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Books > Humanities > History > Asian / Middle Eastern history > From 1900 > Postwar, from 1945 > Vietnam War
A book about the elite Army Ranger of the Republic of Vietnam
The Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) was the first new agency
established by Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara after he
assumed office in 1961. The ambitious McNamara intended to
reformulate U.S. strategic nuclear policy and reduce inefficiencies
that had developed in the Department of Defense (DoD) in the 1950s.
DIA was the lynchpin to both efforts. In the early and middle
1960s, McNamara and his subordinates, Deputy Secretary of Defense
Roswell Gilpatric and new DIA Director Lieutenant General Joseph
Carroll (USAF), worked hard to establish the Agency, but their
efforts were delayed or stymied by intransigent and parochial
military leadership who objected to the creation of DIA because
they feared a loss of both battlefield effectiveness and political
influence in Washington, D.C.1 The work of building the DIA was
made all the more urgent by the deteriorating situation in
Southeast Asia. By the early 1960s, millions of dollars and
hundreds of advisory personnel sent by the U.S. were having a
negligible impact on the anti-communist campaign there. As the U.S.
continued to commit more resources to the ill-fated government in
Saigon, the country found itself drawn deeper and deeper into the
maelstrom. For DIA, the looming war in Southeast Asia would expose
major problems in its organization and performance. Especially in
the period from 1961 to 1969, DIA, either because of structural
weaknesses or leadership failures, often failed to energetically
seize opportunities to assert itself in the major intelligence
questions involving the conflict there. This tendency was
exacerbated by national military leadership's predilection for
ignoring or undercutting the Agency's authority. In turn, this
opened up DIA to severe criticism by Congress and other national
policymakers, some of whom even considered abolishing the Agency.
During the war, McNamara's great hope for reforming military
intelligence would be swept up in quarrels between powerful
domestic adversaries, and DIA's performance left the Secretary of
Defense deeply embittered toward his creation. It was only at the
end of the war that DIA assumed a more influential role in
Southeast Asia. Until then, however, the Agency was consigned to
the wilderness when it came to questions about the Vietnam
conflict.
Published for the fortieth anniversary of the final days of the
Vietnam War, this is the suspenseful and moving tale of how John
Riordan, an assistant manager of Citibank's Saigon branch, devised
a daring plan to save 106 Vietnamese from the dangers of the
Communist takeover.Riordan,who had served in the US Army after the
Tet Offensive and had left the military behind for a career in
international banking,was not the type to take dramatic action, but
once the North Vietnamese Army closed in on Saigon in April 1975
and it was clear that Riordan's Vietnamese colleagues and their
families would be stranded in a city teetering on total collapse,
he knew he could not leave them behind. Defying the objections of
his superiors and going against the official policy of the United
States, Riordan went back into Saigon to save them.In fifteen
harrowing trips to Saigon's airport, he maneuvered through the
bureaucratic shambles, claiming that the Vietnamese were his wife
and scores of children. It was a ruse that, at times, veered close
to failure, yet against all odds, the improbable plan succeeded. At
great risk, the Vietnamese left their lives behind to start anew in
the United States, and now John is known to his grateful Vietnamese
colleagues and hundreds of their American descendants as Papa. They
Are All My Family is a vivid narrative of one man's ingenious
strategy which transformed a time of enormous peril into a display
of extraordinary courage. Reflecting on those fateful days in this
account, John Riordan's modest heroism provides a striking contrast
to America's ignominious retreat from the decade of conflict.
