Paris Peace Accords Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
The Paris Peace Accords were a peace treaty signed in 1973 by the governments of North Vietnam, South Vietnam, and the United States with the intent to stop the continued aggression between the two Vietnams that had become the Vietnam War. They were signed in Paris, France.Peace talks in Paris had been planned since at least 1968. However the American Presidential Election which was ongoing at that time complicated matters, which prompted the South Vietnamese government to wait until Richard Nixon was elected before continuing. The Lyndon Johnson administration and his potential successor, Hubert Humphrey had favored pre-election peace talks, but South Vietnam's Prime Minister Nguyen Cao Ky disagreed with their proposed format of these talks, in which the Communist Viet Cong guerrilla army was allowed to be treated as an independent party. The South Vietnamese government regarded the Viet Cong as agents of the Communist government of North Vietnam, and thus not a sovereign party. The North similarly viewed the Southern government as an agent of the United States, and similarly non-sovereign. Johnson thus began to negotiate unilaterally with the Northern government until he left office.
After Nixon's election, problems still continued. For many months the North and South famously debated over the shape of the table that would be used at the Paris Peace Conference. The North favored a circular table, in which all parties, including Viet Cong representatives, would appear to be equal in importance. The South argued that only a rectangular table was acceptable, for only a rectangle could show two distinct sides to the conflict, the North and South. Eventually a compromise was reached, in which representatives of the North and South government would sit at a circular table, with members representing all other parties sitting on individual square tables around them.
A treaty was finally signed on January 27, 1973. The two Vietnamese governments pledged to recognize each others' sovereignty, and end armed conflict. The United States agreed to continue its withdrawal of troops, which had started in 1969, leading to a complete withdrawal in 1971.
The treaty's terms were unpopular with many in the Southern government, who felt the sudden withdrawal of American forces would cripple the South's military strength in case the North decided to violate the cease-fire. In 1975 this proved true, and the Northern government successfully invaded and conquered the South.
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