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Books > Humanities > History > Asian / Middle Eastern history > From 1900
In a new and updated second edition, this book--first published in
1983--provides a detailed review of the end of the Vietnam War.
Drawing on the author's eyewitness reporting and extensive
research, the book relies on carefully reported facts, not partisan
myths, to reconstruct the war's last years and harrowing final
months. The catastrophic suffering those events brought to ordinary
Vietnamese civilians and soldiers is vividly portrayed. The largely
unremembered wars in Cambodia and Laos are examined as well, while
new material in an updated final chapter points out troubling
parallels between the Vietnam War and America's wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan.
Reuel Long's experiences as an MD in the emergency rooms of Flint,
Michigan prepared him for only some of what he would see in a
mobile army surgical hospital. Antiwar sentiment among the doctors
in basic training at Fort Sam Houston set the tone for his tour as
a general medical officer. In March 1971, the 27th MASH played a
critical role treating survivors of the deadliest attack on any
firebase during the Vietnam War. Long's vivid memoir recalls the
casualties he cared for during the war, including one he crossed
paths with 44 years later-who in his own words describes his
rehabilitation from the loss of his legs and his protesting the war
from a wheelchair. An addendum gives an insider's account of the
U.S. military's initial failure to remedy a fatal design flaw in
the M16 rifle, which caused an unknown number of American
casualties.
In the summer of 1969, as the Vietnam War was being turned over to
the South Vietnamese, Lieutenant John Raschke arrived in Chuong
Thien Province deep in the Mekong Delta, eager to have a positive
impact. Recounting his assignment to a provincial advisory team of
military and civilian personnel, this memoir depicts the ordinary
and the extraordinary of life both inside and outside the
wire--mortar attacks, firefights and snipers, hot showers, good
meals and comradery, the life and death struggles of the Vietnamese
people and the bonds he formed with them.
On his second tour in Vietnam, U.S. Army Captain John Haseman
served 18 months as a combat advisor in the Mekong Delta's Kien Hoa
Province. His detailed memoir gives one of the few accounts of a
district-level advisor's experiences at the "point of the spear."
Often the only American going into combat with his South Vietnamese
counterparts, Haseman highlights the importance of trust and
confidence between advisors and their units and the courage of the
men he fought with during the 1972 North Vietnamese summer
offensive. Among the last advisors to leave the field, Haseman
describes the challenges of supporting his counterparts with fewer
and fewer resources, and the emotional conclusion of an advisory
mission near the end of the Vietnam War.
Steven Grzesik's counter-culture experience in Greenwich Village
ended with a bad acid trip followed by a draft notice. The Vietnam
War, then at its height, seemed doomed to failure by cynical
politicians and a skeptical public, a prediction he weighed against
his sense of duty to himself and to his country. Through a variety
of combat duties--with the infantry, the 36th Engineer Battalion, F
Co. 75th Rangers and the 174th Assault Helicopter Co.--and several
close calls with death, Grzesik's detailed memoir recounts his two
tours in-country, where he hoped merely to survive with a semblance
of heroism, yet ultimately redefined himself.
By the time of the Vietnam War, the U.S. military had transitioned
to jet aircraft. Yet leaders soon learned prop-driven planes could
still play a role in counterinsurgency warfare. World War II-era
Douglas B-26 light bombers proved effective in close air support
and interdiction, beginning with Operation Farm Gate in 1961. Forty
B-26s were remanufactured as improved A-26 attack aircraft, which
destroyed hundreds of North Vietnamese supply vehicles on the Ho
Chi Minh Trail in 1966-1969. The personal recollections of 37
pilots, navigators, maintenance and armament personnel, and family
members, tell the harrowing story of B-26 and A-26 Air Commando
Wing combat operations in Vietnam and Laos.
The conventional narrative of the Vietnam War often glosses over
the decade leading up to it. Covering the years 1954-1963, this
book presents a thought-provoking reexamination of the war's long
prelude--from the aftermath of French defeat at Dien Bien
Phu--through Hanoi's decision to begin reunification by force--to
the assassination of South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem.
Established narratives of key events are given critical reappraisal
and new light is shed on neglected factors. The strategic
importance of Laos is revealed as central to understanding how the
war in the South developed.
In March 2004, the unprovoked ambush, killing and desecration of
the bodies of American civilian security contractors in Fallujah,
Iraq, caused the National Command Authorities in Washington, DC. to
demand that the newly arrived Marine Expeditionary Force there take
action against the perpetrators and other insurgent forces. Planned
Stability and Support Operations were cast aside as insurgent
fighters dared the Marines to enter Fallujah. Marine infantrymen,
tankers, helicopter crews, and amphibious vehicle drivers all
pitched into high-intensity battles and firefights during the first
fights of Fallujah in April 2004. Across the board cooperation and
innovation marked these fighting Marines in combined arms fights
that no one expected. Marines fought in the streets, conducted
house-to-house searches, cleared buildings of enemy, and used tank
main guns in direct support of urban environment operations.
