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Books > Humanities > History > Asian / Middle Eastern history > From 1900 > Postwar, from 1945

The Vietnam War: How the United States Became Involved (Paperback, 2nd Revised ed.): Mitch Yamasaki The Vietnam War: How the United States Became Involved (Paperback, 2nd Revised ed.)
Mitch Yamasaki
R217 Discovery Miles 2 170 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Through a collection of original source documents and the words of those who lived through it, The Vietnam War gives insight into the historic background and events leading to American involvement and escalation of the war. Professor Mitch Yamasaki examines the major interpretations of how and why the U.S. became involved, what it hoped to accomplish, and how a poorly armed guerilla army thwarted U.S. efforts. Carefully selected materials highlight the forces that led to President Johnson's dilemma, the country's deep divisions over the war, and the ongoing reexamination of the Vietnam War.

No Wider War - A History of the Vietnam War Volume 2: 1965-75 (Hardcover): Sergio Miller No Wider War - A History of the Vietnam War Volume 2: 1965-75 (Hardcover)
Sergio Miller
R959 R777 Discovery Miles 7 770 Save R182 (19%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days

No Wider War is the second volume of a two-part exploration of America's involvement in Indochina from the end of World War II to the Fall of Saigon. Following on from the first volume, In Good Faith, which told the story from the Japanese surrender in 1945 through America's involvement in the French Indochina War and the initial advisory missions that followed, it traces the story of America's involvement in the Vietnam War from the first Marines landing at Da Nang in 1965, through the traumatic Tet Offensive of 1968 and the gradual Vietnamisation of the war that followed, to the withdrawal of American forces and the final loss of the South in 1975. Drawing on the latest research, unavailable to the authors of the classic Vietnam histories, including recently declassified top secret National Security Agency material, Sergio Miller examines in depth both the events and the key figures of the conflict to present a masterful narrative of America's most divisive war.

USAF F-105 Thunderchief vs VPAF MiG-17 - Vietnam 1965-68 (Paperback): Peter E. Davies USAF F-105 Thunderchief vs VPAF MiG-17 - Vietnam 1965-68 (Paperback)
Peter E. Davies; Illustrated by Jim Laurier, Gareth Hector; Cover design or artwork by Gareth Hector
R431 R350 Discovery Miles 3 500 Save R81 (19%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days

The F-105D Thunderchief was originally designed as a low-altitude nuclear strike aircraft, but the outbreak of the Vietnam War led to it being used instead as the USAF's primary conventional striker against the exceptionally well-defended targets in North Vietnam and Laos. F-105 crews conducted long-distance missions from bases in Thailand, refuelling in flight several times and carrying heavy external bombloads.

The MiG-17 was the lightweight, highly manoeuvrable defending fighter it encountered most often in 1965-68 during Operation Rolling Thunder. A development of the MiG-15, which shocked UN forces during the Korean War, its emphasis was on simplicity and ease of maintenance in potentially primitive conditions.

Fully illustrated with stunning artwork, this book shows how these two aircraft, totally different in design and purpose, fought in a series of duels that cost both sides dearly.

Dragon's Jaw - An Epic Story of Courage and Tenacity in Vietnam (Paperback): Barrett Tillman, Stephen Coonts Dragon's Jaw - An Epic Story of Courage and Tenacity in Vietnam (Paperback)
Barrett Tillman, Stephen Coonts
R473 R400 Discovery Miles 4 000 Save R73 (15%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days

Every war has its "bridge"--Old North Bridge at Concord, Burnside's Bridge at Antietam, the railway bridge over Burma's River Kwai, the bridge over Germany's Rhine River at Remagen, and the bridges over Korea's Toko Ri. In Vietnam it was the bridge at Thanh Hoa, called Dragon's Jaw. For many years hundreds of young US airmen flew sortie after sortie against North Vietnam's formidable and strategically important bridge, dodging a heavy concentration of anti-aircraft fire, surface-to-air missiles and enemy fighters. Many American airmen were shot down, killed, or captured and taken to the infamous POW prisons in Hanoi. But after each air attack, when the smoke cleared and the debris settled, the bridge stubbornly remained standing. For the North Vietnamese it became a symbol of their invincibility; for US war planners an obsession; for US airmen a testament to American mettle and valor. Using after-action reports, official records, and interviews with surviving pilots, as well as previously untapped Vietnamese sources, Dragon's Jaw chronicles American efforts to destroy the bridge, strike by bloody strike, putting readers into the cockpits, under fire. The story of the Dragon's Jaw is a story rich in bravery, audacity, sometimes luck and sometimes tragedy. The "bridge" story of Vietnam is an epic tale of war against a determined foe.

