What was for the United States a struggle against creeping Communism in Southeast Asia was for the people of North Vietnam a "great patriotic war" that saw its eventual victory against a military Goliath. The story of that conflict as seen through the eyes—and the ideology—of the North Vietnamese military offers readers a view of that era never before seen.
Victory in Vietnam is the People's Army of Vietnam's own account of two decades of struggle, now available for the first time in English. It is a definitive statement of the Vietnamese point of view concerning foreign intrusion in their country since before American involvement—and it reveals that many of the accepted truths in our own histories of the war are simply wrong.
This detailed account describes the ebb and flow of the war as seen from Hanoi. It discloses particularly difficult times in the PAVN's struggle: 1955-59, when Diem almost destroyed the Communist movement in the South; 1961-62, when American helicopter assaults and M-113 armored personnel carriers inflicted serious losses on their forces; and 1966, when U.S. troop strength and air power increased dramatically. It also elaborates on the role of the Ho Chi Minh Trail in the Communist effort, confirming its crucial importance and telling how the United States came close to shutting the supply line down on several occasions.
The book confirms the extent to which the North orchestrated events in the South and also reveals much about Communist infiltration—accompanied by statistics—from 1959 until the end of the war. While many Americans believed that North Vietnam only began sending regular units south after the U.S. commitment of ground forces in 1965, this account reveals that by the time Marines landed in Da Nang in April 1965 there were already at least four North Vietnamese regiments in the South.
Translator Merle Pribbenow, who spent several years in Saigon during the war, has sought to render as accurately as possible the voice of the PAVN authors, retaining much of the triumphant flavor of the text in order to provide an uncensored feel for the Vietnamese viewpoint. A foreword by William J. Duiker, author of Ho Chi Minh: A Life and other books on Vietnam, puts both the tone and content of the text in historical perspective.
Chronicles the 1975 offensive of the Vietnam People’s Army and the uprisings that secured the liberation of South Vietnam.
Essay from the year 2002 in the subject History of Germany - Postwar Period, Cold War, grade: A, University of St Andrews (Department of Modern History), course: America and Vietnam, language: English, abstract: The discussion of this ...
America Won the Vietnam War!, Or, How the Left Snatched Defeat from the Jaws of Victory
John Helmer, Bringing the War Home: The American Soldier in Vietnam and After (New York: Free Press, 1974). ... Davidson quote in Kenneth J. Heineman, Campus Wars: The Peace Movement at American State Universities in the Vietnam Era ...
"For sixteen years, from the time he was assigned Chief of Station for the CIA in Saigon to his appointment as CIA Director, William Colby was deeply involved in America's...
... in communications with General Van Tien Dung, he signed his name as Chien and Dung was Tuan. (See Boudarel, Giap!, p. 120). He used the pen name Hong Nam for an article he published in the October 1978 issue of Tap Chi Cong San, ...
The Road to Victory in Vietnam
The book outlines how the most powerful nation in the world blundered into a needless war against Vietnam, one of the most primitive nations, and why victory was never possible.
8. 31. The Simulmatics Corporation, op. cit., pp. 167-68. 32. RAND Vietnam Interviews, op. cit., pp. 26-29. 33. W. Phillips Davison, User 's Guide to the RAND Interviews in Vietnam, RAND Corporation Report R-1024-ARPA, Santa Monica, ...
Certain Victory: How Hanoi Won the War