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Gareth Porter presents a new interpretation of how and why the US went to war in Vietnam. He provides a challenge to the prevailing explanation that US officials adhered blindly to a Cold War doctrine that loss of Vietnam would cause a 'domino effect' leading to communist dominance of the area.
"Based on eight years of covering the Iran nuclear issue and new research and interviews with participants, Porter reconstructs the history of Iran's nuclear program and shows how the United States and Israel used the accusation about Iran's desire for nuclear weapons to try to pressure Tehran to give up its right to have nuclear power for peaceful purposes"--Back cover.
Here is the first scholarly book-length analysis of Communist Vietnam's political system. Taking advantage of the unprecedented wealth of revealing documentary material published in Vietnam since 1985, Gareth Porter offers new insights into the functioning of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam and its management of the Vietnamese economy and society. He examines the evolution of the system from the time the Democratic Republic of Vietnam was founded in 1945 through the 1986-1990 period of economic liberalization and cautious political reform by the successor regime, the SRV.
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Publisher description: This landmark volume at last gives us a full picture from both sides of the Vietnam conflict, from Ho Chi Minh's first call for revolution to the fall of the U.S.-backed government in Siagon. Decision-makers whose words come to us in over 300 documents spanning almost 35 years. Many of these documents come from recently declassified U.S. archives. They combine to show the step-by-step process by which Franklin Roosevelt's early support for Vietnamese independence moved in succeeding administrations to support for French colonial rule, and then to our own direct armed intervention. They form a record, too, of changing North Vietnamese policy as hope of peaceful triumph faded and struggle against vast military odds became a necessity. Charged with a sense of tragic inevitability as American misconceptions compounded themselves and North Vietnamese militancy stiffened, this revelatory compliation gives eloquent answers to agonizing questions raised by one of the great turning points of modern history. Here is what really happened. And here is why.
This book analyzes the origins and development of the Third Indochinese Conflict and the problems posed by the complex issues involved. It tries to unravel the tangled knot of issues involved in this analysis by following principles proceed from the basic to the more complex aspects of the problem.
An American Eyewitness in Vietnam at the End of War and Beginning of Peace By the end of the Vietnam War in April 1975, almost all Americans and thousands of terrified Vietnamese had left Saigon, fearing the bloodbath predicted by many if the Communists took over. But Claudia Krich and a few other humanitarian aid volunteers chose not to leave. They had no weapons, no cement barriers, no bomb shelter, and no safety, but they were determined to remain in Vietnam to see what happened next. Those Who Stayed is Claudia Krich’s personal firsthand account of the collapse of the South Vietnamese government and the beginning of the new Provisional Revolutionary Government. Her vivid impressions of...
This collection of essays focuses upon American involvement in the Vietnamese War.
"Like the resistable rise of Adolf Hitler there was nothing inevitable about our engagement in a war in Vietnam, in 'a wrong place at a wrong time.' For this war to happen, this costliest and most protracted of all our wars, hundreds of crucial decisions had to be made. Eisenhower decided not to be a signatory to the Geneva Peace Conference of 1954. Kennedy decided to send troops. Congress, on the basis of informatioon which later proved to be false, hastily passed the Tonkin Gulf Authorization. When you read and study Vietnam: The Definitive Documentation of Human Decisions you will be amazed at the amount of manpower, brain power, imagination, personal involvement and adventurousness of the decision makers that had to underlay all the documents presented in this book. One cannot study the roots of the Vietnam War nor the course of events once we were committed to it without having at hand this massive work which documents it all" --Jacket flap.