Helicopter crews supported operations on the ground with rockets
and machine-gun fire, and Amtrac Marines transported forces to face
enemy RPG and machine-gun fire. Marines from infantry squad members
to a battalion commander were interviewed by Marine Corps field
historians within days or weeks of the events at nearby combat
outposts and camps. This book combines these interview notes and
the words of the men themselves to create a unique narrative of
Marines in this combat.
In 1950, just five years after the end of World War II, Britain and
America again went to war--this time to try and combat the spread
of communism in East Asia following the invasion of South Korea by
communist forces from the North. This book charts the course of the
UK-US 'special relationship' from the journey to war beginning in
1947 to the fall of the Labour government in 1951. Ian McLaine
casts fresh light on relations between Truman and Attlee and their
officials, diplomats and advisors, including Acheson and MacArthur.
He shows how Britain was persuaded to join a war it could ill
afford and was forced to rearm at great cost to the economy. The
decision to participate in the war caused great strain to the
Labour party--provoking the Bevan-Gaitskell split which was to keep
the party out of office for the next decade. McLaine's revisionist
study shows how disastrous the war was for the British--and for the
Labour party in particular. It sheds important new light on UK-US
relations during a key era in diplomatic and Cold War history.
At "zero dark thirty" on January 30, 1971, units of the U.S. Fifth
Mechanized Division left their firebases along the DMZ heading west
along Provincial Route 9. The mission, called Dewey Canyon II, was
to reopen the road from Khe Sahn Air Base to the Laotian border, in
support of a South Vietnamese invasion of Laos (doomed from the
start) to cut off the Ho Chi Minh Trail. Alpha Company of U.S. 61st
Infantry performed commendably in keeping Route 9 open, with just
one casualty killed by friendly fire. They returned to Firebase
Charlie-2 in April, exhausted but hopeful--the Fifth would be
leaving Vietnam in July. They patrolled the "western hills" through
May as rocket attacks fell each evening. On the 21st, a direct hit
on a bunker killed 30 of the 63 men inside--18 were from Alpha Co.
This is their story, as told to Specialist Lou Pepi by members of
his unit.
The first account of the new Taliban-showing who they are, what
they want, and how they differ from their predecessors Since the
fall of Kabul in 2021, the Taliban have effective control of
Afghanistan-a scenario few Western commentators anticipated. But
after a twenty-year-long bitter war against the Republic of
Afghanistan, reestablishing control is a complex procedure. What is
the Taliban's strategy now that they've returned to power? In this
groundbreaking new account, Hassan Abbas examines the resurgent
Taliban as ruptures between moderates and the hardliners in power
continue to widen. The group is now facing debilitating
threats-from humanitarian crises to the Islamic State in
Khorasan-but also engaging on the world stage, particularly with
China and central Asian states. Making considered use of sources
and contacts in the region, and offering profiles of major Taliban
leaders, Return of the Taliban is the essential account of the
movement as it develops and consolidates its grasp on Afghanistan.
In February 1968, the U.S. Army's 82nd Airborne Division was
understrength, with only enough paratroopers to deploy a single
brigade. The 3rd Brigade was flown 9000 miles to reinforce American
units fighting the North Vietnamese Army around Hue--received a
Valorous Unit Award for their actions there. James Dorn was on
Brigade staff. He later led a rifle platoon with the 3rd in the
rice paddies west of Saigon. In his second year with the 173rd
Airborne Brigade in the Central Highlands. he again led a platoon
until promoted to captain. His frank and detailed memoir recounts
their diverse combat missions, inhumanity for civilians and the
day-to-day life of Infantrymen in the field.
In 1968, Theodore Hammett stepped forward for a war he believed was
wrong, pressured by his father's threat to disown him if he
withdrew from a Marine Corps officer candidate program. He hated
the Vietnam War and soon grew to hate Vietnam and its people. As a
supply officer at a field hospital uncomfortably near the DMZ, he
employed thievery, bargaining and lies to secure supplies for his
unit and retained his sanity with the help of alcohol, music and
the promise of going home. In 2008, he returned to Vietnam for a
five-year "second tour" to assist in improving HIV/AIDS policies
and prevention programs in Hanoi. His memoir recounts his service
at the height of the war, and how the country he detested became
his second home.
