Through the 1950s and early 1960s many Americans supported the Vietnam War because they didn’t want Vietnam to become a communist nation. However, in the mid-1960s when the Johnson administration increased the United States involvement in Vietnam, many were angry because every night the media would inform the American public of what was going on in Vietnam. These uproars mainly came from University students across the United States. Early antiwar movements were organized to questions about the morality of United States military involvement. After the 1968 Tet Offensive and My Lai Massacre, antiwar sentiment increased because Americans were getting more furious of the gruesome images they were seeing in the television of the Vietnam War. After Lyndon B. Johnson left the office in 2965, President Richard M. Nixon, increased U.S. involvement, and the war claimed large numbers of U.S. lives. Protests also grew rapidly after the invasion of Cambodia in 1970 and the Christmas Eve bombing of Hanoi in 1972
Through the 1950s and early 1960s many Americans supported the Vietnam War because they didn’t want Vietnam to become a communist nation. However, in the mid-1960s when the Johnson administration increased the United States involvement in Vietnam, many were angry because every night the media would inform the American public of what was going on in Vietnam. These uproars mainly came from University students across the United States. Early antiwar movements were organized to questions about the morality of United States military involvement. After the 1968 Tet Offensive and My Lai Massacre, antiwar sentiment increased because Americans were getting more furious of the gruesome images they were seeing in the television of the Vietnam War. After Lyndon B. Johnson left the office in 2965, President Richard M. Nixon, increased U.S. involvement, and the war claimed large numbers of U.S. lives. Protests also grew rapidly after the invasion of Cambodia in 1970 and the Christmas Eve bombing of Hanoi in 1972