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Books > History > Asian / Middle Eastern history > From 1900
1968 was a year filled with calamitous events that mired down the
Lyndon Johnson presidency, not the least of which was the unheeded
warnings leading up to the hijacking of the USS Pueblo, a
lightly-armed spy ship cruising in international waters off North
Korea. After a fierce, one-sided attack by the North Korean
military, the U.S. Navy ship and its crew of eighty-three men were
taken hostage, with the crew being imprisoned and tortured daily
for nearly a year before being released. How, and why did the Navy,
the National Security Agency, and the Johnson administration place
the Pueblo into such an untenable situation in the first place? And
secondly, what could possibly have driven Kim Il-sung, the
autocratic dictator of North Korea to take the gamble of hijacking
a Navy ship belonging to the world's most powerful nation? With
extensive research, including summaries of White House meetings and
conversations that followed the capture, The Capture of the USS
Pueblo answers these questions and reviews the flawed leadership
decisions and national events that led to the capture of the spy
ship. The capture of the USS Pueblo contains painfully-learned
historical lessons, lessons that should be reviewed and heeded,
especially as they relate to international events unfolding today.
From 1945 to 1973, 115,427 US military men were advisors in
Vietnam. Of these, 66,399 were combat advisors. Eleven were awarded
the Medal of Honor, 378 were killed and 1393 were wounded. Combat
advisors, officers and NCOs, lived and fought with Vietnamese
combat units, advising on tactics, weapons, and liaising with local
US military support. This is the story of my first tour as a combat
advisor 1966-1967. My training began at the Army Special Warfare
School in unconventional warfare, Vietnamese culture and customs,
advisor responsibilities, then Vietnamese language school. To get
to Vietnam, I had to hitchhike across the Pacific, a colorful
story. In-country I was senior advisor to a city infantry defense
force and then an infantry mobile rapid reaction force. The
author's respect for his Vietnamese comrades grew as combat
operations against Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army units and
conducting operations with US Marines were part of what we did. A
major battle is described where the 320-man Vietnamese battalion
makes a night helicopter assault on a 1200-man NVA regiment. And,
on a different night, the Viet Cong stopped the war for the author
to obtain a US Marine helicopter to med-evac a wounded baby.
In November 1969, what Time Magazine called the "largest battle of
the year" took place less than two miles from the Vietnamese
Demilitarized Zone. Three companies of Task Force 1-61 met
2,000-3,000 North Vietnamese. American forces fought for two days,
inflicting heavy casualties and suffering nine killed. Late on
November 12, it became evident that the American position could be
overrun. Alpha Company was airlifted in darkness to reinforce a
small hill in the jungle. Three hours later, well past midnight,
the Americans were attacked by 1,500 NVA. There was a twist: A
secret Vietcong document captured near Saigon urged intense action
before November 14 in anticipation of the Vietnam War Moratorium
Demonstrations set for November 15 in many cities in America. The
Vietcong planned to inflict a stunning defeat in "an effort to get
the fighting in step with the peace marchers." The author, a member
of Alpha Company who rode in on the last helicopter, offers unique
insights into the story of the men who fought those three days in
1969.
Hundreds of Americans from the town of Stamford, Connecticut,
fought in the Vietnam War. Of those, 29 did not return. These men
and women came from all corners of the town. They were white and
black, poor and wealthy. Some had not finished high school; others
had graduate degrees. They served as grunts and helicopter pilots,
battlefield surgeons and nurses, combat engineers and mine
sweepers. Greeted with indifference and sometimes hostility upon
their return home, they learned to suppress their memories in a
nation fraught with political, economic and racial tensions. Now in
their late 60s and 70s, these veterans have begun to tell their
stories, which have been collected and recorded in this book.
At Easter 1972, North Vietnam invaded the South, and there were almost no US ground troops left to stop it. But air power reinforcements could be rushed to the theater. Operation Linebacker's objective was to destroy the invading forces from the air and cut North Vietnam's supply routes – and luckily in 1972, American air power was beginning a revolution in both technology and tactics.
Most crucial was the introduction of the first effective laser-guided bombs, but the campaign also involved the fearsome AC-130 gunship and saw the debut of helicopter-mounted TOW missiles. Thanks to the new Top Gun fighter school, US naval aviators now also had a real advantage over the MiGs.
This is the fascinating story of arguably the world's first “modern” air campaign. It explains how this complex operation – involving tactical aircraft, strategic bombers, close air support and airlift – defeated the invasion. It also explains the shortcomings of the campaign, the contrasting approaches of the USAF and Navy, and the impact that Linebacker had on modern air warfare.
