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THE VIETNAM WAR
Authors:James Godbolt  Chris Holmsted Larsen  Søren Hein Rasmussen
Affiliation:1. Department of Social Science , Vestfold Univeristy College , P.O. Box 2243, N‐3103 T?nsberg, Norway E-mail: james.godbolt@hive.no james.godbolt@hive.no;3. SAXO Institute , University of Copenhagen Njalsgade 80 , room 16.2.126 2300, Copenhagen S Denmark. E-mail: chl@hum.ku.dk;4. Historie, ?rhus Universitet , Ndr. Ringgade, bygning 1410, 8000 ?rhus C, Denmark E-mail: hisshr@hum.au.dk
Abstract:This article investigates the role of the Vietnam War in Danish and Norwegian politics. We argue that Danish and Norwegian membership in NATO and an unstable parliamentary situation may explain why these countries, unlike Sweden, did not take on the lead in the international protest against the war. Non‐socialistic coalitions came to power in Norway and Denmark in the latter half of the 1960s which to an extent explains why the social democratic parties in both countries became more critical of the US. By the end of the 1960s, foreign policy as well as public attitudes towards the war converged in Denmark, Sweden and Norway, and in all three countries powerful protest movements emerged that were remarkably similar. The Vietnam War strengthened the left in general and promoted a leftist politics of solidarity that influenced Swedish, Danish and Norwegian foreign policy‐making of the 1970s.
Keywords:Vietnam War  anti‐war movement  sixties  Scandinavian politics  youth protest
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