How many British soldiers died in the Vietnam War?
Casualties. For Britain's involvement in the First Vietnam War, the officially stated casualty list was 40 British and Indian soldiers killed and French and Japanese casualties a little higher. An estimated 2,700 Viet Minh were killed.
// How many British soldiers died in the Vietnam War?//
nil
Harold wilson famously refused to send ANY troops to Vietnam and incurred Johnson's dislike and his disinclination to relieve WIlsons embarrassment over the usual spend spend spend Labour policies. But he still said no - this did not prevent 2 large anti vietnam war marches in London in the late sixties
so years ago when you went froo Ho Chi Minh airport ( post liberation that is ! ) the figure next to - nos of troops sent to Viet was Nil,
yeah they had a placard wivvit on.
but you say were there any Brits serving with other forces? doubtless - but I dont think the viets found out
As for Brits involved in the re establishment of the French Empire in Indochina 1945- in the end they re-armed the defeated enemy - yup the Japanese - ooer that must have been interesting !
PBs and smithsonian intellectuals are not above rewriting history according to their present day needs
if they are aware of the chaos of invading Iraq and leaving nothing in its place - they might be less critical of liberating the British and French empires and .... leaving nothing in its place - hence Viet and 50 000 american dead
fer - instance - WW2 Battle of stalingrad - the first twenty minutes or so was on yet again the Holocaust. but hold it - S-grad on the Volga in Ukraine is er nowhere near the death camps of Poland nor did many ukrainians end up there dead. - and Zhukov and the Battle of Kirsk which did for the German Army is likewise unconnected
Never mind that [- you got it
Just out of curiosity, sorry nothing really to do with original post. But does anyone know about the history of the music and words for God Save the Queen. Who and when it was written.
//It was the melody that came first, possibly as a Tudor plainsong, or chant. The earliest musical manuscript evidence was written around 1619 by Dr John Bull, who was a famed English organist living in Belgian exile following a sex scandal.//
PP lets not open the jap war again ;)
oh OK if madame says so
but not even a little - - slit ? please small opening remember
but not even a small bit - - - a chink ? - please that is also a small opening too - I have no idea of any other meanings you SAY might exist
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