Last year General William Westmoreland told a Boston College audience that politicians caused America\u27s defeat in Vietnam. Westmoreland’s charge reflects recent Vietnam War revisionism, the effort to rationalize America’s defeat by claiming that United States forces were prevented from winning. Besides the politicians, who reduced military spending, the revisionists’ cast of villains includes the media and antiwar dissenters, who turned the nation against the war, and various Presidents, who restricted military operations. If polls are to be believed, these interpretations are widely held by Americans, especially Vietnam veterans
General William Westmoreland, the American commander of Military As- sistance Command Vietnam (MACV)...
This review examines three recently-published books about the Vietnam War: Max Hastings, Vietnam: An...
The first issue of Vietnam Generation: A Journal of Recent History and Contemporary Issues, edited b...
This dissertation provides a rhetorical examination of revisionism in the neoconservative response t...
Since the conclusion of the Vietnam War in the early 1970s, the USA has been involved in a number of...
An original and major reinterpretation of American strategy during the Vietnam War which totally rec...
This paper investigates how and why the U.S. government hid the reality of the failures of the Vietn...
As the United States was expanding its role in the Vietnam War, television sets were increasingly be...
By the early 1990s, when I began studying the Vietnam War, the American public had largely lost inte...
By the time tanks of the North Vietnamese Army crashed through the gates of the Presidential Palace ...
For nearly a decade, American combat soldiers fought in South Vietnam to help sustain an independent...
Critics of the American commitment to defend the Republic of South Vietnam argue that the United Sta...
This article explores the impact of one of the key non-military events in the U.S. war in Vietnam, a...
As the president and his war managers increasingly saw Vietnam as a \u27race between accomplishment ...
Twenty-five years after the fall of Saigon, it seems doubtful that historians will ever achieve cons...
General William Westmoreland, the American commander of Military As- sistance Command Vietnam (MACV)...
This review examines three recently-published books about the Vietnam War: Max Hastings, Vietnam: An...
The first issue of Vietnam Generation: A Journal of Recent History and Contemporary Issues, edited b...
This dissertation provides a rhetorical examination of revisionism in the neoconservative response t...
Since the conclusion of the Vietnam War in the early 1970s, the USA has been involved in a number of...
An original and major reinterpretation of American strategy during the Vietnam War which totally rec...
This paper investigates how and why the U.S. government hid the reality of the failures of the Vietn...
As the United States was expanding its role in the Vietnam War, television sets were increasingly be...
By the early 1990s, when I began studying the Vietnam War, the American public had largely lost inte...
By the time tanks of the North Vietnamese Army crashed through the gates of the Presidential Palace ...
For nearly a decade, American combat soldiers fought in South Vietnam to help sustain an independent...
Critics of the American commitment to defend the Republic of South Vietnam argue that the United Sta...
This article explores the impact of one of the key non-military events in the U.S. war in Vietnam, a...
As the president and his war managers increasingly saw Vietnam as a \u27race between accomplishment ...
Twenty-five years after the fall of Saigon, it seems doubtful that historians will ever achieve cons...
General William Westmoreland, the American commander of Military As- sistance Command Vietnam (MACV)...
This review examines three recently-published books about the Vietnam War: Max Hastings, Vietnam: An...
The first issue of Vietnam Generation: A Journal of Recent History and Contemporary Issues, edited b...