- Banned
- #21
To Picaro: Your reply is basically fact with a few instances of misdirection:
“. . . police Action . . .” implies United Nations approval à la the Korean War. The UN did not approve of stopping Communism in Vietnam or Korea:The Viet Nam police action
Wrong. I never brought up the UN, I brought up SEATO.Different Treaty organization. The stuff following is irrelevant to what I said, so I won't bother parsing it.
Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO), 1954 - 1953–1960 - Milestones - Office of the Historian
Incidentally, our loyal allies, the British, did not fight with us in Vietnam.
Didn't need to; at least three Commonwealth countries contributed to the police action, two with military troops.
Countries that sent troops and/or aid to fight in Viet Nam:
Allies of the Republic of Vietnam
America Wasn’t the Only Foreign Power in the Vietnam War
It's oh so fashionable to claim the VN war was a 'defeat', but it was a major blow against the Soviets, not us.
It was a defeat for us. Put it in perspective this way: The Soviet Union’s war in Afghanistan was, and still is, referred to as their Vietnam.
It's spun that way for domestic partisan political reasons, and as I said before the mindset for Americans was still influenced by WW I and WW II era notions of 'victory', not objective analysis. Johnson's escalation policies ended with the Viet Cong being crushed into insignificance as a force in 1968, but the Tet offensive is ridiculously spun as a 'defeat', which of course is just clueless.