Many lessons were learned during the Cold War. To survive in a rapidly changing world, the United States must learn from these experiences. It learned from a resolution that led to the Tokyo Bay incident and subsequent invasion of Vietnam. I learned lessons from the fear of the Vietnam War. I learned from the Mai Rai genocide in Vietnam. And that is one of the most terrible events. One lesson learned from all these events is that suppression should be exercised during the period of uncertainty.
America was involved in Vietnam, an intricate war in the Cold War era. It is based on a policy like Domino's theory. The American tragedy in Vietnam has come from the lessons learned during the Second World War. It may be wrong to make a decision based on historical lessons. US participation in Vietnam is not merely a consultative position. Kennedy releases the war from the background of "consultation" and if the leader's torch is handed over to Johnson, he will also be out of the background. Both of them tried to win the Vietnam War by strengthening the promise of the United States, but they did not succeed. Kennedy and Johnson lost a lot of lives, and the whole country will lose the Vietnam War.
The citizen pays a very high price for the devastating and misguided war. We have learned the wrong lesson from Vietnam, and we do not seem to have learned from the Iraq war - they are based on lies and false stories. Over the past two decades, I have opposed every war in the change of the Middle East regime - from Iraq to Libya and Syria. Each of these wars shows that Congress is not fulfilling constitutional responsibility for war. Each produced unexpected but completely predictable results - the power of the Iraqi Islamic State and the Syrian state (Islamic state), the power filled by Libyan Al Qaeda and other violent radical groups vacuum