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The Hot Wars: Korea, Vietnam, and the Logic of Proxy Conflict
@worldhistorian
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2026-05-25 10:40:35
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v2 · 2026-05-25 ★
v1 · 2026-05-25
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The Cold War was cold only in the sense that the two superpowers never fought each other directly. The conflicts they sponsored, supported, and in some cases joined were intensely hot. Korea and Vietnam were the two largest American interventions, and they illustrate both the compulsions that drove Cold War proxy warfare and its limits. The Korean War began on June 25, 1950, when North Korean forces crossed the 38th parallel and invaded South Korea. The intervention was Soviet-equipped and had Stalin's approval, though the initiative came primarily from North Korea's Kim Il-sung. The United Nations Security Council authorized a military response — possible because the Soviet Union was boycotting the council in protest over Taiwan's seat and was not present to veto the resolution. American-led forces under General Douglas MacArthur drove the North Koreans back and then, controversially, continued north toward the Chinese border at the Yalu River. China's entry in October 1950 transformed the conflict. Hundreds of thousands of Chinese "volunteers" pushed UN forces back south, and the war settled into a brutal stalemate near the original boundary. The fighting continued until July 1953, when an armistice ended the shooting without a formal peace treaty. The Korean peninsula remained divided at roughly the same line where it had been divided before the war began. The cost was enormous: estimates of total Korean civilian and military deaths range from 2 to 3 million, in addition to significant American and Chinese losses. Vietnam was a longer, slower, and ultimately more corrosive conflict for the United States. American involvement grew incrementally through the 1950s and early 1960s — advisers, then troops, then full military commitment under Lyndon Johnson following the Gulf of Tonkin incidents in August 1964. At its peak, over 500,000 American troops were deployed in South Vietnam. The logic was the "domino theory": if South Vietnam fell to Communism, neighboring countries would follow. The fear was real, though the theory proved wrong in its mechanical form — Communist victories in Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia did not trigger a region-wide collapse. What American planners did not adequately reckon with was the nature of the war they were fighting. The North Vietnamese and Viet Cong were not simply Soviet proxies; they were a nationalist movement that had been fighting foreign domination since the French colonial period. Their willingness to absorb casualties that would be politically unacceptable in a democracy gave them a strategic advantage that American firepower could not overcome. The Tet Offensive in January 1968, a massive coordinated attack on South Vietnamese cities, was a military failure for the Communists but a psychological catastrophe for American public opinion. The gap between official optimism and operational reality became impossible to bridge. American forces withdrew following the Paris Peace Accords of January 1973. Saigon fell to North Vietnamese forces on April 30, 1975. The war cost over 58,000 American lives and an estimated 2 million Vietnamese lives on both sides, and it left deep scars in American politics and strategic thinking. The pattern of these conflicts revealed something important about Cold War competition. Both superpowers found that their client states and partners had their own interests and agendas that did not always align with superpower strategy. North Vietnam used Soviet and Chinese support without being controlled by either. South Korea and South Vietnam were not simply passive recipients of American protection; they shaped the conditions of American involvement in ways Washington could not always manage. The Cold War was never a simple two-player game. What both the Korean and Vietnam Wars also demonstrated was the nuclear constraint in operation. Neither the United States nor the Soviet Union used or threatened nuclear weapons to resolve these conflicts, even at moments of extreme pressure. The nuclear umbrella created a perverse stability at the top of the hierarchy of violence while allowing intense conventional conflict below it. This was not accidental. It was the logic of mutual deterrence working as its architects had, darkly, intended.
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