Peasants
The heat and smell. In the US the smell was of concrete and fossil fuels (traffic); in Vietnam it was the smell of vegetation mixed with swampy rivers, water buffaloes, and the humidity.
what losses did the American forces face during the battle of 1812
Your face is the population of vietnam
American Army slang for a common infantryman, originating in WW2
Drafted men served for two years on active duty. They just did their time, and discharged.
They won the battle of 1812
that American rifles were less accurate than the British muskets
he was an army who won the Victoria cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces.
David H. Hackworth has written: 'About face' -- subject(s): History, Biography, Soldiers, Personal narratives, American, Korean War, 1950-1953, United States, United States. Army, American Personal narratives 'Steel My Soldiers' Hearts' -- subject(s): Vietnam War, 1961-1975, Personal narratives, American, Regimental histories, History, United States. Army. Infantry Division, 9th. Regiment, 39th. Battalion, 4th, United States, American Personal narratives
In June 1775, George Washington was appointed as the commander-in-chief of the Continental Army by the Second Continental Congress. His leadership was pivotal in organizing the colonial forces during the American Revolutionary War, particularly in the face of British military might. Washington's appointment reflected the confidence the Congress had in his military experience and leadership abilities.
An army of Shoop Da Whoops who would be used to combat the evil forces of Darth Helmet and his legion of face hugging, exploding mamorsets.
Vietnamization, an American term first used in the spring of 1969 by Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird to describe the policy, strategy, and programs adopted by the administration of Richard M. Nixon for the Vietnam War. Vietnamization entailed the progressive withdrawal of U.S. forces from South Vietnam combined with efforts to enhance the training and modernization of all South Vietnamese military forces to enable the government of South Vietnam to assume greater responsibility for the conduct of the war. The policy also encompassed U.S. support for Saigon to more vigorously pursue rural pacification and development to win the loyalty of the peasants and to strengthen its political base through village and hamlet elections, social and economic reforms, and expanded social services.Under General Creighton W. Abrams, who succeeded General William C. Westmoreland as the overall U.S. military commander in South Vietnam in June 1968, allied military strategy under Vietnamization emphasized operations to weaken the enemy's capabilities by attacking its logistical bases in South Vietnam and neighboring Cambodia and Laos. Operations such as the May 1970 American ground incursioninto Cambodia and the January 1971 South Vietnamese incursion into Laos, Lam Son 719, were justified as means to gain additional time for Vietnamization to progress. These operations only temporarily disrupted the enemy's plans. The poor showing of Saigon's forces in Lam Son 719 cast doubt on the efficacyof Vietnamization, as did the heavy relianceof Saigon's forces on U.S. airpower to repulse North Vietnam's 1972 Easter offensive.Vietnamization was a useful facade for the withdrawal of American forces from Vietnam between 1969 and 1973. However, despite the extensive equipment the departing U.S. forces turned over to Saigon's armed forces, the latter were ill prepared after 1973 to face North Vietnamese forces in the absence of sustained, direct American military support.