hour or a day of my time to any personal partisan causes or to any duties
other than the awesome duties of this office - the Presidency of your country.
Accordingly,
l shall not seek, and I will not accept, the nomination of my party for another
term as your President.
But let
men everywhere know, however, that a strong, a confident, and a vigilant
America stands ready tonight to seek an
honorable peace - and stands ready tonight to defend an honored cause
whatever the price, whatever the burden, whatever the sacrifice that duty may require.
Thank
you for listening.
Good
night and God bless all of you.