
Originally Posted by
PanzerJaeger
'Gotta disagree with you there. The US military was never defeated on the battlefield in South Vietnam, despite all sorts of advantages given the North Vietnamese via Johnson, ill-suited strategy and tactics, and some pretty poor leadership, and would have had very few troubles taking Hanoi. In fact, IIRC, it was 2 years after the vast majority of US forces had left that the NVA took the South.
As you indicated, Vietnam was a terrible example of politicians creating an atmosphere of inevitable failure. They thought that Ho Chi Men would be comfortable with a Korea-like situation, but it should have been clearly obvious after a year or three that he would have to be clearly defeated or the US should no longer invest their containment resources in Vietnam. The legacy of that war led Kennedy and later Johnson to embrace the idea of "limited war" and create and a worst-case scenario where the communist forces were allowed half the nation to plan and train for all of their (failed) assaults, not to mention resupply the VietCong. Worse, by the time Nixon - who would have had no qualms about trouncing the NVA in NV and letting China sort them out - was elected, there was no public will left to do so.
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