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Vietnam: Was it 'winable'? - Bengalzona - 12-21-2019

I enjoy studying history, and this is one of those debates you can find raging anywhere from the bar down the street to the ivory towers of academia. Could we have won that conflict? If so, how? And what would have been the costs and/or gains?


RE: Vietnam: Was it 'winable'? - fredtoast - 12-23-2019

No. We picked the wrong side.

During WW2 the Japanese took control of Vietnam from the French colonialist who were running the country. At the end of the war when Japan surrendered to the allied forces Ho Cho Minh declare Vietnam to be a free country. In his speech to the Vietnamese people he used this quote “All men are created equal. They are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, among them are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness." and he sent a letter to President Truman asking the United States to help keep the French from re-taking the country. But we chose to back our white European allies instead of supporting freedom for some asian communist.

We lost that war based on a wrong decision back in the 1940's.


RE: Vietnam: Was it 'winable'? - sandwedge - 12-24-2019

(12-23-2019, 11:47 AM)fredtoast Wrote: No.  We picked the wrong side.

During WW2 the Japanese took control of Vietnam from the French colonialist who were running the country.  At the end of the war when Japan surrendered to the allied forces Ho Cho Minh declare Vietnam to be a free country.  In his speech to the Vietnamese people he used this quote “All men are created equal. They are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, among them are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness." and he sent a letter to President Truman asking the United States to help keep the French from re-taking the country.  But we chose to back our white European allies instead of supporting freedom for some asian communist.

We lost that war based on a wrong decision back in the 1940's.

Exactly pretty spot on Fred.


RE: Vietnam: Was it 'winable'? - grampahol - 12-28-2019

Despite the facts as we know them today we were sold on the notion that the Vietnam war was to stop the spread of communism AS IF Vietnam could have ever been the bulwark to prevent the spread in Europe,  the Americas or anywhere other than Vietnam. I can vividly remember when S Vietnam fell many people still believing that communism was right around the corner for us all. Of course not everyone was so naive, but a lot were. 
There was never really a definition of what winning would have been other than bombing N Vietnam back to the stone age which we pretty much did anyway and despite it all we just packed up, went home and repeated the same dumb shit again in Afghanistan..only more expensive and far more corrupt. 


RE: Vietnam: Was it 'winable'? - Synric - 12-28-2019

Wasn't the term Lawfare coined during the Vietnam war?


RE: Vietnam: Was it 'winable'? - Catmandude123 - 12-28-2019

The war was definitely winnable. The American objective was not to win but to perpetuate the war machine. A lot of young men gave their lives in a war the politicians were not committed to win. One Nagasaki sized nuke on Hanoi would have ended the war. The threat of escalation was real but the question was is it winnable. Sometimes you lose more when you win than when you lose.


RE: Vietnam: Was it 'winable'? - grampahol - 12-31-2019

(12-28-2019, 06:07 PM)Catmandude123 Wrote: The war was definitely winnable. The American objective was not to win but to perpetuate the war machine. A lot of young men gave their lives in a war the politicians were not committed to win.  One Nagasaki sized nuke on Hanoi would have ended the war. The threat of escalation was real but the question was is it winnable. Sometimes you lose more when you win than when you lose.

A nuke would have done nothing but escalate things to mutually assured destruction during the cold war. You nor I would likely be around to debate these things had they dropped a nuke on Hanoi. Russia nor China would have stood for such nonsense nor should they have.


RE: Vietnam: Was it 'winable'? - jfkbengals - 01-05-2020

(12-28-2019, 06:07 PM)Catmandude123 Wrote: The war was definitely winnable. The American objective was not to win but to perpetuate the war machine. A lot of young men gave their lives in a war the politicians were not committed to win.  One Nagasaki sized nuke on Hanoi would have ended the war. The threat of escalation was real but the question was is it winnable. Sometimes you lose more when you win than when you lose.

It would have ended the war in Vietnam, but...

(12-31-2019, 02:21 AM)grampahol Wrote: A nuke would have done nothing but escalate things to mutually assured destruction during the cold war. You nor I would likely be around to debate these things had they dropped a nuke on Hanoi. Russia nor China would have stood for such nonsense nor should they have.

... as gramps has already stated, the all out nuclear war between the US and Russia would have begun.


RE: Vietnam: Was it 'winable'? - Catmandude123 - 01-05-2020

(01-05-2020, 02:20 PM)jfkbengals Wrote: It would have ended the war in Vietnam, but...


... as gramps has already stated, the all out nuclear war between the US and Russia would have begun.