Story About Vietnam War - Revealing The Secret Stories Of The War In Vietnam: Discover Extraordinary Soldier'S Life Of... Story About Vietnam War - Revealing The Secret Stories Of The War In Vietnam: Discover Extraordinary Soldier'S Life Of Reaper 6 (Paperback)
Ulysses Erazmus
R337 Discovery Miles 3 370 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
A Day in Hell on the DMZ - The Rocket Attack on Firebase Charlie 2 in Vietnam, May 21, 1971 (Paperback): Lou Pepi A Day in Hell on the DMZ - The Rocket Attack on Firebase Charlie 2 in Vietnam, May 21, 1971 (Paperback)
Lou Pepi
R925 Discovery Miles 9 250 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

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.

Hunting the Viet Cong - Volume 1 - The Counterinsurgency Campaign in South Vietnam 1961-1963. The Strategic Hamlet Programme... Hunting the Viet Cong - Volume 1 - The Counterinsurgency Campaign in South Vietnam 1961-1963. The Strategic Hamlet Programme (Paperback)
Darren Poole
R615 R500 Discovery Miles 5 000 Save R115 (19%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days
This Is What Hell Looks Like - Life as a Bomb Disposal Specialist During the Vietnam War (Hardcover): Stuart Allan Streinberg This Is What Hell Looks Like - Life as a Bomb Disposal Specialist During the Vietnam War (Hardcover)
Stuart Allan Streinberg
R629 R518 Discovery Miles 5 180 Save R111 (18%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

From 1967-1971, Stuart Steinberg served in the U.S. Army as an explosive ordnance disposal specialist. In January 1968, he was sent to Dugway Proving Grounds in Utah, where chemical and biological weaponry was stockpiled, staying there until July 1968. Steinberg was involved in helping to clean up the worst nerve gas disaster in American history on March 13, 1968. As a result, he volunteered to serve in Vietnam from September 4, 1968 to March 24, 1970. This is What Hell Looks Like explores the difficult and traumatic situations faced by Steinberg and his teammates across their time in Vietnam. This volume also examines the causes and consequences of post-traumatic stress disorder though Steinberg's honest account of his experiences, including his subsequent addiction to prescription painkillers. Documenting Steinberg's personal journey through "Hell," his account casts further light on life during the Vietnam War.

The Korean War in Britain - Citizenship, Selfhood and Forgetting (Hardcover): Grace Huxford The Korean War in Britain - Citizenship, Selfhood and Forgetting (Hardcover)
Grace Huxford
R2,453 Discovery Miles 24 530 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The Korean War in Britain explores the social and cultural impact of the Korean War (1950-53) on Britain. Coming just five years after the ravages of the Second World War, Korea was a deeply unsettling moment in post-war British history. From allegations about American use of 'germ' warfare to anxiety over Communist use of 'brainwashing' and treachery at home, the Korean War precipitated a series of short-lived panics in 1950s Britain. But by the time of its uneasy ceasefire in 1953, the war was becoming increasingly forgotten. Using Mass Observation surveys, letters, diaries and a wide range of under-explored contemporary material, this book charts the war's changing position in British popular imagination and asks how it became known as the 'Forgotten War'. It explores the war in a variety of viewpoints - conscript, POW, protester and veteran - and is essential reading for anyone interested in Britain's Cold War past. -- .

Reencounters - On the Korean War and Diasporic Memory Critique (Paperback): Crystal Mun-hye Baik Reencounters - On the Korean War and Diasporic Memory Critique (Paperback)
Crystal Mun-hye Baik
R854 Discovery Miles 8 540 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

In Reencounters,Crystal Mun-hye Baik examines what it means to live with and remember an ongoing war when its manifestations-hypervisible and deeply sensed-become everyday formations delinked from militarization. Contemplating beyond notions of inherited trauma and post memory, Baik offers the concept of reencounters to better track the Korean War's illegible entanglements through an interdisciplinary archive of diasporic memory works that includes oral history projects, performances, and video installations rarely examined by Asian American studies scholars. Baik shows how Korean refugee migrations are repackaged into celebrated immigration narratives, how transnational adoptees are reclaimed by the South Korean state as welcomed "returnees," and how militarized colonial outposts such as Jeju Island are recalibrated into desirable tourist destinations. Baik argues that as the works by Korean and Korean/American artists depict this Cold War historiography, they also offer opportunities to remember otherwise the continuing war. Ultimately, Reencounters wrestles with questions of the nature of war, racial and sexual violence, and neoliberal surveillance in the twenty-first century.

