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Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 9
Vietnam for many Veterans, who took part in the campaign, is a sore memory on the one hand and victory on the other. Victory because those that survived have returned home. A sore memory because most witnessed their comrades die on foreign soil and only some of those remains came home. The question remains as to why the US engaged in Vietnam; Vietnam was not a war against the US, but a war to establish the triumph of communism over Vietnam? It may have been a political decision, yet was Vietnam a threat to the US or its interests in the SEA region? Questions still inundate veterans who served in that era.
COL Mikel J. Burroughs,Maj Marty Hogan,SSG(P) James J. Palmer IV aka "JP4",CW5 Michael Athey CW5 (RET),SSgt GG-15 RET Jim Lint,MAJ Mac Heston,Col (Join to see)
COL Mikel J. Burroughs,Maj Marty Hogan,SSG(P) James J. Palmer IV aka "JP4",CW5 Michael Athey CW5 (RET),SSgt GG-15 RET Jim Lint,MAJ Mac Heston,Col (Join to see)
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LTC John Mohor
I was chatting recently w an SF Veteran of Vietnam and he sees It as our need for rubber. Even after the French lost they still owned the rubber tree plantations in South Vietnam. Kinda reminded me of Mideast Oil reserves. It sure shed a different light on a why we were there and then leaving or trying to leave after DuPont created synthetic rubber in 1969
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If it takes more than a month to pick a site for talks you know this is not going to end well.
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