When Saigon fell to North Vietnamese forces on April 30, 1975, the
communist victory sent shockwaves around the world. Using ingenious
strategy and tactics, Ho Chi Minh had shown it was possible for a
tiny nation to defeat a mighty Western power. The same tactics have
been studied and replicated by revolutionary forces and terrorist
organizations across the globe. Drawing on recently declassified
documents and rare interviews with Ho Chi Minh's strategists and
couriers, this book offers fresh perspective on his military
blueprint and the reasons behind the American failure in Vietnam.
What was it like to live through the only war America lost in the
twentieth century? Firebase Tan Tru answers that question by
describing one man's adventures fighting in Vietnam's Mekong Delta
during the peak of the war in 1969. A unique feature of this story
is that it focuses upon that rare enlisted man who was already a
college graduate, struggling to cope not only with the
authoritarian rigidity of America's Army but also the horror and
madness of the war itself. It describes both harrowing nearly fatal
clashes in combat and the numerous surreal experiences encountered
in that foreign land. If you are curious about how a bizarre war
like Vietnam changes a thoughtful young man into cynicism and
skepticism, then Firebase Tan Tru is a book you need to read. It
provides insights into the personal psychology of both America's
Vietnam era officers and the enlisted men they lead as well as our
Vietnamese allies and our Vietnamese enemies.
Two years before the action in Lone Survivor, a Green Berets A Team
conducted a very different, successful mission in Afghanistan's
notorious Pech Valley. Led by Captain Ronald Fry, the Hammerhead
Six mission applied the principles of unconventional warfare to
"win hearts and minds" and fight against the terrorist insurgency.
In 2003, the Special Forces soldiers entered an area later called
"the most dangerous place in Afghanistan." Here, where the line
between civilians and armed zealots was indistinct, they
illustrated the Afghan proverb: "I destroy my enemy by making him
my friend." Fry recounts how they were seen as welcome guests
rather than invaders. Soon after their deployment ended, the Pech
Valley reverted to turmoil. Their success was never replicated.
Hammerhead Six finally reveals how cultural respect, hard work (and
the occasional machine-gun burst) were more than a match for the
Taliban and Al Qaeda.
Following the success of his #1 New York Times bestseller Make Your
Bed, which has sold over one million copies, Admiral William H.
McRaven is back with amazing stories of bravery and heroism during
his career as a Navy SEAL and commander of America's Special
Operations Forces. Admiral William H. McRaven is a part of American
military history, having been involved in some of the most famous
missions in recent memory, including the capture of Saddam Hussein,
the rescue of Captain Richard Phillips, and the raid to kill Osama
bin Laden.Sea Stories begins in 1963 at a French Officers' Club in
France, where Allied officers and their wives gathered to have
drinks and tell stories about their adventures during World War
II-the place where a young Bill McRaven learned the value of a good
story. Sea Stories is an unforgettable look back on one man's
incredible life, from childhood days sneaking into high-security
military sites to a day job of hunting terrorists and rescuing
hostages.Action-packed, humorous, and full of valuable life lessons
like those exemplified in McRaven's bestselling Make Your Bed, Sea
Stories is a remarkable memoir from one of America's most
accomplished leaders.
Simon Norfolk's book Afghanistan; chronotopia is now recognised as
a classic of photography. It establised Norfolk's reputation as one
of the leading photographers in the world and has been exhibited in
more than 30 venues worldwide. For the first time since 2001, Simon
Norfolk has returned to the country. This time he follows in the
footsteps of the Irish photographer John Burke, a superb, yet
virtually unknown, war photographer whose eloquent and beautiful
photographs of the Second Anglo-Afghan War (1878-1880) form a most
extraordinary record. Using unwieldy wet-plate collodion negatives
and huge wooden cameras Burke shot landscapes, battlefields,
archaeological sites, street scenes, portraits of British officers
and ethnological group portraits of Afghans in what amounts to a
record of an Imperial encounter. The range of work is tremendously
broad and yet suffused with a delicate humanism. These are also the
first ever pictures made in Afghanistan. With this book, one
hundred and thirty years too late, John Burke's time has at last
come. Norfolk's new work looks at what happens when you add half a
trillion US war dollars to an impoverished and broken country such
as Afghanistan. Very loosely re-photographic in nature, the work is
more of an 'Improvisation on a theme' by John Burke, and is
presented as an artistic collaboration between Burke and Norfolk.
It features photographs by Burke never before published as well as
Norfolk's new pictures from Kabul and Helmand.
