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Books > Humanities > History > Asian / Middle Eastern history > From 1900 > Postwar, from 1945
"This is the story of Abu Ghraib that you haven't heard, told by
the soldier sent by the Army to restore order and ensure that the
abuses that took place there never happen again." In April 2004,
the world was shocked by the brutal pictures of beatings, dog
attacks, sex acts, and the torture of prisoners held at Abu Ghraib
in Iraq. As the story broke, and the world began to learn about the
extent of the horrors that occurred there, the U.S. Army dispatched
Colonel Larry James to Abu Ghraib with an overwhelming assignment:
to dissect this catastrophe, fix it, and prevent it from being
repeated.
A veteran of deployments to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and a nationally
well-known and respected Army psychologist, Colonel James's
expertise made him the one individual capable of taking on this
enormous task. Through Colonel James's own experience on the
ground, readers will see the tightrope military personnel must walk
while fighting in the still new battlefield of the war on terror,
the challenge of serving as both a doctor/healer and combatant
soldier, and what can-and must-be done to ensure that
interrogations are safe, moral, and effective.
At the same time, Colonel James also debunks many of the false
stories and media myths surrounding the actions of American
soldiers at both Abu Ghraib and GuantanamoBay, and he reveals
shining examples of our men and women in uniform striving to serve
with honor and integrity in the face of extreme hardship and
danger.
An intense and insightful personal narrative, Fixing Hell shows us
an essential perspective on Abu Ghraib that we've never seen
before.
This book assesses the emergence and transformation of global
protest movements during the Vietnam War era. It explores the
relationship between protest focused on the war and other
emancipatory and revolutionary struggles, moving beyond existing
scholarship to examine the myriad interlinked protest issues and
mobilisations around the globe during the Indochina Wars. Bringing
together scholars working from a range of geographical,
historiographical and methodological perspectives, the volume
offers a new framework for understanding the history of wartime
protest. The chapters are organised around the social movements
from the three main geopolitical regions of the world during the
1960s and early 1970s: the core capitalist countries of the
so-called first world, the socialist bloc and the Global South. The
final section of the book then focuses on international
organisations that explicitly sought to bridge and unite solidarity
and protest around the world. In an era of persistent military
conflict, the book provides timely contributions to the question of
what war does to protest movements and what protest movements do to
war.
The Vietnam War's influence on politics, foreign policy, and
subsequent military campaigns is the center of much debate and
analysis. But the impact on veterans across the globe, as well as
the war's effects on individual lives and communities, is a largely
neglected issue. As a consequence of cultural and legal barriers,
the oral histories of the Vietnam War currently available in
English are predictably one-sided, providing limited insight into
the inner workings of the Communist nations that participated in
the war. Furthermore, many of these accounts focus on combat
experiences rather than the backgrounds, belief systems, and social
experiences of interviewees, resulting in an incomplete
historiography of the war. Chinese native Xiaobing Li corrects this
oversight in Voices from the Vietnam War: Stories from American,
Asian, and Russian Veterans. Li spent seven years gathering
hundreds of personal accounts from survivors of the war, accounts
that span continents, nationalities, and political affiliations.
The twenty-two intimate stories in the book feature the experiences
of American, Chinese, Russian, Korean, and North and South
Vietnamese veterans, representing the views of both anti-Communist
and Communist participants, including Chinese officers of the PLA,
a Russian missile-training instructor, and a KGB spy. These
narratives humanize and contextualize the war's events while
shedding light on aspects of the war previously unknown to Western
scholars. Providing fresh perspectives on a long-discussed topic,
Voices from the Vietnam War offers a thorough and unique
understanding of America's longest war.
Reverberations of the Vietnam War can still be felt in American
culture. The post-9/11 United States forays into the Middle East,
the invasion and occupation of Iraq especially, have evoked
comparisons to the nearly two decades of American presence in Viet
Nam (1954-1973). That evocation has renewed interest in the Vietnam
War, resulting in the re-printing of older War narratives and the
publication of new ones. This volume tracks those echoes as they
appear in American, Vietnamese American, and Vietnamese war
literature, much of which has joined the American literary canon.
Using a wide range of theoretical approaches, these essays analyze
works by Michael Herr, Bao Ninh, Duong Thu Huong, Bobbie Ann Mason,
le thi diem thuy, Tim O'Brien, Larry Heinemann, and newcomers Denis
Johnson, Karl Marlantes, and Tatjana Solis. Including an historical
timeline of the conflict and annotated guides to further reading,
this is an essential guide for students and readers of contemporary
American fiction
The unimagined community proposes a reexamination of the Vietnam
War from a perspective that has been largely excluded from
historical accounts of the conflict, that of the South Vietnamese.
Challenging the conventional view that the war was a struggle
between the Vietnamese people and US imperialism, the study
presents a wide-ranging investigation of South Vietnamese culture,
from political philosophy and psychological warfare to popular
culture and film. Beginning with a genealogy of the concept of a
Vietnamese "culture," as the latter emerged during the colonial
period, the book concludes with a reflection on the rise of popular
culture during the American intervention. Reexamining the war from
the South Vietnamese perspective, The unimagined community pursues
the provocative thesis that the conflict, in this early stage, was
not an anti-communist crusade, but a struggle between two competing
versions of anticolonial communism. -- .
This book examines the critical role of desertion in the
international Vietnam War debate. Paul Benedikt Glatz traces
American deserters' odyssey of exile and activism in Europe, Japan,
and North America to demonstrate how unprecedented levels of
desertion in the US military changed the traditional image of the
deserter.
