|
Books > Humanities > History > Asian / Middle Eastern history > From 1900 > Postwar, from 1945 > Vietnam War
On 8 March, 1965, 3,500 United States Marines of the 9th Marine
Expeditionary Brigade made an amphibious landing at Da Nang on the
south central coast of South Vietnam, marking the beginning of a
conflict that would haunt American politics and society for many
years, even after the signing of the Paris Peace Accords in January
1973. For the people of North Vietnam it was just another in a long
line of foreign invaders. For two thousand years they had struggled
for self-determination, coming into conflict during that time with
the Chinese, the Mongols, the European colonial powers, the
Japanese and the French. Now it was the turn of the United States,
a far-away nation reluctant to go to war but determined to prevent
Vietnam from falling into Communist hands. A Short History of the
Vietnam War explains how the United States became involved in its
longest war, a conflict that, from the outset, many claimed it
could never win. It details the escalation of American involvement
from the provision of military advisors and equipment to the
threatened South Vietnamese, to an all-out shooting war involving
American soldiers, airmen and sailors, of whom around 58,000 would
die and more than 300,000 would be wounded. Their struggle was
against an indomitable enemy, able to absorb huge losses in terms
of life and infrastructure. The politics of the war are examined
and the decisions and ambitions of five US presidents are addressed
in the light of what many have described as a defeat for American
might. The book also explores the relationship of the Vietnam War
to the Cold War politics of the time.
|
A Million Wars
(Paperback)
Charles E. "Chuck" Ferguson
|
R386
R328
Discovery Miles 3 280
Save R58 (15%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
|
Pham Xuan An was one of the twentieth century's greatest spies.
While working as a correspondent for Time during the Vietnam War,
he sent intelligence reports - written in invisible ink or hidden
inside spring rolls in film canisters - to Ho Chi Minh and his
generals in North Vietnam. Only after Saigon fell in 1975 did An's
colleagues learn that the affable raconteur in their midst,
acclaimed as ""dean of the Vietnamese press corps,"" was actually a
general in the North Vietnamese Army. In recognition of his
tradecraft and his ability to spin military losses - such as the
Tet Offensive of 1968 - into psychological gains, An was awarded
sixteen military medals. After the book's original publication,
WikiLeaks revealed that Thomas A. Bass's account of An's career was
distributed to CIA agents as a primer in espionage. Now available
in paper with a new preface, An's story remains one of the most
gripping to emerge from the era.
|
|