I may be wrong but it was the Chinese who backed the Vietnamese. It was winnable but you are right about the consequences. If you aren't willing to use your might when sending 50000 young men to their graves you shouldn't go to war. Dropping the bombs on Japan saved by some accounts  millions of lives on both sides. Then there was only one nuclear power then.


RE: Vietnam: Was it 'winable'? - jfkbengals - 01-05-2020

(01-05-2020, 02:28 PM)Catmandude123 Wrote: I may be wrong but it was the Chinese who backed the Vietnamese. It was winnable but you are right about the consequences. If you aren't willing to use your might when sending 50000 young men to their graves you shouldn't go to war. Dropping the bombs on Japan saved by some accounts  millions of lives on both sides. Then there was only one nuclear power then.

It was both the Chinese and Russian governments.  For example, it was Soviet versus US pilots in air-air combat.  By that point the US was not the only nuclear power, and use of nukes would have brought retribution.


RE: Vietnam: Was it 'winable'? - Bengalzona - 01-05-2020

I suppose that to figure out if Vietnam was 'winnable', you sort of have to figure out what a 'win' would have looked like. We were told that our troops were being sent there to protect South Vietnam from North Vietnamese aggression and, thereby, to prevent the spread of communism. In that perspective, we did accomplish that... while we were there. And at a high cost. It was a cost that our public was not willing to continue paying. Ideally, from our perspective, South Vietnam would have become a self-sufficient country able to take care of its own defense. In that case, our troops could leave and we would have a new proxy client nation similar to South Korea. I think we really did wish to build another South Korea.

Could that have happened? In a word, no. South Korea is located on a peninsula with only one overland neighbor. It was a somewhat easy thing there to seal off that border and create the DMZ. If you look at maps of Vietnam, you can see why that scenario would be more problematic there. Sure, the North and South could be separated at the 17th Parallel. But the border of South Vietnam with Laos and Cambodia to the west was a different matter. It is a very long border with mountains, jungles and punctuated in the south with tributaries of the Mekong River and the Mekong Delta. Sealing off that type of a border in the same manner was (is) not possible. The governments in Laos and Cambodia were communist governments. This did not automatically make them friendly or even sympathetic with North Vietnam, particularly when it came to moving troops or supplies across their sovereign borders. But these governments were nacent and impoverished and could do little to stop incursions, especially through the jungle and hilly areas in the eats prts of their countries.

In light of the west border problems, we decided to take a page out of the British playbook in Malaysia in the 1950's: counter-insurgency. Our strategy during the Kennedy years was to send Army Special Forces advisor teams into the west part of South Vietnam to recruit and train tribesmen like the Montagnard people in the central highlands into militia units. This strategy was actually quite effective during the early years of our involvement.

Would it have continued to be successful if Kennedy had not been killed? Over the long term, no. The North Vietnamese had adopted the Chinese Maoist doctrine Dau Trahn. This doctrine had three phases. The first phase was a period of guerrilla warfare while simultaneously recruiting, training and building a conventional force. The second phase was a period of relative equilibrium of forces with the enemy, where there would be a combination of guerilla warfare and conventional warfare. The final phase was a period of conventional warfare, conducted only at a point where the conventional forces were superior to the enemies forces. If you look at the history of the Vietnam War, that is sort of how things went. During the Kennedy years, they were in the first phase of Dau Trahn. During the Johnson and Nixon admins, the were in the second phase. After we withdrew, they moved to the third phase.

Our leaders were not ignorant of this. We knew they were building forces. Hence, the moment of decision came after Kennedy was assassinated. A withdraw of our troops at that time would have been a wise choice in the long term. But it would have been political suicide for the Johnson admin which was now facing an election against such "hawk" opponents as Barry Goldwater, who had staked their political bets on combating communism throughout the world. They opted to remain, knowing that a surge in U.S. forces might be necessary. The Gulf of Tonkin incident occurred in August of 1964, just a few months before the U.S. election and seemed, at that time, to reinforce U.S. opinions about North Vietnamese aggression. Regardless of that incident, two major defeats by South Vietnamese forces against North Vietnamese forces in December 1964 and in June 1965 demonstrated that the North was now in Phase Two of Dau Trahn and were now more willing to use their conventional forces. Since the decision had been made to "shit" rather than "get off the pot", our course was now set and the build-up of U.S. forces began.

