You are a complete retard. Soldiers who are enlisted do not get to pick who they fight or not. They obey orders and do what they are told. Just like you do when Tucker or whatever other braindead CTer tells you to.
That's fine for imbecilic plebs like you. You and all politicians live in MY Universe. I tell who goes where. Anti-white politicians and their families will go to the front lines with no weapons and no shoes. My instructions are for them to fight the Russians with their bare hands and feet!
Oh, and you can expect some fraggings as well. Would be hilarious to see some of the trannies fragged!
https://allthatsinteresting.com/fragging-vietnam-warFragging: When Soldiers In Vietnam Revolted Against Their Officers By Murdering Them With GrenadesIn the jungles of Vietnam where order and discipline hung by a thread, some officers faced a danger greater than the Viet Cong: their own men.
As the Vietnam War dragged on, soldiers began to see the war as unjust and unwinnable, leading to openly mutinous behavior.
By way of a “fragmentation grenade,” from which the term “fragging” was derived, a soldier could effectively do away with an officer without leaving any evidence. Because the shell of the grenade was destroyed, any fingerprints were destroyed with it. Individual grenades were also not given unique serial numbers, so any effort to trace the murder weapon back to the murderer was unlikely.
Fragging attacks were usually retaliation for some disciplinary action, although they were also sometimes a convenient means for worried troops to get rid of an officer they thought was incompetent.
Targets were sometimes even given a warning in the form of a grenade with their names painted on it, planted in their sleeping quarters with the safety pin still in.
Over the course of the entire Vietnam War, there were 800 documented fragging attempts in the Army and Marine Corps. By another account, over 1,000 such incidents were thought to have occurred. Between 1969 and 1970 alone, the U.S. Army reported 305 fraggings.
The true number of fragging incidents, however, may never be known. This is partly because the attacks themselves make it difficult to determine which were deliberate and partly because, in an attempt to spare the victims’ families further pain, the Army did not officially report the true cause of death of some of the officers.
The United State officially ended its involvement in Vietnam in 1973, along with its military draft. The end of the war also marked the end of the fragging epidemic, something which some historians speculate is not unrelated to the end of the draft.