P.O.W.s in the Vietnam War

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P.O.W.s in the Vietnam War

The Vietnam war, also called the Indochina War , may be said to have started in 1957 when Communist-led rebels began mounting terrorists attacks against the government of the Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam). The rebel forces, commonly called the Vietcong, were later aided by troops of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (North Vietnam). American combat personnel were formally committed to the defense of the South in 1965. An agreement calling for a ceasefire was signed in January 1973, and by March the few remaining U.S. millitary personnel in Vietnam were withdrawn. However, the war between the two Vietnamese sides persisted inconclusively for two additional years before South Vietnamese resistance suddenly and unexpectedly collapsed. Saigon, the capital of South Vietnam, fell to the Communists on April 30, 1975. A prisoner of war is traditionally a member of a belligerent's armed forces who has been captured by the enemy. The complexities of modern warfare, however, have led to the extensions of prisoner-of-war status to persons of other categories. International law identifies the categories of persons who should be classified as prisoners of war (POW) is to be treated humanely and is to be detained for no purpose other than to prevent his further participation in combat. The Vietnamese tortured the American soldiers beyond unimmagineable boundries. Torture isn't always bad as it is made out to be. Not getting mail, may not seem that bad to you, but what if somebody parents died and they received a letter telling them that and they never got it. The Vietcong or Vietminh would withold all the incoming mail. Lot of soldiers parents died or something really important happened and they were not t...

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...ably see them walking down the street hungry and homeless. That's what we did for them. We made it impossible for them to get good jobs. They saved our country. They saved our lives and we kicked them out of our social clique. If you see one walking down the street you should be ashamed. First, be ashamed for rooting against them. If you were a hippie or did any other type of political rallying against the war, than you were rooting against the United States. Second Kyles 4 be ashamed for not knowing that over two-thousand more prisoners-of-war are still in Vietnam. Almost twenty-five years after the wars end we still haven't kept our promise. The government knows about these names, but they would rather not say anything than admit they made a mistake. POWs really helped out before they were captured and this is how we repay them. They saved us; we abandoned them!

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