The disaster was of a D President's making. Johnson made a killing on the war.
The original Brown and Roots was the beginning of what would become Haliburton. And guess who the White House gave all the major contracts in Vietnam to?
Lady Bird was the major shareholder in KBR - Haliburton up to the time of her death I believe.
Dems own Vietnam. Dems own the debacle. The blood is on Dem hands.
You surely don't know your history do you. Tsk! Home schooling I assume.
I lived it. At one point in time I was a huge lib in the 60's. Eisenhower only had advisers in
to assist the French. Kennedy upped the ante with more advisers.
LBJ began the "war" by putting troops on the ground.
Here's a link for you that is very left wing. The freaking BBC. If you have a problem with the timeline, go email them and trash them out.
Friday, 13 March, 1998, 13:17 GMT
Vietnam 1945 to 1975: timeline
Key events in the background to the Vietnam war:
1945 - Viet Minh - a broad front of Vietnamese patriots and nationalists controlled by the Communist Party - seize power. Ho Chi Minh announces independence.
1946 - French forces attack Viet Minh in Haiphong in November sparking the war of resistance against France.
1950 - Democratic Republic of Vietnam is recognised by China and USSR.
1954 - At Geneva Conference Vietnam is split into North and South at the 17th Parallel.
1956 - South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem begins campaign against political dissidents.
1957 - Beginning of communist insurgency in the South.
1959 - Weapons and men from North Vietnam begin infiltrating the South.
1960 - American aid to Diem increased.
1962 - Number of US military advisors in South Vietnam rises to 12,000.
1963 - Viet Cong, the communist guerrillas operating in South Vietnam, defeat units of ARVN, South Vietnamese Army. President Diem overthrown.
1964 - US destroyer allegedly attacked by North Vietnamese patrol boats. This triggers start of pre-planned American bombing raids on North Vietnam.
1965 - 200,000 American combat troops arrive in South Vietnam. 
1966 - US troop numbers in Vietnam rise to 400,000, then to 500,000 the following year.
1968 - Tet Offensive - a combined assault by Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army on US positions - begins. More than 500 civilians die in My Lai massacre.
1969 - President Nixon draws back US ground troops from Vietnam.
1970 - Nixon's National Security advisor, Henry Kissinger, and Le Duc Tho, for the Hanoi government, start talks in Paris.
1973 - Ceasefire agreement in Paris, US troop pull-out completed by March.
1975 - North Vietnamese troops invade South Vietnam and take control of the whole country after South Vietnamese President Duong Van Minh surrenders.