Lost in Vietnam (Hardcover): Chuck Forsman, Le Ly Hayslip Lost in Vietnam (Hardcover)
Chuck Forsman, Le Ly Hayslip
R997 R793 Discovery Miles 7 930 Save R204 (20%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Vietnam is an ancient and beautiful land, with a deep history of occupational conflict that remains an enigma in Americans' collective memory. It is still easy to forget that Vietnam is a country and not a war, even as America's role in Vietnam inflamed and divided the American citizenry in ways that are still evident today. It is as if Vietnam's civil war resurrected our own. And if you are a Vietnam War veteran or a family member of a vet, it's worse, because, even after a half-century, many of the wounds won't heal. What do you do when you have given up on forgetting? Chuck Forsman is one of a sizable number of aging Vietnam vets who have found deep satisfaction in revisiting Vietnam, supporting charities, orphanages, and clinics, doing volunteer work and more-anything to redeem what the U.S. military did there. He is also a renowned painter and photographer who depicts places and environments in ways that become unforgettable visual experiences for the contemporary viewer. Lost in Vietnam chronicles a journey, not a country. They were taken on visits averaging two months each and two-year intervals over a decade. Forsman traveled largely by motorbike throughout the country-south, central, and north-sharing his experiences through amazing photographs of Vietnam's lands and people. His visual journey of one such veteran's twofold quest: the one for redemption and understanding, and the other to make art. The renowned Le Ly Hayslip introduces the book and sets the table for Forsman's incredible sojourn.

After Combat - True War Stories from Iraq and Afghanistan (Hardcover): Marian Eide After Combat - True War Stories from Iraq and Afghanistan (Hardcover)
Marian Eide
R828 R690 Discovery Miles 6 900 Save R138 (17%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Approximately 2.5 million men and women have deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan in the service of the U.S. War on Terror. Marian Eide and Michael Gibler have collected and compiled personal combat accounts from some of these war veterans. In modern warfare no deployment meets the expectations laid down by stories of Appomattox, Ypres, Iwo Jima, or Tet. Stuck behind a desk or the wheel of a truck, many of today's veterans feel they haven't even been to war though they may have listened to mortars in the night or dodged improvised explosive devices during the day. When a drone is needed to verify a target's death or bullets are sprayed like grass seed, military offensives can lack the immediacy that comes with direct contact. After Combat bridges the gap between sensationalized media and reality by telling war's unvarnished stories. Participating soldiers, sailors, marines, and air force personnel (retired, on leave, or at the beginning of military careers) describe combat in the ways they believe it should be understood. In this collection of interviews, veterans speak anonymously with pride about their own strengths and accomplishments, with gratitude for friendships and adventures, and also with shame, regret, and grief, while braving controversy, misunderstanding, and sanction. In the accounts of these veterans, Eide and Gibler seek to present what Vietnam veteran and writer Tim O'Brien calls a "true war story" - one without obvious purpose or moral imputation and independent of civilian logic, propaganda goals, and even peacetime convention.

Paratrooper - Partnership Between Community And Military That Was Unheard: Helicopter And Ground Combat Action Of The Vietnam... Paratrooper - Partnership Between Community And Military That Was Unheard: Helicopter And Ground Combat Action Of The Vietnam War (Paperback)
Angel Besares
R289 Discovery Miles 2 890 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
The 'Stan (Paperback): Kevin Knodell, David Axe The 'Stan (Paperback)
Kevin Knodell, David Axe; Illustrated by Blue Delliquanti
R540 R282 Discovery Miles 2 820 Save R258 (48%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The 'Stan is a collection of short comics about America's longest war. The tales in this book--based on reporting by David Axe and Kevin Knodell and drawn by artist Blue Delliquanti-are all true and took place in roughly the first decade of the U.S. military intervention in Afghanistan. While the stories are from the recent past, The 'Stan is still very much about Afghanistan's, and America's, present. And likely future.

