|
|
Books > Humanities > History > Asian / Middle Eastern history > From 1900
Initially stationed at the U.S. Army's counterintelligence
headquarters in Saigon, David Noble was sent north to launch the
army's first covert intelligence-gathering operation in Vietnam's
Central Highlands. Living in the region of the
Montagnards-Vietnam's indigenous tribal people, deemed critical to
winning the war-Noble documented strategic hamlets and Green Beret
training camps, where Special Forces teams taught the Montagnards
to use rifles rather than crossbows and spears. In this book, he
relates the formidable challenges he confronted in the course of
his work. Weaving together memoir, excerpts from letters written
home, and photographs, Noble's compelling narrative throws light on
a little-known corner of the Vietnam War in its early years-before
the Tonkin Gulf Resolution and the deployment of combat units-and
traces his transformation from a novice intelligence agent and
believer in the war to a political dissenter and active protester.
"An overwhelmingly eloquent book of the purest and most simple writing on Vietnam."—David Halberstam
More than twenty-five years after the official end of the Vietnam War, Dear America allows us to witness the war firsthand through the eyes of the men and women who served in Vietnam. In this collection of more than 200 letters, they share their first impressions of the rigors of life in the bush, their longing for home and family, their emotions over the conduct of the war, and their ache at the loss of a friend in battle. Poignant in their rare honesty, the letters from Vietnam are "riveting,...extraordinary by [their] very ordinariness...for the most part, neither deep nor philosophical, only very, very human" (Los Angeles Times). Revealing the complex emotions and daily realities of fighting in the war, these close accounts offer a powerful, uniquely personal portrait of the many faces of Vietnam's veterans. Over 100,000 copies sold.
"Not a history book, not a war novel....Dear America is a book of truth."—Boston Globe
The Khmer Rouge regime took control of Cambodia by force of
arms, then committed the most brazen crimes since the Third Reich:
at least 1.5 million people murdered between 1975 and 1979. Yet no
individuals were ever tried or punished. This book is the story of
Peter Maguire's effort to learn how Cambodia's "culture of
impunity" developed, why it persists, and the failures of the
"international community" to confront the Cambodian genocide.
Written from a personal and historical perspective, "Facing Death
in Cambodia" recounts Maguire's growing anguish over the gap
between theories of universal justice and political realities.
Maguire documents the atrocities and the aftermath through
personal interviews with victims and perpetrators, discussions with
international and NGO officials, journalistic accounts, and
government sources gathered during a ten-year odyssey in search of
answers. The book includes a selection of haunting pictures from
among the thousands taken at the now infamous Tuol Sleng prison
(also referred to as S-21), through which at least 14,000 men,
women, and children passed -- and from which fewer than a dozen
emerged alive.
What he discovered raises troubling questions: Was the Cambodian
genocide a preview of the genocidal civil wars that would follow in
the wake of the Cold War? Is international justice an attainable
idea or a fiction superimposed over an unbearably dark reality? Did
issues of political expediency allow Cambodian leaders to escape
prosecution?The Khmer Rouge violated the Nuremberg Principles, the
United Nations Charter, the laws of war, and the UN Genocide
Convention. Yet in the decade after the regime's collapse, the
perpetrators were rescued and rehabilitated-even rewarded-by China,
Thailand, the United States, and the UN. According to Peter
Maguire, Cambodia holds the key to understanding why recent UN
interventions throughout the world have failed to prevent
atrocities and to enforce treaties.
As the Vietnam War divided the nation, a network of antiwar
coffeehouses appeared in the towns and cities outside American
military bases. Owned and operated by civilian activists, GI
coffeehouses served as off-base refuges for the growing number of
active-duty soldiers resisting the war. In the first history of
this network, David L. Parsons shows how antiwar GIs and civilians
united to battle local authorities, vigilante groups, and the
military establishment itself by building a dynamic peace movement
within the armed forces. Peopled with lively characters and set in
the tense environs of base towns around the country, this book
complicates the often misunderstood relationship between the
civilian antiwar movement, U.S. soldiers, and military officials
during the Vietnam era. Using a broad set of primary and secondary
sources, Parsons shows us a critical moment in the history of the
Vietnam-era antiwar movement, when a chain of counterculture
coffeehouses brought the war's turbulent politics directly to the
American military's doorstep.
|
|