Soldiers from North Vietnam, South Vietnam, Korea, Australia, and the United States were all effectively trained and prepared for battle in the Vietnam Conflict.
Plenty of US Servicemen of Irish descent fought in the war, but Ireland did not fight in the Vietnam War.
In America. the American soldiers? No. In Vietnam - the Vietnamese Viet-Cong? Yes.
US Airmen and Sailors conducted war against NORTH Vietnam with their airplanes and battleships (one battleship actually, the USS New Jersey), cruisers, and destroyers firing from the gunline. US Soldiers and Marines fought on the ground in SOUTH Vietnam.
The united states sent hundreds of thousands of U.S. soldiers to fight in the war
they fight
49 000 soldiers were sent to fight in the Vietnam war.
Plenty of US Servicemen of Irish descent fought in the war, but Ireland did not fight in the Vietnam War.
They were drafted.
Yes, during WW1 and WW2, there was no conscriprtion (compulsory military service). Soldiers went to war by choice. But in the Vietnam war, conscription was introduce in Australia and the soldiers were forced for the Vietnam war to go and fight.
Either the Korean War or the Vietnam War. Both were in Asia.
Vietnam but it wasnt officially declared war
12 Million
no what i know is that we pulled out but covert operations were still happening
Approximately 2,594,000 US Sailors, Airmen, Marines, and Soldiers were sent to South Vietnam. Approximately 3,403,100 servicemen served thru-out Southeast Asia during the war.
Cherries were new soldiers who had not yet experienced a fire fight or mortar/rocket attack.
In America. the American soldiers? No. In Vietnam - the Vietnamese Viet-Cong? Yes.
They had a personal interest in the Vietnam war...they had to fight it (albeit against their will since they, for the most part, were conscripted by the military/or were draft induced volunteers to fight the war).