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Bombing Of Vietnam's DikesLate in the Vietnam War, the United States of America engaged in a policy of systematically bombing a system of dikes in Vietnam's Red River Delta that protected several hundred thousand people from having their land overrun by water. The threat of the bombing was used as a leveraging tool against the North Vietnamese to encourage them to accept a proposed truce. The Red River Delta provided the majority of the food to North Vietnam, and the destruction of the farmland and the people within would have starved the nation's population and army. Under this threat, in September, 1972, North Vietnam agreed to drop their demand that President Nguyễn Văn Thiệu of South Vietnam be overthrown. Thiệu rejected the treaty, not wanting to leave North Vietnamese troops in the south. Many have referred to the bombing of the dikes as a war crime, although little was accomplished in the bombing before it ceased. Actress Jane Fonda is often credited with helping publicize the bombing, for which then U.N. Ambassador George H. W. Bush accused her of lying. President Richard Nixon and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger discussed bombing dikes in a 1972 conversation, later published by journalist Daniel Ellsberg: - Nixon: We've got to quit thinking in terms of a three-day strike the Hanoi-Haiphong area. We've got to be thinking in terms of an all-out bombing attack - which will continue until they - Now by all-out bombing attack, I am thinking about things that go far beyond. I'm thinking of the dikes, I'm thinking of the railroad, I'm thinking, of course, the docks.
- Kissinger: I agree with you.
:Nixon: We've got to use massive force.
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