No, although public protests did influence American involvement in the war. Public protests were held in the US against intervention, which created a small force against it. Then, after the Tet offensive, even more disagreement occurred along with public protests that made it imperative for the government to leave the area and let the Vietnamese resolve the conflict themselves.
The Vietnamese War ended in 1975 when NVA troops entered and captured South Vietnam's capital, Saigon
The north won.
they conducted anti-war protests on those dates
Opposition to the war was no longer radical. (Apex)
The "public" was being drafted into military service; which influenced public opinion, which in turn influenced the protests and riots against the war.
With riot control.AnswerThe question asked how the public responded, not how the government responded. The public was divided into hawks (those who supported the war) and doves (those who opposed the war).AnswerDue to the violent nature of some of the protests, there was a backlash in public sentiment that denounced the protesters. Essentially, it was felt that the protests "were 'acts of disloyalty' against our soldiers in Vietnam."Student Antiwar Protests and the Backlashhttp://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/twodays/peopleevents/e_antiwar.html
The North Vietnamese got to do more communism.
they settled it by making a pease treaty called The Peace of Verdun
North or South Viets?
Ultimately those protests caused the end of the military draft and the legal adult age to be lowered from age 21 to 18.
true
Actions: Organizing to resist the military draft. Reactions: Anti-War (read Anti-draft) protests and riots.