In Good Faith - A History of the Vietnam War Volume 1: 1945-65 (Paperback): Sergio Miller In Good Faith - A History of the Vietnam War Volume 1: 1945-65 (Paperback)
Sergio Miller
R545 R449 Discovery Miles 4 490 Save R96 (18%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days

In Good Faith is the first of a two-volume, accessible narrative history of America's involvement in Indochina, from the end of World War II to the Fall of Saigon in 1975. The books chart the course of America's engagement with the region, from its initially hesitant support for French Indochina through the advisory missions following the 1954 Geneva Accords, then on to the covert war promoted in the Kennedy years, the escalation to total war in the Johnson era, and finally to the liquidation of the American war under Nixon. Drawing on the latest research, unavailable to the authors of the classic Vietnam histories, In Good Faith tells the story from the Japanese surrender in 1945 through America's involvement in the French Indochina War and the initial advisory missions that followed. It describes how these missions gradually grew in both scope and scale, and how America became ever more committed to the region, especially following the Gulf of Tonkin incident in 1964, which led to the first bombing missions over North Vietnam. It finishes at the climax of one of those operations, Rolling Thunder, and just prior to the first commitment of US ground forces to the war in Vietnam in the spring of 1965. Examining in depth both the events and the key figures of the conflict, this is a definitive new history of American engagement in Vietnam.

Days of Valor - An Inside Account of the Bloodiest Six Months of the Vietnam War (Paperback): Robert L Tonsetic Days of Valor - An Inside Account of the Bloodiest Six Months of the Vietnam War (Paperback)
Robert L Tonsetic
R314 Discovery Miles 3 140 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Days of Valor tells the story of the 199th Light Infantry Brigade, a major combat unit of the US Army that served in the Vietnam War. The brigade was formed at Fort Benning, Georgia, and was sent out to Vietnam in December 1966. In January 1968, the 199th were conducting an operation in Bien Hoa Province, scouring the sector for NVA personnel, when the Viet Cong launched the Tet Offensive. This sudden offensive caught the US Army completely by surprise. The Viet Cong attacked all of the major cities in South Vietnam and 58 major towns. The Communist forces had considerable success in Hueand Saigon. Armed with rockets, mortars, Chinese claymores, mines, machine guns and AK-47s, the Viet Cong were able to force the 199th onto the back foot. Many of the characters described in this book did not make it home, and the narrative gives the reader a vivid impression of what it must have been like to fight in this horrific war. The author was a company commander during these battles, and he has interviewed many of the soldiers of the 199th who fought in this bloody conflict. Days of Valor is a no-holds-barred account of the Tet Offensive, and reveals the shocking reality of what young US soldiers faced. The Tet Offensive was the turning point of the Vietnam War. It was a huge propaganda victory for the Viet Cong, and the beginning of the end for the US in Vietnam.

Nam-Sense - Surviving Vietnam with the 101st Airborne Division (Paperback): Arthur Wiknik Nam-Sense - Surviving Vietnam with the 101st Airborne Division (Paperback)
Arthur Wiknik
R300 R234 Discovery Miles 2 340 Save R66 (22%) Ships in 5 - 10 working days

An honest tour of the Vietnam War from the soldier's eye view . . . Nam-Sense is the brilliantly written story of a combat squad leader in the 101st Airborne Division. Arthur Wiknik was a 19-year-old kid from New England when he was drafted into the U.S. Army in 1968. After completing various NCO training programs, he was promoted to sergeant "without ever setting foot in a combat zone" and sent to Vietnam in early 1969. Shortly after his arrival on the far side of the world, Wiknik was assigned to Camp Evans, a mixed-unit base camp near the northern village of Phong Dien, only thirty miles from Laos and North Vietnam. On his first jungle patrol, his squad killed a female Viet Cong who turned out to have been the local prostitute. It was the first dead person he had ever seen. Wiknik's account of life and death in Vietnam includes everything from heavy combat to faking insanity to get some R& R. He was the first man in his unit to reach the top of Hamburger Hill during one of the last offensives launched by U.S. forces, and later discovered a weapons cache that prevented an attack on his advance fire support base. Between the sporadic episodes of combat he mingled with the locals, tricked unwitting U.S. suppliers into providing his platoon with a year of hard to get food, defied a superior and was punished with a dangerous mission, and struggled with himself and his fellow soldiers as the anti-war movement began to affect his ability to wage victorious war. Nam-Sense offers a perfect blend of candor, sarcasm, and humor - and it spares nothing and no one in its attempt to accurately convey what really transpired for the combat soldier during this unpopular war. Nam-Sense is not about heroism or glory, mental breakdowns, haunting flashbacks, or wallowing in self-pity. The GIs Wiknik lived and fought with during his yearlong tour did not rape, murder, or burn villages, were not strung out on drugs, and did not enjoy killing. They were there to do their duty as they were trained, support their comrades - and get home alive. "The soldiers I knew," explains the author, "demonstrated courage, principle, kindness, and friendship, all the elements found in other wars Americans have proudly fought in." Wiknik has produced a gripping and complete record of life and death in Vietnam, and he has done so with a style and flair few others will ever achieve.