General Westmoreland was placed in charge of our forces. Westmoreland was a long time artillery officer and his subsequent defensive strategy was of using firebases with concentrated artillery situated throughout the country from which small groups would be sent to patrol the surrounding hills and jungles ("search and destroy"). If troops made contact with enemy forces, they would be supported by fire from the artillery in addition to airstrikes. In many ways, it was the same strategy the crusaders used in the Levant during the Crusades. In combination with this strategy, larger units would be sent (often airmobile) to surround large enemy units and obliterate them (known as "clear and hold"). Westmoreland did submit plans for a major operation into southern North Vietnam and Laos known as Operation Frisco/Durango City. This plan was turned down as the admin felt an incursion of conventional forces into North Vietnam and/or Laos would directly draw Chinese military into the conflict wholesale (a la the Korean War). With this option off of the table, Westmoreland chose the overall strategy of attrition. The simple math he used was that if North Vietnam's population of 18 million could produce 200,000 military service aged men each year, we could deplete their forces if we killed more than 200,000 every year (roughly 17,000 per month). And, thus, the era of the "body counts" began. Even with the exaggerated body counts submitted, we never really got near that level of casualties to enemy combatants. By the Department of Defense estimates, there were a total of 950,000 communist combatants killed between 1964 and 1975, which would come to roughly 9,000 per month. Attrition didn't work. But we stayed with that strategy until the Tet Offensive in 1968.

In North Vietnam, they had a different view of the war and different goals. They did not see themselves as "North Vietnamese". They did not see the people in the south as "South Vietnamese". Rather, they saw both groups as just Vietnamese. In their view, it was not a war between two countries, but a civil war between combatants in the same country. They viewed the U.S. as outside interference in the same manner that the North in our own Civil War would have viewed a country like England sending troops to the South to fight. We referred to their forces in the North as NVA (North Vietnamese Army) and their forces in the South as the Viet Cong. But they saw all of these units as being part of their army. These units would often be a mix of soldiers from the north and the south, but they were all trained and supplied.

When the U.S. came in force, they initially tested their conventional troops against ours (Ia Drang Valley, 1965). They quickly assessed that they were over-matched and reverted to a lower level of Phase Two of their doctrine. As a result, we would rarely see large NVA units during the war assembled to fight major pitched battles. Instead, they generally sent units regimental size or smaller to infiltrate, test defenses, or set ambushes (a primary reason why we would never achieve the body counts necessary to make the attrition strategy viable).

The one major exception to their strategy was the Tet Offensive in 1968. The primary objectives of the offensive were to secure targets in South Vietnam and invoke popular uprisings in key cities. They failed in both accounts... miserably. And the massive casualties they took would set them back militarily for a couple of years. But they did incite terror in the local populations. And the Tet Offensive had an even more profound impact on American public opinion. Westmoreland had been proclaiming that we were 'winning' the war for well over a year and that the lack of large enemy offensive operations was proof. The fact that the communists were able to launch such a massive effort contracted what was claimed in the eyes of the public, regardless of how badly we defeated the offensive. Worse, word was leaked that the Johnson Administration was planning on calling up reserve forces (something that was actually considered after Tet). We had already committed nearly 40% of our military to Southeast Asia. The public opinion changed over the war, leading Johnson to announce that he would not seek re-election.

Could we have won? Yes, IMO. But we would have had to either continue with the same strategy of defense or widen the war and occupy Cambodia to secure the western border using conventional weapons. Either of those options would have been distasteful for our public. There is no doubt that incursion into the North would have led to direct Chinese intervention. Use of nuclear weapons would have 1) made us a pariah among the world community, 2) alienated us from our allies, 3) demonstrated to enemy nations that we could not win a war without them, and 4) been superfluous as there were no real targets in North Vietnam worthy of a nuke.


RE: Vietnam: Was it 'winable'? - grampahol - 01-15-2020

If there were ever a time to strike at the heart of the communist spread it would have been immediately after WW2 against Moscow, but...At the time Moscow was largely seen as our ally to defeat Germany and the Russians probably already we well on their way to acquiring nuclear weapons anyway. The world was mostly worn out by the end of that war with little to no appetite for more was much less nuclear war. Even then, had they done it there would have been no way to contain the rest of Russia and China. I think we were pretty lucky to have contained communism at all much less defeat it on a war footing. It was our economic power and close alliances with Europe that saved us all. Otherwise we'd have all been screwed..or dead. I can't even imagine our current government thinking that far ahead strategically as they did in WWII and immediately afterwards.. If we were in the same situation today I don't think we'd stand a chance and we still stand a chance of screwing the pooch before it's all said and done.