My point was that Uncle Ho was not a 'good guy' because he was a classic product of the Comintern, which was demonstrated by his decades long service and the actions of the party he founded after the end of the Vietnam War.
I'm not sure what it has to do with the WW2 alliance, especially as Churchill drew up plans to attack the Soviets immediately after the war and gave them serous consideration. The only reason the alliance was possible was that the Nazis were considered even worse.
Unless you believe Ho was a very reluctant partner, the situations are completely different.
I believe he was acting in what he thought were the best interests of his country. Obviously, the Vietnamese wanted freedom from the French and other foreign powers (including the US), and we didn't really give Ho any other choice but to seek out allies elsewhere.
As for what it has to do with the WW2 alliance, the whole justification behind the Cold War and interventions like Vietnam was rooted in the US perception that communists are evil and can't be reasoned with or negotiated with. Yet our alliance with the Soviet Union (and later, Communist China) proved that they were reasonable and could be negotiated with. Ho was also a US ally during WW2.
Patton wanted to attack the USSR, and MacArthur wanted to attack Red China. Both were overruled and fired for taking those positions. If the US government really thought they were as bad as all that, then they would have (and should have) attacked when they had the golden opportunity to do so.
The fact that they didn't demonstrates that either the US leadership didn't think commies were as bad as the anti-communist propaganda was saying, or they deliberately wanted to set America up for more wars in the future. This could possibly indicate that the entire Cold War was nothing more than geopolitical theater.
It was never about morality though. The Soviets were massively more powerful, and had much more money and influence with international communism.
Not too shabby for a supposedly "failed state," wouldn't you say? Especially after all the untold death and destruction they endured in WW1, the Russian Civil War, and WW2. The fact that they were able to recover so quickly and still be a formidable opponent in the Cold War says something about their ingenuity, strength, and resourcefulness. In contrast, the US was virtually untouched by either WW1 or WW2, yet they still beat us into outer space and surpassed our military in size and strength.
After the Sino-Soviet split, weakening the Soviet bloc was the classic Realist move.
Yes, it was the right play for the West to make. The Soviet hold over Eastern Europe was clearly weakening, and they also had the same Tsarist era problem of managing a sprawling multi-national empire of numerous ethnicities.
That they were less bad after Stalin, didn't make them particularly good though. Even after Khrushchev, Brezhnev invaded Czechoslovakia and maintained the right to invade any Warsaw Pact countries who were threatening to break away. He was also very repressive internally and stayed in power until the 1980s.
Brezhnev was not as bad as Stalin or Khrushchev. For one thing, his power was somewhat limited compared to Stalin's unquestioned absolute rule. Brezhnev took a more low key approach and left most people alone as long as they kept their mouths shut and didn't rock any boats. He wasn't good by any standard, but just as with any world leader, he may have felt that it was his duty to act in the best interests of his country.
It was likely the same with Ho. He apparently believed that it was better for his country that it be independent and free of imperialist domination. I don't believe he was some sort of automaton or puppet of Moscow, but they had to get their training and weapons from somewhere. But they had to deal with the French, then the Japanese, then the French again, then the Americans and other Allied nations.
I guess the question is: Even if Ho was an agent of Moscow and truly a bad guy, does that still necessitate or justify US interference in what was essentially a civil war in another country?