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  • Vietnam War
    1,079 words
    In my opinion the Vietnam War was a terrible experience for both of the fighting sides. In this war both of the fighting sides lost huge amounts of troops, warfare, and civilian lives. The ideas and beliefs of people around the world about the Vietnam War are very different because of the controversy over this issue. The Vietnam War brought the United States shame and disgrace in the eyes of the outside world and the citizens of United States. The Vietnam War is a stain on the United States hist...
  • War On North Vietnam After Its Communist
    1,615 words
    "Vietnam was the first war ever fought without any censorship. Without censorship, things can get terribly confused in the public mind". - Gen William C Westmoreland, US Army (web) It is said that a war cannot be fought without the support of the people. Much so was this related to the Vietnam conflict. I say the "Vietnam Conflict" in that the United States never actually declared war on North Vietnam after its communist split-up in 1960. The conflict was based on the principles of containment s...
  • Korean War Mao Zedong
    1,248 words
    The Korean War is a war that many people will never forget. All wars in American history fought before the Korean War was based on either national survival or the gain of territory. A strong conflict was created between the Soviet Union and the United States. The conflict was so strong that wars were fought in the midst of this cold war. The Korean War was the first American war that was not fought for national survival, for territory, for manifest destiny or for hegemony. "Korea was the first i...
  • Young Vietnamese Love War
    1,056 words
    A New View of the War When we think of the Vietnam War, we think of all the hell and torture that American soldiers went through with little regard to the Vietnamese and the hardships they endured. Reading the Sorrow of War gave me a clear understanding of the Vietnamese people and the suffering that the war caused them. The Sorrow of War is unique and powerful in the sense that it is written by a Vietnam army veteran and gives the perspective of the war from a Vietnamese soldier. It is one of t...
  • Major Aspects Of The Vietnam Wars
    870 words
    Similarities Between the war in Iraq and the Vietnam War As time passes, every society endures situations which stress its' very fabric. Each societies' history is sprinkled with these situations. One such situations which the United States underwent was the Vietnam war. For years this particular event has been hotly debated. Hardly anyone who was present at the time agrees on any point concerning this war, except that they regret it. It has become "the greatest American foreign policy calamity ...
  • Vietnam War
    1,156 words
    Vietnam War The War We Should Have Won The Vietnam War, was not even a war, it was a Police Action. The young men who fought for their country had other views of what it was. This war showed how power hungry the U.S. was to influence the world. I thought the Vietnam War was a serious misallocation of troops, money, resources and time. The Vietnam War was a perfect platform for the U.S. to show the world how belligerent we were to stop the spread of communism. Some observers in the United States ...
  • Thoughts Of Suicide For Many Vietnam Veterans
    1,451 words
    The deaths that were experienced in Vietnam due to Agent Orange and other jungle diseases have become well known by the general public. However, it is suicide that has resulted in the deaths of over 150,000 Vietnam soldiers during and after the war. An enormous amount of suicides resulted from what most people call "protecting our country". The Vietnam War brought more than fifty-eight thousand deaths and is to some one of the darkest battles in United States history. If not killed during the wa...
  • Military Involvement In Vietnam
    1,388 words
    'No new taxes. ' This is a quote that most all of us remember from the 1992 presidential election. Along with it we remember that there were new taxes during that presidents term in office. There are a myriad of promises made and things done in a presidential election year that have questionable motives as to whether they are done in the best interest of the people or in the interests of the presidential candidate. These hidden interests are one of the biggest problems with the political aspects...
  • American Support For The War Cause
    940 words
    In American History, the nineteen sixties and the nineteen seventies were extremely turbulent and controversial times. Protest rights were being tested and occasionally suppressed, new moral and political values began to develop, and the Vietnam War dominated the twenty-year period. Vietnam invited many young activist people to begin a huge movement of anti-war protesting denouncing the war, the government, and even the soldiers who were picked against their will to fight. Reasons for American e...
  • Most Tragic Part About The Vietnam War
    1,581 words
    "I've always said, if you don't go in to win, don't go in at all... Either you conduct the conflict with all the assets the United States has at its disposal to bring about a quick and successful outcome or you stay out". -Alexander M. Haig JR. The War That Couldn't Be Won! By withdrawing its forces from Vietnam in 1973 did the United States admit defeat? This is an argument that historians and observers have been having for years. Before answering that question however, we must first understand...