In 1966, Dr. Richard Carlson was just two years out of medical
school and in his mid-20s. He was about to embark on a year-long
tour in Vietnam to treat the many forgotten victims of the war: the
civilians. During medical school he was introduced to the Los
Angeles County General Hospital, the huge institution that provided
medical care for LA's socially and medically deprived. Dedicated to
the underserved, when drafted he applied to work in a Vietnamese
civilian hospital. His tenure at the LA county hospital was the
best training for what he'd experience in Vietnam. His arrival
coincided with a bloody escalation of the conflict. But like many
Americans, he believed South Vietnam desired a democratic future
and that the U.S. was helping to achieve that goal. Armed with both
his medical bag and a typewriter, Dr. Carlson diligently chronicled
his efforts to save lives in the Mekong delta province of Bac Lieu.
The result is a vivid recollection, detailing the inspiring stories
of the AMA volunteer doctors, USAID nurses and corpsmen that he
worked alongside to treat the local citizens, many of whom were
Viet Cong. He gives a glimpse of the emerging understanding of
post-traumatic stress disorder and his team's development of a
pioneering family planning clinic. Featuring more than 80
photographs, this book relates the fighting of both exotic and
common diseases and the competition among civilians for medical
services. The medical facilities and equipment were primitive, and
the doctors' efforts were often hampered by folk remedies and
superstition.
'Soft' Counterinsurgency reviews the promise and actual achievement
of Human Terrain Teams, the small groups of social scientists that
were eventually embedded in every combat brigade in Iraq and
Afghanistan. The book, based on interviews with both HTT personnel
and their military commanders, examines the military's need for
sociocultural information, the ethical issues surrounding research
carried out in combat zones, and the tensions between military and
social science organizational cultures. The account provides a
close, detailed account of HTT activities, a critical reflection on
the possibilities of creating a 'softer, ' less violent
counterinsurgency, and the difficulty of attempting to make war
more 'intelligent' and discriminating.
What happens when a career Marine officer stops believing in the
doctrine of the Corps and the official pretexts for war? In 2006,
Winston Tierney deployed to Iraq's Anbar Province with the Fourth
Reconnaissance Battalion, excited and proud to serve his country in
the fight against international terrorism. After several trips to
Iraq over the next nine years he returned depleted by hatred,
mendacity, alcohol abuse and PTSD, he felt he had "seen behind the
curtain"-and didn't like what he saw. This hard-hitting memoir
depicts the brutal realities of the conflict in Iraq at street
level, while giving a clear-eyed treatise on the immorality of war
and the catastrophe of America's failures in the Middle East.
During the first half of 1969, Bravo Troop, 3rd Squadron, 4th
Cavalry, 25th Infantry Division operated northwest of Saigon in the
vicinity of Go Dau Ha, fighting in 15 actions on the Cambodian
border, in the Boi Loi Woods, the Hobo Woods and Michelin Rubber
Plantation and on the outskirts of Tay Ninh City. In that time,
Bravo Troop saw 10 percent of its average field strength killed
while inflicting much heavier losses on the enemy. This memoir
vividly recounts those six months of intense armored cavalry combat
in Vietnam through the eyes of an artillery forward observer,
highlighting his fire direction techniques and the routines and
frustrations of searching for the enemy and chaos of finding him.
For Southeast Asia, the Vietnam War altered forever the history,
topography, people, economy, and politics of the Democratic
Republic of Vietnam (DRV), the Republic of Vietnam (RVN), Cambodia,
and Laos. That the war was controversial is an understatement as is
the notion that the war can be understood from any one perspective.
One way of understanding the Vietnam War is by marking its time
with turning points, both major and minor, that involved events or
decisions that helped to influence its course in the years to
follow. By examining a few of these turning points, an
organizational framework takes shape that makes understanding the
war more possible. Historical Dictionary of the War in Vietnam
emphasizes the international nature of the war, as well as provide
a greater understanding of the long scope of the conflict. The
major events associated with the war will serve as the foundation
of the book while additional entries will explore the military,
diplomatic, political, social, and cultural events that made the
war unique. While military subjects will be fully explored, there
will be greater attention to other aspects of the war. All of this
is done through a chronology, an introductory essay, an extensive
bibliography, and over 600 cross-referenced dictionary entries.
This book is an excellent access point for students, researchers,
and anyone wanting to know more about the Vietnam War.
During the Vietnam War, the Military Assistance Command, Vietnam
Studies and Observations Group (MACVSOG) was a highly-classified,
U.S. joint-service organization that consisted of personnel from
Army Special Forces, the Air Force, Navy SEALs, Marine Corps Force
Reconnaissance units, and the CIA. This secret organization was
committed to action in Southeast Asia even before the major
build-up of U.S. forces in 1965 and also fielded a division-sized
element of South Vietnamese military personnel, indigenous
Montagnards, ethnic Chinese Nungs, and Taiwanese pilots in its
varied reconnaissance, naval, air, and agent operations. MACVSOG
was without doubt the most unique U.S. unit to participate in the
Vietnam War, since its operational mandate authorized its missions
to take place "over the fence" in North Vietnam, Laos, and
Cambodia, where most other American units were forbidden to go.
