Into The Vietnam War Analysis

1439 Words6 Pages
United States into the Vietnam War. The U.S. government viewed involvement in the war as a way to prevent a communist takeover of South Vietnam and part of their wider strategy of containment. Communism is a sociopolitical movement that aims for a classless and stateless society structured upon common ownership of the means of production, free access to articles of consumption, and the end of wage labor and private property in the means of production and real estate. However communism might not be a bad thing for countries such as South Vietnam because 80% of the population was poor and in poor countries it is necessary to work together in orders to improve standard of living. The United States military’s entered to the Vietnam War to help…show more content…
So then for older Americans the war was justified, although very unpopular. For young Americans the war was not justified because for them detainment of communism was not worth the sacrifice of human life. At that time they had an idealistic view of communism and sympathized with it. In later years after that idealistic view diminished, especially within communistic countries. For individual people who believe in God the question is easy. God is the creator and owner of human life and humans are not allowed to take it. In the future injustice will be taken away God. The United States became involved in the war for a number of reasons, and these evolved and shifted over time. Primarily, every American president regarded the enemy in Vietnam--the Vietminh; its 1960s successor, the National Liberation Front (NLF); and the government of North Vietnam, led by Ho Chi Minhas agents of global communism. U.S. policymakers, and most Americans, regarded communism as the antithesis of all they held dear. Communists’ scorned democracy, violated human rights, pursued military aggression, and created closed state economies that barely traded with capitalist countries. Americans compared communism to a contagious disease. If it took hold in one nation, U.S. policymakers expected contiguous nations…show more content…
I believe that Vietnam left both memories of sadness and joy, upon those who participated in its evolution. I can, also, appreciate the animosity any country would feel against the colonization of a different race of people. War is obviously its own worst enemy. Even though the U.S.A. capitulated, and abandoned the Southeast Asian conflict, I know that it was possible to death the North Vietnamese. The U.S.A. views this war as a war against communistic aggression, but in reality they viewed it as a civil war struggle. News coverage was biased against the American aggression, which did more to defeat their army than the enemy soldiers. Both sides were glad to have this conflict over and done with, but for different reasons. Vietnam was not a glorious conquest, that the American public was use to obtaining and demanded. It was an early wake-up call for Americans to resolve issues on their home front prior to taking on another country's problems,
Open Document