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Tom Mangold is known to millions as the face of BBC TV's flagship
current affairs programme Panorama and as its longest-serving
reporter. Splashed! is the 'antidote to the conventional
journalist's autobiography' - a compelling, hilarious and raucous
revelation of the events that marked an extraordinary life in
journalism.Mangold describes his National Service in Germany, where
he worked part-time as a smuggler, through his years in the 1950s
on Fleet Street's most ruthless newspapers, a time when chequebook
journalism ruled and shamelessness was a major skill. Recruited by
the BBC, he spent forty years as a broadcaster, developing a
reputation for war reporting and major investigations.From world
exclusives with fallen women in the red-top days to chaotic
interviews with Presidents, Splashed! offers a rare glimpse of the
personal triumphs and disasters of a life in reporting, together
with fascinating revelations about the stories that made the
headlines on Mangold's remarkable journey from print to Panorama.
The story of an extraordinary campaign in the Vietnam War - fought
in a 200-mile labyrinth of underground tunnels and chambers. The
campaign in the tunnels of Cu Chi was fought with cunning and
savagery between Viet Cong guerrillas and special teams of US
infantrymen called 'Tunnel Rats'. The location: the 200-mile
labyrinth of underground tunnels and secret chambers that the Viet
Cong had dug around Saigon. The Tunnel Rats were GIs of legendary
skill and courage. Armed only with knives and pistols, they fought
hand-to-hand against a cruel and ingenious enemy inside the
booby-trapped blackness of the tunnels. For the Viet Cong the
tunnel network became their battlefield, their barracks, their arms
factories and their hospitals, as the ground above was pounded to
dust by American shells and bombs.
At the height of the Vietnam conflict, a complex system of secret
underground tunnels sprawled from Cu Chi Province to the edge of
Saigon. In these burrows, the Viet Cong cached their weapons,
tended their wounded, and prepared to strike. They had only one
enemy: U.S. soldiers small and wiry enough to maneuver through the
guerrillas' narrow domain.
The brave souls who descended into these hellholes were known as
"tunnel rats." Armed with only pistols and K-bar knives, these men
inched their way through the steamy darkness where any number of
horrors could be awaiting them-bullets, booby traps, a tossed
grenade. Using firsthand accounts from men and women on both sides
who fought and killed in these underground battles, authors Tom
Mangold and John Penycate provide a gripping inside look at this
fearsome combat. The Tunnels of Cu Chi" "is a war classic of
unbearable tension and unforgettable heroes.
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