Most US personnel would say the"Tet"offensive in 1968 was a turning point.
A "hot" battle of the cold war. Korea was the first one.
battle of midway
The two incidents (one actual sea battle, and one questionable sea battle) allowed President Johnson (LBJ) to transition the Vietnam War from a guerrilla war into a conventional open war against Hanoi (Capital of North Vietnam).
One hot battle of a cold war.
Vietnam was the second "hot" battle of the Cold War (the fight against communism). Korea was the first "hot" battle. Vietnam was fought under the rule of the domino theory, if one country falls to communism, then the next one will fall. We fought in Vietnam to stop the spread of communism.
The battle was one of the mst decisive ones fought in the American Civil War, and is famous for being the first conflict to be extensively documented by war photographers.
After the war, there was a reunification of Vietnam. So the answer is "One country".
the Vietnam War.
the number that i know is 35 thats the number that i know
US Infantrymen experienced more combat in Vietnam due to the helicopter; which picked him up from one battle and inserted him into another firefight. After two battles, if he was needed in another ongoing skirmish, he'd be choppered into that one too. During WW2, when a GI was in battle, that would be his only one. Until they drove their Trucks, Half Tracks, or in MOST CASEs "Walked" (Marched) toward's their next battle. WW2 was a war in which GI's ADVANCED towards the enemy's capital (Berlin or Tokyo). Fight one battle, win it, then advance forward to the next one, until the war was over. The Vietnam War was fight over there, then go back and fight over here, then go back again and fight in that area. The Helicopter made the Vietnam War the most mobile war in military history.
The dictionary defines two (or more) recognized nations fighting each other as a war. A battle is one engagement or series of engagements over the same objective (a hilltop or city for example). And technically the American Civil War is considered the "War of the Rebellion" in the US Government archives. Neither the US Civil War nor the Vietnam War were declared wars.
one took place in korea and one in Vietnam. look at a map. Also, there was Viet Kong in vietnam, not in korea