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Could More U S Air Power Have Won the Vietnam War?

Here s What You Need to Remember: Used effectively, airpower can stop conventional military offensives.  However, it could not resolve the fundamental political problems that made South Vietnam vulnerable to the North.  Airpower could neither destroy North Vietnamese commitment to unification, nor sufficiently strengthen the Saigon regime’s ability to control its own territory.  Without changing these basic factors, North Vietnam’s victory was just a matter of time. Effectively, the Obama administration has decided to rely on airpower in its efforts to limit the catastrophic, ongoing chaos caused by the Iraq War.  Thinking about the operation against ISIS in these terms almost inevitably evokes similar thoughts about previous catastrophic wars.  For example, could airpower have won the Vietnam War, or at least limited the extent of our defeat?

Wednesday letters: Boebert s grandstanding, 2020, and clean energy

So, it looks like Lauren Boebert, Colorado’s 3rd Congressional District Representative- Elect is ready to slap some leather come Jan. 6 when Congress meets to formally validate the votes of the Electoral College from the general election of Nov. 3. Ms. Boebert has stated that it is her duty to defend the Constitution. That’s true. It is. So, does she know that the U.S. Constitution expressly gives the power to hold elections to the states and the states have already certified the results? Does she know that the Electoral College also has upheld these results, as is its duty according to the U.S. Constitution?

6 Oddly Named U S Government Operations

Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images Composer Glenn Miller probably didn’t have an Allied air offensive in mind when he wrote the song “Chattanooga Choo-Choo,” but in 1944 that’s exactly what occurred under the same name. The goal of the offensive was to limit Germany’s access to locomotives that could be used as a transportation method for reinforcements to northwest France. British and U.S. fighter planes targeted railways in the western portion of German-occupied France. It was extremely successful, drastically decreasing railroad operations and, in turn, the speed of reinforcements. Operation Paperclip © pat hastings/Fotolia No, this wasn’t the solution to a mass staple deficiency. Rather, it was the United States’ recruitment of some 1,600 German scientists following World War II, many of whom had belonged to the Nazi Party. The motive behind the recruitment was the United States’ desire to gain an advantage over the Soviet Union in the Cold War and in the S

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