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Books > Humanities > History > American history > From 1900 > Postwar, from 1945 > Vietnam War
This book is about the unseen Shadow War that occurred between 1968
and 1976. It was written to honor those who served our country and
didn't come back. They may have been ignored or denied by the
"Powers That Be," but they will live in my heart and my nightmares
as long as I live. The profits from the sale of this book will go
to help homeless veterans. Reading this book will open a new world
for you -- The world of Special Intelligence Operations. From Viet
Nam to Cambodia to Laos and North Viet Nam the action will show you
why so many veterans from the Viet Nam War have PTSD. The potential
for recurring nightmares will be apparent. Next you will take a
trip from Libya to Spain to Italy and Romania. You will find out
that the war against terror did not start in 2001. The following
exert will demonstrate what Inside the World of Mirrors is all
about. In 1974, I met and was briefed by a "Mr. Martin," a high
level individual from the American Embassy in Rome, Italy, on an
operation to insure that a particular individual would not continue
funding communist political activities in Italy. He was a bag man
for the KGB. It was less than two months until a very important
election was to take place. He was spreading money around to help
the communist political candidates get elected. I was simply told
"Make Him Stop" They gave me carte blanche to get it done. Anytime
in the next seven days would be just fine. This was only one of the
83 missions ran by a Special Intelligence Operative code named the
Iceman
With the knowledge born of firsthand experience, James H. Willbanks
tells the story of the 60-day siege of An Loc. In 1972, late in the
Vietnam War, a small group of South Vietnamese held off three North
Vietnamese divisions and helped prevent a direct attack on Saigon.
The battle can be considered one of the major events during the
gradual American exit from Vietnam. An advisor to the South
Vietnamese during the battle, Willbanks places the battle in the
context of the shifting role of the American forces and a policy
decision to shift more of the burden of fighting the war onto the
Vietnamese troops. He presents an overview of the 1972 North
Vietnamese Easter Offensive, a plan to press forward the attack on
U.S. and ARVN positions throughout the country, including Binh Long
province and Saigon. The North Vietnamese hoped to strike a
decisive blow at a time when most American troops were being
withdrawn. The heart of Willbanks's account concentrates on the
fighting in Binh Long province, Saigon, and the siege of An Loc. It
concludes with a discussion of the Paris peace talks, the
significance of the fighting at An Loc, and the eventual fall of
South Vietnam.
He had been given a break from work detail and was just
finishing his smoke when he heard a loud explosion from third
platoon's area. As he ran up to see what was going on, several
marines were already there standing around looking at a downed
marine. Holiday rushed up to the scene and was stopped short in his
tracks. There before him lay a man almost blown in half. He could
see the man's spine and little else. He looked into the man's face,
a young kid no older than he was himself. He saw the man look
straight at him and then look away.
Holiday watched the life leave the young man's eyes. He knew the
exact instant the man had died. It left him cold and numb--in
shock. But Holiday found it fascinating to see life one second and
then nothing the next. Holiday kept staring at the dead marine,
pondering what he had just witnessed, vaguely aware of being given
orders to remove the body. But Holiday was frozen--unable to move
to obey that order.
"Joyful to heart-wrenching. Short non-fiction stories about moving
to Los Angeles from Vietnam, and a dream-like childhood that's
turned into a nightmare when the author's father returns to the
family after spending years in a "re-education" camp. It's a
well-written rollercoaster of beauty and terror." - Jason Koivu,
2003
First published in 1992. From the foreword: "Search and rescue has
always been important to the United States Air Force, whose
aircrews deserve nothing less than the fullest possible commitment
to save them and return them home. The motto of Air Force search
and rescue, "So Others May Live," is one of the most compelling of
all military mottoes. It embodies this spirit of altruism and, as
events have proven, also indicates the service's intention to
furnish life-saving SAR for civilian as well as military purposes.
Search and rescue flourished during World War II as lifeguard ships
and submarines joined patrolling aircraft in saving lives and
sustaining morale, especially in the Pacific Ocean Areas. The
rotary-wing, turbojet, and avionics revolutions made modern SAR a
reality. Foreshadowed by the Korean War, the helicopter became the
principal form of air rescue vehicle in Vietnam. In three major
conflicts, SAR forces gained a reputation for bravery, dedication,
and self-sacrifice, as they ventured repeatedly into hostile
territory to pluck fallen aircrews to safety. The USAF rightly
continues to place a top priority on search and rescue, seeking
better ways to perform this function through the use of advanced
equipment and aircraft (such as the multipurpose MH-53J Pave Low
helicopter) and improved training of personnel. This reprint of a
classic work offers the reader an exciting and exacting history of
the evolution of combat search and rescue in America's longest and
most grueling war: the conflict in Southeast Asia."
The Vietnam War was a defining event for a generation of
Americans. But for years, misguided cliches about its veterans have
proliferated. Philip F. Napoli's "Bringing It All Back Home" strips
away the myths and reveals the complex individuals who served in
Southeast Asia. Napoli helped to create Tom Brokaw's The Greatest
Generation, and in the spirit of that enterprise, his oral
histories recast our understanding of a war and its legacy.
Napoli introduces a remarkable group of young New Yorkers who went
abroad with high hopes only to find a bewildering conflict. We
meet, for instance, a nurse who staged a hunger strike to promote
peace while working at a field hospital and a black soldier who
achieved an unexpected camaraderie with his fellow servicemen in
racially tense times. Some of these soldiers became active
opponents of the war; others did not. Tracing their journeys from
the streets of Brooklyn and Queens to the banks of the Mekong, and
back to the most glamorous corporations and meanest homeless
shelters of New York City, Napoli uncovers the variety and
surprising vibrancy of the ex-soldiers' experiences.
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