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Books > Humanities > History > American history > From 1900 > Postwar, from 1945 > Vietnam War
In this new collection of essays on the Vietnam War, eminent scholars of the Second Indochina conflict consider several key factors that led to the defeat of the United States and its allies. The book adopts a candid and critical look at the U.S.’s stance and policies in Vietnam, and refuses to condemn, excuse, or apologize for America’s actions in the conflict. Rather, the contributors think widely and creatively about the varied reasons that may have accounted for the U.S.’s failure to defeat the North Vietnamese Army, such as role played by economics in America’s defeat. Other fresh perspectives on the topic include American intelligence failure in Vietnam, the international dimensions of America’s defeat in Vietnam, and the foreign policy of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam.
There were no dry runs for Seawolves in Vietnam. They put their lives on the line—every time.
In the Viet Cong-infested Mekong Delta, where small SEAL teams were always outgunned and outnumbered, discovery brought swift, deadly consequences— and a radio call for backup from the United States Navy’s very best: the Seawolves. The whir of approaching rotor blades signaled their arrival as they tore through the jungle at treetop level, gunners hanging off the skids, shooting M-60s, raining down their lethal mix of high explosives and incendiary death.
Seawolf Dan Kelly describes the origins of this extraordinary outfit. Put through a training program unlike any other, these men emerged to perform unparalleled feats of courage. The stories of these elite warriors capture America’s real heroes in all their guts and glory, and demonstrate why the Seawolves are known as the most successful and most decorated unit in the Vietnam War.
December 1967: Richard Burns had just arrived in Vietnam as part of the fourteen-man 101st Pathfinder Detachment. Within just one month, during a holiday called Tet, the Communists would launch the largest single attack of the war--and he would be right in the thick of it. . . .
In Vietnam, Richard Burns operated in live-or-die situations, risking his life so that other men could keep theirs. As a Pathfinder--all too often alone in the middle of a hot LZ--he guided in helicopters disembarking troops, directed medevacs to retrieve the wounded, and organized extractions. As well as parachuting into areas and supervising the clearing of landing zones, Pathfinders acted as air-traffic controllers, keeping call signs, frequencies, and aircraft locations in their heads as they orchestrated takeoffs and landings, often under heavy enemy fire.
From Bien Hoa to Song Be to the deadly A Shau Valley, Burns recounts the battles that won him the Silver Star, Bronze Star, Purple Heart, and numerous other decorations. This is the first and only book by a Pathfinder in Vietnam . . . or anywhere else.
From 1967-1971, Stuart Steinberg served in the U.S. Army as an
explosive ordnance disposal specialist. In January 1968, he was
sent to Dugway Proving Grounds in Utah, where chemical and
biological weaponry was stockpiled, staying there until July 1968.
Steinberg was involved in helping to clean up the worst nerve gas
disaster in American history on March 13, 1968. As a result, he
volunteered to serve in Vietnam from September 4, 1968 to March 24,
1970. This is What Hell Looks Like explores the difficult and
traumatic situations faced by Steinberg and his teammates across
their time in Vietnam. This volume also examines the causes and
consequences of post-traumatic stress disorder though Steinberg's
honest account of his experiences, including his subsequent
addiction to prescription painkillers. Documenting Steinberg's
personal journey through "Hell," his account casts further light on
life during the Vietnam War.
'THE VIETNAMESE ANNE FRANK' Last Night I Dreamed of Peace is the
moving diary kept by a 27-year-old Vietnamese doctor who was killed
by the Americans during the Vietnam War, while trying to defend her
patients. Not only is it an important slice of history, from the
opposite side of Dispatches and Apocalypse Now, but it shows the
diarist - Dang Thuy Tram - as a vibrant human being, full of
youthful idealism, a poetic longing for love, trying hard to be
worthy of the Communist Party and doing her best to look after her
patients under appalling conditions. She wrote straight from the
heart and, because of this, her diary has been a huge bestseller in
Vietnam and continues to fascinate at a time of renewed interest in
the Vietnam War.