A Compelling Read or the Perfect Gift... What it's like to fly
combat jets down between the trees. Whether you have ever flown a
jet, or just wished to do so, and whether you served in Vietnam or
just read about it, you will be riveted by this fast-paced and
vivid account in prose and poetry that tells the story of a special
breed of men. These were the hand-picked few who led death-defying
lives as F-100 Super Sabre pilots. "Songs" tells the story of the
"Hun Drivers" in war and peace, who flew low and fast between the
trees with troops under fire day or night, or spent weeks away from
home and family on nuclear alert, hoping that the red phone that
signaled WW III would never ring. Their plane was called "The Widow
Maker" for good reason, as you soon learn. Songs From A Distant
Cockpit puts you in the cockpit and in among these single-seat,
single-engine fighter pilots as they trained in the "most dangerous
plane ever built." It brings you along as they learned how to fly
it, and how to survive in it, and the sudden risks and terrors that
they faced often as they flew it. If you've ever wondered "What
it's like to fly a close-air-support fighter bombers" in combat in
Vietnam, or on other missions that pushed the ragged edges of the
flight envelope, with Death an all-too-frequent wingman, then
you'll have a vivid understanding when you read "Songs." This
highly acclaimed book uses on-the-scene, at-the-time prose and
poetry in a blend said by historians to be unique in books about
combat in its ability to capture the feelings and experiences
shared by those who took pride in their ability to fly "the Hun."
These men were few in number, because, with rare exception, only
top pilots could become F-100 Super Sabre pilots. Many were the
sights they saw, the things they felt, and the terrors that visited
so suddenly, when Death came calling but left again as suddenly,
without a "customer." What they, and the author, have most in
common to this day is that they all enjoyed their "Songs" in
distant cockpits, high above, or down so low, so fast, so far away,
that only God could find them. Men and women from all walks of life
are saying, "I couldn't put it down," and some add that parts of it
"brought them to tears." So, satisfy your yearnings to fly because
now it's time for YOU to get in that fighter cockpit and go flying
through the bullets and down between the trees "
Hal's Navy is an insightful personal memoir that brings home not
only many technical aspects of naval service, but also the joys,
sorrows, separations and heady feelings of a job well done. Hal
Sacks tells his terrific and entertaining story beginning with
Officer Candidate School and Korea in 1953, going on to Vietnam in
1968, and beyond. Lovers of great storytelling will relish this
book, right alongside history buffs and military aficionados.
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Defiant
(Paperback)
Alvin Townley
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R633
R572
Discovery Miles 5 720
Save R61 (10%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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During the Vietnam War, hundreds of American POWs faced years of
brutal conditions and horrific torture at the hands of communist
interrogators who ruthlessly plied them for military intelligence
and propaganda. Determined to maintain their Code of Conduct, the
prisoners developed a powerful underground resistance. To quash it,
the North Vietnamese singled out its eleven leaders, Vietnam's own
"dirty dozen," and banished them to an isolated jail that would
become known as Alcatraz. None would leave its solitary cells and
interrogation rooms unscathed; one would never return. As these men
suffered in Hanoi, their wives launched an extraordinary campaign
that would ultimately spark the POW/MIA movement. When the
survivors finally returned, one would receive the Medal of Honor,
another became a U.S. Senator, and a third still serves in
Congress. A story of survival and triumph in the vein of Unbroken
and Band of Brothers, Defiant will inspire anyone wondering how
courage, faith, and brotherhood can endure even in the darkest of
situations.
This book examines Operation SEALORDS, the capstone campaign
conducted by the Brown-Water Navy in Vietnam. Specifically, this
paper addresses the primary question: Was the SEALORDS campaign
successful, and if so, what lessons, can be learned from SEALORDS
and how might we employ brown-water forces in the future? This book
breaks down the SEALORDS campaign into three areas of study. First,
the study examines the barrier interdiction portion of the campaign
designed to stem the flow of enemy infiltration of men and material
from Cambodia into the Mekong Delta. Second, this study analyzes
the Denial of Sanctuary Operations and Pacification portion of the
SEALORDS operations. Lastly, the Accelerated Turnover to the
Vietnamese Program known as "ACTOV" is examined to determine its
effectiveness. The Findings of this book suggest that by
concentrating naval forces athwart the major infiltration routes
along the Cambodian border, SEALORDS effectively cut enemy lines of
communication into South Vietnam and severly restricted enemy
attempts at infiltration. Additionally, the findings suggest that
SEALORDS contributed significantly to pacification efforts in the
southern part of III Corps and all of the TV Corps Tactical Zone.
Finally, the ACTOV Program is evaluated as successful and put the
navy out ahead of the other services with respect to Vietnamization
of the war effort.
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