Swords of Lightning - Green Beret Horse Soldiers and America's Response to 9/11 (Hardcover): Mark Nutsch, Bob Pennington,... Swords of Lightning - Green Beret Horse Soldiers and America's Response to 9/11 (Hardcover)
Mark Nutsch, Bob Pennington, Jim DeFelice
R801 R625 Discovery Miles 6 250 Save R176 (22%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

The first-person account of how a small band of Green Berets used horses and laser-guided bombs to overthrow the Taliban and al-Qaeda in Afghanistan after 9/11. They landed in a dust storm so thick the chopper pilot used dead reckoning and a guess to find the ground. Welcomed by a band of heavily armed militiamen, they climbed a mountain on horseback to meet the most ferocious warlord in Asia. They plotted a war of nineteenth-century maneuvers against a twenty-first-century foe. They trekked through minefields, sometimes past the mangled bodies of local tribesmen who'd shared food with them hours before. They saved babies and treated fractures, sewed up wounded who'd been transported from the battlefield by donkey. They found their enemy hiding in thick bunkers, dodged bullets from machine-gun-laden pickup trucks, and survived mass rocket attacks from vintage Soviet-era launchers. They battled the Taliban while mediating blood feuds between rival allies. They fought with everything they had, from smart bombs to AK-47s.The men they helped called them brothers. Hollywood called them the Horse Soldiers. They called themselves Green Berets-Special Forces ODA 595.

Broken Arrow - How the U.S. Navy Lost a Nuclear Bomb (Hardcover): Jim Winchester Broken Arrow - How the U.S. Navy Lost a Nuclear Bomb (Hardcover)
Jim Winchester
R781 R617 Discovery Miles 6 170 Save R164 (21%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

On 5 December 1965, the giant American aircraft carrier Ticonderoga was heading to Japan for rest and recreation for its 3,000 crew, following a month on 'Yankee Station' launching missions against targets in Vietnam. Whilst fighting a real conflict and losing men in conventional warfare, Tico's primary mission was Cold War nuclear combat with the Communist bloc. The cruise from the Yankee Station to Japan was used to practice procedures for Armageddon. Douglas Webster was a young pilot from Ohio, newly married and with seventeen combat missions under his belt. On that day in 1965 he strapped into an A-4 Skyhawk bomber for a routine weapons loading drill and simulated mission. After mishandling the manoeuvre, the plane and its pilot sunk to the bottom of the South China sea, along with a live B43 one-megaton thermonuclear bomb. A cover-up mission began. The crew was ordered to stay quiet, rumours circulate of sabotage, a damaged weapon and a troublesome pilot who needed 'disposing of'. The incident, a 'Broken Arrow' in the parlance of the Pentagon, was kept under wraps until 25 years later. The details that emerged caused a diplomatic incident, revealing that the U.S. had violated agreements not to bring nuclear weapons into Japan. Family members and the public only learnt the truth when researchers discovered archived documents that disclosed the true location of the carrier, hundreds of miles closer to land than admitted. Broken Arrow tells the story of Ticonderoga's sailors and airmen, the dangers of combat missions and shipboard life, and the accident that threatened to wipe her off the map and blow US-Japanese relations apart. For the first time, through previously classified documents, never before published photos of the accident aircraft and the recollections of those who were there, the story of carrier aviation's only 'Broken Arrow' is told in full.

The History of a Disgraceful Surrender (2021) (Paperback): Inam R. Sehri The History of a Disgraceful Surrender (2021) (Paperback)
Inam R. Sehri
R599 Discovery Miles 5 990 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

How the US lost its longest war in Afghanistan. .... worth considering that it was America's own choice to jump into the Afghan sand-grave. * The world media's FALSE cry: Pakistan, nominally a US partner in the war, had also been the Afghan Taliban's main patron. Now find the answer below - see the Washington Post of 27th September 2021 with a big caption: PM Imran Khan: Don't blame Pakistan........;

