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In 69 Nixon already said he would go on with the war to secure "peace with honor" but since the beginning, even with the French, the vietmihn/vietcongs knew that the only victory laid in a military defeat and humiliation of the enemy. So they kept on the pressure until 73 when Nixon negotiated an "honorable" way out with the Paris agreement. The US are the only one that stuck to it by withdrawing their troops, leaving North and south at each other's throat.
To force Thieu (Southern puppet) to agree with the deal, US guarantees were given that US forces would come back in case of a Northern aggression. South Vietnam was hyper corrupt and its forces "paper forces" and unwilling to fight or die. Watergate kicked Nixon out. Ford was not even elected. America wanted the end of it. Congress thought it was time to take a revenge from the executive. The US ambassador in Vietnam was "crazy". None of the past agreements with Thieu were respected. The politics and the country lost the war. Not the soldiers. The French were fighting in Dien Bien Phu while their government was negocitating in Geneva...Do you think the North would have agreed on cutting the country in 2 at the 17th parallel if the French forces were really defeated? US forces did not learn from the French successes and mistakes and were also betrayed by the people and the politicians. |
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Whether the Vietnam War could have ever been won by the US, its hard to say, but there are lots of reason why it was such a miserable failure.
1.) We were backing some very corrupt and tyranical governments in Saigon. That made us look like the badguy in the eyes of many Vietnamese. 2.) We went into it all half-ass and with no real objective. 3.) We let North Vietnam pump supplies into the South, almost with no resistence whatsoever. By the time the US actually tried to take decisive action to stop the flow of supplies down the Ho Chi Min trail, the enemy was far too entrenched and too well prepared for it. 4.) We tried to run the War from Washington, not from the front. That kind of warfare never ever works. |
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I posted this a while back in some other message board. It's a pretty long answer, addressing the question of why we lost despite the fact that we won the battles. So forgive me, but I copied and pasted the post I made (because to do it again would probably ensure that my Latin is never going to get done).
Be advised, there were some parts of the post which were pretty snide to the readership. The posters on that board aren't exactly the wisest in political debates, nor the most mature, so I was a bit forceful in ramming the lovely truth (even though they didn't pay attention). So if you see any umbrage in the post, it doesn't refer to you, unless it does. Quote:
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I think it's was two things that caused us to loose the Vietnam war:
1) The Viet Con were resourceful. You bomb a road that you know they pass supplies on, they have it rebuilt right away. They were brutal and they had an objective, and that was to win. 2) The support back home - soldiers rely on the fact the people back home are supporting them. There was some to begin with but as the war dragged along, it vanished, not saying there wasn't any support cause there was. But you never heard about those folks. Also from just ... talks with my dad, some US troops were involved in drugs and alcohol. Some ran drugs back home in body bags (see The Boys in Company C for an example). We weren't together in that war as we are now. It wasn't because of the draft, I believe there were men who were there to do their job and get the hell out. But it collapsed as the war drew on. We pulled out troops and as the city of Saigon fell - when "White Christmas' was being played, we were a nation, where we didn't quite know who we were and what we were doing in this world. We lost a war. That's a huge hit to the patriotic pride of a nation. I believe it wasn't until Ronald Reagan became President, where people felt proud to be Americans again. I believe the entire 1963-70s, is a period that most Americans were not fond of. Some say America changed when President Kennedy was assassinated and I believe that. We weren't whole anymore and we didn't really want to fight, we didn't have Vietnam declared as an official war, our Presidents of that war did things that maybe they shouldn't have done. The Generals as well. But not enough funding that was directed in the right places, sure, it was funded, but not much to show for it. Not enough moral support and the Viet Con, sneaky and brutal. We lost the war on the home front before we lost it over in Vietnam. Our troops come home and they're spit on. You have to think it wasn't until our soldiers came home from the first Gulf War, where we were proud of military. |
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Topic: The Landscape
I liked how you called it a Conflict and not a War, that is a common mistake. The US never officially went to "war" with the Vietcong, we were only assisting the Vietnamese people with their problem, not declaring war against north vietnam. We went over there without studying the landscape at all, a problem that has been alleviated in the following years after Vietnam. Furthermore, the psychological evaluations of the new recruits to all branches of service were not efficiant or thorough enough to say whethter the person was emotionally or mentally stable (history channel) "they asked you your name, if you knew where you were, where you were going and if you FELT ok". Point Blank, we knew nothing about this country, yet the US has always stepped in to other peoples problems. I mean, sure I'm all for defending our country, but since when did defending our country mean solving everyone else's problems?
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