Macau Daily Times

1975 Vietnam’s President thieu resigns

- Courtesy BBC News

The President of South Vietnam has been forced to resign accusing the United States of betrayal.

In a TV and radio address, outgoing President Nguyen Van Thieu said his forces had failed to stop the advance of the Vietcong because of lack of funds promised to him by the Americans.

In a scathing attack on the US, he suggested US Secretary of State Dr Henry Kissinger had tricked him into signing the Paris peace agreement two years ago, promising military aid which then failed to materialis­e.

“At the time of the peace agreement the United States agreed to replace equipment on a one-by-one basis,” he said. “But the United States did not keep its word. Is an American’s word reliable these days?”

He continued: “The United States did not keep its promise to help us fight for freedom and it was in the same fight that the United States lost 50,000 of its young men.”

The general - a fervent anti-communist - first came to power in 1965 having helped overthrow the government of President Diem in 1963 with US support.

But the appetite for war has gradually waned in the US and at the same time, Thieu has stripped South Vietnam of many of its democratic institutio­ns.

The pressure for him to resign has been intense - from politician­s in Saigon as well as from peace negotiator­s representi­ng North Vietnam who will not have any dealings with a man they regard as a dictator.

In the last few months, the communist Provisiona­l Revolution­ary Government (PRG) has said President Thieu must step down before any peace talks with Saigon could begin.

President Thieu’s departure means peace talks will now be able to move forward.

US President Gerald Ford, however, denied his government had asked President Thieu to relinquish power. “There was no pressure by me or anybody lese form here. He made the decision all on his own,” he said in a TV interview.

North Vietnamese troops have surrounded Saigon and military expert are predicting the city will fall within weeks if not days.

Five divisions of South Vietnamese infantry troops, a division of US Rangers and two brigades of US Marines in position around Saigon are outnumbere­d by more than two to one.

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