Ho Chi Minh's Letter To Vietnam

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Comparing the two letters from former United States President, Lyndon Johnson and former North Vietnam President, Ho Chi Minh, it can be argued that Ho Chi Minh’s letter to Johnson is to more persuasive than Johnson’s letter to Chi Minh. President Ho Chi Minh’s use of pathos, logos, and the tone used throughout the letter makes Chi Minh’s argument more compelling.
Ho Chi Minh uses pathos to express the anger over the destruction of his country and the immoral acts that American soldiers did while in Vietnam. After the United States said they would stop further infiltration into Vietnam, Chi Minh reports that, “The United States Government has committed war crimes, crimes against peace and humanity.” He uses emotional appeal to support this statement by list of the infrastructure of which the United States had damaged whilst occupying Vietnam, stating, “...thousands of American planes have rain down on thousands of tons of bombs, destroying cities, villages, mills, roads, bridges…” …show more content…

Ho Chi Minh questions the United States involvement in the war, mentioning that the vietnamese people have never done anything to harm the United States in anyway, but the United States chose to intervene with the war, as if it were their own war. Then, the President johnson complained, expressing the fact that they feel as if the destruction of Vietnam is wrong. Ho Chi Minh respond with, “Permit me to ask you; Who perpetrated these monstrous crimes? It was the American soldiers and the soldiers of the satellite countries. The United States Government is entirely responsible for the extremely grave situation in

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