AMERICAN BOYS AT WAR IN VIETNAM--AND INVOLVED IN INCIDENTS YOU WON'T FIND IN THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES
In this compelling, highly unusual collection of amazing but true stories, U.S. soldiers reveal fantastic, almost unbelievable events that occurred in places ranging from the deadly Central Highlands to the Cong-infested Mekong Delta.
"Finders Keepers" became the sacred byword for one exhausted recon team who stumbled upon a fortune worth more than $500,000--and managed, with a little American ingenuity, to relocate the bounty to the States. Jorgenson also chronicles Marine Sergeant James Henderson's incredible journey back from the dead, shares a surreal chopper rescue, and recounts some heart-stopping details of the life--and death--of one of America's greatest unsung heroes, a soldier who won more medals than Audie Murphy and Sergeant York.
Whether occurring in the bloody, fiery chaos of sudden ambushes or during the endless nights of silent, gnawing menace spent behind enemy lines, these stories of war are truly beaucoup dinky dau . . . and ultimately unforgettable.
A gripping true account of leadership in combat, focusing on Capt.
George Paccerelli as he molded the men of the Army's Air Cavalry
LRRP company into a successful reconnaissance unit
-- Hot combat
-- Jorgenson is one of Ballantine's most prolific and successful
military authors, and books on Long Range Reconnaissance Patrols
are among the most popular Vietnam titles.
-- The author served in Vietnam both as a soldier and as a
journalist and spent over seven years in the military.
On the evening of July 11, 1967, a Navy surveillance aircraft
spotted a suspicious trawler in international waters heading toward
the Quang Ngai coast of South Vietnam. While the ship tried to
appear innocuous on its deck, Saigon quickly identified it as an
enemy gunrunner, codenamed Skunk Alpha. A four-seaborne intercept
task force was established and formed a barrier inside South
Vietnam’s twelve-mile territorial boundary. As the enemy ship
ignored all orders to surrender and neared the Sa Ky River at the
tip of the Batangan Peninsula, Swift Boat PCF-79 was ordered to
take the trawler under fire. What followed was ship-to-ship combat
action not seen since World War II. Capturing Skunk Alpha relates
that breathtaking military encounter to readers for the first time.
But Capturing Skunk Alpha is also the tale of one sailor’s
journey to the deck of PCF-79. Two years earlier, Raúl Herrera was
growing up on the west side of San Antonio, Texas, when he answered
the call to duty and joined the US Navy. Raúl was assigned to PCF
Crew Training and joined a ragtag six-man Swift Boat crew with a
mission to prevent the infiltration of resupply ships from North
Vietnam. The brave sailors who steered into harm’s way in
war-torn Vietnam would keep more than ninety tons of ammunition and
supplies from the Viet Cong and NVA forces. The Viet Cong would
post a bounty on PCF-79; Premier Nguyễn Cao Kỳ and Chief of
State Nguyễn Văn Thiệu would congratulate and decorate them
for their heroism. Capturing Skunk Alpha provides an eyewitness
account of a pivotal moment in Navy operations while also
chronicling one sailor’s unlikely journey from barrio adolescence
to perilous combat action on the high seas.Â
Ron Kovic went to Vietnam dreaming of being an American hero. What
he found there changed him profoundly, even before the severe
battlefield injury that left him paralysed from the waist down. He
returned to an America indifferent to the realities of war and the
fate of those who fought for their country. From his wheelchair he
became one of the most visible and outspoken opponents of the
Vietnam War. Born on the Fourth of July is a journey of
self-discovery, a reckoning with the horrors of an unjust war, a
testament to courage and a call to protest. A modern classic of
anti-war writing, it inspired an Oscar-winning film, sold over one
million copies and remains as powerful and relevant today as when
it was first published.