In 1967, the North Vietnamese launched a series of offensives in
the Central Highlands along the border with South Vietnam - a
strategic move intended to draw U.S. and South Vietnamese forces
away from major cities before the Tet Offensive. A series of bloody
engagements known as ""the border battles"" followed, with the
principle action taking place at Dak To. Drawing on the writings of
key figures, veterans' memoirs and the author's records from two
tours in Vietnam, this book merges official history with the
recollections of those who were there, revealing previously
unpublished details of these decisive battles.
As a 20-year-old gunboat captain and certified U.S. Navy diver in
the Mekong Delta, the author was responsible for both the vessel
and the lives of its crew. Ambushes and firefights became the norm,
along with numerous dives - almost 300 in 18 months. Forty years
after the war, he returned as a tourist. This journal records his
contrasting impressions of the Delta - alternately disturbing and
enlightening - as seen first from a river patrol boat, then from a
luxury cruise ship.
Cold War Friendships explores the plight of the Asian ally of the
American wars in Korea and Vietnam. Enlisted into proxy warfare,
this figure is not a friend but a "friendly," a wartime convenience
enlisted to serve a superpower. It is through this deeply unequal
relation, however, that the Cold War friendly secures her own
integrity and insists upon her place in the neocolonial imperium.
This study reads a set of highly enterprising wartime subjects who
make their way to the US via difficult attachments. American forces
ventured into newly postcolonial Korea and Vietnam, both plunged
into civil wars, to draw the dividing line of the Cold War. The
strange success of containment and militarization in Korea
unraveled in Vietnam, but the friendly marks the significant
continuity between these hot wars. In both cases, the friendly
justified the fight: she was also a political necessity who
redeployed cold war alliances, and, remarkably, made her way to
America. As subjects in process-and indeed, proto-Americans-these
figures are prime literary subjects, whose processes of becoming
are on full display in Asian American novels and testimonies of
these wars. Literary writings on both of these conflicts are
presently burgeoning, and Cold War Friendships performs close
analyses of key texts whose stylistic constraints and
contradictions-shot through with political and historical
nuance-present complex gestures of alliance.
World champion boxer Lew Jenkins fought his whole life. As a child,
he fought extreme poverty during the Great Depression; in his
twenties, he fought as a professional boxer and became a world
champion; and at the pinnacle of his boxing career, Jenkins fought
in World War II and the Korean War. From Boxing Ring to
Battlefield: The Life of War Hero Lew Jenkins details for the first
time this extraordinary story. Despite his talent for boxing,
Jenkins often fought and trained in drunken stupors. Although he
became the world lightweight champion, he soon wasted his ring
title and all his money. Jenkins eventually found purpose during
World War II and the Korean War, fighting in major battles that
included D-Day, Bloody Ridge, and Heartbreak Ridge. His efforts
earned him one of the highest decorations for bravery, the Silver
Star. Unable to find meaning in life at the peak of his boxing
success, Jenkins discovered values to which he could cling during
war. From Boxing Ring to Battlefield features exclusive interviews
with Lew Jenkins's son and grandson, providing a personal
perspective on the life of this complicated war hero. The first
biography of Jenkins, this book will fascinate boxing fans and
historians alike.
Two years before the action in Lone Survivor, a Green Berets A Team
conducted a very different, successful mission in Afghanistan's
notorious Pech Valley. Led by Captain Ronald Fry, the Hammerhead
Six mission applied the principles of unconventional warfare to
"win hearts and minds" and fight against the terrorist insurgency.
In 2003, the Special Forces soldiers entered an area later called
"the most dangerous place in Afghanistan." Here, where the line
between civilians and armed zealots was indistinct, they
illustrated the Afghan proverb: "I destroy my enemy by making him
my friend." Fry recounts how they were seen as welcome guests
rather than invaders. Soon after their deployment ended, the Pech
Valley reverted to turmoil. Their success was never replicated.
Hammerhead Six finally reveals how cultural respect, hard work (and
the occasional machine-gun burst) were more than a match for the
Taliban and Al Qaeda.
Nine men. 2,000 enemies. No back-up. No air support. No rescue. No
chance... First in - the official motto of one of the British
Army's smallest and most secretive units, 16 Air Assault Brigade's
Pathfinder Platoon. Unofficially, they are the bastard son of the
SAS. And, like their counterparts in Hereford, the job of the
Pathfinders is to operate unseen and undetected deep behind enemy
lines. When British forces were deployed to Iraq in 2003, Captain
David Blakeley was given command of a reconnaissance mission of
such critical importance that it could change the course of the
war. It's the story of nine men, operating alone and unsupported,
50 miles ahead of a US Recon Marine advance and heading straight
into a hornets' nest, teeming with thousands of heavily armed enemy
forces. This is the first account of that extraordinary mission -
abandoned by coalition command, left with no option but to fight
their way out of the enemy's backyard. And it provides a gripping
insight into the Pathfinders themselves, a shadowy unit, just 45
men strong, that plies its trade from the skies. Trained to
parachute into enemy territory far beyond the forward edge of
battle - freefalling from high altitude breathing bottled oxygen
and employing the latest skydiving technology - the PF are unique.
