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Books > History > Asian / Middle Eastern history > From 1900 > Postwar, from 1945
Ten U.S. Marines are assigned to live, train, and go into battle
with more than five hundred raw and undisciplined Iraqi soldiers. A
member of this Adviser Support Team, Capt. Eric Navarro, recounts
their tour in vivid and brutally honest detail.Their deployment
comes at a particularly important time in the war. The Battle of
Fallujah is raging, and President Bush has proclaimed training the
Iraqi forces is the key to winning the war. Once they stand up, we
can stand down, or so the theory goes. Navarro's team, nicknamed
The Drifters, faces countless roadblocks-no interpreters initially,
limited supplies, little contact with other U.S. forces, and a vast
cultural gulf with the Iraqis. One hackneyed and fatalistic Arabic
phrase seems to sum up the mission, "Insha Allah," which translates
as "God willing" or "if God wills it."Whether riding into downtown
Fallujah in an unarmored Nissan pick-up truck, living in squalor in
abandoned buildings, dodging trigger-happy troops, sharing "FHM"
magazine with Iraqi soldiers to boost morale, or getting attacked
by insurgent rockets less than an hour after arriving, life is
never easy and more often surreal. The Drifters' trials and
tribulations help shed light on this most under-reported aspect of
the war: What is wrong with the new Iraqi Army? The answer is not
as pretty as the politicians would like.
Journalists began to call the Korean War "the Forgotten War" even
before it ended. Without a doubt, the most neglected story of this
already-neglected war is that of African Americans who served just
two years after Harry S. Truman ordered the desegregation of the
military. Twice Forgotten draws on oral histories of Black Korean
War veterans to recover the story of their contributions to the
fight, the reality that the military& desegregated in fits and
starts, and how veterans' service fits into the long history of the
Black freedom struggle. This collection of seventy oral histories,
drawn from across the country, features interviews conducted by the
author and his colleagues for their 2003 American Radio Works
documentary, Korea: The Unfinished War, which examines the conflict
as experienced by the approximately 600,000 Black men and women who
served. It also includes narratives from other sources, including
the Library of Congress's visionary Veterans History Project. In
their own voices, soldiers and sailors and flyers tell the story of
what it meant, how it felt, and what it cost them to fight for the
freedom abroad that was too often denied them at home.
Why did the USA become involved in Vietnam? What led US policy
makers to become convinced that Vietnam posed a threat to American
interests? In The Road to Vietnam, Pablo de Orellana traces the
origins of the US-Vietnam War back to 1945-1948 and the diplomatic
relations fostered in this period between the US, France and
Vietnam, during the First Vietnam War that pitted imperial France
against the anti-colonial Vietminh rebel alliance. With specific
focus on the representation of the parties involved through the
processes of diplomatic production, the book examines how the
groundwork was laid for the US-Vietnam War of the 60's and 70's.
Examining the France-Vietminh conflict through poststructuralist
and postcolonial lenses, de Orellana reveals the processes by which
the US and France built up the perception of Vietnam as a communist
threat. Drawing on archival diplomatic texts, the representation of
political identity between diplomatic actors is examined as a cause
leading up to American involvement in the First Vietnam War, and
will be sure to interest scholars in the fields of fields of
diplomatic studies, international relations, diplomatic history and
Cold War history.
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