Originally posted by Sikander
Seeing how there is so much ignorance about the war as related on this thread, I suggest that some of you do some reading. There are numerous books on the subject, but I suggest starting with an overview. Even books written by journalists (like Karnow's "The 10,000 Day War) will give you a good base to start from.
Once you have a grasp of the political sequence of events you can move to institutional histories ("Vietnam: The Death of an American Army" is pretty good) and finally campaign and battle histories. "We Were Soldiers Once, and Young" is a good battle history, though it is relatively useless for drawing strategic or political conclusions. In fact, while individual, campaign and battle histories abound, the war was fought over such a vast area with vastly different terrain and other local features, and over such a long period of time, these histories are almost useless except for filling in the gaps once you have a very good handle on the big picture. There were some big battles, but any single battle had almost no effect on the direction of the war at large.
Seeing how there is so much ignorance about the war as related on this thread, I suggest that some of you do some reading. There are numerous books on the subject, but I suggest starting with an overview. Even books written by journalists (like Karnow's "The 10,000 Day War) will give you a good base to start from.
Once you have a grasp of the political sequence of events you can move to institutional histories ("Vietnam: The Death of an American Army" is pretty good) and finally campaign and battle histories. "We Were Soldiers Once, and Young" is a good battle history, though it is relatively useless for drawing strategic or political conclusions. In fact, while individual, campaign and battle histories abound, the war was fought over such a vast area with vastly different terrain and other local features, and over such a long period of time, these histories are almost useless except for filling in the gaps once you have a very good handle on the big picture. There were some big battles, but any single battle had almost no effect on the direction of the war at large.
On 26 March 65 I was discharge from the US Navy.
On 28 March 65 I turned 21 year of age.
I wanted to stay in the military but my wife of 5 months said NO.
However she did ask me to work for the Navy at Mare Island Naval Shipyard as a civilian, so I did.
When we talk about Nam I do used my memory a lot, and yes I may forget some Info from time to time but for the most part it is still petty good.
When Vietnam WAR started in 65 (actually it started back in 54), the country was behind it because we were stopping communism. And yes we where not told that Johnson did not have an end game on the table. He thought we could kill enough of them and they would quit. He was wrong big time.
We could have invaded and now we know that Russia could not have done much about it, because in 62 they had only 3 nucs on ICBMs. Remember the Russian spy who was telling Kennedy everything the Russian had.
The Chinese had no nucs at this time, however they did have men and lots of them.
I believe the B-52s could have slaughter them in an all out war.
That is enough for now.
Joseph
Comment