Contrary to popular belief, the US involvement in Vietnam began in 1953 when Truman secretly supported the French during the Vietnamese war of independence. Eisenhower then sent "advisors to the region", some 5,000 I believe. Then Kennedy increased this by a further 8000-9000 troops. The kennedy administration also passionately supported President Diem of Vietnam, who they installed and who committed copious amounts of human right violations. The US eventually "disposed" of him <span>(assassinated), this showed the extent the Kennedy administration was involved in Vietnam. </span>
Pretty sure its all of the above
Checks and balances, kind of like the government here. The Judicial branch regulates the Legislative and Executive branches, the Legislative branch monitors the Executive and Judicial, and the Executive branch monitors the Legislative and Judicial.
Below are the achievements during theFederalistt ear:
1. Endorsement of Constitution - When a bill of rights was proposed in Congress in 1789, North Carolina sanctioned the Constitution. At long last, Rhode Island, which had rejected the Constitution in March 1788 by prevalent submission, called an approving tradition in 1790 as indicated by the Constitutional Convention.
2. Washington's eagerness to surrender control toward the finish of two terms - It was his respect to regular citizen specialists amid the Revolution and his remarkable surrender of military power at the war's end that made him a Republican general. It was his commitment to the country's motivation and his devoted response to the rehashed summons to open administration that made him the Republican statesman.
Below are the failures of the Federalist Era:
1. 1. Divisive parties in politics - this has a huge impact to the Federalist Era
2. Whiskey Rebellion - These are rebels who protest for the whiskey tax
3. Substantial National Debt