Of all of the wars in which the U.S. has been engaged, none has
been as divisive as the conflict in Vietnam. The repercussions of
this unsettling episode in American history still resonate in our
society. Although it ended more than 30 years ago, the Vietnam War
continues to fascinate and trouble Americans. The third edition of
Light at the End of the Tunnel gives a full overview of the
conflict. Starting with Ho Chi Minh's revolt against the French,
editor Andrew J. Rotter takes the reader through the succeeding
years as scholars, government officials, journalists, and others
recount the important events in the conflict and examine issues
that developed during this tumultuous time. This book is essential
reading for anyone who has an interest in understanding the Vietnam
War. The readings in it will enlighten students about this turning
point in the history of the United States and the world. The third
edition includes greater coverage of the Vietnamese experience of
the war and reflects the growing interest in understanding the war
as an international event, not just a bilateral or trilateral
conflict.
On 21 March 1933, the National Socialists celebrated their alliance
with the old Wilhelmine elites on the Day of Potsdam. Eighty years
following 1933, the great year of upheaval, this volume more
closely reexamines the historical context of the Day of Potsdam as
a critical moment on the road to dictatorship. Nine scholarly
articles reconstruct the events on the Day of Potsdam and analyze
its importance in the culture of commemoration."
During the Vietnam War, the United States embarked on an unusual
crusade on behalf of the government of South Vietnam. Known as the
pacification program, it sought to help South Vietnam's government
take root and survive as an independent, legitimate entity by
defeating communist insurgents and promoting economic development
and political reforms. In this book, Richard Hunt provides the
first comprehensive history of America's "battle for hearts and
minds," the distinctive blending of military and political
approaches that took aim at the essence of the struggle between
North and South Vietnam. Hunt concentrates on the American role,
setting pacification in the larger political context of nation
building. He describes the search for the best combination of
military and political action, incorporating analysis of the
controversial Phoenix program, and illuminates the difficulties the
Americans encountered with their sometimes reluctant ally. The
author explains how hard it was to get the U.S. Army involved in
pacification and shows the struggle to yoke divergent organizations
(military, civilian, and intelligence agencies) to serve one common
goal. The greatest challenge of all was to persuade a surrogate-the
Saigon government-to carry out programs and to make reforms
conceived of by American officials. The book concludes with a
careful assessment of pacification's successes and failures. Would
the Saigon government have flourished if there had been more time
to consolidate the gains of pacification? Or was the regime so
fundamentally flawed that its demise was preordained by its
internal contradictions? This pathbreaking book offers startling
and provocative answers to these and other important questions
about our Vietnam experience.
Britain's peacekeeping role in Southeast Asia after World War II
was clear enough but the Commonwealth's purpose in the region later
became shadowy. British involvement in the wars fought in Vietnam
between 1946 and 1975 has been the subject of a number of
books-most of which focus on the sometimes clandestine activities
of politicians-and unsubstantiated claims about British support for
the United States' war effort have gained acceptance. Drawing on
previously undiscovered information from Britain's National
Archives, this book discusses the conduct of the wars in Vietnam
and the political ramifications of UK involvement, and describes
Britain's actual role in these conflicts: supplying troops, weapons
and intelligence to the French and U.S. governments while they were
engaged in combat with Ho Chi Minh's North Vietnamese.
