Nixon’s presidency is considered very controversial and people have widely different opinions about whether or not he was a good president. During his regime he established many important policies and political reforms, some of which still affect the U.S. today. However, at some point the seriousness and amount of his mistakes outweighed his accomplishments, leading him to be the first and so far only president to resign from office. After years and with the information that has been made available for public today, become all Nixon’s hidden and less hidden fails as clear as the countryside sky. To begin with, the Vietnam War, one of the most paramount foreign policy events during Nixon’s time in office. Often times, ending it is added into Nixon’s list of accomplishments. But was it really as simple as that? This is a perfect example of how there is much more to the iceberg than just the tip. In 1968, during the Paris Peace talks U.S. was close to …show more content…
When the suspect arose that North Vietnam was transporting supplies to South Vietnam through Cambodia, Nixon was unable to have a reasonable conversation with his opponents and instead turned into more radical measurements. He and his adviser Henry Kissinger established the Operation Menu, which was a series of top secret bombings that “were kept secret from the American public and the U.S. Congress because Cambodia was ostensibly neutral.” So, instead of peaceful communication Nixon decided to drop napalm bombs into a tiny neutral country full of innocent people without any certainty that he would even hit the so called enemy whatsoever. This resulted in devastating loss of life in Cambodia as the number of deaths rose as high as 150,000 civilians. Today, the effects of the bombings can still be seen as close to a 500 people die in the affected regions, because of the different kinds of unexploded