'Peace With Honor'
January 23, 1973
This is the text of President Nixon's radio and television broadcast announcing the initialing of the Paris 'Agreement on Ending the War and Restoring Peace in Vietnam'.
Good evening. I have asked for this radio and television time
tonight for the purpose of announcing that we today have
concluded an agreement to end the war and bring peace with honor
in Vietnam and in Southeast Asia.
The following statement is being issued at this moment in
Washington and Hanoi:
At 12:30 Paris time today [Tuesday], January 23, 1973, the
Agreement on Ending the War and Restoring Peace in Vietnam was
initialed by Dr. Henry Kissinger on behalf of the United States,
and Special Adviser Le Duc Tho on behalf of the Democratic
Republic of Vietnam.
The agreement will be formally signed by the parties
participating in the Paris Conference on Vietnam on January 27,
1973, at the International Conference Center in Paris.
The cease-fire will take effect at 2400 Greenwich Mean Time,
January 27, 1973. The United States and the Democratic Republic
of Vietnam express the hope that this agreement will insure
stable peace in Vietnam and contribute to the preservation of
lasting peace in Indochina and Southeast Asia.
That concludes the formal statement.
Throughout the years of negotiations, we have insisted on peace
with honor. In my addresses to the Nation from this room of
January 25 and May 8, [1972] I set forth the goals that we
considered essential for peace with honor.
In the settlement that has now been agreed to, all the
conditions that I laid down then have been met. A cease-fire,
internationally supervised, will begin at 7 p.m., this Saturday,
January 27, Washington time. Within 60 days from this Saturday,
all Americans held prisoners of war throughout Indochina will be
released. There will be the fullest possible accounting for all
of those who are missing in action.
During the same 60-day period, all American forces will be
withdrawn from South Vietnam.
The people of South Vietnam have been guaranteed the right to
determine their own future, without outside interference.
By joint agreement, the full text of the agreement and the
protocols to carry it out, will be issued tomorrow.
Throughout these negotiations we have been in the closest
consultation with President Thieu and other representatives of
the Republic of Vietnam. This settlement meets the goals and has
the full support of President Thieu and the Government of the
Republic of Vietnam, as well as that of our other allies who are
affected.
The United States will continue to recognize the Government of
the Republic of Vietnam as the sole legitimate government of
South Vietnam.
We shall continue to aid South Vietnam within the terms of the
agreement and we shall support efforts by the people of South
Vietnam to settle their problems peacefully among themselves.
We must recognize that ending the war is only the first step
toward building the peace. All parties must now see to it that
this is a peace that lasts, and also a peace that heals, and a
peace that not only ends the war in Southeast Asia, but
contributes to the prospects of peace in the whole world.
This will mean that the terms of the agreement must be
scrupulously adhered to. We shall do everything the agreement
requires of us and we shall expect the other parties to do
everything it requires of them. We shall also expect other
interested nations to help insure that the agreement is carried
out and peace is maintained.
As this long and very difficult war ends, I would like to
address a few special words to each of those who have been
parties in the conflict.
First, to the people and Government of South Vietnam: By your
courage, by your sacrifice, you have won the precious right to
determine your own future and you have developed the strength to
defend that right. We look forward to working with you in the
future, friends in peace as we have been allies in war.
To the leaders of North Vietnam: As we have ended the war
through negotiations, let us now build a peace of
reconciliation. For our part; we are prepared to make a major
effort to help achieve that goal. But just as reciprocity was
needed to end the war, so, too, will it be needed to build and
strengthen the peace.
To the other major powers that have been involved even
indirectly: Now is the time for mutual restraint so that the
peace we have achieved can last.
And finally, to all of you who are listening, the American
people: Your steadfastness in supporting our insistence on peace
with honor has made peace with honor possible. I know that you
would not have wanted that peace jeopardized. With our secret
negotiations at the sensitive stage they were in during this
recent period, for me to have discussed publicly our efforts to
secure peace would not only have violated our understanding with
North Vietnam, it would have seriously harmed and possibly
destroyed the chances for peace. Therefore, I know that you now
can understand why, during these past several weeks, I have not
made any public statements about those efforts.
The important thing was not to talk about peace, but to get
peace and to get the right kind of peace. This we have done.
Now that we have achieved an honorable agreement, let us be
proud that America did not settle for a peace that would have
betrayed our allies, that would have abandoned our prisoners of
war, or that would have ended the war for us but would have
continued the war for the 50 million people of Indochina. Let us
be proud of the 2 1/2 million young Americans who served in
Vietnam, who served with honor and distinction in one of the
most selfless enterprises in the history of nations. And let us
be proud of those who sacrificed, who gave their lives so that
the people of South Vietnam might live in freedom and so that
the world might live in peace.
In particular, I would like to say a word to some of the bravest
people I have ever met-the wives, the children, the families of
our prisoners of war and the missing in action. When others
called on us to settle on any terms, you had the courage to
stand for the right kind of peace so that those who died and
those who suffered would not have died and suffered in vain, and
so that, where this generation knew war, the next generation
would know peace. Nothing means more to me at this moment than
the fact that your long vigil is coming to an end.
Just yesterday, a great American, who once occupied this office,
died. In his life President [Lyndon B.] Johnson endured the
vilification of those who sought to portray him as a man of war.
But there was nothing he cared about more deeply than achieving
a lasting peace in the world.
I remember the last time I talked with him. It was just the day
after New Year's. He spoke then of his concern with bringing
peace, with making it the right kind of peace, and I was
grateful that he once again expressed his support for my efforts
to gain such a peace. No one would have welcomed this peace more
than he.
And I know he would join me in asking for those who died and for
those who live, let us consecrate this moment by resolving
together to make the peace we have achieved a peace that will
last.
Thank you and good evening.
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