The IDENTITY OF A MAN WHO LOST HIS FATHERLAND and VIETNAM WAR - Witnesses Live Magical Stories That Have Never Been Told... The IDENTITY OF A MAN WHO LOST HIS FATHERLAND and VIETNAM WAR - Witnesses Live Magical Stories That Have Never Been Told (Paperback)
Vienman Van Trong Tran
R678 R572 Discovery Miles 5 720 Save R106 (16%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Calloused Heart - Navigating the Balance between Faith and Violence (Paperback): Steve J Sanderson Calloused Heart - Navigating the Balance between Faith and Violence (Paperback)
Steve J Sanderson; Foreword by Charles "Sid" Heal
R697 R585 Discovery Miles 5 850 Save R112 (16%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days
The Search for Tactical Success in Vietnam - An Analysis of Australian Task Force Combat Operations (Hardcover): Andrew Ross,... The Search for Tactical Success in Vietnam - An Analysis of Australian Task Force Combat Operations (Hardcover)
Andrew Ross, Robert Hall, Amy Griffin
R1,390 Discovery Miles 13 900 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

From 1966 to 1971 the First Australian Task Force was part of the counterinsurgency campaign in South Vietnam. Though considered a small component of the Free World effort in the war, these troops from Australia and New Zealand were in fact the best trained and prepared for counterinsurgency warfare. However, until now, their achievements have been largely overlooked by military historians. The Search for Tactical Success in Vietnam sheds new light on this campaign by examining the thousands of small-scale battles that the First Australian Task Force was engaged in. The book draws on statistical, spatial and temporal analysis, as well as primary data, to present a unique study of the tactics and achievements of the First Australian Task Force in Phuoc Tuy Province, South Vietnam. Further, original maps throughout the text help to illustrate how the Task Force's tactics were employed.

Vietnam - The History of an Unwinnable War, 1945-1975 (Paperback): John Prados Vietnam - The History of an Unwinnable War, 1945-1975 (Paperback)
John Prados
R1,192 Discovery Miles 11 920 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The Vietnam war continues to be the focus of intense controversy. While most people--liberals, conservatives, Democrats, Republicans, historians, pundits, and citizens alike--agree that the United States did not win the war, a vocal minority argue the opposite or debate why victory never came, attributing the quagmire to everything from domestic politics to the press. The military never lost a battle, how then did it not win the war?

Stepping back from this overheated fray, bestselling author John Prados takes a fresh look at both the war and the debates about it to produce a much-needed and long-overdue reassessment of one of our nation's most tragic episodes. Drawing upon several decades of research-including recently declassified documents, newly available presidential tapes, and a wide range of Vietnamese and other international sources-Prados's magisterial account weaves together multiple perspectives across an epic-sized canvas where domestic politics, ideologies, nations, and militaries all collide.

Prados patiently pieces back together the events and moments, from the end of World War II until our dispiriting departure from Vietnam in 1975, that reveal a war that now appears to have been truly unwinnable--due to opportunities lost, missed, ignored, or refused. He shows how--from the Truman through the Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon administrations--American leaders consistently ignored or misunderstood the realities in Southeast Asia and passed up every opportunity to avoid war in the first place or avoid becoming ever more mired in it after it began. Highlighting especially Ike's seminal and long-lasting influence on our Vietnam policy, Prados demonstrates how and why our range of choices narrowed with each passing year, while our decision-making continued to be distorted by Cold War politics and fundamental misperceptions about the culture, psychology, goals, and abilities of both our enemies and our allies in Vietnam.

By turns engaging narrative history, compelling analytic treatise, and moving personal account, Prados's magnum opus challenges previous authors and should rightfully take its place as the most comprehensive, up-to-date, and accurate one-volume account of a war that-judging by the frequent analogies to the current war in Iraq-has not yet really ended for any of us.


Alpha - a reckoning for the Navy SEALs (Paperback): David Philipps Alpha - a reckoning for the Navy SEALs (Paperback)
David Philipps
R545 R449 Discovery Miles 4 490 Save R96 (18%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days

The shocking, true story of a soldier gone rogue, and the court martial case that divided America. This is the full story of Eddie Gallagher, a US recruit who was inspired to serve his nation, who became addicted to combat, and whose need to prove himself among his fellow soldiers pushed him to extremes. His actions during a combat deployment to Mosul would divide his platoon, then the SEALs, the Navy, the armed forces, the government, and even the American public, when the President intervened in his trial. Alpha is an examination of how culture within the military has evolved since 9/11. In an endless war without major victories, the media has instead celebrated achievements of SEAL missions - such as the killing of Osama Bin Laden, the rescuing of Captain Phillips, and the survival of Marcus Luttrell. But the SEALs' popularity blinded the public to what was also happening within the armed forces. When Gallagher was accused of killing an unarmed enemy combatant, it created a scandal that reached the White House and millions around the world.

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