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Books > Humanities > History > American history > From 1900 > Postwar, from 1945
For years, the so-called better-war school of thought has argued
that the United States built a legitimate and viable non-Communist
state in South Vietnam in the latter years of the Vietnam War and
that it was only the military abandonment of this state that
brought down the Republic of Vietnam. But Andrew J. Gawthorpe,
through a detailed and incisive analysis, shows that, in fact, the
United States failed in its efforts at nation building and had not
established a durable state in South Vietnam. Drawing on newly
opened archival collections and previously unexamined oral
histories with dozens of U.S. military officers and government
officials, To Build as Well as Destroy demonstrates that the United
States never came close to achieving victory in the late 1960s and
early 1970s. Gawthorpe tells a story of policy aspirations and
practical failures that stretches from Washington, D.C., to the
Vietnamese villages in which the United States implemented its
nationbuilding strategy through the Office of Civil Operations and
Revolutionary Development Support known as CORDS. Structural
factors that could not have been overcome by the further
application of military power thwarted U.S. efforts to build a
viable set of non-Communist political, economic, and social
institutions in South Vietnam. To Build as Well as Destroy provides
the most comprehensive account yet of the largest and
best-resourced nation-building program in U.S. history. Gawthorpe's
analysis helps contemporary policy makers, diplomats, and military
officers understand the reasons for this failure. At a moment in
time when American strategists are grappling with military and
political challenges in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria, revisiting
the historical lessons of Vietnam is a worthy endeavor.
In the spring of 1966 the Vietnam War was intensifying, driven by
the US military build up, under which the 9th Infantry Division was
reactivated. Charlie Company was part of the 9th and representative
of the melting pot of America. But, unlike the vast majority of
other companies in the US Army, the men of Charlie Company were a
close-knit family. They joined up together, trained together, and
were deployed together. This is their story. From the joker who
roller-skated into the Company First Sergeant's office wearing a
dress, to the nerdy guy with two left feet who would rather be off
somewhere inventing computers, and the everyman who just wanted to
keep his head down and get through un-noticed and preferably
unscathed. Written by leading Vietnam expert Dr Andrew Wiest, The
Boys of '67 tells the unvarnished truth about the war in Vietnam,
recounting the fear of death and the horrors of battle through the
recollections of the young men themselves. America doesn't know
their names or their story, the story of the boys of Charlie, young
draftees who had done everything that their nation had asked of
them and received so little in return - lost faces and silent
voices of a distant war.
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