How in the world were Korea and Vietnam just?
Korea - Keeping our part of a treaty. Defending defenseless nations against aggression as had not been done by the useless League of Nations when Fascist Italy invaded peaceful Ethiopia in the 1930s.
North Korea backed by the Soviet Union’s arms and equipment nakedly invaded the peaceful South and the
UN condemned it and ordered the north to back off. They didn’t. Russia walked out of the UN in protest, and the rest of the countries voted to intervene. Mc Arthur saw that the UN troops were almost run off the Peninsula by the time he took over - so he invaded at Inchon, defeated the Communist army and took over the entire peninsula up to the Chinese border.
Some halfway sympathetic to the new Mao Chinese Communist Government folks in the US Defense Department
(IMO but due to evidence I saw) ordered Mc Arthur not to bomb the bridges over the Yalu River (as this would be a “provocation” of Red China) and when he didn’t in came SCADS of so called Chinese “volunteers” that routed the Americans until they held the line near today’s DMZ. Eisenhower two years later negotiated a cease fire that exists today. The war (technically) isn’t over.
WHAT might NOT be so just was negotiating away the freedom of those areas the Chinese took into slavery (North Korea).
Vietnam - another treaty broken by the Communists but honored by us to our SEATO ally, the free country of South Vietnam. It was just to keep our promise to those who could not defend themselves against aggression (rather like Kuwait, except the Communists fought a phony guerilla war they passed off as a revolution - as if the Viet Cong had factories or grew sophisticated arms on trees!).
Richard Nixon succeeded Kennedy and Johnson, and continued to prosecute the war, but promised “Peace with Honor”. He eliminated the draft bit by bit (reducing it first to a lottery and only drafting SOME of the eligible 18 year olds - of which I was one who was able to keep a student deferment). He pulled troops back home bit by bit in a strategy called “Vietnamization” turning over security to the native people. Like we are doing today in the Middle East. He negotiated a peace treaty that got our POWs back-- for total withdrawal of US troops in January of 1973. And North Vietnam violated the treaty once the US left.
The US perhaps ought to have come back and routed the (then) nakedly invading North Vietnamese Regular Army - but congress and the Senate did not support that as they were busy trying to impeach Nixon for not helping them prosecute the Watergate burglars to their taste.
Communist atrocities equalling anything that justified other wars made a graveyard of South Vietnam and Cambodia. But Communists must not be criticized some say … THAT would be against PEACE!
** I COULD say that Vietnam WAS unjust -** but probably for OPPOSITE reasons than those oft heard – i.e. ** “WE** were against ***‘the people’ ***” garbage one hears. In World War II - our soldiers were drafted and risked their lives - but were allowed to “win”. End Nazism, and Fascism, and Imperialism by the Empire of Japan. Victory.
In Vietnam (especially) somehow drafting soldiers to be perpetual sitting ducks for whatever guerilla attack was being cooked up seemed to be OK. There was no march to Hanoi or Haiphong. However when we finally bombed those critical cities the enemy released our POWs and signed the “peace treaty”.
These things said - it IS not bad to question ourselves regarding “just wars”. But if I meet a Korean or Vietnam vet - or a Gulf War Vet, I will consider them first as defenders of others and people of honor. America “took over” not one square YARD of any of those countries (excepting embassies - and whatever bases the host nation asked us to use to protect them).
The title of this thread is a question. But it’s a pacifists question. Pacifism is not necessarily virtuous in all cases. It can be cowardly, foolhardy, selfish and traitorous (surrendering to evil) at times.
All the spiritual battles of the Bible become wrong if pacifism is an absolute. Jesus gave evil its hour on the day he became the ultimate pacifist (pacifism is not always WRONG either !) on the day He let himself be crucified. And there were times when he rebuked those who used the sword (Peter - and those who later would “live by the sword”). But He also told his disciples to sell a cloak or two and have a sword handy (for some reason - hmm - what would you need a sword for?).
St. Paul fought the good fight and spoke of wearing spiritual armor. St. Michael battled Satan.
Jesus Himself leads an army against evil in the book of Revelation (when He comes as the Lion instead of the Lamb). The book ENDS with peace and mercy though, so … it is good to always discern each case in the Holy Spirit and be led by His truth.
PHEW - nice to end on an UP note! In the end, for those who are saved, ETERNAL Peace! :heaven:

:extrahappy: