preview

Pros And Cons Of Conscription In The Vietnam War

Decent Essays

During the Vietnamese war, conscription sparked a fierce debate that lasted for years, and split the Australian public into two. When Australia agreed to help the South Vietnamese, at the hands of the communist Vietcong, very few Australians questioned the judgement of the Australian leaders. However, in November, 1964 - when the Australian Government brought conscription into the Vietnamese war, with plans to increase the Australian army to 37,500 within the next three years, in the form of ‘National Service’, the Australian population began to disagree with the Governments judgement. There are two sides to this debate, the people who were all for the conscription of men, and the people who were against conscription.

The Menzies Government, under the threat of Communist Vietnam, the domino effect, and the pressure from the Americans to come help instigated Menzies, the Australian Prime Minister at the time, to become involved in the war. During the war, it was believed that if South Vietnam were to fall to communism, then communism would spread throughout the rest of Asia, then to Australia, this was enough to spread fear through the entirety of the population and convince those in power to enter the war. The Domino theory was a belief held by various people in the 1950’s and 1960’s, particularly in America and Australia, that if no one did anything, and communism wasn’t stopped, like falling dominoes - Communism would spread through the rest of South East Asia and

Get Access