Peace
Without Conquest
My fellow Americans:
Tonight Americans and Asians are dying for a world where each
people may choose its own path to change. This is the principle
for which our ancestors fought in the valleys of Pennsylvania.
It is the principle for which our sons fight tonight in the
jungles of Viet-Nam.
Viet-Nam is far away from this quiet campus. We have no territory
there, nor do we seek any. The war is dirty and brutal and
difficult. And some 400 young men, born into an America that
is bursting with opportunity and promise, have ended their
lives on Viet-Nam’s steaming soil.
Why must we take this painful road? Why must this Nation hazard
its ease, and its interest, and its power for the sake of
a people so far away?
We fight because we must fight if we are to live in a world
where every country can shape its own destiny. And only in
such a world will our own freedom be finally secure. This
kind of world will never be built by bombs or bullets. Yet
the infirmities of man are such that force must often precede
reason, and the waste of war, the works of peace.
We wish that this were not so. But we must deal with the world
as it is, if it is ever to be as we wish.
The world as it is in Asia is not a serene or peaceful place.
The first reality is that North Viet-Nam has attacked the
independent nation of South Viet-Nam. Its object is total
conquest. Of course, some of the people of South Viet-Nam
are participating in attack on their own government. But trained
men and supplies, orders and arms, flow in a constant stream
from north to south. This support is the heartbeat of the
war. And it is a war of unparalleled brutality. Simple farmers
are the targets of assassination and kidnapping. Women and
children are strangled in the night because their men are
loyal to their government. And helpless villages are ravaged
by sneak attacks. Large-scale raids are conducted on towns,
and terror strikes in the heart of cities.
The confused nature of this conflict cannot mask the fact
that it is the new face of an old enemy.
Why are these realities our concern? Why are we in Viet-Nam
?
We are there because we have a promise to keep. Since 1954
every American President has offered support to the people
of South Viet-Nam. We have helped to build, and we have helped
to defend. Thus, over many years, we have made a national
pledge to help South Viet-Nam defend its independence. And
I intend to keep that promise. To dishonor that pledge, to
abandon this small and brave nation to its enemies, and to
the terror that must follow, would be an unforgivable wrong.
We are also there to strengthen world order. Around the globe,
from Berlin to Thailand, are people whose well-being rests,
in part, on the belief that they can count on us if they are
attacked. To leave Viet-Nam to its fate would shake the confidence
of all these people in the value of an American commitment
and in the value of America’s word. The result would
be increased unrest and instability, and even wider war.
We are also there because there are great stakes in the balance.
Let no one think for a moment that retreat from Viet-Nam would
bring an end to conflict. The battle would be renewed in one
country and then another. The central lesson of our time is
that the appetite of aggression is never satisfied. To withdraw
from one battlefield means only to prepare for the next. We
must say in southeast Asia—as we did in Europe—in
the words of the Bible: “Hitherto shalt thou come, but
no further.”
There are those who say that all our effort there will be
futile—that China’s power is such that it is bound
to dominate all southeast Asia. But there is no end to that
argument until all of the nations of Asia are swallowed up.
There are those who wonder why we have a responsibility there.
Well, we have it there for the same reason that we have a
responsibility for the defense of Europe. World War II was
fought in both Europe and Asia, and when it ended we found
ourselves with continued responsibility for the defense of
freedom.
Our objective is the independence of South Viet-Nam, and its
freedom from attack. We want nothing for ourselves—only
that the people of South Viet-Nam be allowed to guide their
own country in their own way.
We will do everything necessary to reach that objective. And
we will do only what is absolutely necessary.
From a speech by Lyndon Johnson given at 9 p.m. on April 7,
1965 in Shriver Hall Auditorium at Johns Hopkins University,
Baltimore, Md. The speech was televised...