Originally posted by: bauerbrazil
Looks like for some idiots that win a war is when you kill more enemys, hmmm right!!!!!
It isn't? You might want to think about what you just posted.
There are very few wars in history where the "winning" side suffered significantly more casualties than the "losing" side. Usually that only happens when a much larger nation attacks a much smaller nation, and the larger nation can afford the higher casualty rate. Otherwise, given 2 equally sized armies, the side with the higher casualty rate is eventually going to run out of soldiers.
The Vietnam War is almost unique in history in that the much larger nation suffered significantly fewer casualties, and still "lost".
Like I said, the issue was one of
will. And of affordable cost. Wars are always about will and cost. Whichever side is willing to expend more cost (be it soldiers or weaponry), and is actually able to afford to do so, is usually the winner. While the US could have easily afforded to win the Vietnam War (and actually was winning the war while it was in it), it had no will to do so, as it had virtually nothing to win. When the perception of affordability got too high for US citizens, they pulled out. OTOH, the North Vietnamese had everything to lose. They were fighting to the death for their homeland. We were not. If we lost anywhere, we lost there. No where else.