During its nine-year existence it managed to participate in most of
the significant operations and incidents of the conflict. MACVSOG
was there during the Gulf of Tonkin incidents, during air
operations over North Vietnam, the Tet Offensive, the secret
bombing of and ground incursion into Cambodia, Operation Lam Son
719, the Green Beret murder case, the Easter Invasion, the Phoenix
Program, and the Son Tay POW Raid. The story of this extraordinary
unit has never before been told in full and comes as a timely
blueprint for combined-arms, multi-national unconventional warfare
in the post-9/11 age. Unlike previous works on the subject, Black
Ops, Vietnam is a complete chronological history of the unit drawn
from declassified documents, memoirs, and previous works on the
subject, which tended to focus only on particular aspects of the
unit's operations.
A Times Political Book of the Year 2022 A powerful and revelatory
eyewitness account of the American collapse in Afghanistan, its
desperate endgame, and the war's echoing legacy. Elliot Ackerman
left the American military ten years ago, but his time in
Afghanistan and Iraq with the Marines and, later, as a CIA
paramilitary officer marked him indelibly. When the Taliban began
to close in on Kabul in August of 2021 and the Afghan regime began
its death spiral, he found himself pulled back into the conflict.
The official evacuation process was a bureaucratic failure that led
to a humanitarian catastrophe. Ackerman was drawn into an impromptu
effort to arrange flights and negotiate with both Taliban and
American forces to secure the safe evacuation of hundreds. These
were desperate measures taken during a desperate end to America's
longest war, but the success they achieved afforded a degree of
redemption: and, for Ackerman, a chance to reconcile his past with
his present. The Fifth Act is an astonishing human document that
brings the weight of twenty years of war to bear on a single week
at its bitter end. Using the dramatic rescue efforts in Kabul as
his lattice, Ackerman weaves in a personal history of the war's
long progress, beginning with the initial invasion in the months
after 9/11. It is a play in five acts with a tragic denouement. Any
reader who wants to understand what went wrong with the war's
trajectory will find a trenchant accounting here. And yet The Fifth
Act is not an exercise in finger-pointing: it brings readers into
close contact with a remarkable group of characters, who fought the
war with courage and dedication, in good faith and at great
personal cost. Understanding combatants' experiences and sacrifices
demands reservoirs of wisdom and the gifts of an extraordinary
storyteller. In Elliot Ackerman, this story has found that
author.The Fifth Act is a first draft of history that feels like a
timeless classic.
This book examines the United States neoconservative movement,
arguing that its support for the 2003 invasion of Iraq was rooted
in an intelligence theory shaped by the policy struggles of the
Cold War. The origins of neoconservative engagement with
intelligence theory are traced to a tradition of labour
anti-communism that emerged in the early 20th century and
subsequently provided the Central Intelligence Agency with key
allies in the state-private networks of the Cold War era.
Reflecting on the break-up of Cold War liberalism and the challenge
to state-private networks in the 1970s, the book maps the
neoconservative response that influenced developments in United
States intelligence policy, counterintelligence and covert action.
With the labour roots of neoconservatism widely acknowledged but
rarely systematically pursued, this new approach deploys the
neoconservative literature of intelligence as evidence of a
tradition rooted in the labour anti-communist self-image as allies
rather than agents of the American state. This book will be of
great interest to all students of intelligence studies, Cold War
history, United States foreign policy and international relations.
United States involvement in the Vietnam War was one of the most
important events in the post-World War II period. The political,
social and military consequences of US involvement and defeat in
Vietnam have been keenly felt within the US and the international
community, and the 'lessons' learned have continued to exert an
influence to the present day. This book focuses on the effects of
US propaganda on America's Western allies - particularly France,
West Germany and Great Britain - from the time when the Vietnam War
began to escalate in February 1965, to the American withdrawal and
its immediate aftermath. One of its main aims is to assess the
amount and veracity of information passed on by the US
administration to allied governments and to compare this with the
level of public information on the war within those countries.
More than 130,000 South Vietnamese fled their homeland at the end
of the Vietnam War. Tens of thousands landed on the island of Guam
on their way to the U.S. Many remained there. Guamanians and U.S.
military personnel welcomed them. Funded by a $405 million
Congressional appropriation, Operation New Life was among the most
intensive humanitarian efforts ever accomplished by the U.S.
government, with the help of the people of Guam. Without it, many
evacuees would have died somewhere in the Pacific Ocean. This book
chronicles a part of the first mass migration of Vietnamese "boat
people," before and after the fall of Saigon in April 1975-a story
still unfolding almost half a century later.
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