Originally posted by Syzygyone
But your apparent insinuation that the U.S. military could not win the war in Vietnam is just plain wrong. While I will grant you that the Vietnam war was MOSTLY not a war of attrition, that is not the fault of the military, and neither is the defeat. The US didn't win that war, not because it couldn't, but because Johnson, et al., micromanaged the combat and would not let it be a war of attrition.
I have a few objections to some of the points you've made here (and not just you, but some of the others in this thread).
First of all, Vietnam was
absolutely a war of attrition. The North Vietnamese knew that merely surviving and giving the appearance of solvency and military competency would, over time, turn the tide of American opinion against the war. That's a strategy not unlike the one employed by Washington et al. during the American Revolution. In that context, the Tet Offensive was a disastrous tactical blunder for them and a
huge strategic success.
In addition, Johnson's micromanagement certainly played a major roll in America's defeat (though if you consider the political climate, his micromanagement makes slightly more sense even if it remains unforgiveable). However, you seem to ignore the incompetence of military leadership at the time as well. Military leaders pleaded with civilian leadership to provide them with the troops necessary to "win the war" -- and without fail despite grudging reluctance,
civilian leaders did this. The number of troops in Vietnam steadily increased as per the stated requirements of the military leadership. The problem was that military leaders kept increasing their estimates of the troops necessary to secure victory until the numbers approached politically unsustainable levels. How could competent military leadership have been so wrong about the troops needed time and again?
-- Todd/Leviathn