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How Did The Vietnam War Change Australia's Anti-War Movement

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At the 23rd of October 1965, about 60 people were being arrested, because of being part of a sit-down, which was the reason for a traffic chaos in Sydney. At 5pm, the 400 workers left their office to be part of the demonstration, which first began peacefully and esculated as the traffic was banked up in Circular Quay. The protester carried posters with anti-American slogans against the American policy in Vietnam written on it and photographs of Vietnamese civilian casualties while chanting slogans protesting the Vietnam war and handing out scores of leaflets. The demonstrators included members of the Communist Party, the Waterside Workers' Federation, the ALP youth body and the 'Save Our Sons' movement as well as university students. Next to police cars, 15 radio cars found their place in the demonstration to report about the movement to show their reports to the Australians on the television. The demonstration obviously was an anti-conscription movement, because the included organisation are popular for being …show more content…
Australia's government of Robert Menzies was sending the first combat troops to Vietnam in May 1965, with the reason that this action was in Australia's national interest to “involve the United States in Southeast Asia and that Australian participation in the Vietnam conflict would encourage this.“ The previous leader of the Australian Labor Party (ALP), Arthur Calwell opposed conscription, which was announced in November 1964, as well as the dispatch of troops to Vietnam and encouraged demonstrations and movements on the streets after the Parliamentary Labor Party endorsed Calwell's commitment that a Labor Government would withdraw conscripts from Vietnam 'without delay' and regular forces 'as soon as

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