Because of new rules introduced since the publication of BRAVO TWO
ZERO, there have been no first-hand accounts of British Special
Forces waging modern-day warfare for nearly a decade. And no member
of the Pathfinders has ever told their story before. Until now.
PATHFINDER is the only first-hand account of a UKSF mission to
emerge for nearly a generation. And it could be the last.
Playing trumpet in the 9th Infantry Division Band should have been
a safe assignment but the Viet Cong swarmed throughout the Mekong
Delta, and safety was nonexistent. The band's twofold
mission-boosting morale and helping win the hearts and minds of the
Vietnamese-required them to leave their Dong Tam (a.k.a. Mortar
City) base camp and travel through a vast area of rice paddies,
dense jungle and numerous villages. By 1969, home-front support for
the war had dwindled and the U.S. Army in Vietnam was on the brink
of mutiny. No one wanted to die under the command of career minded
officers in a war lost to misguided politics. This memoir of a
conscripted musician in Vietnam provides a personal account of the
lunacy surrounding combat support service in the 9th Infantry
Division during the months prior to its withdrawal.
" On April 30, 1975, Saigon and the government of South Vietnam
fell to the communist regime of North Vietnam, ending -- for
American military forces -- exactly twenty-five year of courageous
but unavailing struggle. This is not the story of how America
became embroiled in a conflict in a small country half-way around
the globe, nor of why our armed forces remained there so long after
the futility of our efforts became obvious to many. It is the story
of what went wrong there militarily, and why. The author is a
professional soldier who experienced the Vietnam war in the field
and in the highest command echelons. General Palmer's insights into
the key events and decisions that shaped American's military role
in Vietnam are uncommonly perceptive. America's most serious error,
he believes, was committing its armed forces to a war in which
neither political nor military goals were ever fully articulated by
our civilian leaders. Our armed forces, lacking clear objectives,
failed to develop an appropriate strategy, instead relinquishing
the offensive to Hanoi. Yet an achievable strategy could have been
devised, Palmer believes. Moreover, our South Vietnamese allies
could have been bolstered by appropriate aid but were instead
overwhelmed by the massive American military presence. Compounding
these errors were the flawed civilian and military chains of
command. The result was defeat for America and disaster for South
Vietnam. General Palmer presents here an insider's history of the
war and an astute critique of America's military strengths and
successes as well as its weaknesses and failures.
"He seems to have brought to this book the ear of a musician and the eye of a painter . . . the premier war correspondence of Vietnam."--Washington Post. "The best book I have ever read on men and war in our time."--John le Carre." . . . Dispatches puts the rest of us in the shade."--Hunter S. Thompson.
Toczek provides the first description of the entire battle of Ap
Bac and places it in the larger context of the Vietnam War. The
study thoroughly examines the January 1963 battle, complete with
detailed supporting maps. Ironically, Ap Bac's great importance
lies in American policymakers' perception of the battle as
unimportant; for all their intelligence and drive, senior American
government officials missed the early warning signs of a flawed
policy in Southeast Asia by ignoring the lessons of the defeat of
the South Vietnamese Army (ARVN) on 2 January 1963. The outcome of
Ap Bac was a direct reflection of how the U.S. Army organized,
equipped, and trained the ARVN. With all the ARVN officer corps's
shortcomings, the South Vietnamese Army could not successfully
conduct an American combined arms operations against a smaller,
less well-equipped enemy. American leadership, both military and
civilian, failed to draw any connection between ARVN's dismal
performance and American policies toward South Vietnam. Although
certain tactical changes resulted from the battle, the larger issue
of American policy remained unchanged, including the structure of
the advisory system.
Rethinking Camelot is a thorough analysis of John F. Kennedy's role
in the U/S. invasion of Vietnam and a probing reflection on the
elite political culture that allowed and encouraged the Cold War.
In it, Chomsky dismisses effort to resurrect Camelot--an attractive
American myth portraying JFK as a shining knight promising peace,
fooled only by assassins bent on stopping this lone hero who wold
have unilaterally withdraws from Vietnam had he lived. Chomsky
argues that U.S. institutions and political culture, not individual
presidents, are the key to understanding U.S. behavior during
Vietnam.
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