  • Korean And Vietnam Wars
    2,497 words
    The Korean War would be a radical step in fighting wars, as well as the feelings people had toward the war. All wars in American History fought before the Korean War were based on either national survival or the gain of territory. A strong conflict was created between the Soviet Union and the United States. From this conflict, tension was so strong that wars were fought in the midst of this Cold War. The Korean War was the first America ever waged that was not fought for national survival, for t...
  • War In America Vietnam
    1,023 words
    The War in America Vietnam is a small Asian country, 9000 miles away from the United States. Yet America felt that its national interest were threatened strong enough to fight a war over there. Their fear was caused by the spread of communism at that time. The role of communism was extremely important in this conflict. The United States had to enter the war to stop the spread of communism in Asia since the North Vietnam were communist. If North Vietnam converted Vietnam into a communist country,...
  • Poetry Of The Vietnam War
    1,832 words
    John Clark Pratt Poetry that documents the attitudes toward the Vietnam War-as well as the origins, development, and conduct of the war-is both pervasive and significant. Although only a few poems by French writers reflect that country's involvement, the Vietnamese tradition of poetic expression produced a large body of work, both personal and political, written by soldiers and civilians of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRV) and the Republic of Vietnam (RUN). Unfortunately, except for the ...
  • Vietnam War
    919 words
    The Political Message in Bob Dylan's "The Times They Are A-Changin" The events of the past continue to influence and shape the present and the future, particularly the decade of the 1960's, which was a time often called the "decade of discontent" because of demonstrations against the Vietnam War. Americans were divided between patriotism and the desire for peace. Some agreed with President Johnson's involvement in Vietnam for the common goal of eliminating communism, others became entranced in t...
  • Australian And South Vietnamese Soldiers
    729 words
    The Vietnam War The Vietnam War was a war no one could win. It was made more difficult for the US, Australian and South Vietnamese soldiers to fight because the enemy had the same physical appearance as the South Vietnamese, and often even children were armed and fought as part of the militia. Not only did the enemy look the same but the soldiers had to battle impenetrable jungle, hot sticky conditions and torrential rain. Plus with years of oppression by many invaders there was no way the Vietn...
  • Responsibility Of War To South Vietnam
    3,665 words
    The Vietnam War greatly changed America forever. It was the longest war fought in America's history, lasting from 1955 to 1973. The Vietnam War tarnished America's self image by becoming the first time in history the United States failed to accomplish its stated war aims, to preserve a separate, independent, noncommunist government. The war also had great effects on the American people. It was the first war ever broadcast on television. The public was able to see what happened on the battlefield...
  • Involved In The Vietnam War
    1,862 words
    . Did the United States Make A Mistake getting involved in the Vietnam War? The Vietnam War was a military struggle in Vietnam from 1959 to 1975, involving the North Vietnamese and the National Liberation Front (NLF) in conflict with United States forces and the South Vietnamese army. From 1946 until 1954, the Vietnamese had struggled for their independence from France during the First Indochina War. At the end of this war, the country was temporarily divided into North and South Vietnam. North ...
  • Usa In The Vietnam War
    1,117 words
    The conflict in Vietnam between the years of 1945 and 1975 was a nationalist struggle for independence. The Vietnam War developed as a sequel to the struggle in 1946-1954 between the French, who were the colonial rulers of Indo-China before World War II, and the Communist-led Vietminh, established and led by Ho Chi Minh. In 1950 the New Chinese Communist Government and the USSR supplied Ho Chi Minh and his rebels with arms and equipment. This drew the USA into the battle in Vietnam as they saw t...
  • Personalities During The Vietnam War Era
    1,466 words
    The author of this informative "America's Longest War" book series is Dr. George C. Herring. Dr. Herring is a pioneer in his own right as a leading Vietnam War historian. Dr. Herring holds a massive amount of accreditations to his name, ranging from serving in the U. S Navy, to his tenure as a leading historian. George C. Herring began his illustrious and vivid career in history by acquiring his Ph. D. from the University of Virginia. Shortly after, he began his thirty plus year career of teachi...
  • U.S. Military Involvement In Vietnam
    1,638 words
    Vietnam War was a war that had the many of the world stumped on how it accrued and what it was for. Many lives were lost and destroyed for a war that had no real purpose. As to why the US got involved is still a controversial issue to this day. Pin pointing exactly when the war started is a heated debate among historians. The war was not only in Vietnam but also right at home. Society was divided and conflict began. Was Vietnam a lost cause for the US? In 1941, Ho Chi Minh, a communist activist,...

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