Jeffrey Record has synthesized the vast body of Vietnam war literature into a concise analysis of why the United States lost in Vietnam, who was responsible, and whether defeat was avoidabke. Record lists five major causes for the American defeat. The first was the U.S. government\u27s misunderstanding of the naturre and significance of hte war for both America and Vietnam. A succession of American administrations failed (in what Clausewitz describes as the first, the supreme act of strategic judgement) to establish the kind of war on which rthey are embarking;neither mistaking it for, nor trying to turn it into, something that is aliento its true nature
The Vietnam War is viewed by many historians as a turning point in American war memory. Never before...
Over the course of the prolonged US war in Vietnam, the bloodiest one after World War II, it became ...
The sudden collapse of South Vietnam on 30 April 1975 came as a surprise to most observers. The gene...
Vietnam War is thought to be the best-known military conflict after the World War II. This is becau...
The war in Vietnam may now be described as typical of a pattern that limited wars might follow in th...
This paper investigates how and why the U.S. government hid the reality of the failures of the Vietn...
In the middle of the 20th century young American men gave their lives in the jungles of Vietnam for ...
In this article, Anderson explores the reasons that make the resolution of key historical questions ...
The war in Vietnam achieved almost none of the goals the American decision-makers formulated, and it...
As American operations against terrorism spread around the globe to places like Afghanistan and the ...
For nearly a decade, American combat soldiers fought in South Vietnam to help sustain an independent...
The admission, supported by a careful reading of the historical record, begs larger questions: How d...
The admission, supported by a careful reading of the historical record, begs larger questions: How d...
The Vietnam War is viewed by many historians as a turning point in American war memory. Never before...
This review examines three recently-published books about the Vietnam War: Max Hastings, Vietnam: An...
The Vietnam War is viewed by many historians as a turning point in American war memory. Never before...
Over the course of the prolonged US war in Vietnam, the bloodiest one after World War II, it became ...
The sudden collapse of South Vietnam on 30 April 1975 came as a surprise to most observers. The gene...
Vietnam War is thought to be the best-known military conflict after the World War II. This is becau...
The war in Vietnam may now be described as typical of a pattern that limited wars might follow in th...
This paper investigates how and why the U.S. government hid the reality of the failures of the Vietn...
In the middle of the 20th century young American men gave their lives in the jungles of Vietnam for ...
In this article, Anderson explores the reasons that make the resolution of key historical questions ...
The war in Vietnam achieved almost none of the goals the American decision-makers formulated, and it...
As American operations against terrorism spread around the globe to places like Afghanistan and the ...
For nearly a decade, American combat soldiers fought in South Vietnam to help sustain an independent...
The admission, supported by a careful reading of the historical record, begs larger questions: How d...
The admission, supported by a careful reading of the historical record, begs larger questions: How d...
The Vietnam War is viewed by many historians as a turning point in American war memory. Never before...
This review examines three recently-published books about the Vietnam War: Max Hastings, Vietnam: An...
The Vietnam War is viewed by many historians as a turning point in American war memory. Never before...
Over the course of the prolonged US war in Vietnam, the bloodiest one after World War II, it became ...
The sudden collapse of South Vietnam on 30 April 1975 came as a surprise to most observers. The gene...