In terms of fatalities: WWI had the most, followed by Viet Nam and Korea.
Korean democracy stood up to communism. the result of this was a stalemate. (nobody wins_a tie) this happened around 150-53.
The Vietnam War ended in a decisive communist victory, while the Korean War did not. ( apex )
About 1,000,000 men.
There were many more than just two, but Korea and Vietnam were the largest and most serious of the Cold War 'skirmishes."
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The answer is yes, South Korea was in the Vietnam War!
They both had an impact. ALL wars will influence/impact their respective generations. Naturally, some will impact more than others. The bloodier the war, the more the impact. WWII, for the US, had more casualties than Vietnam, Vietnam had more casualties than Korea, WWII had more US casualties than WWI did. The US Civil War had more casualties than any of our wars (however, we were fighting ourselves, so one must be careful when using those figures). Casualties aside, it may be said that the greatest impact about WWII was when the world entered the "atomic age", on 06 August 1945, when the atomic bomb was used to end WWII. The war however, had been won. Vietnam's impact may have been that it wasn't.
Korean democracy stood up to communism. the result of this was a stalemate. (nobody wins_a tie) this happened around 150-53.
Korea and Vietnam.
world war two dummy
Those statistics are itemized on the "Vietnam War casualties" website.
About 1,000,000 men.
The Vietnam War ended in a decisive communist victory, while the Korean War did not. ( apex )
About 211,472 casualties.
The website, "Vietnam War casualties" might be helpful.
Nearly 5 million people died. More than half of these–about 10 percent of Korea's prewar population–were civilians. (This rate of civilian casualties was higher than World War II's and the Vietnam War's.) Almost 40,000 Americans died in action in Korea, and more than 100,000 were wounded.
Over 3,000 Pennsylvania men were killed in Vietnam. See website: Vietnam War Casualties by state, for their names.