In April 1975, as the North Vietnamese
People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN) advanced on Saigon, the United States carried out evacuations from
South Vietnam, such as
Operation Babylift and
Operation Frequent Wind for Americans, nationals of allied countries, Vietnamese children or adults who had worked for or been closely associated with the U.S. during the Vietnam War. To finance Operation New Life the
Indochina Migration and Refugee Assistance Act was adopted on 23 May 1975. This act allocated funding of $305 million for the State Department and $100 million for HEW. Nearby countries in
Southeast Asia declined to accept the Vietnamese evacuees, fearing that they would have them on their soil permanently. Governor
Ricardo Bordallo, agreed to grant the Vietnamese temporary
asylum on Guam, some from
Saigon. However, the Guam Governor had no power to deny the U.S. military to bring in Vietnamese refugees and evacuees. On April 23, Rear Admiral
George Stephen Morrison, commander of U.S. Naval forces on Guam, was ordered to "accept, shelter, process and care for refugees as they were removed from South Vietnam." More than 130,000 Vietnamese were evacuated from South Vietnam by air and sea during the last few days of April. A few went to other locations, such as
Wake Island, but most were transported to Guam by U.S. and South Vietnamese naval ships, commercial vessels and military and commercial aircraft. A total of 111,919 Vietnamese would be housed temporarily and processed for entry into the United States on Guam. That total included 2,600 orphans and abandoned children evacuated from South Vietnam under Operation Babylift who transited Guam on 3 and 4 April en route to the United States. Guam had a substantial U.S. military presence to care for the Vietnamese refugees.
Andersen Air Force Base on the northern end of the island was the U.S.'s biggest
B-52 base and
Naval Base Guam was a large deep-water port for naval vessels.
Typhoons frequently affect Guam and the military and civilian personnel involved in Operation New Life feared that a typhoon would strike Guam while the Vietnamese were living in tents and unprotected from the elements. Fortunately, no typhoon hit Guam in 1975. ==Refugees==