Even if you don't know much about the war in Vietnam, you've
probably heard of "The Hanoi Hilton," or Hoa Lo Prison, where
captured U.S. soldiers were held. What they did there and whether
they were treated well or badly by the Vietnamese became lasting
controversies. As military personnel returned from captivity in
1973, Americans became riveted by POW coming home stories. What had
gone on behind these prison walls? Along with legends of lionized
heroes who endured torture rather than reveal sensitive military
information, there were news leaks suggesting that others had
denounced the war in return for favorable treatment. What wasn't
acknowledged, however, is that U.S. troop opposition to the war was
vast and reached well into Hoa Loa Prison. Half a century after the
fact, Dissenting POWs emerges to recover this history, and to
discover what drove the factionalism in Hoa Lo. Looking into the
underlying factional divide between prowar "hardliners" and antiwar
"dissidents" among the POWs, authors Wilber and Lembcke delve into
the postwar American culture that created the myths of the HeroPOW
and the dissidents blamed for the loss of the war. What they found
was surprising: It wasn't simply that some POWs were for the war
and others against it, nor was it an officers versus enlisted men
standoff. Rather, it was the class backgrounds of the captives and
their precaptive experience that drew the lines. After the war, the
hardcore hero holdouts-like John McCain-moved on to careers in
politics and business, while the dissidents faded from view as the
antiwar movement, that might otherwise have championed them,
disbanded. Today, Dissenting POWs is a necessary myth buster,
disabusing us of the revisionism that has replaced actual GI
resistance with images of suffering POWs - ennobled victims that
serve to suppress the fundamental questions of America's drift to
endless war.
Extraordinary Valor is the true story of American Special Forces
officer John Duffy, and South Vietnamese paratrooper, Le Van Me, as
they fight to defend Charlie Hill, a key to holding Vietnam's
Central Highlands during North Vietnam's 1972 Easter Offensive.
John Joseph Duffy was born in Brooklyn, New York; Le Van Me in a
small village outside the old imperial capital of Hue in South
Vietnam. Living on opposite sides of the globe, they come together
in the heat of war in Southeast Asia when Major Duffy is assigned
as the American advisor to the elite South Vietnamese 11th Airborne
Battalion where Me is second in command. The battalion receives the
order to "Fight to the death" on Charlie Hill. After two weeks of
intense combat, hundreds lay dead and those still standing are out
of food, water, and medical supplies. Their ammunition is nearly
gone. Duffy and Me draw on their bond of friendship and trust to
make a selfless two-man last stand against the final North
Vietnamese human wave assault. Both are badly wounded, Duffy
multiple times. Their heroic action allows 36 members of the
471-man battalion to escape and be rescued. The rest are killed,
captured, or missing in action. This is their story.
Vietnam, January, 1968. As the citizens of Hue are preparing to
celebrate Tet, the start of the Lunar New Year, Nha Ca arrives in
the city to attend her father's funeral. Without warning, war
erupts all around them, drastically changing or cutting short their
lives. After a month of fighting, their beautiful city lies in
ruins and thousands of people are dead. Mourning Headband for Hue
tells the story of what happened during the fierce North Vietnamese
offensive and is an unvarnished and riveting account of war as
experienced by ordinary people caught up in the violence.
In the fall of 1965, the North Vietnamese Army launched its first
major campaign against American forces, targeting, with 4,000 men,
the U.S. Special Forces camp at Plei Me in the Central Highlands,
where about a dozen green berets were training a few hundred South
Vietnamese troops. In response, the U.S. choppered in a relief
force of elite soldiers from Project Delta under legendary Chargin'
Charlie Beckwith and dropped an unprecedented million pounds of
munitions just yards from the camp's perimeter. The camp held out,
but operations in the area continued. Within weeks, the Battle of
Ia Drang broke out, the first major battle between the U.S. Army
and North Vietnamese regulars. Based on archival research and
interviews with veterans, Saliba covers the battle for Plei Me camp
in close, vivid, and very human detail. He also gives careful
attention to the strategic picture and shows how this clash laid
the groundwork for the Battle of Ia Drang.
The tactics and technologies of modern air assault - vertical
deployment of troops by helicopter or similar means - emerged
properly during the 1950s in Korea and Algeria. Yet it was during
the Vietnam War that helicopter air assault truly came of age and
by 1965 the United States had established fully airmobile
battalions, brigades, and divisions, including the 1st Cavalry
Division (Airmobile).This division brought to Vietnam a
revolutionary new speed and dexterity in battlefield tactics, using
massed helicopters to liberate its soldiers from traditional
overland methods of combat manoeuvre. However, the communist troops
adjusted their own thinking to handle airmobile assaults.