British foreign policy towards Vietnam illustrates the evolution of
Britain's position within world geopolitics 1943-1950. It reflects
the change of the Anglo-US relationship from equaltiy to
dependence, and demonstrates Britain's changing association with
its colonies and with the other European imperial spheres within
southeast Asia. This book shows that Britain pursued a more
involved policy towards Vietnam than has previously been stated,
and clarifies Britain's role in the origins of the Vietnam War and
the nature of subsequent US involvement.
This second volume of accounts by nurses who served with U.S.
forces in Vietnam presents recollections of 17 women who cared for
American casualties during a controversial war. They faced
overwhelming trauma, conflicting emotions and isolation while
caring for wounded at frontline hospitals, aboard ships and in
medical centers. Representing the army and navy, their experiences
of struggle, friendship and love formed their professional and
personal lives.
Military cemeteries are one of the most prominent cultural
landscapes of Israel. Their story reflects largely the main social
processes that Israeli society has been undergoing since the War of
Independence (1948) until today. Until the end of the 1970s, the
military tombstones and their surroundings were uniform and equal,
according to rules set by the State. However, since the 1980s
families of the fallen soldiers started to add on the tombstone
personal expressions, as well as personal objects, photographs,
military artifacts etc. Thus the military tombstone and the Israeli
military cemetery became one of the expressions of the dramatic
transformation, from a society which emphasized the importance of
the collective, to a society which intensifies the significance of
the individual. The book is based on many archival documents, as
well as interviews and photographs, all of which shed light on one
of the most sensitive issues in Israeli society and express its
importance as a central component of Israeli identity.
This collection of essays, inspired by the author s experience
teaching ethics to Marine and Navy chaplains during the Iraq War,
examines the moral and psychological dilemmas posed by war. The
first section deals directly with Dr. Peter A. French s teaching
experience and the specific challenges posed by teaching applied
and theoretical ethics to men and women wrestling with the
immediate and personal moral conflicts occasioned by the dissonance
of their duties as military officers with their religious
convictions. The following chapters grew out of philosophical
discussions with these chaplains regarding specific ethical issues
surrounding the Iraq War, including the nature of moral evil,
forgiveness, mercy, retributive punishment, honor, torture,
responsibility, and just war theory. This book represents a unique
viewpoint on the philosophical problems of war, illuminating the
devastating toll combat experiences take on both an individual s
sense of identity and a society s professed moral code.
The rough-and-tumble life of Special Forces vet and Sixties pop
star Barry Sadler The top Billboard Hot 100 single of 1966 wasn't
The Rolling Stones' "Paint It Black" or the Beatles' "Yellow
Submarine"--it was "The Ballad of the Green Berets," a
hyper-patriotic tribute to the men of the Special Forces by Vietnam
veteran, U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Barry Sadler. But Sadler's
clean-cut, all-American image hid a darker side, a Hunter
Thompson-esque life of booze, girls, and guns. Unable to score
another hit song, he wrote a string of popular pulp fiction
paperbacks that made "Rambo look like a stroll through Disneyland."
He killed a lover's ex-boyfriend in Tennessee. Settling in Central
America, Sadler ran guns, allegedly trained guerrillas, provided
medical care to residents, and caroused at his villa. In 1988 he
was shot in the head in Guatemala and died a year later. This
life-and-times biography of an American pop culture phenomenon
recounts the sensational details of Sadler's life vividly but
soberly, setting his meteoric rise and tragic fall against the big
picture of American society and culture during and after the
Vietnam War.
This book explores the important role that the Korean War played in
Turkish culture and society in the 1950s. Despite the fact that
fewer than 15,000 Turkish soldiers served in Korea, this study
shows that the Turkish public was exposed to the war in an
unprecedented manner, considering the relatively small size of the
country's military contribution. It examines how the Turkish people
understood the war and its causes, how propaganda was used to
'sell' the war to the public, and the impact of these messages on
the Turkish public. Drawing on literary and visual sources,
including archival documents, newspapers, protocols of
parliamentary sessions, books, poems, plays, memoirs, cartoons and
films, the book shows how the propaganda employed by the state and
other influential civic groups in Turkey aimed to shape public
opinion regarding the Korean War. It explores why this mattered to
Turkish politicians, viewing this as instrumental in achieving the
country's admission to NATO, and why it mattered to Turkish people
more widely, seeing instead a war in the name of universal ideas of
freedom, humanity and justice, and comparing the Turkish case to
other states that participated in the war.
Like the widely praised original, this new edition is compact,
clearly written, and accessible to the nonspecialist. First, the
book chronicles and analyzes the twenty-year struggle to maintain
South Vietnamese independence. Joes tells the story with a
sympathetic focus on South Viet Nam and is highly critical of U.S.
military strategy and tactics in fighting this war. He claims that
the fall of South Viet Nam was not inevitable, that an abrupt and
public termination of U.S. aid provoked a crisis of confidence
inside South Viet Nam that led to the debacle. Students and
scholars of military studies, South East Asia, U.S. foreign policy,
or the general reader interested in this fascinating period in 20th
century history, will find this new edition to be invaluable
reading. After discussing the principal American mistakes in the
conflict, Joes outlines a workable alternative strategy that would
have saved South Viet Nam while minimizing U.S. involvement and
casualties. He documents the enormous sacrifices made by the South
Vietnamese allies, who in proportion to population suffered forty
times the casualties the Americans did. He concludes by linking the
final conquest of South Viet Nam to an increased level of Soviet
adventurism which resulted in the invasion of Afghanistan, the U.S.
military build-up under Presidents Carter and Reagan, and the
eventual collapse of the USSR. The complicated factors involved in
the war are here offered in a consolidated, objective form,
enabling the reader to consider the implications of U.S.
experiences in South Viet Nam for future policy in other world
areas.
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.
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