Meadmaker wrote: ↑Fri Apr 12, 2024 3:37 pm
President Bush wrote: ↑Fri Apr 12, 2024 1:09 am
You neglected to mention the most striking difference: Hitler´s side lost, Kissinger´s side didn´t.
Last time I checked, Vietnam was a communist country. I think Kissinger's side lost, although the degree of defeat was not so bad as Hitler's. The Cambodians, Laotians and Vietnamese didn't have an opportunity to put him on trial.
Last time I checked Laos was a very interesting place, great food, chill people, very rural mountainous countryside.
One phenomenon that happens a lot with powerful countries is that they have a noble cause, but their execution in pursuing the noble cause is so bad that the people who are supposed to be the beneficiaries end up not appreciating the effort, because the "collateral damage" seems a bit worse than the problem they were trying to solve. In Kissinger's case, I think that fighting communism truly was a noble cause. I don't just mean that he believed it was a noble cause. I think it actually was a noble cause. Where it went wrong is that military, from the top generals to the 19 year old privates, tended to value the lives of the Asians less highly than those of Americans.
Sadly it's not something confined to American in the 1970s. I think there are examples from today's headlines that are similar.
Laos and the state of Michigan are fairly similar in size.
https://www.mylifeelsewhere.com/country ... n-usa/laos
During the Vietnam War US planes dropped over 270,000,000 bombs on Laos. Divide that by 83, the number of counties in Michigan.
Imagine three million, two hundred fifty three thousand, and twelve cluster bombs dropped on every county in your state over the course of 580,000 bombing missions.
Have a nice day.