From the late 1960s to the late 1970s, the United States Army
was a demoralized institution in a country in the midst of a social
revolution. The war in Vietnam had gone badly and public attitudes
about it shifted from indifference, to acceptance, to protest. Army
Chief of Staff General Creighton Abrams directed a major
reorganization of the Army and appointed William E. DePuy
(1919--1992) commander of the newly established Training and
Doctrine Command (TRADOC), in 1973. DePuy already had a
distinguished record in positions of trust and high responsibility:
successful infantry battalion command and division G-3 in World War
II by the age of twenty-five; Assistant Military Attach? in
Hungary; detail to CIA in the Korean War; alternating tours on the
Army Staff and in command of troops. As a general officer he was
General Westmoreland's operations officer in Saigon; commander of
the 1st Infantry Division in Vietnam; Special Assistant to the
Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff; and Assistant Vice Chief of Staff,
Army. But it was as TRADOC Commander that DePuy made his major
contribution in integrating training, doctrine, combat
developments, and management in the U.S. Army. He regenerated a
deflated post-Vietnam Army, effectively cultivating a military
force prepared to fight and win in modern war. General William E.
DePuy: Preparing the Army for Modern War is the first full-length
biography of this key figure in the history of the U.S. Army in the
twentieth century. Author Henry G. Gole mined secondary and primary
sources, including DePuy's personal papers and extensive archival
material, and he interviewed peers, subordinates, family members,
and close observers to describe and analyze DePuy's unique
contributions to the Army and nation. Gole guides the reader from
DePuy's boyhood and college days in South Dakota through the major
events and achievements of his life. DePuy was commissioned from
the ROTC six months before the attack on Pearl Harbor, witnessed
poor training and leadership in a mobilizing Army, and served in
the 357th Infantry Regiment in Europe -- from the bloody fighting
in Normandy until victory in May 1945, when DePuy was stationed in
Czechoslovakia. Gole covers both major events and interesting
asides: DePuy was asked by George Patton to serve as his aide; he
supervised clandestine operations in China; he served in the Office
of the Army Chief of Staff during the debate over "massive
retaliation" vs. "flexible response"; he was instrumental in
establishing Special Forces in Vietnam; he briefed President Lyndon
B. Johnson in the White House. DePuy fixed a broken Army. In the
process his intensity and forcefulness made him a contentious
figure, admired by some and feared by others. He lived long enough
to see his efforts produce American victory in the Gulf War of
1991. In General William E. DePuy, Gole presents the
accomplishments of this important military figure and explores how
he helped shape the most potent military force in the history of
the world.
General
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