Specializing in ambush, harassment, infiltration attacks, and
small-scale attrition, the North Vietnamese operated with light
logistics and a deep familiarity with the terrain. They optimized
their defensive tactics to make landing zones as hostile as
possible for assaulting US troops, and from 1966 worked to draw
them into 'Hill Traps', extensive kill zones specially prepared for
defence -in -depth. By the time the 1st Cavalry Division
(Airmobile) withdrew from Vietnam in 1972, it had suffered more
casualties than any other US Army division. Featuring specially
commissioned artwork, archive photographs, and full-colour battle
maps, this study charts the evolution of US airmobile tactics
pitted against North Vietnamese countermeasures. The two sides are
analysed in detail, including training, logistics, weaponry, and
organization.
In November 1969, what Time Magazine called the "largest battle of
the year" took place less than two miles from the Vietnamese
Demilitarized Zone. Three companies of Task Force 1-61 met
2,000-3,000 North Vietnamese. American forces fought for two days,
inflicting heavy casualties and suffering nine killed. Late on
November 12, it became evident that the American position could be
overrun. Alpha Company was airlifted in darkness to reinforce a
small hill in the jungle. Three hours later, well past midnight,
the Americans were attacked by 1,500 NVA. There was a twist: A
secret Vietcong document captured near Saigon urged intense action
before November 14 in anticipation of the Vietnam War Moratorium
Demonstrations set for November 15 in many cities in America. The
Vietcong planned to inflict a stunning defeat in "an effort to get
the fighting in step with the peace marchers." The author, a member
of Alpha Company who rode in on the last helicopter, offers unique
insights into the story of the men who fought those three days in
1969.
A hard-hitting history of the U.S. airborne unit who made a name
for themselves in the unforgiving jungles of South Vietnam. "It was
easier killing than living." Third Battalion 506th Airborne veteran
Drawing on interviews with veterans, many of whom have never gone
on the record before, Ian Gardner follows up his epic trilogy about
the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment in World War II with the
story of the unit's reactivation at the height of the Vietnam War.
This is the dramatic history of a band of brothers who served
together in Vietnam and who against the odds lived up to the
reputation of their World War II forefathers. Brigadier General
Salve Matheson's idea was to create an 800-strong battalion of
airborne volunteers in the same legendary "Currahee" spirit that
had defined the volunteers of 1942. The man he chose to lead them
was John Geraci, who would mold this young brotherhood into a
highly cohesive and motivated force. In December 1967, the
battalion was sent into the Central Highlands of Lam Dong Province.
Geraci and his men began their Search and Destroy patrols, which
coincided with the North Vietnamese build-up to the Tet Offensive
and was a brutal introduction to the reality of a dirty, bloody
war. Gardner reveals how it was here that the tenacious volunteers
made their mark, just like their predecessors had done in Normandy,
and the battalion was ultimately awarded a Valorous Unit Citation.
This book shows how and why this unit was deserving of that award,
recounting their daily sanguinary struggle in the face of a hostile
environment and a determined enemy. Through countless interviews
and rare personal photographs, Sign Here for Sacrifice shows the
action, leadership, humor and bravery displayed by these airborne
warriors.
In 1967, the North Vietnamese launched a series of offensives in
the Central Highlands along the border with South Vietnam - a
strategic move intended to draw U.S. and South Vietnamese forces
away from major cities before the Tet Offensive. A series of bloody
engagements known as ""the border battles"" followed, with the
principle action taking place at Dak To. Drawing on the writings of
key figures, veterans' memoirs and the author's records from two
tours in Vietnam, this book merges official history with the
recollections of those who were there, revealing previously
unpublished details of these decisive battles.
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April
H Neels, W Kleber
Hardcover
R3,614
Discovery Miles 36 140
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